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25869790
|
Heneage Finch, 2nd Earl of Aylesford
|
| birth_place = Albury, Surrey
| death_date = 29 June 1757
| death_place = England
| education = Christ Church, Oxford
| occupation = Politician, courtier
| known_for | notable_works
| style | spouse Mary Fisher
}}
]]
Heneage Finch, 2nd Earl of Aylesford ( – 29 June 1757), styled Lord Guernsey from 1714 to 1719, was an English politician, courtier and peer who sat in the English and British House of Commons from 1704 to 1719, representing the constituencies of Maidstone and Surrey. Born in Albury, Surrey into an aristocratic family, he also served as the Master of the Jewel Office from 1711 to 1716.
Origins
Heneage was born about 1683 at Albury, Surrey. He was the son and heir of Heneage Finch, 1st Earl of Aylesford (died 1719).
Career
From 1704 to 1705, he represented Maidstone in the British House of Commons, and was knight of the shire for Surrey from 1710 to 1719. He was the Master of the Jewel Office from 1711 to 1716.
Marriage and children
, Warwickshire: Argent, a chevron vair between three demi-lions rampant gules]]
He married Mary Fisher (1690 – 28 May 1740) on 9 December 1712 at Great Packington. Mary was the daughter and sole heiress of Sir Clement Fisher, 3rd Baronet (died 1729) of Packington Hall, Great Packington, Warwickshire, by his wife Ann Jennens. They had children including:
*Heneage Finch, 3rd Earl of Aylesford (6 November 1715 - 9 September 1777), eldest son and heir.
*Mary (1717-16 March 1803) married William Howard, Viscount Andover. They had one son and three daughters.
*Elizabeth (1719 - 19 December 1793)
*Frances (4 February 1721 - 19 December 1761), married in 1741 William Courtenay, de jure 7th Earl of Devon, 1st Viscount Courtenay (1710–1762) of Powderham Castle, Devon.
Sources
*Dictionary of National Biography, Finch, Heneage, first Earl of Aylesford (1647?–1719), by E. T. Bradley. Published 1889.
References
External links
*[https://artcollection.culture.gov.uk/artwork/0-7/ Portrait of Heneage Finch, 2nd Earl of Aylesford (1683-1757)] The Government Art Collection. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
|-
Category:1680s births
Category:1757 deaths
Finch, Heneage
Guernsey, Heneage Finch, Lord
Guernsey, Heneage Finch, Lord
2
Finch, Heneage
Guernsey, Heneage Finch, Lord
Heneage
Category:Masters of the Jewel Office
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heneage_Finch,_2nd_Earl_of_Aylesford
|
2025-04-06T15:55:04.976779
|
25869795
|
Bahrain national football team results
|
This article includes the Bahrain national football team results since its beginnings.
2020s
2010s
2019
|round = 2019 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report = http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/13255
|goals1 =
*Khalil
|goals2 =
*Al Romaihi
|stadium = Zayed Sports City Stadium
|location = Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
|attendance = 33,878
|referee = Adham Makhadmeh (Jordan)
|result = D
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report = http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/13257
|goals1 |goals2
*Chanathip
|stadium = Al-Maktoum Stadium
|location = Dubai, United Arab Emirates
|attendance = 2,720
|referee = Chris Beath (Australia)
|result = L
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report = http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/13260
|goals1 |goals2
*Rashid
|stadium = Sharjah Stadium
|location = Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
|attendance = 11,417
|referee = Ilgiz Tantashev (Uzbekistan)
|result = W
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|aet = yes
|report = http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/13301
|goals1 =
*Hwang Hee-chan
*Kim Jin-su
|goals2 =
*Al Romaihi
|stadium = Rashid Stadium
|location = Dubai, United Arab Emirates
|attendance = 7,658
|referee = Ryuji Sato (Japan)
|result = L
}}
|score = 0–1
|report = https://www.flashscore.info/match/dEAklI4k/#match-summary
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
*Abdullatif
|stadium = Franso Hariri Stadium
|location = Erbil, Iraq
|attendance = 3,500
|referee = Haitham Al-Walidi (Yemen)
|result = W
}}
|score = 0–0
|report = https://www.flashscore.info/match/xOIcndZ1/#match-summary
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Franso Hariri Stadium
|location = Erbil, Iraq
|attendance |referee Wissam Rabie (Syria)
|result = D
}}
|score = 0–1
|report = https://www.flashscore.info/match/ng0l9JtF/#match-summary
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
*Abdullatif
|stadium = Franso Hariri Stadium
|location = Erbil, Iraq
|attendance |referee Wathik Al-Baag (Iraq)
|result = W
}}
|score = 0–1
|report = https://www.flashscore.info/match/8z7owGDG/#match-summary
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
*Moosa
|stadium = Karbala International Stadium
|location = Karbala, Iraq
|attendance = 34,500
|referee = Turki Al-Khudhayr (Saudi Arabia)
|result = W
}}
|score = 1–1
|report = [https://web.archive.org/web/20190901181810/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/qatar2022/preliminaries/asia/matches/match/400080726/ Report (FIFA)]<br>[http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/16185 Report (AFC)]
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Al Aswad
|goals2 =
*M. Ali
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Omar Al-Yaqoubi (Oman)
|result = D
}}
|team1 =
|score = 0–1
|report = [https://web.archive.org/web/20190901181818/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/qatar2022/preliminaries/asia/matches/match/400080729/ Report (FIFA)]<br>[http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/16188 Report (AFC)]
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
*Al Aswad
|stadium = Phnom Penh Olympic Stadium
|location = Phnom Penh, Cambodia
|attendance |referee Nivon Robesh Gamini (Sri Lanka)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–3
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/10/09/world/friendlies/bahrain/azerbaijan/3131239/
|goals1 =
*Al-Malood
*Al-Shaikh
|goals2 =
*Dadashov
*Khalilzade
*Sheydayev
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team1 =
|score = 1–0
|report = [https://web.archive.org/web/20190901181813/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/qatar2022/preliminaries/asia/matches/match/400080733/ Report (FIFA)]<br>[http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/16192 Report (AFC)]
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Al-Hardan
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 14,810
|referee = Valentin Kovalenko (Uzbekistan)
|result = W
}}
|team1 =
|score = 0–0
|report = [https://web.archive.org/web/20190901181816/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/qatar2022/preliminaries/asia/matches/match/400080734/ Report (FIFA)]<br>[http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/16193 Report (AFC)]
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Mong Kok Stadium
|location = Kowloon, Hong Kong
|attendance = 4,541
|referee = Kim Dong-jin (South Korea)
|result = D
}}
|team1 =
|score = 0–0
|report = [https://web.archive.org/web/20190901181818/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/qatar2022/preliminaries/asia/matches/match/400080736/ Report (FIFA)]<br>[http://stats.the-afc.com/match_report/16195 Report (AFC)]
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Amman International Stadium
|location = Amman, Jordan
|attendance = 10,366
|referee = Muhammad Taqi (Singapore)
|result = D
}}
|team1 =
|score = 0–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/11/27/asia/gulf-cup/oman/bahrain/3184883/
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Alexandre Boucaut (Belgium)
|result = D
}}
|team1 =
|score = 0–2
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/11/30/asia/gulf-cup/bahrain/saudi-arabia/3184886/
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
*Al-Hamdan
*Al-Khabrani
|stadium = Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Lionel Tschudi (Switzerland)
|result = L
}}
|team1 =
|score = 2–4
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/12/02/asia/gulf-cup/kuwait/bahrain/3184888/
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Nasser
*Zanki
|goals2 =
*Madan
*Al-Shaikh
*Thiago Augusto
|stadium = Khalifa International Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)
|result = W
}}
|team1 =
|score = 2–2
|aet = yes
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/12/05/asia/gulf-cup/iraq/bahrain/3184889/
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Ali
*Bayesh
|goals2 =
*Al-Haza'a
*Marhoon
|penalties1 =
*Faez
*Ismail
*Bayesh
*Qasim
|penaltyscore = 3–5
|penalties2 =
* Al-Hardan
* Al-Shaikh
* Marhoon
* Thiago Augusto
* Madan
|stadium = Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Ryuji Sato (Japan)
|result = D
}}
|team1 =
|score = 1–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2019/12/08/asia/gulf-cup/bahrain/saudi-arabia/3184891/
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Al Romaihi
|goals2 |stadium Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Lionel Tschudi (Switzerland)
|result = W
}}
2018
|round = 2017 Gulf Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/01/02/asia/gulf-cup/oman/bahrain/2702983/
|goals1 =
*Abduljabbar
|goals2 |stadium Jaber International Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance |referee Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)
|result = L
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report = http://www.worldfootball.com/m/710674/2018-03-22/friendlies/bahrain/palestine
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Ali Shaban (Kuwait)
|result = D
}}
|round = 2019 AFC Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report = https://www.flashscore.com/match/IeoAgj4m/#match-summary
|goals1 =
*Helal
*Issa
*Yaser
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 100
|referee = Yaqoob Abdul Baki (Oman)
|result = W
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report = http://www.worldfootball.com/m/766914/2018-09-06/friendlies/bahrain/philippines
|goals1 =
*Issa
|goals2 =
*P. Younghusband
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Hamad Ali Yousef (United Arab Emirates)
|result = D
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/09/10/world/friendlies/bahrain/china-pr/2893651/
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Ahmed Al Ali (Jordan)
|result = D
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report = http://www.worldfootball.com/m/775538/2018-10-11/friendlies/bahrain/syria
|goals1 |goals2
*Al Somah
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Mohammad Arafah (Jordan)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–1
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/10/16/world/friendlies/bahrain/myanmar/2928230/
|goals1 =
*Rashid
*Marhoon
*Issa
|goals2 =
*Myat Kaung Khant
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Khalid Al-Turais (Saudi Arabia)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = Cancelled
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/11/15/world/friendlies/kuwait/bahrain/2931458/
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Jaber International Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance |referee Sultan Abdulrazaq Al Marzouqi (United Arab Emirates)
|result = P
|note = The match was cancelled due to bad weather conditions.
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/11/19/world/friendlies/oman/bahrain/2931461/
|goals1 =
*E. Al-Farsi
*Al-Yahmadi
|goals2 =
*Al-Humaidan
|stadium = Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
|location = Muscat, Oman
|attendance |referee Hussein Abo Yehia (Lebanon)
|result = L
}}
|score = 5–0
|report = http://www.worldfootball.com/m/782491/2018-12-20/friendlies/bahrain/tajikistan
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Al Romaihi
*Rashid
*Madan
*Al-Husaini
|goals2 |stadium Khalifa Sports City Stadium
|location = Isa Town, Bahrain
|attendance = 20
|referee = Ammar Ashkanani (Kuwait)
|result = W
}}
|score = 1–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2018/12/27/world/friendlies/bahrain/lebanon/2953990/
|team2 =
|goals1 =
*Habib
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|score = 4–0
|report = http://www.worldfootball.com/m/785493/2018-12-29/friendlies/bahrain/korea-dpr
|team2 =
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Khalifa Sports City Stadium
|location = Isa Town, Bahrain
|attendance |referee Omar Al Yaqoubi (Oman)
|result = W
}}
2017
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
*Al Aswad
|goals2 =
*Dzhalilov
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report http://cms.the-afc.com/afcasfeeds?fixtureid11184&stageid432&tModeH&viewajax&showmatchsummary
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 225
|referee = Nivon Robesh Gamini (Sri Lanka)
|result = D
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2017/06/06/world/friendlies/bahrain/palestine/2448378/
|goals1 |goals2
*Salem
*Maraaba
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report http://cms.the-afc.com/afcasfeeds?fixtureid11187&stageid432&tModeH&viewajax&showmatchsummary
|goals1 =
*Ýagşyýew
|goals2 =
*Al Romaihi
*Yaser
|stadium = Sport Toplumy Stadium
|location = Daşoguz, Turkmenistan
|attendance = 9,500
|referee = Ma Ning (China PR)
|result = W
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2017/08/29/world/friendlies/bahrain/jordan/2447181/
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 5–0
|report http://cms.the-afc.com/afcasfeeds?fixtureid11189&stageid432&tModeH&viewajax&showmatchsummary
|goals1 =
*Al-Aswad
*Madan
*Abduljabbar
*Helal
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 362
|referee = Nagor Amir Noor Mohamed (Malaysia)
|result = W
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report http://cms.the-afc.com/afcasfeeds?fixtureid11191&stageid432&tModeH&viewajax&showmatchsummary
|goals1 =
*Chen Po-liang
*Chu En-le
|goals2 =
*Abdullatif
|stadium = Taipei Municipal Stadium
|location = Taipei, Taiwan
|attendance = 7,908
|referee = Hiroyuki Kimura (Japan)
|result = L
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2017/11/09/world/friendlies/hong-kong/bahrain/2561716/
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Mong Kok Stadium
|location = Mong Kok, Hong Kong
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|round = 2019 Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–3
|report http://cms.the-afc.com/afcasfeeds?fixtureid11192&stageid432&tModeH&viewajax&showmatchsummary
|goals1 |goals2
*Abduljabbar
*Rashid
|stadium = National Stadium
|location = Singapore
|attendance = 2,628
|referee = Jarred Gillett (Australia)
|result = W
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report = https://int.soccerway.com/matches/2017/12/18/world/friendlies/bahrain/kuwait/2700503/
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|round = 2017 Gulf Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
*Rashid
|goals2 =
*Abdul-Raheem
|stadium = Al Kuwait Sports Club Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance |referee Ammar Al-Jeneibi (United Arab Emirates)
|result = D
}}
|round = 2017 Gulf Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 =
*Rashid
|stadium = Al Kuwait Sports Club Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance |referee Sultan Al-Harbi (Saudi Arabia)
|result = W
}}
|round = 2017 Gulf Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
*Al-Haydos
|goals2 =
*Madan
|stadium = Jaber International Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance |referee Aziz Asimov (Uzbekistan)
|result = D
}}
2016
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
*Abdulatif
*Al-Malood
*Al Romaihi
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 1,000
|referee = Ahmed Al-Kaf (Oman)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
*Rashidov
|goals2 |stadium Bunyodkor Stadium
|location = Tashkent, Uzbekistan
|attendance = 34,000
|referee = Mohammed Abdulla Hassan Mohamed (United Arab Emirates)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
2015
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–6
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Philippines
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–4
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–4
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = North Korea
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
2014
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|aet = yes
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Qatar
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
2013
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–6
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Sharjah, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Qatar
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Qatar
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
2012
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Thani bin Jassim Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 10–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Saudi Arabia
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–6
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|aet = yes
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
2011
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 =
*An Chol-hyok
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|referee |result L
}}
|round = 2011 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
*Koo Ja-Cheol
|goals2 =
*Aaish
|stadium = Thani bin Jassim Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance = 6,669
|referee = Abdullah Al Hilali (Oman)
|result = L
}}
|round = 2011 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 5–2
|report |goals1
*Aaish
*Abdullatif
|goals2 =
*G. Singh
*Chhetri
|stadium = Jassim bin Hamad Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance = 11,032
|referee = Subkhiddin Mohd Salleh (Malaysia)
|result = W
}}
|round = 2011 Asian Cup
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
*Jedinak
|goals2 |stadium Jassim bin Hamad Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance = 3,919
|referee = Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
*Hadid
|goals2 =
*Abdulrahman
|stadium |location
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
*Abdullatif
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Jakarta, Indonesia
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 6–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Tehran, Iran
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 =
*Abdulrahman
|stadium = Ali Sabah Al-Salem Stadium
|location = Al Farwaniyah, Kuwait
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Qatar
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|round = Friendly
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 =
*El-Khatib
|stadium = Al Muharraq Stadium
|location = Arad, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|round = Football at the 2011 Pan Arab Games
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
*Al Hardan
*Abdullatif
|goals2 |stadium Jassim bin Hamad Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Khaled Abdurahaman (Sudan)
|result = W
}}
|round = Football at the 2011 Pan Arab Games
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
*Al Alawi
*Isa
*Abu Saleh
|goals2 =
*Nu'man
|stadium = Thani bin Jassim Stadium
|location = Al Rayyan, Qatar
|attendance |referee Andre El Haddad (Lebanon)
|result = W
}}
|round = Football at the 2011 Pan Arab Games
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
Abdullatif
|goals2 |stadium Jassim bin Hamad Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance |referee Abdullah Balideh (Qatar)
|result = W
}}
2010
|round = 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
*Abdullatif
*Adnan
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 1,550
|referee = Abdullah Balideh (Qatar)
|result = W
}}
|round = 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
*Al-Nono
*Al Abidi
|goals2 |stadium Ali Mohsen Al-Muraisi Stadium
|location = Sana'a, Yemen
|attendance = 7,000
|referee = Mohsen Torky (Iran)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|round = 2011 AFC Asian Cup qualification
|team1 =
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
*Okazaki
*Honda
|goals2 |stadium Toyota Stadium
|location = Toyota, Japan
|attendance = 38,042
|referee = Abdul Malik Abdul Bashir (Singapore)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–4
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Yemen
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Yemen
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Yemen
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Dubai, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
2000s
2009
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
|location = Muscat, Oman
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
|location = Muscat, Oman
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex
|location = Muscat, Oman
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Hong Kong
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Dubai, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Pakhtakor Markaziy Stadium
|location = Tashkent, Uzbekistan
|attendance = 30,000
|referee = Subkhiddin Mohd Salleh (Malaysia)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 5–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Saitama Stadium 2002
|location = Saitama, Japan
|attendance = 57,276
|referee = Kim Dong-jin (South Korea)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 20,000
|referee = Sun Baojie (China)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Stadium Australia
|location = Sydney, Australia
|attendance = 39,540
|referee = Abdullah Al Hilali (Oman)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 14,100
|referee = Masoud Moradi (Iran)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 16,000
|referee = Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium King Fahd International Stadium
|location = Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
|attendance = 50,000
|referee = Ravshan Irmatov (Uzbekistan)
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 37,000
|referee = Viktor Kassai (Hungary)
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 5–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
*Fallon
|goals2 |stadium Westpac Stadium
|location = Wellington, New Zealand
|attendance = 36,500
|referee = Jorge Larrionda (Uruguay)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
2008
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Oman
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Thailand
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Japan
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 20,000
|referee = Abdul Malik Abdul Bashir (Singapore)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium Jassim bin Hamad Stadium
|location = Doha, Qatar
|attendance = 7,000
|referee = Kim Dong-jin (South Korea)
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 =
*Bresciano
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 10,000
|referee = Masoud Moradi (Iran)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
2007
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
*Al-Qahtani
|goals2 =
*Yousef
|stadium = Al Nahyan Stadium
|location = Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
*Al-Marzouqi
|goals2 =
*Mulla Mohammed
|stadium = Al Nahyan Stadium
|location = Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–2
|report |goals1
*Khalfan
|goals2 =
*Hubail
|stadium = Al Nahyan Stadium
|location = Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
*Al-Maimani
|goals2 |stadium Mohammed bin Zayed Stadium
|location = Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 5–3
|report |goals1
*Lê Công Vinh
*Mai Tiến Thành
*Phan Thanh Bình
*Nguyễn Anh Đức
|goals2 =
*Abdulrahman
*Hubail
*Okwunwanne
|stadium = Mỹ Đình National Stadium
|location = Hanoi, Vietnam
|attendance |referee
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
*Budi
*Bambang
|goals2 =
*Mahmood
|stadium = Gelora Bung Karno Stadium
|location = Jakarta, Indonesia
|attendance = 60,000
|referee = Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–1
|report |goals1
*Isa
*Abdullatif
|goals2 =
*Kim Do-heon
|stadium = Gelora Bung Karno Stadium
|location = Jakarta, Indonesia
|attendance = 9,000
|referee = Sun Baojie (China)
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–0
|report |goals1
*Al-Mousa
*A. Al-Qahtani
*Al-Jassim
|goals2 |stadium Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium
|location = Palembang, Indonesia
|attendance = 500
|referee = Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–3
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 3–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 2–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 4–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Bahrain
|attendance |referee
|result = W
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location = Malaysia
|attendance |referee
|result = D
}}
2006
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|score = 1–3
|report |team2
|goals1 =
*Ali
|goals2 =
*Thompson
*Skoko
*Elrich
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 2,500
|referee = Subkhiddin Mohd Salleh (Malaysia)
|result = L
}}
|score = 0–0
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = National Stadium
|location = Kuwait City, Kuwait
|attendance = 16,000
|referee = Masoud Moradi (Iran)
|result = D
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–0
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 0–2
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result L
}}
|score = 2–0
|report |team2
|goals1 =
*Aloisi
*Bresciano
|goals2 |stadium Sydney Football Stadium
|location = Sydney, Australia
|attendance = 36,606
|referee = Fareed Ali Mohamed Al Marzouqi (United Arab Emirates)
|result = L
}}
|team2 =
|score = 1–1
|report |goals1
|goals2 |stadium
|location |attendance
|referee |result D
}}
|score = 2–1
|report |team2
|goals1 =
*Yousef
*Ghuloom
|goals2 =
*Laheeb
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 20,000
|referee = Kwon Jong-Chul (Korea Republic)
|result = W
}}
2005
|score = 0–0
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 25,000
|referee |result D
}}
|score = 1–2
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Kim Il-sung Stadium
|location = Pyongyang, North Korea
|attendance = 50,000
|referee |result W
}}
|score = 1–0
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Saitama Stadium
|location = Saitama, Japan
|attendance = 67,549
|referee |result L
}}
|score = 0–1
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 32,000
|referee |result L
}}
|score = 1–0
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Azadi Stadium
|location = Tehran, Iran
|attendance = 80,000
|referee |result L
}}
|score = 2–3
|report |team2
|goals1 |goals2
|stadium = Bahrain National Stadium
|location = Riffa, Bahrain
|attendance = 3,000
|referee |result L
}}
<!-- 2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
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External links
* [https://www.flashscore.com/team/bahrain/GITLc4Fp/results/ Bahrain results]; FlashScore
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160905230133/http://www.fifa.com/live-scores/teams/country=bhr/men/matches/index.html Live Scores - Bahrain]; FIFA.com
Category:Bahrain national football team
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahrain_national_football_team_results
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.105491
|
25869819
|
Zeitler
|
Zeitler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Charles Zeitler (1871–1903), American football player from South Bend, Indiana
Günter Zeitler, German handballer
Kevin Zeitler (born 1990), American football player
William Zeitler (born 1954), American armonica player
Yehoshua Zettler (1917–2009), (last name also spelled as Zeitler), the Jerusalem commander of Jewish paramilitary group Lehi
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.106776
|
25869824
|
Border crossings of Albania
|
Border crossings () in the Republic of Albania are defined as boundary checkpoints that serve to control the flow of people and goods from neighbouring countries to and from Albania. These checkpoints are administered by the border police authorities that record the entry and exit of each person and vehicle followed by the customs authorities that record the entry and exit of goods and cash. Albania currently has 22 operational land border crossings and shares borders with Montenegro, Kosovo (116.3 km), North Macedonia (186.1 km), and Greece.
This article outlines a complete list of Albania's international border crossings, including land, sea and air entry points.
History
During the communist period in Albania, very few people were allowed to leave the country (usually only diplomats) and would also be required to have written permission to do so. Visitors entering the country from outside for any reason, tourism or otherwise, were immediately suspect and closely monitored. Escaping the country was practically impossible with electric fencing, guard dogs and border police instructed to shoot at will if they saw citizens fleeing across the border.
Land border crossings
thumb|Muriqan-Sukobin integrated crossing between Albania and Montenegro
Muriqan (Shkodër) – Sukobin, Ulqin
Han i Hotit (Malësi e Madhe) – Božaj (Podgorica, the main border crossing)*
Bashkim, Vermosh – Karaula, Vjeternik (Guci)
Grabom (Malësi e Madhe) – Cem i Trieshit (Cijevna), Podgorica
planned border crossings:
Zogaj (Shkodër) – Hutaj (Skje), Bar
Qafë Vranicë (Tropojë) – Plav
thumb|Morinë–Vërmicë border crossing
Qafë Morinë (Tropojë) – Gjakovë
Qafë Prush (Has) – Gjakovë
Morinë (Kukës) – Vërmicë (Prizren, the main border crossing)*
Orgjost (Kukës) – Orqushë (pedestrian only, not frequently used)
Borje – Glloboçicë
Shishtavec (Kukës) – Dragash (opened as normal border crossing on May 10, 2013)
thumb|Bllatë border
Bllatë (Dibër) – Spas (Debar)
Trebisht (Dibër) – Džepište (Debar)
Qafë Thanë (Pogradec) – Kjafasan (Struga, the main border crossing)*
Tushemisht (Pogradec) – Sveti Naum (Ohrid)
Goricë (Pustec) – Stenje (Resen)
thumb|Kakavi border
Kapshticë (Devoll) – Krystallopigi (Prespes, important border crossing)
Tre Urat (Përmet) – Melissopetra (Konitsa)
Sopik (Dropull) – Drymades (Pogoni, pedestrian only, not frequently used)
Kakavijë – Ktismata (Pogoni, the main border crossing)*
Rips (Finiq) – Ampelonas (Filiates, pedestrian only, not frequently used)
Qafë Botë (Konispol) – Sagiada (Filiates)
Railway crossings
Podgorica–Shkodër railway
Pogradec–Krystallopigi railway (planned)
Maritime ports
thumb|Port of Durrës
Port of Durrës
Port of Vlorë
Port of Sarandë
Port of Shëngjin
Airports
Tirana International Airport (TIA)
Kukës International Airport (KFZ)
Vlorë International Airport (u/c)
See also
State Authority for Geospatial Information (ASIG)
References
External links
Albania Border Crossings on Google Maps
Albania
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Border_crossings_of_Albania
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.112753
|
25869841
|
T. B. Townsend
|
thumb|Muskingum County Courthouse in Zanesville, Ohio
thumb|Tuscarawas County Courthouse
thumb|Miami County Courthouse in Troy, Ohio
Thomas Burgess Townsend, known as T.B. Townsend, was a brick manufacturer, a building Contractor, and owned a cattle ranch in Kansas. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 8 September 1837, he made Zanesville, Ohio his home. He was president of T. B. Townsend Brick and Contracting Co. in Zanesville, Ohio, claimed to be the largest brick factory in Ohio at the time. He founded one of "the most extensive and well-improved farms" in Peabody, Marion County, Kansas, in the 1880s, called Rockland Farm, better known as the Townsend Ranch.
Background
Townsend was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1837 and moved to Beverly, Ohio in 1846. He and Sybil A. Milton wed in Washington, Ohio on 23 September 1858. They moved in 1867 to Zanesville where they had three children: Orville (b.1860), Hatty (b.1862), and Mary (b.1872.) His properties included the sprawling 2,500 acre Townsend Ranch he established in 1886 in Peabody, Marion County, Kansas. Tuscarawas County Courthouse, Miami County Courthouse, and the Arlington Hotel (since demolished).
Brick was in high demand for use as pavers (including at the "Brickyard" racetrack Indianapolis Motor Speedway) in the early 20th century, and Townsend's bricks are collected along with other historic examples at "Redbud Alley" in Columbus, Ohio. Townsend was reported to have located a vein of clay thick which he used to make vitrified brick for street paving.
Townsend Ranch, Peabody, Kansas
Townsend established the livestock ranch in 1886 when he and his wife purchased 300 acres near Peabody from the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad. He realized a
need for access to the railroad, not only for incoming freight but also for loading and shipping of livestock to eastern markets. Townsend deeded a 1.5-acre parcel to the railroad company for a siding and stockyards. To this nucleus was added a store, post office, hotel, depot, and the office of Townsend Cattle Ranch. The village became known as the Horners. In all the Townsend Ranch comprised some 2,500 acres. That represented four of Caitlin Township's 36 sections, 640 acres each. The Townsends did not live there, rather the ranch was overseen by Hans Johnson, a Dane.
In 1887, the large, limestone barn was constructed. Measuring 80 by 140 feet, it was completed in a year using locally quarried materials and cost $10,000. The barn has a basement with a rock floor. The barn walls are plastered with lime and sand, and large timbers
support the interior framework. The beams are connected with wooden pegs, producing fine-fitting joints. Ventilation ducts installed in the outside walls from basement to eaves provided ventilation for hay stored in the barn. Grain was stored in second-floor bins.
The basement was used for grinders and power units for grinding. It also provided shelter for hogs.
At one time, a large wooden windmill with a wooden wheel was used to provide power for grinding grain and pumping water. It stood to the west of the stone barn along with a wooden water storage tank. The water was piped from the tank to feedlots for cattle and hogs.
In 1901 the ranch was described in the local paper as having a carriage house, horse barn, granary, an "immense" cattle barn, a store, dwelling house for operator, and four houses "for the men that work on the ranch". Townsend also owned stockyards and the office of the Townsend Cattle Co. Townsend raised cattle including stockers and feeders, as well as hogs.
The Townsend Ranch was a model progressive farm, a site admired by railroad passengers rolling through it, and it was a major employer in Marion County.
The Townsend family sold the farm in 1937.
References
Category:1837 births
Category:Businesspeople from Ohio
Category:Year of death missing
Category:Businesspeople from Pittsburgh
Category:People from Zanesville, Ohio
Category:Cattle in the United States
Category:Brick manufacturers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._B._Townsend
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.116238
|
25869876
|
2009 Bahrain national football team results
|
This article details the fixtures and results of the Bahrain national football team in 2009.
Results
{| class"wikitable" width80% style="font-size: 90%"
|-
!Date
!Tournament
!Location
!Home Team
!Score
!Away Team
!width=50%|Bahrain Scorers
|-
|
|
|<br> Muscat
|<br>Iraq
|
|<br>Bahrain
|<div style="text-align: center;"> Abdullah Omar <br>Sayed Adnan <br>Saleh Al Dakheel </div>
|-
|
|
|<br> Muscat
|<br>Kuwait
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Muscat
|<br>Oman
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Hong Kong
|<br>Hong Kong
|
|<br>Bahrain
|<div style="text-align: center;">Abdullatif <br /> Fatadi <br /> Salman Isa </div>
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Japan
|}}
|-
|
|
|<br> Dubai
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>South Korea
|
|-
|
|
|<br>Tashkent
|<br>Uzbekistan
|
|<br>Bahrain
|}}
|-
|
|
|<br>Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Zimbabwe
|<div style="text-align: center;"> Abdulrahman <br> Salmeen <br> Aaish <br> John <br> Fatai</div>
|-
|
|
|<br> Saitama
|<br>Japan
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Qatar
|}}
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Congo
|<div style="text-align: center;"> Ahmed Hassan <br> Faouzi Aaish <br> Ali Sayed Issa </div>
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Jordan
|<div style="text-align: center;"> Mohammed Salmeen <br> Abdulla Ismail Omar <br> Ismaeel Abdullatif , </div>
|-
|
|
|<br> Sydney
|<br>Australia
|<div style"text-align: center;"> 2:0 </div>
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Uzbekistan
|}}
|-
|
|
|<br> Vienna
|<br> Lombard-Pápa TFC
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Kapfenberg
|<br> Internazionale
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Kapfenberg
|<br> Austria Vienna
|
|<br>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Kenya
|, }}
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Iran
|<div style="text-align: center;"> Abdulrahman <br> Abdullatif <br> Issa <br> Adnan </div>
|-
|
|World Cup Qualifier
| Riffa
| Bahrain
|
|| Saudi Arabia
|
|-
|
|World Cup Qualifier
| Riyadh
|| Saudi Arabia
|
|| Bahrain
| <br /> Abdullatif }}
|-
|
|World Cup Qualifier
| Riffa
|| Bahrain
|
|| New Zealand
|
|-
|
|Friendly
| Riffa
|| Bahrain
|
|| Togo
|
|-
|
|World Cup Qualifier
| Wellington
|| New Zealand
|
|| Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<br> Riffa
|<br>Bahrain
|
|<br>Yemen
|
|-
|}
References
Category:Bahrain national football team
Category:2009 national football team results
Category:2009–10 in Bahraini football
Category:2008–09 in Bahraini football
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Bahrain_national_football_team_results
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.135078
|
25869899
|
2008 Bahrain national football team results
|
This article details the fixtures and results of the Bahrain national football team in 2008.
Results
{| class"wikitable" width80% style="font-size: 90%"
|-
!Date
!Tournament
!Location
!Home Team
!Score
!Away Team
!width=30%|Bahrain Scorers
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Kuwait
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Syria
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Yemen
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Muscat
|<BR>Oman
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Doha
|<BR>Qatar
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Iran
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Japan
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Singapore
|<BR>Singapore
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Bangkok
|<BR>Thailand
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Riffa
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Thailand
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Oman
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Saitama
|<BR>Japan
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Burkina Faso
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Abu Dhabi
|<BR>UAE
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Japan
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Doha
|<BR>Qatar
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR>Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Azerbaijan
| }}
|-
|
|
|<BR> TBA
|<BR>Saudi Arabia
|
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|-
|
|
|<BR> Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Australia
|
|-
|
|
|<BR> Manama
|<BR>Saudi Arabia
|
|<BR>Bahrain
| }}
|-
|
|
|<BR> Manama
|<BR>Bahrain
|
|<BR>Syria
|
|}
References
Category:Bahrain national football team
Category:2008 national football team results
Category:2007–08 in Bahraini football
Category:2008–09 in Bahraini football
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_Bahrain_national_football_team_results
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.164796
|
25869915
|
Scheibler
|
Scheibler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Carl Scheibler (1827–1899), German sugar chemist
Christoph Scheibler (1589–1653), philosopher, author Opus Metaphysicum
Frederick G. Scheibler Jr. (1872–1958), American architect
Johann Scheibler (1777–1837), silk manufacturer of Crefeld, and contributor to the science of acoustics
Karl Wilhelm Scheibler (1820–1881), German-Polish industrialist
See also
Scheibler Palace, Łódź, Poland
Karol Scheibler's Chapel, Łódź, a major architectural work
Scheibler Armorial, an armorial manuscript compiled from the 15th to 17th centuries
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheibler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.165471
|
25869916
|
1958 Portuguese presidential election
|
0.18pp)
| image1
| candidate1 = Américo Tomás
| party1 = National Union (Portugal)
| popular_vote1 = 765,081
| percentage1 = 76.42%
| image2
| candidate2 = Humberto Delgado
| party2 = Independent politician
| colour2 = cc0033
| popular_vote2 = 236,057
| percentage2 = 23.58%
| map_image = Mapa das eleições presidenciais portuguesas de 1958.svg
| map_caption = Results by district, councils and overseas provinces
| title = President
| before_election = Francisco Craveiro Lopes
| before_party = National Union (Portugal)
| after_election = Américo Tomás
| after_party = National Union (Portugal)
}}
Presidential elections were held in Portugal on 8 June 1958, during the authoritarian Estado Novo regime led by Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar.
Incumbent President Francisco Craveiro Lopes had clashed with Salazar and did not seek another term, either as candidate of the regime or for the opposition, which deemed the incumbent president capable of winning the race. In Craveiro Lopes' place, the National Union, the sole legal political party, levied naval minister Américo Tomás, a conservative.
The democratic opposition backed Air Force General Humberto Delgado, who ran as an independent in an attempt to challenge the regime. When asked if he would retain Salazar if elected, Delgado famously replied, "Obviously, I'll sack him." Delgado knew that under Portugal's corporatist constitution, the president still had the right to dismiss the prime minister, which was effectively the only check on Salazar's power.
The official tally was 76.4 percent for Tomás and 23.6 percent for Delgado. The regime's secret police force, PIDE, harassed and attacked Delgado voters and supporters, and there were many reports of widespread electoral fraud. For example, Salazar refused to allow opposition representatives to observe the counting of ballots.
