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World War II, Italian Libya was occupied by France and the United Kingdom. The Cyrenaica Emirate was declared in British-occupied Cyrenaica in 1949 with the backing of the British authorities. The "Emir of Cyrenaica", Idris of Libya, kept the emirate's flag which derives from flag of Turkey (a white crescent and star o...
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Joseph J. Ross Joseph J. Ross (December 1842 - October 24, 1899) served as the 14th Vice President of Liberia from 1898 to 1899. He also served as Attorney General of Liberia under three separate administrations and was thrice-elected to the Senate of Liberia as a senator from Sinoe County, serving as President pro tem...
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Ila-kabkabu The Amorite name Ila-kabkabu appears twice in the Assyrian King List: Arising from the two appearances of the name "Ila-kabkabu" within two different places of the Assyrian King List, the “kings whose fathers are known” section has often, although not universally been considered a list of Šamši-Adad I's anc...
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Teijo National Park Teijo National Park (, ) is a national park in Southwest Finland, Finland in the Perniö area of Salo municipality. The park was established on January 1, 2015 and covers an area of . It is maintained by Metsähallitus. In the National Park, there is one eutrophic fen, which is a type of mire that has...
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1991 Tour de France, Stage 12 to Stage 22 The 1991 Tour de France was the 78th edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Tour began in Lyon with a prologue individual time trial on 6 July and Stage 12 occurred on 18 July with a mountainous stage from Pau. The race finished on the Champs-Élysées in Pa...
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Summer with Monika Summer with Monika () is a 1953 Swedish film directed by Ingmar Bergman, based on Per Anders Fogelström's 1951 novel of the same title. It was controversial abroad at the time of its first release for its frank depiction of nudity and, along with the film "One Summer of Happiness" from the year befor...
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1965 American Football League season The 1965 American Football League season was the sixth regular season of the American Football League. The season also saw a change of television address as the games moved from ABC to NBC. The season ended when the Buffalo Bills defeated the San Diego Chargers in the AFL Championsh...
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Adel Yzquierdo Adel Onofre Yzquierdo Rodríguez (born 12 June 1945) is a Cuban politician and engineer. Yzquierdo Rodríguez studied at the V.V. Kuybyshev Institute of Civil Engineering in Moscow. He has held several positions in the Council of Ministers: Minister of Economy and Planning from 2011 to 2014; First Vice-Min...
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American Wrestler: The Wizard American Wrestler: The Wizard is a 2016 American sports biographical film directed by Alex Ranarivelo. The film centers around the world of competitive high school wrestling and stars George Kosturos as Ali Jahani, a 17 year old who escapes Iran in the 1980s after the Iran hostage crisis a...
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Lee F. Gunn Lee F. Gunn (born in Michigan) is a retired Vice Admiral and former Naval Inspector General of the United States Department of the Navy. Gunn earned a Bachelor’s degree in Experimental and Physiological Psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles and a Master of Science degree in Operations Re...
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Caeciri Caeciri was a Roman–Berber "civitas" (town) and ancient diocese in Africa Proconsularis. Its exact location is unknown, though it must have been in the Sahel, Tunisia region south of Algiers in modern Algeria. Caeciri must have been of some size as it was the seat of an ancient Christian bishopric, which surviv...
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Tui Cakau The Tui Cakau is the Paramount Chief of Cakaudrove Province in Fiji. In Modern Fiji this chiefly title is regarded as the most senior in the Tovata Confederacy, and the third most senior in the country. The current "Tui Cakau" is Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu; he was installed on 8 May 2001 in succession to his fat...
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Soden v British and Commonwealth Holdings plc Soden v British and Commonwealth Holdings plc [1998] AC 298 is a UK insolvency law case, decided in the House of Lords. It decided that damages for negligent misrepresentation inducing purchase of company shares are not "sums due" to shareholders for the purpose of the Inso...
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.mobi The domain name mobi is a top-level domain (TLD) in the Domain Name System of the Internet. Its name is derived from the adjective "mobile", indicating it is used by mobile devices for accessing Internet resources via the Mobile Web. The domain was approved by ICANN on 11 July 2005, and is managed by the mTLD glo...
