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projected-06901340-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006%20Progressive%20Democrats%20leadership%20election | 2006 Progressive Democrats leadership election | References | The Progressive Democrats leadership election, 2006 began on 7 September 2006 when Mary Harney resigned as leader of the Progressive Democrats. In spite of speculation earlier in the year surrounding her position as leader, Harney's announcement surprised many. She had been leader of the party since 1993. | Category:2006 elections in the Republic of Ireland
Category:2006 in Irish politics
Category:Progressive Democrats
Category:Political party leadership elections in the Republic of Ireland
Category:Indirect elections
Progressive Democrats leadership election | [] | [
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projected-56569318-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Introduction | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | [
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projected-56569318-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Construction and design | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | The Imperial German Navy ordered 12 large torpedo boats (Große Torpedoboote) as part of the fiscal year 1910 shipbuilding programme, with one half-flotilla of six ships ordered from Germaniawerft and the other six ships from AG Vulcan. The two groups of torpedo boats were of basically similar layout but differed slightly in detailed design, with a gradual evolution of design and increase in displacement with each year's orders.
G196 was long overall and between perpendiculars, with a beam of and a draught of . The ship displaced design and deep load.
Three coal-fired and one oil-fired water-tube boiler fed steam at a pressure of to two sets of direct-drive steam turbines. The ship's machinery was rated at giving a design speed of , with members of the class reaching a speed of during sea trials. 145 tons of coal and 76 tons of oil fuel were carried, giving an endurance of at , at or at .
The ship was armed with two 8.8 cm L/45 guns, one on the forecastle and one aft. Four single 50 cm (19.7 in) torpedo tubes were fitted, with two on the ship's beam in the gap between the forecastle and the ship's bridge which were capable of firing straight ahead, one between the ship's two funnels, and one aft of the funnels. The ship had a crew of 84 officers and men.
G196 was laid down at Germaniawerft's Kiel shipyard as Yard number 156 and was launched on 25 May 1911 and completed on 2 October 1911.
The ship was extensively modified in 1923, with the forecastle being lengthened to behind the first funnel, the bridge structure and funnels being modified. The boilers were replaced by three oil-fired boilers, with power dropping to and speed to . Two 10.5 cm L/45 guns replaced the 8.8 cm guns, while the torpedo armament remained four 50 cm tubes, but arranged in two single and one twin mount. By the Second World War, her torpedo tubes had been removed, while two 20 mm anti-aircraft guns had been added. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Service | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | On commissioning, G196 joined the 2nd Half Flotilla of the 1st Torpedo Flotilla, and remained part of the 2nd Half Flotilla in 1914. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | First World War | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | On 28 August 1914, the British Harwich Force, supported by light cruisers and battlecruisers of the Grand Fleet, carried out a raid towards Heligoland with the intention of destroying patrolling German torpedo boats. The German defensive patrols around Heligoland consisted of one flotilla (the 1st Torpedo Flotilla) of 12 modern torpedo boats forming an outer patrol line about North and West of Heligoland, with an inner line of older torpedo boats of the 3rd Minesweeping Division at about . Four German light cruisers and another flotilla of torpedo boats (the 5th Torpedo Boat Flotilla) was in the vicinity of Heligoland. G196, a member of the 2nd Half Flotilla of the 1st Torpedo Flotilla, formed part of the outer screen of torpedo boats. At about 06:00 on 28 August, , another member of the outer screen reported spotting the periscope of a submarine. As a result, the 5th Torpedo Boat Flotilla was ordered out to hunt the hostile submarine. At 07:57 G194 was fired on by British warships, and soon G194 and G196 were retreating towards Heligoland, pursued by four British destroyers. The 5th Flotilla and the old torpedo boats of the 3rd Minesweeping Division also came under British fire, and were only saved by the intervention of the German cruisers and , with the torpedo boats , and T111 damaged. The Torpedo boat , leader of the 1st Flotilla, trying to return to Heligoland on hearing gunfire, ran into the midst of the Harwich force and was sunk. The intervention of the supporting British forces resulted in the sinking of the German cruisers , and . The British light cruiser and destroyers , and were badly damaged but safely returned to base. G196 was undamaged.
On 11 September 1915, the German cruisers and set out from Wilhelmshaven to lay a minefield off the Swarte Bank in the North Sea, with the High Seas Fleet sailing in support. On the return trip, the High Seas Fleet ran into a newly laid British minefield. G196, which was off the port beam of the battleship , struck one of the mines and was badly damaged, being towed into port by another destroyer.
In 1918 G196 joined an Escort Flotilla, and she was renamed T196 on 22 February 1918. She remained a member of the 1st Half-flotilla of the 1st Escort Flotilla at the end of the war. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Between the wars | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | After the end of the First World War, the scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet at Scapa Flow on 21 June 1919 and the Treaty of Versailles left Germany with a small navy of obsolete warships. The Versailles treaty limited the German Navy's torpedo forces to 16 destroyers and 16 torpedo boats, with only twelve of each in active service, with replacement of the existing ships not allowed until 15 years after they were launched. Replacements could not exceed 800 t displacement for destroyers and 200 t for torpedo boats. T196 was retained as a destroyer under the treaty, and remained in active service in the new Reichsmarine. In 1923 T196 was allocated to the North Sea station. T196 was modernised in 1923, but was still obsolete and in the 1930s was transferred to subsidiary roles, being used for training and as a Fleet Tender, and from 1938 as a minesweeper command ship. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Second World War | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | On the outbreak of the Second World War on 1 September 1939, T196 was the flagship of the Officer Commanding Minesweepers and was deployed in support on the German Invasion of Poland. On 4 September T196, along with the pre-dreadnought battleship and the old minesweeper Von der Groeben (formerly ), bombarded Westerplatte.
In late January 1945, the Germans began a mass evacuation of soldiers and civilians from East Prussia and Danzig, which were threatened by the advance of Soviet forces. On 10 February T196 and the torpedo recovery vessel TF19 were escorting the liner Steuben from Pillau, when the Soviet submarine S-13 torpedoed and sank Steuben. Only about 300 of the more than 3000 aboard could be saved. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Soviet Union | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | On 27 December 1945 T196 was transferred to the Soviet Union as a War Prize, named Pronzitelny () The ship joined the Soviet Baltic Fleet in February 1946 and was stricken for scrapping on 30 April 1949. | [] | [
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projected-56569318-009 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMS%20G196 | SMS G196 | Bibliography | SMS G196 was a S-138-class large torpedo boat of the Imperial German Navy. She was built by the Germaniawerft shipyard at Kiel between 1910 and 1911, and was launched on 25 May 1911, entering service later that year. She served throughout the First World War, taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight on 28 August 1914. She was renamed T196 in February 1918.
Post war, T196 served in the Weimar Republic's Reichsmarine, being rebuilt and modernised in 1923. She was still in service on the outbreak of the Second World War, taking part in the German Invasion of Poland at the start of the war and the evacuation of East Prussia towards the end of the war in Europe.
She survived the war, and was transferred to the Soviet Navy in 1945, and was renamed Pronzitelny. The ship was stricken in 1949. | Category:Torpedo boats of the Imperial German Navy
Category:World War I torpedo boats of Germany
Category:Ships built in Kiel
Category:1911 ships | [] | [
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projected-71476630-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalina%20San%20Mart%C3%ADn | Catalina San Martín | Introduction | Catalina San Martín (Lerma, July 28, 1896 - Tres Cantos, 2000) was a mayor of Rivas-Vaciamadrid (in Madrid, Spain) who held the position briefly during the time of The Second Spanish Republic. When she was appointed, she was a teacher at the municipal school. She can be considered the first mayor elected by universal suffrage in Spain. | [] | [
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projected-71476630-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalina%20San%20Mart%C3%ADn | Catalina San Martín | Career | Catalina San Martín (Lerma, July 28, 1896 - Tres Cantos, 2000) was a mayor of Rivas-Vaciamadrid (in Madrid, Spain) who held the position briefly during the time of The Second Spanish Republic. When she was appointed, she was a teacher at the municipal school. She can be considered the first mayor elected by universal suffrage in Spain. | After the proclamation of the Second Republic, a law was approved in December 1932 by which all the councillors were dismissed and a Management Commission of the City Council was created. Accidentally, the school teacher, Catalina San Martín López, was elected as president. The following year, in April 1933, municipal elections were held and she was elected mayor of the municipality. It is the only known case of a woman who, after having chaired one of these Management Committees, stood for election and was confirmed for the position by the polls. Her candidacy received a total of 204 votes, followed by three male candidates who received 201 votes each.
She is not known to have been a member of any party but various historians consider that it is very possible that she was close to the Partido Republicano Radical and the Unión Republicana Femenina, due to her friendship with Diego Martínez Barrio and her cordial relationship with Clara Campoamor.
During the Spanish Civil War, she was arrested by the Francoist police with her husband near Sedano. The fascists had orders to shoot her as soon as they stopped her and leave her in a ditch. Faced with the husband's refusal to allow his wife to get into the Francoist police car, they took a taxi and went to the corresponding offices in Burgos. There she was arrested and brought to justice. She spent a few days in a prison in the city, and finally a trial was held in which she was accused of joining the rebellion, one of the crimes included in the Military Code of the time. | [] | [
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projected-71476630-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalina%20San%20Mart%C3%ADn | Catalina San Martín | Final years | Catalina San Martín (Lerma, July 28, 1896 - Tres Cantos, 2000) was a mayor of Rivas-Vaciamadrid (in Madrid, Spain) who held the position briefly during the time of The Second Spanish Republic. When she was appointed, she was a teacher at the municipal school. She can be considered the first mayor elected by universal suffrage in Spain. | Finally, she was declared insane and disqualified from practicing her profession. In her husband's exact words, during the trial, she even stated that she did not recognize the legitimacy of the court derived from a coup d'état, and that she was indeed a Republican.
She spent the rest of her days in Madrid, with her husband and children. He died at the age of 101 years. | [] | [
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projected-71476630-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalina%20San%20Mart%C3%ADn | Catalina San Martín | References | Catalina San Martín (Lerma, July 28, 1896 - Tres Cantos, 2000) was a mayor of Rivas-Vaciamadrid (in Madrid, Spain) who held the position briefly during the time of The Second Spanish Republic. When she was appointed, she was a teacher at the municipal school. She can be considered the first mayor elected by universal suffrage in Spain. | Category:1896 births
Category:2000 deaths
Category:Spanish political people
Category:Spanish women in politics
Category:Spanish women activists
Category:Spanish centenarians
Category:Women centenarians | [] | [
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projected-71476640-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut%27s%20109th%20House%20of%20Representatives%20district | Connecticut's 109th House of Representatives district | Introduction | Connecticut's 109th House of Representatives district elects one member of the Connecticut House of Representatives. It encompasses parts of Danbury and has been represented by Democrat David Arconti since 2013. | [] | [
"Introduction"
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"Connecticut House of Representatives districts"
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projected-71476640-007 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut%27s%20109th%20House%20of%20Representatives%20district | Connecticut's 109th House of Representatives district | References | Connecticut's 109th House of Representatives district elects one member of the Connecticut House of Representatives. It encompasses parts of Danbury and has been represented by Democrat David Arconti since 2013. | 109 | [] | [
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projected-06901343-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchor%20Li%C3%B1%C3%A1n%20y%20Cisneros | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros | Introduction | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros (sometimes Melchor de Liñán y Cisneros) (December 19, 1629, Madrid – June 28, 1708, Lima, Peru) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima (1677–1708), Archbishop of La Plata o Charcas (1672–1675), Bishop of Popayán (1667–1672), and Bishop of Santa Marta (1664–1668). He also served as Viceroy of Peru from July 7, 1678, to November 20, 1681. | [] | [
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projected-06901343-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchor%20Li%C3%B1%C3%A1n%20y%20Cisneros | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros | Biography | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros (sometimes Melchor de Liñán y Cisneros) (December 19, 1629, Madrid – June 28, 1708, Lima, Peru) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima (1677–1708), Archbishop of La Plata o Charcas (1672–1675), Bishop of Popayán (1667–1672), and Bishop of Santa Marta (1664–1668). He also served as Viceroy of Peru from July 7, 1678, to November 20, 1681. | Melchor de Liñán y Cisneros was born in Madrid, Spain. He studied theology in the University of Alcalá de Henares, where he took his doctorate. Thereafter he was chaplain in Buitrago. He was also calificador (censor) of the Holy Office of the Inquisition. On October 6, 1664, Pope Alexander VII, appointed him Bishop of Santa Marta. In 1665, he was consecrated bishop by Antonio Sanz Lozano, Bishop of Cartagena.
On January 26, 1668, Pope Clement IX, appointed him Bishop of Popayán.
In 1671, he was sent as visitador (inspector) to Nuevo Reino de Granada in what is now Colombia because of the inaction of Diego de Villalba y Toledo, president of the Audiencia. He replaced Villabla in that position on June 2, 1671. At the same time he served as interim governor and captain general of Nuevo Reino de Granada. On February 8, 1672, Pope Clement X, appointed him Archbishop of La Plata o Charcas. On June 14, 1677, Pope Innocent XI appointed him Archbishop of Lima. On July 7, 1678, he was appointed viceroy of Peru serving until November 20, 1681. As viceroy, he improved the fortifications of the port of Callao to defend against attacks by Dutch filibusters. He repressed rebellions of the clergy, who were opposed to the nomination of prelates from Spain—the Franciscans in Cuzco and the Dominicans in Quito.
On the death of the Peruvian astronomer Doctor Francisco Ruiz Lozano, Viceroy Liñán y Cisneros (with the approval of the Crown) gave mathematics a permanent position in the University of San Marcos. Mathematics was attached to the chair of cosmography. Doctor Juan Ramón Koening, a Belgian by birth, was named to the chair.
