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25887524
|
George Mans
|
| birth_place = Detroit, Michigan, U.S
| death_date =
| death_place = Trenton, Michigan, U.S
| alma_mater | module
}}
George W. Mans Jr. (January 31, 1940 – December 20, 2017) was an American college football player and coach and politician. He was the captain of the 1961 Michigan Wolverines football team, an assistant football coach at the University of Michigan from 1966 to 1973, and the head coach of the Eastern Michigan Eagles football (then called the Hurons) team from 1974 to 1975. Mans later went into politics, serving as the mayor of Trenton, Michigan and a member of the Michigan House of Representatives.
Biography
Athlete
Mans was born in Detroit and raised in Trenton, Michigan.
In 1958, Mans enrolled at the University of Michigan, where he played at the right end position for the Michigan Wolverines football program from 1959 to 1961. He was captain of the 1961 team that compiled a 6–3 record. Mans was , and weighed in his senior year at Michigan. After the 1961 season, Mans played for the North All-Star team in the North-South Shrine Game. but he did not play professionally.
Coach
In 1963, Mans began a career as a college football coach, accepting a position as the ends coach for the Eastern Michigan University football team. In 1966, he accepted an assistant coaching position at the University of Michigan where he remained for eight years from 1966 to 1973. Mans was one of two members of Bump Elliott's coaching staff to continue to serve under Bo Schembechler when he became coach in 1969. Mans later recalled that Schembechler brought a sharply different attitude to the program when he took over the reins: "He definitely brought a different philosophy to Michigan. He had that Ohio State background and said that in order to compete in the Big 10, we had to get tougher (with) practices, off-season conditioning and coaching."
In February 1974, Mans was hired as the head football coach at Eastern Michigan University, where he remained for the 1974 and 1975 seasons. In his first season as head coach, Mans' team started the season with only one win in the first six games, but the team finished strong, going 3–1–1 in the final five games. In May 1976, Mans announced his resignation as Eastern Michigan's coach in what the Associated Press described as a "surprise move." According to one newspaper report, Mans resigned "when it became apparent that EMU would place a greater emphasis on basketball, hiring former Detroit Pistons Coach Ray Scott." Mans compiled an 8–12–1 record in two seasons as the head football coach at Eastern Michigan.PoliticsAfter retiring from coaching, Mans entered politics in his home town of Trenton, Michigan. He was a member of the Trenton School Board of Education from 1976 to 1983 and the mayor of Trenton from 1983 to 1989. In 1996, Mans was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives as a Democrat representing the 23rd District. In 1999, Mans drew negative publicity when The Detroit News reported on its front page that Mans had the worst attendance record of any state lawmaker, having missed six of every 10 votes in the Michigan House over the past year. Mans told the News that he had been "torn" on some issues and could not decide how to cast his vote.
Mans continued to serve in the Michigan House until 2002 when term limits prevented him from running for another term. He ran an unsuccessful race for a seat in the Michigan State Senate in 2002, losing to Republican Bruce Patterson by a margin of 52,444 votes to 39,338.
As of 2005, Mans was the City Administrator of Southgate, Michigan. Since at least 2006, Mans has worked in various positions in the municipal government of Flat Rock, Michigan, including positions as City Administrator, acting City Clerk and most recently economic development director.
Mans also served as the chairman of the board of directors for the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge and has been active in efforts to develop the Humbug Marsh in Gibraltar, Michigan into a tourist destination.Head coaching record
References
Category:1940 births
Category:2017 deaths
Category:American football ends
Category:American athlete-politicians
Category:Eastern Michigan Eagles football coaches
Category:Michigan Tech Huskies football coaches
Category:Michigan Wolverines football players
Category:Michigan Wolverines football coaches
Category:Mayors of places in Michigan
Category:Democratic Party members of the Michigan House of Representatives
Category:University of Michigan Law School alumni
Category:Politicians from Detroit
Category:People from Trenton, Michigan
Category:Players of American football from Wayne County, Michigan
Category:Players of American football from Detroit
Category:People from Flat Rock, Michigan
Category:Coaches of American football from Michigan
Category:20th-century members of the Michigan Legislature
Category:21st-century members of the Michigan Legislature
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Mans
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.400213
|
25887525
|
Psilocybe banderillensis
|
Psilocybe banderillensis is a species of psilocybin mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae known from the states of Veracruz and Oaxaca in Mexico.