}}
Results by district
{|class"wikitable sortable" style"text-align:right; font-size:95%"
!colspan2 rowspan2|District
!colspan=2|Tomás
!colspan=2|Delgado
|-
!Votes
!%
!Votes
!%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Aveiro
|bgcolor=lightblue|40,087
|bgcolor=lightblue|69.43%
|17,651
|30.57%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Beja
|bgcolor=lightblue|14,540
|bgcolor=lightblue|86.81%
|2,209
|13.19%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Braga
|bgcolor=lightblue|48,813
|bgcolor=lightblue|72.19%
|18,809
|27.81%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Bragança
|bgcolor=lightblue|19,534
|bgcolor=lightblue|75.93%
|6,193
|24.07%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Castelo Branco
|bgcolor=lightblue|30,783
|bgcolor=lightblue|93.13%
|2,271
|6.87%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Coimbra
|bgcolor=lightblue|33,944
|bgcolor=lightblue|71.35%
|13,629
|28.65%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Évora
|bgcolor=lightblue|13,101
|bgcolor=lightblue|77.22%
|3,865
|22.78%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Faro
|bgcolor=lightblue|22,179
|bgcolor=lightblue|86.69%
|3,405
|13.31%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Guarda
|bgcolor=lightblue|29,565
|bgcolor=lightblue|83.17%
|5,983
|16.83%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Leiria
|bgcolor=lightblue|33,284
|bgcolor=lightblue|76.14%
|10,433
|23.86%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Lisbon
|bgcolor=lightblue|110,939
|bgcolor=lightblue|71.90%
|43,359
|28.10%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Portalegre
|bgcolor=lightblue|16,542
|bgcolor=lightblue|81.27%
|3,812
|18.73%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Porto
|bgcolor=lightblue|69,174
|bgcolor=lightblue|66.10%
|35,473
|33.90%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Santarém
|bgcolor=lightblue|37,645
|bgcolor=lightblue|64.22%
|20,974
|35.78%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Setúbal
|bgcolor=lightblue|12,973
|bgcolor=lightblue|70.57%
|5,409
|29.43%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Viana do Castelo
|bgcolor=lightblue|20,797
|bgcolor=lightblue|73.91%
|7,342
|26.09%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Vila Real
|bgcolor=lightblue|26,899
|bgcolor=lightblue|85.62%
|4,519
|14.38%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Viseu
|bgcolor=lightblue|46,692
|bgcolor=lightblue|85.19%
|8,117
|14.81%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Angra do Heroísmo
|bgcolor=lightblue|11,255
|bgcolor=lightblue|99.72%
|32
|0.28%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Funchal
|bgcolor=lightblue|16,024
|bgcolor=lightblue|85.59%
|2,698
|14.41%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Ponta Delgada
|bgcolor=lightblue|13,796
|bgcolor=lightblue|95.25%
|688
|4.75%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Angola
|bgcolor=lightblue|22,295
|bgcolor=lightblue|67.71%
|10,630
|32.29%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Cape Verde
|bgcolor=lightblue|13,191
|bgcolor=lightblue|97.67%
|314
|2.33%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Guinea
|bgcolor=lightblue|1,624
|bgcolor=lightblue|79.07%
|430
|20.93%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Macau
|bgcolor=lightblue|1,507
|bgcolor=lightblue|100.00%
|0
|0.00%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Mozambique
|bgcolor=lightblue|13,385
|bgcolor=lightblue|61.29%
|8,454
|38.71%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Portuguese India
|bgcolor=lightblue|16,773
|bgcolor=lightblue|95.64%
|765
|4.36%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|São Tomé and Príncipe
|bgcolor=lightblue|5,249
|bgcolor=lightblue|100.00%
|0
|0.00%
|-
|bgcolor=lightblue|
|align=left|Timor
|bgcolor=lightblue|1,853
|bgcolor=lightblue|100.00%
|0
|0.00%
|- class=sortbottom
|colspan6 alignleft|Source: Presidency<ref name="Results" />
|}
References
Presidential
Category:Presidential elections in Portugal
Portugal
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958_Portuguese_presidential_election
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.180380
|
25869952
|
Emergency Medical Services for Children
|
The Emergency Medical Services for Children (EMSC) program is a US federal government health initiative. It is administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), and the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB). Its aim is to reduce child and youth disability and death due to severe illness or injury by increasing awareness among health professionals, provider and planners and the general public of the special (physiological and psychological) needs of children receiving emergency medical care.
Background
In the Korean and Vietnam wars, medical experience demonstrated that survival rates improved dramatically when patients were stabilized in the field and transported immediately to a well-equipped emergency facility. During the 1960s, civilian medical and surgical communities recognized the possibility of applying this principle to an EMS system.
Support
In 1973, Congress passed the Emergency Medical Services Systems Act of 1973. Managed by the HRSA, it provided funding for more comprehensive state and local government EMS systems.
Between 1975 and 1979, state EMS systems dramatically improved outcomes of adult patients but not those of pediatric patients.
In 1979, Calvin C.J. Sia, MD, then-president of the Hawaii Medical Association, requested that the members of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) develop EMS programs designed to decrease disability and death in children. Dr. Sia was joined by José B. Lee, then-executive officer of the Hawaii Medical Association Emergency Medical Services Program in requesting that U.S. Senator Daniel K. Inouye introduce legislation to establish, implement and fund a national initiative designed to address emergency medical services for children systems development.
Soon after, Inouye responded to this request by introducing a legislative vehicle in the United States Senate. His staff assistant and chief of staff Patrick DeLeon's daughter was hospitalized with meningitis. The girl's treatment demonstrated the shortcomings of an average emergency department when treating a critically ill child.
Senators Orrin Hatch(R-UT) and Lowell Weicker(R-CT) also gave their support. In 1984, Congress enacted legislation (Public Law 98-555) authorizing the use of federal funds for emergency medical services for children (EMSC). By this law, and through the administration of the MCHB, the EMSC program obtained funds to improve the pediatric capabilities of existing emergency medical services systems.
In 1985, Congress designated initial funding for the EMSC program and in 1986, the first federal grants were utilized in Alabama, California, New York, and Oregon.
Federal program
The federal EMSC program is designed to ensure that all children and adolescents receive appropriate care in a health emergency. Since 1985, the EMSC program has provided grants to all states, and the District of Columbia, five U.S. territories, and three Freely Associated States. Additional EMSC program funding has been used to establish national resource centers and a pediatric emergency care research network.
Grants and cooperative agreements funded by EMSC Description State Partnership (SP) grants State partnership grants fund activities to improve and integrate pediatric emergency care in a state EMS system. The typical applicant is a state government unless the state decides to delegate responsibility to an accredited school of medicine. Every grantee is required to collect and report data on program-defined performance measures. Targeted Issue (TI) grants Targeted issue grants are intended to address specific needs, concerns, or topics in pediatric emergency care that transcend state boundaries. Grantees are typically schools of medicine looking to find new approaches to providing the best possible emergency care for children across the nation. Typically, the projects result in new products or resources, or demonstrate the effectiveness of model system component(s) or service(s) of value. State Partnership Regionalization of Care (SPROC) grants The purpose of the SPROC grants is two-fold: (1) to continue its work with state governments and/or accredited schools of medicine to develop regionalized systems that encompass the sharing of resources and improve access to pediatric health care services for children and families in tribal, territorial, insular, and rural areas of the United States and (2) to develop "Models of Inclusive Care" that may be replicated in other regions where access to specialized pediatric medical treatment is limited due to geographical distances or jurisdictional borders. Network Development Demonstration Project (NDDP) cooperative agreements NDDP cooperative agreements demonstrate the value of an infrastructure or network that conducts multi-center investigations on the efficacy of treatment, transport, and care responses for children, including those preceding the arrival of children to hospital emergency departments. These cooperative agreements form the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). PECARN currently consists of six research node centers that work collaboratively with hospital emergency department affiliates to develop and submit nodal research proposals and conduct PECARN-approved research at their respective institutions. In 2013, PECARN added an EMS demonstration node. EMSC Data Coordinating Center (DCC) Following the inception of PECARN, a cooperative agreement was awarded to the University of Utah to serve as a central repository for data generated by each of the PECARN research nodes and their hospital affiliates. The DCC also works with PECARN principal investigators to implement PECARN-wide standards for data collection and analysis in order to ensure uniformity and quality of the data and to monitor the safety and timely progress of PECARN studies. National EMSC Data Analysis Resource Center (NEDARC) Funded through a cooperative agreement, NEDARC provides technical assistance to EMSC grantees and state EMS offices in the areas of data collection, data analysis, data communication, quality improvement, grant writing, and research design. EMSC National Resource Center (EMSC NRC) Also funded through a cooperative agreement, the EMSC NRC focuses on dissemination and transfer of best practices in pediatric emergency care. This is accomplished by the following: identification of resources and model programs; development of interfacility transfer guidelines/agreements and facility recognition; development of legislation and regulations; and dissemination and implementation of EMSC best practices. EMSC Innovation and Improvement Center (EIIC) Building on the strong foundation of the EMSC NRC, EIIC employs quality improvement science, the experiential knowledge at Texas Children's Hospital and the University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School, and the expertise of multiple professional societies and federal organizations to continue to transform emergency medical care for children across the continuum of pediatric care.
Program accountability
To measure the effectiveness of federal grant programs, the HRSA requires grantees to report on specific performance measures related to their grant funded activities. The measures are part of the Government Performance Results Act (GPRA). In order to receive or continue to receive Program funds, all EMSC grantees must provide data on measures 71 to 80:
The percent of prehospital provider agencies in the state or territory that have on-line pediatric medical direction available from dispatch through patient transport to a definitive care facility.
The percent of prehospital provider agencies in the state/territory that have off-line pediatric medical direction available from dispatch through patient transport to a definitive care facility.
The percent of patient care units in the state or territory that have essential pediatric equipment and supplies as outlined in national guidelines.
The percent of hospitals recognized through a statewide, territorial, or regional standardized system that are able to stabilize or manage pediatric medical emergencies.
The percent of hospitals recognized through a statewide, territorial, or regional standardized system that are able to stabilize and/or manage pediatric traumatic emergencies.
The percentage of hospitals in the state/territory that have written interfacility transfer guidelines that cover pediatric patients and that include pre-defined components of transfer.
The percent of hospitals in the state/territory that have written interfacility transfer agreements that cover pediatric patients.
The adoption of requirements by the state/territory for pediatric emergency education for license/certification renewal of BLS/ALS providers.
The degree to which state/territories have established permanence of EMSC in the state/territory EMS system by establishing an EMSC Advisory Committee, incorporating pediatric representation on the EMS Board, and hiring a full-time EMSC manager.
The degree to which state/territories have established permanence of EMSC in the state/territory EMS system by integrating EMSC priorities into statutes/regulations.
Partnerships
The program works with a variety of national and professional organizations to identify and address the key issues affecting EMS, including but not limited to: managed care, disaster preparedness, children with special health care needs, mental health, family-centered care, and cultural diversity. The program develops national task forces and publishes comprehensive reports drawing attention to many of these issues.
Emergency department readiness project
In 2013, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Emergency Physicians, the Emergency Nurses Association, and the EMSC cooperated in a quality improvement project. Approximately 5,000 EDs were offered an assessment of their department's readiness, based on six topic areas published in the 2009 Guidelines for the Care of Children in the Emergency Department (or National Guidelines). The assessment was conducted over a period of seven months. The response rate of EDs was over eighty percent. Assessments were completed by August 2013. Upon completion of their assessment, each emergency department was given a pediatric readiness score, a gap analysis and access to an on-line toolkit to assist in quality improvement initiatives.
Inter-facility transfer tool kit for the pediatric patient
In collaboration with the Emergency Nurses Association and the Society of Trauma Nurses, the EMSC developed the Inter Facility Transfer Tool Kit for the Pediatric Patient. The toolkit includes an algorithm for developing transfer processes; talking points; example guidelines, agreements, and memorandums of understanding; and case presentations.
Equipment list for ambulances
The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma, the National Association of EMS Physicians, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), and the EMSC Partnership for Children Stakeholder Group collaborated to revise the recommended equipment list for ambulances. This revised document was to be used to evaluate the availability of pediatric equipment and supplies for basic and advanced life support.
Pediatric medication safety in the emergency department
Duke University and the AAP convened a multidisciplinary panel provide recommendations to improve pediatric medication safety in the emergency department.
Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA)
The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services Department of Health Policy and the NRC published an issue brief entitled The Application of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) to Hospital Inpatients.
EMS-related research
The Federal Interagency Committee on EMS and the EMSCNRC conducted a gap analysis of EMS related research. The analysis included over 270 articles. Its aim was to provide an evidence base for decision makers.
PECARN
thumb|right|300px|Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network logo
The EMSCNRC has collaborated with the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN), the first federally funded pediatric emergency medicine research network.
References
External links
EMSC Innovation and Improvement Center, a department within University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital and the University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School.
The National EMSC Data Analysis Resource Center, Salt Lake City, UT.
Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network, the first federally funded pediatric emergency medicine research network in the United States.
Category:Children's health in the United States
Category:Emergency medical services in the United States
Category:Health Resources and Services Administration
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Medical_Services_for_Children
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.185596
|
25869954
|
Klingler
|
Klingler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Alfred Klingler (1912–?), German field handball player who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
Baylee Klingler (born 1999), American softball player
David Klingler (born 1969), American football player
Gwen Klingler (born 1944), American politician
Jimmy Klingler (born 1972), American football player
Karl Klingler (1879–1971); German classical musician
Werner Klingler (1903–1972), German film director and actor
See also
Klinger, surname
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klingler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.186157
|
25869956
|
2000 Woking Borough Council election
|
in yellow, Conservatives in blue, Labour in red and independent in grey.]]
The 2000 Woking Council election took place on 4 May 2000 to elect members of Woking Borough Council in Surrey, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 1999 increasing the number of seats by one. The council stayed under no overall control, and overall turnout in the election was 34.32%.Election result
References
2000
Category:2000 English local elections
Category:2000s in Surrey
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_Woking_Borough_Council_election
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.205360
|
25869987
|
2009 Formula 3 Sudamericana season
|
The 2009 Formula 3 Sudamericana season was the 23rd Formula 3 Sudamericana season. It began on 6 June 2009, at Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet in Brasília and ended on 22 November at Autódromo Internacional de Curitiba. Brazilian driver Leonardo Cordeiro won the title.
Drivers and teams
All drivers competed in Pirelli-shod.
Team No Driver Chassis Engine Rounds Class A Cesário Fórmula 1 Leonardo Cordeiro Dallara F309 Berta All 2 Lucas Foresti Dallara F309 Berta All PropCar Racing 7 Igor Veras Dallara F309 Berta All 8 Nilton Molina Dallara F309 Berta All Dragão Motorsport 11 Luiz Boesel Dallara F309 Berta All Víctor Guerin Dallara Berta 1–5, 7–8 Kemba Racing 12 Leonardo de Souza Dallara F309 Berta 1–5, 7, 9 André Negrão Dallara F309 Berta 6–7 Hitech Racing 13 Walter Grubmüller Dallara F309 Mercedes 7 Bassan Motorsport 14 Fernando Galera Dallara F309 Berta 1–4 15 Claudio Cantelli Jr. Dallara F309 Berta All Razia Motorsport 17 Yann Cunha Dallara F309 Berta All 18 Henrique Lambert Dallara F309 Berta 3–9 Class B Cesário Fórmula Junior 31 Henrique Martins Dallara F301 Berta All 32 Raphael Abbate Dallara F301 Berta All Baumer Racing 33 Lucilio Baumer Dallara F301 Berta 1 Kemba Racing 41 Mateus Laba Dallara F301 Berta 4 Bassani Racing 43 Leandro Florenzo Dallara F301 Berta 4, 7 MX Sports 63 Bruno Andrade Dallara F301 Berta All
Race calendar and results
Round Location Circuit Date Pole Position Fastest Lap Winning Driver Supporting 1 R1 Brasília, Brazil Brasília 6 June Leonardo Cordeiro Fernando Galera Fernando Galera Stand-alone event R2 7 June Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro 2 R1 Pinhais, Brazil Autódromo Internacional de Curitiba 13 June Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Stand-alone event R2 14 June Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo de Souza 3 R1 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jacarepaguá 11 July Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Stand-alone event R2 12 July Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro 4 R1 Santa Cruz do Sul, Brazil Autódromo Internacional de Santa Cruz do Sul 29 August Luiz Boesel Leonardo Cordeiro Luiz Boesel Stand-alone event R2 30 August Claudio Cantelli Jr. Leonardo Cordeiro Claudio Cantelli Jr. 5 R1 Buenos Aires, Argentina Autódromo Juan y Oscar Gálvez 12 September Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Buenos Aires Grand Prix R2 13 September Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro 6 R1 Piriápolis, Uruguay Piriápolis Street Circuit 3 October Claudio Cantelli Jr. Claudio Cantelli Jr. Claudio Cantelli Jr. Gran Premio de Piriápolis R2 4 October Leonardo Cordeiro Claudio Cantelli Jr. Leonardo Cordeiro 7 R1 São Paulo, Brazil Autódromo José Carlos Pace 16 October Henrique Lambert Race Cancelled Brazilian Grand Prix R2 17 October Henrique Lambert Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro 8 R1 Campo Grande, Brazil Autódromo Internacional Orlando Moura 7 November Claudio Cantelli Jr. Leonardo Cordeiro Claudio Cantelli Jr. Stand-alone event R2 Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Henrique Lambert R3 8 November Lucas Foresti Leonardo Cordeiro Lucas Foresti 9 R1 Pinhais, Brazil Autódromo Internacional de Curitiba 21 November Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Leonardo Cordeiro Stand-alone event R2 22 November Henrique Lambert Igor Veras Leonardo Cordeiro
Championship standings
Pos Driver BRA1 BRA2 CUR1 CUR2 JAC1 JAC2 SCZ1 SCZ2 BUE1 BUE2 PIR1 PIR2 INT1 INT2 CAM1 CAM2 CAM3 CUR1 CUR2 Pts Class A 1 Leonardo Cordeiro 6 1 1 2 1 1 Ret 3 1 1 9 1 C 1 8 2 2 1 1 138 2 Claudio Cantelli Jr. 4 2 4 6 4 3 2 1 Ret 6 1 4 C Ret 1 5 3 8 4 96 3 Lucas Foresti Ret 5 3 4 3 2 5 2 6 5 Ret Ret C Ret 2 4 1 2 7 81 4 Henrique Lambert 5 9 3 6 2 2 3 2 C 2 5 1 9 7 5 75 5 Yann Cunha 2 Ret 10 7 2 4 4 7 9 3 2 3 C Ret 3 8 5 9 2 74 6 Igor Veras 7 10 5 5 7 8 Ret 5 5 Ret 6 7 C 7 Ret 3 4 6 3 56 7 Luiz Boesel 3 Ret 7 10 8 7 1 4 4 Ret 4 5 C 8 11 10 8 4 11 54 8 Nilton Molina 5 6 6 3 Ret 5 7 13 3 4 5 6 C Ret 10 Ret 11 Ret 6 45 9 Leonardo de Souza Ret 4 2 1 6 Ret 8 10 8 7 C Ret Ret 10 33 10 Fernando Galera 1 3 Ret 8 11 6 6 Ret 23 11 Víctor Guerin C 3 4 7 10 15 12 André Negrão Ret 11 C 10 4 Walter Grubmüller C Ret 0 Class B 1 Henrique Martins 9 7 11 11 Ret Ret 11 8 7 8 Ret 8 C 5 9 6 6 3 8 132 2 Raphael Abbate 10 9 8 9 10 10 9 9 11 Ret 8 10 C 6 7 9 7 5 12 132 3 Bruno Andrade 12 12 Ret 12 Ret 11 10 11 10 9 7 9 C 4 6 11 Ret Ret 9 110 4 Víctor Guerin 11 11 9 Ret 9 12 12 Ret Ret 10 49 5 Lucílio Baumer 8 8 18 6 Leandro Florenzo 13 12 C 9 14 Mateus Laba Ret Ret 0 Pos Driver BRA1 BRA2 CUR1 CUR2 JAC1 JAC2 SCZ1 SCZ2 BUE1 BUE2 PIR1 PIR2 INT1 INT2 CAM1 CAM2 CAM3 CUR1 CUR2 PtsBold – PoleItalics – Fastest Lap
References
External links
Official website
Formula 3 Sudamericana
Sudamericana
Category:Formula 3 Sudamericana seasons
Sudamericana F3
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Formula_3_Sudamericana_season
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.414082
|
25869991
|
Lovers Point State Marine Reserve
|
thumb|Monterey Bay
thumb|Cormorant chick in Monterey Bay
Lovers Point State Marine Reserve (SMR) is one of four small marine protected areas located near the cities of Monterey and Pacific Grove, at the southern end of Monterey Bay on California’s central coast. The four MPAs together encompass . The SMR protects all marine life within its boundaries. Fishing and take of all living marine resources is prohibited.
History
Lovers Point State Marine Reserve was established in September 2007 by the California Department of Fish & Game. It was one of 29 marine protected areas adopted during the first phase of the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. The Marine Life Protection Act Initiative (or MLPAI) is a collaborative public process to create a statewide network of marine protected areas along the California coastline.
Recreation and nearby attractions
thumb|Wedding in Lover's Point
The natural environment and ocean resources of the Monterey Peninsula draw millions of visitors from around the world each year, including more than 65,000 scuba divers drawn by the area’s easy access, wildlife, and kelp forests.
The Monterey Bay Aquarium is a tourist attraction featuring a living kelp forest. The exhibit includes many of the species native to the nearby marine protected areas. The aquarium also houses sea otters, intertidal wildlife, and occasionally sea turtles.
In addition to diving and visiting the aquarium, people visit the Monterey Bay for kayaking, whale watching, charter fishing, surfing, bird watching, tidepooling and walking on the beach.
Lovers Point is also where the Kelp Krawlers, a local open water swimming group, holds its weekly Sunday swim.
California's marine protected areas encourage recreational and educational uses of the ocean. Activities such as kayaking, diving, snorkeling, and swimming are allowed unless otherwise restricted.
On June 22, 2022, a 60-year-old swimmer was attacked by a shark at Lover's Point Beach, in the Lovers Point State Marine Reserve. The swimmer, left with major injuries, was aided to safety by bystanders, and taken to a hospital in Salinas. The Monterey Fire Department used a drone to conduct a search for the shark, but did not locate it.
Scientific monitoring
In accordance with the Marine Life Protection Act,
Local scientific and educational institutions involved in the monitoring include Stanford University’s Hopkins Marine Station, University of California Santa Cruz, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Research methods include hook-and-line sampling, intertidal and scuba diver surveys, and the use of Remote Operated Vehicle (ROV) submarines.
References
External links
California MPAs
Marine Life Protection Act Initiative
CalOceans
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Category:Marine sanctuaries in California
Category:Monterey Bay
Category:California Department of Fish and Wildlife areas
Category:Protected areas of Monterey County, California
Category:Monterey, California
Category:Pacific Grove, California
Category:2007 establishments in California
Category:Protected areas established in 2007
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lovers_Point_State_Marine_Reserve
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.419120
|
25870008
|
Download to Donate
|
Download to Donate is a program by Music for Relief, a non-profit organization established by Linkin Park in 2005 to aid victims of natural disasters in their recovery efforts. So far, the program has released three compilations: two to support the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and one for the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. Several artists contribute songs to the compilations, and people are encouraged to either download the songs, in which the proceeds will go to relief efforts for the disasters; or to simply donate any amount money for the cause.
Download to Donate for Haiti
Download to Donate for Haiti is a compilation album by Music for Relief, who is working alongside United Nations Foundation, Habitat for Humanity and the Dave Matthews Band's BAMA Works to provide food, water, medical supplies and sustainable housing for those affected by the 2010 Haiti earthquake. Mike Shinoda and Enrique Iglesias promoted the compilation on Larry King Live. The compilation has raised around $270,000 with 115,000 downloads. Some of the tracks from the first Download to Donate for Haiti are included in the album. The cause has raised more than $26,000. The donations will support Artists for Peace and Justice, charity: water, Direct Relief, Partners In Health and the United Nations Foundation, as well as reconstruction and the delivery of food, water and medical care in Haiti.
On February 22, 2011, Linkin Park members Chester Bennington, Brad Delson, Joe Hahn and Rob Bourdon joined United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in a Facebook Town Hall discussion on how they continue their work on raising efforts on awareness of Haiti. Fans were also encouraged to participate in the Download to Donate campaign.
The songs were no longer available for download from December 10, 2011. Music for Relief selected the Haitian Education and Leadership Program, or HELP, a program that gives higher education to young Haitians, as the final beneficiary of funds raised through Download to Donate for Haiti v2.0. Music for Relief still accepts donations for Haiti.
Download to Donate: Tsunami Relief
Download to Donate: Tsunami Relief (sometimes known as Download to Donate for Japan), launched on March 22, 2011, was the third Download to Donate compilation album. The proceeds for downloading the songs went to Save the Children, which helped the victims of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. The songs were no longer available for download as of June 7, 2011.
References
External links
Download to Donate Official Website
Category:2010 compilation albums
Category:Charity albums
Category:Albums produced by Mike Shinoda
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Download_to_Donate
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.422522
|
25870018
|
Bill Patterson (racing driver)
|
| birth_place | death_date
| death_place = Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
| retired = 1964
| related to | last series Australian Drivers' Championship
| years active = 1957–63
| teams | starts
| wins | poles
| fastest laps = <!-- if known -->
| best finish = 1st
| year = 1961 Australian Drivers' Championship
| prev series = <!-- previous series with line breaks -->
| prev series years | titles Australian Hillclimb Championship<br> Australian Grand Prix<br> Australian Drivers' Championship
| title years = 1954<br> 1957<br> 1961
| awards | award years
}}
Gerald William Riggall Patterson (30 August 1923 – 10 January 2010) was an Australian motor racing driver, race team owner and businessman.
Patterson, son of Wimbledon champion Gerald Patterson, attended his father's school, Scotch College, Melbourne, from 1931 to 1934, and Geelong Grammar School from 1935 to 1941. He was one of a brace of new drivers that emerged after World War II, first appearing in the Australian Grand Prix in 1948 driving a stripped down MG TC. After improving the MG as far as he was able, he moved to a JAP powered Cooper Mk.V in 1953. Patterson used this to win his first national title, the 1954 Australian Hillclimb Championship.
In the scorching heat of a Western Australian summer in 1957, Patterson stepped into Lex Davison's Ferrari 625 F1 as a relief driver, working together to defeat Stan Jones to win the 1957 Australian Grand Prix.
A succession of grand prix Coopers followed. The biggest year of Patterson's career was 1961. Victories at Mount Panorama, Lowood, Caversham and a second at Longford saw Patterson dominate the 1961 Australian Drivers' Championship, scoring 51 points to Lex Davison's 15 to win the Gold Star.
Patterson raced on for a few more years and took part in the inaugural Tasman Series in 1964, but after that Patterson stepped away from the sport as a driver, but stayed as an entrant, sponsor and team boss. Patterson Holden dealership Bill Patterson Motors supported several drivers over the following decades, open wheelers for the rest of the 1960s and on into the 1970s. In 1977 Patterson purchased touring car racing team, Team Brock which he ran for a year. Patterson's name continued to be seen in the sport into the 2000s in Speedway racing.
Patterson died at Sandringham on 10 January 2010 at the age of 86.
Career results
{| class"wikitable" style"font-size: 95%;"
|-
! Season
! Race / Series
! Position
! Car
! Team
|-
| 1956
| Moomba TT
| align="center" | 7th
| MGA
| Bill Patterson
|-
| 1957
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align="center" | 4th
| Ferrari 625 F1<br> Cooper T39 Climax
| Ecurie Australie<br> W.Patterson
|-
| 1957
| Victorian Tourist Trophy
|align"center" style"background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd
| Cooper Coventry Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
| 1959
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align="center" | 4th
| Cooper T43 Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
| 1960
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align"center" style"background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd
| Cooper T51 Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
| 1961
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align"center" style"background:#ffffbf;"| 1st
| Cooper T51 Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
| 1962
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align"center" style"background:#ffdf9f;"| 3rd
| Cooper T51 Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
| 1963
| Australian Drivers' Championship
|align="center" | 6th
| Cooper T51 Climax<br> Cooper T53 Climax
| Bill Patterson Motors P/L
|-
|}
References
Category:1923 births
Category:2010 deaths
Category:Racing drivers from Melbourne
Category:Tasman Series drivers
Category:People educated at Geelong Grammar School
Category:People educated at Scotch College, Melbourne
Category:Racing drivers from Victoria (state)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Patterson_(racing_driver)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.428144
|
25870021
|
Progressive parlay
|
A progressive parlay is a joint wager on multiple events, for example team sports or horse races. Generally a progressive parlay involves a joint wager on four to twelve separate events. Should all the selected bets win, the bettor receives a relatively large payout, because of the sizable odds against this happening. However, unlike a regular parlay, if some of the individual bets lose, but most win, the bettor still wins, although with a much smaller payout. Several sites use a schedule where the bettor can lose one bet on a 4-6 event progressive parlay, can lose up to two bets on a 7-9 event progressive parlay, and up to three bets on a 10-12 event progressive parlay.
The term has also been used for a long series of wagers on roulette or other gambling games, where the bettor attempts to rely on a "stream of luck".
Strategies
Several strategies have been suggested by gambling consultants when wagering on parlays or progressive parlays, one of them being to pick interrelated outcomes. For example, a bettor may believe that one team is likely to win if the game is a low-scoring affair while the other team is almost certain to win if the game becomes a high scoring shootout. If the bettor uses a parlay to bet on the first team along with an under bet against the point total, he stands to gain 2.6 units ($260 if $100 is bet) on an original investment of 1 unit (the most common unit in betting is $100 although any amount can be substituted as a unit) compared to a payout of just 1.82 units ($182) if the bets are made independently of each other. Conversely, if both outcomes are missed, one will only lose his original 1 unit investment rather than the 2 units one would lose if it had wagered on the events individually. This minimized risk is another notable potential positive of a parlay. If a bettor wishes to bet on a significant number of events without putting a substantial amount of his total bankroll at stake, parlays may represent an attractive option. By turning 12 individual events into four 3 event parlays, the bettor reduces the number of units he is risking from 12 to 4 while simultaneously increasing his potential payout if all events are correctly picked.
References
Category:Wagering
Category:Sports betting
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_parlay
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.430519
|
25870024
|
Eckler
|
Eckler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
A. Ross Eckler (1901–1991), director of the U.S. Census Bureau
A. Ross Eckler Jr. (born 1927), American scientist and mathematician
Harry Eckler (1916–2011), Canadian softball player
Rebecca Eckler (born 1973), Canadian journalist and author
See also
Bricker & Eckler, law firm in the midwestern United States with approximately 160 attorneys and 3 offices in Ohio
Ekeler, surname
Ecker (surname)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eckler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.430951
|
25870028
|
Margaret Greville, 6th Baroness Willoughby de Broke
|
Margaret Greville, 6th Baroness Willoughby de Broke and de jure 14th Baroness Latimer (c. 1561 – 26 March 1631) was a peeress in the peerage of England.
Margaret Greville was born circa 1561, the youngest daughter of Sir Fulke Greville, Sheriff of Warwick and 4th Baron Willoughby de Broke (1536–1606) and Lady Ann Neville. She married on 29 October 1582 at Alcester Sir Richard Verney (d. 1630). She inherited de jure the title 6th Baroness Willoughby de Broke and 14th Baroness Latimer when her brother Sir Fulke Greville, 1st Baron Brooke and 5th Baron Willoughby de Broke (1554–1628) was murdered by one of his servants. Her brother's senior title of Baron Brooke had been passed on to a cousin who her brother had formally adopted.
On her death on 26 March 1631, her title passed to her son, Greville Verney.
References
External links
Compton Verney House website
Category:1560s births
Category:1631 deaths
Margaret
Category:16th-century English nobility
Category:16th-century English women
Category:17th-century English nobility
Category:17th-century English women
Category:English baronesses
Margaret
6
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Greville,_6th_Baroness_Willoughby_de_Broke
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.432189
|
25870035
|
Amphicyclotulus
|
Amphicyclotulus is a genus of tropical land snails with gills and an operculum, terrestrial gastropod molluscs in the family Neocyclotidae (according to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005).
Species
Species within the genus Amphicyclotulus include:
Amphicyclotulus amethystinus (Guppy, 1868)
Amphicyclotulus beauianus (Petit, 1853)
Amphicyclotulus dominicensis Bartsch, 1942
Amphicyclotulus guadeloupensis de la Torre, Bartsch & Morrison, 1942
Amphicyclotulus martinicensis (Shuttleworth, 1857)
Amphicyclotulus mineri Bartsch, 1942
Amphicyclotulus perplexus de la Torre, Bartsch & Morrison, 1942
Amphicyclotulus portoricensis (O. Boettger, 1887)
Amphicyclotulus rufescens (G. B. Sowerby I, 1843)
Amphicyclotulus schrammi (Shuttleworth, 1857) synonym of Amphicyclotulus martinicensis (Shuttleworth, 1857) (junior subjective synonym)
See also
Amphicyclotus is a different genus in the same family Neocyclotidae.
References
Category:Neocyclotidae
Category:Gastropod genera
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphicyclotulus
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.435487
|
25870041
|
List of foreign football players in Malta
|
This category is for non-Maltese footballers who currently play or have played in any of the Maltese leagues. The list includes also players that earned Maltese nationality during the years since being Maltese or marrying a Maltese wife. Players with two different nationalities are written in both of the countries.