As a reward for his services, the Spanish Crown granted Liñán y Cisneros the title of conde de la Puebla de los Valles. He wrote Ofensa y defensa de la libertad eclesiástica (Offense and Defence of Ecclesiastical Liberty). He died in Lima in 1708. | [] | [
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projected-06901343-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchor%20Li%C3%B1%C3%A1n%20y%20Cisneros | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros | Episcopal succession | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros (sometimes Melchor de Liñán y Cisneros) (December 19, 1629, Madrid – June 28, 1708, Lima, Peru) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima (1677–1708), Archbishop of La Plata o Charcas (1672–1675), Bishop of Popayán (1667–1672), and Bishop of Santa Marta (1664–1668). He also served as Viceroy of Peru from July 7, 1678, to November 20, 1681. | While bishop, he was the principal consecrator of: | [] | [
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projected-06901343-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melchor%20Li%C3%B1%C3%A1n%20y%20Cisneros | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros | External links and additional sources | Melchor Liñán y Cisneros (sometimes Melchor de Liñán y Cisneros) (December 19, 1629, Madrid – June 28, 1708, Lima, Peru) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Lima (1677–1708), Archbishop of La Plata o Charcas (1672–1675), Bishop of Popayán (1667–1672), and Bishop of Santa Marta (1664–1668). He also served as Viceroy of Peru from July 7, 1678, to November 20, 1681. | Short biography
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
(for Chronology of Bishops)
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Category:17th-century Roman Catholic bishops in Bolivia
Category:17th-century Roman Catholic bishops in Peru
Category:Roman Catholic archbishops of Lima
Category:Roman Catholic bishops of Santa Marta
Category:Roman Catholic bishops of Popayán
Category:Roman Catholic archbishops of Sucre | [] | [
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projected-56569329-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%20Shafee%20Elsheikh | El Shafee Elsheikh | Introduction | El Shafee Elsheikh (born 16 July 1988), known as Jihadi Ringo, is a Sudanese Islamist terrorist who took part in atrocities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS and IS) as one of the four so-called Jihadi Beatles. He was found guilty of eight charges of hostage taking and murder by an American court in 2022 and later sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. | [] | [
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projected-56569329-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%20Shafee%20Elsheikh | El Shafee Elsheikh | Early life | El Shafee Elsheikh (born 16 July 1988), known as Jihadi Ringo, is a Sudanese Islamist terrorist who took part in atrocities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS and IS) as one of the four so-called Jihadi Beatles. He was found guilty of eight charges of hostage taking and murder by an American court in 2022 and later sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. | Born in Sudan, Elsheikh spent his youth in London, England. The Daily Telegraph reports he was a follower of a local football team, Queen's Park Rangers, and dreamed of joining the team when he grew up. | [] | [
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"People convicted of murder by the United States federal government",
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projected-56569329-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%20Shafee%20Elsheikh | El Shafee Elsheikh | Terrorist activity | El Shafee Elsheikh (born 16 July 1988), known as Jihadi Ringo, is a Sudanese Islamist terrorist who took part in atrocities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS and IS) as one of the four so-called Jihadi Beatles. He was found guilty of eight charges of hostage taking and murder by an American court in 2022 and later sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. | In 2014 and 2015, ISIL held dozens of European and North American captives, and the brutal conditions of their detention were widely reported. Four English-speaking terrorists played a central role in the brutality. Their identities were initially either not known or security officials did not make their identities known to the public. Due to their British accents, their captives dubbed them The Beatles, with Mohammed Emwazi, the most well-known of the group, having been dubbed "Jihadi John". Later, Elsheikh was reported to have been one of the other three Beatles.
On 30 March 2017, Elsheikh and four other men were named as suspected terrorists, by the United States State Department, under Executive Order 13224. This Executive Order signed by US President George W. Bush, shortly after al Qaeda's attacks on 9/11, allowed the State Department to bar US citizens, US financial institutions, and other US corporations, from having any financial transactions with designated individuals.
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) captured Elsheikh, and his friend Alexanda Kotey, on 24 January 2018 as he was fleeing from the collapse of ISIL, the short-lived "Islamic State". The pair were reported to have been trying to blend in with genuine civilian refugees, fleeing the collapse of the last ISIL enclaves. | [] | [
"Terrorist activity"
] | [
"1988 births",
"British people imprisoned abroad",
"Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant members",
"Living people",
"People extradited to the United States",
"People extradited from Iraq",
"People convicted of kidnapping",
"People convicted of murder by the United States federal government",
"Sudane... |
projected-56569329-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%20Shafee%20Elsheikh | El Shafee Elsheikh | Prosecution | El Shafee Elsheikh (born 16 July 1988), known as Jihadi Ringo, is a Sudanese Islamist terrorist who took part in atrocities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS and IS) as one of the four so-called Jihadi Beatles. He was found guilty of eight charges of hostage taking and murder by an American court in 2022 and later sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. | The Independent reported that the United Kingdom government was considering agreeing that Kotey and Elsheikh could be transferred to the Guantanamo detention camps. Detention in Guantanamo could be indefinite detention, without charge, if transferred to US custody. For a civilian trial, they would likely be detained at the Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, if they were convicted.
Another option under consideration is trial at the International Court in The Hague. According to The Independent, the UK government would first strip Kotey and Elsheikh of UK citizenship, prior to agreeing to transfer to The Hague.
The Guardian quoted Tobias Ellwood, the UK Minister of Defence, who argued that transfer to Guantanamo was inappropriate. In a face-to-face interview with Jenan Moussa of Al Aan TV in Kobanî, Syria, at the beginning of April 2018 Elsheikh said he was interviewed by US and SDF officials, but not by UK officials.
On 7 October 2020, Elsheikh and Alexanda Kotey were brought to the United States to face charges of beheading western hostages. Elsheikh denied being a member of "the Beatles" but admitted joining the ISIL terrorist group. On 14 April 2022, after a three week trial, he was found guilty of lethal hostage taking and conspiracy to commit murder and on 19 August 2022, was sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. Elsheikh plans to appeal his conviction.
On 24 September 2022, Elsheikh was transferred into the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons and designated to United States Penitentiary, Florence High. Some members of the victims of family expressed disappointment in the Bureau of Prisons for designating Elsheikh and Kotey to high-security penitentiaries instead of the federal supermax ADX Florence. David Spencer of the Center for Crime Prevention slammed the decision claiming it was a "soft" punishment for the actions of Elsheikh and Kotey. | [] | [
"Prosecution"
] | [
"1988 births",
"British people imprisoned abroad",
"Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant members",
"Living people",
"People extradited to the United States",
"People extradited from Iraq",
"People convicted of kidnapping",
"People convicted of murder by the United States federal government",
"Sudane... |
projected-56569329-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El%20Shafee%20Elsheikh | El Shafee Elsheikh | References | El Shafee Elsheikh (born 16 July 1988), known as Jihadi Ringo, is a Sudanese Islamist terrorist who took part in atrocities of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS and IS) as one of the four so-called Jihadi Beatles. He was found guilty of eight charges of hostage taking and murder by an American court in 2022 and later sentenced to eight life sentences without the possibility of parole. | Category:1988 births
Category:British people imprisoned abroad
Category:Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant members
Category:Living people
Category:People extradited to the United States
Category:People extradited from Iraq
Category:People convicted of kidnapping
Category:People convicted of murder by the United States federal government
Category:Sudanese Islamists | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"1988 births",
"British people imprisoned abroad",
"Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant members",
"Living people",
"People extradited to the United States",
"People extradited from Iraq",
"People convicted of kidnapping",
"People convicted of murder by the United States federal government",
"Sudane... |
projected-08555250-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Bactrocera%20species | List of Bactrocera species | Introduction | This is a list of species of fruit flies (Tephritidae) in the genus Bactrocera, as of 2019.
Bactrocera abbreviata (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera abdofuscata (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera abdolonginqua (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera abdomininigra Drew, 1989
Bactrocera abdonigella (Drew, 1866)
Bactrocera aberrans (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera abscondita (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera absidata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera abundans Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aceraglans White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera aceromata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera adamantea Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera aemula Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aenigmatica (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera aeroginosa (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera aethriobasis (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera affinibancroftii Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera affinidorsalis (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera affinis (Hardy, 1954)
Bactrocera aglaiae (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera aithogaster Drew, 1989
Bactrocera albistrigata (Meijere, 1911)
Bactrocera allwoodi (Drew, 1979)
Bactrocera alyxiae (May, 1953)
Bactrocera amarambalensis Drew, 2002
Bactrocera ampla (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera amplexa (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera amplexiseta (May, 1962)
Bactrocera andamanensis (Kapoor, 1971)
Bactrocera anfracta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera angusticostata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera angustifasciata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera anomala (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera anthracina (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera antigone (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera apicofuscans White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera apiconigroscutella Drew, 2002
Bactrocera apicopicta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera aquila (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera aquilonis (May, 1965)
Bactrocera arecae (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera assita Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aterrima (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera atra (Malloch, 1938)
Bactrocera atrabifasciata Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera atramentata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera atrifemur Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera atriliniellata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aurantiaca (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera aurea (May, 1952)
Bactrocera avittata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera balagawii Drew, 2011
Bactrocera bancroftii (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera banneri White, 1999
Bactrocera barringtoniae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera batemani Drew, 1989
Bactrocera beckerae (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera bellisi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bhutaniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera biarcuata (Walker, 1865)
Bactrocera bidentata (May, 1963)
Bactrocera bifasciata (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera biguttata (Bezzi, 1922)
Bactrocera bimaculata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera binhduongiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bipustulata Bezzi, 1914
Bactrocera bitungiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bivittata Lin & Wang, 2005
Bactrocera blairiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera brachycera (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera breviaculeus (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera brevistriata (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera bruneiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera brunnea (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera brunneola White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera bryoniae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera buinensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera bullata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera bullifera (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera buloloensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera cacuminata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera caledoniensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera caliginosa (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera calophylli (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera captiva Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera carambolae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera carbonaria (Hendel, 1927)
Bactrocera careofascia Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera caryeae (Kapoor, 1971)
Bactrocera ceylanica Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera cheesmanae (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera chettalli David & Ranganath, 2016
Bactrocera cibodasae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera cinnabaria Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera cinnamea Drew, 1989
Bactrocera circamusae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera citima (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera clarifemur Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera cogani White 2006
Bactrocera cognata (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera collita Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera commensurata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera commina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera confluens (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera congener Drew, 1989
Bactrocera connecta Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera consectorata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera contermina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera contigua Drew, 1989
Bactrocera continua (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera coracina (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera correcta (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera costalis (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera curreyi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera curtivitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera curvifer (Walker, 1864)
Bactrocera curvipennis (Froggatt, 1909)
Bactrocera curvosterna Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera dapsiles Drew, 1989
Bactrocera daruensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera decumana (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera decurtans (May, 1965)
Bactrocera diallagma Drew, 1989
Bactrocera diaphana (Hering, 1953)
Bactrocera digressa Radhakrishnan, 1999
Bactrocera diospyri Drew, 1989
Bactrocera dispar (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera dongnaiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel, 1912)
Bactrocera dorsaloides (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera dyscrita (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ebenea (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ektoalangiae Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera elongata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera endiandrae (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera enochra (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera epicharis (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera ernesti Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera erubescentis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera eurycosta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera exigua (May, 1958)
Bactrocera eximia Drew, 1989
Bactrocera expandens (Walker, 1859)
Bactrocera exspoliata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera facialis (Coquillett, 1909)
Bactrocera fagraea (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera fastigata Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera fergussoniensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fernandoi Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera finitima Drew, 1989
Bactrocera flavinotus (May, 1957)
Bactrocera flavipennis (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera flavoscutellata Lin & Wang, 2005
Bactrocera flavosterna Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera floresiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera frauenfeldi (Schiner, 1868)
Bactrocera froggatti (Bezzi, 1928)
Bactrocera fuliginus (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera fulvicauda (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera fulvifacies (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera fulvifemur Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera fulvoabdominalis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera fulvosterna Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera furcata David & Hancock 2017
Bactrocera furfurosa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera furvescens Drew, 1989
Bactrocera furvilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fuscalata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fuscitibia Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera fuscoformosa Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera fuscohumeralis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera fuscolobata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera fuscoptera Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera garciniae Bezzi, 1913
Bactrocera gnetum Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera gombokensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera grandifasciata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera grandistylus Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera halfordiae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera halmaherae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera hantanae Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera harrietensis Ramani & David, 2016
Bactrocera hastigerina (Hardy, 1954)
Bactrocera hispidula (May, 1958)
Bactrocera hollingsworthi Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera holtmanni (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera humilis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera hyalina (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera hypomelaina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera icelus (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera illusioscutellaris Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera impunctata (de Mejeire, 1914)
Bactrocera incompta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera inconspicua Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera inconstans Drew, 1989
Bactrocera indecora (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera indonesiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera infulata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera invisitata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera involuta (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera irvingiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ismayi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera jaceobancroftii Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera jarvisi (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera kalimantaniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera kanchanaburi Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera kandiensis (Drew & Hancock, 1994)
Bactrocera kelaena Drew, 1989
Bactrocera kinabalu Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera kirki (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera kohkongiae Leblanc, 2015
Bactrocera kraussi (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera kuniyoshii (Shiraki, 1968)
Bactrocera laithieuiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera lampabilis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera lata (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera lateritaenia Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera laticaudus (Hardy 1950)
Bactrocera laticosta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera latifrons (Hendel, 1915) - In 2016 found in Burundi, quickly investigated across the country, and found to have already spread to the entire country and possibly soon its neighbors.
