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was located in the belly of the aircraft. In the event of a failure (and they occurred frequently), the crew was instructed to begin immediate emergency restart procedures as the aircraft basically shut down. When the APU failed, the pilot had "NO fuel pressure, NO vacuum, NO hydraulic pressure, NO gear, NO flaps and N... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Luján, Buenos Aires Luján (pronounced ) is a city in the Buenos Aires province of Argentina, located 68 kilometres north west of the city of Buenos Aires. The city was founded in 1755 and has a population of 106,899 (per the ). Luján is best known for its large neo-gothic Basilica, built in honor of the Virgin of Luján... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Ambala bechraji Ambala is the village of Bechraji taluka in Gujarat and it is far from 15 km from Bechraji. There is majority of 72 kadva patidar and thereiarealso public like thakor, chamar, vaghri. Janmastami, dashera are celebrated widely in this village. Dashera is the biggest festival of the village and around reg... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Latrice Royale Timothy Wilcots (born February 12, 1972), better known by his stage name Latrice Royale, is an American drag performer and reality television personality. He is best known for his appearances in season 4 of "RuPaul's Drag Race" in 2012, and season 1 of "RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars" later that year. He f... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Joe Langworth Joe Langworth (born July 19, 1966) is an American choreographer, casting director, singer and dancer. From 1990 - 2005, Langworth appeared in a number of major Broadway musicals, including the closing company of the original production of "A Chorus Line", the Tony Award-winning production of "Ragtime" wit... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
John Warner (1736–1800) John Warner (1736–1800) was an English cleric and classical scholar. Son of Ferdinando Warner and born in London in 1736, he was admitted to St Paul's School on 30 March 1747. Going on to Magdalene College, Cambridge in 1754, then shortly moving to Trinity College, he graduated B.A. in 1758, M.A... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Paul Kogerman Paul Nikolai Kogerman ( in Tallinn – 27 July 1951 in Tallinn) was an Estonian chemist and founder of modern research in oil shale. Paul Kogerman was born into a family of gas factory worker (and former sailor). He went to an elementary school in 1901–1904 and a town school in 1904–1908. After town school ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Transport in Pune Pune is a city in the western part of India, in the state of Maharashtra and is roughly 160 km east of Mumbai. It has winding roads, many of which follow the natural slopes of the mountainous terrain and end at the rivers feeding the city. As the city expanded in an unorganized fashion, a large number... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Enron Code of Ethics The Enron Code of Ethics was a 64-page booklet published by Enron Corporation, the last known edition of which was in July 2000. The sale of copies of the booklet on Ebay has passed into internet folklore. An article in the "San Francisco Chronicle" for February 10, 2002 reported a final bid level ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Icaro Icaro () is a South American indigenous colloquialism for magic or alchemy, or any esoteric modality by which a practitioner attempts to channel their energy to manifest their will. Today, this term is commonly used to describe the medicine songs performed in "vegetal" ceremonies, especially by shamans in ayahuas... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Red Willow County, Nebraska Red Willow County is a county located in the U.S. state of Nebraska. As of the 2010 census, the population was 11,055. Its county seat is McCook. In the Nebraska license plate system, Red Willow County is represented by the prefix 48 (it had the forty-eighth-largest number of vehicles regist... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Samuel Wagan Watson Samuel Wagan Watson (born 1972) is a contemporary Indigenous Australian poet. Samuel Wagan Watson was born in Brisbane; Completed secondary studies in Morayfield State High School where his lawyer sister Nicole also completed her secondary education; whilst living in Caboolture West with his mother ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Marie-François Auguste de Caffarelli du Falga Marie-François Auguste de Caffarelli du Falga (October 7, 1766, Haute-Garonne, France - January 23, 1849, Leschelles, near Guise, Aisne) was a French général de division of Italian descent. Two of his brothers were also generals. His name is inscribed on the south side of t... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Ones' complement The ones' complement of a binary number is defined as the value obtained by inverting all the bits in the binary representation of the number (swapping 0s for 1s and vice versa). The ones' complement of the number then behaves like the negative of the original number in some arithmetic operations. To w... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Elaine Trebek Kares Elaine Trebek Kares, formerly known as Elaine Callei, is an American businesswoman. Originally from Columbus, Ohio, and a journalism graduate of Ohio State University, she was a Playboy Bunny in the 1960s under the pseudonym Teddy Howard. With her first husband Louis Callei, she later moved to Toron... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Alfred Schickel Alfred Schickel (18 June 1933 – 30 September 2015) was a German revisionist historian and Scientific Director of the Zeitgeschichtliche Forschungsstelle Ingolstadt. Schickel was born in Ústí nad Labem/Aussig an der Elbe, Czechoslovakia. He attended Kolleg St. Blasien, a Jesuit school, from 1947 till gra... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Chale Wote Street Art Festival The Chale Wote Street Art Festival also known as Chale Wote is an alternative platform that brings art, music, dance and performance out into the streets. The festival targets exchanges between scores of local and international artists and patrons by creating and appreciating art together... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Darryl Middleton Darryl Bryan Middleton (born July 21, 1966) is an American former professional basketball player and current assistant coach for CSKA Moscow of the VTB United League. Standing at 6'8" (2.03 m), he played at the power forward position. He holds the record for being the oldest player to ever play a game ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Roch-Ambroise Auguste Bébian Roch-Ambroise Auguste Bébian (b. August 4, 1789 at Pointe-à-Pitre (also written: Ponte-à-Pitre), Guadeloupe; d. February 24, 1839 Pointe-à-Pitre) was one of the first hearing educators in France to achieve native-level fluency in French Sign Language. He wrote an important book titled "Mimo... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Thodu Needa Thodu Needa (English: Companion — Shadow) is a 1965 Telugu drama film, produced by N. N. Bhatt and A. Rami Reddy under the Vijayabhat Movies banner and directed by Adurthi Subba Rao. It stars N. T. Rama Rao, Bhanumathi Ramakrishna, Jamuna in the lead roles and music composed by K. V. Mahadevan. The film was... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
St. Mary's of the Barrens Catholic Church (Perryville, Missouri) St. Mary's of the Barrens Church is a Roman Catholic Church and former Seminary in Perryville, Missouri. St. Mary's is the historic seat of the American Vincentians and since its establishment in 1818 has served as an educational institution, a Vincentian... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
on the St. Mary's campus. The hewn log building, often referred to as Rosati's Cabin, was used as a sacristy to the first church. The cabin is a single log pen with V notched corners, and was built around 1825. In a move to preserve the cabin, it was set on a concrete foundation in 1932 and placed under a large arched ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Louis Vorster Louis Vorster (2 November 1966 – 17 April 2012) was a South African-Namibian cricketer. He was a left-handed batsman and a right-arm off-break bowler. He was born in Potchefstroom. Vorster made his cricketing debut for Albatross cricket club on 1 July 1983, in a victory against the Sussex Second XI at Gly... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
HORTA (mining) HORTA is an underground geographic positioning technology utilized in the mining industry and being considered for extraterrestrial space mining applications. The technology utilizes a gyroscope and an accelerometer, together called an inertial navigation system or INS, to aid in 3D-position determinatio... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Dale E. Saffels Dale Emerson Saffels (August 13, 1921 – November 14, 2002) was an American lawyer, legislator, and United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Kansas. Saffels was born in Moline, Kansas. He volunteered for the United States Army in 1942, during World War II and w... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Hoshigami: Ruining Blue Earth The player must raise a small army of mercenaries by fighting turn-based tactical battles. Game flow involves selecting places on the world map, watching story characters interact, and then a battle. While on the story map, the player can equip items and teach party members skills, as well... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Big Daddy (band) Big Daddy is an American satire/parody band, and voice actors that was among the first groups to create mashups - in this case, of oldies and modern pop songs. They are best known for the voices of the Rhinoceros, the Lion, the Giraffe, the Penguin, the Alligator, the Gorilla, the Turtle, the Snake, th... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Red Rubber Ball "Red Rubber Ball" is a pop song written by Paul Simon and Bruce Woodley of The Seekers and recorded by The Cyrkle, whose version reached #2 on the US "Billboard" Hot 100 and in New Zealand. In Canada, the song reached number one. "Red Rubber Ball" is sung from the perspective of a man who has recently e... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