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Coca-Cola Cherry Coca-Cola Cherry (originally marketed as and still widely referred to as Cherry Coke) is a cherry-flavored version of Coca-Cola. It is produced and distributed by The Coca-Cola Company and its bottlers in the United States and some international markets. Long before its official introduction in stores ...
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Samuel Stanier Sir Samuel Stanier (1649-28 August 1724) of Wanstead, Essex was a London merchant who became Lord Mayor of London in 1713 Stanier was the eldest son of James Stanier of St. Mary Axe, London and his wife Thomasine Meade. His father was a merchant, trading with Italy who died in 1666. In 1673, Stanier inhe...
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Greatest Hits (Paula Abdul album) Greatest Hits is the first compilation album by American singer Paula Abdul. Released in 2000, it contains Paula's six #1s and other singles, with the exception of the top 20 single "Will You Marry Me", which was released in 1992 and reached #19 on the Billboard charts. It does, howeve...
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Arizona State Route 389 State Route 389, also known as SR 389, is a state highway in far northern Arizona serving the Arizona Strip. SR 389 stretches from the Utah border at Colorado City, southeast to Pipe Spring National Monument, and ends at U.S. Route 89A in Fredonia; it is the only major east–west route between th...
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Cotulla, Texas Cotulla ( ) is a city in and the county seat of La Salle County, Texas, United States. The population was 3,614 at the 2000 census. The whole of La Salle County had 6,886 persons in the 2010 census. In June 2014, Cotulla "self-declared" its population at 7,000, based on utility connections alone. Polish ...
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Ip Ching Ip Ching (born 7 July 1936) is a Chinese martial artist. He is one of five still-living Grandmasters of the Ip Man (Yip Man) family of Wing Chun Kung Fu. Ip Ching (Ip Hok Ching Chinese 葉學正 )(born in Foshan, China in 1936) is the second eldest son of Ip Man. This was short lived as his father had to leave and t...
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Bantu Philosophy Bantu Philosophy (La philosophie bantoue in French) is a 1945 book written by Placide Tempels which argues that the people of Sub-Saharan Africa (the use of the term "Bantu" as an ethnic label is now largely discredited) have a distinctive philosophy, and attempts to describe the underpinnings of that ...
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Houbigant Parfum Houbigant Parfum () is a perfume manufacturer founded in Paris, France in 1775 by Jean-François Houbigant of Grasse (1752–1807). The brand originally sold gloves, perfumes, and bridal bouquets. The original shop, called "A la Corbeille de Fleurs", was at 19, rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Over the centu...
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Natalie Chung Natalie Chung (born 1962 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian news anchor and journalist for the Réseau de l'information (RDI) television network, a Canadian French language news channel owned by the Société Radio-Canada. She was anchor of RDI's weekend newscast "Aujourd'hui" and "Le Monde ce soir". Chung w...
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William Andrew Chatto William Andrew Chatto (1799–1864) was an English writer. He used the pseudonym Stephen Oliver (Junior). The only son of William Chatto, a merchant who died at Gibraltar in 1804, was born at Newcastle-on-Tyne on 17 April 1799. After education at a grammar school in the north, he went into business,...
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French frigate Rhin (1802) Rhin was a 40-gun "Virginie"-class frigate of the French Navy launched in 1802. She was present at two major battles while in French service. The Royal Navy captured her in 1806. Thereafter "Rhin" served until 1815 capturing numerous vessels. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars she was laid ...
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Andrew Mango Andrew James Alexander Mango (14 June 1926 – 6 July 2014) was a British author who was born in Turkey as one of three sons of a prosperous Anglo-Russian family. He was the brother of the distinguished Oxford historian and Byzantinist Professor Cyril Mango. Mango's early years were passed in Istanbul; in th...
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Nerbudda Division The Nerbudda Division, named after the Narmada River (Nerbudda), was a former administrative division of the Central Provinces of British India. It encompassed a good part of the Narmada River basin in the eastern part of present-day Madhya Pradesh state of India. The Nerbudda Division had an area of ...
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Dmitry Lobkov Dmitry Vladimirovich Lobkov (; born 2 February 1981 in Murom) is a Russian speedskater who specialises in the shortest distances, with the 500 metres being his favourite. At the 2004 World Single Distance Speed Skating Championships in Seoul he achieved the silver medal at this distance, only allowing Jer...