(As to January 19, 2010)
Albania
Fatos Daja
Vilson Caushi
Renis Hyka
Edmond Lufi
Angola
Mawete Júnior
Argentina
Julio Alcorsé
Walter Acevedo
Rodrigo Cariaga
Pablo Doffo
Cesar Paiber
Australia
Leighton Grech
Daniel Severino
Benin
Florent Raimy
Salomon Wisdom
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Sanin Ortas
Siniša Radak
Senad Repuh
Brazil
Anderson
André Rocha da Silva
Bizú
Camilo
Daniel Mariano Bueno
Denni
Elton Morelato
Éverson
Éverton
Italo Nogueira
Ivan
Marcelo Pereira
Marcos Aurélio
Marco Morgon
Michael Douglas Lima
Pedrinho
Ramón
Renato Conceição
Wendell Gomes
Bulgaria
Sasho Angelov
Hari Borislavov
Valeri Bojinov
Martin Deanov
Peycho Deliminkov
Nikolay Kirilov
Dragomir Draganov
Rumen Galabov
Stanimir Georgiev
Svetlan Kondev
Milen Penchev
Nikola Slavtchev
Mitko Trendafilov
Emil Yanchev
Borislav Giorev
Krasimir Manolov
Burkina Faso
Ousseni Zongo
Saïdou Panandétiguiri
Cameroon
Ernest Nfor
Central African Republic
Boris Sandjo
Marcelin Tamboulas
Chile
Francisco Arriagada
Juan Manuel Artiaga
Edison Bilbao
José Luis Gamonal
Congo
Rufin Oba
Costa Rica
Victor Coto Ortega
Windell Gabriels
Curaçao
Richmar Siberie
Czech Republic
Petr Bartes
Martin Klein
Pavel Mraz
Denmark
Ronni Hartvig
Carl Zachhau
Dominican Republic
Enmy Peña
DR Congo
Yannick Bolasie
Landry Mulemo
England
Chris Bart-Williams
Mark Briggs
Nathan Charnock
Barry Gallagher
Peter Hatch
Paul Mariner
Tony Morley
Carl Saunders
Donovan Simmonds
Kris Thackray
Danny de Abela-Borg
Equatorial Guinea
Eloy Edu – St. Andrews, Tarxien Rainbows
David García Mitogo – Vittoriosa Stars
Diosdado Mbele – Hibernians
Rui Da Gracia – Hibernians
Óscar Siafá – Birkirkara – 2024–
Finland
Pekka Helin
Kimmo Hovi – Melita – 2014
Zakaria Kibona – Mosta – 2012
Felix Lehtinen – Gudja United – 2024
Salomo Ojala – Mosta – 2025–
Timo Paasolainen
France
Amed Davy Sylla
Georgia
Grigol Gvazava
Germany
Heiner Backhaus
Ghana
Asante Agyemang
Abudulai Issaka
Nii Nortey Ashong
Elvis Sakyi
Guinea-Bissau
Arnaud Mendy
Hungary
Attila Filkor
Györgyi Handel
Ireland
Declan O'Brien
Italy
Cristiano Bergodi
Domenico Di Carlo
Mauro Di Lello
Christian Terlizzi
Paltemio Barbetti
Andrea Pisanu
Fabrizio Miccoli
Cristian Zaccardo
Jamaica
Nathan Koo-Boothe
Latvia
Maksims Daņilovs
Oļegs Malašenoks
Lithuania
Donatas Vencevicius
Macedonia
Darko Krsteski
Borče Manevski
Mali
Souleymane Diamoutène
Moldova
Andrian Caşcaval
Nicolae Milinceanu
Montenegro
Aleksandar Madžar
Nikola Bogdanović
Draško Braunović
Ivan Janjušević
Bojan Kaljević
Netherlands
Sylvano Comvalius
Jordi Cruyff
Geert den Ouden
New Zealand
Kim Wright
Nigeria
Olomuyiwa Agonun
Murphy Akanji
Akanni-Sunday Wasiu
Minabo Asechemie
Ibrahim Babatunde
Haruna Babangida
Ndubisi Chukunyere
Haruna Doda
Sunday Eboh
Augustine Eguavoen
Anthony Ewurum
Anthony Evi Parker
Precious Monye
Essien Mbong
Benneth Njoku
Chidoze Nwankwo
Jeremiah Ani
Daniel Nwoke
Emeka Ochei
Uwa Ogbodo
Joseph Okonkwo
Chris Oretan
Frank Temile
Omonigho Temile
Edafe Uzeh
Oman
Raed Ibrahim Saleh
Portugal
Nuno Gomes
Miguel Nimes Lopes De Pina
Zeferino
Romania
Lucian Dronca
Marius Filipref
Alexandru Pavel
Adrian Popescu
Russia
Viktor Zlydarev
Scotland
Derek Collins
Malcolm Robertson
Gary Muir
Carlo Monti
Serbia
Andjelko Djuričić
Danilo Dončić
Dejan Maksić
Zoran Levnaić
Đorđe Pintac
Robert Savić
Bojan Mamić
Somalia
Ciise Aadan Abshir
Spain
Jorge Mora
Sweden
Andre Grabowski
Tunisia
Ridha Dardouri
Abdelkarim Nafti
Ukraine
Oleksandr Maksymov
United Arab Emirates
Hamdan Al-Kamali
Uruguay
Christian Callejas
Venezuela
Donnys Quintero
References
Notes
Malta
*
Category:Association football player non-biographical articles
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_foreign_football_players_in_Malta
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.475031
|
25870073
|
Lineamenta
|
A Lineamenta document is a text written in preparation for a General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in the Roman Catholic Church.
The lineamenta encourages bishops to invite all Catholics into discussion and to take a pastoral inventory.
References
Category:Documents of the Catholic Church
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lineamenta
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.475716
|
25870082
|
Staller
|
Staller is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Brock Staller (born 1992), Canadian rugby union player
Eric Staller (born 1947), American artist who uses light and architecture
George Staller (1916–1992), American outfielder, scout and coach in Major League Baseball
Ilona Staller (born 1951), Hungarian-born Italian politician, porn-star, and singer
Thomas Staller (died 1606), English Anglican priest and Archdeacon of Rochester
See also
Staller Saddle, a mountain pass in the Alps
Category:Occupational surnames
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staller
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.476241
|
25870095
|
Morane-Saulnier MS.560
|
<!-- This article is a part of Wikipedia:WikiProject Aircraft. Please see Wikipedia:WikiProject Aircraft/page content for recommended layout. -->
{|
|}
The Morane-Saulnier MS.560 was a French civil aerobatic monoplane designed and built by Morane-Saulnier.
|prime units?=met
<!--
General characteristics
-->
|genhide|crew1
|capacity|length m7
|length ft|length in
|length note|span m9
|span ft|span in
|span note|height m2
|height ft|height in
|height note|wing area sqm
|wing area sqft=126.9
|wing area note|aspect ratio<!-- sailplanes -->
|airfoil|empty weight kg
|empty weight lb=765
|empty weight note|gross weight kg
|gross weight lb=2170
|gross weight note|max takeoff weight kg
|max takeoff weight lb|max takeoff weight note
|more general=
<!--
Powerplant
-->
|eng1 number=1
|eng1 name=Train 6D-01
|eng1 type=piston engine
|eng1 kw=<!-- prop engines -->
|eng1 hp=<!-- prop engines -->75
|eng1 kn=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
|eng1 lbf=<!-- jet/rocket engines -->
|eng1 note|power original
|thrust original|eng1 kn-ab<!-- afterburners -->
|eng1 lbf-ab=<!-- afterburners -->
|prop blade number=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop name|prop dia m<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop dia ft=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop dia in=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop note=
<!--
Performance
-->
|perfhide|max speed kmh
|max speed mph=145
|max speed kts|max speed noteat
|max speed mach=<!-- supersonic aircraft -->
|cruise speed kmh|cruise speed mph129
|cruise speed kts|cruise speed note
|stall speed kmh=<!-- aerobatic -->
|stall speed mph=<!-- aerobatic -->
|stall speed kts|stall speed note
|never exceed speed kmh|never exceed speed mph
|never exceed speed kts|never exceed speed note
|minimum control speed kmh|minimum control speed mph
|minimum control speed kts|minimum control speed note
|range km|range miles620
|range nmi|range note
|combat range km|combat range miles
|combat range nmi|combat range note
|ferry range km|ferry range miles
|ferry range nmi|ferry range note
|endurance=<!-- if range unknown -->
|ceiling m|ceiling ft22960
|ceiling note|g limits<!-- aerobatic -->
|roll rate=<!-- aerobatic -->
|glide ratio=<!-- sailplanes -->
|climb rate ms|climb rate ftmin
|climb rate note|sink rate ms<!-- sailplanes -->
|sink rate ftmin=<!-- sailplanes -->
|sink rate note|lift to drag
|wing loading kg/m2|wing loading lb/sqft
|wing loading note|disk loading kg/m2
|disk loading lb/sqft|disk loading note
|power/mass met|power/mass imp
|power/mass note|thrust/weight
|thrust/weight note=
}}
<!-- See also -->
References
Notes
Bibliography
*
*
*
*Further reading*
MS.560
Category:1940s French sport aircraft
Category:Aerobatic aircraft
Category:Low-wing aircraft
Category:Single-engined tractor aircraft
Category:Aircraft first flown in 1945
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morane-Saulnier_MS.560
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.481577
|
25870125
|
Podlipki-Dachnye
|
|line = Yaroslavsky Suburban Line
|other Bus: 1, 2, 28, 392
|structure = At-grade
|platform = 2
|levels = 1
|tracks = 2
|parking |bicycle
|opened = 1914
|closed |rebuilt 2000s
|electrified = Yes
| accessible |code 234901
|owned = Russian Railways
|operator = Moscow Railway
|zone = 3
|former |passengers
|pass_year |pass_percent
|pass_system |services
|route_map =
}}
Podlipki-Dachnye is a railway station of Yaroslavsky suburban railway line. It is located in the city of Korolyov of Moscow Oblast.
It takes 1 hour 20 minutes to get to the station from the Moscow Yaroslavsky railway station and 35 minutes from Fryazino station.
History
The station was opened in 1914. It was named after the then-existing housing estate Villa-Podlipki. It was reconstructed and equipped with turnstiles in the beginning of the 2000s.
Public conveyances
There are 3 bus routes that have the station as a terminus:
* 12 — to station Bolshevo
* 16 — to Lesnaya school
* 15 — to the town of Yubileyny
Also buses of routes 1 and 2 (to Silikatnaya str.), 28 (to Mytishchi station) and 392 (to VDNKh Moscow Metro station) make a stop there.
References
Category:Railway stations of Moscow Railway
Category:Railway stations in Moscow Oblast
Category:Railway stations in the Russian Empire opened in 1914
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podlipki-Dachnye
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.483242
|
25870126
|
Cecil Bodington
|
| death_place = Near Arras, Pas-de-Calais, France
| heightft | heightinch
| batting = Right-handed
| bowling = Unknown
| role | club1 Hampshire
| year1 =
| columns = 1
| column1 = First-class
| matches1 = 10
| runs1 = 154
| bat avg1 = 11.00
| 100s/50s1 = –/–
| top score1 = 36
| deliveries1 = 375
| wickets1 = 9
| bowl avg1 = 31.88
| fivefor1 = –
| tenfor1 = –
| best bowling1 = 3/19
| catches/stumpings1 = 4/–
| date = 19 January
| year = 2010
| source = http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/9138.html Cricinfo
}}
Cecil Herbert Bodington (20 January 1880 – 11 April 1917) was an English cricketer and educator.
The son of The Reverend Herbert James Bodington, he was born in January 1880 at Suffield, Norfolk. He was educated firstly at a national school in Overstrand, before going to Charterhouse School on a junior scholarship in 1893. Three years later he went up to The King's School, Canterbury on a senior scholarship, where he played both rugby union and cricket for the school. From there, he matriculated to Peterhouse, Cambridge. At Cambridge, he was a member of Cambridge University Cricket Club but did not play at first-class level for the university. However, he did play first-class cricket during his studies in 1901 and 1902 for Hampshire on ten occasions, making nine appearances in the County Championship and a further appearance against the touring Australians. In these matches, he scored 154 runs at an average of exactly 11, with a highest score of 36. With the ball, he took 9 wickets at a bowling average of 31.88, with best figures of 3 for 19.
After graduating from Cambridge, he went to The Cape. From there, he went to British India, where he was tutor to three sons of the Maharaja of Kapurthala. the same month in which he was appointed to the Household Battalion. He was made a temporary lieutenant in April 1916, before being appointed a temporary captain in September of the same year. Bodington was killed in action on 11 April 1917 during the Battle of Arras.
References
External links
*
Category:1880 births
Category:1917 deaths
Category:People from North Norfolk (district)
Category:People educated at Charterhouse School
Category:People educated at The King's School, Canterbury
Category:Alumni of Peterhouse, Cambridge
Category:English cricketers
Category:Hampshire cricketers
Category:Schoolteachers from Norfolk
Category:British Army personnel of World War I
Category:Royal Horse Guards officers
Category:British military personnel killed in World War I
Category:Cricketers from Norfolk
Category:Military personnel from Norfolk
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecil_Bodington
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.486560
|
25870134
|
Biller
|
Biller is an Anglo Saxon and German surname, and it's a variant of Buhler. Notable people with the surname include:
Anna Biller, independent American filmmaker
Georg Christoph Biller (1955–2022), German choral conductor of the Thomanerchor
John Biller (1879–1960), American athlete who competed mainly in the standing jumps
José Biller, American cardiologist
Kenneth Biller, TV producer, TV writer, TV director and TV editor, best known for Star Trek: Voyager
Maxim Biller (born 1960), German writer
Nikola Biller-Andorno, German bioethicist
Stefanie Biller (born 1985), long-distance swimmer from Germany
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biller
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.487156
|
25870157
|
Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine
|
The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine is a quarterly peer-reviewed open-access medical journal. It was established in October, 1928 and is the oldest medical student publication still being published. Since 2015, each issue covers a particular topic in biology, medicine, or public health, including experimental and clinical research. The journal's editorial board is composed of Yale University graduate, medical, and professional students. It is published on PubMed Central and is financially supported by the Yale Office of Medical Education.
History
The journal was established in 1928 by Milton C. Winternitz, dean of the Yale School of Medicine from 1920 to 1935. During his tenure, Winternitz instituted what became known as "The Yale System of Medical Education", which eliminated required course exams and comparative grades, allowed for flexibility of course requirements in students' schedules, and encouraged students to carry out original thesis research and writing. The journal originally served as an outlet to publish students' thesis research and as a tool for students to practice scientific writing and learn how to publish as scientists and researchers. and Scopus.
Colloquium series
The journal sponsors a series of quarterly seminars to run in parallel with each issue, featuring a Yale faculty member whose research expertise aligns with the topic featured in the issue. The colloquia are free and open to the public.
Podcast series
The journal also creates a series of podcasts with discussions with editors, authors, and Yale faculty researchers and clinicians.
References
External links
Archive on Pubmed Central
Category:Biology journals
Category:General medical journals
Category:Yale University academic journals
Category:Quarterly journals
Category:English-language journals
Category:Academic journals established in 1928
Category:Academic journals edited by students
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yale_Journal_of_Biology_and_Medicine
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.489837
|
25870160
|
1990 United States Senate election in Virginia
|
| title = U.S. Senator
| before_election = John Warner
| before_party = Republican Party (United States)
| after_election = John Warner
| after_party = Republican Party (United States)
}}
The 1990 United States Senate election in Virginia took place on November 5, 1990. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator John W. Warner won re-election to a third term. No Democrat filed to run against him as he won every single county and city in the state with over 60% of the vote. Independent Nancy B. Spannaus (an affiliate of the controversial Lyndon LaRouche) got 18% of the vote, as she was the only other candidate on the ballot besides Warner.
Results
See also
* 1990 United States Senate elections
References
Category:1990 Virginia elections
Virginia
1990
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990_United_States_Senate_election_in_Virginia
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.492371
|
25870177
|
Philip Kenyon-Slaney
|
Major Philip Percy Kenyon-Slaney (12 February 1896 – 9 September 1928) was a British Conservative Party politician.
Kenyon-Slaney was son of Percy Kenyon-Slaney (1861–1911) and his wife, Geraldine Ellen Georgina, daughter of the Reverend George William Whitmore, who had made their home at Langworthy, Devon. His uncle Colonel William Kenyon-Slaney had also been a Member of Parliament.
He was educated at Bradfield School.
Throughout the First World War he served with Royal North Devon Yeomanry, Royal Field Artillery, seeing action on the Western Front. He was mentioned in despatches and awarded the Military Cross in the 1916 Birthday Honours. He was gassed several times, subsequently affecting his health. After the war he was on the Territorial Army Reserve of Officers with the rank of Major.
His health had caused him to announce he would not stand at the next General Election.
References
External links
Category:1896 births
Category:1928 deaths
Category:Conservative Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Category:UK MPs 1924–1929
Category:Recipients of the Military Cross
Category:British Army personnel of World War I
Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Tavistock
Category:Royal North Devon Yeomanry officers
Category:Royal Field Artillery officers
Category:Territorial Force officers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Kenyon-Slaney
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.494982
|
25870183
|
International Fair Play Committee
|
The International Fair Play Committee (), abbreviated as the CIFP or the IFPC, is a not for profit international non-governmental organisation which serves to foster sportsmanship in international competition. It presents awards annually at the World Fair Play Awards to recognise acts of fair play carried out by sportspeople or teams. The awards ceremony is held in various locations and has been broadcast on television in Europe.
History
during his tennis career]]
The CIFP was established in France in 1963 by members of UNESCO, , ICSSPE, FIFA, FIBA, FILA and the International Rugby Board. The committee presented its first award two years later: Eugenio Monti, an Italian bobsleigher, was the recipient. The spare part Monti had given to rival Tony Nash at the 1964 Winter Olympics had enabled the Briton to go on to win the gold medal.
Awards
, founder of the modern Olympics, has a trophy named in his honour.]]
Annual awards
Awards are presented at the annual World Fair Play Awards Ceremony in three categories:
* For an act of fair play by complying with both the written and unwritten rules of sport.
* For a general attitude of sportsmanship throughout a sports career by demonstrating an outstanding and constant spirit of fair play.
* For an activity aiming to promote fair play such as the organisation of national or local campaigns, lectures, books, articles or reports in the media.
The given in recognition of the different achievements in each category are:|International Pierre de Coubertin Fair Play Trophy|Pierre de Coubertin Award for Act of Fair Play|Pierre de Coubertin Fair Play Trophy|Pierre de Coubertin International Fair Play Award|Pierre de Coubertin International Fair Play Trophy|Pierre de Coubertin International Trophy for Fair Play|Pierre de Coubertin Trophy for Fair Play|Pierre de Coubertin World Trophy.}}}} – the "trophy for action", awarded since 1965 for gestures of fair play in which an athlete impedes their performance to aid a fellow competitor.
* Jean Borotra World Fair Play Trophy}}}} – the "trophy for the career", awarded since 1973 to recognise athletes who have displayed fair play throughout their careers.
* World Fair Play Trophy}} – the "trophy for promotion", awarded since 1995 to a person or organisation that has promoted the spirit of fair play.
Since 2013, the CIFP has, under the auspices of the IOC President, also given out the
* Jacques Rogge World Fair Play Trophy for The Youth. These were first presented at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Among the recipients are:
* 2013: Russian middle-distance runner Yuliya Zaripova received the CIFP Fair Play Award for the 2013 Summer Universiade.
* 2016: Norway men's national handball team received the Rio 2016 Fair Play Award for great sportsmanship during their semifinal match against Germany on 29 January at the 2016 European Men's Handball Championship. Nikki Hamblin and Abbey D'Agostino received the Rio 2016 Fair Play Award after colliding with each other on the track during the 5000 m event and assisting each other to continue the race. received the CIFP Fair Play Award for the 2023 Pan American Games.
* 2024: Canadian gymnast Ellie Black received the Paris 2024 Fair Play Award.
Trophy recipients
{| class"wikitable" style"margin: 1em auto;"
|-
! Year
! Pierre de Coubertin World Fair Play Trophy
! Jean Borotra World Fair Play Trophy
! Willi Daume World Fair Play Trophy
! Jacques Rogge World Fair PlayTrophy for The Youth
|-
| align=left | 1964
| alignleft | Eugenio Monti
| rowspan8, aligncenter | Not awarded
| rowspan30, aligncenter | Not awarded
| rowspan48, aligncenter | Not awarded
|-
| align=left | 1965
| alignleft | Willye White West Ham andTSV Munich andIstván Zsolt
|-
| align=left | 1966
| alignleft | Stevan Horvat
| alignleft | Japan Men's Olympic Football Team Pedro Zaballa
|-
| align=left | 1970
| alignleft | Ryszard Szurkowski
|-
| align=left | 1972
| alignleft | Stan Smith
| alignleft | Emiliano Rodríguez
|-
| align=left | 1973
| alignleft | Great Britain's men's team pursuit-team :Michael BennettRik EvansIan HallamWilliam Moore
| alignleft | Bobby Charlton
|-
| align=left | 1974
| alignleft | Claude Ravonel
| alignleft | Lia Manoliu
|-
| align=left | 1975
| alignleft | Victor Niederhoffer
| alignleft | Bob Mathias Emil Zátopek
|-
| align=left | 1976
| alignleft | André Bastin
| alignleft | Jenő Kamuti
|-
| align=left | 1977
| alignleft | Japanese spectators during the1977 Volleyball World Cup (Men's, Women's)
| alignleft | John Naber
|-
| align=left | 1978
| alignleft | Tamás Wichmann
| alignleft | Gareth Edwards
|-
| align=left | 1979
| alignleft | Philippe Roux
| alignleft | Sven Thofelt
|-
| alignleft | 1980
|-
| align=left | 1982
| alignleft | Mats Wilander
|
|-
| alignleft | 1983
| alignleft | Mohamed Ali Rashwan Dariusz Zawadzki
|
|-
| align=left | 1985
| alignleft | Mokhtar Mokhtar
| alignleft | René Bazennerye John B. Kelly Jr. Juha Mieto Balbir Singh Sr.
|-
| align=left | 1986
| alignleft | István Vaskuti and János Sarusi Kis
| alignleft | Stanley Matthews
|-
| align=left | 1987
| alignleft | Cleveland Stroud
| alignleft | Vijay Amritraj
|-
| align=left | 1988
| alignleft | Soviet–Canadian 1988 Polar Bridge Expedition /Teófilo Stevenson
|
|-
| align=left | 1989
| alignleft | Jean-Michel Henry
| alignleft | Věra Čáslavská Chris Evert Ken Rosewall Pirmin Zurbriggen
|-
| align=left | 1990
| alignleft | Ivan Lawler and Graham Burns
|-
| align=left | 1992
| alignleft | Eddie Van Hoof
| alignleft | Raymond Poulidor Raisa Smetanina
|-
| align=left | 1993
| alignleft | FIFA The people of Norway at theXVII Olympic Winter Games in Lillehammer
|
|-
| align=left | 1994
| alignleft | Francesco Panetta Justin McDonald
|
| alignleft |
|-
| align=left | 1995
| alignleft | Sergey Bubka Laurent Jalabert
| alignleft | Nelson Mandela Jean-François Lamour Vreni Schneider
| alignleft | Albert II, Prince of Monaco
|-
| align=left | 1996
|
| alignleft | Ludvík Daněk Stefan Edberg
| alignleft | Erica Terpstra Mario Vázquez Raña
|-
| align=left | 1997
|
|
| alignleft | Ludvík Daněk Konishiki Yasokichi
|-
| align=left | 1998
| alignleft |
| alignleft | Brigitte Deydier
| alignleft | Lithuanian Fair Play Committee and
|-
| align=left | 1999
|
|
| alignleft | Panathlon International
|-
| align=left | 2000
|
| alignleft | Rolland Boitelle
| alignleft | Students and teachers from Sydneyand New South Wales
|-
| align=left | 2001
| alignleft | Simone Moro
| alignleft | Eusebio da Silva Ferreira
| alignleft | Kipchoge Keino
|-
| align=left | 2002
| alignleft | Denmark national football team
| alignleft | Mária Mračnová
| alignleft | Albert Jannes Buisman <!-- Albert Jannes Buisman (6-10-1939 – 25-04-2022); per 20240830 no Wikidata entry -->
|-
| align=left | 2003
| alignleft | Tana Umaga
| align=left | Herb Elliott
| align=left |
|-
| alignleft | 2007
| align=left | Graham Henry
| align=left | Jan Železný Mary Glen-Haig
| align=left | Shaozu Zhang
|-
| alignleft | 2008
| align=left | Edoardo Mangiarotti
| align=left | UEFA
|-
| align=left | 2009
| align=left | Elvan Abeylegesse Ammanuel Merkorios Giuseppe Pillon
| align=left | Saúl Mendoza Bill Slater
| alignleft | Pál Schmitt Herbert Ehlen Amin Motevaselzadeh
| alignleft | Tegla Loroupe
| align=left |
| align=left | Walter Kilger Laura Vaca
| align=left | Erika Miklósa Pál Szekeres
|-
| align=left | 2012
| align=left | Jochen Wollmert
| align=left | Sebastian Coe
| align=left | Carlos Gonçalves<!-- Presumably Carlos Eduardo Gonçalves, Q57422437 on Wikidata -->
| align=left | Christiana Pavlou Fenerbahçe S.K. U–15 team
|-
| alignleft | 2013
| align=left | Mohamed Abdelaziz Ghonem
| align=left | International Children's Games Committee
| align=left | Hana Dragojevic "Triqui Children" Team
|-
| align=left | 2014
| align=left | Łukasz Kubot
| align=left | Javier Zanetti
| align=left | Ligue Francophone de Hockey
| align=left | Nilufar Muhiddinova
|-
| alignleft | 2015
|
| alignleft |
| align=left | Denis Samoylov
|-
| align=left | 2016
| alignleft | Jorge Ariel Rodriguez
| align=left | Thomas Baroukh and andThibault Colard
| align=left | Jacques Ferran
| align=left |
| align=left | Valerio Catoia
|-
| align=left | 2018
| align=left | Fabio Caramel
| align=left | Azad Rahimov David Smetanine
| align=left | Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan andUAE Wrestling and Judo Federation andInternational Judo Federation andEuroNews
| align=left | Péter László Gasztonyi
|-
| alignleft | 2019
| align=left | Roger Casugay
| align=left | Carles Puyol
| align=left | Turkish National Olympic Committee
| alignleft | Giovanni Borgonovo<!-- https://www.canottaggio.org/news/2019/premio-coraggio-ed-altruismo-a-giovanni-borgonovo/ https://canottaggioservice.canottaggio.net/vedi_skeda_atl_cs.php?tipoAL&tes_codi=319035 -->
|-
| alignleft | 2020
| align=left | Maxime Mbanda City of Brussels
|
|-
| align=left | 2021
| align=left | Denmark national football team <!-- Per 20240830, the database at https://www.fairplayinternational.org/award-winners-search has two entries for "Trophy for action" (aka PdCWFPT), one for "Israel Judo Federation Saudi Judo Federation" and one for "Saudi Judo Federation", both with the same note saying "The whole process, which involved the federations, the governments and the National Olympic Committees, to make this historic moment happen was based on fair play and sportsmanship, both delegations showing mutual understanding and respect. The emotion was at its maximum when at the end of the match both athletes bowed and greeted one another. At the end of the season both federations were awarded with the IJF Judo for Peace award. Tahani Alqahtani (KSA) and Raz Hershko (ISR) faced in the first round of the competition." This looks like an error, looking at https://www.ijf.org/news/show/a-peaceful-success they did indeed receive an IJF award. No sources talk about an CIFP award to the two federations. That's some peculiar bad database handling. -->
| align=left | Mauro Borghi
| align=left | Wenke Thewis<!-- Listed in the database at https://www.fairplayinternational.org/award-winners-search as "Wemke Themis" -->
| align=left | Giovanni Lava
|-
| alignleft | 2022
* , 1988–1996
* , 1996–1999
Since 2000, Jenő Kamuti has served as the CIFP president.
Honorary Presidents
* Michael Morris, 3rd Baron Killanin, past President of the IOC (1974)
* René Maheu, the sixth Director-General of UNESCO (1974)
* Juan Antonio Samaranch, President of the IOC (1981)
* Jean Borotra, "Honorary President – Founder" (1988)
* Jacques Rogge, President of the IOC (2003)
* Koïchiro Matsuura, Director-General of UNESCO (2005) See also
* FIFA Fair Play Award
* Jean Borotra Sportsmanship Award
* Lady Byng Memorial Trophy
* Pierre de Coubertin Medal, awarded by the IOC
Notes
References
*
External links
*
Category:International organizations based in France
Category:International sports organizations
Category:Sports organizations established in 1963
Category:Sportsmanship
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Fair_Play_Committee
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.859440
|
25870201
|
The Lion & the Mouse
|
The Lion & the Mouse is a 2009 nearly wordless picture book illustrated by Jerry Pinkney. This book, published by Little, Brown and Company, tells Aesop's fable of The Lion and the Mouse. In the story, a mouse's life is a spared by a lion. Later, after the lion is trapped, the mouse is able to set the lion free. Adapting the fable, with the moral that the weak can help the strong, as a wordless picture book was seen as a successful way of overcoming the brief plot generally found in the source stories. While it was Pinkney's first wordless picture book, it was not the first time he had told the story, having previously included it in his Aesop's Fables, published in 2000. Pinkney, who had received five Caldecott Honors, became the first African American to win the Caldecott Medal for his illustrations in this book. His illustrations were generally praised for their realism and sense of place. The cover illustrations, featuring the title characters but no text, drew particular praise.
Background and publication
This book is the second time Pinkney has told this story, the first being as part of his 2000 compendium of Aesop's Fables. He also wanted to show that a fable could be "action packed" and not just moralistic. The story is Pinckney's favorite fable and he felt that the characters of the mouse and the "majestic lion" were particularly relatable for children.
Plot
In this book where the only words are the sounds made by the animals, the story begins at dawn. The mouse escapes several predators before coming upon the lion. The lion lets the mouse go. Later, some hunters come along and capture the lion with the net. The mouse chews through the rope of the net, freeing the lion and they become friends.
Illustrations and design
Pinkney illustrated this book using "pencil, watercolor, and colored pencils on paper." This method helps, in the words of The Horn Book Magazine review, to provide, "pleasing detail".
This book is unusual in that it does not have any text on its front dust cover, just the picture of the lion, though this is something that this book's publisher had done before. This back cover features the mouse, such that when the book is opened the mouse and the lion look at each other. These personalities are shown through the other animals' body parts that are illustrated in close-up.
This book's illustrations of the Serengeti were seen as well-researched and carefully drawn. Further, the animals are able to convey emotions without becoming personified.
This book's theme of how the "powerful can crush the weak" was seen as particularly timely. The "temptation, danger, and choice" the characters have to face could suggest a Garden of Eden-like setting, according to Horn Book.
Reception and awards
This book was a best seller and was well reviewed. It received a starred review from Booklist: reviewer Daniel Kraus rhetorically asked how readers could avoid being, "drawn into watercolors of such detail and splendor". The Horn Book Magazine, and Children's Book Council were among those who named it as one of the best books of 2009. Amanda Craig in The Times described the book as "exquisite".
This book won the 2010 Caldecott Medal, something which had been widely predicted. The committee cited how, "[i]n glowing colors, Pinkney's textured watercolor illustrations masterfully portray the relationship between two very unlikely friends." Pinkney expressed his surprise at actually winning the Caldecott, after having drawn five honor books. In his acceptance speech, Pinkney discussed what might have sparked his interest in the story, spoke at length about its creation, and his "deep feeling of satisfaction" over children "claiming ownership" of the fable.
See also
Four harmonious animals
References
Category:2009 children's books
Category:American picture books
Category:Wordless books
Category:Aesop's Fables
Category:Caldecott Medal–winning works
Category:English-language children's books
Category:Children's books about lions
Category:Children's books about mice and rats
Category:Children's books about friendship
Category:Picture books by Jerry Pinkney
Category:Little, Brown and Company books
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_&_the_Mouse
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.881765
|
25870205
|
Bill Roost
|
| birth_place = Bristol, England
| death_date
| height
| position = Inside forward
| years1 = 1948–1948
| clubs1 = Stonehouse
| caps1 | goals1
| years2 = 1948–1957
| clubs2 = Bristol Rovers
| caps2 = 177
| goals2 = 49
| years3 = 1957–1959
| clubs3 = Swindon Town
| caps3 = 18
| goals3 = 3
| years4 = 1960–1963
| clubs4 = Minehead
| caps4 | goals4
| totalcaps = 195
| totalgoals = 52
}}
William Charles Roost (22 March 1924 – 10 February 2013) was a professional footballer who played as an inside forward in The Football League for Bristol Rovers and Swindon Town.
Roost's footballing career had a late start, due to the Second World War, eventually making his League debut in 1948 at the age of 24. He previously played for Stonehouse in Gloucestershire where he was spotted by a Bristol Rovers scout, and he joined Rovers initially as an amateur on 10 September. He was awarded his first professional contract after less than two weeks in Bristol, signing on 23 September.
After making 177 League appearances for Rovers and scoring 49 goals he moved to Swindon Town in 1957, but he played just eighteen League games for them in two years and scored only three goals, all coming in a single game against Shrewsbury Town in December 1957. After an unsuccessful trial with Yeovil Town in 1959 he joined non-League side Minehead in January 1960 for whom he played 90 times in all competitions and scored 21 times before retiring in 1963.
Following his retirement from football he worked as a foreman in a scaffolding yard, and lived in the Whitehall area of Bristol.
References
*
Category:1924 births
Category:2013 deaths
Category:Footballers from Bristol
Category:English men's footballers
Category:Men's association football forwards
Category:Stonehouse Town F.C. players
Category:Bristol Rovers F.C. players
Category:Swindon Town F.C. players
Category:Minehead A.F.C. players
Category:English Football League players
Category:20th-century English sportsmen
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Roost
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.884733
|
25870215
|
Kappler
|
Kappler or Käppler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
August Kappler (1815–1887), German researcher, naturalist and explorer from Mannheim
Bianca Kappler (born 1977), German long jumper
Chris Kappler (born 1967), American equestrian, showjumper and Olympic gold and silver medalist
Darren Kappler (born 1965), former professional Australian rules footballer
Emanuel Selway "Jack" Kappler (1892–1969), former Australian rules footballer
Herbert Kappler (1907–1978), head of German police and security forces in Rome during World War II
John Kappler (born 1943), professor in the Department of Integrated Immunology at National Jewish Health
Nathalie Käppler (formerly von Lahnstein), fictional character on the German soap opera Verbotene Liebe
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kappler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.892808
|
25870219
|
Mutunus Tutunus
|
thumb|A denarius issued by Quintus Titius, thought to depict a bearded Mutunus Tutunus
In ancient Roman religion, Mutunus Tutunus or Mutinus Titinus was a phallic marriage deity, in some respects equated with Priapus. His shrine was located on the Velian Hill, supposedly since the founding of Rome, until the 1st century BC.
During preliminary marriage rites, Roman brides are supposed to have straddled the phallus of Mutunus to prepare themselves for intercourse, according to Church Fathers who interpreted this act as an obscene loss of virginity. The Christian apologist Arnobius says that Roman matrons were taken for a ride (inequitare) on Tutunus's "awful phallus" with its "immense shameful parts", but other sources specify that it is brides who learned through the ritual not to be embarrassed by sex: "Tutinus, upon whose shameful lap sit brides, so that the god seems to sample their shame before the fact." The 2nd-century grammarian Festus is the only classical Latin source to take note of the god, and the characterization of the rite by Christian sources is likely to be hostile or biased.
Etymology
Unlike Priapus, who is depicted in human form with an outsized erection, Mutunus seems to have been embodied purely by the phallus, like the fascinus or the mysterious begetter of Servius Tullius. The god's name is related to two infrequently recorded slang words for penis in Latin, mūtō (or muttō) and mūtōnium. "Mutto" was also used as a cognomen, the third of the three elements of a Roman man's name. Lucilius offers the earliest recorded instance of both forms: at laeva lacrimas muttoni absterget amica ("A girlfriend wipes away Mutto's tears — his left hand, that is"), and the derivative mūtōnium. Mūtōnium may have replaced the earlier form, as it appears later among the graffiti of Pompeii. Horace has a dialogue with his muttō: "What do you want? Surely you're not demanding a grand consul's granddaughter as a cunt?" Both Lucilius and Horace thus personify the muttō. Mutūniātus, used by Martial and in the Corpus Priapeorum, describes a "well-endowed" male.
Both parts of the name Mūtūnus Tūtūnus are reduplicative, Tītīnus perhaps from tītus, another slang word for "penis."
thumb|MT in Budge's dictionary
It is also possible, if not probable, that Latin "mut" was a vowelized loan derivative of the consonantal Egyptian word MT for 'phallus, male, man' in the adjacent hieroglyph, considering that Egyptian scribes did not vowelize MT, and that Budge added an /e/ to MT in his dictionary to make it pronounceable.
Cult
The shrine of Mutunus Tutunus on the Velia has not been located. According to Festus, it was destroyed to make a private bath for the pontifex and Augustan supporter Domitius Calvinus, even though it was revered as among the most ancient landmarks.
This uprooting raises the question of why Calvinus was permitted to displace such a venerable shrine. The Church Fathers associate Mutunus with groupings of other deities that are assumed to be based on the lost theological works of Varro. Through examining these connections, Robert Palmer concluded that the old cult of Mutunus was merged with that of Father Liber, who was variously identified with or shared attributes with Jupiter, Bacchus, and Lampsacene Priapus. Palmer further conjectured that it was Mutunus, in the form of Liber, to whom Julius Caesar made sacrifice on the day of his assassination, receiving the ill omens that the conspirator Decimus Brutus urged him to ignore. Caesar had previously celebrated his victory at the Battle of Munda on the Liberalia, or festival of Liber held March 17, and he visited the house of the pontifex Calvinus on the Ides of March, near the archaic shrine of Mutunus-Liber. In Palmer's view, the evident ill favor of the god gave Augustus license to reform the cult during his program of religious revivalism that often disguised radical innovations. The god was then Hellenized as Bacchus Lyaeus.