2016 World Mixed Curling Championship The 2016 World Mixed Curling Championship was held from October 14 to 22 at the Sport Palace in Kazan, Russia. Among the 37 participating nations, Andorra, Croatia, South Korea and the Netherlands debuted on this event, while China, Israel and Lithuania didn't participate this time... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Manuel A. Alonso Dr. Manuel A. Alonso (October 6, 1822 – November 4, 1889) was a writer, poet and journalist. He is considered to be the first Puerto Rican writer of notable importance. Alonso was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He received his primary education in Caguas and in the Ildefonso Seminary in San Juan. Alons... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Alvin Toffler Alvin Toffler (October 4, 1928 – June 27, 2016) was an American writer, futurist, and businessman known for his works discussing modern technologies, including the digital revolution and the communication revolution, with emphasis on their effects on cultures worldwide. Toffler was an associate editor of ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
another problem for the future, when a culturally "new environment comes to you ... and comes to you rapidly." That kind of sudden cultural change within one's own country, which he felt many would not understand, would lead to a similar reaction, one of "future shock", which he wrote about in his book by that title. T... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Subsea Valley The Subsea Valley(SSV) geographically consists of Fornebu, Sandvika, Asker, Tranby, Drammen, Hokksund and Kongsberg, totaling approximately 75 km in length. The SSV consists of 184 firms and currently incorporates three of the five major subsea engineering companies that compete in the industry. The major... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
DR & AJU DR & AJU Law Group LLC is a Korea-based international law firm headquartered in Seoul. Since the 2009 merger of Daeryook (DR) and AJU, the firm has expanded to over 155 attorneys and is now among the top ten firms in Korea. The Kim Dae-Hui Law Office opened in 1992, and after former prosecutor Hahm Seung-Hui j... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Gisbert VI of Bronckhorst-Borculo Gisbert VI of Bronckhorst-Borculo ( – 1 November 1409) was a Dutch nobleman. He was a son of William IV of Bronckhorst and Kunigunde of Moers. He was the ruling Lord of Bronckhorst from 1399 until his death, and the ruling Lord of Borculo from 1402 until his death. He was the sixth Lor... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Ngarkat Conservation Park Ngarkat Conservation Park is a protected area located in South Australia's south-eastern corner about south east of the Adelaide city centre. The conservation park was proclaimed in 1979 "to conserve the mallee heath habitat of the 90 Mile Desert". On 27 May 2004, the following conservation pa... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Steingaden Steingaden is a town and municipality in the Weilheim-Schongau district of Upper Bavaria, Germany. It is the site of the 12th-century Steingaden Abbey ("Kloster Steingaden") and the Wies Church, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The community lies in the Alpine foothills, on the border between Upper Bavaria and ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Sugar paste Sugar paste icing is a sweet edible sugar dough usually made from sucrose and glucose. It is sometimes referred to as sugar gum or gum paste, but should not be confused with fondant. It is used to cover cakes, mold features and create decorations for cakes. Sugar paste hardens so it is ideal for creating la... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Jonathan L. Austin Jonathan Loring Austin (January 2, 1748 – May 10, 1826) was a Massachusetts revolutionary, diplomat and politician who served as the second Secretary of the Commonwealth and the tenth Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts. Austin was the father of Massachusetts Attorney General James Treaco... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Old Dog Haven OldDog Haven is 501(c)(3) not-for-profit charitable organization whose goal it is to improve the quality of life of geriatric or "senior" dogs that need care and homes, mainly in the western part of Washington State. The group was formed in 1994 by shelter volunteers who saw senior dogs overlooked by adop... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
If I Was Your Vampire "If I Was Your Vampire" is a song by Marilyn Manson, and is the first track on the album "Eat Me, Drink Me". Marilyn Manson wrote the song on Christmas Day in 2006. The song was uploaded to Manson's MySpace on April 16, 2007 and was officially released on June 5, 2007 on the album. The song was in... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
USS America (CV-66) USS "America" (CVA/CV-66) was one of three supercarriers built for the United States Navy in the 1960s. Commissioned in 1965, she spent most of her career in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, but did make three Pacific deployments serving in the Vietnam War. She also served in the Persian Gulf War's o... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Italy, on the first day of May for eight days of relaxation. During three days of general visiting in Taranto, "America" hosted 1,675 visitors who came aboard to tour the hangar and flight decks. "America" departed Taranto on 8 May for routine task group operations in the Ionian and Tyrrhenian Seas, she followed these ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