}}
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
banderillensis
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_banderillensis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.401972
|
25887529
|
Katsaros
|
|postal_code |area_code
|licence |website
|image_skyline |caption_skyline
|elevation_min |elevation_max
}}
Katsaros () is a settlement in the municipal unit of Iardanos, Elis, Greece. It is situated at the foot of low hills, at 80 m elevation. It is 2 km southeast of Vounargo, 2 km southwest of Fonaitika and 6 km northwest of Pyrgos
Population
{| class=wikitable
|-
! Year !! Population
|-
| 1981 || 387
|-
| 1991 || 362
|-
| 2001 || 384
|-
| 2011 || 310
|-
| 2021 || 248
|}
See also
*List of settlements in Elis
References
Category:Populated places in Elis
Category:Pyrgos, Elis
Category:Iardanos
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katsaros
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.403768
|
25887543
|
Slovenia national futsal team
|
{{Infobox National futsal team
| Name = Slovenia
| Badge | Badge_size
| FIFA Trigramme = SVN
| Nickname | Association Football Association of Slovenia
| Confederation = UEFA (Europe)
| Coach = Tomislav Horvat
| Captain = Igor Osredkar
| Most caps Igor Osredkar (187)
| Top scorer Igor Osredkar (88)
{| class"wikitable sortable" style"text-align:center;"
|-
!Name
!class="unsortable"|Period
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| Željko Pijetlovič
|1994–1995
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| Dušan Razboršek
|1995–2000
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| Darko Križman
|2001–2005
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| Andrej Dobovičnik
|2005–2020
|-
|style="text-align: left;"| Tomislav Horvat
|2020–present
|-
|}
Players
Current squad
The following players were called up for the UEFA 2024 FIFA Futsal World Cup qualification matches against Italy and Czech Republic on 15 and 20 December 2023, respectively.
Caps and goals are correct as of 20 December 2023, after the match against Czech Republic.
|caps2|goals0|clubnatSLO|club=Meteorplast}}
|caps33|goals1|clubnatSLO|club=Siliko}}
|caps19|goals0|clubnatSLO|club=Oplast Kobarid}}
|caps19|goals1|clubnatSLO|club=Siliko}}
|caps187|goals88|clubnatBIH|clubBubamara Cazin|othercaptain}}
|caps83|goals16|clubnatITA|club=Sandro Abate Avelino}}
|caps16|goals2|clubnatSLO|club=Siliko}}
|caps43|goals4|clubnatSLO|club=Dobovec}}
|caps52|goals19|clubnatSLO|club=Dobovec}}
|caps81|goals27|clubnatSUI|club=Futsal Minerva}}
|caps54|goals8|clubnatITA|club=Came Dosson}}
|caps8|goals1|clubnatSLO|club=Extrem}}
|caps54|goals18|clubnatSLO|club=Extrem}}
|caps47|goals13|clubnatCRO|club=Olmissum}}
Individual records
Most appearances{| class"wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!Rank
!class="unsortable"|Name
!Caps
|-
|1
|style="text-align: left;"|Igor Osredkar
|187
|-
|2
|style="text-align: left;"|Kristjan Čujec
|128
|-
|3
|style="text-align: left;"|Benjamin Melink
|124
|-
|4
|style="text-align: left;"|Alen Fetić
|122
|-
|5
|style="text-align: left;"|Damir Puškar
|115
|-
|6
|style="text-align: left;"|Rok Mordej
|106
|-
|7
|style="text-align: left;"|Rajko Uršič
|91
|-
|8
|style="text-align: left;"|Gašper Vrhovec
|90
|-
|9
|style="text-align: left;"|Nejc Hozjan
|83
|-
|10
|style="text-align: left;"|Matej Fideršek
|81
|-
|}
:<small>Last updated: 20 December 2023</small>
Top goalscorers{| class"wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!Rank
!class="unsortable"|Name
!Goals
|-
|1
|style="text-align: left;"|Igor Osredkar
|88
|-
|2
|style="text-align: left;"|Kristjan Čujec
|75
|-
|3
|style="text-align: left;"|Alen Fetić
|48
|-
|4
|style="text-align: left;"|Gašper Vrhovec
|45
|-
|5
|style="text-align: left;"|Rok Mordej
|41
|-
|6
|style="text-align: left;"|Benjamin Melink
|35
|-
|7
|style="text-align: left;"|Matej Fideršek
|27
|-
|8
|style="text-align: left;"|Jože Gačnik
|25
|-
|9
|style="text-align: left;"|Senudin Džafić
|24
|-
|10
|style="text-align: left;"|Milivoje Simeunović
|23
|-
|}
:<small>Last updated: 20 December 2023</small>
Competitive record
FIFA Futsal World Cup
{| class"wikitable" width50% style="text-align: center;font-size:90%;"
!colspan=9|FIFA Futsal World Cup record
|-
!width=25%|Year
!width=25%|Round
!
!
!
!
!
!
|-
|Netherlands 1989
|colspan=8|Part of Yugoslavia
|-
|Hong Kong 1992||Did not compete||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Spain 1996||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Guatemala 2000||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Chinese Taipei 2004||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Brazil 2008||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Thailand 2012||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Colombia 2016||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Lithuania 2021||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Uzbekistan 2024||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|}
UEFA European Futsal Championship
{| class"wikitable" width50% style="text-align: center;font-size:90%;"
!colspan=9|UEFA European Futsal Championship record
|-
!width=25%|Year
!width=25%|Round
!