Palmer concurred with numismatists who regard a denarius minted by Quintus Titius, moneyer ca. 90–88 BC, as picturing an aged and bearded Mutunus on its obverse. The winged diadem is a reference to the Priapus of Lampsacus and to the winged phallus as a common motif in Roman decorative arts, which can also serve as an apotropaic charm against the evil eye. Another issue by Titius pictures an ivy-crowned Bacchus, with both denarii having a virtually identical Pegasus on the reverse. Michael Crawford finds "no good grounds" for identifying this figure as Mutunus, but Palmer points to the shared iconography of the Bacchus–Liber–Priapus figure and the associative etymology of the gens name Titius. A titus ("penis") with wings was a visual pun, since the word also referred to a type of bird. Varro seems to have associated Titinus with the Titii, in an etymological collocation that included Titus Tatius, the royal Sabine contemporary of Romulus; the Curia Titia; or the tribus of the Titienses, one of the three original tribes of Rome.
See also
List of Roman fertility deities
References
Category:Fertility gods
Category:Roman gods
Category:Sexuality in ancient Rome
Category:Marriage in ancient Rome
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutunus_Tutunus
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.899999
|
25870234
|
Eddie (soundtrack)
|
| length = 1:36:21
| label =
| producer =
| misc =
}}
Eddie: The Soundtrack is the soundtrack album to Steve Rash's 1996 film Eddie. It was released on May 21, 1996 through Hollywood Records/Island Black Music and consisted of contemporary R&B and hip hop. The album peaked at 119 on the Billboard 200 and 44 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. Two singles made it to the charts, "Say It Again" which was a minor hit on the R&B charts and both the successful hits "Tell Me", and "It's All the Way Live (Now)".
Track listing
| extra1 = }}
| length1 = 4:19
| title2 = Ain't No Love
| note2 = performed by 40 Thevz
| writer2 =
| extra2 = |Stan "The Guitar Man" Jones|Coolio}}
| length2 = 4:08
| title3 = Where Ya At?
| note3 = performed by Ill Al Skratch
| writer3 = Simon Cullins
| extra3 = Crazy C
| length3 = 4:40
| title4 = Punch Drunk
| note4 = performed by House of Pain
| writer4 =
| extra4 = Scheme Team Productions
| length4 = 3:31
| title5 = Da Dribbol
| note5 = performed by N.B. Hey
| writer5 =
| extra5 = Joe Galdo
| length5 = 3:48
| title6 = Scarred
| note6 = performed by Luke
| writer6 =
| extra6 = Darren "D.J. Spin" Rudnick
| length6 = 3:30
| title7 = After Last Night
| note7 = performed by Jodeci
| writer7 =
| extra7 = Mr. Dalvin
| length7 = 4:05
| title8 = Say It Again
| note8 = performed by Nneka
| writer8 =
| extra8 = Mario Winans
| length8 = 4:24
| title9 = Tell Me
| note9 = performed by Dru Hill
| writer9 =
| extra9 = }}
| length9 = 4:13
| title10 = Sistas
| note10 = performed by Myron
| writer10 =
| extra10 = }}
| length10 = 4:00
| title11 = Say That You're Ready
| note11 = performed by J'Son
| writer11 =
| extra11 =
| length11 = 4:02
| title12 = Rain Falls
| note12 = performed by Darcus
| writer12 =
| extra12 = }}
| length12 = 4:07
| title13 = Skills
| note13 = performed by Stanley Clarke
| writer13 =
| extra13 =
| length13 = 4:39
| title14 = Step up to the Line
| note14 = performed by Mighty Reel and Kimberly Blake
| writer14 =
| extra14 =
| length14 = 3:55
| total_length = 1:36:21
}}
;Notes
*}} signifies an additional producer
*}} signifies a co-producer
*}} signifies an executive producer
Charts
{| class"wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center"
|-
! scope="col"| Chart (1996)
! scope="col"| Peak<br /> position
|-
! scope"row" |US Billboard 200
| 119
|-
! scope"row" |US Top R&B Albums (Billboard)
| 44
|}
References
External links
*
Category:Hip-hop soundtracks
Category:1996 soundtrack albums
Category:Comedy film soundtracks
Category:Island Records soundtracks
Category:Albums produced by Fredwreck
Category:Contemporary R&B soundtracks
Category:Hollywood Records soundtracks
Category:Albums produced by Chris Stokes (director)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_(soundtrack)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:05.911320
|
25870241
|
List of early Warner Bros. sound and talking features
|
This is a list of early pre-recorded sound and/or talking movies produced, co-produced, and/or distributed by Warner Bros. and its subsidiary First National (FN) for the years 1927–1931.
Synchronized Sound Films
Synchronized Musical Score With Sound Effects
Release date Title Notes August 6, 1926 Don Juan Synchronized ScoreExtantFirst Vitaphone Feature. August 14, 1926 Broken Hearts of Hollywood Synchronized ScoreExtant September 2, 1926 The Honeymoon Express Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 1, 1926 Millionaires Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 2, 1926 Across the Pacific Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 6, 1926 The Better 'Ole Synchronized ScoreExtant October 16, 1926 My Official Wife Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 30, 1926 Private Izzy Murphy Synchronized ScoreLost Film November 27, 1926 While London Sleeps Synchronized ScoreLost Film December 1, 1926 The Third Degree Synchronized ScoreExtant at LOC January 8, 1927 Finger Prints Synchronized ScoreLost Film January 15, 1927 Wolf's Clothing Synchronized ScoreLost Film January 18, 1927 The Fortune Hunter Synchronized ScoreLost Film January 22, 1927 Don't Tell the Wife Synchronized ScoreLost Film February 19, 1927 Hills of Kentucky Synchronized ScoreExtant February 26, 1927 The Gay Old Bird Synchronized ScoreLost Film March 19, 1927 White Flannels Synchronized ScoreLost Film March 20, 1927 What Every Girl Should Know Synchronized ScoreLost Film April 9, 1927 Matinee Ladies Synchronized ScoreLost Film April 23, 1927 Bitter Apples Synchronized ScoreLost Film April 30, 1927 The Brute Synchronized ScoreLost Film May 7, 1927 Tracked by the Police Synchronized ScoreExtant. Soundtrack Lost. May 14, 1927 The Climbers Synchronized ScoreLost Film May 21, 1927 Irish Hearts Synchronized ScoreLost Film May 22, 1927 The Missing Link Synchronized ScoreExtant Held at Gosfilmofond, LoC, Cineteca Nazionale, BFI May 28, 1927 A Million Bid Synchronized ScoreIncomplete June 1, 1927 Simple Sis Synchronized ScoreLost Film June 4, 1927 The Black Diamond Express Synchronized ScoreLost Film June 18, 1927 Dearie Synchronized ScoreLost Film June 25, 1927 What Happened to Father? Synchronized ScoreLost Film July 23, 1927 The Heart of Maryland Synchronized ScoreIncomplete August 20, 1927 The Bush Leaguer Synchronized ScoreLost Film August 21, 1927 When a Man Loves Synchronized ScoreExtant August 27, 1927 The Desired Woman Synchronized ScoreLost Film September 3, 1927 Slightly Used Synchronized ScoreLost Film September 4, 1927 Old San Francisco Synchronized ScoreExtant September 10, 1927 Jaws of Steel Synchronized ScoreIncomplete September 17, 1927 One Round Hogan Synchronized ScoreLost Film September 18, 1927 The First Auto Synchronized ScoreLost Film September 24, 1927 A Sailor's Sweetheart Synchronized ScoreIncomplete October 8, 1927 Sailor Izzy Murphy Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 15, 1927 The College Widow Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 22, 1927 A Reno Divorce Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 29, 1927 A Dog of the Regiment Synchronized ScoreLost Film November 5, 1927 Good Time Charley Synchronized ScoreExtant November 12, 1927 The Silver Slave Synchronized ScoreLost Film November 19, 1927 The Girl from Chicago Synchronized ScoreLost Film November 26, 1927 Ginsberg the Great Synchronized ScoreLost Film December 3, 1927 Brass Knuckles Synchronized ScoreExtant December 17, 1927 If I Were Single Synchronized ScoreExtant December 24, 1927 Ham and Eggs at the Front Synchronized ScoreExtant December 31, 1927 Husbands for Rent Synchronized ScoreLost Film January 14, 1928 Beware of Married Men Synchronized ScoreIncomplete (One Reel Extant). January 28, 1928 A Race for Life Synchronized ScoreExtant February 11, 1928 The Little Snob Synchronized ScoreIncomplete February 25, 1928 Across the Atlantic Synchronized ScoreLost Film March 3, 1928 Children of the Ritz Synchronized ScoreIncomplete March 10, 1928 Powder My Back Synchronized ScoreLost Film March 28, 1928 Domestic Troubles Synchronized ScoreLost Film April 1, 1928 Ladies' Night in a Turkish Bath (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant April 7, 1928 The Crimson City Synchronized ScoreExtant April 21, 1928 Rinty of the Desert Synchronized ScoreLost Film May 12, 1928 Pay as You Enter Synchronized ScoreLost Film September 9, 1928 Night Watch (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant September 16, 1928 The Whip (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant September 16, 1928 Waterfront (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant September 28, 1928 Show Girl (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant October 7, 1928 The Crash (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film October 18, 1928 Lilac Time (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant November 4, 1928 The Haunted House (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film November 11, 1928 Outcast (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant November 18, 1928 The Good-Bye Kiss (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film December 2, 1928 Adoration (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant December 16, 1928 Naughty Baby (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant December 30, 1928 Scarlet Seas (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant January 9, 1929 Synthetic Sin (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant February 3, 1928 Cheyenne (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film February 9, 1929 The Greyhound Limited Synchronized ScoreExtant February 17, 1928 The Royal Rider (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film February 17, 1928 The Lawless Legion (FN) Synchronized ScoreLost Film February 28, 1929 Why Be Good? (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant March 24, 1929 Love and the Devil (FN) Synchronized ScoreExtant March 31, 1929 The Divine Lady Synchronized ScoreExtant
Talking Film
The following films contain dialogue and are classified as Part-Talkies or All-Talkies.
Title Release date Notes The Jazz Singer October 6, 1927Part-TalkieExtant at WCFTR, LoC and BFI.First Warner Feature with dialogue. Tenderloin March 14, 1928 Part-TalkieLost film. Glorious Betsy April 26, 1928 Part-TalkieExtant at LoC and WCFTR.Incomplete Soundtrack. Five and Ten Cent Annie May 28, 1928 Part-TalkieIncomplete. The Lion and the Mouse June 15, 1928 Part-TalkieExtant at UCLA, LoC & WCFTR. Incomplete Soundtrack. Lights of New York July 8, 1928All-Talking Warner's First All-Talking Feature. The Terror August 15, 1928 All-TalkingLost film.Soundtrack Extant. State Street Sadie September 2, 1928Part-TalkieLost Film. The Singing Fool September 19, 1928Part-TalkieExtant Women They Talk About October 14, 1928 Part-TalkieLost Film. Land of the Silver Fox October 18, 1928 Part-TalkieExtant The Home Towners October 23, 1928 All-TalkingLost Film. Beware of Bachelors October 27, 1928 Part-TalkieExtant The Midnight Taxi October 28, 1928 Part-TalkieSound Version Lost.Silent Version Extant. Noah's Ark November 1, 1928 Part-Talkie.Extant On Trial November 14, 1928 All-TalkingLost Film. Caught in the Fog December 2, 1928 Part-TalkieIncomplete The Little Wildcat December 8, 1928 Part-Talkie.Lost film. The Barker (FN) December 9, 1928 Part-Talkie.Extant. My Man December 21, 1928 Part-TalkieLost Film.Soundtrack Extant. Conquest December 22, 1928 All-TalkingLost Film. Seven Footprints to Satan (FN) January 27, 1929 Part-Talkie. Part-Talkie Version LostInternational Sound Version Extant. The Greyhound Limited February 9, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. Million Dollar Collar February 9, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Weary River (FN) February 10, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. Fancy Baggage February 23, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Stolen Kisses February 23, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Sonny Boy February 27, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. Stark Mad March 2, 1929 All-TalkingLost Film. Queen of the Night Clubs March 24, 1929 All-TalkingLost Film. Hardboiled Rose March 30, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. The Redeeming Sin April 6, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. His Captive Woman (FN) April 7, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. Hot Stuff (FN) April 7, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. The Desert Song April 8, 1929 All-Talking.Technicolor Sequences.Extant. Saturday's Children (FN) April 14, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. One Stolen Night April 20, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Kid Gloves April 27, 1929 Part-Talkie. Extant at GEH House of Horror (FN) April 28, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Glad Rag Doll May 4, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. No Defense May 11, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Two Weeks Off (FN) May 12, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. Prisoners (FN) May 19, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. Frozen River May 25, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. The Squall (FN) May 26, 1929 All-Talkie.Extant. On with the Show May 28, 1929 All-Talking.All Technicolor.Extant In Black And White. Careers (FN) June 2, 1929 All-Talkie.Extant. From Headquarters June 6, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. The Girl in the Glass Cage (FN) June 23, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. The Gamblers June 29, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Broadway Babies (FN) June 30, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. The Man and the Moment (FN) July 7, 1929 Part-Talkie.Extant. The Time, the Place and the Girl July 8, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Twin Beds (FN) July 14, 1929 All-Talkie.Lost Film. Drag (FN) July 21, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. Madonna of Avenue A July 22, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Smiling Irish Eyes (FN) July 28, 1929 All-Talking.Technicolor Sequences.Lost Film. Hard To Get (FN) August 4, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Say It with Songs August 6, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. Dark Streets (FN) August 11, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Careless Age (FN) August 18, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Her Private Life (FN) August 25, 1929 All-Talking. Extant at Cineteca Italiana. Gold Diggers of Broadway August 30, 1929 All-Talking.All Technicolor.Incomplete. Fast Life (FN) September 1, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Hearts in Exile September 14, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Great Divide (FN) September 15, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. Honky Tonk September 21, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. A Most Immoral Lady (FN) September 22, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Hottentot September 28, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Isle Of Lost Ships (FN) September 29, 1929 All-Talking.Extant The Argyle Case October 5, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Evidence October 5, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. So Long Letty October 16, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. Is Everybody Happy? October 19, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Young Nowheres (FN) October 20, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. In the Headlines October 26, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Girl From Woolworths (FN) October 27, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Disraeli November 1, 1929 All-Talking.ExtantNominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Skin Deep November 2, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Paris (FN) November 7, 1929 All-Talking. Part Technicolor.Lost Film. Footlights And Fools (FN) November 8, 1929 All-Talking. Part Technicolor.Lost Film. The Sap November 9, 1929 Part-Talkie.Lost Film. The Forward Pass (FN) November 10, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Little Johnny Jones (FN) November 17, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Show of Shows November 21, 1929 All-Talking. Part Technicolor.Extant In Black And White. The Royal Box November 21, 1929All-Talking.Lost Film. The first all talking German language film made in America. The Sacred Flame November 24, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Painted Angel (FN) December 1, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. General Crack December 3, 1929 All-Talking. Part Technicolor.Silent Version Extant. The Love Racket (FN) December 8, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. The Aviator December 14, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film. Tiger Rose December 21, 1929 All-Talking.Extant. Sally (FN) December 23, 1929 All-Talking.All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Wedding Rings (FN) December 29, 1929 All-Talking.Lost Film.
Films released in 1930 and after are All-Talking
No further Synchronized Films or Part-Talkies were made or released from this point.
Title Release date Notes Second Choice January 4, 1930 Lost Film. Lilies of the Field (FN) January 5, 1930 Lost Film. Playing Around (FN) January 19, 1930 On DVD In the Next Room (FN) January 26, 1930 Lost Film. Wide Open February 1, 1930 On DVD Loose Ankles (FN) February 2, 1930 On DVD The Other Tomorrow (FN) February 9, 1930 Lost Film. The Green Goddess February 13, 1930 She Couldn't Say No February 15, 1930 Lost Film.No, No, Nanette (FN) February 16, 1930 Part Technicolor.160 ft Fragment Extant at BFI. Demon of the Sea March 1930 Lost Film. Isle of Escape March 1, 1930 Lost Film. Strictly Modern (FN) March 2, 1930 Lost Film. Son of the Gods (FN) March 9, 1930 Part Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. On DVD Song of the West March 15, 1930 All Technicolor. Lost Film. On the Border March 15, 1930 The Furies (FN) March 16, 1930 Lost Film. Hold Everything March 20, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Mammy March 26, 1930 Technicolor sequences. On DVD The Man from Blankley's March 28, 1930 Lost Film. Under a Texas Moon April 1, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant at UCLA. Murder Will Out (FN) April 6, 1930 Lost Film. Spring is Here (FN) April 13, 1930 Those Who Dance April 19, 1930 Show Girl in Hollywood (FN) April 20, 1930 Part Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. On DVD The Second Floor Mystery April 26, 1930 A Notorious Affair (FN) May 4, 1930 On DVD The Man Hunter May 5, 1930 Lost Film. Dumbbells in Ermine May 10, 1930 Lost Film. The Flirting Widow (FN) May 11, 1930 The Bride of the Regiment (FN) May 21, 1930 All Technicolor.Lost Film. Courage May 22, 1930 Lost Film. Song of the Flame (FN) May 25, 1930 All Technicolor. Vitascope. Lost Film. Back Pay (FN) June 1, 1930 On DVD Rough Waters June 7, 1930 Lost Film. Golden Dawn June 14, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Sweethearts and Wives (FN) June 15, 1930 Sweet Mama (FN) July 6, 1930 Recaptured Love July 8, 1930 The Dawn Patrol (FN) July 10, 1930 On DVD Dancing Sweeties July 19, 1930 On DVD Road to Paradise (FN) July 20, 1930 On DVD Three Faces East July 26, 1930 On DVD The Matrimonial Bed August 2, 1930 On DVD Sweet Kitty Bellairs August 9, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. On DVD Numbered Men (FN) August 6, 1930 Moby Dick August 14, 1930 On DVD Oh Sailor Behave August 16, 1930 On DVD The Office Wife August 23, 1930 On DVD Top Speed (FN) August 24, 1930 Big Boy September 6, 1930 On DVD The Way of All Men (FN) September 7, 1930 Lost Film. The Bad Man (FN) September 15, 1930 Unpreserved nitrate print at UCLA. In danger of being lost. Bright Lights (FN) September 21, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Color Fragments at LOC. On DVD Old English September 27, 1930 On DVD Scarlet Pages (FN) September 28, 1930 On DVD Maybe It's Love October 4, 1930 On DVD College Lovers (FN) October 5, 1930 Lost Film Sinner's Holiday October 11, 1930 On DVD The Girl of the Golden West (FN) October 12, 1930 Lost Film. The Doorway to Hell October 18, 1930 On DVD The Life of the Party October 25, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Kismet (FN) October 30, 1930 Vitascope.Lost Film. A Soldier's Plaything November 1, 1930 Vitascope. On DVD River's End November 1, 1930 The Gorilla (FN) November 2, 1930 Lost Film. The Truth About Youth (FN) November 3, 1930 Sunny (FN) November 9, 1930 On DVD The Widow from Chicago (FN) November 23, 1930 On DVD Viennese Nights November 26, 1930 All Technicolor. Extant. Color Print at UCLA. Outward Bound November 29, 1930 One Night at Susie's (FN) November 30, 1930 On DVD Man to Man December 6, 1930 Mother's Cry (FN) December 7, 1930 Divorce Among Friends December 13, 1930 The Lash (FN) December 14, 1930 Vitascope. On DVD Captain Thunder December 27, 1930 On DVD Other Men's Women January 17, 1931 On DVD Captain Applejack January 31, 1931 Illicit February 14, 1931 On DVD Sit Tight February 28, 1931 On DVD Fifty Million Frenchmen March 21, 1931 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. God's Gift to Women April 25, 1931 On DVD Svengali April 29, 1931 On DVD The Millionaire May 15, 1931 The Public Enemy May 22, 1931 On DVD The Maltese Falcon June 13, 1931 On DVD Gold Dust Gertie June 27, 1931 On DVD Smart Money July 11, 1931 On DVD Children of Dreams July 25, 1931 Part Technicolor.Lost film. Night Nurse August 8, 1931 On DVD Bought! August 8, 1931 The Star Witness August 21, 1931 Alexander Hamilton September 12, 1931 On DVD Side Show September 19, 1931 On DVD The Road to Singapore October 10, 1931 On DVD Expensive Women October 24, 1931 The Mad Genius November 7, 1931 On DVD Blonde Crazy November 14, 1931 On DVD The Naughty Flirt (FN) January 11, 1931 On DVD Little Caesar (FN) January 25, 1931 On DVD Going Wild (FN) February 2, 1931 On DVD The Right of Way (FN) February 7, 1931 On DVD Kiss Me Again (FN) February 21, 1931 All Technicolor. Extant In Black and White. Father's Son (FN) March 7, 1931Lost film.Soundtrack survives. The Hot Heiress (FN) March 28, 1931 On DVD Woman Hungry (FN) April 4, 1931 All Technicolor. Lost film. The Finger Points (FN) April 11, 1931 On DVD Misbehaving Ladies (FN) April 18, 1931 Too Young to Marry (FN) May 8, 1931 The Lady Who Dared (FN) May 29, 1931 Party Husband (FN) June 6, 1931 On DVD Men of the Sky (FN) June 20, 1931 Lost film. Big Business Girl (FN) July 4, 1931 On DVD Chances (FN) July 18, 1931 On DVD Broadminded (FN) August 1, 1931 On DVD The Reckless Hour (FN) August 15, 1931 On DVD The Last Flight (FN) August 29, 1931 On DVD The Bargain (FN) September 5, 1931 Lost film. I Like Your Nerve (FN) September 12, 1931 On DVD Five Star Final (FN) September 26, 1931 On DVD Penrod and Sam (FN) October 3, 1931 On DVD Honor of the Family (FN) October 17, 1931 Lost film. The Ruling Voice (FN) October 31, 1931 Local Boy Makes Good (FN) November 28, 1931 On DVD Compromised (FN) December 5, 1931 Lost film. Safe in Hell (FN) December 12, 1931 On DVD Her Majesty, Love (FN) December 26, 1931 On DVD
Notes
See also
List of early color feature films
List of early sound feature films (1926–1929)
List of lost films
List of incomplete or partially lost films
Vitaphone Varieties
Early Warner Bros. sound and talking features
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_early_Warner_Bros._sound_and_talking_features
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Logan Henderson
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}}
|birth_place =
|occupation =
|net_worth |awards
|website =
|module }}
Logan Phillip Henderson (born September 14, 1989) is an American actor and singer. He played the role of Logan Mitchell on the Nickelodeon series Big Time Rush (2009–2013) and is a current member of the Big Time Rush band.
Early life and career
Henderson was born in Temple, Texas and raised in North Richland Hills, Texas. His father is a school therapist and his mother works in the pharmaceutical industry. Henderson had a small role on Friday Night Lights in 2008. During his senior year at Birdville High School, Henderson auditioned for Big Time Rush at an open casting call in Dallas. More than 1,500 people auditioned for the role and producer Scott Fellows spent several months deciding which four would be selected. The applicants were not allowed to audition for any other projects during the waiting period. Henderson was ultimately offered the role in 2009. He was the "only member of the group without a major credit on his résumé". Henderson signed with Sony Music Entertainment and Columbia Records as a part of the Big Time Rush band in 2009, alongside castmates Kendall Schmidt, Carlos PenaVega, and James Maslow. The band released their debut album, BTR, on October 11, 2010. On the album, Henderson co-wrote on the song "Oh Yeah". BTR sold 67,000 copies in its first week and peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard 200. It also peaked at No. 1 on the Top Soundtracks chart on iTunes and was later certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
Henderson and the rest of Big Time Rush made an appearance at the 2010 and 2013 Kids' Choice Awards and performed at the 2011 Kids' Choice Awards. They released their second album Elevate on November 21, 2011. Henderson co-wrote "Time of Our Life" with Nicholas "Ras" Furlong. Henderson co-wrote three other songs on Elevate: "Music Sounds Better With U", "Love Me Love Me" and "Superstar". Big Time Rush's third album, 24/Seven was released on June 11, 2013. Henderson co-wrote many of the songs on the album with his fellow bandmates, including "Get Up", which he co-wrote with Schmidt.2017–2021: Solo careerAfter the band's hiatus, Henderson took a break from singing and acting for several years to focus on his personal life. Henderson returned to music with the release of his debut solo single and music video, "Sleepwalker", on January 27, 2017. The track introduced a new sound for Henderson, which he described as a "dark grunge pop sound", a departure from the music of Big Time Rush. His second single, "Bite My Tongue", was released on September 15, 2017, and continued the musical style of his first solo release. A third single, "Speak of the Devil", was released for digital download on October 30, 2017. On February 15, 2018, Henderson released acoustic versions of his previous three singles as an EP titled "Acoustic Sessions".
On May 15, 2018, Henderson announced the title and release date of his debut album, Echoes of Departure and the Endless Street of Dreams - Pt. 1, on social media. The album was released four days later on May 18, 2018 and was produced by Nicholas "Ras" Furlong. The album included his previously released singles as well as new songs "Take It out on Me", "Evergreen", and "Generations". The album is a two-part project, with Echoes of Departure and the Endless Street of Dreams - Pt. 2 forthcoming. Henderson released a single from the album's second part, "Pull Me Deep", on August 14, 2018. It peaked at number 40 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40.
Artistry
Henderson grew up listening to Aretha Franklin, Billie Holiday, B.B. King, Elvis Costello, and Prince. and Elton John. Henderson's debut solo project, Echoes of Departure and the Endless Street of Dreams, is focused around confronting tough personal battles in order to get closure and the payoff in getting comfortable with vulnerability.
Discography
Studio albums
{| class"wikitable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center;"
! scope"col" style"width:12em;"| Title
! scope"col" style"width:16em;"| Album details
|-
! scope"row"| Echoes of Departure and the Endless Street of Dreams - Pt. 1
|
*Released: May 18, 2018
*Formats: LP, Digital download
*Label: Herø
|-
! scope="row"| Echoes of Departure and the Endless Street of Dreams - Pt. 2
|
*Scheduled: TBA
*Formats: Digital download
*Label: Herø
|}
Singles
{| class"wikitable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center;"
|+ List of singles, with selected chart positions
! scope"col" rowspan"2" style="width:16em;"| Title
! scope"col" rowspan"2"| Year
! scope"col" colspan"1"| Peak chart positions
! scope"col" rowspan"2"| Album
|-
! scope"col" style"width:2.5em;font-size:85%;"| US<br>Pop<br>
|-
! scope"row"| "Sleepwalker"
| rowspan="3"| 2017
| —
| rowspan="3"| Echoes of Departure and the Endless<br>Street of Dreams – Pt. 1
|-
! scope"row"| "Bite My Tongue"
| —
|-
! scope"row"| "Speak of the Devil"
| —
|-
! scope"row"| "Pull Me Deep"
| rowspan="2"| 2018
| 40
| rowspan="3"| Echoes of Departure and the Endless<br>Street of Dreams – Pt. 2
|-
! scope"row"| "End of the World"
| —
|-
! scope"row"| "Disappear"
| 2019
| —
|-
| colspan"4" style"font-size:90%"| "—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory.
|}
Other appearances
{| class"wikitable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center"
! scope"col" style"width:16em;"| Title
! scope="col"| Year
! scope="col"| Other artist(s)
! scope="col"| Album
|-
! scope"row"| "Passing Time"
| 2015
| Heffron Drive
| Happy Mistakes (Unplugged)
|-
|}
Tours
*Spring Tour (2018)
*Forever Tour (2022)
*Can't Get Enough Tour (2023)
Filmography
{| class="wikitable"
! Year
! Title
! Role
! Notes
|-
| 2009
| Friday Night Lights
| Teenage Boy #2
| Episode: "Who Do You Think You Are?"
|-
| 2009–2013
| Big Time Rush
| Logan Mitchell
| Main role, 75 episodes
|-
| 2011
| BrainSurge
| Himself
| Episode: "April 22, 2011"
|-
| 2011
| Nick News
| Himself
| Episode: "Lies We Tell In Middle School"
|-
| 2011
| Hand aufs Herz
| Himself
| Episode: "August 4, 2011"
|-
| 2012
| How to Rock
| Himself
| Episode: "How to Rock an Election"
|-
| 2012
| Big Time Movie
| Logan Mitchell
| Television movie
|-
| 2013
| Marvin Marvin
| Himself
| Episode: "Big Time Marvin"
|-
| 2015
| The Penguins of Madagascar
| Beaver Logan (voice)
| Episode: "Tunnel of Love"
|-
|}
References
External links
*
*
Category:1989 births
Category:Living people
Category:21st-century American male actors
Category:21st-century American singers
Category:American male pop singers
Category:American male singers
Category:American male television actors
Category:American male voice actors
Category:American tenors
Category:Big Time Rush (band) members
Category:Columbia Records artists
Category:Male actors from Texas
Category:Nickelodeon people
Category:People from North Richland Hills, Texas
Category:People from Temple, Texas
Category:Singers from Texas
Category:Songwriters from Texas
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logan_Henderson
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Luigi Frari
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Luigi Frari (Lat. Aloysius, Croat. Lujo) (1813–1898) was a Dalmatian Italian medical doctor and politician from Šibenik, Dalmatia, now Croatia, who served as the chief municipal physician of Šibenik, and also as the mayor and political and social activist of Šibenik, Dalmatia. His special political and social efforts were related to improving the infrastructure and modernizing the city of Šibenik, as well as speaking in favor of preservation of Roman Catholic Diocese of Šibenik in 1872. He also contributed to the collection and preservation of folk proverbs in the Šibenik region. His inaugural dissertation on rabies from 1840 represents an example of conceptions of the disease in the early 19th century, before Louis Pasteur's time.
Origins
Luigi ("Aloysius") Frari came from an illustrious Šibenik medical family. His grandfather Giuseppe Frari came from Treviso, Republic of Venice (now Veneto), to Šibenik, Dalmatia (now Croatia), where he became the chief municipal physician and the author of a work on rabies published in 1782 in Ancona: (Ancona, Presso Pietro Ferri 1783). It is considered the first publication on rabies written in the territory of modern Croatia. His father Sebastiano was also the chief municipal physician of Šibenik. His uncle Angelo Antonio Frari was chief municipal physician of Split, famous epidemiologist, historian of medicine and the protomedicus of Venice, whose son Michele Carlo Frari was an illustrious professor of obstetrics at the University of Padua.
Dissertation on rabies
In 1840 in Vienna, Frari published his inaugural dissertation at the Padua University on rabies, . It was the second inaugural dissertation on subject of rabies written by an author from the region of modern Croatia, and it contained an overall description of the disease, methods of transmission, symptoms, clinical course, and methods of curing and treating the disease and preventing its transmission. The dissertation was doubtlessly greatly inspired by his grandfather Giuseppe Frari's pioneering work on rabies from 1782.
Political and social work in Šibenik
However, perhaps more than for his medical work, Frari was famous for his political and social activism and writing. He was the mayor of Šibenik and is especially remembered for his work in improving the town's infrastructure.
As mayor (), Frari also fought against a possible abolition of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Šibenik in 1872. In an article published in addressed directly to the Austrian Emperor, Frari provided substantial religious and civil arguments for preserving the diocese. Frari was also the president of the Šibenik Theatre Society, which financed and built the Šibenik Mazzoleni Theatre in 1870, one of the oldest in Croatia. He was a well known member of Šibenik's intellectual and social elites, who collaborated with Niccolò Tommaseo to catalog Slavic folk proverbs in the Šibenik region. Although he was a Dalmatian autonomist, the radical autonomists at that time criticized him as "a man of mild colors".
Post-mortem sonnet
After his death on 19 March 1898, his unknown friend, signed , published a sonnet about him. The document, written originally in Dalmatian Venetian (translation into English by Anton Krnić) is the property of Roksanda Smolčić from Zagreb; it was presumably also published in in 1898:
Sacred old man, tender like seraphim
Husband, father, citizen, brother
Upon your bier a kiss of esteem
Upon your cold coffin tears and flower
You were gentle, good, you were faithful
Like Gabriel the angel resembling
I try to soothe, in this painful
Part of earth, my cry and suffering
The tired eyes are forever closed
But your spirit noble and devout
Flied bright and pure to bosom of the Lord
And in your silent grave, in autumn and spring
Sacred old man, of hair white,
Dream in peace your dream everlasting
References
Category:1813 births
Category:1898 deaths
Category:Physicians from the Kingdom of Dalmatia
Category:Italian politicians
Category:People from Šibenik
Category:Dalmatian Italians
Category:Physicians from the Austrian Empire
Category:Physicians from Austria-Hungary
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luigi_Frari
|
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Bressler
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Bressler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Bernard H. Bressler, Canadian physiologist and neuroscientist
Charles Bressler (1926–1996), American tenor
Clotilde Bressler-Gianoli (1875–1912), Swiss-born opera singer
David M. Bressler (1879–1942), German-American social worker
Raymond G. Bressler, Sr. (1887–1948), American academic and college president
Rube Bressler (1894–1966), American baseball player
Shikma Bressler (born 1980), Israeli physicist
Fictional characters:
General Bressler, character in Falling Skies
See also
14977 Bressler, main-belt asteroid
Bressler-Enhaut-Oberlin, Pennsylvania, census-designated place (CDP) in Swatara Township, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, United States
Bresler
Bresser
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bressler
|
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25870276
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Morro Bay State Marine Recreational Management Area and Morro Bay State Marine Reserve
|
|coords_ref |length
|length_mi |length_km
|width |width_mi
|width_km |area
|area_ha |area_acre
|area_km2 = 7.94
|area_sqmi |area_ref
|elevation |elevation_avg
|elevation_min |elevation_max
|dimensions |designation California Marine Protected Area
|authorized |created
|designated = 2007
|established |disestablished
|named_for |visitation_num
|visitation_year |visitation_ref
|governing_body |administrator California State Parks
|operator |owner
|world_heritage_site |website
|url [https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id27293 Morro Bay State Marine Reserve and State Marine Recreational Management Area]
|child |embedded
|embedded1 |embedded2
}}
Morro Bay State Marine Recreational Management Area (SMRMA) and Morro Bay State Marine Reserve (SMR) are two marine protected areas that provide protection for Morro Bay Estuary on California's central coast. The two marine protected areas together encompass . The SMR protects all marine life within its boundaries. Fishing and take of any living marine resources is prohibited. Within the SMRMA, fishing or taking any living marine resources is prohibited with the exception that, with a valid state water bottom lease and permit, the recreational taking of finfish and the aquaculture of oysters is permitted north of latitude 35° 19.70′ N. Recreational hunting of waterfowl is allowed unless otherwise restricted by hunting regulations.HistoryMorro Bay State Marine Recreational Management Area and Morro Bay State Marine Reserve were established in September 2007 by the California Department of Fish & Game. They are two of 29 marine protected areas adopted during the first phase of the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. The Marine Life Protection Act Initiative (or MLPAI) is a collaborative public process to create a statewide network of marine protected areas along the California coastline.
The Morro Bay SMR includes the area below mean high tide line within Morro Bay east of longitude 120° 50.34′ W.
Recreation and nearby attractions
Morro Bay supports a variety of recreational activities such as bird watching, sea kayaking, and recreational fishing, and is a working commercial and sport fishing harbor. Whale watching is one of the most well-featured attractions in the area, targeting various migratory species most notably humpback, gray, minke, and blue whales. Various dolphins, killer whales, seals, sea lions, and sea otters are also visible.
Area parks include Morro Bay State Park, Morro Strand State Beach and Montana de Oro State Park which provide hiking trails and campgrounds. Morro Bay State Park includes a Museum of Natural History.