started between the Israelis and the Arabs, a weary quiet had settled over the carrier's flight deck. Ready, the ship waited for any possible situation, but the planes never left the decks. However, as the Israeli forces moved to speedy victory in the Six-Day War, the Arabs charged that 6th Fleet aircraft were providin... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Match", a major Atlantic Fleet exercise involving approximately eighty ships was held in the AFWR from 7–29 March. "America" and Commander, CarDiv 2 (as commander, Task Group 26.1 (TG 26.1)), participated from the 18th to the 20th. As the "Blue" Force attack carrier, "America" and her air wing pilots provided close air... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
on board from their Presidential yacht to visit the ship. Accompanied by American Ambassador and Mrs. Henry A. Byroade, they were greeted by Vice Admiral Bardshar and "America"s commanding officer, Capt. Thomas B. Hayward and were subsequently escorted to the ship's hangar deck where the carrier division band and the s... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
the pace proved hectic until the Christmas cease-fire. "Christmas away from home is never good", "America's" historian wrote, "but the men of "America" made the best of it with homemade decorations." There were services to celebrate the season, "and carolers were noted strolling through the passageways ..." "America" r... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
overhaul at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Entering the yard on 27 November 1974, "America" remained there until 27 September 1975, when the ship got underway to conduct post-overhaul sea trials. "America" departed Norfolk Naval Shipyard on 16 October 1975 for local operations off the Virginia Capes and, after a few weeks... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
and then entered Norfolk Naval Shipyard for an availability. Upon the conclusion of that period of repairs and alterations, the carrier conducted post-availability sea trials on 19–20 September 1978, and conducted carrier qualifications with CVW from 12–20 October. Tragedy marred the last day of operations, when a Lock... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
departed that port for her second stint on "Gonzo Station". This deployment was to last 35 days. "America" and her embarked air wing provided a vital U.S. presence in the North Arabian Sea and ensured freedom of the seas for all nations operating ships through the Strait of Hormuz and into the Persian Gulf. These opera... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
northern Arabian Sea, en route to the Suez Canal. Transiting that waterway on 4 May, "America" headed for Souda Bay, reaching an anchorage there on 7 May. Five days later, the carrier got underway for Málaga, Spain, reaching her destination on 14 May for a nine-day port visit. The ship subsequently departed Málaga on 2... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
know that the United States had not only the desire but the capability to respond effectively to terrorism, intelligence information indicated that Qaddafi intended to retaliate. On 5 April 1986, two days after a bomb exploded on board a Trans World Airlines (TWA) flight en route to Athens from Rome, killing four Ameri... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
night strike of the war against an oil production facility. Strikes of up to five hours into Iraq against bridges, mobile Scud sites, oil production facilities and Iraqi Republican Guard units continued for three weeks, when the focus of the air war changed. On 9 February Captain Kent W. Ewing took command of the great... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
devices placed on the vessel. These explosions were designed to simulate underwater attacks. After the completion of the tests, "America" was sunk in a controlled scuttling on 14 May 2005 at approximately 11:30, although the sinking was not publicized until six days later. At the time, no warship of that size had ever ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Johann Kuhnau Johann Kuhnau (; 6 April 16605 June 1722) was a German polymath: known primarily as composer today, he was also active as novelist, translator, lawyer, and music theorist, being able late in life to combine these activities with the duties of his official post of "Thomaskantor" in Leipzig, which he occupi... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
in a single manuscript which also contains an anonymous treatise on double counterpoint ("Kurtze doch deutliche Reguln von den doppelten Contrapuncten") and two texts by Christoph Bernhard; the entire manuscript was at one point attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach. Unfortunately, "Fundamenta" appears to be a bad and pa... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Games Domain Games Domain was a video game website founded by Dave Stanworth and based in Birmingham, UK. In the late 1990s, it was at one time mirrored in seven countries and had a tumultuous history of being purchased by different corporations over its 11-year existence. It was active from March 1994 until March 2005... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Corbly Family massacre The Corbly Family massacre refers to the massacre of members of the family of the Rev. John Corbly by Indians on May 10, 1782. The Corbly family lived one mile north of Garards Fort, in southwest Pennsylvania at the John Corbley Farm. The massacre occurred on Sunday morning, May 10, 1782, as the ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Kubutz and Shuruk Kubutz ( ) and Shuruk ( ) are two Hebrew niqqud vowel signs that represent the sound . Kubutz is a short "u" and Shuruk is long "u".. In an alternate, Ashkenazi naming, the Kubutz (three diagonal dots) is called "Shuruk" and Shuruk is called "Melopum" (). The Kubutz sign is represented by three diagon... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