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Tag (barbershop music) A tag, in barbershop music, is a dramatic variation put in the last section of the song. Its rough analog in Classical music is a coda. Tags are characterized by heightening the dramatic tension of the song, frequently including a hanger, or sustained note against which the other singers carry th...
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Bagrat III of Imereti Bagrat III () (1495-1565), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a King of Imereti from April 1, 1510, to 1565. He succeeded upon the death of his father, Alexander II, and faced repeated assaults from the Ottoman Turks as well as the conflicts with his ostensible vassal princes of Mingrelia, Guria, and ...
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Teckberg Teckberg is a mountain at "Landkreis Esslingen" in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, with an elevation of 775 metres. Situated on top is castle Teck. The Teckberg jumps from Swabian Jura edge from about 3 km towards the north front and overlooks the Albvorland to 350 m, the Lauter (Neckar) valley to 400 m. He is fla...
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Webroot Window Washer Webroot Window Washer was a tool designed to protect user's privacy by permanently deleting all traces of web browsing history and other personal information files on a computer running Microsoft Windows. Currently, no further versions are planned as the program is no longer being updated. Window ...
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Vishnu (TV actor) Vishnu is an Indian actor who has worked on Tamil films and television series. After making a breakthrough as an actor through his role in "Office" (2013), he has worked on films including "Mapla Singam" (2016) "Ivan Yarendru Therikiratha" (2017) and ‘’Kalari’’ (2018). As a part of his post-graduate d...
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Charlotte Elizabeth Ferguson-Davie Charlotte Elizabeth Ferguson-Davie (1880-1943) was a British physician and the founder of the St. Andrew's Medical Mission and the St. Andrew Mission Hospital, the first women's and children's clinic in Singapore. Ferguson-Davie was born Charlotte Elizabeth Hull, the daughter of Edwar...
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Hack! Hack! is a 2007 American horror film directed and written by Matt Flynn. The film centres on a group of students who, while on a field trip, become victims in a snuff film, and stars Danica McKellar, Jay Kenneth Johnson, William Forsythe, Sean Kanan, Juliet Landau, Justin Chon, Travis Schuldt, Adrienne Frantz and...
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The state legislature did not get around to granting a charter for the University until 1789. Name | Location | Founded ---|---|--- North Carolina Arboretum | Asheville, Buncombe County | North Carolina Center for International Understanding | Raleigh, Wake County | North Carolina Center for Nurs...
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The General Assembly shall provide that the benefits of The University of North Carolina and other public institutions of higher education, as far as practicable, be extended to the people of the State free of expense. Within its seventeen campuses, UNC houses two medical schools and one teaching hospital, ten nursin...
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Sec. 9. Benefits of public institutions of higher education. Name | Term ---|--- Rev. Joseph Caldwell | 1804–1812 Robert Hett Chapman | 1812–1816 Rev. Joseph Caldwell | 1816–1835 Elisha Mitchell * | 1835 David Lowry Swain | 1835–1868 Rev. Solomon Pool | 1869–1872 Rev. Charles Phil...
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-yllion -yllion is a proposal from Donald Knuth for the terminology and symbols of an alternate decimal superbase system. In it, he adapts the familiar English terms for large numbers to provide a systematic set of names for much larger numbers. In addition to providing an extended range, "-yllion" also dodges the long...
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Mota Singh Sir Mota Singh, QC (26 July 1930 – 13 November 2016) was a British judge who was noted for being the United Kingdom's first Asian judge. Singh was born in 1930 in Nairobi, Kenya. He was only sixteen years of age when he lost his father, Sardar Dalip Singh. The responsibility of the family with five younger s...
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Pat Kelly (musician) Pat Kelly (born 1944, Kingston, Jamaica) is a reggae singer whose career began in the late 1960s. Kelly was born in Kingston in 1944. After leaving school, he spent a year studying electronics in Springfield, Massachusetts, United States during 1966, before returning to Jamaica. In 1967, when Slim ...
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Hadley Hills The Hadley Hills are a rugged glacial moraine located in The Thumb of Michigan, that extend from northern Oakland County and into southern Lapeer County. The hills surround the village of Hadley; the highest points and most prominent outcroppings are: Pinnacle Point, at 1,262 feet (385 m), Kerr (Cemetery) ...