Bactrocera latilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera latilineola Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera latissima Drew, 1989
Bactrocera limbifera (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera linduensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera lineata (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera lombokensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera longicornis Macquart, 1835
Bactrocera lucida (Munro, 1939)
Bactrocera luteola (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera maculigera Doleschall, 1858
Bactrocera makilingensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera malaysiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera mamaliae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera manskii (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera matsumurai (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera mayi (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera mcgregori (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera mediorufula Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera megaspilus (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera melania (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera melanogaster Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanoscutata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanothoracica Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanotus (Coquillett, 1909)
Bactrocera melas (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera melastomatos Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera memnonia (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera menanus (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera mendosa (May, 1958)
Bactrocera merapiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera mesomelas (Bezzi, 1908)
Bactrocera mesonotochra Drew, 1989
Bactrocera mimulus Drew, 1989
Bactrocera minax (Enderlein, 1920)
Bactrocera miniscula Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera minuta (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera moluccensis (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera montyanus (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera morobiensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera morula Drew, 1989
Bactrocera mucronis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera muiri (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera munroi (White, 1957)
Bactrocera murrayi (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera musae (Tryon, 1909)
Bactrocera mutabilis (May, 1952)
Bactrocera nanoarcuata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera nationigrotibialis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera naucleae Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera neoarecae Drew, 2002
Bactrocera neocheesmanae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera neocongnata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera neofulvicauda Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera neohumeralis (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera neonigrita (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera neonigrotibialis Drew 2002
Bactrocera neopropinqua Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera neoritsemai Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera neoxanthodes Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera nesiotes (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera nigella (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera nigra (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera nigrescens (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera nigrescentis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera nigricula (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera nigrifacia Zhang Ji & Chen, 2011
Bactrocera nigrifemorata Li & Wang, 2011
Bactrocera nigrita (Hardy, 1955)
Bactrocera nigrivenata (Munro, 1937)
Bactrocera nigrofemoralis White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera nigroscutata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera nigrotibialis (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera nigrovittata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera notatagena (May, 1953)
Bactrocera nothaphoebe Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera obfuscata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera oblineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera obliqua (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera obliquivenosa Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera obscura (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera obscurata (de Mejeire, 1911)
Bactrocera obscurivitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera occipitalis (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera ochracea Drew, 1989
Bactrocera ochroma Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera ochromarginis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ochrosiae (Malloch, 1942)
Bactrocera ochroventer Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera oleae (Rossi, 1790)
Bactrocera opacovitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera opiliae (Drew & Hardy, 1981)
Bactrocera osbeckiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera pacificae Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera pagdeni (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera pallescentis (Hardy, 1955)
Bactrocera pallida (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera paraarecae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera parabancroftii Drew, 2011
Bactrocera parabarringtoniae Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera paradiospyri Chen Zhou & Li, 2011
Bactrocera parafrauenfeldi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera parafroggatti Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera paralatissima Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paralimbifera Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paramusae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera paranigrita Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paraosbeckiae Drew 2002
Bactrocera paraverbascifoliae Drew, 2002
Bactrocera paraxanthodes Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera parvula (Hendel, 1912)
Bactrocera passiflorae (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera patula Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pectoralis (Walker, 1859)
Bactrocera pedestris (Bezzi, 1913)
Bactrocera pendleburyi (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera peneallwoodi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penebeckerae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penecognata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera penecorrecta Drew, 2002
Bactrocera penecostalis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penefurva Drew, 1989
Bactrocera peneobscura Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera penephaea Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera peninsularis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera pepisalae (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera perfusca (Aubertin, 1929)
Bactrocera perigrapha White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera perkinsi (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera pernigra Ito, 1983
Bactrocera peterseni (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera petila Drew, 1989
Bactrocera phaea (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera phaleriae (May, 1956)
Bactrocera picea (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera pictipennis Lin & Zeng 2011
Bactrocera pisinna Drew, 1989
Bactrocera popondettiensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera profunda Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera prolixa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera propedistincta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera propinqua (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera pruniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pseudobeckerae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pseudocucurbitae (White, 1999)
Bactrocera pseudodistincta (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera pseudoversicolor Drew, 2002
Bactrocera psidii (Froggatt, 1899)
Bactrocera pulchra Tryon, 1927
Bactrocera pusilla (Hardy, 1983)
Bactrocera pyrifoliae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera quadrata (May, 1963)
Bactrocera quadrisetosa (Bezzi, 1928)
Bactrocera quasiinfulata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera quasineonigrita Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera quasipropinqua Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera quasisilvicola Drew, 1989
Bactrocera raiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ramuensis Drew, 2011
Bactrocera ranganathi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera reclinata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera recurrens (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera redunca (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera repanda Drew, 1989
Bactrocera resima (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera retrorsa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera rhabdota Drew, 1989
Bactrocera ritsemai (Weyenbergh, 1869)
Bactrocera robertsi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera robiginosa (May, 1958)
Bactrocera romigae (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera rubigina (Wang & Zhao, 1989)
Bactrocera rufescens (May, 1967)
Bactrocera rufivitta Drew 2011
Bactrocera rufofuscula (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera russeola (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera rutengiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera rutila (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera samoae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera sapaensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera satanellus (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera seguyi (Hering, 1939)
Bactrocera selenophora Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera sembaliensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera setinervis (Malloch, 1938)
Bactrocera silvicola (May, 1962)
Bactrocera simulata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera speculifer (Walker, 1865)
Bactrocera speewahensis Fay & Hancock, 2006
Bactrocera splendida (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera strigata (Perkins, 1934)
Bactrocera sulawesiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera suliae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera sumbawaensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera superba Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera symplocos Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera syzygii White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera ttapahensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tenuifascia (May, 1965)
Bactrocera terminaliae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera terminifer (Walker, 1860)
Bactrocera ternatiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tetrachaeta (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera thailandica Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera thistletoni Drew, 1989
Bactrocera tigrina (May, 1953)
Bactrocera tillyardi (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera tinomiscii Drew, 1989
Bactrocera torresiae Huxam & Hancock, 2006
Bactrocera tortuosa White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera toxopeusi (Hering, 1953)
Bactrocera trifaria (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera trifasciata (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera trilineola Drew, 1989
Bactrocera trilobata Drew & Hancock, 2016
Bactrocera trivialis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera truncata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt, 1897)
Bactrocera tsuneonis (Miyake, 1919)
Bactrocera tuberculata (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera turneri Drew, 1989
Bactrocera umbrosa (Fabricius, 1805)
Bactrocera unifasciata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera unilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera unimacula Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera unipunctata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera unistriata (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera unitaeniola Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera usitata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ustulata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera uvariae Drew, 2011
Bactrocera venefica (Hering, 1938)
Bactrocera verbascifoliae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera versicolor (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera visenda (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera vishnu Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera vulgaris (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera waaiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera wanangiae Drew & Hancock, 2016
Bactrocera warisensis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera wuzhishana Li & Wang, 2006
Bactrocera xanthodes (Broun, 1904)
Bactrocera yayeyamana (Matsumara, 1916)
Bactrocera yorkensis Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera zonata (Saunders, 1842) | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Lists of insect species"
] | |
projected-08555250-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Bactrocera%20species | List of Bactrocera species | References | This is a list of species of fruit flies (Tephritidae) in the genus Bactrocera, as of 2019.
Bactrocera abbreviata (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera abdofuscata (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera abdolonginqua (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera abdomininigra Drew, 1989
Bactrocera abdonigella (Drew, 1866)
Bactrocera aberrans (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera abscondita (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera absidata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera abundans Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aceraglans White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera aceromata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera adamantea Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera aemula Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aenigmatica (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera aeroginosa (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera aethriobasis (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera affinibancroftii Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera affinidorsalis (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera affinis (Hardy, 1954)
Bactrocera aglaiae (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera aithogaster Drew, 1989
Bactrocera albistrigata (Meijere, 1911)
Bactrocera allwoodi (Drew, 1979)
Bactrocera alyxiae (May, 1953)
Bactrocera amarambalensis Drew, 2002
Bactrocera ampla (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera amplexa (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera amplexiseta (May, 1962)
Bactrocera andamanensis (Kapoor, 1971)
Bactrocera anfracta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera angusticostata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera angustifasciata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera anomala (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera anthracina (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera antigone (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera apicofuscans White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera apiconigroscutella Drew, 2002
Bactrocera apicopicta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera aquila (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera aquilonis (May, 1965)
Bactrocera arecae (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera assita Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aterrima (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera atra (Malloch, 1938)
Bactrocera atrabifasciata Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera atramentata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera atrifemur Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera atriliniellata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera aurantiaca (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera aurea (May, 1952)
Bactrocera avittata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera balagawii Drew, 2011
Bactrocera bancroftii (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera banneri White, 1999
Bactrocera barringtoniae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera batemani Drew, 1989
Bactrocera beckerae (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera bellisi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bhutaniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera biarcuata (Walker, 1865)
Bactrocera bidentata (May, 1963)
Bactrocera bifasciata (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera biguttata (Bezzi, 1922)
Bactrocera bimaculata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera binhduongiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bipustulata Bezzi, 1914
Bactrocera bitungiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera bivittata Lin & Wang, 2005
Bactrocera blairiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera brachycera (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera breviaculeus (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera brevistriata (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera bruneiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera brunnea (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera brunneola White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera bryoniae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera buinensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera bullata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera bullifera (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera buloloensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera cacuminata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera caledoniensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera caliginosa (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera calophylli (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera captiva Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera carambolae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera carbonaria (Hendel, 1927)
Bactrocera careofascia Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera caryeae (Kapoor, 1971)
Bactrocera ceylanica Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera cheesmanae (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera chettalli David & Ranganath, 2016
Bactrocera cibodasae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera cinnabaria Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera cinnamea Drew, 1989
Bactrocera circamusae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera citima (Hardy, 1973)
Bactrocera clarifemur Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera cogani White 2006
Bactrocera cognata (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera collita Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera commensurata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera commina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera confluens (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera congener Drew, 1989
Bactrocera connecta Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera consectorata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera contermina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera contigua Drew, 1989
Bactrocera continua (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera coracina (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera correcta (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera costalis (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera curreyi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera curtivitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera curvifer (Walker, 1864)
Bactrocera curvipennis (Froggatt, 1909)
Bactrocera curvosterna Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera dapsiles Drew, 1989
Bactrocera daruensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera decumana (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera decurtans (May, 1965)
Bactrocera diallagma Drew, 1989
Bactrocera diaphana (Hering, 1953)
Bactrocera digressa Radhakrishnan, 1999
Bactrocera diospyri Drew, 1989
Bactrocera dispar (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera dongnaiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel, 1912)
Bactrocera dorsaloides (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera dyscrita (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ebenea (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ektoalangiae Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera elongata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera endiandrae (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera enochra (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera epicharis (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera ernesti Leblanc & Doorenweerd, 2018
Bactrocera erubescentis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera eurycosta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera exigua (May, 1958)
Bactrocera eximia Drew, 1989
Bactrocera expandens (Walker, 1859)
Bactrocera exspoliata (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera facialis (Coquillett, 1909)
Bactrocera fagraea (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera fastigata Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera fergussoniensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fernandoi Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera finitima Drew, 1989
Bactrocera flavinotus (May, 1957)
Bactrocera flavipennis (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera flavoscutellata Lin & Wang, 2005
Bactrocera flavosterna Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera floresiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera frauenfeldi (Schiner, 1868)
Bactrocera froggatti (Bezzi, 1928)
Bactrocera fuliginus (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera fulvicauda (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera fulvifacies (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera fulvifemur Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera fulvoabdominalis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera fulvosterna Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera furcata David & Hancock 2017
Bactrocera furfurosa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera furvescens Drew, 1989
Bactrocera furvilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fuscalata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera fuscitibia Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera fuscoformosa Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera fuscohumeralis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera fuscolobata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera fuscoptera Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera garciniae Bezzi, 1913
Bactrocera gnetum Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera gombokensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera grandifasciata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera grandistylus Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera halfordiae (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera halmaherae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera hantanae Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera harrietensis Ramani & David, 2016
Bactrocera hastigerina (Hardy, 1954)
Bactrocera hispidula (May, 1958)
Bactrocera hollingsworthi Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera holtmanni (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera humilis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera hyalina (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera hypomelaina Drew, 1989
Bactrocera icelus (Hardy, 1974)
Bactrocera illusioscutellaris Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera impunctata (de Mejeire, 1914)
Bactrocera incompta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera inconspicua Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera inconstans Drew, 1989
Bactrocera indecora (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera indonesiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera infulata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera invisitata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera involuta (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera irvingiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ismayi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera jaceobancroftii Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera jarvisi (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera kalimantaniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera kanchanaburi Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera kandiensis (Drew & Hancock, 1994)
Bactrocera kelaena Drew, 1989
Bactrocera kinabalu Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera kirki (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera kohkongiae Leblanc, 2015
Bactrocera kraussi (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera kuniyoshii (Shiraki, 1968)
Bactrocera laithieuiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera lampabilis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera lata (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera lateritaenia Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera laticaudus (Hardy 1950)
Bactrocera laticosta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera latifrons (Hendel, 1915) - In 2016 found in Burundi, quickly investigated across the country, and found to have already spread to the entire country and possibly soon its neighbors.
