wikipedia_id stringlengths 2 8 | wikipedia_title stringlengths 1 243 | url stringlengths 44 370 | contents stringlengths 53 2.22k | id int64 0 6.14M |
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7542015 | Adele Girard | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adele%20Girard | Adele Girard
brothers (Jack and Charles) and Frankie Trumbauer at the Hickory House in New York City on 52nd Street. She replaced harpist Casper Reardon, who had been hired for a Broadway show.
When the Ts toured, Girard worried that she would be unable to continue payments on her first harp. She asked the proprietor of Hickory House to keep her on, and he introduced her to Joe Marsala. In 1937 she wed Marsala and became a member of his band. Marsala's band included Eddie Condon and Buddy Rich. The Marsalas worked in the house band at Hickory House for ten years. He introduced her to Shelly Manne, Charlie Byrd, Gene DiNovi, and Neal Hefti. She had perfect pitch and could improvise any tune on the spot. | 6,124,300 |
7542015 | Adele Girard | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adele%20Girard | Adele Girard
Among her fans were James Bond author Ian Fleming and Harpo Marx, who also played harp and asked her for lessons.
In 1946, Marsala found a job at ABC as a studio musician while Girard worked for NBC. Although Marsala was unhappy with the work, he wrote the song "Don't Cry Joe" which became a hit when it was recorded by Frank Sinatra. Inspired by a photograph of Aspen in "Life" magazine, they bought a station wagon and moved to Colorado. Marsala co-wrote the musical "I've Had It" which made fun of Aspen's mixture of cowboys and classical musicians. Girard sang in the leading role. Although Marsala tried to take the show beyond Colorado, he was unsuccessful, and in 1954 the couple returned to | 6,124,301 |
7542015 | Adele Girard | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adele%20Girard | Adele Girard
New York City where Marsala helped start a music publishing company, Beatrice Music, that bore Adele Girard's first name. Girad returned to studio work. Beatrice Music was bought by Seeburg Music Corporation in 1962 and Marsala was hired as vice president. He helped organize the album "Warm and Sentimental" by clarinetist Bobby Gordon on which Girard recorded.
Back in Chicago, Girard drifted out of music and spent her time restoring furniture, drawing, painting, and ice skating. When Seeburg struggled financially, she and Marsala moved to California where she was hired to teach drama at the University of California. She played piano for some of the shows and occasionally filled an acting role. | 6,124,302 |
7542015 | Adele Girard | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adele%20Girard | Adele Girard
She and Marsala performed publicly for the last time in 1970 during a two-week residency at Donte's in North Hollywood, where visiting sidemen included Shelly Manne, Dick Cary, Neil Hefti, and Leonard Feather. After Marsala died in 1978, Girard performed at venues along the California coast, sometimes accompanied by Bobby Gordon. Despite having suffered two strokes, she agreed to record the album "Don't Let It End" (Arbors, 1991) with Gordon. The song was Joe Marsala's tribute to the swing era. Girad died from congestive heart failure in Denver, Colorado, in 1993.
# Sources.
- Atteberry, Phillip D. "The Sweethearts of Swing: Adele Girard and Joe Marsala". "The Mississippi Rag". April 1996
- | 6,124,303 |
7542015 | Adele Girard | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adele%20Girard | Adele Girard
bum "Don't Let It End" (Arbors, 1991) with Gordon. The song was Joe Marsala's tribute to the swing era. Girad died from congestive heart failure in Denver, Colorado, in 1993.
# Sources.
- Atteberry, Phillip D. "The Sweethearts of Swing: Adele Girard and Joe Marsala". "The Mississippi Rag". April 1996
- Marsala Trampler, Eleisa, "Don't Let It End Pt. I: Joe Marsala". "The Clarinet". June 2007
- Marsala Trampler, Eleisa, "Don't Let It End Pt. II: Bobby Gordon". "The Clarinet". September 2007
- Marsala-Trampler, Eleisa, "Adele Girard Marsala: First Lady of the Jazz Harp". "The American Harp Journal". Winter 2005
- Liner Notes: "Bobby Gordon Plays Joe Marsala: Lower Register". Arbors. 2007 | 6,124,304 |
7542028 | Martijanec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Martijanec | Martijanec
Martijanec
Martijanec is a Croatian village and municipality in Varaždin County. According to the 2011 census, there are 3,843 inhabitants in the municipality. | 6,124,305 |
7542036 | Gornji Kneginec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gornji%20Kneginec | Gornji Kneginec
Gornji Kneginec
Gornji Kneginec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin county. According to the 2011 census, there are 5,349 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats.
The municipality is home to a monument to Croatian soldiers killed by Yugoslav Partisans in World War II and it aftermath.
# External links.
- Gornji Kneginec | 6,124,306 |
7542040 | Jalžabet | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jalžabet | Jalžabet
Jalžabet
Jalžabet () is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin county. According to the 2001 census, there are 3,732 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats. | 6,124,307 |
7542020 | Yasuhiro Hato | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yasuhiro%20Hato | Yasuhiro Hato
Yasuhiro Hato
# Club career.
Hato was born in Minamiawaji on May 4, 1976. After graduating from high school, he joined Yokohama Flügels in 1995. He played as mainly right midfielder and his opportunities to play gradually increased from 1997. In 1998, the club won Emperor's Cup. However the club was disbanded end of 1998 season due to financial strain, he moved to Yokohama F. Marinos. He played as mainly right side-back and also center back. The club won the champions 2001 J.League Cup and 2003 J1 League. He moved to Kashiwa Reysol in April 2004. However the club was relegated to J2 League in 2005 and he moved to Omiya Ardija in 2006. He returned to Yokohama F. Marinos in 2010. He retired end | 6,124,308 |
7542020 | Yasuhiro Hato | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yasuhiro%20Hato | Yasuhiro Hato
e club was relegated to J2 League in 2005 and he moved to Omiya Ardija in 2006. He returned to Yokohama F. Marinos in 2010. He retired end of 2011 season.
# National team career.
On April 25, 2001, Hato debuted for Japan national team against Spain. After debut, he played as right midfielder in most matches including Confederations Cup in 2001. However his opportunity to play decreased behind Daisuke Ichikawa in 2002 and he was not elected Japan for 2002 World Cup. He played 15 games for Japan until 2002.
# Honors and awards.
## Team Honors.
- J.League Cup: 2001
- J1 League: 2003 2004
- FIFA Confederations Cup Runner-up: 2001
# External links.
- Japan National Football Team Database | 6,124,309 |
7542044 | Klenovnik, Croatia | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klenovnik,%20Croatia | Klenovnik, Croatia
Klenovnik, Croatia
Klenovnik is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin county. According to the 2001 census, there are 2,278 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats. | 6,124,310 |
7542052 | Ljubešćica | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ljubešćica | Ljubešćica
Ljubešćica
Ljubeščica is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2001 census, there are 1,958 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats. | 6,124,311 |
7542057 | Mali Bukovec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mali%20Bukovec | Mali Bukovec
Mali Bukovec
Mali Bukovec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin county. According to the 2011 census, there are 2,212 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats. | 6,124,312 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Humboldt Prize
The Humboldt Prize, also known as the Humboldt Research Award, is an award given by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany to internationally renowned scientists and scholars who work outside of Germany. The prize is currently valued at €60,000 with the possibility of further support during the prize winner's life. Up to one hundred such awards are granted each year. Nominations must be submitted by established academics in Germany.
The award is named after the late Prussian naturalist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt.
# Past winners.
## Biology.
Günter Blobel,
Serge Daan,
Daniel Gianola,
Hendrikus Granzier,
Dan Graur,
Bert Hölldobler,
Sergej Nedospasov,
Hans | 6,124,313 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Othmer,
John M. Opitz,
Burkhard Rost (2009),
Thomas Dyer Seeley,
Günter P. Wagner,
Rüdiger Wehner,
Eckard Wimmer.