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BAFTA Award for Best Production Design This is a list of winners and nominees for the BAFTA Award for Best Production Design for each year. The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) is a British organisation that hosts annual awards shows for movies, television, children's movies and television, and inter...
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Thomas Happer Taylor Thomas Happer Taylor (December 11, 1934 – October 1, 2017) was a highly decorated veteran of the United States Army, a military historian, an author of seven books, and a champion triathlete. He served in Vietnam following in the footsteps of his father, General Maxwell D. Taylor. Thomas H. Taylor ...
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collections." Booklist (August 12, 2002) noted that Taylor "relates an incredible odyssey of Beyrle's escape attempts, survival in several POW camps, and ultimate escape to the advancing Russians, with whom he volunteered to fight and was subsequently wounded. Despite the presentation's compositional bumpiness, it carr...
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Melodorum siamense Melodorum siamensis (Taxonomic synonym "Rauwenhoffia siamensis"; locally called nom-maew) is a plant in the family Annonaceae. "Melodorum siamensis" is a small tree, related to the ylang-ylang. It requires little care and can even be kept in containers, blooming from spring until fall. Despite their ...
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Middelalderparken The Medieval Park () in the borough of Gamle Oslo in Oslo, Norway. The park was built in 2000 in Sørenga in The medieval town of Oslo in The Old Town, Oslo (Gamlebyen). That is about ten minutes walk from the Oslo Central Station. The park is located within the so-called Medieval Park area, which also...
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Russian-speaking Ukraine The All-Ukrainian Non-government Organization “Human Rights Public Movement “Russian-speaking Ukraine” () was founded on March 1, 2008 in Severodonetsk, Luhansk region during the II All-Ukrainian congress of deputies of all-level councils, and was registered on August 10, 2009 by the Ministry o...
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Cornelius Johnson (American football) Cornelius Otis Johnson (born July 12, 1943) is a former American football offensive guard who played six seasons with the Baltimore Colts of the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Colts in the eighth round of the 1967 NFL Draft. He played college football at Virg...
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Veniamin Kaverin Veniamin Alexandrovich Kaverin (; real name – Вениамин Абелевич Зильбер, or Veniamin Abelevich Zilber)(, Pskov – May 2, 1989, Moscow) was a Soviet writer associated with the early 1920s movement of the Serapion Brothers. Kaverin was born in a family of kapellmeister of the 96th Infantry Regiment out of...
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Order of Entrepreneurial Merit The Order of Entrepreneurial Merit () is the most junior of the Portuguese civil orders of merit, and is intended to distinguish those who have rendered, as an entrepreneur or worker, outstanding service in promoting appreciation or services in an economic sector. The Order has three cate...
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Sandy Johnson (director) Sandy Johnson is a Scottish director who has directed episodes of "The Comic Strip Presents", "Inspector Morse", "A Touch of Frost", "The Ruth Rendell Mysteries", "Jonathan Creek" and "Auf Wiedersehen, Pet". His first full-length film was "Coast to Coast" (1987) written by Stan Hey and starring...
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1951 Salad Bowl The 1951 Salad Bowl was a college football postseason bowl game between the Arizona State Sun Devils and the Miami Redskins. The Sun Devils were making their fourth bowl appearance in 11 years, and 2nd straight Salad Bowl after a 2nd place finish in the Border Intercollegiate Athletic Association Miami ...
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Augustine Clarke Augustine Clarke (c. 1780—June 17, 1841) was a Vermont attorney, banker and politician who was a leader of the Anti-Masonic Party and served as Vermont State Treasurer. Details of Clarke’s birth are not known for certain. His name is sometimes spelled “Clark” and he appears to have been born in Richmon...
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Lewis J. Clarke Lewis James Clarke (born 10 March 1927) was born in Carlton, Nottinghamshire, England. He is a landscape architect of the Modernist period. Clarke was one of Dean Henry L. Kamphoefner's early faculty members at the North Carolina State University School (now College) of Design, and has been recognised a...
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Pat Keysell Pat Keysell (7 June 1926 – 31 October 2009) was a presenter of the BBC television series "Vision On" which ran from 1964 to 1976. She was also a mime artist and administrator. Keysell was born in Tooting, London and brought up in Petts Wood, Kent. She was educated in Orpington and trained in mime at the Cen...