Bactrocera latilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera latilineola Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera latissima Drew, 1989
Bactrocera limbifera (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera linduensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera lineata (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera lombokensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera longicornis Macquart, 1835
Bactrocera lucida (Munro, 1939)
Bactrocera luteola (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera maculigera Doleschall, 1858
Bactrocera makilingensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera malaysiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera mamaliae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera manskii (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera matsumurai (Shiraki, 1933)
Bactrocera mayi (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera mcgregori (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera mediorufula Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera megaspilus (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera melania (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera melanogaster Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanoscutata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanothoracica Drew, 1989
Bactrocera melanotus (Coquillett, 1909)
Bactrocera melas (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera melastomatos Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera memnonia (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera menanus (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera mendosa (May, 1958)
Bactrocera merapiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera mesomelas (Bezzi, 1908)
Bactrocera mesonotochra Drew, 1989
Bactrocera mimulus Drew, 1989
Bactrocera minax (Enderlein, 1920)
Bactrocera miniscula Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera minuta (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera moluccensis (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera montyanus (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera morobiensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera morula Drew, 1989
Bactrocera mucronis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera muiri (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera munroi (White, 1957)
Bactrocera murrayi (Perkins, 1939)
Bactrocera musae (Tryon, 1909)
Bactrocera mutabilis (May, 1952)
Bactrocera nanoarcuata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera nationigrotibialis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera naucleae Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera neoarecae Drew, 2002
Bactrocera neocheesmanae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera neocongnata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera neofulvicauda Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera neohumeralis (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera neonigrita (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera neonigrotibialis Drew 2002
Bactrocera neopropinqua Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera neoritsemai Drew & Romig 2013
Bactrocera neoxanthodes Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera nesiotes (Munro, 1984)
Bactrocera nigella (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera nigra (Tryon, 1927)
Bactrocera nigrescens (Drew, 1968)
Bactrocera nigrescentis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera nigricula (Drew, 1989)
Bactrocera nigrifacia Zhang Ji & Chen, 2011
Bactrocera nigrifemorata Li & Wang, 2011
Bactrocera nigrita (Hardy, 1955)
Bactrocera nigrivenata (Munro, 1937)
Bactrocera nigrofemoralis White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera nigroscutata White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera nigrotibialis (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera nigrovittata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera notatagena (May, 1953)
Bactrocera nothaphoebe Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera obfuscata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera oblineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera obliqua (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera obliquivenosa Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera obscura (Malloch, 1931)
Bactrocera obscurata (de Mejeire, 1911)
Bactrocera obscurivitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera occipitalis (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera ochracea Drew, 1989
Bactrocera ochroma Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera ochromarginis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera ochrosiae (Malloch, 1942)
Bactrocera ochroventer Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera oleae (Rossi, 1790)
Bactrocera opacovitta Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera opiliae (Drew & Hardy, 1981)
Bactrocera osbeckiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera pacificae Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera pagdeni (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera pallescentis (Hardy, 1955)
Bactrocera pallida (Perkins & May, 1949)
Bactrocera paraarecae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera parabancroftii Drew, 2011
Bactrocera parabarringtoniae Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera paradiospyri Chen Zhou & Li, 2011
Bactrocera parafrauenfeldi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera parafroggatti Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera paralatissima Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paralimbifera Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paramusae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera paranigrita Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera paraosbeckiae Drew 2002
Bactrocera paraverbascifoliae Drew, 2002
Bactrocera paraxanthodes Drew & Hancock, 1995
Bactrocera parvula (Hendel, 1912)
Bactrocera passiflorae (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera patula Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pectoralis (Walker, 1859)
Bactrocera pedestris (Bezzi, 1913)
Bactrocera pendleburyi (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera peneallwoodi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penebeckerae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penecognata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera penecorrecta Drew, 2002
Bactrocera penecostalis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera penefurva Drew, 1989
Bactrocera peneobscura Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera penephaea Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera peninsularis (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera pepisalae (Froggatt, 1910)
Bactrocera perfusca (Aubertin, 1929)
Bactrocera perigrapha White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera perkinsi (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera pernigra Ito, 1983
Bactrocera peterseni (Hardy, 1970)
Bactrocera petila Drew, 1989
Bactrocera phaea (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera phaleriae (May, 1956)
Bactrocera picea (Drew, 1972)
Bactrocera pictipennis Lin & Zeng 2011
Bactrocera pisinna Drew, 1989
Bactrocera popondettiensis Drew, 1989
Bactrocera profunda Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera prolixa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera propedistincta Drew, 1989
Bactrocera propinqua (Hardy & Adachi, 1954)
Bactrocera pruniae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pseudobeckerae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera pseudocucurbitae (White, 1999)
Bactrocera pseudodistincta (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera pseudoversicolor Drew, 2002
Bactrocera psidii (Froggatt, 1899)
Bactrocera pulchra Tryon, 1927
Bactrocera pusilla (Hardy, 1983)
Bactrocera pyrifoliae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera quadrata (May, 1963)
Bactrocera quadrisetosa (Bezzi, 1928)
Bactrocera quasiinfulata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera quasineonigrita Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera quasipropinqua Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera quasisilvicola Drew, 1989
Bactrocera raiensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ramuensis Drew, 2011
Bactrocera ranganathi Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera reclinata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera recurrens (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera redunca (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera repanda Drew, 1989
Bactrocera resima (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera retrorsa Drew, 1989
Bactrocera rhabdota Drew, 1989
Bactrocera ritsemai (Weyenbergh, 1869)
Bactrocera robertsi Drew, 1989
Bactrocera robiginosa (May, 1958)
Bactrocera romigae (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera rubigina (Wang & Zhao, 1989)
Bactrocera rufescens (May, 1967)
Bactrocera rufivitta Drew 2011
Bactrocera rufofuscula (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera russeola (Drew & Hancock, 1981)
Bactrocera rutengiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera rutila (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera samoae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera sapaensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera satanellus (Hering, 1941)
Bactrocera seguyi (Hering, 1939)
Bactrocera selenophora Tsuruta & White, 2001
Bactrocera sembaliensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera setinervis (Malloch, 1938)
Bactrocera silvicola (May, 1962)
Bactrocera simulata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera speculifer (Walker, 1865)
Bactrocera speewahensis Fay & Hancock, 2006
Bactrocera splendida (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera strigata (Perkins, 1934)
Bactrocera sulawesiae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera suliae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera sumbawaensis Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera superba Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera symplocos Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera syzygii White & Tsuruta, 2001
Bactrocera ttapahensis Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tenuifascia (May, 1965)
Bactrocera terminaliae Drew, 1989
Bactrocera terminifer (Walker, 1860)
Bactrocera ternatiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tetrachaeta (Bezzi, 1919)
Bactrocera thailandica Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera thistletoni Drew, 1989
Bactrocera tigrina (May, 1953)
Bactrocera tillyardi (Perkins, 1938)
Bactrocera tinomiscii Drew, 1989
Bactrocera torresiae Huxam & Hancock, 2006
Bactrocera tortuosa White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera toxopeusi (Hering, 1953)
Bactrocera trifaria (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera trifasciata (Hardy, 1982)
Bactrocera trilineola Drew, 1989
Bactrocera trilobata Drew & Hancock, 2016
Bactrocera trivialis (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera truncata Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt, 1897)
Bactrocera tsuneonis (Miyake, 1919)
Bactrocera tuberculata (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera turneri Drew, 1989
Bactrocera umbrosa (Fabricius, 1805)
Bactrocera unifasciata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera unilineata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera unimacula Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera unipunctata (Malloch, 1939)
Bactrocera unistriata (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera unitaeniola Drew & Romig, 2001
Bactrocera usitata Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera ustulata Drew, 1989
Bactrocera uvariae Drew, 2011
Bactrocera venefica (Hering, 1938)
Bactrocera verbascifoliae Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera versicolor (Bezzi, 1916)
Bactrocera visenda (Hardy, 1951)
Bactrocera vishnu Drew & Hancock, 1994
Bactrocera vulgaris (Drew, 1971)
Bactrocera waaiae Drew & Romig, 2013
Bactrocera wanangiae Drew & Hancock, 2016
Bactrocera warisensis White & Evenhuis, 1999
Bactrocera wuzhishana Li & Wang, 2006
Bactrocera xanthodes (Broun, 1904)
Bactrocera yayeyamana (Matsumara, 1916)
Bactrocera yorkensis Drew & Hancock, 1999
Bactrocera zonata (Saunders, 1842) | after Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) Species Database from 2006-12-22
*
Bactrocera | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Lists of insect species"
] |
projected-08555258-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restoration%20Council | Restoration Council | Introduction | Restoration Council may refer to:
D'ni Restoration Council, a fictional organization in the Myst franchise
State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC), name of State Peace and Development Council (the military regime of Burma) from 1988 to 1997 | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-08555258-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restoration%20Council | Restoration Council | See also | Restoration Council may refer to:
D'ni Restoration Council, a fictional organization in the Myst franchise
State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC), name of State Peace and Development Council (the military regime of Burma) from 1988 to 1997 | Judeo-Christian Council for Constitutional Restoration, an American conservative religious organization formed in early 2005 that ran the defunct website StopActivistJudges.org | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-06901350-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancie%20Caraway | Nancie Caraway | Introduction | Nancie Ellen Caraway (born February 2, 1942) is the former First Lady of the U.S. state of Hawaii from 2010 to 2014. She is the spouse of former First Congressional District U.S. Representative and former Governor of Hawaii Neil Abercrombie. Caraway is a University of Hawaii at Manoa political scientist, feminist scholar and activist, a member of the university's Globalization Research Center and its Director of Women's Human Rights, leading its Trafficking Project. She is also a mentor and lecturer at the East–West Center.
Caraway was born in Alabama and arrived in Hawaii from Houston, Texas. She received her bachelor of arts degree in political science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 1980. She was a resident of New York City while studying for her Master of Science degree in journalism at Columbia University. She married her husband, Neil Abercrombie, in 1981 in Palm Springs, California. She returned to Hawaii and completed a master of arts in 1986 and doctorate in 1991, both in political science.
Following her husband to Washington, D.C. where he served in the United States Congress, Caraway became an assistant professor at Georgetown University, George Washington University and American University.
An author, Caraway won the Victoria Schuck Award—an international award for the best book on women and politics—from the American Political Science Association for her 1992 book, Segregated Sisterhood: Racism and the Politics of American Feminism, also the title of her University of Hawaii at Manoa doctoral dissertation. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"American women political scientists",
"American political scientists",
"Living people",
"First Ladies and Gentlemen of Hawaii",
"University of Hawaiʻi faculty",
"American feminist writers",
"University of Hawaiʻi alumni",
"Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumni",
"1942 births",
... | |
projected-06901350-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancie%20Caraway | Nancie Caraway | References | Nancie Ellen Caraway (born February 2, 1942) is the former First Lady of the U.S. state of Hawaii from 2010 to 2014. She is the spouse of former First Congressional District U.S. Representative and former Governor of Hawaii Neil Abercrombie. Caraway is a University of Hawaii at Manoa political scientist, feminist scholar and activist, a member of the university's Globalization Research Center and its Director of Women's Human Rights, leading its Trafficking Project. She is also a mentor and lecturer at the East–West Center.
Caraway was born in Alabama and arrived in Hawaii from Houston, Texas. She received her bachelor of arts degree in political science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in 1980. She was a resident of New York City while studying for her Master of Science degree in journalism at Columbia University. She married her husband, Neil Abercrombie, in 1981 in Palm Springs, California. She returned to Hawaii and completed a master of arts in 1986 and doctorate in 1991, both in political science.
Following her husband to Washington, D.C. where he served in the United States Congress, Caraway became an assistant professor at Georgetown University, George Washington University and American University.
An author, Caraway won the Victoria Schuck Award—an international award for the best book on women and politics—from the American Political Science Association for her 1992 book, Segregated Sisterhood: Racism and the Politics of American Feminism, also the title of her University of Hawaii at Manoa doctoral dissertation. | Category:American women political scientists
Category:American political scientists
Category:Living people
Category:First Ladies and Gentlemen of Hawaii
Category:University of Hawaiʻi faculty
Category:American feminist writers
Category:University of Hawaiʻi alumni
Category:Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumni
Category:1942 births
Category:American women academics
Category:21st-century American women | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"American women political scientists",
"American political scientists",
"Living people",
"First Ladies and Gentlemen of Hawaii",
"University of Hawaiʻi faculty",
"American feminist writers",
"University of Hawaiʻi alumni",
"Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism alumni",
"1942 births",
... |
projected-06901363-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian%20Etheridge | Brian Etheridge | Introduction | Brian Etheridge may refer to:
Brian Etheridge, character in comic book series V for Vendetta
Brian Etheridge (footballer) (born 1944), retired English footballer | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-08555260-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawn%20Jeter | Shawn Jeter | Introduction | Shawn Darrell Jeter (born June 28, 1966) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He is the son of former Major League Baseball outfielder Johnny Jeter. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"1966 births",
"Living people",
"African-American baseball players",
"American expatriate baseball players in Canada",
"American expatriate baseball players in Mexico",
"Baseball players from Shreveport, Louisiana",
"Calgary Cannons players",
"Chicago White Sox players",
"Dunedin Blue Jays players",... | |
projected-08555260-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawn%20Jeter | Shawn Jeter | Career | Shawn Darrell Jeter (born June 28, 1966) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He is the son of former Major League Baseball outfielder Johnny Jeter. | Drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 7th round of the 1985 MLB amateur draft, Jeter would make his Major League Baseball debut with the Chicago White Sox on June 13, 1992, and appear in his final game on October 4, 1992.
Jeter appeared as a replacement player for the Cleveland Indians during the Major League Baseball Players Association strike during Spring training prior to the 1995 season. | [] | [
"Career"
] | [
"1966 births",
"Living people",
"African-American baseball players",
"American expatriate baseball players in Canada",
"American expatriate baseball players in Mexico",
"Baseball players from Shreveport, Louisiana",
"Calgary Cannons players",
"Chicago White Sox players",
"Dunedin Blue Jays players",... |
projected-08555260-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawn%20Jeter | Shawn Jeter | See also | Shawn Darrell Jeter (born June 28, 1966) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He is the son of former Major League Baseball outfielder Johnny Jeter. | List of second-generation Major League Baseball players | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"1966 births",
"Living people",
"African-American baseball players",
"American expatriate baseball players in Canada",
"American expatriate baseball players in Mexico",
"Baseball players from Shreveport, Louisiana",
"Calgary Cannons players",
"Chicago White Sox players",
"Dunedin Blue Jays players",... |
projected-06901375-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shorthorn | The Shorthorn | Introduction | The Shorthorn is the campus newspaper for the University of Texas at Arlington. It is published online daily with a print digest on Wednesday during the fall and spring semesters. During the summer, all content is published online since no print edition is produced.
The Shorthorn has been in print since 1919. It is a fully functional student-run publication. The newspaper has won many awards for excellence in college journalism including the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Gold Crown award, the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors award, and the Texas Intercollegiate Press Sweepstakes award. The Shorthorn won the National Pacemaker Award in 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017, 2016 & 2015
The newspaper has been actively providing online content since 1997. In 2019, The Shorthorn celebrated its 100th anniversary, marking it as UT Arlington's oldest tradition. Reese Oxner served as editor in chief during its centennial year. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"University of Texas at Arlington",
"Student newspapers published in Texas",
"Weekly newspapers published in Texas"
] | |
projected-06901375-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shorthorn | The Shorthorn | Notable staff alumni | The Shorthorn is the campus newspaper for the University of Texas at Arlington. It is published online daily with a print digest on Wednesday during the fall and spring semesters. During the summer, all content is published online since no print edition is produced.
The Shorthorn has been in print since 1919. It is a fully functional student-run publication. The newspaper has won many awards for excellence in college journalism including the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Gold Crown award, the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors award, and the Texas Intercollegiate Press Sweepstakes award. The Shorthorn won the National Pacemaker Award in 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017, 2016 & 2015
The newspaper has been actively providing online content since 1997. In 2019, The Shorthorn celebrated its 100th anniversary, marking it as UT Arlington's oldest tradition. Reese Oxner served as editor in chief during its centennial year. | Michael Ainsworth - Pulitzer prize-winning photographer
Tom Fox - Pulitzer prize-winning photographer
Brad Loper - Pulitzer prize-winning photographer
Michael Phillips - Noted historian | [
"Bob Feller, pitcher for Cleveland Indians, interviewed by Shorthorn editor Vivian Luther (10004198).jpg"
] | [
"Notable staff alumni"
] | [
"University of Texas at Arlington",
"Student newspapers published in Texas",
"Weekly newspapers published in Texas"
] |
projected-06901375-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shorthorn | The Shorthorn | See also | The Shorthorn is the campus newspaper for the University of Texas at Arlington. It is published online daily with a print digest on Wednesday during the fall and spring semesters. During the summer, all content is published online since no print edition is produced.