## Chemistry.
Anthony J. Arduengo III,
Paul Josef Crutzen,
Robert F. Curl,
Kuiling Ding,
John Bennett Fenn,
Alice P. Gast,
Walter Gilbert,
Robert H. Grubbs,
Narayan Hosmane,
Jean-Marie Lehn,
Yuri Lvov,
Rudolph Marcus,
James Cullen Martin,
Debashis Mukherjee,
Kenji Ohmori,
Geoffrey Ozin,
John Anthony Pople,
Alessandro Piccolo,
Ronald T. Raines,
Roger Reed
Julius Rebek,
Richard R. Schrock,
Sason Shaik,
Peter Schwerdtfeger,
Oktay Sinanoğlu,
Yoshitaka Tanimura,
Matthias Tschöp,
Thomas Zemb,
Ahmed H. Zewail.
## Computer Science.
Manindra Agrawal,
Patrick | 6,124,314 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Cousot (2008),
Ken Forbus,
Michael Fellows,
Michael Franz,
Johannes Gehrke,
Jonathan Katz,
Leonid Levin,
Toby Walsh.
## Economics.
Gérard Debreu, Francis X. Diebold, Jean-Michel Grandmont, Ronald Shephard, Hal Varian.
## Engineering.
Andrew Jenike, Mohamed Gad-el-Hak, Lanny D. Schmidt, Phoon Kok Kwang, Lefteri H. Tsoukalas, Moeness Amin.
## History.
Andreas W. Daum, Harry Liebersohn, Charles S. Maier, James J. Sheehan
## Linguistics.
Matthew S. Dryer, Jaklin Kornfilt, Paul Kiparsky, Peter Austin (twice)
## Management.
Timothy M. Devinney
## Mathematics.
Dmitri Anosov,
Paul Balmer,
Ole Barndorff-Nielsen,
Spencer J. Bloch,
Dinh Tien-Cuong,
Rod Downey,
Alexandre Eremenko,
Dima | 6,124,315 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Grigoriev,
Victor Guillemin,
Uffe Haagerup,
Harald Andrés Helfgott (2015),
Toshiyuki Kobayashi,
Robert Langlands,
Roberto Longo,
Benoît Mandelbrot,
Arnold Mandell,
Grigory Margulis,
Vladimir Maz'ya,
Trevor McDougall,
Curtis T. McMullen,
Alexander Merkurjev,
John Milnor,
Teimuraz Pirashvili,
Gopal Prasad,
Svetlozar Rachev,
Shayle R. Searle,
Elias M. Stein,
Anatoly Vershik,
Ernest Borisovich Vinberg,
Raymond O. Wells, Jr.,
Shing-Tung Yau,
Marc Yor,
Andrei Zelevinsky.
## Medicine.
Fritz Albert Lipmann,
Stanley B. Prusiner
## Meteorology.
Evgeni Fedorovich
## Organizational Psychology.
Steven Rogelberg
## Philosophy.
Colin Allen,
Michael Friedman,
Peter J. Graham | 6,124,316 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
(2018),
Panagiotis Kondylis,
Stephan Hartmann (2013),
Hannes Leitgeb (2011),
Jeff Malpas,
John Perry,
R. Jay Wallace.
## Physics.
Girish Agarwal,
Riccardo Barbieri,
Wolfgang Bauer,
Nihat Berker,
Nicolaas Bloembergen,
Robert W. Boyd,
Victor A. Brumberg (1993),
Ali Chamseddine,
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar,
Steven Chu,
Predrag Cvitanović,
Donald D. Clayton,
Hans Dehmelt,
Durmus A. Demir,
Tomasz Dietl,
Alexei L. Efros,
Yuri Estrin (1999, 2012),
Andrea Ferrara,
Pierre-Gilles de Gennes,
Roy J. Glauber,
Chris Greene,
Yuval Grossman,
Willy Haeberli (1982, 1991),
John L. Hall,
Theodor W. Hänsch,
Robert Hofstadter,
John W. Harris,
Kyozi Kawasaki,
Jihn E. Kim,
Dmitri | 6,124,317 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Kharzeev,
Masatoshi Koshiba,
Dirk Kreimer (2011),
Herbert Kroemer,
Jay H. Lieske (1980),
Rodney Loudon (1998),
Andreas Mandelis,
M. Brian Maple,
Jagdish Mehra,
Eugen Merzbacher,
Curt Michel,
Rabindra Mohapatra,
Pran Nath,
Holger Bech Nielsen,
Hirosi Ooguri,
Valery Pokrovsky,
Augusto Sagnotti,
Alfred Saupe,
Arthur L. Schawlow,
Julian Schwinger,
Ivan A. Sellin,
Clifford G. Shull,
Costas Soukoulis,
Sauro Succi,
Ching W. Tang,
Anthony William Thomas,
José W. F. Valle,
Gary A. Wegner,
Gary Westfall,
Paul Wiegmann,
Maw-Kuen Wu,
Stefano Zapperi,
M. Suhail Zubairy,
Victor I. Klimov,
and
Gia Dvali
# See also.
- Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
# External links.
- | 6,124,318 |
7541880 | Humboldt Prize | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humboldt%20Prize | Humboldt Prize
Kreimer (2011),
Herbert Kroemer,
Jay H. Lieske (1980),
Rodney Loudon (1998),
Andreas Mandelis,
M. Brian Maple,
Jagdish Mehra,
Eugen Merzbacher,
Curt Michel,
Rabindra Mohapatra,
Pran Nath,
Holger Bech Nielsen,
Hirosi Ooguri,
Valery Pokrovsky,
Augusto Sagnotti,
Alfred Saupe,
Arthur L. Schawlow,
Julian Schwinger,
Ivan A. Sellin,
Clifford G. Shull,
Costas Soukoulis,
Sauro Succi,
Ching W. Tang,
Anthony William Thomas,
José W. F. Valle,
Gary A. Wegner,
Gary Westfall,
Paul Wiegmann,
Maw-Kuen Wu,
Stefano Zapperi,
M. Suhail Zubairy,
Victor I. Klimov,
and
Gia Dvali
# See also.
- Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
# External links.
- Alexander von Humboldt Foundation | 6,124,319 |
7542061 | Maruševec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maruševec | Maruševec
Maruševec
Maruševec ( Kajkavian: "Maršuvic, Maršovec," or "Maršuvec") is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2011 census, there are 6,379 inhabitants, the absolute majority of which are Croats.
# Notable buildings.
- Maruševec Castle | 6,124,320 |
7542069 | Sračinec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sračinec | Sračinec
Sračinec
Sračinec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin county. According to the 2011 census, there are 4,842 inhabitants, an absolute majority of which are Croats.
The municipality includes the following settlements:
- Sračinec, population 3,897
- Svibovec Podravski, population 945 | 6,124,321 |
7542066 | Petrijanec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petrijanec | Petrijanec
Petrijanec
Petrijanec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2001 census, there are 4,994 inhabitants, the absolute majority of which are Croats.
The ancient Roman settlement of Aquaviva, Pannonia is believed to have been located in the same place. | 6,124,322 |
7542074 | Sveti Đurđ | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sveti%20Đurđ | Sveti Đurđ
Sveti Đurđ
Sveti Đurđ is a village and municipality in Croatia in Varaždin County. According to the 2001 census, there are 3,804 inhabitants, the absolute majority of whom are Croats. The municipality was established in 1993. | 6,124,323 |
7542082 | Sveti Ilija | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sveti%20Ilija | Sveti Ilija
Sveti Ilija
Sveti Ilija is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2001 census, there are 3,532 inhabitants, absolute majority which are Croats. The municipality was founded in 1992.
# External links.
- Municipality of Sveti Ilija | 6,124,324 |
7542100 | Veliki Bukovec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Veliki%20Bukovec | Veliki Bukovec
Veliki Bukovec
Veliki Bukovec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2011 census, there are 1,438 inhabitants, the overwhelming majority of which are Croats. | 6,124,325 |
7542088 | Trnovec Bartolovečki | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trnovec%20Bartolovečki | Trnovec Bartolovečki
Trnovec Bartolovečki
Trnovec Bartolovečki is a municipality in Varaždin County, Croatia.
The municipality consists of 6 villages – Bartolovec, Trnovec, Šemovec, Štefanec, Zamlaka and Žabnik. The population of the municipality in the 2011 census was 6,884. The village of Trnovec had a population of 4,185 in the same census. The majority of the people living in the municipality are Croats.