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2008 in Strikeforce The year 2008 is the 3rd year in the history of Strikeforce, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2008 Strikeforce held 8 events beginning with, "Strikeforce: Young Guns II". Strikeforce: Young Guns II was an event held on February 1, 2008 at the San Jose Civic Auditorium in...
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Convoys Wharf Convoys Wharf, formerly called the King's Yard, is the site of Deptford Dockyard, the first of the Royal Dockyards, built on a riverside site in Deptford, by the River Thames in London. It was first developed in 1513 by Henry VIII to build vessels for the Royal Navy. Convoys Wharf also covers most of the ...
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eight locos, seven were apparently still in existence at Deptford, but out of use. In October 2000, 'Creekside Forum' set up the 'Convoys Opportunity' umbrella group in response to the News International Ltd plan to sell the Convoys Wharf site. Convoys Opportunity, composed of community organisations, churches, busines...
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Protected areas of Brazil Protected areas of Brazil included various classes of area according to the National System of Conservation Units (SNUC), a formal, unified system for federal, state and municipal parks created in 2000. Protected areas, also called conservation units, are divided into different categories acco...
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An Innocent Man (song) "An Innocent Man" is a 1983 song performed by Billy Joel and the third single from his album "An Innocent Man". The song, whose musical style is an homage to Ben E. King and The Drifters, reached #10 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart, the third consecutive top 10 single from the album. It also spe...
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Sant'Antonio di Padova, Santa Maria Nuova Sant'Antonio di Padova is a Neoclassic-style, Roman Catholic church located facing Piazza Magagnini in the town of Santa Maria Nuova, region of Marche, Italy. The church was designed in 1793 by the architect Mattia Capponi, but only built in 1884. The altar has a modern polychr...
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Daphne's Flight Daphne’s Flight was an album that resulted from a collaboration between five of the most highly regarded female vocalists, instrumentalist and songwriters in the British folk and root music scene: Christine Collister, Melanie Harrold, Julie Matthews, Helen Watson and Chris While. The collaboration resul...
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América Football Club (CE) América Football Club, is an association football club based in Fortaleza, the capital of the north-east Brazilian state of Ceará. The club was founded on November 11, 1920 and plays home games at Estádio Presidente Vargas, which has a maximum capacity of 23,000 people. América's mascot used ...
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Albert Raisner Albert Raisner (30 September 1922 in Apolda, Germany – 1 January 2011 in Boulogne-Billancourt, France) was a French harmonica player, founder of the award-winning Trio Raisner and a TV and radio host and producer. He was the host of the hit show Age Tendre et Tetes de Bois, which aired from 1961 to 1967 ...
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change in the entertainment industry's functioning. Always avant-gardist, he was one of the first host/producers to propose shooting live in other or simultaneous countries. His TV shows' excerpts are nowadays oftentimes relayed by media. A widely successful tour featuring 1960s and 1970s French and international artis...
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Mersin Orthodox Church Mersin Orthodox Church ( is a church in Mersin, Turkey. The church is at is to the south of Mersin Halkevi and to the west of Mersin Atatürk Monument. It is to İsmet İnönü Boulevard and to the Mediterranean Sea coast. The church has been built in 1870 during the Ottoman Empire era. Its building a...
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Yonggwang Station (South Hamgyong) Yŏnggwang Station is a railway station in Yŏnggwang-ŭp, Yŏnggwang county, South Hamgyŏng province, North Korea on the Sinhŭng Line of the Korean State Railway, and is the starting point of the narrow gauge Changjin Line. There are facilities for servicing the locomotives and rolling s...
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Michael Jackson (anthropologist) Michael D. Jackson (born 1940) is a New Zealand poet and anthropologist who has taught in anthropology departments at Massey University, the Australian National University, Indiana University Bloomington, and the University of Copenhagen. He is currently distinguished professor of world...
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Stavanger Peninsula Stavanger Peninsula () is a peninsula in Rogaland county, Norway. The peninsula is named for the city of Stavanger, located on its northeastern shore and it includes the most populous parts of Greater Stavanger. The peninsula extends from a line between the Sandnes harbour at the southern end of the...
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The Blazing Sun (1950 film) The Blazing Sun is a 1950 American western film directed by John English, which stars Gene Autry, Lynne Roberts, and Anne Gwynne. Gene Autry is a private investigator for a banking association, on the trail of two bank robbers, Al Bartlett and Trot Lucas. Bartlett and Lucas waylay Larry Tayl...