!
!
!
!
!
|-
|Spain 1996||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Spain 1999||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Russia 2001||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Italy 2003||Group stage||3||0||0||3||7||14
|-
|Czech Republic 2005||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Portugal 2007||Did not qualify||—||—||—||—||—||—
|-
|Hungary 2010||Group stage||2||0||0||2||1||7
|-
|Croatia 2012||Group stage||2||0||0||2||5||10
|-
|Belgium 2014||Quarterfinals||3||1||0||2||9||13
|-
|Serbia 2016||Group stage||2||0||0||2||3||11
|-
|style="border: 3px solid red"|Slovenia 2018||Quarterfinals||3||1||1||1||4||5
|-
|Netherlands 2022||Group stage||3||0||2||1||7||8
|-
|Latvia/Lithuania 2026||colspan=7|To be determined
|-
!Total||7/13||18||2||3||13||36||68
|}
Grand Prix de Futsal
{| class"wikitable" width50% style="text-align: center;font-size:90%;"
|-
!colspan=9|Grand Prix de Futsal record
|-
!width=25%|Year
!width=25%|Position
!
!
!
!
!
!
|-
|Brazil 2007||Sixth place||6||2||2||2||16||17
|-
|}
Mediterranean Cup
{| class"wikitable" width50% style="text-align: center;font-size:90%;"
|-
!colspan=9|Mediterranean Cup record
|-
!width=25%|Year
!width=25%|Position
!
!
!
!
!
!
|-
|Libya 2010||Third place||6||5||0||1||32||12
|}
References
External links
*[https://www.nzs.si/reprezentanca/default.asp?id_menu=154 Official website]
Category:European national futsal teams
national
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovenia_national_futsal_team
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.425832
|
25887561
|
Harriet Lindeman
|
| residence | death_date
| death_place | office Minister of Social Affairs and Environment
| term_start =2005
| term_end =2007
| predecessor = Gun-Mari Lindholm
| successor = Katrin Sjögren
| constituency | office2 Second Deputy Speaker. the Parliament of Åland
| term_start2 =2003
| term_end2 = 2005
| office3 = Minister of Social Affairs and Environment
| term_start3 =1999
| term_end3 = 2001
| predecessor3 =Gun Carlson
| successor3 =Sune Eriksson
| constituency3 | office4 Minister of Education and Culture
| term_start4 = 1995
| term_end4 = 1999
| predecessor4 =Roger Nordlund
| successor4 =Gun Carlson
| constituency4 | office5 Deputy Premier
| term_start5 = 1991
| term_end5 = 1995
| predecessor5 =May Flodin
| successor5 =Roger Nordlund
| constituency5 | office6 Minister of Social Affairs and Environment
| term_start6 = 1991
| term_end6 = 1995
| predecessor6 =May Flodin
| successor6 =Gun Carlson
| constituency6 | party Åland Conservatives
| religion | occupation
| majority | relations
| spouse | children
| website = www.fs.ax
| footnotes =
}}
Harriet Lindeman (born 16 June 1946) is a politician in the Åland Islands, an autonomous and unilingually Swedish territory of Finland.
* Minister of Social Affairs and Environment 2005-2007
* Second Deputy Speaker of the Lagting (Åland parliament) 2003-2005
*Minister of Social Affairs and Environment 1999-2001
*Minister of Education and Culture 1995-1999
*Vice lantråd (Deputy Premier) 1991-1995
*Member of the Lagting (Åland parliament) 1987-1991
Lindeman, a nurse by profession, is one of the island group's most experienced politicians. She retired from national politics in 2007.
References
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110612225555/http://www.lagtinget.aland.fi/arkiv/lagting2001/lindeman.html Åland parliament official biography]
*[http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/aland.htm Worldwide Guide to Women in Leadership, Åland Islands entry]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110717125948/http://www.helcom.fi/press_office/news_baltic/en_GB/1156834620156/ Helsinki Commission, "Algae migrating northwards in Baltic", 14 Aug 2006]
Category:1946 births
Category:Living people
Category:Women government ministers of Åland
Category:20th-century Finnish women politicians
Category:21st-century Finnish women politicians
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_Lindeman
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.428670
|
25887581
|
Ethan Watters
|
Ethan Watters is an American journalist. He is the author of articles for The New York Times Magazine, Spin, Details, Mother Jones, Glamour, GQ, Esquire, and the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine as well as books. He has also appeared on a number of media outlets such as Good Morning America, Talk of the Nation, and CNN.
Personal
Watters is married and has children. He and his family live in San Francisco, California.