The village of Trnovec is located around 6 kilometres from the centre of Varaždin, the county seat of Varaždin County. Varaždin Airport is located just outside the village. The entire municipality borders the shores of the Drava, especially Lake Varaždin, a reservoir built on the river. | 6,124,326 |
7542105 | Vidovec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vidovec | Vidovec
Vidovec
Vidovec is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2011 census, there are 5,425 inhabitants, absolute majority of which are Croats. | 6,124,327 |
7542095 | Varaždinske Toplice | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Varaždinske%20Toplice | Varaždinske Toplice
Varaždinske Toplice
Varaždinske Toplice ( Kajkavian: "Varaždinske Toplice") is a small town in northern part of Croatia in Varaždin County. The town has been well known throughout the centuries for its hot springs as well as a medical center. In Ancient Rome it was known as Aquae Iasae.
# Thermal Spa.
Today, the town's biggest employers are "Hotel Minerva", built in 1981 with approx. 440 beds, and Hospital for Medicinal Rehabilitation "Terme" which is one of the leading rehabilitation centers for spinal cord and neurological injuries and disorders in Croatia. In 2013 Varaždin County, the formal owner of the hotel and the hospital, outlined a plan of building a new hospital which would continue | 6,124,328 |
7542095 | Varaždinske Toplice | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Varaždinske%20Toplice | Varaždinske Toplice
on the expertise in spinal cord treatment. The plan also includes the construction of a completely new hotel, as well as an adaptation of the existing hotel Minerva. The value of proposed investments revolves around €80 million.
Varaždinske Toplice has two churches, the smaller one having been built in 13th century with the resting place of Antun Kukuljević, a supreme principal of all the schools in Croatia between 1836 and 1847, and father of Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski, next to the church.
The town is also famous for being a site of a school in 1480 which is considered to be the oldest known school in the Balkan peninsula. The most recent school building for town's elementary school was opened | 6,124,329 |
7542095 | Varaždinske Toplice | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Varaždinske%20Toplice | Varaždinske Toplice
in 1980 thus commemorating 500 years of education.
# Settlements.
Nowadays, the town is also the center of a municipality which consists of the town itself and surrounding villages. In the 2011 census, the population of the municipality was 6,364, composed of the following settlements:
- Boričevec Toplički, population 40
- Črnile, population 162
- Čurilovec, population 131
- Donja Poljana, population 426
- Drenovec, population 361
- Gornja Poljana, population 269
- Grešćevina, population 140
- Hrastovec Toplički, population 176
- Jalševec Svibovečki, population 302
- Jarki Horvatićevi, population 47
- Leskovec Toplički, population 487
- Lovrentovec, population 118
- Lukačevec | 6,124,330 |
7542095 | Varaždinske Toplice | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Varaždinske%20Toplice | Varaždinske Toplice
vina, population 140
- Hrastovec Toplički, population 176
- Jalševec Svibovečki, population 302
- Jarki Horvatićevi, population 47
- Leskovec Toplički, population 487
- Lovrentovec, population 118
- Lukačevec Toplički, population 55
- Martinkovec, population 66
- Petkovec Toplički, population 265
- Pišćanovec, population 73
- Retkovec Svibovečki, population 23
- Rukljevina, population 17
- Svibovec, population 302
- Škarnik, population 84
- Tuhovec, population 706
- Varaždinske Toplice, population 1,765
- Vrtlinovec, population 349
# Notable people.
- Ana Bešenić, writer
- Nenad Brixy, journalist and writer
- Lavoslav Horvat, architect
- Ruža Pospiš-Baldani, opera singer | 6,124,331 |
7542108 | Visoko, Croatia | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Visoko,%20Croatia | Visoko, Croatia
Visoko, Croatia
Visoko is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. In the 2011 census, the total population of the municipality was 1,518, in the following settlements:
- Čanjevo, population 184
- Đurinovec, population 135
- Kračevec, population 135
- Presečno Visočko, population 180
- Vinično, population 277
- Visoko, population 493
- Vrh Visočki, population 114
In the 2011 census, an absolute majority of the population were Croats. | 6,124,332 |
7542107 | Vinica, Varaždin County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vinica,%20Varaždin%20County | Vinica, Varaždin County
Vinica, Varaždin County
Vinica is a village and municipality in Croatia in the Varaždin County. According to the 2001 census, there are 3,747 inhabitants: an "absolute" majority of which are Croats.
Vinica is a site of ancient Roman vineyards. Opeka Manor, surrounded by a large park, and the Opeka Arboretum are also located in Vinica. | 6,124,333 |
7542096 | Khabees | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Khabees | Khabees
Khabees
Khabees ( sometimes pronounce as Khabeesa) is a traditional sweet dish from Arab States of the Persian Gulf, and common in Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. It is made of flour and oil and is commonly served as a traditional dish for breakfast, especially during Eid days.
# Etymology.
Khabees comes from the Arabic word خبَصَ which translates to mix.
# History.
A recipe for Khabees was mentioned in a tenth-century Arabic cookbook, Kitab al-Ṭabīḫ (the book of dishes) by Ibn Sayyar al-Warraq. | 6,124,334 |
7542134 | Brckovljani | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brckovljani | Brckovljani
Brckovljani
Brckovljani is a municipality in Zagreb County, Croatia.
According to the 2001 Croatian census, there are 6,816 inhabitants, 96% which are Croats.
They live in 14 naselja:
- Božjakovina – 216
- Brckovljani – 1,243
- Gornja Greda – 586
- Gornje Dvorišće – 335
- Gračec – 997
- Hrebinec – 237
- Kusanovec – 53
- Lupoglav – 1,064
- Prečec – 224
- Prikraj – 590
- Stančić – 738
- Štakorovec – 281
- Tedrovec – 111 | 6,124,335 |
7542133 | Burn My Eye | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Burn%20My%20Eye | Burn My Eye
Burn My Eye
Burn My Eye was the debut EP recorded by Sydney punk rock band Radio Birdman, in October 1976. It was a low-budget EP recorded at Trafalgar Studios, Sydney and released on the studio's own Trafalgar label after the band had been rejected by many other labels. Part of the reason that many labels were reluctant to sign the band was because of their unconventional sound, which was quite different from the music then popular in the Australian rock scene during the 1970s.
The members of Birdman were not impressed with the acoustics of Trafalgar, a typical 1970s studio which they described as "dead sounding and quiet", in contrast to the high tempo, hard-rock sound for which Birdman is | 6,124,336 |
7542133 | Burn My Eye | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Burn%20My%20Eye | Burn My Eye
known. To the sound engineers' horror, Birdman decided to alter the studio's sound more to their liking by hauling sheets of corrugated iron from nearby demolition sites up the stairs of the studio and covering the walls with them to 'lighten up the sound'.
Birdman also experimented with some other unconventional sounds on the EP, such as the smashing of VB cans on their heads, as a percussion instrument throughout the recording.
The "Burn My Eye" EP was only produced once and has not been re-issued, so original copies of the EP are extremely rare. All tracks from the EP appear on the bonus disk of the 2015 CD reissue of the Trafalgar version of their first album, Radios Appear.
# Track listing.
- | 6,124,337 |
7542133 | Burn My Eye | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Burn%20My%20Eye | Burn My Eye
the recording.
The "Burn My Eye" EP was only produced once and has not been re-issued, so original copies of the EP are extremely rare. All tracks from the EP appear on the bonus disk of the 2015 CD reissue of the Trafalgar version of their first album, Radios Appear.
# Track listing.
- 1. "Smith and Wesson Blues"
- 2. "Snake"
- 3. "I-94"
- 4. "Burned My Eye"
# Personnel.
- Radio Birdman
- Rob Younger - lead vocals
- Chris Masuak - guitar, vocals, piano
- Deniz Tek - guitar, vocals
- Warwick Gilbert - bass
- Ron Keeley - drums
# See also.
- Proto-Punk
# External links.
- http://www.divinerites.com/dr_birdm.htm
- http://www.radio-birdman.com/ - Official Radio Birdman Website | 6,124,338 |
7542135 | Mick Leach | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mick%20Leach | Mick Leach
Mick Leach
Michael 'Mick' Leach (16 January 1947 – 11 January 1992) was a footballer with Queens Park Rangers in the 1960s and 1970s.