מרבה. In Biblical Hebrew both signs may have indicated the same sound and when the Bible manuscripts were vocalized Kubutz was simply used where the letter Waw was not written, although other possibilities were proposed by researchers, most commonly that the vowels had different length (quantity), Kubutz being shorter,... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Gregory Ain Gregory Ain (March 28, 1908 – January 9, 1988) was an American architect active in the mid-20th century. Working primarily in the Los Angeles area, Ain is best known for bringing elements of modern architecture to lower- and medium-cost housing. He addressed "the common architectural problems of common peop... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Article directory An article directory is a website with collections of articles written about different subjects. Sometimes article directories are referred to as content farms, which are websites created to produce mass content, where some are based on churnalism. An article directory may accept new articles from any... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Gantz Homestead The Gantz Homestead, also called the Gantz Farm House, in Grove City, Franklin County, Ohio, United States, was built in around 1832. It was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1979. Adam Johan Gantz was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania on May 10, 1805 to Andrew and Margare... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
United Service Organization of North Carolina The United Service Organizations of North Carolina (USO of NC) is the oldest continuously operating United Service Organization (USO) in the world (founded April 23, 1941, in Jacksonville/Camp Lejeune) as well as the first USO (at Fort Bragg).The USO of North Carolina suppo... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Numa Coste Numa Coste (August 31, 1843 – June 10, 1907) was a French painter and journalist. Numa Coste was born on August 31, 1843 in Aix-en-Provence, in south-eastern France. Coste started his career as a notary's clerk. He later served as a sergeant in the civil service. After he received his inheritance, he became ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Peters Glacier (Alaska Range) Peters Glacier, also known as Hanna Glacier and Hudeetsedle Toyaane' is a glacier in Denali National Park and Preserve in the U.S. state of Alaska. The glacier runs from the Peters Basin icefield in a deep valley to the north of Denali's Wickersham Wall, between Denali and Peters Dome, fal... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Miodrag Bulatović Miodrag Bulatović (Serbian Cyrillic: Миодраг Булатовић; 20 February 1930 – 15 March 1991) was a Montenegrin Serb writer, novelist and playwright in Yugoslavia. Bulatović was known "for his fierce Serbian nationalism, which earned him the enmity of other ethnic groups in Yugoslavia, and he was an offic... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Comedy Playhouse (series 2) The second series of Comedy Playhouse, the long-running BBC series, aired from 1 March 1963 to 12 April 1963. All the episodes were written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson. The second series, which was in black and white, consisted of six episodes, each of which had a different cast and story... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Ricky Waddell Richard Alexander Waddell (born 4 February 1981 in Falkirk) is a Scottish football player and coach who is currently head coach of Scottish Lowland Football League team Edusport Academy. His playing career as a defender or midfielder saw him play for Scottish clubs including Falkirk, Partick Thistle, Hami... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
2004 Iraq churches attacks On August 1, 2004, a series of car bomb attacks took place during the Sunday evening Mass in churches of two Iraqi cities, Baghdad and Mosul. The six attacks killed at least 12 people and wounded at least 71. No one claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Iraq's national security adviser,... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Johnnie Walker (racing driver) Johnnie Walker (aka John Walker) is a former Australian racing driver, born in Adelaide, South Australia. He first raced in the early 1960s at Mallala in his Holden FE road car. After competing in the Australian Formula 2 Championship he graduated to Formula 5000 in 1972, driving an Elfin... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Rob Johnston Rob Johnston is the assistant general secretary of the International Transport Workers’ Federation - a global union federation of 677 trade unions representing 19.7 million workers in 149 countries in the seafaring, port, road, rail, tourism and aviation sectors. Johnston joined the ITF in 2016 as the Assi... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