The Shorthorn has been in print since 1919. It is a fully functional student-run publication. The newspaper has won many awards for excellence in college journalism including the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Gold Crown award, the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors award, and the Texas Intercollegiate Press Sweepstakes award. The Shorthorn won the National Pacemaker Award in 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017, 2016 & 2015
The newspaper has been actively providing online content since 1997. In 2019, The Shorthorn celebrated its 100th anniversary, marking it as UT Arlington's oldest tradition. Reese Oxner served as editor in chief during its centennial year. | List of college newspapers | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"University of Texas at Arlington",
"Student newspapers published in Texas",
"Weekly newspapers published in Texas"
] |
projected-08555262-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactrocera | Bactrocera | Introduction | Bactrocera is a large genus of tephritid fruit flies, with close to 500 species currently described and accepted. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Dacinae",
"Agricultural pest insects",
"Tephritidae genera",
"Taxa named by Pierre-Justin-Marie Macquart"
] | |
projected-08555262-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactrocera | Bactrocera | Name | Bactrocera is a large genus of tephritid fruit flies, with close to 500 species currently described and accepted. | The genus name is derived from Ancient Greek bakter "rod" and kera "horn". | [
"BactroceraAnthurium.jpg"
] | [
"Name"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Dacinae",
"Agricultural pest insects",
"Tephritidae genera",
"Taxa named by Pierre-Justin-Marie Macquart"
] |
projected-08555262-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactrocera | Bactrocera | Systematics | Bactrocera is a large genus of tephritid fruit flies, with close to 500 species currently described and accepted. | Prior to the 1990s, almost all Dacini species were described in the genera Dacus or Strumeta. Bactrocera became the main genus for the tribe after Bactrocera and Dacus were split, but Bactrocera was further divided into Zeugodacus and Bactrocera in 2015. The subgeneric treatments have only partly adopted this latest change, but are indicated here to reflect the most modern - DNA based - insights.
Many subgenera are defined within this genus:
Afrodacus
Aglaodacus
Apodacus
Asiadacus
Austrodacus
Bactrocera
Bulladacus
Calodacus
Daculus
Diplodacus
Gymnodacus
Hemigymnodacus
Heminotodacus
Hemiparatridacus
Hemisurstylus
Hemizeugodacus
Javadacus
Melanodacus
Neozeugodacus
Nesodacus
Niuginidacus
Notodacus
Papuodacus
Paradacus
Paratridacus
Parazeugodacus
Perkinsidacus
Queenslandacus
Semicallantra
Sinodacus
Tetradacus
Trypetidacus | [] | [
"Systematics"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Dacinae",
"Agricultural pest insects",
"Tephritidae genera",
"Taxa named by Pierre-Justin-Marie Macquart"
] |
projected-08555262-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactrocera | Bactrocera | See also | Bactrocera is a large genus of tephritid fruit flies, with close to 500 species currently described and accepted. | List of Bactrocera species | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Dacinae",
"Agricultural pest insects",
"Tephritidae genera",
"Taxa named by Pierre-Justin-Marie Macquart"
] |
projected-08555262-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactrocera | Bactrocera | Further reading | Bactrocera is a large genus of tephritid fruit flies, with close to 500 species currently described and accepted. | (with key to Indian Bactrocera species) — (description of new species B. amarambalensis, B. apiconigroscutella, B. neoarecae, B. neonigrotibialis, B. paraosbeckiae, B. paraverbascifoliae, B. penecorrecta, B. pseudoversicolor, B. yercaudiae and B. binoyi) | [] | [
"Further reading"
] | [
"Bactrocera",
"Dacinae",
"Agricultural pest insects",
"Tephritidae genera",
"Taxa named by Pierre-Justin-Marie Macquart"
] |
projected-08555306-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal%20court | Criminal court | Introduction | Criminal court may refer to:
A court that tries offenses against criminal law
Criminal justice
Criminal Court (film), a 1946 American film. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-08555306-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal%20court | Criminal court | See also | Criminal court may refer to:
A court that tries offenses against criminal law
Criminal justice
Criminal Court (film), a 1946 American film. | Cour d'assises, France
Court of assizes (Belgium) | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-56569331-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central%20Women%27s%20Sniper%20Training%20School | Central Women's Sniper Training School | Introduction | The Central Women's Sniper Training School () was a Soviet military school for training female snipers for battle in the Second World War, more commonly referred to as the Great Patriotic War among Soviet Troops. Throughout the war the school trained 1061 snipers and 407 sniper instructors. The school yielded several highly successful snipers who became decorated veterans, and two graduates were posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"1942 establishments in the Soviet Union",
"1945 disestablishments in the Soviet Union",
"Educational institutions disestablished in 1945",
"Educational institutions established in 1942",
"Military academies of the Soviet Union",
"Soviet women in World War II"
] | |
projected-56569331-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central%20Women%27s%20Sniper%20Training%20School | Central Women's Sniper Training School | History | The Central Women's Sniper Training School () was a Soviet military school for training female snipers for battle in the Second World War, more commonly referred to as the Great Patriotic War among Soviet Troops. Throughout the war the school trained 1061 snipers and 407 sniper instructors. The school yielded several highly successful snipers who became decorated veterans, and two graduates were posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. | The school was established in Veshnyaki, Moscow Oblast after an order issued on 20 March 1942 by the People's Commissariat of Defence to establish the school. Potential students had to be at least 20 years old, physically fit, graduated at least seven of their secondary school classes, and pass the initial 4-day Vsevobuch program. After a parade and swearing upon an oath the school was officially opened on 3 May.
In February 1943 students of the school donated 69,260 roubles of their combined savings to kickstart further rifle manufacturing. That same month a practice shooting range was opened in Kosino. In May the school officially became the Central Women's Sniper Training School. On 25 June the school was ordered to form two battalions and a unit of sniper instructors after 50 graduates were sent to the Kalinin Front and another 54 sent to the Northwestern Front among the first batch of cadets. In July a second set of cadets swore their military oath and began their training. Cadets who passed the Moscow Higher Military Command School exam in addition to graduating achieved the rank of junior lieutenant. Of the March 1944 graduating class, 150 were sent to the Northwestern Front, 75 to the 2nd Baltic Front, 200 to the Western Front, 75 to the 1st Baltic Front, and 85 to the 1st Belorussian Front.
In May 1944 the third batch of cadets took their oath and began training. On 25 November 1944, 559 of the women left the academy for active duty before the rest of the remaining 411 students of their graduating class were deployed to the warfront in February. Those students included 95 sent to the 1st Belorussian Front, 87 sent to the 2nd Belorussian Front, 110 sent to the 1st Ukrainian Front, and 119 were sent to the 4th Ukrainian Front.
The school was disbanded from 15 March to 10 May 1945 while personnel were transferred to the Moscow Higher Military Command School. | [] | [
"History"
] | [
"1942 establishments in the Soviet Union",
"1945 disestablishments in the Soviet Union",
"Educational institutions disestablished in 1945",
"Educational institutions established in 1942",
"Military academies of the Soviet Union",
"Soviet women in World War II"
] |
projected-56569331-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central%20Women%27s%20Sniper%20Training%20School | Central Women's Sniper Training School | Notable graduates | The Central Women's Sniper Training School () was a Soviet military school for training female snipers for battle in the Second World War, more commonly referred to as the Great Patriotic War among Soviet Troops. Throughout the war the school trained 1061 snipers and 407 sniper instructors. The school yielded several highly successful snipers who became decorated veterans, and two graduates were posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. | Hero of the Soviet Union Aliya Moldagulova – ~30 kills
Hero of the Soviet Union Tatyana Baramzina – 36 kills
Olga Bordashevskaya – ~108 kills
Nina Lobkovskaya – 89 kills
Aleksandra Vinogradova – 82 kills
Aleksandra Shlyakhova – 69 kills
Roza Shanina – 59 kills | [] | [
"Notable graduates"
] | [
"1942 establishments in the Soviet Union",
"1945 disestablishments in the Soviet Union",
"Educational institutions disestablished in 1945",
"Educational institutions established in 1942",
"Military academies of the Soviet Union",
"Soviet women in World War II"
] |
projected-56569331-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central%20Women%27s%20Sniper%20Training%20School | Central Women's Sniper Training School | References | The Central Women's Sniper Training School () was a Soviet military school for training female snipers for battle in the Second World War, more commonly referred to as the Great Patriotic War among Soviet Troops. Throughout the war the school trained 1061 snipers and 407 sniper instructors. The school yielded several highly successful snipers who became decorated veterans, and two graduates were posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. | Category:1942 establishments in the Soviet Union
Category:1945 disestablishments in the Soviet Union
Category:Educational institutions disestablished in 1945
Category:Educational institutions established in 1942
Category:Military academies of the Soviet Union | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"1942 establishments in the Soviet Union",
"1945 disestablishments in the Soviet Union",
"Educational institutions disestablished in 1945",
"Educational institutions established in 1942",
"Military academies of the Soviet Union",
"Soviet women in World War II"
] |
projected-56569364-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulla%20Maaskola | Ulla Maaskola | Introduction | Ulla Maaskola (born 5 April 1959) is a Finnish cross-country skier. She competed in the women's 10 kilometres at the 1980 Winter Olympics. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"1959 births",
"Living people",
"People from Kouvola",
"Finnish female cross-country skiers",
"Olympic cross-country skiers of Finland",
"Cross-country skiers at the 1980 Winter Olympics",
"Sportspeople from Kymenlaakso"
] | |
projected-44500187-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | Introduction | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | [
"Suraj Bhan (Indian archaeologist).jpg"
] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"20th-century Indian archaeologists",
"Scientists from Haryana",
"Delhi University alumni",
"Kurukshetra University faculty",
"1931 births",
"2010 deaths",
"Analysts of Ayodhya dispute",
"People from Sahiwal District",
"Punjabi people",
"Historians of India",
"Indian social sciences writers",
... | |
projected-44500187-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | Life and career | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | Suraj Bhan was born in March 1931 in Montgomery (now in Pakistan) to a peasant family of Haryana.
He studied Economics and Sanskrit for a B.A. and M.A. at the Delhi University. Subsequently, he joined the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) in 1956 as a technical assistant. He studied Archaeology and Culture for a second M.A. degree in 1960 and, in 1972 also received a Ph.D. degree from the M. S. University, Baroda. He went on to a teaching career first at the Punjab University and then in at Kurukshetra University, carrying out archaeology of prehistoric sites in Haryana. He rose to become the Dean of the Faculty of Indic Studies before retiring in 1991. | [] | [
"Life and career"
] | [
"20th-century Indian archaeologists",
"Scientists from Haryana",
"Delhi University alumni",
"Kurukshetra University faculty",
"1931 births",
"2010 deaths",
"Analysts of Ayodhya dispute",
"People from Sahiwal District",
"Punjabi people",
"Historians of India",
"Indian social sciences writers",
... |
projected-44500187-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | Archaeological work | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | Bhan's early research was on the archaeology of prehistoric sites along the old river channels of Sarsuti–Ghaggar and Chautang rivers in Haryana. In 1968, he excavated the Indus culture site of Mitathal. His thesis on the "Historic Archaeology of Saraswati and Drishadavati Valleys" earned him a PhD in 1972. In 1975, Bhan published his major report, Excavations at Mitathal and Other Explorations in the Sutlej-Yamuna Divide, which became a fundamental reference for the study of Indus and post-Indus cultures.
In 1987, Bhan was invited to give the presidential address to the Archaeology section of the Indian History Congress, where he came out strongly against the tendency among some archaeologists to identify the Indus Valley Civilisation with the Vedic cultures. His paper in The Making of History volume (2002) countered arguments made by archaeologists, B. B. Lal, S. P. Gupta et al. for an Aryan link to the Indus Valley Civilization.
In 1996, he was awarded a senior fellowship by the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR) and a year later, he was appointed as a member of the ICHR council. Irfan Habib, in his obituary of Bhan, believed him to be a man of "impeccable personal ethics, which matched well with his professional probity."
His academic work was said to bear a deep imprint of Marxism. He was also involved with the work of Communist Party of India (Marxist) in Haryana and took particular interest in the People's Science movement. | [] | [
"Archaeological work"
] | [
"20th-century Indian archaeologists",
"Scientists from Haryana",
"Delhi University alumni",
"Kurukshetra University faculty",
"1931 births",
"2010 deaths",
"Analysts of Ayodhya dispute",
"People from Sahiwal District",
"Punjabi people",
"Historians of India",
"Indian social sciences writers",
... |
projected-44500187-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | Ayodhya dispute | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | Suraj Bhan played a significant role during the Ayodhya dispute, supporting the case for the Babri Masjid. He along with historians, Ram Sharan Sharma, Dwijendra Narayan Jha and M. Athar Ali, were a group of four academics who submitted a document titled Babari Mosque or Rama's Birth Place? Historians Report to the Nation to the Minister of Home Affairs in May 1991. Bhan contributed towards the archaeological component of the report. The authors claimed to have scrutinised the evidence provided by the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Babri Masjid Action Committee (BMAC) and rejected outright the idea of the mosque being the site of Rama's birth or of the possibility of it having been built atop a pre-existing temple. The authors dismissed the claim by B. B. Lal, a former director of the ASI, that he had discovered pillar bases next to the Babri Masjid during his excavation in the 1970s. However, they did so while noting that they were not given access to Lal's excavation notes. Bhan would later testify in the Allahabad High Court that the report had been hurriedly compiled "under pressure" from BMAC.
In October 1992, the four historians wrote in the CPI(M)'s weekly newspaper, People's Democracy, reacting to the booklet Ram Janmabhumi Ayodhya: New Archaeological Discoveries stating that the VHP protagonists had indulged in "indiscriminate PWD-like excavation." Bhan had earlier also contested statements by S. P. Gupta that the black basalt pillars in the Babri Masjid were once part of a Hindu temple.
The Babri Masjid was demolished on 6 December 1992.
Suraj Bhan deposed as an expert witness in the Allahabad High Court on behalf of the pro-mosque parties in 2000, 2002, and again in 2006. He was the only one of the four authors of the Historians Report to the Nation to do so. On 5 March 2003, the Allahabad High Court ordered the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to excavate the site of the Babri Masjid in order to determine whether a temple-like structure had been demolished before the construction of the mosque. Suraj Bhan joined Irfan Habib and others in issuing a press statement denouncing the move. The ASI proceeded with its excavations and submitted its findings to the court in September 2003. Its report revealed the presence of a circular shrine, dateable to 7–10th century and a "massive structure", 50 metres by 30 metres, built in three structural phases during the 11–12th century.
Bhan who had visited the digs in June 2003 criticised the ASI for conducting extensive horizontal diggings which destroyed all the Mughal period remains at the site when limited vertical trenching was all that was required. Questioning the methodologies employed to date the underground structure, he accused the ASI report of being an attempt to push back the antiquity of Ayodhya and thereby the Ramayana to . He proclaimed with certainty, that the "massive structure" found by the ASI was not a temple and that it was likely a Sultanate period mosque.