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Ray Baum Raymond Sims Baum (August 18, 1955 – February 9, 2018) was an American lawyer, lobbyist, and politician Baum was born and raised in La Grande, Oregon. He studied at Brigham Young University and Willamette University College of Law. Baum was admitted to the Oregon bar in 1983 and practiced law in La Grande. Bau...
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Ernst Joubert Ernst Joubert (born 5 August 1980 in Ceres, Western Cape) is a former South African rugby union player. He played at Number Eight for Saracens in the Aviva Premiership from 2009 to 2015 and was the vice captain of the team. He retired from all rugby at the end of November 2015. Joubert started his career ...
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Louis Du Pont Duchambon Louis Du Pont Duchambon (Chalais, Charente January 1, 1680 – 1775?) was a French military officer who served as a member of the French Army during the King George's War. Louis Du Pont Duchambon arrived in Acadia in 1702 as an ensign in a new company in which his brothers, François du Pont Duvivi...
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Dom Turner Dominic Turner is an Australian blues guitarist, vocalist and key songwriter for the Australian blues band "The Backsliders". Dom also has a number of solo projects including 'Dom Turner and Supro' and 'Dom Turner and the Nationals'. In 2002, Dom along with Rob Hirst, formed the band Angry Tradesman. He spec...
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Lanzhou West railway station Lanzhou West railway station is located in Qilihe District, Lanzhou, Gansu Province on Xi Zhan Xi Road (西站西路). It is served by the Longhai Railway, Lan-Xin Railway, Lanzhou–Ürümqi High-Speed Railway, Lanzhou–Zhongchuan Airport Intercity Railway and Baoji–Lanzhou High-Speed Railway (u/c), in...
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Perlora Perlora is one of 12 parishes (administrative divisions) in Carreño, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in northern Spain. Situated at above sea level, the "parroquia" is in size, with a population of 755 (INE 2007). The postal code is 33491. Its villages include: Les Arene...
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Harshaw, Arizona Harshaw is a populated place in Santa Cruz County in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Arizona. The town was settled in the 1870s, in what was then Arizona Territory. Founded as a mining community, Harshaw is named after the cattleman-turned-prospector David Tecumseh Harshaw, who first success...
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in the path of the fire. The town again saw activity between 1937 and 1956 when the Arizona Smelting and Refining Company (ASARCO) worked the Flux and Trench mines located nearby, and tapped into the region's non-silver ore. After 1956, when ASARCO left, Harshaw returned to its status as a ghost town. In 1963, Harshaw ...
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an expected productive life for the mine of 13.5 years. A 2009 assessment also included lead among the expected products of the mine. Wildcat is currently assessing a plan to construct an on site mill capable of processing tons of ore per day. Similar assessments are underway in other nearby parts of Santa Cruz County,...
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Neith (hypothetical moon) Neith is a hypothetical natural satellite of Venus reportedly sighted by Giovanni Cassini in 1672 and by several other astronomers in following years. The first supposed sighting of this moon was in 1650. It was 'observed' up to 30 times by astronomers until 1770, when there were no new sighti...
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John Irwin (producer) John Irwin is an American television producer and entertainment executive. Irwin is the President of Irwin Entertainment, Inc., a full-service production company specializing in developing comedy, reality, scripted and live entertainment programming. Irwin founded the Los Angeles-based company in ...
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Pleasure riding Pleasure riding is a form of equestrianism that encompasses many forms of recreational riding for personal enjoyment, absent elements of competition. Pleasure riding is called hacking in British English, and in parts of the eastern United States and Canada. In the United States, particularly the America...
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Amended Christadelphians "This article refers to a distinction that is today only directly relevant in North America. For more complete information on Christadelphians please see the main article" The term Amended Christadelphians is a name given in North American publications to Christadelphian fellowships who adhere ...
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Silas Talbot Silas Talbot (January 11, 1751 – June 30, 1813) was an officer in the Continental Army and in the Continental Navy during the American Revolution. Talbot is most famous for commanding the USS "Constitution" from 1799 to 1801. Talbot was born in Dighton, Massachusetts and came from a large, farming family. ...