He made over 300 Football League appearances for QPR. His first league appearance for them was in 1964–65, and his final league game with QPR was in 1977–78. His final appearance was in a 3rd round F.A. Cup tie versus Wealdstone on 7 January 1978 played at Loftus Road.
In 1978, he moved to the USA to play in the North American Soccer League with the Detroit Express, making 23 appearances for them.
He died from cancer in 1992. | 6,124,339 |
7542127 | Brdovec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brdovec | Brdovec
Brdovec
Brdovec is a municipality in the Zagreb County, Croatia. The closest town to Brdovec is neighboring Zaprešić on the east.
# Demographics.
According to the 2001 census, there are 10,287 inhabitants, 92% which are Croats. They live in 13 settlements:
- Brdovec - 2,310
- Donji Laduč - 745
- Drenje Brdovečko - 694
- Gornji Laduč - 864
- Harmica - 232
- Javorje - 634
- Ključ Brdovečki - 663
- Prigorje Brdovečko - 1,258
- Prudnice - 641
- Savski Marof - 35
- Šenkovec - 733
- Vukovo Selo - 381
- Zdenci Brdovečki - 1,097
## Austro-hungarian 1910 census.
According to the 1910 census in Croatia, municipality of Brdovec had 4,021 inhabitants, which were linguistically and religiously | 6,124,340 |
7542127 | Brdovec | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brdovec | Brdovec
tia. The closest town to Brdovec is neighboring Zaprešić on the east.
# Demographics.
According to the 2001 census, there are 10,287 inhabitants, 92% which are Croats. They live in 13 settlements:
- Brdovec - 2,310
- Donji Laduč - 745
- Drenje Brdovečko - 694
- Gornji Laduč - 864
- Harmica - 232
- Javorje - 634
- Ključ Brdovečki - 663
- Prigorje Brdovečko - 1,258
- Prudnice - 641
- Savski Marof - 35
- Šenkovec - 733
- Vukovo Selo - 381
- Zdenci Brdovečki - 1,097
## Austro-hungarian 1910 census.
According to the 1910 census in Croatia, municipality of Brdovec had 4,021 inhabitants, which were linguistically and religiously declared as this:
# External links.
- Official site | 6,124,341 |
7542143 | Dubrava, Zagreb County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dubrava,%20Zagreb%20County | Dubrava, Zagreb County
Dubrava, Zagreb County
Dubrava is a village and a municipality ("općina") in Zagreb County, Croatia.
According to the 2001 Croatian census, there are 5,478 inhabitants in the municipality, 94% which are Croats. They live in 27 naselja:
- Bađinec - 173
- Brezje - 121
- Donji Marinkovac - 101
- Donji Vukšinac - 103
- Dubrava - 1,275
- Dubravski Markovac - 169
- Gornji Marinkovac - 157
- Gornji Vukšinac - 146
- Graberec - 226
- Habjanovac - 200
- Koritna - 204
- Kostanj - 102
- Kunđevac - 92
- Ladina - 125
- Mostari - 211
- Nova Kapela - 279
- Novaki - 232
- Paruževac - 157
- Pehardovac - 16
- Podlužan - 185
- Radulec - 132
- Stara Kapela - 242
- Svinjarec - 63
- Zetkan | 6,124,342 |
7542143 | Dubrava, Zagreb County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dubrava,%20Zagreb%20County | Dubrava, Zagreb County
Croatia.
According to the 2001 Croatian census, there are 5,478 inhabitants in the municipality, 94% which are Croats. They live in 27 naselja:
- Bađinec - 173
- Brezje - 121
- Donji Marinkovac - 101
- Donji Vukšinac - 103
- Dubrava - 1,275
- Dubravski Markovac - 169
- Gornji Marinkovac - 157
- Gornji Vukšinac - 146
- Graberec - 226
- Habjanovac - 200
- Koritna - 204
- Kostanj - 102
- Kunđevac - 92
- Ladina - 125
- Mostari - 211
- Nova Kapela - 279
- Novaki - 232
- Paruževac - 157
- Pehardovac - 16
- Podlužan - 185
- Radulec - 132
- Stara Kapela - 242
- Svinjarec - 63
- Zetkan - 209
- Zgališće - 180
- Zvekovac - 217
- Žukovec - 161
The total area of Dubrava is . | 6,124,343 |
7542136 | Bistra, Croatia | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bistra,%20Croatia | Bistra, Croatia
Bistra, Croatia
Bistra is a municipality ("općina") in Zagreb County, Croatia. The municipality was established in 1995 by separating from the former Municipality of Zaprešić and its municipal seat is Donja Bistra.
According to the 2011 Croatian census, there are 6,632 inhabitants, absolute majority of which are Croats. They live in 6 settlements/naselja:
- Bukovje Bistransko - 395
- Donja Bistra - 1,438
- Gornja Bistra - 1,836
- Novaki Bistranski - 763
- Oborovo Bistransko - 939
- Poljanica Bistranska - 1,261
# External links.
- Official site | 6,124,344 |
7542116 | Me, You and Him | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Me,%20You%20and%20Him | Me, You and Him
Me, You and Him
Me, You and Him is a British television sitcom, that aired on ITV from 30 July to 3 September 1992. It was made for the ITV network by Thames.
It was written by and starred Hugh Dennis, Nick Hancock and Steve Punt, all previously known - though particularly, Punt and Dennis - for their work on the alternative comedy and satirical circuit, especially through the BBC Radio 1 sketch show "The Mary Whitehouse Experience", which had transferred to television and made Dennis and Punt into household names.
The plot centred on Hancock's character, John Hanley, a teacher of physical education who lived happily and lazily alone in a flat in the fictional area of Southbridge, London, | 6,124,345 |
7542116 | Me, You and Him | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Me,%20You%20and%20Him | Me, You and Him
until his old school friend, ambitious and obnoxious businessman Harry Dunstan (played by Dennis), returns from working in France and moves in with him. Punt's character, the unemployed but intelligent Mark Prior, lives nearby but was forever visiting the others after arguing with his parents.
The six-part series was continuous in its plot, with Harry trying to win back the affections of girlfriend Clare (played by Adie Allen) with whom he had declined to keep in touch while in France. The other regular characters were Hanley's upstairs neighbours Helen and Todd (played by Harriet Thorpe and Ron Donachie), a reformed but still scary ex-convict and his wife, who was his probation officer. A | 6,124,346 |
7542116 | Me, You and Him | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Me,%20You%20and%20Him | Me, You and Him
running theme is Harry's discomfort with Todd living above due to his prejudice against criminals, even reformed ones.
Ultimately, the series ended with Harry and Clare reuniting cautionarily and Mark deciding to break from his parents' apron strings. The show was deemed a success for ITV and was largely enjoyed by critics, but did not appear for a second series.
It gave pre-watershed audiences their first glimpses of Dennis, Hancock and Punt (beyond their numerous appearances on television advertisements) and also featured a guest appearance by Danny Baker, an old friend of Hancock's, parodying his own Daz detergent commercials.
When first promoted by Thames TV in a season preview the title | 6,124,347 |
7542116 | Me, You and Him | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Me,%20You%20and%20Him | Me, You and Him
dice against criminals, even reformed ones.
Ultimately, the series ended with Harry and Clare reuniting cautionarily and Mark deciding to break from his parents' apron strings. The show was deemed a success for ITV and was largely enjoyed by critics, but did not appear for a second series.
It gave pre-watershed audiences their first glimpses of Dennis, Hancock and Punt (beyond their numerous appearances on television advertisements) and also featured a guest appearance by Danny Baker, an old friend of Hancock's, parodying his own Daz detergent commercials.
When first promoted by Thames TV in a season preview the title of the show was "Letting Go", but this was changed before transmission. | 6,124,348 |
7542161 | Farkaševac | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Farkaševac | Farkaševac
Farkaševac
Farkaševac is a municipality in Zagreb County, Croatia. According to the 2011 census, there are 1,937 inhabitants. 92% of the population are Croats.
The coat of arms of Farkaševac consists of gold coins on a tree stump, with a sapling and a maroon wolf next to it. The town's flag is green, with the coat of arms in the middle bordered in white.