Bhan appeared in the Allahabad High Court to state his professional opinion that the conclusion of the ASI report regarding the existence of any temple beneath the Babri mosque was baseless. While he was present at the excavation for only three days, he claimed that the ASI did not properly record the glazed ware, glazed tiles and bones found at the site. He made other observations such as on the use of lime mortar which he believed dated the underground structure to the Sultanate period. He also claimed that the shortcomings of the report could not be made good and alleged that the ASI lacked objectivity, professional integrity, and scientific rigour. Under examination, Bhan clarified that he was only an archaeologist and not an art-historian or medieval historian.
In its 2010 verdict on the Ayodhya dispute, the Allahabad High Court criticised the professionalism of the expert witnesses who had appeared on behalf of the pro-mosque parties. On Suraj Bhan, the court felt that he had made vague statements and had failed to provide a proper reason to challenge the conclusions of the ASI. It dismissed as baseless his technical observations on matters such as the use of lime mortar which had been established to have been in use in India from at least 600 BCE, well before the Sultanate period. The court noted that Bhan had a predetermined attitude against the ASI and noted that rather than being condemned, the Survey deserved commendation and appreciation. | [] | [
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projected-44500187-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | Works | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | "Excavations at Mitathal (Hissar), 1968." Journal of Haryana Studies 1.1 (1969): 1–15.
"Changes in the course of Yamuna and their bearing on the protohistoric cultures of Haryana." Archaeological congress and seminar papers. 1972.
"Siswal, a pre-Harappan site in Drishadvati valley." (1972): 44–46.
"The sequence and spread of prehistoric cultures in the upper Sarasvati Basin." Radiocarbon and Indian Archaeology (1973): 252–263.
Excavation at Mitathal (1968) and Other explorations in the Sutlej-Yamuna divide. Kurukshetra University, 1975.
(with Jim G. Shaffer) "New discoveries in northern Haryana." Man and Environment 2 (1978): 59-68.
"Recent trends in Indian archaeology." Social Scientist (1997): 3–15. .
"Aryanization of the Indus Civilisation." The Making of History: Essays presented to Irfan Habib, pp. 41–55. Anthem Press, 2002. . | [] | [
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projected-44500187-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | See also | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | Archaeology of Ayodhya
Ram Janmabhoomi
Siswal | [] | [
"See also"
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projected-44500187-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suraj%20Bhan%20%28archaeologist%29 | Suraj Bhan (archaeologist) | References | Suraj Bhan (1931–2010) was an Indian archaeologist and professor of archaeology. He was part of a panel of academics which contested the Vishva Hindu Parishad's claim that the Babri Masjid was built on top of a Râm temple. | Sources
Category:20th-century Indian archaeologists
Category:Scientists from Haryana
Category:Delhi University alumni
Category:Kurukshetra University faculty
Category:1931 births
Category:2010 deaths
Category:Analysts of Ayodhya dispute
Category:People from Sahiwal District
Category:Punjabi people
Category:Historians of India
Category:Indian social sciences writers
Category:Indian scientific authors | [] | [
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"Indian social sciences writers",
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projected-26723954-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Introduction | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | [] | [
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"2006 Norwegian television series debuts",
"Norwegian music television series",
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projected-26723954-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Hosts | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Full time presenter
Competed as a contestant before being a presenter | [] | [
"Hosts"
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"Skal vi danse?",
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projected-26723954-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Judges | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Full time presenter
Competed as a contestant before being a presenter | [] | [
"Judges"
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"2006 Norwegian television series debuts",
"Norwegian music television series",
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projected-26723954-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Professional partners | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Color key:
Winner
Runner-up
3rd place
Celebrity partner was eliminated first for the season
Celebrity partner withdrew from the competition
A professional couple of weeks, and then does not appear on the show | [] | [
"Professional partners"
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projected-26723954-006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 1 (Spring 2006) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the first season Simen Agdestein, Terje Sporsem, Katrine Moholt, Caroline Dina Kongerud, Signy Fardal, Finn Schjøll, Tom A. Haug, Anita Moen, Otto Robsahm and Guri Schanke took part. The series was won by Katrine Moholt and dance partner Bjørn Holthe, who defeated Guri Schanke and dance partner Tom Arild Hansen in the final.
Judges in the first season were Anita Langset, Trine Dehli Cleve, Trond Harr and Tor Fløysvik.
Simen Agdestein (chess player/coach) (partnered by Gyda Kathrine Bloch Svela-Thorsen)
Terje Sporsem (comedian) (partnered by Cecilie Brink Rygel)
Katrine Moholt (TV hostess) (partnered by Bjørn Wettre Holthe)
Caroline Dina Kongerud (singer) (partnered by Gustaf Lundin)
Signy Fardal (publisher and magazine editor) (partnered by Geir Gundersen)
Finn Schjøll (flower decorator) (partnered by Lena Granaas Lillebø)
Tom A. Haug (actor) (partnered by Therese Cleve)
Anita Moen (Former Cross-country skier) (partnered by Thomas Kagnes)
Otto Robsahm (handyman) (partnered by Michelle Lindøe)
Guri Schanke (actress and singer) (partnered by Tom Arild Hansen)
The Season Finale took place in March 2006. Winners were TV hostess Katrine Moholt and her partner Bjørn Wettre Holthe.
The professional jury in "Skal Vi Danse"s 1st Season were:
Trine Dehli Cleve
Tor Fløysvik
Anita Langset
Trond Harr | [
"Skal vi danse - Steffen Tangstad.jpg"
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"Attendees",
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projected-26723954-007 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 2 (Autumn 2006) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the second season took part Jeanette Roede, Trude Mostue, Christer Torjussen, Elisabeth Andreassen, Tone Damli Aaberge, Susann Goksør Bjerkrheim, Eirik Newth, Steffen Tangstad, Kristian Ødegård and Ingar Helge Gimle. The second season was won by Kristian Ødegård and his dancing partner Alexandra Kakurina. They defeated Susann Goksør Bjerkrheim and Asmund Grinaker.
Judges in the second season was Cecilie Brinck Rygel, Trine Dehli Cleve, Trond Harr and Tor Fløysvik.
Jeanette Roede, administrative manager. She was partnered by Jan-Eric Fransson
Trude Mostue, TV-Veterinarian. She was partnered by Tom Arild Hansen
Christer Torjussen, comedian. He was partnered by Lena Granaas Lillebø
Elisabeth Andreassen, singer. She was partnered by Mats Brattlie
Tone Damli Aaberge, singer. She was partnered by Tom-Erik Nilsen
Susann Goksør Bjerkrheim, former handball-player. She was partnered by Asmund G. S. Grinaker
Eirik Newth, writer and radio host. He was partnered by Therese Cleve
Steffen Tangstad, former professional boxer, now a sports manager. He was partnered by Ingrid Beate Thompson
Kristian Ødegård, TV-producer and comedian/joke host. He was partnered by Alexandra Kakurina
Ingar Helge Gimle, actor. He was partnered by Gyda Kathrine Bloch Svela-Thorsen
The Season Finale took place on 24 November 2006. Winners were TV-producer/comedian/joke host Kristian Ødegård and his dancing partner Alexandra Kakurina.
The professional jury in "Skal Vi Danse"s 2nd Season were:
Trine Dehli Cleve
Tor Fløysvik
Cecilie Brinck Rygel
Trond Harr | [] | [
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projected-26723954-008 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 3 (Autumn 2007) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the third season took part Mari Maurstad, Jostein Pedersen, Dag Otto Lauritzen, Esben Esther Pirelli Benestad, Tshawe Baqwa, Trine Hattestad, Pia Haraldsen, Liv Marit Wedvik, Mona Grudt and Finn Christian Jagge. The third season was won by Tshawe Baqwa and his dance partner Maria Sandvik. They defeated Mona Grudt and Glenn Jørgen Sandaker.
Judges in the third season was Christer Tornell, Trine Dehli Cleve, Trond Harr and Tor Fløysvik
Tshawe Baqwa, rapper. He was partnered by Maria Sandvik – Winner
Esben Esther Pirelli Benestad, transvestite doctor. He was partnered by Ingrid Beate Thompson
Mona Grudt, former Miss Universe. She was partnered by Glenn Jørgen Sandaker
Pia Haraldsen, TV host. She was partnered by Thomas Wendel
Trine Hattestad, former athlete. She was partnered by Mats Brattlie
Finn Christian Jagge, former alpine skier. He was partnered by Therese Cleve
Dag Otto Lauritzen, former cyclist. He was partnered by Gyda Kathrine Bloch Svela-Thorsen
Mari Maurstad, entertainer. She was partnered by Jan Eric Fransson
Jostein Pedersen, TV host. He was partnered by Michelle Lindøe
Liv Marit Wedvik, country singer. She was partnered by Asmund Grinaker | [] | [
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projected-26723954-009 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 4 (Autumn 2008) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the fourth season attended Gaute Ormåsen, Hans Petter Buraas, Tor Endresen, Tore André Flo, Janne Formoe, Mikkel Gaup, Siri Kalvig, Hanne Krogh, Jenny Skavlan, Sigurd Sollien and Lene Alexandra Øien. The fourth season was won by Lene Alexandra Øien and dance partner Tom Erik Nilsen, which in the final defeated Tore Andre Flo and his dance partner Nadya Khamitskaya. Judges were Trine Dehli Cleve, Tor Fløysvik, Christer Tornell and Alexandra Kakurina.
Hans Petter Buraas, alpine skier – eliminated 3rd
Tor Endresen, singer eliminated 5th
Tore Andre Flo, football player – runner-up
Janne Formoe, actress – eliminated 1st
Mikkel Gaup, actor
Siri Kalvig, meteorologist
Hanne Krogh, singer -eliminated 4th
Gaute Ormåsen, singer
Jenny Skavlan, actress – eliminated 2nd
Sigurd Sollien, TV host – withdrawn
Lene Alexandra Øien, singer and model – winner | [] | [
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projected-26723954-010 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Super Finals (Autumn 2008) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | 12 December 2008 was held a great finale in Skal vi dance? in which the winning pairs from the four previous seasons, participated. Since Tshawe Baqwa was on a concert tour at the time of the super-final took second pair from 2007 instead of the winning pair. Super Final was won by Mona Grudt and Glenn Jørgen Sandaker. Judges were Trine Dehli Cleve, Tor Fløysvik, Christer Tornell, Cecilie Brinck Rygel, Trond Harr and Raymond Myhr Engen. Super final winners were chosen by judges depending by points.
Results of choosing to win in super finals.
Total results
1st result
Second Result
Third Result | [] | [
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projected-26723954-011 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 5 (Autumn 2009) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the fifth season competed Mia Gundersen, Hallvard Flatland, Anita Valen, Ellen Arnstad, Ole Klemetsen, Jan Thomas Mørch Husby, Elin Tvedt, Triana Iglesias, Carsten Skjelbreid, Margrethe Røed and Svein Østvik. Carsten Skjelbreid won the competition in the final against Mia Gundersen. Judges were Trine Dehli Cleve, Tor Fløysvik, Karianne Gulliksen Stensen and Christer Tornell.
Mia Gundersen,
Hallvard Flatland,
Anita Valen,
Ellen Arnstad,
Ole Klemetsen,
Jan Thomas Mørch Husby,
Elin Tvedt,
Triana Iglesias,
Carsten Skjelbreid,
Margrethe Røed and
Svein Østvik.
Red numbers indicate the lowest score for each week.
Green numbers indicate the highest score for each week.
indicates the winning couple.
indicates the runner-up couple.
The judges are Trine Dehli Cleve, Tor Fløysvik, Karianne Stensen Gulliksen and Christer Tornell. | [] | [
"Attendees",
"Season 5 (Autumn 2009)"
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"Skal vi danse?",
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projected-26723954-012 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 6 (Autumn 2010) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | In the sixth season of Skal vi danse? will return on Autumn 2010 according to TV 2 after the finale of season 5 Skal vi danse? decided to renew for this season. These are the participants who are going to participate in Skal vi danse? this year. Judges are the same from last year Trine Dehli Cleve, Tor Fløysvik, Karianne Gulliksen Stensen and Christer Tornell.
Maria Haukaas Mittet, singer (partnered by Asmund Grinaker)
Håvard Lilleheie, TV host (partnered by Elena Bokoreva Wiulsrud)
Aylar Lie, former glamour model (partnered by Egor Filipenko)
Stig Henrik Hoff, actor (partnered by Alexandra Kakourina)
Cecilie Skog, adventurer (partnered by Tobias Karlsson)
Cato Zahl Pedersen, multiple Paralympic gold winner (partnered by Marianne Sandaker)
Anne-Marie Ottersen, actress (partnered by Glenn Jørgen Sandaker)
Tommy Fredvang, singer (partnered by Rakel Kristina Aalmo)
Stine Buer, comedian (partnered by Tom-Erik Nilsen)
Einar Gelius, priest (partnered by Olga Divakova)
Andrine Flemmen, former alpine skier (partnered by Lars Alexander Wiulsrud)
Åsleik Engmark, comedian (partnered by Nadya Khamitskaya) | [] | [
"Attendees",
"Season 6 (Autumn 2010)"
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"Skal vi danse?",
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"Norwegian television series based on British television series"
] |
projected-26723954-013 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 7 (Autumn 2011) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Rachel Nordtømme, runner (partnered by Henrik Frisk)
Inger Lise Hansen, politician (partnered by Lars Alexander Wiulsrud)
Noman Mubashir, journalist (partnered by Nadya Khamitskaya)
Stella Mwangi, singer (partnered by Asmund Grinaker)
Anna Anka, reality TV star (partnered by Glenn Jorgen Sandaker)
Lars Bohinen, footballer (partnered by Alexandra Kakourina)
Kari Traa, skier (partnered by Egor Filipenko)
Rune Larsen, music journalist (partnered by Olga Divakova)
Atle Pettersen, singer (partnered by Marianne Sandaker)
Anders Jacobsen, ski jumper (partnered by Elena Bokoreva Wiulsrud) | [] | [
"Attendees",
"Season 7 (Autumn 2011)"
] | [
"Skal vi danse?",
"TV 2 (Norway) original programming",
"2006 Norwegian television series debuts",
"Norwegian music television series",
"Norwegian reality television series",
"Norwegian television series based on British television series"
] |
projected-26723954-014 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | Season 8 (Autumn 2012) | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Ben Adams, singer (partnered by Tone Jacobsen)
Lars Erik Blokkhus, singer (partnered by Maria Sandvik)
Stein Johan Grieg Halvorsen, actor/comedian (partnered by Marianne Sandaker)
Cathrine Larsåsen, pole vaulter (partnered by Tom-Erik Nilsen)
Linni Meister, singer & model (partnered by Calle Sterner)
Marit Mikkelsplass, skier (partnered by Lars Alexander Wiulsrud)
Lillian Müller, actress/model (partnered by Glenn Jorgen Sandaker)
Lasse Ottesen, ski jumper (partnered by Olga Divakova)
Vebjørn Sand, painter (partnered by Nadya Khamitskaya)
Hanne Sørvaag, singer (partnered by Egor Filipenko)
Eldar Vågan, guitarist (partnered by Elena Bokoreva Wiulsrud) | [] | [
"Attendees",
"Season 8 (Autumn 2012)"
] | [
"Skal vi danse?",
"TV 2 (Norway) original programming",
"2006 Norwegian television series debuts",
"Norwegian music television series",
"Norwegian reality television series",
"Norwegian television series based on British television series"
] |
projected-26723954-015 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal%20vi%20danse%3F | Skal vi danse? | See also | Skal vi danse is the Norwegian edition of the British television series, Strictly Come Dancing. It is produced by Monster Entertainment and broadcast on TV 2 Jon Peder Olrud and Geir Bie were producers in the first season. The second and third seasons were produced by Ingvild Daae. The series premiered on TV 2 on January 15, 2006. Skal vi danse? in Norwegian means "shall we dance?" and the Dancing celebrities with professional dancers and companies are reviewed by a panel of judges and the TV viewers. Each pair consists of a celebrity and a professional dancer and the one with the fewest votes does not participate in the next round.