California's marine protected areas encourage recreational and educational uses of the ocean. Activities such as kayaking, diving, snorkeling, and swimming are allowed unless otherwise restricted.
Scientific monitoring
s proves the richness of Morro Bay's marine ecosystem.]]
As specified by the Marine Life Protection Act, select marine protected areas along California's central coast are being monitored by scientists to track their effectiveness and learn more about ocean health. Similar studies in marine protected areas located off of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands have already detected gradual improvements in fish size and number.
Local scientific and educational institutions involved in the monitoring include Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station, University of California Santa Cruz, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Research methods include hook-and-line sampling, intertidal and scuba diver surveys, and the use of remote operated vehicle (ROV) submarines.
, US, with the town of Cayucos on the left, Morro Bay/Morro Rock center, and Point Buchon/Montana de Oro State Park on the right.]]
References
External links
*[https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=27293 California State Parks: official Morro Bay State Marine Recreational Management Area and Morro Bay State Marine Reserve website]
*[http://www.californiampas.org California MPAs]
*[http://www.dfg.ca.gov/mlpa/phase1.asp Marine Life Protection Act Initiative]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20130324010038/http://www.caloceans.org/ CalOceans]
*[https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=594 Morro Bay State Park]
*[https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=593 Morro Strand State Beach]
Category:California State Reserves
Category:Morro Bay
Category:Marine sanctuaries in California
Category:Protected areas of San Luis Obispo County, California
Category:2007 establishments in California
Category:Protected areas established in 2007
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morro_Bay_State_Marine_Recreational_Management_Area_and_Morro_Bay_State_Marine_Reserve
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2025-04-06T15:55:06.028222
|
25870281
|
Family tree of British monarchs
|
The following is a simplified family tree of the English, Scottish, and British monarchs.
For more-detailed charts see:
* Family tree of English monarchs, from Alfred the Great and Æthelstan to James VI and I;
* Family tree of Scottish monarchs, from Kenneth MacAlpin also to James VI and I;
* Family tree of Welsh monarchs; and
* Family tree of the British royal family from James VI and I to the present.
List of monarchs
<br/>}}
}}
<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Do1=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Ke1=Kenneth I<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ke1=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Al0=border-width:2px
|Gi2=Giric<br/>–889<br/>King of the Picts<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Gi2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Co2=Constantín I<br/><br/><br/>King of the Picts<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Co2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Ae2=Áed<br/><br/><br/>King of the Picts<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ae2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Un2=?
|Ru2=Run<br/>(?)}}
}}
<br/>–924<br/>King of the Anglo-Saxons<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ed1=border-width:2px
|Do3=Donald II<br/><br/><br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Do3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Co3=Constantine II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Co3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Eo3=Eochaid<br/>)<br/>King of the Picts<br/>(?)}}
|boxstyle_Eo3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
–939<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Eg2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ed3=Edmund I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ed3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ea3=Eadred<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ea3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ma4=Malcolm I<br/>–954<br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ma4=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|In4=Indulf<br/><br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_In4=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
|Ea4=Eadwig<br/>–959<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ea4=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ed4=Edgar I<br/><br/>–975<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ed4=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Du5=Dub<br/>–967<br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Du5=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Ke4=Kenneth II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ke4=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Am5=Amlaíb<br/><br/><br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Am5=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Cu5=Cuilén<br/><br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Cu5=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
|Sw2=Sweyn<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_Sw2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ke3=Kenneth III<br/>–1005<br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ke3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Ma2=Malcolm II<br/>–1034<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ma2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Co3=Constantine III<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Co3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>–978<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ed5=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Atl=Æthelred<br/><br/>–1016<br/>King of the English<br/>, }}
|Em5=Emma<br/><br/>–1052}}
|boxstyle_Atl=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Cn5=Cnut<br/><br/>–1035<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Cn5=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Bo6=Boite<br/><br/>}}
|Do6=Donada
|Be6=Bethóc
}}
|Ei6Edmund II<br/><br/>–1016<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|God=Godwin<br/>
|Edc=Edward<br/><br/>–1066<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Edc=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|boxstyle_Ei6=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Gr7=Gruoch<br/><br/>}}
|Ma7=Macbeth<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ma7=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Dc1=Duncan I<br/>–1040<br/>King of Alba<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Dc1=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>
|Ed7=Edith<br/><br/>–1075}}
|Ha7Harold II<br/><br/>–1066<br/>King of the English<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ha7=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Cn4=Harthacnut<br/>–1042<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Cn4=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ha4=Harold I<br/><br/>–1040<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ha4=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Lu7=Lulach<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_Lu7=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>–1087<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Wm1=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Mgt=Margaret
|StM=Saint Margaret<br/><br/>–1093}}
|MAL=Malcolm III<br/><br/>–1093<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_MAL=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Mae=Máel Muire<br/>
|Dn3=Donald III<br/><br/>–1099<br/>King of Scots<br/>, }}
|boxstyle_Dn3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
|HEN=Henry I<br/>–1135<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_HEN=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ade=Adela<br/><br/>–1137}}
|Wm2=William II<br/>–1100<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Wm2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Al1=Alexander I<br/>–1124<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Al1=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Egr=Edgar<br/>–1107<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Egr=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|DAV=David I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_DAV=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Dc2Duncan II<br/>–1094<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Dc2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
}}
|GfP=Geoffrey Plantagenet<br/>
|boxstyle_Mtl=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|StB=Stephen<br/><br/>/1096–1154<br/>King of England<br/>, }}
|boxstyle_StB=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Mat=Matilda<br/>
|HE2=Henry<br/><br/>
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Hy2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|WIL=William I<br/><br/>–1214<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_WIL=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|MA2=Malcolm IV<br/>}}
|boxstyle_MA2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|DA2=David<br/><br/>–1219<br/>Earl of Huntingdon}}
|Mar=Marjorie<br/>
}}
}}
|boxstyle_RIC=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|JOH=John<br/>}}
|boxstyle_JOH=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|MAh=Margaret<br/>
|AlC=Alexander Comyn<br/><br/>Earl of Buchan}}
|Isb=Isobel<br/>
|Bet=Bethóc<br/>
|W3S=Walter<br/><br/><br/>High Steward}}
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Hy3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|JAN=Joan<br/><br/>
|Al2=Alexander II<br/>'}}
|boxstyle_Al2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Dva=Dervorguilla<br/><br/>–1290}}
|P2D=Patrick II<br/>
|EuS=Euphemia Stewart
|RB5=Robert V<br/><br/>–1295}}
|MgC=Margaret Stewart
|A4S=Alexander Stewart<br/>
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Ed1=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|MRG=Margaret<br/><br/>
|Al3=Alexander III<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Al3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Wl2=William II<br/>
|JB2=John Balliol<br/>–1314<br/>King of Scots<br/>}}
|boxstyle_JB2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|RB6=Robert VI<br/><br/>
|MjC=Marjorie<br/><br/>/1256–}}
}}
<br/>
|EIC=Eric II<br/><br/>
|Isl=Isabel Bruce<br/>–1358}}
|RtB=Robert I<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_RtB=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|J5S=James Stewart<br/>–1309<br/>High Steward}}
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Ed2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|MG4=Margaret<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_MG4=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Mj2=Marjorie Bruce<br/>
|W6S=Walter Stewart<br/>–1327<br/>High Steward}}
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Ed3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|JoT=Joan<br/><br/>
|Dd2=David II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Dd2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
|Ro2=Robert II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ro2=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>
|JG2=John<br/><br/>
|LIO=Lionel<br/><br/>
|Ro3=Robert III<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ro3=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
}}
|boxstyle_RT2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|HT3=Henry IV<br/>}}
|boxstyle_HT3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|JB=John Beaufort<br/>
|PHI=Philippa<br/><br/>
|EDY=Edmund<br/><br/>
}}
}}
}}
|boxstyle_HF3=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|JB2=John Beaufort<br/>
|AM=Anne Mortimer<br/>
|RC3=Richard<br/><br/>–1415<br/>Earl of Cambridge}}
|Jo4=Joan Beaufort<br/>–1445}}
|Ja4=James I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ja4=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
, }}
|boxstyle_Hy6=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|MB2=Margaret Beaufort<br/>
|RY=Richard<br/><br/>
|Ja5=James II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ja5=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
, }}
|boxstyle_ET=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|RE=Richard III<br/>}}
|boxstyle_RE=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Ja7=James III<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ja7=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
}}
|boxstyle_Hy7=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|EY=Elizabeth<br/><br/>
|EVEdward V<br/>}}
|boxstyle_EV=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
}}
|Hy8=Henry VIII<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Hy8=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|Js8=John<br/>–1526<br/>Earl of Lennox}}
|Ma8=Margaret Tudor<br/>
|ArD=Archibald Douglas<br/>–1557<br/>Earl of Angus}}
|Ja8=James IV<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ja8=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
|MA2=Mary I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_MA2=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|PS=Philip II<br/><br/>}}
|boxstyle_PS=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|MS9=Matthew<br/>
|MD9=Margaret Douglas<br/>
|JV9=James V<br/>}}
|boxstyle_JV9=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
}}
|boxstyle_JG=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|ED=Edward VI<br/>}}
|boxstyle_ED=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|EL=Elizabeth I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_EL=border-width:2px; border-color:#C00
|HS2=Henry Stuart<br/>
|MQS=Mary I<br/>'}}
|boxstyle_MQS=border-width:2px; border-color:#20F
}}
<br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_Ja0=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
|CR=Charles I<br/>}}
|boxstyle_CR=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
<br/>
|CR2=Charles II<br/>,<br><br/>King of England<br/>}}
|boxstyle_CR2=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|MH=Mary<br/>
|JR2=James II & VII<br/>}}
|boxstyle_JR2=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_GR=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|WR2=William III & II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_WR2=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|MR=Mary II<br/>}}
|boxstyle_MR=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|AR=Anne<br/>}}
|boxstyle_AR=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_GR2=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
}}
|boxstyle_GR3=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_GR4=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|WR3=William IV<br/>}}
|boxstyle_WR3=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|EK=Edward<br/>
}}
}}
|boxstyle_VRI=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
|boxstyle_HOW=border-width:0px
}}
}}
|boxstyle_ERI=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_GRI=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_EDW=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
|GOG=George VI<br/>}}
|boxstyle_GOG=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
}}
|boxstyle_ER=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
<br/>King of the United Kingdom<br/>}}
|boxstyle_C3=border-width:2px; border-color:#CC2EFA
}}
See also
* Family tree of English monarchs (more detailed)
* Family tree of the British royal family (more detailed)
* Lists of monarchs in the British Isles
References
*
*
*
Category:English monarchs
British monarchs
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_tree_of_British_monarchs
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.129098
|
25870287
|
Häusler
|
Häusler is a common surname of Germanic origin, sometimes romanized as Haeusler. Its variant forms include Hausler, Häussler, Hausner and Häusner.
Notable people
Charles A. Hausler (1889–1971), American architect
Cherie Hausler, Australian TV presenter of the Nine Network quiz show The Mint (Australia)
Claudia Häusler (born 1985), German professional cyclist
Laurel Hausler, contemporary oil painter and sculptor
Moritz Häusler (born 1901), Austrian football inside forward who played professionally in Austria and the United States
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Häusler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.131314
|
25870298
|
Minuscule 564
|
| type = Byzantine text-type
| cat = V
| hand | note
}}
Minuscule 564 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 1026 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 10th century.
Scrivener labelled it by number 478.
The manuscript has complex contents.
Description
The codex contains a complete text of the four Gospels on 360 parchment leaves (size ). The writing is in one column per page, 21 lines per page. The initial letters are in gold.
The text is divided according to the (chapters), whose numerals are given at the margin, (not ). There is also a division according to the Ammonian Sections (in Mark 236 – 16:12), with references to the Eusebian Canons.
It contains Epistula ad Carpianum, the Eusebian Canon tables, Prolegomena, tables of the are placed before every Gospel, lectionary markings, liturgical books with hagiographies (Synaxarion and Menologion), subscriptions at the end of each Gospel, and numbers of . Text The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine text-type. Hermann von Soden classified it to the textual family K<sup>x</sup>. Aland placed it in Category V.
According to the Claremont Profile Method it represents the textual family K<sup>x</sup> in Luke 1, and Luke 20. In Luke 10 no profile was made.<ref name = Wisse/>
The Pericope Adulterae (John 7:53–8:11) is placed at the end of John (after 21:25).<ref name Gregory/> History The manuscript was brought by Constantin von Tischendorf from the East.<ref name Gregory/> It was added to the list of the New Testament manuscripts by F. H. A. Scrivener.
Currently the manuscript is housed at the Library of the Leipzig University Library (Cod. Gr. 6).<ref name Aland/> See also
* List of New Testament minuscules
* Biblical manuscript
* Textual criticism
References
Further reading
* C.v. Tischendorf, Anecdota Sacra et profana, pp. 20–29
Category:Greek New Testament minuscules
Category:10th-century biblical manuscripts
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minuscule_564
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.135943
|
25870353
|
Shindler
|
Shindler is a German surname that is derived from the German word "schindel" which means "shingle". This suggests that the original bearers of the name were related to the trades of making and installing them. Given the demographics of the name's appearance, it is also possible that Shindler is an anglicization of the German surname "Schindler". Variations and alternate spellings include Schindel and Schindelle.
People with the surname Shindler
Alma Shindler (1879–1964), Austrian-born American socialite and composer
Antonio Zeno Shindler (–1899), Bulgarian-born American photographer and painter
Colin Shindler (born 1949), English historian and writer
Conrad Shindler, Revolutionary War veteran; original owner of the Conrad Shindler House
Geoffrey Shindler (born 1942), British solicitor
Mary S. B. Shindler (1810–1883), American poet
Nicola Shindler (born 1968), British television producer and executive
See also
Schindel
The Conrad Shindler House, historic building, now part of The Historic Shepherdstown Museum, in Shepherdstown, West Virginia
Shindler, South Dakota, unincorporated community in the northeastern corner of Lincoln County, South Dakota, United States
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shindler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.150228
|
25870355
|
Kai Wessel (countertenor)
|
| birth_place = Hamburg
| death_date | death_place
| education = Schola Cantorum Basiliensis
| occupation =
| years_active | organization Hochschule für Musik Köln
}}
Kai Wessel (born 1964 in Hamburg) is a German countertenor and teacher at the Hochschule für Musik Köln.
Professional career
Kai Wessel started singing in school choirs and as a boy soprano at the Christus-Kirche of Hamburg-Wandsbek and received lessons on piano, organ and oboe. He studied to become a composer at the Lübeck Academy of Music but then concentrated on training his countertenor voice with Ute von Garczynski. He studied baroque performance practice at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis with René Jacobs.
His first concert was in Flensburg in 1984, his first opera appearance 1988 in the theatre of Freiburg im Breisgau. From 1994 to 2004, he was engaged at the theatre of Basel where he sang in productions of Herbert Wernicke in Handel's Theodora, Giulio Cesare and Israel in Egypt, among others. He took part in the project of Ton Koopman to record the complete vocal works of Johann Sebastian Bach with the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir. Composers such as Mauricio Kagel, Karola Obermüller, Chaya Czernowin, Heinz Holliger and Klaus Huber wrote works for him. He has been teaching at the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln and Hochschule der Künste Bern. Selected recordings * Marc-Antoine Charpentier: "Motets à double Choeur", H.403, H.404, H.135, H.136, H.137, H.392, H.410, H.167, 1992, Barbara Schlick, Nancy Zijlstra, Klaus Mertens, Dominique Visse, Kai Wessel, Christophe Prégardien, Harry Van Berne, Peter Kooij, The Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra conducted by Ton Koopman. 2 CD Erato 1992 References External links
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110713132006/http://www.kaiwessel.com/start_eng.htm Kai Wessel] website
* [http://www.worldcat.org/search?qKai+Wessel&qtresults_page Entries for recordings by Kai Wessel] on WorldCat
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUMO4Dlk2Ts Kai Wessel sings PORPORA - IL GEDEONE - Air de Gedeone]
Category:German countertenors
Category:German opera singers
Category:Academic staff of the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln
Category:Singers from Hamburg
Category:Living people
Category:1964 births
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kai_Wessel_(countertenor)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.152716
|
25870366
|
SER 235 class
|
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| driverdiameter
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| minimumcurve | wheelbase
| length | width
| height | axleload
| weightondrivers <!-- -->
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| fueltype = Coke
| fuelcap
| watercap
| sandcap | boiler
| boilerpressure
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| cylindercount = Two, inside
| cylindersize
| valvegear | valvetype
| tractiveeffort | factorofadhesion
| trainheating | locobrakes <!-- Steam -->
| trainbrakes = <!-- Vacuum, nos 236/8/41 from 1878 -->
| operator = South Eastern Railway
| operatorclass | numinclass 7
| fleetnumbers = 235–241
| officialname | nicknames
| locale | deliverydate July–August 1866
| firstrundate | lastrundate
| retiredate | withdrawndate June 1887–June 1893
| scrapdate | disposition All scrapped
}}
The SER 235 class was a class of 0-4-4T steam locomotives on the South Eastern Railway. Introduced in 1866, they were the first locomotives of this wheel arrangement to be built for an English railway.
History
Until 1864 the South Eastern Railway had very few tank locomotives. In that year the 205 class 0-4-2T locomotives were introduced, for use on the London suburban passenger services. They were designed by James I. Cudworth, the company's locomotive superintendent. They performed well, but their capabilities were restricted by their small fuel and water capacities, so after twelve were built, Cudworth produced an enlarged version of the design.
With the fuel capacity raised from to and the water capacity raised from to , the extra weight and length needed behind the cab required adding an extra trailing axle, producing an 0-4-4T - the first of that wheel arrangement to be built for an English railway (the first Scottish railway to use the 0-4-4T wheel arrangement was the Caledonian Railway, in 1873). There were compensating levers to equalise the weight between the coupled axles, and the outside-framed bogie also had compensating levers; it carried about a third of the locomotive's weight<!-- of -->. Like the 205 class, they burned coke for fuel.
At first, they were mainly used on services to . Only one batch (of seven) was built in 1866; there were troubles with the bogie, and so when more were required Cudworth once more used the 0-4-2T type, producing the 73 class. However, the 235 class continued to be used and all were given new boilers between 1877 and 1883. Under Stirling's locomotive classification scheme of September 1879, they formed Class J. They were withdrawn and scrapped between 1887 and 1893.Notes
References
*
*
*
235
Category:0-4-4T locomotives
Category:Railway locomotives introduced in 1866
Category:Scrapped locomotives
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SER_235_class
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.159396
|
25870379
|
Girdler
|
Girdler is a surname of professional origin.
Girdlers or belt makers are people who make metal belts worn around the waist and other small metal objects. The occupation was of particular importance in the past, but still exists today.
The surname may refer to:
People with the surname Girdler
Chris Girdler, American politician from Kentucky
Eddie Girdler, American politician from Kentucky
Nick Girdler, British radio broadcaster
Ryan Girdler (born 1972), Australian rugby player
William Girdler (1947–1978), American filmmaker
People with the given name Girdler
George Girdler Smith, American engraver in 19th-century Boston
Other uses
Girdler, Kentucky
Girdler Island
See also
Girdler sulfide process, industrial production method for making heavy water (deuterium oxide)
Worshipful Company of Girdlers, a Livery Company of the City of London
References
Category:Metalworking occupations
Category:Belts (clothing)
Category:Ironworkers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girdler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.161530
|
25870389
|
Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries
|
| native name = 中国人民对外友好协会
| founding_location = Beijing
| type = People's organization
| headquarters = 1 Taijichang Street, Dongcheng District, Beijing
| leader_title = Chair
| leader_name = Yang Wanming
| parent_organization = Ministry of Foreign Affairs
| subsidiaries = China Friendship Foundation for Peace and Development
| affiliations = Chinese Communist Party
| website =
}}
The '''Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC''') is one of the major foreign affairs organizations of the People's Republic of China. The organization is officially termed a "people's organization" and manages China's sister city relationships. Its stated aim is to promote friendship and mutual understanding between the Chinese people and foreign nations but observers have pointed out that it functions as a front organization in the united front system used to influence and co-opt elites to promote the interests of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) while downplaying its association with the CCP. The CPAFFC has been described as the "public face" of the CCP's United Front Work Department. Its leadership is drawn from the upper ranks of the Chinese Communist Party and, as part of the United Front Work Department, it has as its goal "to make the foreign serve China" (). The CPAFFC sponsors and coordinates various front organizations and influence operations in other countries at the national and sub-national level.
History
Predecessor
On October 2, 1949, following the founding of the People's Republic of China, the Committee of China's Conference for the Defense of World Peace () was established with Guo Moruo serving as chairman. On October 5, the General Association of Sino-Soviet Friendship was established, with Liu Shaoqi as its president. After the outbreak of the Korean War, on October 5, 1950, the "Chinese People's Committee for Opposing the U.S. Aggression against Taiwan and Korea" merged with the "Conference for the Defense of World Peace" and was reorganized into the Chinese People's Committee for the Defense of World Peace Against the U.S. Aggression, with Guo Moruo continuing to serve as chairman.
On May 3, 1954, at the suggestion of Premier Zhou Enlai, multiple people's organizations alongside the Committee of China's Conference for the Defense of World Peace (), founded of the "'''People's Association for Foreign Culture of the People's Republic of China'''". In attendance were scholars such as Guo Moruo, Zhao Puchu, Ma Yinchu, Mao Dun, Cao Yu, Lao She, Xia Yan, Tian Han, Ding Xilin, He Luting, Ma Sicong, Mei Lanfang, Huang Xianfan, Jiao Juyin, Yang Hansheng, Zhou Yang, Hu Guizhi, Fan Changjiang, Zhu Kezhen, Qian Duansheng, Qian Weichang, and Hua Luogeng.
Early activities
In 1955, the Association organized a Chinese classical song and dance troupe to visit Finland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland, which had not yet established diplomatic relations. They visited the villa of Halldór Laxness, the Nobel Prize winner for Literature, and established a personal contact. In 1956 August, the Association organized a Chinese art delegation to visit Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil in South America, which had not yet established diplomatic relations with China at that time. During the visit to Brazil, the delegation was welcomed and entertained by the Brazilian literary and artistic circles represented by Jorge Amado. On the way back, one of the planes exploded, killing ten delegations.
In May 1957, the association organized a Chinese cultural and friendship delegation to visit Nepal and had a meeting with King Mahendra of Nepal. In December 1957, Guo Moruo, Bao Erhan and Chu Tunan led a Chinese delegation to Egypt to participate in the Asian-African Solidarity Conference. The delegation was received by President Nasser. In February 1959, a Chinese cultural delegation visited North Korea and signed the first Sino-North Korean Cultural Cooperation Agreement. In April 1961, the association visited Cuba.
led the friendship association to visit Japan.|thumb|right|230px]]
In 1966, the name of the organization was changed to the "Association of the People's Friendship with Foreign Countries and Culture". In 1969, it was changed to the current name, the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries.
In 1970, Wang Guoquan was instructed by Zhou Enlai to return to Beijing to serve as the CPAFFC chair and chair of the China-Japan Friendship Association (CJFA). Subsequently, the CPAFFC under his charge carried out people's diplomacy, and in August 1971, without the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Japan, Wang Guoquan, as the Premier's special envoy, traveled to Japan to attend the funeral of Kenzō Matsumura, and to attend the National Congress of the Japan-China Friendship Association for the Triumph of Unity. Subsequently, Japanese politicians such as Kakuei Tanaka, Takeo Miki and Yasuhiro Nakasone visited China with CPAFFC's efforts, a prelude to the Japan–China Joint Communiqué in 1972. In May 1972, the Chinese People's Committee for the Defense of World Peace, the Chinese Committee for Asian-African Solidarity and the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries merged, with offices at No. 1, Taiji Factory Street, Beijing.
In April 1973, Liao Chengzhi led a CPAFFC delegation to Japan, sent off by Zhou Enlai, to build a foundation for the 1978 Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Japan and China.
led a delegation to visit the Netherlands and met with Mayor of Amsterdam Ed van Thijn.|thumb|right]]
In November 1978, the CPAFFC sent a delegation to the United Kingdom, Belgium and France, In April 1980, a delegation of the CPAFFC visited North Korea, and in 1981, the association visited Romania, and in 1982, Italy.
In March 1992, the CPAFFC established of the China Association of International Friendship Cities, set up an Economic Cooperation Committee and an International Friendship Cities Exchange Centre, and joined United Cities and Local Governments.
21st century
On May 20, 2004, at the 50th anniversary celebration of the CPAFFC in the Great Hall of the People, Hu Jintao along with former heads of state Martti Ahtisaari of Finland and Bob Hawke of Australia delivered speeches.
On May 15, 2014, the CPAFFC organized the China International Friendship Conference and the 60th anniversary of the group's founding, attended by General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. During the conference, Xi called on the organization to "make friends widely and establish good relationships” and “create more platforms for cooperation and guide foreign institutions and outstanding talents to participate in the PRC’s modernization efforts". The CPAFFC has served to cultivate "people to people exchanges" and has attempted to influence sub-national and local levels of government via groups such as the National Governors Association in the U.S. The CPAFFC has sponsored and coordinated with groups such as China Bridge in Germany, the EU-China Friendship Group, Association Sino-Française d'Entraide et d'Amitié (ASFEA) in France, the Italy-China Friendship Association, US–China Peoples Friendship Association, and Neil Bush's George H. W. Bush Foundation for U.S.-China Relations, among others.
In April 2015, the CFFPD signed an education partnership with United Technologies (now RTX Corporation). The CFFPD maintains a strategic partnership with the Asia Society in the U.S.
, Ambassador of Japan to China, meets with Songtian Lin, Chair of the Association.|thumb|right|230px]]
, Philippines.|thumb|right|230px]]
In May 2019, the CPAFFC inked an agreement with Irish think tank Asia Matters, founded and chaired by former politician Alan Dukes. Since 2021, the CPAFFC has partnered with the United States Heartland China Association (USHCA) to promote agricultural trade between the US and China.
Its chairperson between 2020 and 2023 was Lin Songtian, China's former ambassador to South Africa who suggested that the U.S. Army was responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic in mainland China.
In 2023, the Associated Press reported that personnel affiliated with the CFFPD had been involved in influence operations with the Utah state government. In 2024, the CFFPD was instrumental in organizing panda diplomacy efforts in San Francisco.
Responses
In October 2020, the United States Department of State discontinued participation in the U.S.-China Governors Forum to Promote Sub-National Cooperation, established jointly with the National Governors Association in 2011, due to alleged actions by the CPAFFC to "malignly influence state and local leaders" in the U.S. However, CPAFFC's China-U.S. Sub-National Legislatures Cooperation Forum remained unaffected by the U.S. Department of State's action. Organization The following organizations are set up in the organization of the Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries: Internal organizations
Related friendship organizations
Regional friendship associations
Source:
Key people
.|thumb|right|230px]]
; Honorary Chair
* Soong Ching-ling (June 1980–May 1981)
;
; Chair
* Chu Tunan (May 1954–May 1969), Vice-chairman of the 6th NPC Standing Committee
* Wang Guoquan (May 1972–April 1973), pioneer of the Sino-Japanese relations, former Vice President of the China-Japan Friendship Association
* Chai Zemin (June 1974–August 1975), the first Chinese Ambassador to the United States
* Wang Bingnan (August 1975–January 1986), former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
* Zhang Wenjin (January 1986–October 1989), former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
* Han Xu (October 1989–May 1994), former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
* Qi Huaiyuan (May 1994–October 2000), former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs
* Chen Haosu (October 2000–September 2011), former Vice Minister of Culture; his father is the late Marshal and Foreign Minister Chen Yi
* Li Xiaolin (September 2011–April 2020), whose father is the late Chinese President Li Xiannian
* Lin Songtian (April 2020–August 2023), former Chinese Ambassador to South Africa
* Yang Wanming (August 2023–present), former Chinese Ambassador to Brazil, Argentina, and Chile, and former deputy director of the Hong Kong and Macau Work Office<ref name":6" />See also
*Foreign relations of China
*Chinese information operations and information warfare
*Chinese intelligence activity abroad
*One-China policy
References
<references />
External links
*
Category:1954 establishments in China
Category:Government agencies established in 1954
Category:Organizations associated with the Chinese Communist Party
Category:Chinese intelligence agencies
Category:Chinese propaganda organisations
Category:Information operations units and formations
Category:United front (China)
Category:1954 in Beijing
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_People's_Association_for_Friendship_with_Foreign_Countries
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.193032
|
25870390
|
Snowshoe Lake (Magnetawan River, Ontario)
|
| lake_type | inflow
| outflow = Unnamed river to Doctor Lake
| catchment | basin_countries Canada
| date-built | date-flooded
| length
| width
| area | depth
| max-depth | volume
| residence_time | shore
| elevation
| frozen | islands
| cities | reference
}}
Snowshoe Lake is a lake in the Lake Huron drainage basin northeast of the community of Burton and the Canadian National Railway line in Whitestone, Parry Sound District, Ontario, Canada. It is about long and wide, and lies at an elevation of . The lake drains via unnamed creek to Doctor Lake and into the South Branch of the Magnetawan River, and then either through the Magnetawan, or Harris and Naiscoot Rivers into Lake Huron.
A second Snowshoe Lake in Whitestone, Snowshoe Lake (Kimikong River, Ontario), lies northeast and flows via the Kimikong, Pickerel and French rivers into Lake Huron.
See also
*List of lakes in Ontario
References
*
Category:Lakes of Parry Sound District
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowshoe_Lake_(Magnetawan_River,_Ontario)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.196605
|
25870411
|
Tom Bailey (footballer)
|
Thomas Henry Bailey (1888 – after 1914) was an English footballer who played for Lincoln City and Stoke.
Career
Bailey was born in Burton upon Trent and played for Overseal Swifts and Burton United before joining Lincoln City in 1907. before playing for Walsall and Stoke Priory and signed for Stoke in 1912. He played 36 times for Stoke in three seasons scoring once against Caerphilly.
Career statistics
Source:
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsLincoln City 1907–08Second Division100010Stoke1912–13Southern League Division One130001301913–14Southern League Division Two151201711914–15Southern League Division Two600060Career total35120371
References
Category:1888 births
Category:Year of death missing
Category:Footballers from Burton upon Trent
Category:English men's footballers
Category:Men's association football wing halves
Category:Overseal Swifts F.C. players
Category:Burton United F.C. players
Category:Lincoln City F.C. players
Category:Walsall F.C. players
Category:Stoke City F.C. players
Category:English Football League players
Category:English football managers
Category:Crewe Alexandra F.C. managers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Bailey_(footballer)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.208289
|
25870447
|
The Best American Mystery Stories 2009
|
thumb|First edition
The Best American Mystery Stories 2009, a volume in The Best American Mystery Stories series, was edited by Otto Penzler and by guest editor Jeffery Deaver.
Short Stories included
Author Story Where story previously appeared N. J. Ayres "Rust" At the Scene of the Crime Tom Bissell "My Interview with the Avenger" The Virginia Quarterly Review Alafair Burke "Winning" Blue ReligionJames Lee Burke "Big Midnight Special" ShenandoahRon Carlson "Beanball" One Story Michael Connelly "Father's Day" Blue Religion David Corbett "Pretty Little Paradise" Las Vegas Noir M. M. M. Hayes "Meantime, Quentin Ghlee" The Kenyon Review Chuck Hogan "Two Thousand Volts" Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine Clark Howard "Manila Burning" Ellery Queen's Mystery MagazineRob Kantner "Down Home Blues" robkantner.com Robert McClure "My Son" Thuglit.com Alice Munro "Free Radicals" The New Yorker Joyce Carol Oates "Dear Husband" Conjunctions Nic Pizzolatto "Wanted Men" Oxford American Gary Craig Powell "Kamila and the King of Kandy" Red Wheelbarrows Randy Rohn "The Man Who Fell in Love with the Stump of a Tree" Loch Raven Review Kristine Kathryn Rusch "G-Men" Sideways in CrimeJonathan Tel "Bola de la Fortuna" The Yale ReviewVu Tran "This of Any Desert" Las Vegas Noir
Other distinguished mystery stories of 2008
Other distinguished mystery stories of 2008 honored in the volume were Jacob M. Appel's Ad Valorem (Subtropics), Ron Rash's Into the Gorge (Southern Review), Shelly Nix's Monkey (Hayden's Ferry Review), Leslie Glass's The Herald (Blue Religion) and Becky Hagenston's Midnight, Licorice, Shadow (Crazyhorse).
References
Category:2009 anthologies
Category:Mystery anthologies
Mystery Stores 2009
Category:Houghton Mifflin books
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_American_Mystery_Stories_2009
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.234499
|
25870460
|
1994 United States Senate election in Virginia
|
<br />North:
| title = U.S. Senator
| before_election = Chuck Robb
| before_party = Democratic Party (United States)
| after_election = Chuck Robb
| after_party = Democratic Party (United States)
}}
The 1994 United States Senate election in Virginia was held November 8, 1994. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Chuck Robb won re-election to a second term versus Republican nominee Oliver North, a Marine Corps veteran famous for his role in the Iran–Contra affair.
Robb ultimately won by a 45.6% to 42.9% margin, with Marshall Coleman, a former Republican state attorney general of Virginia, taking 11.4% as an Independent candidate.
Background and campaign
Campaign
Oliver North was a very controversial figure as he was involved in the Iran-Contra Affair, a scandal during Ronald Reagan's presidency where he had asserted that he was merely following orders from superiors. He faced James C. Miller III for the Republican nomination. On March 16, 1994, a letter was solicited by former Senator Paul Laxalt and released by Miller that came from Reagan, which stated among the following, "I'm getting pretty steamed about the statements coming from Oliver North." It was the only statement Reagan made on the race. North defeated Miller in June for the party nomination with over 55% of the vote. The questions about North's credibility would be a constant issue for the duration of the campaign. On the Democrat side however, Robb was not assured of an easy path to re-election, as he had admitted to questionable behavior before and during his term as Senator. Marshall Coleman, a former state Attorney General, attempted to seize the middle ground between Robb and North and ran as an independent. Republican Senator John Warner of Virginia endorsed Marshall Coleman, declaring North "unfit" for public service.
Douglas Wilder, the first black governor of Virginia, who served from 1990 to 1994, originally entered the Senate race in June as an independent before dropping out in September after polls showed him with favoring of less than 15% in a four-man ballot. In the last weeks of the election, Wilder started to campaign for Robb. In contrast, by late October, Robb had raised just $4.5 million, and Coleman had raised just over $400,000.
On October 27 (less than two weeks before the election), former First Lady Nancy Reagan made a rare public speaking appearance that was videotaped. When asked about North, she stated that North had lied to her husband when discussing Iran-Contra with the former president, which came with the polls showing North in a tie with Robb. North, labeled as usually combative in his rhetoric, stated the following soon after: "My mom told me a long time ago not to get into a fight with a lady. Nothing is going to change the fact that I think Ronald Reagan is the greatest president of my lifetime and maybe the greatest president we've ever had." The statement by Reagan was stated later as key in hurting North's image, particularly with Republican women.
North's candidacy was documented in the 1996 film A Perfect Candidate. In a race declared by one historian as "the two most unpopular party nominees in this state's history", Robb defeated North by a narrow margin.}}
There was an attempt to draft Governor Doug Wilder to run against Robb, but he chose to run as an Independent candidate.
Primary
Republican primary
Candidates
*James C. Miller III, former Director of the Office of Management and Budget
*Oliver North, Marine Corps veteran
Convention
North won a majority of the vote at the convention. He was not opposed in the primary.