WPVI-TV WPVI-TV, branded as 6 ABC, is an ABC owned-and-operated television station licensed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on virtual and VHF channel 6 from a transmitter located in Philadelphia's Roxborough neighborhood at . Owned by the ABC Owned Televisio... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
1986, WPVI-TV became an ABC owned-and-operated station. A decade later, in 1996, The Walt Disney Company purchased Capital Cities/ABC. Even in the years after WPVI became an ABC-owned station, it continued to preempt an hour of ABC daytime programs in favor of other programs. Wildwood, New Jersey-based NBC affiliate WM... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Senate races, WPVI and WABC will pool resources and have anchors or reporters from both stations participate in the debate. The station is famous for pioneering the Action News format, which was used by many stations throughout the United States. When WFIL-TV premiered it on April 6, 1970, the format allowed the news p... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
WCAU (which began producing the 10 p.m. newscast in December 2005, after WPHL shut down its own in-house news department). The newscast, "Action News at 10pm on PHL 17", respectively utilizes most of the same anchors as WPVI's weekday 4 p.m. and weekend evening newscasts with a few noticeable differences. Features anch... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Tulsi Diwasa Tulsi Prasad Joshi (popular Tulasi Diwasa) Nepali:तुलसी दिवस is a Nepalese literary figure and folklore expert. He was honoured with "Bisista Sahitya Siromani" title at the International Poetry Festival in India in April 2013., Professor Diwas had served as Cultural Secretary at the Nepalese Embassy in the... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
2006 Croydon London Borough Council election Elections to Croydon Council in London, England were held on 4 May 2006. The whole council was up for election for the first time since the 2002 election. The Labour Party lost control of the council to the Conservative Party for the first time since 1994. There are 24 wards... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Boss Johnson Byron Ingemar "Boss" Johnson (December 10, 1890 – January 12, 1964), born Björn Ingimar "Bjössi" Jónsson, served as the 24th Premier of the province of British Columbia, Canada, from 1947 to 1952. To his contemporaries he was often referred to by his nickname, "Boss Johnson", which had nothing to do with h... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Douglas XB-42 Mixmaster The Douglas XB-42 Mixmaster was an experimental bomber aircraft, designed for a high top speed. The unconventional approach was to mount the two engines within the fuselage driving a pair of contra-rotating propellers mounted at the tail in a pusher configuration, leaving the wing and fuselage c... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Acropora kirstyae Acropora kirstyae is a species of acroporid coral that was first described by Jen Veron and C. C. Wallace in 1984. Found in marine, tropical, shallow reefs in sheltered areas usually at depths of , and also occurs in sheltered lagoons. It is listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List, and it ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Antonia of Baux Antonia of Baux (; c. 1355 – 23 January 1374) was the second Queen consort of Frederick III, King of Sicily. Antonia was a daughter of Francis of Baux and his second wife Marguerite of Taranto. Antonia's only other sibling by her father's marriage to Marguerite was James of Baux, the last titular Latin ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Gio Batta Gori Professor Gio Batta Gori is an epidemiologist and fellow with the Health Policy Center in Bethesda, Maryland which he established in 1997 and where he specializes in risk assessment and scientific research. He was deputy director of the United States' National Cancer Institute's Division of Cancer Cause ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Harlem River Drive The Harlem River Drive is a 4.20-mile (6.76 km) long north–south parkway in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It runs along the west bank of the Harlem River from the Triborough Bridge in East Harlem to 10th Avenue in Inwood, where the parkway ends and the road continues north as Dyckman Street... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
John Paul II Catholic High School (North Carolina) John Paul II Catholic High School (JPII), located in Greenville, North Carolina is a four-year private coeducational college-preparatory Catholic high school in the Diocese of Raleigh that is an inclusive community where students of all faiths are welcome. We embrace t... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Two dimensional window design Windowing is a process where an index limited sequence has its maximum energy concentrated in a finite frequency interval. This can be extended to an N-dimension where the N-D window has the limited support and maximum concentration of energy in a separable or non-separable N-D passband. T... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