The series has had high ratings in Norway, with an average of between 600,000 and 700,000 viewers. The record with 733,000 viewers on average in the season premiere was reached for the first program of series 4 (12 September 2008). Only the final episodes of each series have had higher numbers. | Dancing with the Stars United States
Strictly Come Dancing
Season 4 of Skal vi danse?
Season 5 of Skal vi danse?
Season 6 of Skal vi danse?
Season 7 of Skal vi danse?
Season 8 of Skal vi danse? | [] | [
"See also"
] | [
"Skal vi danse?",
"TV 2 (Norway) original programming",
"2006 Norwegian television series debuts",
"Norwegian music television series",
"Norwegian reality television series",
"Norwegian television series based on British television series"
] |
projected-08555309-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutionary%20Council | Revolutionary Council | Introduction | Revolutionary Council may refer to the:
Revolutionary Council (Afghanistan), organ of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) from 1965 until the party's collapse in 1992
Revolutionary Council (Algeria), the body that ruled Algeria following its 1965 coup d'état
Revolutionary Council (Portugal), a body created by the Armed Forces Movement in 1975, disbanded in 1982
Revolutionary Council (Zanzibar), part of the semi-autonomous Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar
It may, alternatively, refer to the:
Armed Forces Revolutionary Council, a group of Sierra Leone soldiers that allied itself with the rebel Revolutionary United Front in the late 1990s
Council of Islamic Revolution (Iran), a group of clerics and experts chosen to manage Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution and then legislate for its interim government
National Patriotic Front of Liberia – Central Revolutionary Council, a rebel group that participated in the Liberian civil war
Revolutionary Military Council, the supreme military authority of Soviet Russia
Supreme Revolutionary Council (Madagascar), the body that ruled Madagascar from 1975
Supreme Revolutionary Council (Somalia), the body that ruled Somalia for most of the period between 1969 and 1991
Union Revolutionary Council, the supreme governing body of socialist Burma between 1962 and 1974 | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-08555309-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutionary%20Council | Revolutionary Council | See also | Revolutionary Council may refer to the:
Revolutionary Council (Afghanistan), organ of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) from 1965 until the party's collapse in 1992
Revolutionary Council (Algeria), the body that ruled Algeria following its 1965 coup d'état
Revolutionary Council (Portugal), a body created by the Armed Forces Movement in 1975, disbanded in 1982
Revolutionary Council (Zanzibar), part of the semi-autonomous Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar
It may, alternatively, refer to the:
Armed Forces Revolutionary Council, a group of Sierra Leone soldiers that allied itself with the rebel Revolutionary United Front in the late 1990s
Council of Islamic Revolution (Iran), a group of clerics and experts chosen to manage Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution and then legislate for its interim government
National Patriotic Front of Liberia – Central Revolutionary Council, a rebel group that participated in the Liberian civil war
Revolutionary Military Council, the supreme military authority of Soviet Russia
Supreme Revolutionary Council (Madagascar), the body that ruled Madagascar from 1975
Supreme Revolutionary Council (Somalia), the body that ruled Somalia for most of the period between 1969 and 1991
Union Revolutionary Council, the supreme governing body of socialist Burma between 1962 and 1974 | Revolutionary committee (disambiguation)
Revolutionary Command Council (disambiguation)
Workers' council | [] | [
"See also"
] | [] |
projected-56569365-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shadow%20Theory | The Shadow Theory | Introduction | The Shadow Theory is the twelfth studio album by the American power metal band Kamelot. The album is produced by Sascha Paeth and was released on April 6, 2018. Guests on the album include Lauren Hart (Once Human) and Jennifer Haben (Beyond the Black).
It is the only studio album to feature Johan Nunez, replacing longtime member Casey Grillo on drums, who had departed from the band on February 5, 2018, to pursue other musical and touring opportunities and to focus on his drumhead company. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"2018 albums",
"Kamelot albums",
"Napalm Records albums"
] | |
projected-56569365-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shadow%20Theory | The Shadow Theory | Personnel | The Shadow Theory is the twelfth studio album by the American power metal band Kamelot. The album is produced by Sascha Paeth and was released on April 6, 2018. Guests on the album include Lauren Hart (Once Human) and Jennifer Haben (Beyond the Black).
It is the only studio album to feature Johan Nunez, replacing longtime member Casey Grillo on drums, who had departed from the band on February 5, 2018, to pursue other musical and touring opportunities and to focus on his drumhead company. | All information from the album booklet.
Kamelot
Tommy Karevik – vocals
Thomas Youngblood – guitars
Sean Tibbetts – bass
Oliver Palotai – keyboards
Johan Nunez – drums, percussion
Guest musicians
Lauren Hart – guest vocals and growls on "Phantom Divine (Shadow Empire)" and growls on "MindFall Remedy"
Jennifer Haben – guest vocals on "In Twilight Hours"
Choir
Oliver Hartmann, Herbie Langhans, Cloudy Yang, Annie Berens, Nadine Ruch, Evelyn Mank, Thomas Dalton Youngblood
Crew
Sascha Paeth – production, mixing, engineering, additional guitars and keys, and growls on "The Proud and the Broken"
Thomas Youngblood – engineering, editing
Oliver Palotai – orchestral arrangements, engineering, editing
Jacob Hansen – mastering
Stefan Heilemann – artwork
Arne Wiegand – engineering, editing
Miro Rodenberg – engineering, editing
Olaf Reitmeier – engineering, editing
Logan Mader – engineering, editing
Tim Tronckoe – photography | [] | [
"Personnel"
] | [
"2018 albums",
"Kamelot albums",
"Napalm Records albums"
] |
projected-56569365-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Shadow%20Theory | The Shadow Theory | References | The Shadow Theory is the twelfth studio album by the American power metal band Kamelot. The album is produced by Sascha Paeth and was released on April 6, 2018. Guests on the album include Lauren Hart (Once Human) and Jennifer Haben (Beyond the Black).
It is the only studio album to feature Johan Nunez, replacing longtime member Casey Grillo on drums, who had departed from the band on February 5, 2018, to pursue other musical and touring opportunities and to focus on his drumhead company. | Category:2018 albums
Category:Kamelot albums
Category:Napalm Records albums | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"2018 albums",
"Kamelot albums",
"Napalm Records albums"
] |
projected-26723956-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam%20Moffet | Sam Moffet | Introduction | Samuel R. Moffet (March 14, 1857 – May 5, 1907) was an outfielder and pitcher in Major League Baseball. He played all or parts of three seasons between 1884 and 1888 for the Cleveland Blues and Indianapolis Hoosiers. Moffet stood at and weighed 175 lbs. His brother, Joe, also played in the major leagues. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Baseball players from West Virginia",
"Cleveland Blues (NL) players",
"Indianapolis Hoosiers (NL) players",
"Major League Baseball outfielders",
"Major League Baseball pitchers",
"Omaha Lambs players",
"Omaha Omahogs players",
"Sportspeople from Butte, Montana",
"Sportspeople from Wheeling, West Vi... | |
projected-26723956-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam%20Moffet | Sam Moffet | Biography | Samuel R. Moffet (March 14, 1857 – May 5, 1907) was an outfielder and pitcher in Major League Baseball. He played all or parts of three seasons between 1884 and 1888 for the Cleveland Blues and Indianapolis Hoosiers. Moffet stood at and weighed 175 lbs. His brother, Joe, also played in the major leagues. | Sam Moffet was born in Wheeling, West Virginia when it was still part of Virginia. He played on amateur baseball teams as a teenager, and in 1882 he batted .404 for the Wheeling Standards. The following season, Moffet started his professional baseball career with the Northwestern League's Toledo Blue Stockings. He was a pitcher for Toledo and also played at first base and third base.
In 1884, Moffet made it to the major leagues with the Cleveland Blues. The Blues finished in seventh place, and Moffet, as their third starter, went just 3–19. The three wins all came in a single week from August 11 to August 18. Moffet's .136 winning percentage is tied for the fifth-lowest by a rookie in MLB history, and it was also the lowest winning percentage of any MLB pitcher during the 1880s. In addition to pitching, Moffet also played 42 games in the outfield that season. He batted .184 in 256 at bats.
After the season ended, Moffet went to Butte, Montana, and joined two of his brothers in a mining venture. They extracted over $200,000 worth of gold and silver over the next year, and Moffet was out of professional baseball in 1885 and 1886. In 1887, he returned to the majors with the Indianapolis Hoosiers, and he went 1–5 on the mound while batting .122. He didn't fare any better in 1888 and was released in mid-season.
Moffet then returned to Montana. In March 1889, The Meriden Daily Journal reported that he had "struck so rich in mining in Montana that he cleared $40,000".
Moffet was married to Mary Agnes "Minnie" Donaldson. He died in Butte, Montana, in 1907. | [] | [
"Biography"
] | [
"Baseball players from West Virginia",
"Cleveland Blues (NL) players",
"Indianapolis Hoosiers (NL) players",
"Major League Baseball outfielders",
"Major League Baseball pitchers",
"Omaha Lambs players",
"Omaha Omahogs players",
"Sportspeople from Butte, Montana",
"Sportspeople from Wheeling, West Vi... |
projected-56569384-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | Introduction | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] | |
projected-56569384-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | Recording and music | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | The album contains ten tracks. Five are solo piano pieces composed by Thelonious Monk and recorded at Loft, in Cologne, in May 1995. The other five are Nabatov compositions that he performed on piano and electronics in concert at Loft in June 2013. This use of electronics came from a collaboration in April 2013 between Nabatov and composer Hans Koch. | [] | [
"Recording and music"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] |
projected-56569384-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | Release and reception | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | Monk 'n' More was released by Leo Records in October 2016. The Cadence reviewer described it as "A fine set of outings that stands up well on repeated listens." | [] | [
"Release and reception"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] |
projected-56569384-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | Track listing | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | "Skippy"
"Electroacoustic Extension 1"
"Oska T."
"Electroacoustic Extension 2"
"Pannonica"
"Electroacoustic Extension 3"
"Light Blue"
"Electroacoustic Extension 4"
"Sunrise Twice Redux"
"Epistrophy" | [] | [
"Track listing"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] |
projected-56569384-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | Personnel | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | Simon Nabatov – piano | [] | [
"Personnel"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] |
projected-56569384-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monk%20%27n%27%20More | Monk 'n' More | References | Monk 'n' More is an album by Simon Nabatov. It was recorded in May 1995 and June 2013 and was released by Leo Records. | Category:2016 albums
Category:Leo Records albums
Category:Solo piano jazz albums | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"2016 albums",
"Leo Records albums",
"Solo piano jazz albums"
] |
projected-56569388-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraida%20Suslova | Iraida Suslova | Introduction | Iraida Suslova (born 16 January 1955) is a Soviet cross-country skier. She competed in the women's 10 kilometres at the 1980 Winter Olympics. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"1955 births",
"Living people",
"Soviet female cross-country skiers",
"Olympic cross-country skiers of the Soviet Union",
"Cross-country skiers at the 1980 Winter Olympics",
"Place of birth missing (living people)"
] | |
projected-56569392-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyser%20Lake | Kyser Lake | Introduction | Kyser Lake is a lake on the Herkimer County and Fulton County line, located south of Dolgeville, New York. East Canada Creek is the main inlet. Kyser Lake drains south via East Canada Creek which flows into the Mohawk River. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Lakes of New York (state)",
"Lakes of Herkimer County, New York",
"Lakes of Montgomery County, New York"
] | |
projected-56569392-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyser%20Lake | Kyser Lake | References | Kyser Lake is a lake on the Herkimer County and Fulton County line, located south of Dolgeville, New York. East Canada Creek is the main inlet. Kyser Lake drains south via East Canada Creek which flows into the Mohawk River. | Category:Lakes of New York (state)
Category:Lakes of Herkimer County, New York
Category:Lakes of Montgomery County, New York | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"Lakes of New York (state)",
"Lakes of Herkimer County, New York",
"Lakes of Montgomery County, New York"
] |
projected-71476674-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Australian%20football%20code%20crowds | 2022 Australian football code crowds | Introduction | This is a list of crowd figures for 2022 Australian football codes.
(Updated August 7, 2022)
Several football codes have national competitions in Australia. Specifically, the list primarily includes home matches in the following seasons:
The 2022 Australian Football League season (Aussie Rules)
The 2022 National Rugby League season
The 2022 State of Origin series
As well as, where applicable, data from:
The 2022 Super Rugby Pacific season
The 2021–22 A-League Men | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"2022 in Australian rugby league",
"2022 in Australian rugby union",
"2022 in Australian soccer",
"2022 in Australian rules football",
"Australian football code crowds"
] | |
projected-71476674-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Australian%20football%20code%20crowds | 2022 Australian football code crowds | Club attendances | This is a list of crowd figures for 2022 Australian football codes.
(Updated August 7, 2022)
Several football codes have national competitions in Australia. Specifically, the list primarily includes home matches in the following seasons:
The 2022 Australian Football League season (Aussie Rules)
The 2022 National Rugby League season
The 2022 State of Origin series
As well as, where applicable, data from:
The 2022 Super Rugby Pacific season
The 2021–22 A-League Men | Note: Includes Magic Round individual game figures (as listed below) as this is how they are recorded by the NRL.