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Elm Elms are deciduous and semi-deciduous trees comprising the flowering plant genus "Ulmus" in the plant family Ulmaceae. The genus first appeared in the Miocene geological period about 20 million years ago, originating in what is now central Asia. These trees flourished and spread over most of the Northern Hemisphere...
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in the US has concentrated on the American Elm "U. americana", resulting in the release of highly resistant clones, notably the cultivars 'Valley Forge' and 'Jefferson'. Much work has also been done into the selection of disease-resistant Asiatic species and cultivars. In Europe, the European White Elm "Ulmus laevis" h...
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splitting, with significant uses in wagon wheel hubs, chair seats and coffins. The bodies of Japanese Taiko drums are often cut from the wood of old elm trees, as the wood's resistance to splitting is highly desired for nailing the skins to them, and a set of three or more is often cut from the same tree. The elm's woo...
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in the elm-and-vine motif, the elm is a masculine symbol: Another of the most famous kisses in English literature, that of Paul and Helen at the start of Forster's "Howards End", is stolen beneath a great wych elm. The elm tree is also referenced in children's literature. "An Elm Tree and Three Sisters" by Norma Sommer...
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Just Jinjer Just Jinjer (formerly known as Just Jinger) is a contemporary rock group from South Africa. Just Jinjer is one of the top selling rock bands in South African history, with over 250,000 units sold. Over the last decade, the band has performed and toured with U2, Counting Crows and Def Leppard among many othe...
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Andrei Ujică Andrei Ujică (born 1951 in Timişoara, Romania) is a Romanian screenwriter and director. Ujicǎ studied literature in Timișoara, Bucharest and Heidelberg. He moved to Germany in 1981. In 1990 he began making films. Together with Harun Farocki, he created "Videograms of a Revolution", a film which has become ...
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Beatbox House Beatbox House is an American beatbox collective based in New York City consisting of 6 award winning beatboxers. The beatbox house began as a residence home in Brooklyn, New York for beatboxer Chris Celiz and Izzy Freedman who one day had an idea to create a place for beatboxers to connect and socialize. ...
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Corybas dowlingii Corybas dowlingii, commonly known as red lanterns, is a rare species of terrestrial orchid endemic to New South Wales. It grows in colonies and has a round or heart-shaped leaf and a dark purplish red flower with white patches in the labellum. "Corybas dowlingii" is a terrestrial, perennial, deciduous...
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Ruth Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church The Ruth Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church, also known as Parker United Methodist Church, is a historic church at 19670 E. Mainstreet in Parker, Colorado. It was built in 1913 and was added to the National Register in 1989. It was deemed notable on architectural grounds:Archit...
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David Michael Barrett David Michael Barrett (born April 3, 1971) is an award-winning screenwriter and film producer in Los Angeles, California. Best known for his films "Bad Actress", "Such Good People" and "Kiss Me, Kill Me", his play "Brentwood" was featured in Noah Wylie's prestigious Blank Theatre Company's Living ...
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Washington Executive Airport Washington Executive Airport , also known as Washington Executive Airpark or Hyde Field, is a public use general aviation airport located southwest of the central business district (CBD) of Clinton, in Prince George's County, Maryland, USA. Hyde Field is one of the "Maryland 3" airports loc...
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1854 Swiss federal election Federal elections were held in Switzerland on 29 October 1854. The Radical Left remained the largest group in the National Council, winning 80 of the 120 seats. The 120 members of the National Council were elected in 49 single- and multi-member constituencies; there was one seat for every 20...
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Mountain Island, North Carolina Mountain Island is suburb of Charlotte, North Carolina. Located in Riverbend Township in northeastern Gaston County, it is an affluent home to many private schools and lakes. It is approximately north of Mount Holly. Mountain Island is named for a small island in Mountain Island Lake, on...
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Michael Roberts (fashion journalist) Michael Roberts (born October 2, 1947) is a British fashion journalist. He is the fashion and style director of "Vanity Fair" magazine. He has worked as fashion director for "The New Yorker", fashion editor of "The Sunday Times", style director and art director of "Tatler", design d...
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You're Making Me Hot-Hot-Hot " You're Making Me Hot-Hot-Hot" is a successful English language single by Swedish singer Linda Pritchard. She sang the song written by Pritchard took part in the Melodifestivalen 2010 in a bid to represent Sweden in the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest in Oslo. On 14 October 2009 SVT had revea...
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