2-D Tseng window coefficients. This window finds applications in antenna array design for the detection of AM signals. The advantages include simple and efficient design, nearly circularly symmetric frequency response of the 2-D window, preserving of the 1-D window prototype features. However, when this approach is use... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Cyathea alleniae Cyathea alleniae is a species of tree fern native to the Malay Peninsula, where it grows in forest margin on steep ground at an altitude of approximately 1200 m. The trunk is erect, about 4 m tall and 15 cm in diameter. It is usually unbranched, but may branch to form several small crowns. Fronds are b... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Swimming at the 2007 South Pacific Games The swimming competition at the 2007 South Pacific Games in Apia, Samoa was held: All pool events were swum in a long-course (50m) pool; the open water events were 5-kilometres in length (5K). Monday, September 3: men's and women's 5,000m Open Water swim. "Note: The 2007 swimmin... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Franklin Simon Franklin Simon (February 7, 1865 – October 4, 1934), was the owner of Franklin Simon & Co., a department store in Manhattan, New York City. The store was founded in February 1902, when Simon partnered with Herman A. Flurscheim. Born on New York City's Lower East Side in 1865 to Henri and Helene Simon, Fr... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
INAS 312 The INAS 312 is an Indian naval air squadron based at INS Rajali. The Navy’s first long range Maritime Reconnaissance squadron was commissioned with five ex IAF Super Constellation aircraft on 8 November 1976. Cdr R D Dhir was the commissioning Squadron Commander. The squadron was originally based at INS Hansa... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Alison Weir (activist) Alison Weir is an American activist and writer best known for her connection to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. She is the founder and executive director of the nonprofit organization If Americans Knew (IAK) and president of the Council for the National Interest (CNI). She is known for critical... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
King City GO Station King City GO Station is a train and bus station in the GO Transit network located in King City, Ontario in Canada. It also serves the nearby communities of Nobleton, Oak Ridges, the northern parts of Maple (in Vaughan), and other communities in King Township. It is a stop on the Barrie line train s... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Impossible Subjects Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America, is a Frederick Jackson Turner Award-winning book by historian Mae M. Ngai published by Princeton University Press in 2004. In part one, Ngai begins with discussing the implications of immigration restriction in the 1920s by partic... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
America. As a result of this increase in the Filipino population was backlash, official efforts encouraged Filipinos to stay (or return to) the Philippines. However, within the 1920s Filipinos replaced Japanese farmers (who now faced quotas because of the immigration act of 1924) and found employment within the service... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Hansína Regína Björnsdóttir Hansína Regína Björnsdóttir (6 June 1884-5 February 1973) was an Icelandic photographer, whose main body of works were signed with the name H. Eiríksson. Her archive of photographic works is held by the National Museum of Iceland. Hansína Regína Björnsdóttir was born on 6 June 1884 in Eskifj... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Davy (album) Davy is Coconut Records' 2009 second release. The album is, as was "Nighttiming", the product of Jason Schwartzman, who wrote all of the songs and performs the majority of the instruments. The first official single for the album was "Microphone." The song was also used in the 2012 film LOL, starring Miley ... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Fanfulla Luigi Visconti, better known by his stage name Fanfulla, (26 February 1913 – 5 January 1971) was an Italian actor and comedian. Born in Rome, Visconti debuted at very young age on stage alongside his mother, the actress Mercedes Menolesi (best known as "Diavolina"). From the mid-forties to the late fifties, he... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
Fly (Archie Comics) The Fly is a fictional comic book superhero first published in 1959 by Red Circle Comics. He was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby as part of Archie's "Archie Adventure Series" and later camped up (as Fly Man) as part of the company's Mighty Comics line. He first appeared in ""The Double Life of P... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
The Ball Park The Old Orchard Beach Ball Park is a baseball stadium located in and owned by the Town of Old Orchard Beach, Maine. The stadium has a seating capacity of 6,000 and was a former Triple-A baseball facility that was almost destroyed by years of neglect until a community organized volunteer effort revived the... | RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter |
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