# Population by censuses.
## Austro-Hungarian 1910 census.
According to the 1910 census, Municipality of Farkaševac had 3,304 inhabitants, which were ethnically and religiously declared as follows: | 6,124,349 |
7542169 | Dan Gordon | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dan%20Gordon | Dan Gordon
Dan Gordon
Dan Gordon may refer to:
# Athletes.
- Dan Gordon (footballer) (1881–1958), Scottish footballer
- Dan Gordon (Gaelic footballer), Gaelic football player from County Down, Northern Ireland
- Dan Gordon (rugby union) (born 1980), rugby player
# Others.
- Dan Gordon (actor) (born 1961), Northern Irish actor
- Dan Gordon (animator) (died 1969), writer and director of cartoons
- Dan Gordon (Charmed), character in the television series "Charmed"
- Dan Gordon (screenwriter), writer of screenplays for films such as "The Hurricane"
- Dan Gordon, co-founder and original brewmaster for Gordon Biersch Brewing Company
# See also.
- Daniel Gordon (disambiguation) | 6,124,350 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
Büssing
Büssing AG was a German bus and truck manufacturer, established in 1903 by Heinrich Büssing (1843–1929) in Braunschweig. It quickly evolved to one of the largest European producers, whose utility vehicles with the Brunswick Lion emblem were widely distributed, especially from the 1930s onwards. The company was taken over by MAN AG in 1971.
# Heinrich Büssing.
At the age of 60, the inventor and businessman Heinrich Büssing together with his two sons founded the "Heinrich-Büssing-Spezialfabrik für Motorwagen und Motoromnibusse". Büssing, the son of a blacksmith dynasty at Nordsteimke (in present-day Wolfsburg), had studied engineering at the Collegium Carolinum in Braunschweig and had | 6,124,351 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
founded several bicycle, engineering and railway signal works with varying degrees of success. His first truck was a 2-ton payload machine powered by a 2-cylinder gasoline engine and featuring worm drive. That successful design was later built under license by other companies in Germany, Austria, Hungary and by Straker-Squire in England.
One year later he debuted a first 20 HP omnibus model carrying up to twelve passengers on the route from Braunschweig to Wendeburg, operated by his own "Automobil-Omnibus-Betriebs-Gesellschaft". Büssing busses soon served public transport in European cities like Berlin (ABOAG), Vienna and Prague ("Fross–Büssing"), or London.
# History.
Before World War I | 6,124,352 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
Büssing started to build heavy-duty trucks for the time. These trucks featured 4- and 6-cylinder engines (5 tonnes and 11 tonnes, respectively). In 1914 the Büssing A5P armored car was developed at the behest of the German "Oberste Heeresleitung". After the war, Heinrich Büssing had to enter a "Kommanditgesellschaft" limited partnership, converted into the Büssing AG joint-stock company in 1922. In 1923, Büssing introduced the first rigid three-axle chassis which was used in upcoming models and allowed Büssing to lead the market share in Germany in commercial vehicles.
Büssing NAG used inmates of several Nazi concentration camps in Braunschweig from 1944 to March 1945 for slave labor. These | 6,124,353 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
camps were subcamps to the Neuengamme concentration camp.
After World War II civilian production resumed with 5-tonne and later 7-tonne trucks.
In 1950, the company name became Büssing Nutzkraftwagen GmbH and production was concentrated on underfloor-engined trucks which were to become the firm's speciality. Most tractor units and all normal-control trucks had vertical engines, but in the mid 1960s there was a version of their Commodore maximum-weight tractor unit, the 16-210, which had a horizontal diesel mounted under the cab ahead of the front axle, the gearbox being mounted halfway along the truck's chassis.
In 1969, Büssing started strong ties with MAN AG. MAN was a customer to some | 6,124,354 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
Büssing's innovative trucks and parts while they were promoting their own line-up. In 1971, an MAN takeover of Büssing was announced. MAN started to use the lion logo on its newly named "MAN-Büssing" trucks. Büssing's unique underfloor-engined truck range continued in production under the MAN AG through to the late 1980s.
## Acquisitions.
- First acquisition for Büssing was Mannesmann-Mulag Motoren und Lastwagen AG of Aachen.
- Elbing plant of Automobil Fabrik Kornnick AG.
- In 1934, Neue Automobil Gesellschaft (NAG). After the takeover Büssing used the brand Büssing-NAG until 1950.
- Büssing took over the Borgward plant at Osterholz-Scharmbeck in 1962. This plant used for building military | 6,124,355 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
4-tonne 4x4. (1968 Factory was sold to Faun-Werke GmbH)
## Innovations.
- 1923: The Büssing III GL 6 is the world's first full-size bus
- 1930s: Büssing began building heavy duty trucks with diesel engines
- 1936: Büssing pioneered the horizontal "underfloor" diesel engines
- During World War II Büssing once again supplied military vehicles including 6x4 armoured cars and an 8x8 with all-wheel steering.
## Trolleybus production.
Büssing manufactured trolleybuses between 1933 and 1966, producing approximately 71 models. Most were for German cities, but production also included three trolleybuses for Chernyakhovsk, Russia, in 1939; four for Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1940–42; and 14 for Lucerne, | 6,124,356 |
7542101 | Büssing | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Büssing | Büssing
ng manufactured trolleybuses between 1933 and 1966, producing approximately 71 models. Most were for German cities, but production also included three trolleybuses for Chernyakhovsk, Russia, in 1939; four for Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1940–42; and 14 for Lucerne, Switzerland, in 1965. In Turkey, ESHOT converted 21 Büssing motorbuses into trolleybuses in 1962 and 1968 (these are not counted in the total of 71 given above). At least four Büssing trolleybuses have been preserved, including ones at the Frankfurt Transport Museum, at the "Hannoversches Straßenbahn-Museum" and at the "Historama" transport museum in Ferlach, Austria.
# See also.
- Borgward
- Magirus
- MAN SE
- Henschel
# Notes. | 6,124,357 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
St. Mary's University School of Law
St. Mary's University School of Law is one of the professional graduate schools of St. Mary's University. The law school is located in San Antonio, Texas, USA and is the only Catholic law school in the American Southwest. The University is a private Catholic university. The School of Law has an enrollment of about 770 students, pursuing Juris Doctor (J.D.), Master of Laws (LL.M.), or Master of Jurisprudence (M.Jur.) degrees. St. Mary's is the first law school in Texas to offer the M.Jur., a graduate degree in the study of law for students not seeking to enter the practice of law. The 2020 Rankings by "U.S. News & World Report" places the school at No. 146-192 | 6,124,358 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
of U.S. law schools.
# History.
In October 1927, the San Antonio Bar Association established the San Antonio School of Law, which for seven years after its founding was administered by a board of governors under the control of the bar association. Until the School of Law became associated with a physical campus, classes were held at the Bexar County Courthouse. In an attempt to maximize educational and material resources of the fledgling institution, the Board of Governors negotiated with St. Mary's University regarding a transfer of the School of Law's administrative control. The transfer was completed on October 1, 1934, and St. Mary's University School of Law was officially established.
The | 6,124,359 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
School of Law was then housed at St. Mary's University's original downtown campus at 112 College Street, situated near what would later become the city's largest tourist attraction, the San Antonio River Walk. Possessing several military bases, San Antonio experienced a surge of population and industry in the years immediately following the World War II. This exponential growth resulted in more law students. To meet these new demands adequately, the School of Law organized itself to meet the requirements of the American Bar Association and the Association of American Law Schools. It received accreditation from the ABA in February 1948 and became a member of the AALS in December 1949.
On December | 6,124,360 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
19, 1967, the School of Law relocated from the College Street campus to join the main campus of St. Mary's. A multimillion-dollar expansion project had provided for the addition of eight new buildings to the main University campus, including a lecture hall, law library, and faculty building comprising the Law Center. The school held its first classes the next month, in January 1968. Since 1968, the school has had several structures rededicated, renovated, or expanded, including the Law Administration Building, housing the office of the dean; the Law Classroom Building; and the Sarita Kenedy East Law Library, dedicated in 1984 after the John G. and Marie Stella Kenedy Memorial Foundation gave | 6,124,361 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
the School of Law $7.5 million to fund its construction in January 1982.
# Employment.
According to St. Mary's ABA-required disclosures, 60% of St. Mary's 2017 graduates found full-time long-term employment that required bar passage.