General election
Candidates
*J. Marshall Coleman, former Virginia attorney general and Republican candidate for governor in 1989 (Independent)
*Chuck Robb, incumbent senator (Democratic)
*Oliver North, Marine Corps veteran and figure in the Iran-Contra affair (Republican)
*Douglas Wilder, outgoing governor of Virginia (Independent) (withdrew)
Polling
{| class=wikitable
|-
! Source
! Date
! Chuck<br />Robb (D)
! Oliver<br />North (R)
! Marshall<br />Coleman (I)
! Douglas<br />Wilder (I)
|-
| Mason-Dixon
| November 1–2, 1994
| |37%
| 36%
| 17%
|
|-
| Richmond Times-Dispatch
| October 31 – November 3, 1994
| |39%
| 31%
| 12%
|
|-
| Roanoke College
| October 27–30, 1994
| |39%
| 35%
| 14%
|
|-
| Mason-Dixon
| October 15–17, 1994
| 33%
| |37%
| 16%
|
|-
| Mason-Dixon
| September 22–24, 1994
| 33%
| |35%
| 18%
|
|-
| Mason-Dixon
| September 8–11, 1994
| |33%
| 28%
| 15%
| 12%
|-
| Virginia Commonwealth University
| July 7–15, 1994
| 29%
| 29%
| 11%
| 16%
|}
Results
See also
* 1994 United States Senate elections
References
United States Senate
Virginia
1994
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1994_United_States_Senate_election_in_Virginia
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.243838
|
25870466
|
Münchweiler
|
Münchweiler may refer to:
Glan-Münchweiler, municipality in the district of Kusel, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Glan-Münchweiler (Verbandsgemeinde), collective municipality in the district of Kusel, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Münchweiler am Klingbach, municipality in Südliche Weinstraße district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany
Münchweiler an der Alsenz, municipality in the Donnersbergkreis district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Münchweiler an der Rodalb, municipality in Südwestpfalz district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Münchweiler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.246388
|
25870487
|
Cloughfold
|
| static_image_name = Bacup Road, Cloughfold - geograph.org.uk - 1079008.jpg
| static_image_caption = Bacup Road
| official_name = Cloughfold
| shire_district = Rossendale
| shire_county = Lancashire
| region = North West England
| constituency_westminster = Rossendale and Darwen
| post_town = ROSSENDALE
| postcode_district = BB4
| postcode_area = BB
| dial_code = 01706
| os_grid_reference = SD823227
| pushpin_map = United Kingdom Borough of Rossendale
| pushpin_map_caption = Location within Rossendale
}}
Cloughfold is a small hamlet in between the towns of Rawtenstall and Waterfoot in Rossendale, Lancashire, England.
Clough Fold railway station on the Rawtenstall to Bacup Line opened in 1871 and closed when the line closed in 1966.
Notable people
* Caleb Ashworth (1722–1775) an English dissenting tutor.
* Agyness Deyn (born 1983), model and actress
* Sir David James Shackleton (1863–1938) a cotton worker and trade unionist who became the third Labour Member of Parliament in 1902
References
Category:Hamlets in Lancashire
Category:Geography of the Borough of Rossendale
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloughfold
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.256736
|
25870488
|
Roberto Moll
|
Roberto Moll Cárdenas (born 19 July 1948) is an actor who is best known for his work on telenovelas. He was born in Lima, Peru. Moll first starred with little roles in many telenovelas, but in 1985 he got a bigger role in the telenovela Cristal. Later he starred in other telenovelas like Abigail, Carmín, Kassandra, El Desafío and Reina de Corazones.
Later career
In 2003 Moll starred with Astrid Carolina Herrera in telenovela La Mujer de Judas and in 2005 with Mario Cimarro in El Cuerpo del Deseo.
In 2010 he starred with Mauricio Ochmann and Sandra Echeverria in El Clon, where he portrays Augusto Albieri, a genetic specialist that created a clone of the hero.
He was portrayed Venezuelan President Cipriano Castro in the 2017 film La planta insolente.
Personal life
In 1984 he married the Venezuelan actress Carmen Padrón, and they had one child, a daughter, before divorcing in 2000.
Moll suffered from a pneumonia in 2013. He stayed two weeks in a coma and was declared clinically dead, before recovering conscience.
References
Category:1948 births
Category:Living people
Category:Male actors from Lima
Category:Peruvian male telenovela actors
Category:21st-century Peruvian male actors
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto_Moll
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.259420
|
25870506
|
Frank Burnell-Nugent
|
|birth_place= Sherborne St John, Hampshire, England
|death_date
|death_place= Kingsclere, Hampshire, England
|placeofburial= St Mary's Church, Kingsclere
|placeofburial_coordinates
|allegiance= United Kingdom
|branch= British Army<br/>British Indian Army
|serviceyears= 1899–1933
|rank= Brigadier-general
|unit= Rifle Brigade<br/>15th Punjab Regiment
|commands= British concession of Tianjin<br/>182nd Infantry Brigade<br/>55th Infantry Brigade<br/>167th Brigade<br/>2nd Battalion, Rifle Brigade
|battles=
*Second Boer War
*First World War
**Battle of Mons
*Iraq Rebellion
|awards= Companion of the Order of the Bath<br/>Distinguished Service Order<br/>Officer of the Order of the British Empire
|spouse = Ellen Burnell (m. 1905–1941: her death)
|relations= Admiral Sir James Burnell-Nugent (grandson)
|laterwork| module
}}
}}
Brigadier-General Frank Henry Burnell-Nugent, (5 September 1880 – 12 March 1942), born Frank Henry Nugent, was an English first-class cricketer and British Army officer. Burnell-Nugent had a distinguished career in the army, serving with the Rifle Brigade between 1899 and 1933 and seeing action in the Second Boer War and the First World War. As a cricketer, he made one appearance in first-class cricket for Hampshire.Early life and military serviceFrank Nugent was the son of Albert Llewellyn Nugent, 3rd Baron Nugent (of Austria), and his wife, Elizabeth Baltazzi, he was born at The Vyne estate near Basingstoke in September 1880. He was educated firstly at the Horris Hill School preparatory school, before attending Winchester College. From Winchester, he went up to the Royal Military College at Sandhurst. He graduated from there into the Rifle Brigade as a second lieutenant in November 1899. In March 1901, was seconded to serve with the Mounted Infantry in the Second Boer War in South Africa. Nugent was seriously wounded during the war, but was decorated for his participation with the Queen's South Africa Medal with four clasps.
Nugent made a single appearance in first-class cricket as a wicket-keeper for Hampshire against Worcestershire at Worcester in the 1905 County Championship. Batting twice in the match, he was dismissed without scoring by Ted Arnold in Hampshire's first innings, while in their second innings he was dismissed for the same score by George Wilson. He married Ellen Burnell in 1905, and would later change his surname to Burnell-Nugent in the second-half of 1916. In April 1910, he was seconded to serve as an adjutant with the Leeds and University of Manchester contingents of the Officers' Training Corps.First World War and later serviceNugent fought in the First World War, during which he was wounded during the British retreat from Mons in August 1914. with him gaining the full rank three months later in September 1915. In January 1916, he was made a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order, while the following month he was attached to headquarters as a brigade commander which saw him made a temporary brigadier-general whilst so employed. In June 1916, Nugent was made a brevet lieutenant colonel in recognition of distinguished service in the field. During the war, he commanded the 2nd Battalion, the 167th, and the 55th and 182nd Infantry Brigades. The following year, he saw action in the Iraq Rebellion. prior to his appointment to the 15th Punjab Regiment in December 1926. In the Rifle Brigade, he was made a lieutenant colonel in June 1927, In July 1930, he was promoted to colonel and was placed in command of the British concession of Tianjin in Northern China, and whilst holding that command he was given the temporary rank of brigadier. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in the 1933 Birthday Honours. He relinquished his command in Tianjin upon his retirement in September 1933, at which point he was granted the honorary rank of brigadier-general; his time in command was described by The Times as a "difficult period". His wife, with whom he had a son, predeceased him by one year.<ref name"OBIT"/> His grandson is the retired Royal Navy Admiral Sir James Burnell-Nugent.
References
External links
*
Category:1880 births
Category:1942 deaths
Category:Burials in Hampshire
Category:People from Sherborne St John
Category:Cricketers from Hampshire
Category:People educated at Winchester College
Category:Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst
Category:Rifle Brigade officers
Category:British Army personnel of the Second Boer War
Category:English cricketers
Category:Wicket-keepers
Category:Hampshire cricketers
Category:British Army generals of World War I
Category:British Army brigadiers
Category:Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
Category:Officers of the Order of the British Empire
Category:British military personnel of the Iraqi revolt of 1920
Category:British Indian Army officers
Category:Punjab Regiment officers
Category:Companions of the Order of the Bath
Category:Military personnel from Hampshire
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Burnell-Nugent
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.274252
|
25870509
|
Timeline of the city of Rome
|
The city of Rome, Italy, has had an extensive history since antiquity.
Early history
thumb|Tradition states that Romulus and Remus were raised by a wolf before founding Rome in 753 BC.
1000 BC – Latins begin to settle in Italy
Republic
thumb|19th-century painting of the Gallic leader Brennus looting Rome after the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC
499 BC - A battle against foreign tribes commences, including the construction of the Temple of Castor and Pollux.
396 BC - The Etruscan city of Veio is defeated by the Romans
390 BC - Rome is sacked by the Gauls after the Battle of the Allia
380 BC - The once destroyed Servian Wall is reconstructed.
312 BC - The Via Appia and Aqua Appia are constructed.
264 - 241 BC - First Punic War
220 BC - Via Flaminia is constructed.
218 - 202 BC - Second Punic War
168 BC - The Romans have a great victory in the Macedonian War, conquering Greece.
149 - 146 BC - The Third Punic War
133 BC - 120 BC - The Gracchi brothers are controversially killed.
71 BC - Spartacus is killed and his rebel army destroyed.
60 BC - Pompey, Crassus and Caesar form the first triumvirate.
59 BC - Handwritten "news posters" introduced.
55 BC - Theatre of Pompey completed.
49 BC - Caesar crosses the Rubicon in order to take Rome.
44 BC - Caesar elects himself dictator, and in March is killed by Brutus and Cassius
Imperial city
thumb|St Peter, the first Pope, was crucified in Rome in 67 AD
thumb|The Colosseum opened in 80 AD
27 BC - Augustus is made Rome's first emperor.
13 BC - The Senate commissions the Ara Pacis to honor Augustus' return to Rome.
c. 60 AD - Paul the Apostle arrives in Rome.
64 AD - The Great Fire of Rome, rumored to be blamed by Nero on the Christians.
c. 65 AD - Blamed for causing the Great Fire, Christians in the city are persecuted.
72 AD - Work on the Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) begins.
80 AD - While Titus is inspecting the damage of the eruption of Vesuvius, a fire breaks out in the city for three days, destroying Capitoline temples and the Pantheon.
125 AD - Emperor Hadrian has the Pantheon reconstructed, assuming its current appearance.
212 AD - All the inhabitants of the empire are granted citizenship of Rome.
216 AD - Work on the Baths of Caracalla is completed.
217 AD - Fire, possibly caused by a lightning strike, damages the Flavian Amphitheatre.
225 AD - Mathematicians allowed to teach publicly at Rome.
247 AD - The first millennium of Rome is celebrated.
270 AD - Construction of the Aurelian Wall begins.
274 AD - The Temple of the Sun built at Rome.
284 AD - Diocletian partitions administration of the Roman Empire in half, thereby establishing the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium.
Late antiquity and early medieval period
thumb|19th-century painting of the Visigothic Sack of Rome in 410 AD
312 - Constantine the Great defeats Maxentius at Battle of the Milvian Bridge to become the ruler of the western Roman Empire
c.320 - Old St. Peter's Basilica is constructed.
325- Constantine convenes the First Council of Nicaea.
380 - The Christian emperor Theodosius makes Christianity the official religion of Rome, persecuting pagans and destroying temples.
402 - Ravenna becomes the capital of the Western Roman Empire, whilst Constantinople that of the east.
410 - Rome is sacked by Alaric, King of the Visigoths
422 - The Church of Santa Sabina is founded.
455 - Rome is sacked by Genseric, King of the Vandals
476 - Romulus Augustulus is deposed, traditionally considered the end of the Western Roman Empire and the beginning of the Middle Ages in Europe. Constantinople continues to be the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire.
496 - The first pope to achieve the Pontifex Maximus is Anastasius II.
536 - Rome is recovered for the Roman Empire by Belisarius.
546 - Rome is sacked by Totila, King of the Ostrogoths.
c. 590 - 604 - Pope Gregory the Great makes the Christian church exceedingly strong.
609 - The Pantheon becomes a Christian church.
630 - The Church of Sant' Agnese is the first Roman church to be constructed in Byzantine style.
725 - The King Ine of Wessex is the first man to create a hostel for pilgrims to Rome.
774 - Charlemagne, King of the Franks, conquers Italy.
800 - Charlemagne is crowned Roman emperor in St. Peter's Basilica.
801 - An earthquake damages St. Paul's Outside the Walls on 29 April.
846 - During the Arab raid against Rome the moors plundered the environs of the city, including Old St. Peter's Basilica, but they were prevented from entering the city itself by the Aurelian Wall
880 - 932 - A rare occasion, the city is governed by women, Theodora and later her daughter Marozia.
961 - King Otto the Great of Germany becomes in Rome the first Holy Roman Emperor.
High Middle Ages
thumb|The Papal throne in the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran dates from the 13th century
1084 - The city of Rome is attacked by the Normans
1108 - The church of San Clemente is in this year rebuilt.
1140 - The church of Santa Maria in Trastevere is restored.
1200 - The city becomes an independent commune
1232 - The cloisters in the Basilica of St. John Lateran are finished.
1300 - Pope Boniface VIII proclaims the First Holy Year.
1309 - The Papacy is moved to Avignon under Pope Clement V
1347 - The patriot and rebel Cola di Rienzo tries to restore the Roman Republic.
1348 - As in most of Europe, the Black Death strikes Rome.
Roman Renaissance
thumb|From 1508 to 1512, Michelangelo painted the Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
1377 - The Papacy returns to Rome with Pope Gregory XI.
1409 - 1415 - For a short while, the Papacy moves over to Pisa.
1417 - The Great Schism of the 14th century is ended by Pope Martin V
1444 - Bramante is born.
1452 - Old St. Peter's Basilica is demolished and a new one is begun.
1475 - Michelangelo Buonarroti is born.
1483 - Raphael is born.
1486 - The Palazzo della Cancelleria is built.
1506 - The first significant works on the New St. Peter's Basilica re begun with Pope Julius II
1508 - Michelangelo paints the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
1519 - The frescos of the Villa Farnesina are finally completed.
1527 - Troops of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor attack Rome, looting and ruining the city.
1547 - Michelangelo is appointed by Pope Paul III as the main architect of the new St. Peter's Basilica.
Baroque period
thumb|The Church of the Gesù was the first Baroque structure, built in 1568
thumb|The current St. Peter's Basilica was finished in 1626
1568 - The Jesuits build the early Baroque Church of the Gesù.
1571 - Caravaggio is born.
1585 - Rome's streets are re-planned by Pope Sixtus V.
1595 - The frescos in the Palazzo Farnese are begun by Annibale Carracci.
1600 - Giordano Bruno (philosopher) is burned at the stake for his heresies.
1624 - Apollo and Daphne, the sculpture by Bernini, is made in this year.
1626 - Construction of the new St. Peter's Basilica is completed.
1633 - Galileo is condemned for heresy.
1651 - Piazza Navona is fully re-designed by Bernini.
1653 - Pope Innocent X issues the bull "Cum occasione impressionis libri" condemning heresy of Jansenism.
1656 - Bernini's colonnades in St. Peter's Square are begun.
1657 - Borromini finishes his work in Sant' Agnese in Agone.
1676 - Pope Innocent XI (1676-1689) initiates major reforms; stabilises papal finances; condemn nepotism; upgrades clerical morals; finances Austria's wars against Ottoman Empire to protect Vienna and Hungary. However he fails in efforts to reduce royal control of the Church in France.
1694 - The Palazzo di Montecitorio is finished.
1732 - Work on the Trevi Fountain begins.
1734 - The Palazzo Nuovo is made by Pope Clement XII the world's first public museum.
1735 - The Spanish Steps are designed.
1751 - The Views of Rome by Piranesi revives interest in Rome's classical ruins.
1762 - The Trevi Fountain is completed.
1792 - Pope Clement XIII tomb by Canova is completed.
1797 - Napoleon Bonaparte captures Rome.
1798 - New Roman Republic declared by Napoleon, Pope Pius VI exiled.
1799 - Napoleon is driven out of Rome and Italy by the Russians and the Austrians
19th century and Risorgimento
thumb|Illustration of the proclamation of the 1849 Roman Republic in the Piazza del Popolo.
1800 - 1801 - Napoleon retakes Italy and Rome.
1816 - Work on the Piazza del Popolo begins.
1820 - There are a series of revolts in Rome and the rest of Italy.
1821 - The British poet John Keats dies in Rome.
1848 - Uprisings in Rome.
1849 - Nationalists proclaim an unrecognised Roman Republic. Pope Pius IX is later restored to power in the city, after a French invasion.
1860 - Garibaldi and his 1,000 soldiers take Sicily and Naples.
1861 - The Kingdom of Italy is founded, with Turin as its capital.
1870 - Rome captured by Italy.
20th century and modern Rome
thumb|The Altare della Patria was built in honour of King Victor Emmanuel II in 1911
thumb|Fascists, led by Benito Mussolini, at the March on Rome in 1922
1911 - The Altare della Patria is completed.
1922 - March on Rome by Fascists.
1925-40 - Large parts of the historic centre are pulled down and rebuilt by Benito Mussolini.
1929 - A separate country within Rome, Vatican City, is created by the Lateran Treaty.
1940 - EUR begins, and the nation enters World War II.
1943 - Bombing of Rome in World War II begins.
1944 - Rome is liberated by the Allied troops from the Germans.
1957 - Treaty of Rome
1960 - Rome hosts the 1960 Summer Olympics, with great success.
1962 - Roman Catholic church reforms are brought about with the Second Vatican Council.
1978 - Italian prime minister Aldo Moro is kidnapped and later killed by the Brigate Rosse; Pope John Paul I and Pope John Paul II are made popes in this year.
c.1978 - 1990 - Years of Lead: period of paramilitary violence across Italy.
1981 - An assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II is made in St. Peter's Basilica Square.
1990 - Rome hosts the 1990 FIFA World Cup Final.
1993 - Francesco Rutelli becomes the first mayor of Rome elected by the citizens.
2000 - The city enters the New Millennium, featuring a new Holy Year, or the Jubilee.
21st century
2004 - A new constitution of the European Union is signed in Rome.
2005 - Pope John Paul II dies in Rome, and Pope Benedict XVI takes his place.
2013 - Benedict XVI resigns and Pope Francis is elected as his successor.
2016 - June: Rome municipal election, 2016 held.
2022 - Benedict XVI dies in Rome.
See also
Other cities in the macroregion of Central Italy:(it)
Timeline of Ancona, Marche region
Timeline of Arezzo, Tuscany region
Timeline of Florence, Tuscany
Timeline of Livorno, Tuscany
Timeline of Lucca, Tuscany
Timeline of Perugia, Umbria region
Timeline of Pisa, Tuscany
Timeline of Pistoia, Tuscany
Timeline of Prato, Tuscany
Timeline of Siena, Tuscany
References
Further reading
External links
(maps related to water, 753 BCE-present)
Rome
Rome
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_city_of_Rome
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.287130
|
25870513
|
Lausanne railway station
|
| elevation
| owned = Swiss Federal Railways
| operator | line
| distance | platforms 8
| tracks = 10
| train_operators =
| connections Transports publics de la région lausannoise buses
| structure = At-grade
| parking = Yes
| bicycle = 167
| accessible = Yes
| code = 8501120 (LS)
| iata = QLS
| zone 11 (mobilis)
| website | opened
| rebuilt =
| electrified | closed <!-- -->
| passengers 105'900 per weekday
| pass_year = 2023
| pass_system = SBB
| pass_rank = 4 out 1'159
| services
| services_collapsible = yes
| other_services | mapframe yes
| mapframe-custom
}}
Lausanne railway station () is the main intercity and regional railway station for the city of Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland. It is often known as Lausanne CFF to distinguish it from others in the town.
Description
Lausanne is a through station, which sits at the junction of the Simplon, Lausanne–Bern, and Lausanne–Geneva railway lines. Due to this, express passenger trains are available to a wide variety of destinations across the country.
Passenger trains are primarily run by Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS), with additional international trains run by companies from neighbouring France (TGV Lyria).
There is also a network of local services from Lausanne, primarily as part of the RER Vaud, and platforms for line 2 of the Lausanne Métro. The metro station, Lausanne-Gare, was opened on 27 October 2008.
Passenger facilities include Bureau de change, left luggage and lost property offices.DevelopmentsSignificant improvements are planned for the station by 2020. A third subway is to be constructed for platform access, along with longer platforms to allow larger trains. A new tunnel is also to be built for the Lausanne Métro directly underneath the Renens (West) end of the main line station, with new métro platforms directly connected to the subway, removing the need for some métro passengers to cross the square in front of the station.
* TGV Lyria: six trains per day to Paris-Lyon via either or .
* EuroCity: four trains per day between Genève-Cornavin and , with one train continuing from Milano Centrale to .
* InterCity:
** : hourly service between and via .
** : half-hourly service to Zürich Hauptbahnhof via , with every other train continuing to , rush-hour trains continue from Zürich Hauptbahnhof to St. Gallen.
* InterRegio:
* ––
* / ––
** half-hourly service between Geneva Airport and .
** hourly service between Geneva Airport and .
* RegioExpress:
** half-hourly service (hourly on weekends) between and , and hourly service from St-Maurice to . On weekends, hourly service to Geneva Airport.
** two daily round-trips on weekdays to St-Maurice.
* RER Vaud:
** / : half-hourly service between and .
** / : half-hourly (hourly on weekends) service between and ; hourly service to ; limited service from Bex to .
** / : half-hourly service between and , with every other train continuing from Payerne to .
** / : half-hourly service to .
Gallery
<gallery class="center">
File:Gare-lausanne-IMG 0002.JPG|Lausanne station from Place de la Gare
File:Bahnhof_Lausanne.JPG|Lausanne station, looking East.
File:TGV_in_Lausanne_CFF.jpg|View under overall canopy (and a Swiss railway clock), looking East.
File:M2-Lausanne-Gare1.jpg|Lausanne Metro Line m2 platforms & coach
</gallery>
See also
* History of rail transport in Switzerland
* Rail transport in Switzerland
References
External links
*[https://www.sbb.ch/en/station-services/railway-stations/lausanne-station.html Lausanne railway station – SBB]
*[http://plans.trafimage.ch/lausanne#?lang=en Interactive station plan (Lausanne)]
Category:Railway stations in the canton of Vaud
Category:Swiss Federal Railways stations
Category:Transport in Lausanne
Category:Railway stations in Switzerland opened in 1856
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lausanne_railway_station
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.295272
|
25870519
|
Sample and Data Relationship Format
|
The Sample and Data Relationship Format (SDRF) is part of the MAGE-TAB standard for communicating the results
of microarray investigations, including all information required for MIAME compliance.
An SDRF file is a tab-delimited file describing the relationships between samples, arrays, data, and other objects used or produced in a microarray investigation.
For simple experimental designs, constructing the SDRF file is straightforward, and even complex loop designs can be expressed in this format.
References
External links
MAGE-TAB — FGED (formerly MGED) Society
Sample and Data Relationship Format — U. S. National Cancer Institute's wiki
Category:Minimum Information Standards
Category:Microarrays
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sample_and_Data_Relationship_Format
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.303754
|
25870532
|
Stacksteads
|
| official_name = Stacksteads
| shire_district = Rossendale
| shire_county = Lancashire
| population = 3,789
| population_ref = (2011 Census)
| region = North West England
| constituency_westminster = Rossendale and Darwen
| post_town = BACUP
| postcode_district = OL13
| postcode_area = OL
| dial_code = 01706
| london_distance | static_image_name Acre Mill Baptist Church, Stacksteads, Bacup. - geograph.org.uk - 633326.jpg
| static_image_caption = Acre Mill Baptist Church
| pushpin_map = United Kingdom Borough of Rossendale
| pushpin_map_caption = Location within Rossendale
}}
Stacksteads is a village between the towns of Bacup and Waterfoot within the Rossendale borough of Lancashire, England. The population of this Rossendale ward at the 2011 census was 3,789. Stacksteads includes a mountain bike trail called Lee Quarry which had originally been a working quarry.
It is part of the Rossendale and Darwen constituency, with Andy MacNae becoming Member of Parliament in 2024.
History
In the 19th century it was home to several cotton mills along the banks of the River Irwell. These expanded after the ending of the American Civil War. During the 1870s agricultural labourers moved from across the UK – including many from East Anglia – to drive this expansion.
During the 20th century, as the cotton trade decreased in the face of overseas manufacture, some of the mills were adapted to more modern purposes such as footwear – notably the Bacup Shoe Company in the former Stacksteads Mill. In the 1980s, the village featured in a number of episodes of the long running BBC1 police procedural drama series Juliet Bravo, set in a fictional part of the Rossendale Valley between Rawtenstall and Bacup. It was also the location for the filming of Laurence Olivier Presents: Hindle Wakes, a 1976 television film of the stage play, directed by Laurence Olivier, that starred Rosalind Ayres, Judi Bowker, and Roy Dotrice.
Today
The area is today noted for a high number of reported UFO sightings and featured in one episode of a 2008 Five TV series on British cases.
Stacksteads has a Rosso Bus 464 going through it every 10 minutes via the main road through the village, Newchurch Road. There is a secondary school called The Valley Leadership Academy.
Stacksteads is home to the famous Kimberley Club formed in 1897 as a drinking club for quarry workers. Lit and warmed by gas (no electricity), it is still going strong and sells real ale direct from the barrel.
From 1903 until 2011, Stacksteads Cricket Club played on Waterbarn Recreation Ground adjacent to Waterbarn Baptist Church. The club moved to New Hall Hey Cricket Ground in nearby Rawtenstall after difficulties with the landlord who also owns the Grade II listed Waterbarn Baptist Chapel on Brandwood Road built in 1847.
References
Category:Villages in Lancashire
Category:Geography of the Borough of Rossendale
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stacksteads
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.318295
|
25870534
|
Scyllarides herklotsii
|
Scyllarides herklotsii is a species of slipper lobster from the Atlantic coast West Africa. It is edible, but is not commercially fished, and is taken only by accident. the type material came from Butre, Ghana, The species is found from Senegal, where its range overlaps slightly with that of Scyllarides latus, south to Ponta do Pinda, Angola. It usually lives at depths of , but has been recorded from depths as great as .
References
Category:Achelata
Category:Edible crustaceans
Category:Crustaceans described in 1851
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scyllarides_herklotsii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.339054
|
25870544
|
The Premiere Collection: The Best of Andrew Lloyd Webber
|
| recorded | venue
| studio | genre Classical crossover
| length | label
| producer =
| prev_title | prev_year
| next_title | next_year
}}
The Premiere Collection: The Best of Andrew Lloyd Webber is a 1988 compilation album, bringing together some of composer Andrew Lloyd Webber's best known compositions at the time of release. It includes songs from the musicals The Phantom of the Opera, Tell Me on a Sunday, Evita, Cats, Jesus Christ Superstar, Starlight Express and Requiem. Co-writers of the songs include Tim Rice, Don Black, Richard Stilgoe, Charles Hart and Trevor Nunn.
The album spent two weeks at number one in the UK Compilation Chart in January 1989.
It was released by Really Useful Records and Polydor Records on LP (with a gatefold cover), cassette and CD. A follow-up album, The Premiere Collection Encore, was released in 1992.
Track listing
All music written by Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Side one
| extra1 = The Phantom of the Opera
| length1 = 4:37
| title2 = Take That Look Off Your Face
| note2 = Marti Webb
| lyrics2 = Don Black
| extra2 = Tell Me on a Sunday
| length2 = 3:56
| title3 = All I Ask of You
| note3 = Sarah Brightman & Cliff Richard
| lyrics3 =
| extra3 = The Phantom of the Opera
| length3 = 4:05
| title4 = Don't Cry for Me, Argentina
| note4 = Julie Covington
| lyrics4 = Tim Rice
| extra4 = Evita
| length4 = 4:02
| title5 = Magical Mr. Mistoffelees
| note5 = Paul Nicholas
| lyrics5 = T. S. Eliot
| extra5 = Cats
| length5 = 5:10
| title6 = Four Variations for Cello & Orchestra
| note6 = Julian Lloyd Webber
| lyrics6 = ―
| extra6 = Song and Dance
| length6 = 4:12
| title7 = Superstar
| note7 = Murray Head & cast
| lyrics7 = Rice
| extra7 = Jesus Christ Superstar
| length7 = 3:56
}}
Side two
| extra1 = Cats
| length1 = 4:26
| title2 = Starlight Express
| note2 = Ray Shell
| lyrics2 = Stilgoe
| extra2 = Starlight Express
| length2 = 5:02
| title3 = Tell Me on a Sunday
| note3 = Marti Webb
| lyrics3 = Black
| extra3 = Tell Me on a Sunday
| length3 = 3:30
| title4 = The Music of the Night
| note4 = Michael Crawford
| lyrics4 =
| extra4 = The Phantom of the Opera
| length4 = 5:12
| title5 = Another Suitcase in Another Hall
| note5 = Barbara Dickson
| lyrics5 = Rice
| extra5 = Evita
| length5 = 3:18
| title6 = I Don't Know How to Love Him
| note6 = Julian Lloyd Webber
| lyrics6 = Rice
| extra6 = Jesus Christ Superstar
| length6 = 3:56
| title7 = Pie Jesu
| note7 = Sarah Brightman & Paul Miles-Kingston
| lyrics7 = Lloyd Webber; traditional
| extra7 = Requiem
| length7 = 3:58
}}
Personnel
Adapted from the album's liner notes.Musicians
* Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – orchestra (track 4 on side two)
* David Caddick – conductor (track 4 on side two)
* Winchester Cathedral Choir – choir (track 7 on side two)
* Martin Neary – director (track 7 on side two)
* James Lancelot – organ (track 7 on side two)
* English Chamber Orchestra – orchestra (track 7 on side two)
* Lorin Maazel – conductor (track 7 on side two)
Technical
* Andrew Lloyd Webber – producer (tracks 2–7 on side one; tracks 1–6 on side two), executive producer (track 1 on side one)
* Tim Rice – producer (tracks 4 & 7 on side one; tracks 5 & 6 on side two)
* Mike Batt – producer (track 1 on side one)
* David R. Murray – producer (track 7 on side two)
* Martin Levan – engineer (track 3 on side one; track 2 on side two; track 4 on side two)
* David Hamilton-Smith – engineer (track 1 on side two)
* J. L. – sleeve design
* Carlos Olms – digital engineer
Charts
{| class"wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center"
|+ Chart performance for The Premiere Collection: The Best of Andrew Lloyd Webber
! scope="col"| Chart (1988–1994)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
|-
|-
|-
|}
Certifications and sales
References
Category:1988 greatest hits albums
Category:Classical crossover albums
Category:Polydor Records compilation albums
Category:MCA Records compilation albums
Category:Andrew Lloyd Webber compilation albums
Category:Albums produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber
Category:Albums produced by Tim Rice
Category:Albums produced by Mike Batt
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Premiere_Collection:_The_Best_of_Andrew_Lloyd_Webber
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.361371
|
25870553
|
Laskiainen
|
300px|thumb|right|Sled riding on ice is part of Finnish traditions.
() is the Finnish celebration of what is known in the English-speaking world as Shrove Tuesday. It is often described as a "mid-winter sledding festival".
Ecclesiastically, is a part of Shrovetide and is a Lutheran celebration just prior to the beginning of Lent, the 40-day season of repentance in Christianity. In Northern Europe, this tradition has been practiced from at least the 7th century onward, and in Catholic countries—in the form of carnivals—even before that.
in Finland
Etymology
The etymology of the word is uncertain. Candidates for the source of the word have been (, as in descent to fasting) or (, as in counting days until Easter). According to a third proposal, the word comes from the old Romance term (), with the latter part having changed into a Finnish form.
As is called () in Swedish after the French name Mardi Gras, one possible explanation for the Finnish name is simply (). The Finnish word comes from the Swedish word , meaning . is also part of Swedish culinary traditions.
Traditions
thumb|A Finnish cream puff called laskiaispulla, a traditional dessert
The traditions of consist largely of merrymaking and feasts.
Many of the Finnish traditions are probably based on an old work feast, where women stopped the winter tasks of working linen, hemp and wool and spinning them into yarn. Surviving old traditions include downhill sled riding and riding a sled around a pole. is no longer connected with the growth of flax, but is instead a feast of saying goodbye to the dark winter and waiting for spring.
After the Reformation, Finns no longer observed obligatory fasting, but many beliefs and restrictions stayed in the people's minds. remained a peasant work feast, most importantly as a day belonging to women's work. An ancient European New Year's Day is situated around , which has led to many folk beliefs and spells connected to it in historical Finland. Work had to be stopped early in the afternoon on , in order for work to succeed for the rest of the year. The time for sauna was during daylight and bathers had to be quiet in the sauna. The soup was also called pig foot soup.
Desserts are also an integral part of . The best-known dessert, often enjoyed either with coffee or tea, is laskiaispulla, which is a sweet roll filled with almond paste or strawberry jam, and whipped cream. This pastry started becoming common in the 19th century.
There were also beliefs about food. Most importantly, food had to be fatty. The more fat glistened on people's fingers and mouths, the more milk the cows gave and the fattier the pigs got, the better. Greasy fingers should not be wiped clean; instead the grease had to be left to clean away on its own. This guaranteed good skills with a scythe. Those who licked their fingers would wound themselves with a scythe. When food was left on the table for the whole day, this guaranteed plenty of food for the rest of the year.
in North America
thumb|Ice slide at in Palo, Minnesota, US
In North America too, it is traditional in to have a meal of split pea soup with ham, and for amusement – as in Finland – to slide down a hill on either snow-covered or iced tracks, often on toboggans.
One of the places where is celebrated outside Europe in form of an annual festival is the community of Palo, located between Aurora and Makinen on the shores of Loon Lake in Minnesota. With this celebration, Palo is the home for one of the longest continuously held annual Finnish-American festivals in the United States, others being e.g. various Saint Urho's Day festivals held each 16 March both in Canada and the United States, and the FinnFest USA festivals, which have taken place in locations throughout the United States, typically hosted by communities with connections to Finnish-American cultural history.
Many Finnish-North-American groups and clubs host various celebrations, but the one which developed in Palo in the 1930s is notable for both its size and longevity.
References
Category:Culture of Europe
Category:Culture of Finland
Category:Public holidays in Finland
Category:Finnish-American history
Category:Holidays based on the date of Easter
Category:Mardi Gras
de:Fastnachtsdienstag
es:Martes de Carnaval
et:Vastlapäev
fi:Laskiainen
fr:Mardi gras
ru:масленица
sv:Fettisdagen
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laskiainen
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.371363
|
25870557
|
John F. Hayes (Kansas legislator)
|
|death_place= Hutchinson, Kansas, U.S.
|spouse= Elizabeth "Betty" Ireton
|profession= Attorney
|party= Republican
|education = Washburn University<br>Washburn Law School
|children = 2
|allegiance =
|branch =
|battles = World War II
|rank = Captain
}}
John F. Hayes (December 11, 1919 – January 14, 2010) was a Kansas attorney and former majority leader of the Kansas House of Representatives.