Updated 7 August (Missing MEL v GLD and SOU v WAR R21 games) | [] | [
"National Rugby League Attendances",
"Club attendances"
] | [
"2022 in Australian rugby league",
"2022 in Australian rugby union",
"2022 in Australian soccer",
"2022 in Australian rules football",
"Australian football code crowds"
] |
projected-71476674-011 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Australian%20football%20code%20crowds | 2022 Australian football code crowds | Average Crowds | This is a list of crowd figures for 2022 Australian football codes.
(Updated August 7, 2022)
Several football codes have national competitions in Australia. Specifically, the list primarily includes home matches in the following seasons:
The 2022 Australian Football League season (Aussie Rules)
The 2022 National Rugby League season
The 2022 State of Origin series
As well as, where applicable, data from:
The 2022 Super Rugby Pacific season
The 2021–22 A-League Men | Notes:
Rugby league indicated by use of league icons (colour boxes)
Australian rules indicated by no colours | [] | [
"Code Comparison",
"Average Crowds"
] | [
"2022 in Australian rugby league",
"2022 in Australian rugby union",
"2022 in Australian soccer",
"2022 in Australian rules football",
"Australian football code crowds"
] |
projected-71476674-012 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Australian%20football%20code%20crowds | 2022 Australian football code crowds | Top Crowds | This is a list of crowd figures for 2022 Australian football codes.
(Updated August 7, 2022)
Several football codes have national competitions in Australia. Specifically, the list primarily includes home matches in the following seasons:
The 2022 Australian Football League season (Aussie Rules)
The 2022 National Rugby League season
The 2022 State of Origin series
As well as, where applicable, data from:
The 2022 Super Rugby Pacific season
The 2021–22 A-League Men | Notes:
Crowds of 30,000 or more
Rugby league indicated by use of league icons (colour boxes)
Australian rules indicated by no colours | [] | [
"Code Comparison",
"Top Crowds"
] | [
"2022 in Australian rugby league",
"2022 in Australian rugby union",
"2022 in Australian soccer",
"2022 in Australian rules football",
"Australian football code crowds"
] |
projected-71476674-013 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022%20Australian%20football%20code%20crowds | 2022 Australian football code crowds | References | This is a list of crowd figures for 2022 Australian football codes.
(Updated August 7, 2022)
Several football codes have national competitions in Australia. Specifically, the list primarily includes home matches in the following seasons:
The 2022 Australian Football League season (Aussie Rules)
The 2022 National Rugby League season
The 2022 State of Origin series
As well as, where applicable, data from:
The 2022 Super Rugby Pacific season
The 2021–22 A-League Men | Category:2022 in Australian rugby league
Category:2022 in Australian rugby union
Category:2022 in Australian soccer
Category:2022 in Australian rules football
2022 | [] | [
"References"
] | [
"2022 in Australian rugby league",
"2022 in Australian rugby union",
"2022 in Australian soccer",
"2022 in Australian rules football",
"Australian football code crowds"
] |
projected-56569399-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulverbach | Pulverbach | Introduction | Pulverbach may refer to:
Pulverbach (Selke), a river of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, tributary of the Selke
Pulverbach (Klosterbach), a river of Bavaria, Germany, tributary of the Klosterbach | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [] | |
projected-44500189-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe%20Geller | Joe Geller | Introduction | Joseph Scott Geller (born March 7, 1954) is a Democratic politician who currently serves as a member of the Florida House of Representatives, representing the 100th District, which includes most of Hollywood in southern Broward County and parts of Miami-Dade County, since 2014. | [] | [
"Introduction"
] | [
"Florida State University College of Law alumni",
"Florida Democrats",
"Members of the Florida House of Representatives",
"1954 births",
"Living people",
"21st-century American politicians"
] | |
projected-44500189-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe%20Geller | Joe Geller | History | Joseph Scott Geller (born March 7, 1954) is a Democratic politician who currently serves as a member of the Florida House of Representatives, representing the 100th District, which includes most of Hollywood in southern Broward County and parts of Miami-Dade County, since 2014. | Geller was born in The Bronx in New York City in 1954, and moved to the state of Florida in 1965. He attended Northwestern University, but did not graduate, instead receiving his bachelor's degree in history from the Florida State University in 1975. After graduation, Geller then attended the Florida State University College of Law, receiving his Juris Doctor in 1979.
In 1989, he was elected the Chairman of the Miami-Dade County Democratic Party, serving in that capacity in 2000. During the 2000 presidential election, he played a prominent role as an attorney for the Al Gore presidential campaign. During the recount, Geller, seeking to confirm a theory that some Gore voters had accidentally punched the wrong hole in their ballots, requested a sample ballot from the Supervisor of Elections' office. After receiving the ballot from a clerk, Geller was accused of stealing a ballot, was mobbed by protesters, and had to be escorted to safety by police. "I requested [the sample ballot], which I'm entitled to do," Geller said. "It was clearly marked 'sample ballot for use by Democratic Party.' The whole transaction was out in the open and all very calmly done. This Republican observer — a woman with blond hair, a suit and clipboard — was watching the whole thing. But the moment I started to walk away, she sicced the crowd on me. She said I was stealing a ballot and they surrounded me. It was all orchestrated."
Geller ran for Mayor of North Bay Village, a small city in northeastern Miami-Dade County, in 2004. He faced Frank DiMaggio and was able to win narrowly, receiving 54% of the vote to DiMaggio's 46%. | [] | [
"History"
] | [
"Florida State University College of Law alumni",
"Florida Democrats",
"Members of the Florida House of Representatives",
"1954 births",
"Living people",
"21st-century American politicians"
] |
projected-44500189-002 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe%20Geller | Joe Geller | Florida House of Representatives | Joseph Scott Geller (born March 7, 1954) is a Democratic politician who currently serves as a member of the Florida House of Representatives, representing the 100th District, which includes most of Hollywood in southern Broward County and parts of Miami-Dade County, since 2014. | When incumbent State Representative Dan Gelber was unable to seek re-election due to term limits in 2008, Geller ran to succeed him in the 106th District, which stretched from Fisher Island to Golden Beach in eastern Miami-Dade County. He faced Richard L. Steinberg in the Democratic primary, and he lost to Steinberg handily, receiving only 31% of the vote to Steinberg's 69%.
In 2014, incumbent State Representative Joseph Gibbons was unable to seek re-election in the 100th District, so Geller ran in the Democratic primary to replace him, declaring, "My style is to be a consensus builder to build bridges between people. I’m a progressive. And I make no bones about being a progressive. But I have also lived in other parts of the state. I think I can do some good up there. I think I can make a difference. I think I can make this a better state." He faced teacher John Paul Alvarez and pastor Ben Sorenson in the Democratic primary, and earned the endorsement of the Miami Herald, which praised him as a candidate who "knows this bi-county district well," and noted that the district "stands to benefit from his legislative priorities." Ultimately, Geller defeated his opponents handily, receiving 62% of the vote to Sorensen's 20% and Alvarez's 18%. In the general election, Geller faced fellow attorney Marty Feigenbaum and once again earned the endorsement of the Herald, which said that he was "thoroughly familiar with the issues."
In April 2022, Geller argued that the effort to repeal the Reedy Creek Improvement Act was "disrespectful of the legislative process." | [] | [
"Florida House of Representatives"
] | [
"Florida State University College of Law alumni",
"Florida Democrats",
"Members of the Florida House of Representatives",
"1954 births",
"Living people",
"21st-century American politicians"
] |
projected-06901377-000 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Rawlings | Bill Rawlings | Introduction | William Ernest Rawlings (3 January 1896 – 25 September 1972) was an English footballer. A centre-forward, he scored more than 196 goals in 367 league games in a 15-year career.
He began his career with Southampton in 1918, who were elevated from the Southern League to the Football League in 1919. He finished as the club's top-scorer eight times in nine seasons from 1920–21 to 1927–28, helping the "Saints" to win the Third Division South title in 1921–22 and to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925 and 1927. He also won himself two England caps in 1922, both of which were from British Home Championship games. He signed with Manchester United in March 1928, and moved on to Port Vale in November 1929. He picked up a serious ankle injury whilst with the "Valiants", and moved onto Newport via New Milton the following year, before retiring in 1933. | [] | [
"Introduction"
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projected-06901377-001 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Rawlings | Bill Rawlings | Early life and war record | William Ernest Rawlings (3 January 1896 – 25 September 1972) was an English footballer. A centre-forward, he scored more than 196 goals in 367 league games in a 15-year career.
He began his career with Southampton in 1918, who were elevated from the Southern League to the Football League in 1919. He finished as the club's top-scorer eight times in nine seasons from 1920–21 to 1927–28, helping the "Saints" to win the Third Division South title in 1921–22 and to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925 and 1927. He also won himself two England caps in 1922, both of which were from British Home Championship games. He signed with Manchester United in March 1928, and moved on to Port Vale in November 1929. He picked up a serious ankle injury whilst with the "Valiants", and moved onto Newport via New Milton the following year, before retiring in 1933. | Rawlings was playing for hometown club Andover when he enlisted to fight in World War I in 1914, aged eighteen. He served with the Wessex Field Ambulance and was awarded the 1914 star. | [] | [
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"Port Vale F.C. players",
"New Milton Town F.C. playe... |
projected-06901377-003 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Rawlings | Bill Rawlings | Southampton | William Ernest Rawlings (3 January 1896 – 25 September 1972) was an English footballer. A centre-forward, he scored more than 196 goals in 367 league games in a 15-year career.
He began his career with Southampton in 1918, who were elevated from the Southern League to the Football League in 1919. He finished as the club's top-scorer eight times in nine seasons from 1920–21 to 1927–28, helping the "Saints" to win the Third Division South title in 1921–22 and to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925 and 1927. He also won himself two England caps in 1922, both of which were from British Home Championship games. He signed with Manchester United in March 1928, and moved on to Port Vale in November 1929. He picked up a serious ankle injury whilst with the "Valiants", and moved onto Newport via New Milton the following year, before retiring in 1933. | Rawlings' career started in 1918 with an apprenticeship at Southampton, having impressed playing against their reserve team for his regiment two years previously. He turned professional in February 1919 and made his first-team debut against Swansea Town on 1 September. He quickly settled into the side, building a formidable attacking partnership with Arthur Dominy. He scored 19 goals in the Southern League in 1919–20. The "Saints" were then elected into the Football League, becoming founder members of the Third Division. He became the club's top scorer in 1920–21 with 22 goals, as Southampton were denied promotion despite finishing in second place. He hit 32 goals in 1921–22 to win himself attention at a national level, and to help his club win the Third Division South title. His intelligent play and deadly shooting earned him two England caps. He appeared against Wales and Scotland in the 1922 British Home Championship, achieving the rare distinction of being capped for England while playing for a third tier club.
In 1922–23, the "Saints" posted a respectable 11th-place finish in the Second Division, with Dominy finishing as top-scorer. Rawlings then returned to form and finished as the club's top-scorer for the third time in four seasons in 1923–24, when he found the net 21 times. Rawlings went on to remain as the club's top scorer for another four seasons, hitting 16 goals in 1924–25, 20 goals in 1925–26, 28 goals in 1926–27, and 21 goals in 1927–28. He also helped the club to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1927, and scored in what was a 2–1 defeat to Arsenal at Stamford Bridge. He toured Canada with an XI picked by The Football Association in 1927. Nevertheless, he was transfer-listed by the club, though offers from Everton and Newcastle United were rejected. He scored a total of 193 goals in 364 appearances in league and cup competitions during his ten years at The Dell. His 193 goals places him third on the club's list of all-time goalscorers, behind Mick Channon and Matthew Le Tissier. | [] | [
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projected-06901377-004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Rawlings | Bill Rawlings | Manchester United | William Ernest Rawlings (3 January 1896 – 25 September 1972) was an English footballer. A centre-forward, he scored more than 196 goals in 367 league games in a 15-year career.
He began his career with Southampton in 1918, who were elevated from the Southern League to the Football League in 1919. He finished as the club's top-scorer eight times in nine seasons from 1920–21 to 1927–28, helping the "Saints" to win the Third Division South title in 1921–22 and to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925 and 1927. He also won himself two England caps in 1922, both of which were from British Home Championship games. He signed with Manchester United in March 1928, and moved on to Port Vale in November 1929. He picked up a serious ankle injury whilst with the "Valiants", and moved onto Newport via New Milton the following year, before retiring in 1933. | In March 1928, he signed for First Division side Manchester United for a fee of £4,000. He scored on his Old Trafford debut on 14 March; a 1–0 win over Everton. He hit a hat-trick on 7 April, in a 4–3 home win over Burnley, and finished the 1927–28 season with ten goals for the "Red Devils". However, he was limited to six goals in 1928–29. He found all three goals of the 1929–30 campaign on 14 September, in a 3–2 win over Middlesbrough at Ayresome Park. | [] | [
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projected-06901377-005 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill%20Rawlings | Bill Rawlings | Later career | William Ernest Rawlings (3 January 1896 – 25 September 1972) was an English footballer. A centre-forward, he scored more than 196 goals in 367 league games in a 15-year career.
He began his career with Southampton in 1918, who were elevated from the Southern League to the Football League in 1919. He finished as the club's top-scorer eight times in nine seasons from 1920–21 to 1927–28, helping the "Saints" to win the Third Division South title in 1921–22 and to reach the FA Cup semi-finals in 1925 and 1927. He also won himself two England caps in 1922, both of which were from British Home Championship games. He signed with Manchester United in March 1928, and moved on to Port Vale in November 1929. He picked up a serious ankle injury whilst with the "Valiants", and moved onto Newport via New Milton the following year, before retiring in 1933. | In November 1929, he moved to Port Vale, after the "Valiants" paid United a four figure fee. Rawlings scored on his Vale debut in a 5–2 win over Accrington Stanley at The Old Recreation Ground on 9 November. He played a further five games before suffering a serious ankle injury on Christmas Day 1929, during a 2–1 home defeat by Stockport County. The "Valiants" went on to win the Third Division North title in 1929–30. He recovered to full fitness by the spring of 1930, but was unable to return to the first team and left for New Milton during the 1930–31 season. Later in 1930 he moved to Isle of Wight and played for Newport, where he was reunited with Dominy, winning the Hampshire Senior Cup in 1932. | [] | [
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