# Admissions and costs.
According to St. Mary's 2017 ABA-required disclosures, 1,339 people applied to enter in the fall of 2017. 63% of those applicants were accepted, and 34% of those admitted enrolled at the school. For students enrolling in the fall of 2017, the average LSAT score was 150, and the average GPA was 3.12.
The total cost of full-time attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at St. Mary's for the 2016–17 academic | 6,124,362 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
year was $56,994, of which tuition is $36,310. The total cost for part-time attendance is $44,654, of which tuition is $23,970.
# Programs.
The School of Law hosts the St. Mary's University Institute on World Legal Problems in Innsbruck, in the Tyrol region of Austria, which students have the opportunity to attend each summer. Currently under the direction of Professor Michael Ariens and Professor Mark Cochran, several prominent legal scholars have taught courses or lectured at the institute, including Chief Justice of the United States William Rehnquist, who returned for several summers, and Frank Höpfel, "ad litem" judge on the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. The | 6,124,363 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
2009 Distinguished Visiting Jurist was Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Alito.
The St. Mary's University School of Law Institute on Chinese Law and Business prepares law students for representing clients doing business with Chinese partners. Located each summer at Beihang University in Beijing, China, the Institute introduces students to the Chinese legal system and the instruments of international and domestic law governing cross-border sales of goods, protection of intellectual property and investments. Participants learn about the practical realities of doing business in China, as well as the dispute resolution mechanisms that play a large role in enforcing private agreements between | 6,124,364 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
enterprises in China and the United States. Most American students hold internships in leading law firms and corporate legal offices in Beijing during their participation in the program.
The School of Law offers many Judicial Internships to its students in conjunction with the following courts:
- The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit;
- The United States District Court for the Western District of Texas;
- The United States Magistrate Court for the Western District of Texas;
- The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Texas;
- The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; and
- The Texas Fourth Court of Appeals.
In addition, students from St. Mary's University | 6,124,365 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
often participate in three judicial internship programs in Austin operated under the supervision of the University of Texas School of Law. Those internships are with:
- The Texas Supreme Court;
- Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; and
- The Texas Third Court of Appeals.
# Centers.
The Center for Terrorism Law aims to address "current and potential legal issues related to terrorism in light of the challenge of achieving and maintaining a proper balance between global security and civil justice." It recently secured a $1 million U.S. Department of Defense appropriation to study "Homeland Defense and Civil Support Threat Information Collection." This grant was conditioned upon "independent information | 6,124,366 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
gathering [by the Center] to compile and study all of the various state legislation that has been enacted (particularly since 9/11) related to how various state governments have chosen to balance the issue of increased security concerns and the protection of civil liberties." The Center is directed by Professor of Law Jeffrey Addicott .
The Center for International Legal Studies developed following the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the establishment of the North American Development Bank in San Antonio. The program was created to develop relationships with foreign universities and conduct public service outreach in the Mexico-U.S. border area. Through course | 6,124,367 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
offerings, overseas programs, faculty and student exchanges, and other activities, the Center offers extensive exposure to comparative and international law.
The Center for Legal and Social Justice
The Center for Legal and Social Justice permits students to act as the attorney of record for indigent clients who cannot find legal help elsewhere. It offers three clinical programs to students: the Civil Justice Clinic; the Immigration and Human Rights Clinic; the Criminal Justice Clinic.
The Center for Legal and Social Justice also houses the School of Law’s Pro Bono Program for which students may participate by volunteering in the community, including the Identification Recovery Program. Through | 6,124,368 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
the ID Recovery Program, students help those individuals without the means to obtain recovery of their identification credentials retrieve them—often at no cost to the individual.
In addition, the Center for Legal and Social Justice recently partnered with the University of Texas School of Law Richard and Ginni Mithoff Pro Bono Program to launch the San Antonio Gender Affirmation Project. The inaugural clinic was held April 20, 2019, at The Center — San Antonio Pride Center. Students from both of the law schools organized the clinic, with community stakeholders. The clinic was the culmination of the work of the volunteer attorneys, student attorney supervisors, local media, student volunteers, | 6,124,369 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
and director of The Center, among others. The clinic—thought a success—is expected to be continued in subsequent semesters.
# Facilities.
The Sarita Kenedy East Law Library is the largest legal information center in San Antonio and the surrounding area. A federal depository, the Library's collection consists of print, microfilm, and multimedia items totaling over 400,000 volumes (or equivalent). The facility includes two large reading rooms and shelving spaces, two computer labs, a Rare Book Room, an Alumni Room (for reading and receptions), 17 conference rooms (or group studies), 136 study carrels, three media/instruction classrooms, and three copy/printing centers. There is a popular reading | 6,124,370 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
area in the library with popular magazines and newspapers. There is also a student lounge for breaks and snacks. The library also houses the law review offices of the "St. Mary's Law Journal" and "". In addition, the library is home to the Office of Career Services.
In 2006, the Courtroom at St. Mary's underwent a $1 million renovation. The modernization project included the installation of information technology tools, which mirror that of the courtrooms in the Bexar County Courthouse. The Courtroom seats 300 and features interchangeable furniture and fixture configurations, suiting the needs of either appellate or trial proceedings. The full Texas Supreme Court, an en banc panel of Texas | 6,124,371 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Courts of Appeals, and a panel of judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit have presided over mock proceedings in the Moot Courtroom.
# Publications.
The School of Law is home to three legal periodicals. The "St. Mary's Law Journal" is the flagship journal. It is produced by the students of St. Mary's University School of Law. The "Journal" was founded in 1969 as a "practitioner's journal." In the last five years, the "Journal" has ranked as high as #45 and as low as #55 for citations by courts out of 1,659 law reviews in the nation.
Among the authors who have published in the "St. Mary's Law Journal" are William H. Rehnquist, former Chief Justice of the United States; | 6,124,372 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Carla Hills, then a member of the President Gerald Ford's Cabinet; Father F. Darin, S.J., a former member of the House Watergate Committee; Broadus A. Spivey, President of the State Bar of Texas; and numerous Justices of the Texas Supreme Court and Courts of Appeals.
In 2011, the "St. Mary's Law Journal" began producing the "St. Mary's Journal on Legal Malpractice & Ethics", which is produced annually by the members of the "Journal". This topic-specific journal addresses legal malpractice and ethics issues that impact the daily work of legal practitioners. To this effort, the St. Mary's Law Journal also hosts an annual Symposium on legal malpractice and ethics issues.
The School of Law is | 6,124,373 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
also home to "". This topic-specific law review focuses exclusively on legal issues that impact minorities across the world. "The Scholar's" inaugural issue was published in 1999. "The Scholar" is currently ranked as the third most cited out of 44 minority issues law journals.
# Advocacy programs.
St. Mary's is home to several external advocacy teams: Mock Trial, Moot Court, Arbitration, and Negotiation. Since the year 2000, the Moot Court program has brought St. Mary’s two state championships, numerous regional championships, two national finalist rankings, and two national championships in advocacy. St. Mary’s students have been individually recognized as well, receiving numerous brief and | 6,124,374 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
advocacy awards, including Best Brief at a National competition (twice), Best Brief in the State of Texas, and Best Advocate in the state (twice), region (twice), and nation (twice).
The St. Mary's Moot Court team was the 2010 national champions of the Civil Rights and Liberties Moot Court Competition (CRAL). Marian Reilly, a St. Mary's student, was recognized for the second year in a row as the Best Brief Writer. Trevor Hall, another St. Mary's student, was awarded the Best Advocate Award for the final round.
The Black Law Student Association's Mock Trial Team won the Rocky Mountain Region Thurgood Marshall Mock Trial in 2008–2009, and were regional finalists in the 2010 competition.
The | 6,124,375 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
School of Law has hosted a variety of advocacy competitions. Recently, the School of Law hosted the 2010 Lone Star Classic, an annual invitational mock trial tournament open to ABA-accredited law schools nationwide. Additionally, the School of Law recently hosted the National Finals of the Arbitration Competition, conducted by the ABA Law Student Division and the National Arbitration Forum.
# Deans.
Nine individuals have held the title of dean:
- 1927-1938, Anton N. Moursund
- 1938-1942, Henry B. Dieleman
- 1946-1978, Ernest A. Raba
- 1978-1989, James N. Castleberry, Jr.