Early life and family
Hayes was born in Salina, Kansas, on December 11, 1919, the only child of J. Frank and Helen Dye Hayes. He graduated from Hutchinson High School, Hutchinson Community College, Washburn University and Washburn Law School. While at Washburn, Hayes was initiated into the Kansas Beta chapter of Phi Delta Theta. While a student at Washburn Law, he and eight other fraternity brothers formed the Free Society of Gnip Gnop. They provided scholarships to Washburn law students for more than sixty years.
On August 10, 1950, he married Elizabeth "Betty" Ireton. Together they had two children, a son, Carl, and a daughter, Chandler. They were grandparents to five children and great grandparents to two children.
Military service, legal career and business activities
Hayes served as Captain in the United States Army with service in the New Hebrides Islands and the Philippines during World War II. Upon his return home and graduation from law school, Hayes was a founding partner of the Gilliland & Hayes law firm, which has offices in Hutchinson, Wichita, Lawrence and Overland Park, Kansas. The firm celebrated its 50th anniversary on December 15, 2009.
Hayes was a Life Member of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws serving for more than 30 years, and a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and the American Bar Foundation. He served as president of the Reno County Bar Association and the Kansas Association of Defense Counsel. He was a member of the American Bar Association, Kansas Bar Association and the Kansas Bar Foundation.
He was a long-time director of Central Bank & Trust in Hutchinson, Kansas, and Waddell & Reed Group of Funds, Overland Park, Kansas. He also served as president of the Hutchinson Chamber of Commerce, Hutchinson Rotary Club, Hutchinson Town Club and Prairie Dunes Country Club. Hayes also served as a director and district vice-president of the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce and vice-president of the Hutchinson Symphony.
Political activities
In 1952, Hayes served as a delegate to the National Republican Convention and later served six terms in the Kansas House of Representatives (1953–1955, 1967–1979) where he was chairman of the Insurance and Judiciary committees and was Majority Floor Leader from 1975 to 1977. He was credited with creating Sand Hills State Park, supporting passage of court unification and the state's no-fault insurance law, improving the Kansas State Fair and establishing the Law Enforcement Training Center in Hutchinson.
References
|-
Category:1919 births
Category:2010 deaths
Category:Republican Party members of the Kansas House of Representatives
Category:United States Army personnel of World War II
Category:Kansas lawyers
Category:Politicians from Hutchinson, Kansas
Category:Politicians from Salina, Kansas
Category:United States Army officers
Category:Washburn University alumni
Category:20th-century American lawyers
Category:Washburn University School of Law alumni
Category:Phi Delta Theta members
Category:20th-century members of the Kansas Legislature
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_F._Hayes_(Kansas_legislator)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.379517
|
25870559
|
Schüssler
|
Schüssler or Schuessler or Schüßler is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Benjamin Schüßler (born 1981), German football player
Brittany Schussler (born 1985), Canadian speed skater
Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza (born 1938), feminist theologian
Francis Schüssler Fiorenza, Stillman Professor of Roman Catholic Theological Studies at Harvard Divinity School
Harry Schüssler (born 1957), Swedish chess grandmaster
Hans Wilhelm Schüßler (1928–2007), German telecommunications engineer and professor
Jan Wilhelm Schüssler (born 1965), Norwegian show producer
Karl Schüßler (1924–2023), West German cross country skier
Otto Schüssler (1905–1982), German communist
Wilhelm Heinrich Schüßler (1821–1898), German medical doctor who endeavoured to find natural remedies
Johannes Schussler, German bookprinter 15th century, from Augsburg
See also
Schüssel
References
Category:Occupational surnames
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schüssler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.382498
|
25870572
|
Petrenko-Kritschenko piperidone synthesis
|
| Reaction =
}}
The Petrenko-Kritschenko reaction is a classic multicomponent-name reaction that is closely related to the Robinson–Schöpf tropinone synthesis, but was published 12 years earlier.Classic reactionIn the original publication diethyl-α-ketoglurate, a derivative of acetonedicarboxylic acid, is used in combination with ammonia and benzaldehyde. The relative stereochemistry was not elucidated in the original publication, structural analysis using X-rays or NMR was not available in these days. In the absence of ammonia or ammonium salts a 4-oxotetrahydropyran is formed.
In contrast to the Robinson synthesis, it does not employ dialdehydes like succinaldehyde or glutaraldehyde but simpler aldehydes like benzaldehyde. Therefore, the product of the reaction is not a bicyclic structure (see tropinone and pseudopelletierine) but a 4-piperidone. The synthesis of tropinone can be seen as a variation of the Petrenko-Kritschenko reaction in which the two aldehyde functions are covalently linked in a single molecule. Apart from the Hantzsch synthesis the Petrenko-Kritschenko reaction is one of the few examples in which a symmetric pyridine precursor can be obtained in a multicomponent ring-condensation reaction followed by an oxidation. The oxidation by chromium trioxide in acetic acid leads to a symmetrically substituted 4-pyridone, decarboxylation yields the 3,5-unsubstituted derivative. The use of aniline has also been reported in the original Publication. Essentially this method is based on two subsequent Petrenko-Kritschenko reactions. These ligands can be used to prepare compounds containing high-valent iron, that are able to oxidize cyclohexane in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. References External links
* A picture of Paul Petrenko-Kritschenko taken at the Kazan School of Chemistry in 1928 (1st row, first on the left): http://www.ksu.ru/chmku/images/30b.jpg
Category:Name reactions
Category:Ring forming reactions
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrenko-Kritschenko_piperidone_synthesis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.396864
|
25870573
|
Pacific Grove Marine Gardens State Marine Conservation Area
|
thumb|Rowers in Monterey Bay
thumb|Monterey Bay
thumb|Cormorant chick in Monterey Bay
Pacific Grove Marine Gardens State Marine Conservation Area is one of four small marine protected areas located near the cities of Monterey and Pacific Grove, at the southern end of Monterey Bay on California’s central coast. The four MPAs together encompass . Within the SMCA fishing and take of all living marine resources is prohibited except the recreational take of finfish and the commercial take of giant and bull kelp by hand under certain conditions. According to the Frommer's guide, the Marine Gardens area is "renowned for ocean views, flowers, and tide-pool seaweed beds."
History
Pacific Grove Marine Gardens State Marine Conservation Area was established in September 2007 by the California Department of Fish & Game. It was one of 29 marine protected areas adopted during the first phase of the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. The Marine Life Protection Act Initiative (or MLPAI) is a collaborative public process to create a statewide network of marine protected areas along the California coastline.
Geography and natural features
Pacific Grove Marine Gardens SMCA is located off the coast of the Monterey Peninsula, at the southern end of Monterey Bay. It covers an area of .93 sq miles (2.4 km2). The reserve is directly offshore from Point Pinos Lighthouse Reservation.
Pacific Grove Marine Gardens SMCA is one of four marine protected areas bordering the Monterey Peninsula. It is between Asilomar State Marine Reserve and Lovers Point State Marine Reserve. Farther east is the Edward F. Ricketts State Marine Conservation Area. All four areas are included within the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.
This marine protected area is bounded by the mean high tide line, and straight lines connecting the following points in the order listed:
36° 37.60’ N. lat. 121° 54.91’ W. long.;
36° 37.60’ N. lat. 121° 54.75’ W. long.;
36° 38.70’ N. lat. 121° 55.40’ W. long.;
36° 38.90’ N. lat. 121° 56.60’ W. long.; and
36° 38.22’ N. lat. 121° 56.15’ W. long.
Habitat and wildlife
The Monterey Peninsula includes extensive tidepools brimming with life. Its sandy beaches are used by pupping harbor seals, and dense kelp beds offshore provide shelter for sea otters. The Pacific Grove Marine Gardens SMCA provides habitat for a variety of marine life, and includes kelp forest, beach, rocky intertidal, soft and hard bottom.
Recreation and tourism
The natural environment and ocean resources of the Monterey Peninsula draw millions of visitors from around the world each year, including more than 65,000 scuba divers drawn by the area’s easy access, variety of wildlife, and kelp forests.
The Monterey Bay Aquarium is a tourist attraction featuring a living kelp forest. The exhibit includes many of the species native to the nearby marine protected areas. The aquarium also houses sea otters, intertidal wildlife, and occasionally sea turtles.
In addition to diving and visiting the aquarium, people visit Monterey Bay for kayaking, whale watching, charter fishing, surfing, bird watching, tidepooling and walking on the beach. The adjacent Point Pinos Lighthouse Reservation is home to the oldest continuously operating lighthouse on the West Coast.
California’s marine protected areas encourage recreational and educational uses of the ocean. Activities such as kayaking, diving, snorkeling, and swimming are allowed unless otherwise restricted.
Scientific monitoring
As specified by the Marine Life Protection Act, select marine protected areas along California’s central coast are being monitored by scientists to track their effectiveness and learn more about ocean health. Similar studies in marine protected areas located off of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands have already detected gradual improvements in fish size and number.
Local scientific and educational institutions involved in the monitoring include Stanford University’s Hopkins Marine Station, University of California Santa Cruz, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Research methods include hook-and-line sampling, intertidal and scuba diver surveys, and the use of Remote Operated Vehicle (ROV) submarines.
References
External links
California MPAs
Marine Life Protection Act Initiative
CalOceans
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Point Pinos Lighthouse Reservation
Category:Marine sanctuaries in California
Category:Monterey Bay
Category:California Department of Fish and Wildlife areas
Category:Protected areas of Monterey County, California
Category:Pacific Grove, California
Category:2007 establishments in California
Category:Protected areas established in 2007
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Grove_Marine_Gardens_State_Marine_Conservation_Area
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.400589
|
25870576
|
Snowshoe Lake (Kimikong River, Ontario)
|
| lake_type | inflow
| outflow = Unnamed creek to the Kimikong River
| catchment | basin_countries Canada
| date-built | date-flooded
| length
| width
| area | depth
| max-depth | volume
| residence_time | shore
| elevation
| frozen | islands
| cities | reference
}}
Snowshoe Lake is a lake in the Lake Huron drainage basin in Whitestone, Parry Sound District, Ontario, Canada, about north of the community of Maple Island, and southeast of the community of Arnstein. It is about long and wide and lies at an elevation of . The lake drains via an unnamed creek to the Kimikong River and then via the Pickerel and French rivers into Lake Huron.
A second Snowshoe Lake in Whitestone, Snowshoe Lake (Magnetawan River, Ontario), lies southwest and flows via the Magnetawan River or Harris and Naiscoot Rivers into Lake Huron.
See also
*List of lakes in Ontario
References
*
Category:Lakes of Parry Sound District
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowshoe_Lake_(Kimikong_River,_Ontario)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.404347
|
25870580
|
Trexler
|
Trexler may refer to:
Trexler (surname)
Trexler, Berks County, Pennsylvania, an unincorporated community in Albany Township
Trexler Nature Preserve, in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania
See also
Trexlertown, Pennsylvania, a census-designated place in Lehigh County
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trexler
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.412536
|
25870583
|
Gareth Waite
|
| birth_place Thornaby-on-Tees, England
| currentclub | clubnumber
| height | position Midfielder
| youthyears1 | youthclubs1
| years1 ?–2010 | clubs1 Spennymoor Town | caps1 | goals1
| years2 2010–2011 | clubs2 Darlington | caps2 19 | goals2 1
| years3 2011–? | clubs3 Spennymoor Town | caps3 | goals3
| years4 2013–? | clubs4 Thornaby Jolly Farmers | caps4 | goals4
| club-update = 09:05, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
}}
Gareth Waite (born 16 February 1986) is an English footballer who played in the Football League for Darlington. He joined that club from Northern Football League Division One side Spennymoor Town. He is a midfielder.
Career
Waite, Spennymoor Town's 2008–09 player of the year, joined Football League Two club Darlington on 15 January 2010. Darlington manager Steve Staunton expressed his gratitude to Spennymoor Town's chairman Bradley Groves and manager Jason Ainsley for allowing Waite the opportunity to play League football. Waite made his debut against Rotherham United in a 2–1 away win, and his first goal came three games later, at home to Rotherham United. Waite was employed by Staunton as a right winger, although his natural position is in the centre. Waite was released by Darlington in June 2011. He then returned to Spennymoor Town, and later played for Stockton Sunday League club Thornaby Jolly Farmers.ReferencesExternal links
*
Category:1986 births
Category:Living people
Category:People from Thornaby-on-Tees
Category:Footballers from County Durham
Category:Footballers from North Yorkshire
Category:English men's footballers
Category:Men's association football midfielders
Category:Spennymoor Town F.C. players
Category:Darlington F.C. players
Category:English Football League players
Category:National League (English football) players
Category:21st-century English sportsmen
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gareth_Waite
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.421769
|
25870585
|
Patrick Deane (footballer)
|
| birth_place = Perth, Scotland
| position = Striker
| height 6 ft 3 in Deane was one of seven players, including David Wotherspoon and Kurtis Byrne, who were given senior contracts by the club in March 2009. Towards the end of the summer 2009 transfer window, Deane was released by Hibs without making an appearance for the first team, after new manager John Hughes decided that Deane, David van Zanten and Jonatan Johansson were surplus to his requirements. Deane then played as a trialist for Montrose in a Scottish Football League match against Berwick Rangers a month later.
English League Two club Darlington signed Deane in mid-January 2010 on a deal until the end of the 2009–10 season. He made his debut for Darlington on 19 January against Rotherham United, coming on as a substitute in the game, which ended in a 2–1 win for his new club. Deane made ten league appearances before he and 13 other players were released by the club at the end of the season following their relegation from League Two.
Deane returned to Scottish football in October 2010 when he signed for Third Division club Arbroath in October 2010. He joined the club at the same time as Ross Chisholm, another Hibernian youth product. References External links
*
Category:1990 births
Category:Living people
Category:Footballers from Perth, Scotland
Category:Scottish men's footballers
Category:Men's association football forwards
Category:Hibernian F.C. players
Category:Montrose F.C. players
Category:Darlington F.C. players
Category:Arbroath F.C. players
Category:Jeanfield Swifts F.C. players
Category:Scottish Football League players
Category:English Football League players
Category:Scottish Junior Football Association players
Category:21st-century Scottish sportsmen
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Deane_(footballer)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.427064
|
25870586
|
A Fazenda 1
|
| num_episodes = 81
| network = RecordTV
| first_aired =
| last_aired =
| episode_list | prev_series
| next_series = A Fazenda 2
}}
A Fazenda 1 was the first season of the Brazilian reality television series A Fazenda, which premiered on Sunday, May 31, 2009, on RecordTV. It was hosted by Britto Júnior and reports by Chris Couto. The direction was handled by Rodrigo Carelli, Bruno Gomes, Chica Barros, and Rogerio Farah.
On August 23, 2009, 28-year-old actor Dado Dolabella won the competition with 83% of the public vote over singer Danni Carlos (17%).ProductionCastThere were fifteen celebrity contestants competing for the grand prize, which was R$ 1 million without tax allowances with a brand new car offered to the runner-up. The season lasted 85 days, making this the shortest season until A Fazenda 8.Contestants
, winner of the first season.]]
Below is biographical information according to the Record official site, plus footnoted additions.<br>(ages stated are correct at the start of the contest)
{| class"wikitable sortable" style"text-align: center; margin:auto; align: center"
|-
! width=150| Contestant
! width=050| Age
! width=125| Background
! width=125| Hometown
! width=115| Status
! width=050| Finish
|-
| Franciely Freduzeski
| 30
| Actress
| Laranjeiras do Sul
| <br>
| 15th
|-
| Bárbara Koboldt
| 33
| Reporter
| Porto Alegre
| <br>
| 14th
|-
| Babi Xavier
| 34
| TV Host
| Niterói
| <br>
| 13th
|-
| Théo Becker
| 32
| Actor
| Pelotas
| <br>
| 12th
|-
| Fabio Arruda
| 38
| Style consultant
| Rio de Janeiro
| <br>
| 11th
|-
| Miro Moreira
| 25
| Model
| São Paulo
| <br>
| 10th
|-
| Luciele di Camargo
| 31
| Actress
| Goiânia
| <br>
| 9th
|-
| Mirella Santos
| 25
| Dancer
| Florianópolis
| <br>
| 8th
|-
| nowrap| Jonathan Haagensen
| 25
| Actor
| Rio de Janeiro
| <br>
| 7th
|-
| Fabiana Alvarez
| 32
| Actress
| São José
| <br>
| 6th
|-
| Danielle Souza
| 28
| Model
| Lages
| <br>
| 5th
|-
| Pedro Leonardo
| 22
| Musician
| Anápolis
| <br>
| 4th
|-
| Carlinhos Silva
| 28
| Comedian
| São Paulo
| <br>
| 3rd
|-
| Danni Carlos
| 33
| Singer
| Rio de Janeiro
| <br>
| 2nd
|-
| bgcolor="E6E6FA" nowrap|Dado Dolabella
| bgcolor="E6E6FA|28
| bgcolor="E6E6FA|Actor
| bgcolor="E6E6FA|Rio de Janeiro
| }}
| bgcolor="E6E6FA|1st
|-
|}
Future appearances
In 2011, Franciely Freduzeski was contender to be a competitor on A Fazenda 4, but ultimately did not return.
In 2017, Théo Becker appeared in Dancing Brasil 2, he finished in 9th place in the competition.
In 2017, Fábio Arruda returned to compete in A Fazenda 9, he finished in 14th place in the competition.
In 2019, Babi Xavier appeared in Popstar 3, she finished in 10th place in the competition, in 2023, Xavier appeared on Bake Off Celebridades 3, she finished in 13th place in the competition.
Voting history
{| class"wikitable" style"text-align:center; font-size:85%; width:100%; line-height:13px;"
|-
! rowspan2 width"08%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! rowspan2 width"07%" |
! colspan2 width"14%" |
|-
! width="07%" |Day 78
! width="07%" |Finale
|-
!
| Dado
| Théo
| Pedro
| Luciele
| Carlinhos
| Danielle
| Fabiana
| Danielle
| Carlinhos
| Pedro
| rowspan4 colspan3|
|-
! Nominated<br>
| Luciele
| Danielle
| Jonathan
| Fabio
| Danni
| Carlinhos
| Mirella
| Jonathan
| Danni
| Danielle
|-
! Nominated<br>
| Franciely
| Babi
| Théo
| Pedro
| Miro
| Luciele
| Jonathan
| Danni
| Fabiana
| Dado
|-
! Nominated<br>
| Mirella
| Jonathan
| Miro
| Dado
| Dado
| Fabiana
| Dado
| Dado
| Dado
| Danni
|-
| bgcolor"000000" colspan15|
|-
! Dado
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Babi
| Théo
| Pedro
| Miro
| Pedro
| Jonathan
| Fabiana
| Fabiana
| Carlinhos
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor="73FB76" nowrap|Winner<br>(Day 85)
|-
! Danni
| Franciely
| Babi
| Théo
| Fabiana
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Miro
| Fabiana
| Jonathan
| Fabiana
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Fabiana
| Carlinhos
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor="D1E8EF" nowrap|Runner-up<br>(Day 85)
|-
! Carlinhos
| Pedro
| Pedro
| Miro
| Dado
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Luciele
| Pedro
| Pedro
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Dado
| bgcolor="FBF373"|Immune
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor="FA8072" nowrap|Evicted<br>(Day 81)
|-
! Pedro
| Carlinhos
| Carlinhos
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Carlinhos
| Mirella
| Dado
| Carlinhos
| Carlinhos
| Dado
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Nominee
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan2|Evicted<br>(Day 78)
|-
! Danielle
| Franciely
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Babi
| Théo
| Mirella
| Luciele
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Jonathan
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Pedro
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Dado
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan3|Evicted<br>(Day 71)
|-
! Fabiana
| bgcolor"FFFFFF" colspan2|Not in<br>house
| Théo
| Danni
| Pedro
| Jonathan
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Danni
| Dado
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan4|Evicted<br>(Day 64)
|-
! Jonathan
| Bárbara
| Miro
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Théo
| Dado
| Fabiana
| Mirella
| Danielle
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Danni
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan5|Evicted<br>(Day 57)
|-
! Mirella
| Théo
| Fabio
| Théo
| Danielle
| Luciele
| Luciele
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Jonathan
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan6|Evicted<br>(Day 50)
|-
! Luciele
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Franciely
| Miro
| Théo
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Miro
| Mirella
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan7|Evicted<br>(Day 43)
|-
! Miro
| Pedro
| Jonathan
| Théo
| Pedro
| Luciele
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan8|Evicted<br>(Day 36)
|-
! Fabio
| Bárbara
| Mirella
| Théo
| bgcolor="959FFD"|Pedro
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan9|Evicted<br>(Day 29)
|-
! Théo
| Mirella
| bgcolor="CCFFCC"|
| Miro
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan10|Evicted<br>(Day 22)
|-
! Babi
| Bárbara
| Danni
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan11|Evicted<br>(Day 15)
|-
! Bárbara
| Franciely
| bgcolor"FFCCFF" colspan12|Walked<br>(Day 9)
|-
! Franciely
| Bárbara
| bgcolor"FA8072" colspan12|Evicted<br>(Day 8)
|-
| bgcolor"000000" colspan15|
|-
! Notes
| 1, 2
| colspan=3|
| 3
| 4
|
| 5
| 6
| 7
| 8
| 9
| 10
|-
! Walked
|
| bgcolor="FFCCFF"|Bárbara
| colspan=11|
|-
! Nominated<br>for Eviction
| Luciele<br>Franciely<br>Mirella
| Danielle<br>Babi<br>Jonathan
| Jonathan<br>Théo<br>Miro
| Fabio<br>Pedro<br>Dado
| Danni<br>Miro<br>Dado
| Carlinhos<br>Luciele<br>Fabiana
| Mirella<br>Jonathan<br>Dado
| Jonathan<br>Danni<br>Dado
| Danni<br>Fabiana<br>Dado
| Danielle<br>Dado<br>Danni
| Dado<br>Danni<br>Pedro
| Carlinhos<br>Dado<br>Danni
| Dado<br>Danni
|-
! rowspan=2|Evicted
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Franciely<br>45.3%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Babi<br>50.8%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Théo<br>51.8%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Fabio<br>59.8%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Miro<br>67.5%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Luciele<br>48.4%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Mirella<br>49.5%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Jonathan<br>69%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Fabiana<br>67.6%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Danielle<br>60%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Pedro<br>68%<br>
| rowspan2 bgcolor"FA8072"|Carlinhos<br>65%<br>
| rowspan1 bgcolor"D1E8EF"|Danni<br>17%<br>
|-
| rowspan1 bgcolor"73FB76" | Dado<br>83%<br>
|-
|}
Notes
* : The first Farmer of the Week (Dado) was chosen by the public through an online vote.
* : Bárbara and Franciely were tied with 4 votes each. First nominee Luciele, the first nominee, had the casting vote and chose to nominate Franciely.
* : Luciele and Miro were tied with 3 votes each. First nominee Danni had the casting vote and chose to nominate Miro.
* : Luciele and Mirella were tied with 2 votes each. First nominee Carlinhos had the casting vote and chose to nominate Luciele.
* : Danni and Fabiana were tied with 2 votes each. First nominee Jonathan had the casting vote and chose to nominate Danni.
* : Dado and Fabiana were tied with 2 votes each. First nominee Danni had the casting vote and chose to nominate Fabiana.
* : Carlinhos and Dado were tied with 2 votes each. First nominee Danielle had the casting vote and chose to nominate Dado.
* : Carlinhos won the final challenge and won immunity. Therefore, Dado, Danni and Pedro were automatically nominated.
* : The final three contestants were automatically nominated for the final eviction.
* : For the final, the public votes for the contestant they want to win A Fazenda 1.
Notes
References
External links
* [http://afazenda.r7.com/ Official Site]
Category:2009 Brazilian television seasons
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Fazenda_1
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.452173
|
25870593
|
2007 Seattle Storm season
|
The 2007 WNBA season was the eighth for the Seattle Storm. The Storm struggled through the season, but they were able to reach the playoffs, falling in the first round to eventual champion, Phoenix Mercury.
Offseason
Dispersal Draft
Based on the Storm's 2006 record, they would pick 7th in the Charlotte Sting dispersal draft. The Storm picked Tye'sha Fluker.
WNBA draft
Round Pick Player Nationality School/Club Team 1 7 Katie Gearlds Purdue 3 33 Brandie Hoskins Ohio State
Regular season
Season standings
Season schedule
Date Opponent Score Result Record May 19 Houston 82-69 Win 1-0 May 23 Phoenix 100-87 Win 2-0 May 25 @ San Antonio 71-82 Loss 2-1 June 2 San Antonio 68-78 Loss 2-2 June 7 @ Sacramento 72-81 Loss 2-3 June 9 Minnesota 90-76 Win 3-3 June 12 @ Chicago 81-69 Win 4-3 June 13 @ Indiana 62-90 Loss 4-4 June 15 Houston 84-71 Win 5-4 June 20 Detroit 71-87 Loss 5-5 June 22 @ Minnesota 76-78 Loss 5-6 June 24 @ Los Angeles 83-71 Win 6-6 June 26 Chicago 94-76 Win 7-6 June 28 @ Houston 76-81 Loss 7-7 July 1 New York 84-53 Win 8-7 July 3 Los Angeles 90-71 Win 9-7 July 6 @ Houston 71-55 Win 10-7 July 7 @ San Antonio 73-80 Loss 10-8 July 10 @ Los Angeles 82-47 Win 11-8 July 11 Connecticut 63-76 Loss 11-9 July 17 @ Phoenix 79-89 Loss 11-10 July 20 @ Connecticut 58-76 Loss 11-11 July 22 @ New York 77-75 Win 12-11 July 24 @ Washington 96-97 (OT) Loss 12-12 July 27 Indiana 89-75 Win 13-12 July 29 San Antonio 88-92 Loss 13-13 July 31 Sacramento 74-78 Loss 13-14 August 3 @ Sacramento 76-82 Loss 13-15 August 4 Phoenix 111-101 Win 14-15 August 7 @ Minnesota 74-95 Loss 14-16 August 9 @ Detroit 70-97 Loss 14-17 August 11 Washington 91-68 Win 15-17 August 14 Minnesota 81-67 Win 16-17 August 17 Los Angeles 97-77 Win 17-17
Playoffs
Game Date Opponent Score Result Record Western Conference Semifinals 1 August 24 Phoenix 84-101 Loss 0-1 2 August 26 @ Phoenix 89-95 Loss 0-2
Player stats
Player GP REB AST STL BLK PTS Lauren Jackson 31 300 40 31 63 739 Betty Lennox 34 160 92 36 5 454 Iziane Castro Marques 34 96 95 35 4 419 Sue Bird 29 57 143 43 8 303 Janell Burse 29 154 22 13 28 256 Wendy Palmer 34 145 17 15 7 156 Tanisha Wright 34 43 69 31 2 139 Katie Gearlds 33 53 24 12 6 132 Shyra Ely 29 39 11 8 1 65 Ashley Robinson 33 100 14 16 25 48 Doneeka Lewis 6 2 6 1 0 10 Astou Ndiaye-Diatta 4 7 0 1 1 10 Shona Thorburn 2 1 0 0 0 2 Tye'sha Fluker 9 7 0 0 1 1
Awards and honors
Lauren Jackson, WNBA Most Valuable Player Award
Lauren Jackson, WNBA Defensive Player of the Year Award
Lauren Jackson, WNBA Peak Performer (Points)
Lauren Jackson, WNBA Peak Performer (Rebounds)
References
External links
Storm on Basketball Reference
Category:Seattle Storm seasons
Seattle
Category:2007 in sports in Washington (state)
Category:2007 in Seattle
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Seattle_Storm_season
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.474630
|
25870644
|
The Best American Mystery and Suspense
|
The Best American Mystery and Suspense is an annual anthology of North American mystery and thriller stories. Prior to 2021, its title was The Best American Mystery Stories and it was published by Houghton Mifflin through the year 2017. It has been part of The Best American Series since 1997, it is published by Mariner Books, an imprint of HarperCollins.
Works for each edition are selected like the other The Best American Series titles, whereby a series editor chooses about 50 candidates from which a guest editor picks about 20 for publication. Runners-up are listed in the appendix. The editor of the series during 1997–2020, Otto Penzler, defined eligible mystery stories as "any work of fiction in which a crime or the threat of a crime is central to the theme or plot" and only considered those that had been written by an American or Canadian and published for the first time during the previous calendar year in an American or Canadian publication.
Series editors
Otto Penzler (1997–2020)
Steph Cha (2021–)
Guest editors
1997: Robert B. Parker
1998: Sue Grafton
1999: Ed McBain
2000: Donald Westlake
2001: Lawrence Block
2002: James Ellroy
2003: Michael Connelly
2004: Nelson DeMille
2005: Joyce Carol Oates
2006: Scott Turow
2007: Carl Hiaasen
2008: George Pelecanos
2009: Jeffery Deaver
2010: Lee Child
2011: Harlan Coben
2012: Robert Crais
2013: Lisa Scottoline
2014: Laura Lippman
2015: James Patterson
2016: Elizabeth George
2017: John Sandford
2018: Louise Penny
2019: Jonathan Lethem
2020: C. J. Box
2021: Alafair Burke
2022: Jess Walter
2023: Lisa Unger
2024: SA Cosby
See also
The Best American Mystery Stories 1997
The Best American Mystery Stories 2003
The Best American Mystery Stories 2009
References
Category:Book series introduced in 1997
Mystery Stories
Category:Publications established in 1997
Category:Houghton Mifflin books
Category:Mariner Books books
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Best_American_Mystery_and_Suspense
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.490850
|
25870647
|
Hugh Luttrell (Liberal politician)
|
thumb|200px|Hugh Luttrell
thumb|200px|Arms of Luttrell: Or, a bend between six martlets sable
Hugh Courtenay Fownes Luttrell (10 February 1857 – 14 January 1918) was a British Liberal Party politician.
He was elected at the 1892 general election as Member of Parliament (MP) for the Tavistock division of Devon, regaining a seat where the Liberal MP Viscount Ebrington had joined the Liberal Unionists after his election in 1885. Luttrell's majority was a slender 2.5% of the votes, and although he increased it slightly in 1895, he did not contest the seat in 1900, on account of ill-health. The Liberal Unionist John Ward Spear won it with a majority of only 15 votes. Luttrell stood again at the 1906 general election and regained the seat by a wide margin, but his majority was cut in January 1910 and at the December 1910 general election Spear unseated him for a second time.
References
External links
Category:1857 births
Category:1918 deaths
Category:Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Category:UK MPs 1892–1895
Category:UK MPs 1895–1900
Category:UK MPs 1906–1910
Hugh
Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Tavistock
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Luttrell_(Liberal_politician)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.493869
|
25870651
|
Lý Thần Tông
|
Lý Thần Tông (1116–1138), personal name Lý Dương Hoán, was the fifth emperor of the Lý dynasty, reigning over Đại Việt from 1127 to his death in 1138. Becoming the ruler of Đại Việt at the age of twelve, Lý Thần Tông successfully maintained the order of the royal court and strengthened the stability of the country with the assistance of capable officials. For that reason, Đại Việt under Lý Thần Tông was able to witness a peaceful period like during the reign of his predecessors. However, Lý Thần Tông died at age 22 before passing the throne to his crown prince Lý Thiên Tộ.
Early years
Lý Dương Hoán was born in the summer of 1116 as Lý Dương Hoán to Lady Đỗ and the Marquis of Sùng Hiền (Vietnamese: Sùng Hiền hầu) who was son of the Emperor Lý Thánh Tông and younger brother of the Emperor Lý Nhân Tông. According to the Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư, Lý Dương Hoán was born right after the death of the monk Từ Đạo Hạnh, one of the most important figures of the Early Lý dynasty, which implied that Lý Dương Hoán might be the incarnation of Từ Đạo Hạnh. At that time, the Emperor Lý Nhân Tông was unable to have his own child, and thus he decided to adopt sons of the Marquises Sùng Hiền, Thành Khánh, Thành Quảng, Thành Chiêu, Thành Hưng, so that the emperor could choose a capable successor to maintain the throne for the Lý dynasty. Finally, being an intelligent and vivacious boy, Lý Dương Hoán was made by Lý Thần Tông the crown prince of the Lý dynasty at the age of two in 1117.
In December 1127, Lý Nhân Tông died at Vĩnh Quang Palace and was succeeded by the Crown Prince Lý Dương Hoán, now Lý Thần Tông. Immediately after the coronation, Thần Tông began to regulate the royal court and the royal family in order to keep the stability of the Lý dynasty in the wake of Nhân Tông's death. This action of Lý Thần Tông was criticized by contemporary historians Lê Văn Hưu and Ngô Sĩ Liên who thought that Lý Thần Tông should have been in mourning for his predecessor for a longer period to show his respect for the departed emperor.As emperor
}}
After the enthronement, Lý Thần Tông changed the era name to Thiên Thuận (1128–1132) and made his adoptive mother Lady Trần Anh the Empress Mother of the Lý dynasty. During the reign, the Emperor changed the era name one more time to Thiên Chương Bảo Tự (1133–1138).
Although he had been not long on the Lý throne, Lý Thần Tông at once made several major changes in the royal court such as relaxing strict laws, appointing officials for important positions and maintaining diplomatic relations with the Song dynasty and the Kingdom of Champa. At that time, the Đại Việt's borders were fairly stable except for some skirmishes with the Khmer ruler Suryavarman II, starting in 1128, and Champa, which were driven out by the Lý army without difficulty. Besides the Emperor, the victory over Champa was also attributed to the protection of the Buddhist and Taoist deities, an opinion that the historian Lê Văn Hưu did not agree with since the historian thought that the victory in battlefield was solely due to the ability of the commander. Lê Văn Hưu, together with Ngô Sĩ Liên, again criticized Lý Thần Tông for his order in the first month of 1130 that every daughter of the mandarins in the royal court had to be available for the emperor's selection of concubines and ones who were not chosen could only get married afterwards. Because of the young age of the emperor, Ngô Sĩ Liên and Lê Văn Hưu often pointed their criticisms to Lý Thần Tông's officials who were considered ( by the historians ) lacking ability and being flatterers. However, Lý Thần Tông was later considered in the Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư a skilled ruler who was able to choose and use talented officials and hold the stability of the Lý dynasty. Nevertheless, Lý Thần Tông survived for only two years, he died on the 26th day of the ninth month of 1138 at the age of 23 and was succeeded by Lý Anh Tông.FamilyLý Thần Tông entitled his empress, the Empress Consort Lệ Thiên (Lệ Thiên Hoàng hậu) Lý thị in 1128. At the same time, Lý Thần Tông also married the niece Lê thị of the chancellor Lê Xương, who was entitled as Lady Minh Bảo (Minh Bảo phu nhân).
The first son of Lý Thần Tông and Lady Minh Bảo Lê thị was Lý Thiên Tộ who was born in the fourth month in Lunar calendar of 1136. In the ninth month of 1138, the ill emperor decided to make Lý Thiên Tộ his successor and downgraded Lý Thiên Lộc to Prince Minh Đạo (Minh Đạo vương) after a campaign opened by three other concubines of the Emperor, Ladies Cảm Thánh, Nhật Phụng and Phụng Thánh, who were afraid that the coronation of a concubine's son would menace their position in royal family. Besides Lý Thiên Tộ and Lý Thiên Lộc, the emperor had a stillborn daughter in 1132,ReferencesNotesBibliography*
*
*
*
|- style="text-align: center;"
|-
|-
Category:Emperors of the Lý dynasty
Category:1116 births
Category:1138 deaths
Category:People from Bắc Ninh province
Category:12th-century Vietnamese monarchs
Category:Vietnamese monarchs
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lý_Thần_Tông
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.499682
|
25870667
|
Pteraeolidia
|
Pteraeolidia is a genus of sea slugs, aeolid nudibranchs, marine gastropod molluscs in the family Facelinidae.