- 1989-1998, Barbara Bader Aldave
- 1998-2007, Robert William "Bill" Piatt
- 2007-2014, Charles E. Cantú
- 2014–2019, | 6,124,376 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Stephen M. Sheppard
- 2019–Present, Vincent R. Johnson
# Notable alumni.
## Judiciary.
- David Berchelmann, J. D. 1973, Judge of two state district courts and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; lawyer in his native San Antonio
- Elma Salinas Ender, J.D. 1978, first Hispanic woman to serve on a state district court in Texas; Judge of the 341st Judicial District in Laredo from 1983 until her retirement in 2012
- David Alan Ezra, J.D. 1972, District Judge, United States District Court for the District of Hawaii
- Julio A. Garcia, J.D., District Attorney in Laredo, 1980–1988
- Paul W. Green, J.D. 1977, Justice, Texas Supreme Court
- Thad Heartfield, J.D. 1965, Chief Judge, United States | 6,124,377 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
District Court for the Eastern District of Texas
- Kathleen Cardone, J.D. 1979, District Judge, United States District for the Western District of Texas
- Barbara Hervey, J.D. 1979, Place 7 judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; first elected in 2000
- Julie Kocurek, J.D. 1990, presiding judge of the 390th District Court in Travis County, Texas.
- Marina Marmolejo, J.D. 1996, District Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas
- Bert Richardson, J.D., Place 3 judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, first elected in 2014
- Tom Rickhoff, J. D. Texas state district court, appeals court, and probate court judge; former St. Mary's faculty member
- Rose | 6,124,378 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Spector, J.D. First woman elected, in 1992, to serve as a Justice of the Texas Supreme Court
- Nelson W. Wolff, J.D. 1966, Judge, Bexar County Court, 2001–2018, Mayor of San Antonio, Texas (June 1, 1991 – June 1, 1995), Former Texas State Senator for Texas's 26th Senate District (1973–1975), Former Texas State Representative from Bexar County (1971–1973)
- Kevin Patrick Yeary, J.D. 1991, Place 4 judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; first elected in 2014
## Elected officials.
- Carter Casteel, J.D. 1985, Former Texas State Representative for Texas's 73rd House District; Former County Judge of Comal County
- John Cornyn, J.D. 1977, U.S. Senator from Texas since 2002; Senate Minority | 6,124,379 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Whip since 2013; Former Justice of the Texas Supreme Court; 49th Attorney General of Texas (1999–2002)
- Michael McCaul, J.D. 1987, U.S. Representative from Texas's 10th Congressional District
- Glenn Hegar, M.A. and J.D. 1997, Texas State Senator 2007–2014; Member of the Texas House from 2003–2007; elected Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts in 2014 State General Election
- Carlos Uresti, J.D. 1992, Former Texas State Senator for Texas's 19th Senate District
- Kika de la Garza, J.D. 1952, Former U.S. Representative for Texas's 15th Congressional District, former Chairman of House Agriculture Committee, Former Texas State Representative
- Blake Farenthold, J.D. 1989, U.S. Representative | 6,124,380 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
for Texas's 27th Congressional District
- Charlie Gonzalez, J.D. 1972, Former U.S. Representative for Texas's 20th Congressional District
- Henry B. Gonzalez, J.D. 1943, Former U.S. Representative for Texas's 20th Congressional District; Former Chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services
- Brooks Landgraf, J.D. 2008, Incoming Texas State Representative from Odessa
- Michael McCaul, J.D. 1987, U.S. Representative for Texas's 10th Congressional District; Chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security
- Scott McInnis, J.D. 1980, Former U.S. Representative from Colorado's 3rd congressional district
- Joe Nixon, J.D. 1982, Former Texas State Representative from Houston (1995–2007)
- | 6,124,381 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
Walter Thomas Price, IV, J.D., Texas State Representative for Texas's 87th House District
- Alan Schoolcraft, J.D. 1978, Former Texas State Representative from San Antonio
- John H. Shields, J.D. 1988, Former Texas State Representative from San Antonio
- Stuart Bowen, J.D. 1991, Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction
- Tom Corbett, J.D. 1975, 46th Governor of Pennsylvania (2011–2015), 46th Attorney General of Pennsylvania (2005–2011), Former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania
- Glenn Hegar, M.A. and J.D. 1997, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts since January 2, 2015.
- Peter Kinder, J.D. 1979, 46th Lieutenant Governor of Missouri
- Art Martinez de Vara, | 6,124,382 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
J.D., M.A. 2007, Founder and Mayor of Von Ormy, Texas
- Rolando Pablos, J.D. 1998, 111th Texas Secretary of State
- Pete Saenz, J. D., Mayor of Laredo, Texas since November 12, 2014
## Other.
- Hayden C. Covington, J.D. 1933, Legal Counsel for the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania (has argued many cases Before the U.S. Supreme Court)
- Charles Fincher, J.D. 1971, American cartoonist ("Thadeus & Weez")
- Mario G. Obledo, LL.B. 1960, co-founder of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund
- Chris Marrou, J.D. 2007, former news anchor for KENS-TV
- Jared Woodfill, J.D. 1993, Houston attorney and former Chairman of the Republican Party for Harris County, Texas
# | 6,124,383 |
7542058 | St. Mary's University School of Law | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=St.%20Mary's%20University%20School%20of%20Law | St. Mary's University School of Law
State
- Pete Saenz, J. D., Mayor of Laredo, Texas since November 12, 2014
## Other.
- Hayden C. Covington, J.D. 1933, Legal Counsel for the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania (has argued many cases Before the U.S. Supreme Court)
- Charles Fincher, J.D. 1971, American cartoonist ("Thadeus & Weez")
- Mario G. Obledo, LL.B. 1960, co-founder of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund
- Chris Marrou, J.D. 2007, former news anchor for KENS-TV
- Jared Woodfill, J.D. 1993, Houston attorney and former Chairman of the Republican Party for Harris County, Texas
# External links.
- St. Mary's Sarita Kenedy East Law Library Website
- St. Mary's Law Journal Website | 6,124,384 |
7542147 | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The%20Abbey,%20Aston%20Abbotts | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts
The Abbey, Aston Abbotts
The Abbey, Aston Abbotts is a country house in Buckinghamshire, England. The house derived its name from being a property of St. Albans Abbey in the Middle Ages, and it belonged to the Dormer family from the Dissolution of the Monasteries until the early 19th century. While in their ownership the house was almost continuously tenanted, and it was altered in a piecemeal way as a result. In the early 20th century it was a secondary seat of the Spencer family of Coles Hall. It was the family home for Captain Harold and Mrs Beatrice (née Shaw) Morton in 1923 and sold in 1989 after their deaths. It is now an L-shaped house with a plain, mildly neo-Classical, south front of | 6,124,385 |
7542147 | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The%20Abbey,%20Aston%20Abbotts | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts
c.1800, masking a medieval hall and dining-room, and Queen Anne drawing-room at W. end; the smaller west wing is Elizabethan.
There has been a property at the location since before the Domesday Book. Although the Abbey has never been an ecclesiastical building, it was so named having been built on land confiscated from the Abbotts of St. Albans by Henry VIII.
The property has had some illustrious owners including the Duke of Buckingham, Sir James Clark Ross, the polar explorer who gave his name to many geographical features in the Antarctic, such as the Ross Ice Shelf, and President Benes of Czechoslovakia.
During the Second World War from 1940 to 1945 Dr Edvard Beneš, the exiled President | 6,124,386 |
7542147 | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The%20Abbey,%20Aston%20Abbotts | The Abbey, Aston Abbotts
ark Ross, the polar explorer who gave his name to many geographical features in the Antarctic, such as the Ross Ice Shelf, and President Benes of Czechoslovakia.
During the Second World War from 1940 to 1945 Dr Edvard Beneš, the exiled President of Czechoslovakia, stayed at the Abbey in Aston Abbotts. During this period the Morton family moved to the Chauffeur's Cottage. The two families became the best of friends, Major Morton being invested as a Commander in the Order of the White Lion (Order of the White Lion, third class), by the President in recognition.
In the gardens of the Abbey there is a lake with two islands, named after the Ross expedition's ships HMS "Erebus" and HMS "Terror". | 6,124,387 |
7542175 | Klinča Sela | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klinča%20Sela | Klinča Sela
Klinča Sela
Klinča Sela is a municipality in Zagreb County, Croatia. According to the 2001 census, there are 4,927 inhabitants. | 6,124,388 |
7542164 | Little Jimmy | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Little%20Jimmy | Little Jimmy
Little Jimmy
Little Jimmy, originally titled Jimmy, was a newspaper comic strip created by Jimmy Swinnerton. With a publication history from February 14, 1904, to April 27, 1958, it was one of the first continuing features and one of the longest running.
# Characters and story.
The title character was a little boy who was constantly forgetting what he was supposed to do and ended up getting into trouble. As comics historian Don Markstein described:
The strip first appeared sporadically in" The New York Journal". It soon became a regular in the Sunday comics section and was picked up as a feature in other newspapers owned by William Randolph Hearst. When King Features Syndicate was created | 6,124,389 |
7542164 | Little Jimmy | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Little%20Jimmy | Little Jimmy
in 1915, "Little Jimmy" went into nationwide syndication. In 1920, a daily strip was added and ran until the late 1930s. The Sunday strip continued until Swinnerton retired in 1958.
Markstein noted that Swinnerton "drew his strip in a clear, open style, unlike most cartoonists of his time. In this, he anticipated dominant styles of the 20th century, less crowded and more easily read — quite appropriate for newsprint production, where the printing isn't always as clear as it should be."
The Sunday page included several toppers over the course of the strip: "Mr. Jack", a revival of a previous Swinnerton strip (January 24, 1926 - 1935), "Li'l Ole Orvie" and "Oh, Yeah?" (both 1935-1937), and "Funny | 6,124,390 |
7542164 | Little Jimmy | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Little%20Jimmy | Little Jimmy
— quite appropriate for newsprint production, where the printing isn't always as clear as it should be."
The Sunday page included several toppers over the course of the strip: "Mr. Jack", a revival of a previous Swinnerton strip (January 24, 1926 - 1935), "Li'l Ole Orvie" and "Oh, Yeah?" (both 1935-1937), and "Funny Films" (November 1943 - 1944).
# Animation.
Little Jimmy appeared in silent film animation and later in the 1936 Betty Boop film "Betty Boop and Little Jimmy".
# Legacy.
Little Jimmy Camp in the Angeles National Forest, near Los Angeles, California, is named after the comic strip in honor of Swinnerton, who once stayed there.
# External links.
- Coulton Waugh: "The Comics" | 6,124,391 |
7542178 | Jakovlje | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jakovlje | Jakovlje
Jakovlje
Jakovlje is a municipality in Croatia, in Zagreb County. According to the 2011 census there are 3,930 inhabitants, a majority of which are Croats. The municipality consists of three settlements: Igrišće, Jakovlje and Kraljev Vrh.
# Notable people.
- Ivan Vrhovec, Sports Journalist | 6,124,392 |
7542148 | Dubravica, Zagreb County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dubravica,%20Zagreb%20County | Dubravica, Zagreb County
Dubravica, Zagreb County
Dubravica is a municipality in Zagreb County, Croatia. According to the 2001 census, there are 1,586 inhabitants, absolute majority of which are Croats.
# Geography.
Dubravica municipality is located in the northwestern part of Zagreb County.
From the north it borders with the Krapina-Zagorje County and Municipality Kraljevec na Sutli, the Municipality of Luka and the city of Zaprešić, the Southeast Pušća Municipality, on the south by the Municipality of Marija Gorica, while the west washes the Sutla river where is the border with Slovenia.
In the west, the municipality covers a large part of the fertile valley, and its eastern parts are picturesque gentle hills | 6,124,393 |
7542148 | Dubravica, Zagreb County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dubravica,%20Zagreb%20County | Dubravica, Zagreb County
of Zagorje and Prigorje.
# Origin of name.
The name Dubravica itself originates from an oak forest "Dubrava", which was once covered the entire area, and even today it is not uncommon to find a typical forest plants such as wood anemone, or saffron, and the occasional oak tree in the meadows in the valley of the river Sutla.
# Settlements.
- Bobovec Rozganski
- Donji Čemehovec
- Dubravica
- Kraj Gornji
- Lugarski Breg
- Lukavec Sutlanski
- Pologi
- Prosinec
- Rozga
- Vučilčevo
## Austro-hungarian 1910 census.
According to the 1910 census, municipality of Dubravica had 2,448 inhabitants, which were linguistically and religiously declared as this:
# Notable people from Dubravica.
- | 6,124,394 |
7542148 | Dubravica, Zagreb County | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dubravica,%20Zagreb%20County | Dubravica, Zagreb County
tes from an oak forest "Dubrava", which was once covered the entire area, and even today it is not uncommon to find a typical forest plants such as wood anemone, or saffron, and the occasional oak tree in the meadows in the valley of the river Sutla.
# Settlements.
- Bobovec Rozganski
- Donji Čemehovec
- Dubravica
- Kraj Gornji
- Lugarski Breg
- Lukavec Sutlanski
- Pologi
- Prosinec
- Rozga
- Vučilčevo
## Austro-hungarian 1910 census.
According to the 1910 census, municipality of Dubravica had 2,448 inhabitants, which were linguistically and religiously declared as this:
# Notable people from Dubravica.
- Pavao Štoos, a Croatian poet, priest and a revivalist, born in Dubravica | 6,124,395 |
7542154 | Dugo Selo | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dugo%20Selo | Dugo Selo
Dugo Selo
Dugo Selo is a town in Zagreb County, Croatia.
# Geography.
Dugo Selo (lit. "Long Village") is a 20 km drive from Zagreb city centre.
The town covers an area of 51 km² and it consists of numerous settlements. The summit of the hill Martin Breg is situated in the northern part of the town. Most neighborhoods of Dugo Selo are located on the Martin Breg slopes.
Dugo Selo is usually considered an exurb of Zagreb. It is also a part of Zagreb metropolitan area.
## Transportation.
The railway lines from Zagreb, to Koprivnica and to Novska connect to each other at a major railway station, which is located in the southern part of town. All three lines are part of Pan-European Corridors | 6,124,396 |
7542154 | Dugo Selo | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dugo%20Selo | Dugo Selo
Vb and X respectively.
The main thoroughfare of Dugo Selo is Ž3034 county road (Zagreb-Križevci), an east-west heavily travelled two-lane road. Because of the proximity, a substantial amount of inhabitants commute to Zagreb, thereby creating congestion during peak hours. The congestion on the Dugo Selo's part of the route is mild. The Ž3034 used to be classified as D41 state road before the D10 expressway was built.
# Demographics.
In the 2011 census, the Town of Dugo Selo has a total population of 17,466, in the following settlements:
- Andrilovec, population 286
- Donje Dvorišće, population 188
- Dugo Selo, population 10,453
- Kopčevec, population 1,093
- Kozinščak, population 1,345
- | 6,124,397 |
7542154 | Dugo Selo | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dugo%20Selo | Dugo Selo
Leprovica, population 254
- Lukarišće, population 1,020
- Mala Ostrna, population 325
- Prozorje, population 521
- Puhovo, population 710
- Velika Ostrna, population 1,271
# Administration.
Town government, court, police, health-service, post office are the part of infrastructure of Dugo Selo.
Dugo Selo has a misdemeanor court, a municipal court, a police station, a hospital and a post office.
Its post code is 10370.
# History.
In the late 19th and early 20th century, Dugo Selo was a district capital in the Zagreb County of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia.
# Economy.
Ever since the beginning of the 20th century main occupation of this region has been agriculture. Today in addition | 6,124,398 |
7542154 | Dugo Selo | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dugo%20Selo | Dugo Selo
to land cultivation people also grow wine and fruit on the slopes of Martin Breg. The very beginning of the century also saw the development of industrial and trade activities. At that time brick-making and wood-processing facilities were first built, followed by bake-house and metal processing plant. The class of tradesmen and merchants emerged and these activities – trade, services and hospitality industry – remain the most important to this day. Making of bread, cakes and pastries (“Mipel”) is the most outstanding, together with individual agricultural production.
# Monuments and sightseeings.
There are many scenic spots in and around Dugo Selo. Martin Breg and the surrounding area is the | 6,124,399 |
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