Species
Species within the genus Pteraeolidia include:
Pteraeolidia annulata Eliot, 1910 - synonym: Indocratena annulata (Eliot, 1910)
Pteraeolidia ianthina (Angas, 1864) - synonyms: Flabellina ianthina Angas, 1864, Flabellina scolopendrella Risbec, 1928
Pteraeolidia semperi (Bergh, 1870) - synonym: Flabellina semperi Bergh, 1870
A recent study suggests that Pteraeolidia semperi is a species complex and there are many species of it in the Indo-Pacific region.
References
Further reading
Bergh, L. S. R. 1890. Die cladohepatischen Nudibranchien. Zoologische Jahrbücher, Abtheilung für Systematik Geographie und Biologie der Thiere 5:1-75.
Bergh, L. S. R. 1892. Malacologische Untersuchungen. In: Reisen im Archipel der Philippinen von Dr. Carl Gottfried Semper. Zweiter Theil. Wissenschaftliche Resultate. Band 2, Theil 3, Heft 18, pp. 995–1165.
Bergh, L. S. R. 1905a. Die Opisthobranchiata der Siboga-Expedition. Monographie 50, pp. 1–248, pls. 1-20.
Thiele, J. 1992. Handbook of Systematic Malacology, part 2 (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata). Scientific editors of Translation: Rüdiger Bieler & Paula M. Mikkelsen. xiv + 1189 pp. Smithsonian Institution Libraries & National Science Foundation, Washington, D. C.; page 748
Vaught, K.C. (1989). A classification of the living Mollusca. American Malacologists: Melbourne, FL (USA). . XII, 195 pp
Category:Facelinidae
Category:Gastropod genera
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pteraeolidia
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.508358
|
25870672
|
Miss USA 2011
|
| acts =
| venue = Planet Hollywood Theatre for the Performing Arts, Las Vegas, Nevada
| entrants = 51
| placements = 16
| broadcaster
| before = 2010
| next = 2012
}}
Miss USA 2011 was the 60th Anniversary of the Miss USA pageant, held at the Planet Hollywood Theatre for the Performing Arts in Las Vegas, Nevada on June 19, 2011. Rima Fakih of Michigan crowned her successor, Alyssa Campanella of California, at the end of this event. This was California's sixth Miss USA title and the first title since 1992. Campanella represented the United States at the Miss Universe 2011 pageant in São Paulo, Brazil on September 12, 2011.
This pageant gained attention on the internet, when a video of all the contestant's answers to the question, whether evolution should be taught in school, was put on YouTube. Only two contestants affirmed that it should be taught, with the others confusing the question with the debate on evolution of species vs. creationism, or stating that both should be taught.
Background
Selection of participants
Delegates from 50 states and the District of Columbia were selected in state pageants which began in July 2010 and concluded in January 2011. The first state pageant was Florida, held on July 10, 2010, while the final pageant was Arkansas, held on January 9, 2011. Initially, eight of these delegates were former Miss Teen USA state winners but the number increased to nine after one titleholder resigned and former Teen USA delegate succeeded her, and one former Miss America state winner.
Two state titleholders were appointed as a replacements after the original titleholders were unable to compete. Emily Johnson, the original Miss Maine USA 2011, resigned on April 17, 2011 due to attending her sister's wedding on the day of the pageant. She was replaced by Ashley Marble, who was the first runner-up of the Miss Maine USA 2011 pageant, and Shaletta Tawanna Porterfield, the original Miss Wisconsin USA 2011, resigned on May 12, 2011 after was being charged in Dane County Circuit Court of three felony theft charges. She was replaced by Jordan Morkin, who was the first runner-up of the Miss Wisconsin USA 2011 pageant.
Delegates
{| class"wikitable sortable" style"font-size:95%;"
|-
! State/district
! Contestant
! Hometown
! Age
! Height
! Placement
! Notes
|-
| Alabama
| Madeline Mitchell
| Russellville
| 22
| 5'9"
| 2nd runner-up
| Later Mrs. America 2015
|-
| Alaska
| Jessica Chuckran
| Anchorage
| 24
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Arizona
| Brittany Brannon
| Paradise Valley
| 22
| 5'6"
| Top 16
|
|-
| Arkansas
| Lakynn McBride
| White Hall
| 20
| 5'6"
|
|
|-
| California
| Alyssa Campanella
| Los Angeles
| 21
| 5'9"
| Miss USA 2011
| Previously Miss New Jersey Teen USA 2007
|-
| Colorado
| Blair Griffith
| Denver
| 23
| 5'6"
|
| Previously Miss Colorado Teen USA 2006
Later Top 20 Miss Grand International 2013
|-
| Connecticut
| Regina Turner
| Hartford
| 21
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Delaware
| Katie Hanson
| Newark
| 20
| 5'7"
|
| Contestant of Survivor: Philippines
|-
| District of Columbia
| Heather Swann
| Washington, D.C.
| 23
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Florida
| Lissette Garcia
| Miami
| 26
| 5'11"
| Top 16
|
|-
| Georgia
| Kaylin Reque
| Suwanee
| 22
| 5'10"
| Top 16
|
|-
| Hawaii
| Angela Byrd
| Honolulu
| 23
| 5'10"
| Top 8
|
|-
| Idaho
| Erza Haliti
| Meridian
| 20
| 5'6"
|
|
|-
| Illinois
| Angela Sparrow
| Chicago
| 25
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Indiana
| Jillian Wunderlich
| Kokomo
| 20
| 5'6"
| Top 16
| Previously Miss Florida Teen USA 2008
|-
| Iowa
| Rebecca Goldsmith
| Chariton
| 26
| 5'9"
|
|
|-
| Kansas
| Jaymie Stokes
| Lenexa
| 20
| 5'11"
|
| Previously Miss Kansas Teen USA 2007
|-
| Kentucky
| Kia Hampton
| Louisville
| 22
| 5'5"
|
|
|-
| Louisiana
| Page Pennock
| Shreveport
| 21
| 5'9"
|
|
|-
| Maine
| Ashley Lynn Marble
|Topsfield
| 27
| 5'10"
| Top 8
| Previously Miss Maine Teen USA 2000<br>Originally first runner-up, assumed the title after winner Emily Johnson resigned in April 2011 due to attending the latter's sister's wedding.
|-
| Maryland
| Allyn Rose
| Newburg
| 22
| 5'8"
| Top 8
| Later Miss District of Columbia 2012
|-
| Massachusetts
| Alida D'Angona
| Boston
| 24
| 5'8"
|
|
|-
| Michigan
| Channing Pierce
| Royal Oak
| 24
| 5'9"
|
|
|-
| Minnesota
| Brittany Lee Thelemann
| Plymouth
| 24
| 5'9"
|
|
|-
| Mississippi
| Keeley Patterson
| Starkville
| 20
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Missouri
| Hope Driskill
| Jefferson City
| 22
| 5'9"
| Top 16
| Contestant of Survivor: Caramoan
|-
| Montana
| Brittany Wiser
| Bozeman
| 23
| 5'9"
|
| Previously Miss Montana 2009
|-
| Nebraska
| Haley Herold
| Omaha
| 23
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Nevada
| Sarah Chapman
| Henderson
| 27
| 5'10"
|
| Sister of Ellen Chapman, Miss California USA 2004
|-
| New Hampshire
| LacyJane Folger
| Farmington
| 22
| 5'6"
|
|
|-
| New Jersey
| Julianna White
| Haddon Township
| 22
| 5'7"
|
| Previously Miss New Jersey Teen USA 2006
|-
| New Mexico
| Brittany Toll
| Las Cruces
| 24
| 5'9"
| Top 16
| Previously Miss New Mexico Teen USA 2005
|-
| New York
| Amber Collins
| Manhattan
| 26
| 5'9"
| Top 16
|
|-
| North Carolina
| Brittany Leigh York
| Wilmington
| 21
| 5'6"
|
|
|-
| North Dakota
| Brandi Schoenberg
| Bismarck
| 26
| 5'10"
|
|
|-
|Ohio
| Ashley Caldwell
| Gallipolis
| 24
| 5'8"
|
|
|-
| Oklahoma
| Kaitlyn Smith
| Norman
| 22
| 5'9"
|
|
|-
| Oregon
| Anna Prosser
| Portland
| 26
| 5'8"
|
| Contestant at National Sweetheart 2008
|-
| Pennsylvania
| Amber-Joi Watkins
| Philadelphia
| 26
| 5'7"
|
|
|-
| Rhode Island
| Kate McCaughey
| Lincoln
| 23
| 5'4"
|
|
|-
| South Carolina
| Courtney Hope Turner
| North Augusta
| 21
| 5'7"
| Top 8
|
|-
| South Dakota
| Chandra Burnham
| Highmore
| 23
| 5'3"
|
|
|-
| Tennessee
| Ashley Durham
| Adamsville
| 21
| 5'8"
| 1st runner-up
| Previously Miss Tennessee Teen USA 2006
|-
| Texas
| Ana Rodriguez
| Laredo
| 25
| 5'8"
| 3rd runner-up
|
|-
| Utah
| Jamie Crandall
| Salt Lake City
| 23
| 5'8"
| Top 16
|
|-
| Vermont
| Lauren Carter
| Burlington
| 21
| 5'8"
|
|
|-
| Virginia
| Nikki Poteet
| Richmond
| 24
| 5'10"
|
|
|-
| Washington
| Angelina Kayyalaynen
| Orchards
| 21
| 5'8"
|
|
|-
| West Virginia
| Whitney Veach
| Petersburg
| 24
| 5'6"
|
| Previously Miss West Virginia Teen USA 2003
|-
| Wisconsin
| Jordan Morkin
| Green Bay
| 21
| 5'4"
|
|
|-
| Wyoming
| Kaitlyn Davis
| Laramie
| 20
| 5'9"
|
|
|}
Television ratings
*In the first hour of the pageant, it earned NBC 6.6 million viewers, winning the timeslot. In the second hour, viewership rose to 7.8 million, also winning its timeslot. Both hours were the leader in the 18-49 demographic.
Notes
References
External links
* [http://www.missuniverse.com/missusa/ Miss USA official website]
*
2011
Category:June 2011 in the United States
Category:2011 beauty pageants
Category:2011 in Nevada
Category:Zappos Theater
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_USA_2011
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.527487
|
25870688
|
Alfred Wood (cricketer)
|
| birth_place = Portsmouth, Hampshire, England
| death_date
| death_place = Southsea, Hampshire, England
| heightft | heightinch
| batting = Unknown
| bowling | role
| club1 = Hampshire
| year1 = 1901
| columns = 1
| column1 = First-class
| matches1 = 1
| runs1 = 22
| bat avg1 = 11.00
| 100s/50s1 = –/–
| top score1 = 11
| hidedeliveries = true
| catches/stumpings1 = 1/–
| date = 19 January
| year = 2010
| source = http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/22494.html Cricinfo
}}
Alfred Herbert Wood (23 April 1866 — 19 April 1941) was an English first-class cricketer who was private secretary to Arthur Conan Doyle for 29 years.
The son of Robert Wood, he was born at Portsmouth in April 1866. He was educated at Portsmouth Grammar School, before matriculating on an open mathematics scholarship to Brasenose College, Oxford. After graduating from Oxford, he returned to Portsmouth to become an assistant master at Portsmouth Grammar School. Batting twice in the match, he was dismissed for 11 runs by Len Braund in Hampshire's first innings, before being dismissed for the same score in their second innings by Beaumont Cranfield. Wood was a member of the Marylebone Cricket Club. He served in the First World War, gaining the temporary rank of major in September 1915. During the war, he saw action on the Western Front, and later on the Italian front in 1918.ReferencesExternal links*
Category:1866 births
Category:1941 deaths
Category:Cricketers from Portsmouth
Category:People educated at The Portsmouth Grammar School
Category:Alumni of Brasenose College, Oxford
Category:Schoolteachers from Hampshire
Category:English Freemasons
Category:English cricketers
Category:Hampshire cricketers
Category:Arthur Conan Doyle
Category:Territorial Force officers
Category:British Army personnel of World War I
Category:Royal Sussex Regiment officers
Category:Military personnel from Portsmouth
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Wood_(cricketer)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.549701
|
25870696
|
Bejucal (Mesoamerican site)
|
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|mapsize = 250
|country =
|region |municipality
|nearest_town |culture
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|conquered_by |abandoned
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Bejucal is a Maya archaeological site in the Petén Department of Guatemala. It is located northeast of El Zotz and was subservient to that city. The site is thought to date to the second half of the 4th century AD, in the Early Classic period.
Location
The site is located within the San Miguel La Palotada biotope in the municipality of San José in the department of Petén in northern Guatemala. The biotope is a part of the Maya Biosphere Reserve that is bordered on the east by the Tikal National Park and surrounded on all other sides by designated multiple-use zones of the Reserve. Bejucal is situated west of the ruins of Tikal.
History
Bejucal was the original capital of the royal dynasty that later ruled El Zotz, apparently transferring their capital to that city.
The Teotihuacan-linked general Siyaj K'ak' ("Fire is Born") conquered Bejucal in the 4th century, together with many other sites in Petén, including the great city of Tikal.
A text at the site mentions Siyaj K'ak' as overlord of Bejucal in AD 381. Stela 1 from Bejucal also indicates that Siyaj K'ak' was overlord of nearby El Zotz. From around this time the kings of Bejucal began to refer to themselves as vassals of Tikal, their giant neighbour, using the y ajaw phrase meaning subordinate lord.
Inscriptions at Bejucal all fit within a very short 40-year span in the second half of the 4th century, ending about AD 396. The abrupt cessation of inscriptions at Bejucal is possibly the result of the expansion of the Tikal polity.
In the late 1970s Ian Graham visited Bejucal and recorded two stelae and a sculpted altar.
Notes
References
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Category:Maya sites in Petén Department
Category:Archaeological sites in Guatemala
Category:Former populated places in Guatemala
Category:Populated places established in the 4th century
Category:4th-century establishments in the Maya civilization
Category:4th-century disestablishments in Central America
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bejucal_(Mesoamerican_site)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.561511
|
25870699
|
Antonio Gaudi (film)
|
-->
| starring = Antoni Gaudí
| narrator <!-- or: |narrators -->
| music | cinematography
| editing | studio <!-- or: |production_companies = -->
| distributor <!-- or: |distributors -->
| released =
| runtime = 72 minutes
| country = Japan
| language | budget
| gross = <!--(please use condensed and rounded values, e.g. "£11.6 million" not "£11,586,221")-->
}}
is a 1984 Japanese documentary film by Hiroshi Teshigahara about the works of Antoni Gaudí. In the film the director visits the buildings including houses in Barcelona and the Sagrada Família.
Reception
The Village Voice wrote a review describing the film as "Something of a passion project, completed decades after an earlier visit by the director, the film is given over to an eager, rolling catalog of Gaudí's fin-de-siècle works sans much voiceover or any explanatory text". The New York Times wrote that "Much of the imagery in 'Gaudi' is nothing less than astounding in its beauty and boldness, and the blending of a neo-Gothic mysticism and grandeur with an Art Nouveau line and a surreal apprehension of the power of nature".
See also
* List of Gaudí buildings
References
External links
*
*
*[https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/552-antonio-gaud-border-crossings Antonio Gaudí: Border Crossings] an essay by Dore Ashton at the Criterion Collection
Category:1984 films
Category:1980s Spanish-language films
Category:Documentary films about architecture
Category:Japanese documentary films
Category:1984 documentary films
Category:Films directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara
Category:1980s Japanese films
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Gaudi_(film)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.565292
|
25870701
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Webster Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
thumb|Location of Webster Parish in Louisiana
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Webster Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 19 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish.
Current listings
|}
See also
List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Webster Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Webster_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.572219
|
25870714
|
Joel Kleefisch
|
| birth_place = Waukesha, Wisconsin, U.S.
| spouse = Rebecca Reed
| children = 2
| party = Republican
| residence = Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, U.S.
| education = Pepperdine University (BA)
}}
Joel M. Kleefisch ( ; born June 8, 1971) is a former American politician and a former television reporter who now works as a lobbyist. He served fourteen years in the Wisconsin State Assembly, representing parts of Waukesha, Jefferson, and eastern Dane counties. His wife, Rebecca Kleefisch, was the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin.
Early life and education
Born in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Kleefisch graduated from Waukesha North High School in 1989. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Pepperdine University in 1993.
Career
Kleefisch worked as a news researcher for KCBS-TV in Los Angeles during the summer of 1992. Upon graduation from Pepperdine he worked as a reporter for WREX-TV in Rockford, Illinois from 1993 to 1994. Kleefisch then was hired by WISN-TV to work the assignment desk and as a part-time reporter in 1994, before becoming a full-time general assignment reporter, where he worked until entering politics. As a reporter at WISN-TV, he appeared on CNN to discuss the trial of Mark Chmura. He won an award for "Best investigative report or series" from the Milwaukee Press Club in 1999 for a piece about date rape drugs.
Kleefisch was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly in 2004, and was re-elected in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, and 2016.
Kleefisch did not seek re-election in 2018 and was succeeded by Barbara Dittrich. Personal life Kleefisch met his wife when she was also a reporter and anchor for WISN. They married in 1999 after she moved to the station from Rockford, Illinois. The couple have two children.ReferencesExternal links
*[http://www.todaystmj4.com/features/iteam/140096183.html "Rep. Joel Kleefisch allegedly caught voting for absent member", Feb. 22, 2012]
Category:1971 births
Category:Living people
Category:Journalists from Wisconsin
Category:Republican Party members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Category:People from Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
Category:Politicians from Waukesha County, Wisconsin
Category:Politicians from Waukesha, Wisconsin
Category:American evangelicals
Category:Pepperdine University alumni
Category:American television reporters and correspondents
Category:21st-century members of the Wisconsin Legislature
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joel_Kleefisch
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.582351
|
25870734
|
Paul McPhillips
|
|birth_place = Glasgow, Scotland
|death_date |death_place
| Sport country =
| Professional = 1991–1997, 1998–2001
| High ranking = 59 (1994/1995)
| Official maximums | Best finish Last 16 (x2)
| Ranking wins | World champ
}}
Paul McPhillips (born 27 March 1971) is a Scottish former professional snooker player. He is best known as the regular practice partner of Stephen Hendry.
Amateur career
McPhillips was the UK Junior Champion in 1987. In 1990, he was defeated by Alan McManus in the final of the Scottish Amateur Championship.Pro careerMcPhillips turned Pro in 1991. In the 1992 Classic he reached the last 32 by defeating former world champion Joe Johnson. He defeated Ronnie O'Sullivan to reach the Last 16 of the 1994 Welsh Open but was beaten by Steve Davis and he also finished runners up to Matthew Stevens at the 1995 Benson & Hedges Championship in Edinburgh, he reached no. 59 in the Snooker world rankings 1994/1995 as a result. At the 1997 British Open, he reached the last 16 but was narrowly defeated by Stephen Hendry.
During the 1997/98 season, he defeated Michael Holt 6–5 to win the 1st event, in Event 4 he reached the last 16 and at Event 5 he reached the Quarter Final to claim the overall UK Tour.
He had another notable victory in 3rd Qualifying round of the 2001 Embassy World Snooker Championship against Tony Jones.
In the later stages of his career he reached the preliminary round at the 2011 Scottish Professional Championship. and at the 2015 World Seniors Championship he was defeated in the quarter finals by John Parrott.
Career finals
Non-ranking finals: 2 (1 title)
{| class="sortable wikitable"
!width="80"| Outcome
!width="20"| No.
!width="50"| Year
!style="width:250px;"| Championship
!style="width:200px;"| Opponent in the final
!style="width:100px;"| Score
|-
| style="background:#ffa07a;"|Runner-up
| 1.
| 1995
| Benson & Hedges Championship
| Matthew Stevens
| 3–9
|-
| style="background:#98FB98"|Winner
| 1.
| 1997
| UK Tour – Event 1
| Michael Holt
| 6–5
|}
Amateur finals: 1
{| class="sortable wikitable"
!width="80"| Outcome
!width="20"| No.
!width="50"| Year
!width="250"| Championship
!width="200"| Opponent in the final
!width="100"| Score
|-
| style="background:#ffa07a;"|Runner-up
| 1.
| 1990
| Scottish Amateur Championship
|
| 5–9
|}
Results
*1989 WPBSA Pro Ticket Series - Event 3 - Quarter Final
*1991 Benson & Hedges Championship Satellite Championship - last 16
*1992 Welsh Open last 64
*1992 Classic (snooker) last 32
*1993 Welsh Open last 64
*1993 European Open (1992/1993) last 64
*1994 British Open last 64
*1994 Grand Prix (snooker) last 64
*1995 International Open last 64
*1995 Welsh Open last 64
*1996 Grand Prix (snooker) last 32
*1997 WPBSA Qualifying School - Event 2 - last 32
*1997 WPBSA Qualifying School - Event 3 - last 32
*1997 International Open last 64
*1998 UK Tour - Event 2 - 32
*1998 UK Tour - Event 5 - Quarter Final
*1998 UK Tour - Event 4 - last 16
*2000 Grand Prix (snooker) last 48
*2001 Challenge Tour (snooker) - Event 2 -last 16
*2001 Challenge Tour (snooker) - Event 1 -last 16
*2002 Challenge Tour (snooker) - Event 3 -last 32
*2002 Challenge Tour (snooker) - Event 4 -last 32
References
External links
*
Category:Scottish snooker players
Category:1971 births
Category:Living people
Category:Snooker players from Glasgow
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_McPhillips
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.595074
|
25870743
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 22 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish. Another property was once listed, but has been removed.
Current listings
west of LA 27
|city=DeQuincy vicinity
|county=Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana
|date=1986-02-13
|image|lat30.43679
|lon=-93.4336
|coordsource=ProprioMeOW
|description=<!-- Description goes here -->
}}
south of East Sale Road
|city=Lake Charles
|county=Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana
|date=1989-05-05
|image|lat30.18177
|lon=-93.21735
|coordsource=ProprioMeOW
|description=<!-- Description goes here -->
}}
to include nearby Berdon-Campbell Store.
}}
|}
Former listings
|}
See also
*List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
*National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Calcasieu Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Calcasieu_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.610432
|
25870756
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 24 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish, and one former listing.
Current listings
area Nature Preserve is roughly bounded by Bayou Coquilles, Bayou des Familles, Bayou Barataria, Bayou Villars, and Lake Salvador.
|commonscat=Barataria Preserve
}}
.
|commonscat=David Crockett Fire Hall and Pumper
}}
.
}}
|}
See also
*List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
*National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Jefferson Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Jefferson_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.626979
|
25870779
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 17 properties listed on the National Register in the parish, and one former listing.
Current listings
|}
Former listings
|}
See also
*List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
*National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Jefferson Davis Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Jefferson_Davis_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.666206
|
25870791
|
Piedras Blancas State Marine Reserve and Marine Conservation Area
|
thumb|Coastline of the Piedras Blancas SMCA. Piedras Blancas Light Station is in the background.
thumb|Elephant seal mother and pup, Piedras Blancas rookery 2009
thumb|Piedras Blancas SMCA and seal colony
thumb|Piedras Blancas Elephant Seal rookery, January 2013
thumb|Elephant seals
Piedras Blancas State Marine Reserve (SMR) and Piedras Blancas State Marine Conservation Area (SMCA) are two adjoining marine protected areas that lie offshore of San Luis Obispo County on California's central coast. The combined area of these marine protected areas is . The SMR protects all marine life within its boundaries. Fishing and take of all living marine resources is prohibited. Within the SMCA fishing and take of all living marine resources is prohibited except the commercial and recreational take of salmon and albacore.
History
Piedras Blancas SMR and Piedras Blancas SMCA were established in September 2007 by the California Department of Fish & Game. They are two of 29 marine protected areas adopted during the first phase of the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. The Marine Life Protection Act Initiative (or MLPAI) is a collaborative public process to create a statewide network of marine protected areas along the California coastline. Many migratory whales most notably gray whales pass and rest through the area in annual seasons, and there had been a sighting of a North Pacific right whale, the most rare of large whales in the world in 1995.
Geography and natural features
These two marine protected areas adjoin each other off the coast of San Luis Obispo County.
The Piedras Blancas SMR is bounded by the mean high tide line and straight lines connecting the following points in the order listed:
35° 42.85' N. lat. 121° 18.95' W. long.;
35° 42.85' N. lat. 121° 21.00' W. long.;
35° 39.15' N. lat. 121° 18.50' W. long.; and
35° 39.15' N. lat. 121° 14.45' W. long.
The Piedras Blancas SMCA is bounded by the mean high tide line and straight lines connecting the following points in the order listed except where noted: Activities such as kayaking, diving, snorkeling, and swimming are allowed unless otherwise restricted.
Scientific monitoring
As specified by the Marine Life Protection Act, select marine protected areas along California's central coast are being monitored by scientists to track their effectiveness and learn more about ocean health. Similar studies in marine protected areas located off of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands have already detected gradual improvements in fish size and number.
Local scientific and educational institutions involved in the monitoring include Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station, University of California Santa Cruz, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Research methods include hook-and-line sampling, intertidal and scuba diver surveys, and the use of Remote Operated Vehicle (ROV) submarines.
References
External links
California MPAs
Marine Life Protection Act Initiative
CalOceans
Hearst San Simeon State Historic Monument
Piedras Blancas Light Station
Friends of the Elephant Seal
Category:Marine reserves of the United States
Category:Protected areas established in 2007
Category:2007 establishments in California
Category:Marine sanctuaries in California
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piedras_Blancas_State_Marine_Reserve_and_Marine_Conservation_Area
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.677693
|
25870797
|
Stuart Davis (album)
|
Stuart Davis is the ninth studio album released by Stuart Davis.
Track listing
"Surfaces"
"Babies"
"Rock Stars And Models"
"Dresden"
"Fault Lines"
"Invincible"
"Savoring Samsara"
"Doppelganger Body Donor"
"Immanence
"Ladder"
"Dive"
"Swim"
"Drown"
References
Category:2001 albums
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuart_Davis_(album)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.683894
|
25870807
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 18 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish, including 2 National Historic Landmarks.
Current listings
|}
See also
*List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
*National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
St. John the Baptist Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_St._John_the_Baptist_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.692303
|
25870823
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 21 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish. Another property was once listed but has been removed.
Current listings
|}
Former listing
|}
See also
*List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
*National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Terrebonne Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Terrebonne_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.700626
|
25870828
|
Minuscule 568
|
| type = Byzantine text-type
| cat = V
| hand | note
}}
Minuscule 568 (in the Gregory-Aland numbering), ε 189 (in the Soden numbering), is a Greek minuscule manuscript of the New Testament, on parchment. Palaeographically it has been assigned to the 10th century. Description The codex contains a complete text of the four Gospels on 259 parchment leaves (size ). It has ornamented head-pieces. The writing is in one column per page, 24 lines per page.
Text
The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine text-type. Hermann von Soden classified it to the K<sup>ak</sup> (with hesitation). Aland placed it in Category V.
According to the Claremont Profile Method it represents the textual family K<sup>x</sup> in Luke 1, Luke 10, and Luke 20.
History
The manuscript was presented by consul of Syra, Sandrinus.
Gregory by 568.<ref name = Gregory/>
Currently the manuscript is housed at the Russian National Library (Gr. 67) in Saint Petersburg.<ref name Aland/> See also
* List of New Testament minuscules
* Biblical manuscript
* Textual criticism
References
Further reading
* Eduard de Muralt, [https://books.google.com/books?id=dc4WAAAAQAAJ Catalogue des manuscrits grecs de la Bibliothèque Impériale publique] (Petersburg 1864).
* Kurt Treu, Die griechischen Handschriften des Neuen Testaments in der UdSSR; eine systematische Auswertung des Texthandschriften in Leningrad, Moskau, Kiev, Odessa, Tbiblisi und Erevan, Texte und Untersuchungen 91 (Berlin, 1966), pp. 50–53.
External links
* [http://www.nlr.ru/eng/exib/Gospel/viz/7.html Minuscule 568] at the Russian national Library
Category:Greek New Testament minuscules
Category:10th-century biblical manuscripts
Category:National Library of Russia collection
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minuscule_568
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.705840
|
25870841
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
thumb|Location of Vermilion Parish in Louisiana
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 20 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish.
Current listings
|}
See also
List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Vermilion Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Vermilion_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.712824
|
25870847
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Vernon Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
thumb|Location of Vernon Parish in Louisiana
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Vernon Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Vernon Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 16 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the parish.
Current listings
|}
See also
List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Vernon Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Vernon_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.719176
|
25870854
|
National Register of Historic Places listings in Washington Parish, Louisiana
|
__NOTOC__
thumb|Location of Washington Parish in Louisiana
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Washington Parish, Louisiana.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
There are 18 properties listed on the National Register in the parish.
Current listings
|}
See also
List of National Historic Landmarks in Louisiana
National Register of Historic Places listings in Louisiana
References
*
Washington Parish
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Washington_Parish,_Louisiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.729990
|
25870882
|
Center for China and Globalization
|
| native name = 全球化智库
| type = Think tank
| headquarters = Beijing
| leader_title = President
| leader_name = Wang Huiyao
| leader_title2 = Secretary General
| leader_name2 = Mable Lu Miao
| affiliations | website
| founder = Wang Huiyao; Mable Miao Lu
}}
The Center for China and Globalization (CCG) is a Chinese think tank based in Beijing. It is registered as a non-governmental organization, though its independence from the Chinese Communist Party has been disputed. It also occasionally suffered attacks and censorship within China.
Leadership
CCG was founded in 2008 by Wang Huiyao and Mable Miao Lu, scholars who are reported to have ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Wang is a central committee member of the Jiusan Society, one of the country's eight legally-permitted minor political parties under the direction of the CCP. Wang has also served as a counselor to the State Council appointed by Premier Li Keqiang. According to The Economist, Wang is a "something of a go-between for technocratic government ministries, Chinese entrepreneurs and foreign embassies in Beijing." Victor Gao is a vice president of the CCG. Political stance Residency permits As a counselor to the State Council, CCG's Wang Huiyao and Mabel Lu Miao have advocated for easing the residency requirements for foreign citizens in China. In 2020, the Ministry of Justice published a draft legislation outlining new paths to permanent residence, sparking controversy among Chinese nationalists who opposed the move. Wang was vilified by nationalists for supporting the permanent residency scheme.
Criticism of external propaganda
In 2021, CCG hosted an event critical of China's external propaganda as "mirroring internal propaganda in external propaganda." As a result, CCG and the scholars were targeted and media posts related to the event began to disappear.
Wang Huiyao, president of CCG, was previously a vice chairman of the Western Returned Scholars Association (WRSA). He has been a standing director of the China Overseas Friendship Association (COFA).
CCG has argued that it is financed primarily by private and corporate donors without government funding, and that Wang's involvement with the WRSA was merely an advisory role on its council, not formal employment. In 2023, CCG denied being "founded, run, or financed" by the WRSA, explaining that to navigate the stringent legal requirements for private think tanks, the organization had<blockquote>incorrectly said WRSA was one initiator of CCG. In trying to survive, exist, and develop, CCG staff took advantage of what was plausibly available in an imperfect development environment and felt then it was preferable to mention what could be its most plausible link to an organization with over 100 years of history—longer than the CPC or PRC.
Wilson Center panel
In 2018, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars invited CCG president Wang Huiyao to a Kissinger Institute panel on Chinese influence operations in Washington, DC on May 9. In a letter to the Wilson Center, U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, then chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, asked the think tank to disclose Wang's affiliation with the United Front Work Department (UFWD). He visited the Wilson Center in person in 2019 and spoke virtually at a panel in 2020. Collaboration with Semafor In March 2023, U.S. news startup Semafor launched its "China and Global Business" initiative in partnership with CCG and the Chinese foreign ministry-affiliated China Public Diplomacy Association. Justin B. Smith, CEO of Semafor, wrote that the company was not "under the illusion that Chinese business leaders or other local groups operate independently of the Chinese Communist Party." Due to Chinese legal requirements, however, CCG "will take on local administrative responsibilities and coordinate with local sponsors, and Semafor will pay CCG for their services. The platform will be exclusively underwritten by corporate partnerships with no financial contributions from our local Chinese partners or the Chinese government."
Sara Fischer and Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian, reporting for Axios, wrote that the "speech and activities of Chinese Communist Party-linked groups are strongly influenced by Beijing. Semafor has not detailed how it plans to disclose to its audiences during live events or via digital coverage details about the group's affiliation to the CCP."See also
* Government-organized non-governmental organization
* China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations
References
External links
*
Category:Political and economic think tanks based in China
Category:Foreign policy and strategy think tanks in China
Category:Global economic research
Category:Think tanks established in 2008
Category:United front (China)
Category:2008 in Beijing
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_China_and_Globalization
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.746667
|
25870902
|
Ely Racecourse
|
thumb|Ely Racecourse
Ely Racecourse was a horse racing venue in the Ely district of Cardiff, Wales. The racecourse opened in 1855, with the first race being held on 30 May. By 1864 racing at Ely was a regular event, the races that year were acclaimed as 'the most brilliant and successful ever held'.
History
In 1895 the first Welsh Grand National was held at the Ely Racecourse. It was watched by over 40,000 people, many of whom did not pay for entry after charging the entry gates and overpowering the stewards.
In the early 1900s attendance figures began to steadily decline and the racecourse never fully recovered from a fire that destroyed the grandstand in 1937.
The last race to be held there, in 1939, was won by Grasshopper, ridden by Keith Piggott, father of the famous jockey Lester Piggott.
Trelai Park is now on the site of the racecourse.
Further reading
See also
Sport in Cardiff
See my book The Welsh Grand National - From Deerstalker to Emperor's Choice.
Published by the History Press.
References
Category:Defunct horse racing venues in Wales
Category:History of Cardiff
Category:Sports venues in Cardiff
Category:Defunct sports venues in Wales
Category:Sports venues completed in 1855
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ely_Racecourse
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.749267
|
25870926
|
The Last One to Know (song)
|
"The Last One to Know" is a song written by Matraca Berg and Jane Mariash, and originally recorded by Karen Brooks on her 1985 album I Will Dance with You. The song was released by American country music artist Reba McEntire in September 1987 as the first single and title track from her album The Last One to Know. It was McEntire's ninth number one country hit as a solo artist. The single went to number one for one week and spent a total of fourteen weeks on the country chart.
Charts
Chart (1987)PeakpositionCanadian RPM Country Tracks2
References
Category:1987 singles
Category:1985 songs
Category:Karen Brooks songs
Category:Reba McEntire songs
Category:Songs written by Matraca Berg
Category:Song recordings produced by Jimmy Bowen
Category:MCA Records singles
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_One_to_Know_(song)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:06.770590
|
25870932
|
The Salvation Army in Namibia
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The Salvation Army has had a turbulent history in Namibia dating back to 1913 when Major Schaud set up the first corps in Walvis Bay. Little is known of this venture which is thought to have been brought to an end by the First World War after British South Africa declared war on the then German South-West Africa. In the 1920s Salvationist families kept an unofficial presence in the towns of Walvis Bay, Usakos and Tsumeb. By 1928, unofficial corps were also operating in Swakopmund and Windhoek. The Salvation Army officially returned to Namibia in 1931 with a corps being opened in the town of Usakos. The campaign ended in tragedy when Captain Claasen, the officer in charge of The Salvation Army in Namibia, was accidentally killed in Italy at the start of World War II.
On 3 January 2008, The Salvation Army returned for the second time after Major Lenah Jwili opened a new corps in the capital Windhoek. Namibia is now part of the Southern Africa Territory, which also oversees Salvation Army work in Lesotho, St Helena, South Africa and Swaziland. Currently The Salvation Army Namibia is led by Captains Edouard and Lynn Zola and predominantly serves the people in Windhoek.
References
Category:Protestantism in Namibia
Category:The Salvation Army by region
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Salvation_Army_in_Namibia
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2025-04-06T15:55:06.772590
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