Books
With co-author Richard Ofshe
References
External links
Ethan Watters at Simon & Schuster
Category:Living people
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
Category:Anti-psychiatry
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethan_Watters
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.432081
|
25887592
|
Chrisman, Ohio
|
Chrisman is an unincorporated community in Oak Run Township, Madison County, Ohio, United States. It is located at the intersection of London-Circleville Road (State Route 56) and Gregg Mill Road (Township Highway 100), about four miles southeast of London.
Chrisman was never platted. The Chrisman Post office was established on October 16, 1896, but was discontinued on October 31, 1901. The mail service is now sent through the London branch. As of 1915, the community contained little more than a few houses.<ref nameBryan/>
References
Category:Unincorporated communities in Madison County, Ohio
Category:Unincorporated communities in Ohio
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrisman,_Ohio
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.435009
|
25887597
|
Tora-san's Tropical Fever
|
| runtime = 104 minutes
| country = Japan
| language = Japanese
| budget | gross
}}
aka Torasan Goes to Hisbiscus Land is a 1980 Japanese comedy film directed by Yoji Yamada. It stars Kiyoshi Atsumi as Torajirō Kuruma (Tora-san), and Ruriko Asaoka as his love interest or "Madonna". ''Tora's Tropical Fever is the twenty-fifth entry in the popular, long-running Otoko wa Tsurai yo'' series.
Shochiku theatrically released a Special Edition version to theaters in 1997. It used computer graphics to add Hidetaka Yoshioka (who played Tora-san's nephew in the later films) to the story in added scenes.
Plot
Lily, the lounge singer with whom Tora-san fell in love in film 11 (''Tora-san's Forget Me Not, 1973) and film 15 (Tora-san's Rise and Fall'', 1975) sends Tora-san a letter informing him that she is terminally ill. Tora-san rushes to Okinawa—taking his first plane trip in the process—to be at her side and nurse her to health.Cast* Kiyoshi Atsumi as Torajirō
* Chieko Baisho as Sakura
* Ruriko Asaoka as Lily
* Masami Shimojō as Kuruma Tatsuzō
* Chieko Misaki as Tsune Kuruma (Torajiro's aunt)
* Gin Maeda as Hiroshi Suwa
* Hisao Dazai as Boss (Umetarō Katsura)
* Hayato Nakamura as Mitsuo Suwa
* Gajirō Satō as Genkō
* Suzuko Aragaki as Kaori Yamazato
Critical appraisal
Writer-director Yoji Yamada reportedly considers ''Tora's Tropical Fever his own favorite of the Otoko wa Tsurai yo series films. The German-language site molodezhnaja gives Tora's Tropical Fever'' four out of five stars, naming it one of the highlights of the series. Stuart Galbraith IV judges the film "one of the best of the series", and a "delight in every respect: it's funny, sad, and perceptive about human nature". In Japan, the film was released on videotape in 1996 and 1998, and in DVD format in 2008.ReferencesBibliographyEnglish*
*
*
*
*
German
* Japanese*
*
*
*
External links
* [http://www.tora-san.jp/toranomaki/movie25/ ''Tora's Tropical Fever''] at www.tora-san.jp (official site)
Category:1980 films
Category:Films directed by Yoji Yamada
Category:1980 comedy films
Category:1980s Japanese-language films
Category:Otoko wa Tsurai yo films
Category:Japanese sequel films
Category:Shochiku films
Category:Films with screenplays by Yôji Yamada
Category:Films set in Okinawa Prefecture
Category:1980s Japanese films
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tora-san's_Tropical_Fever
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.441330
|
25887599
|
Papua New Guinea–Solomon Islands Maritime Boundary Treaty
|
| location_signed | date_sealed
| date_effective | condition_effective
| date_expiration | signatories
| parties =
*
*
| ratifiers | depositor United Nations Secretariat
| language | languages English
| wikisource =
}}
The Papua New Guinea – Solomon Islands Maritime Boundary Treaty is a 1989 treaty in which Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands agreed to delimit a maritime boundary between the two states.
The agreement was signed on 25 January 1989. The text of the treaty sets out a roughly north–south boundary that is approximately long and is composed of a single straight-line maritime segment defined by two individual coordinate points. The boundary passes through the Bougainville Strait and the Solomon Sea. The boundary represents a modified equidistant line between Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. The southern coordinate point is the tripoint with Australia.
The treaty was under negotiation for 11 years prior to signing. In the end, the boundary that was settled on is roughly the same as the 1904 Anglo-German line created by the United Kingdom and German Empire.
The full name of the treaty is Treaty between the Independent State of Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands Concerning Sovereignty, Maritime and Seabed Boundaries between the Two Countries, and Cooperation on Related Matters. The treaty has not yet been ratified by the parties. In 1994, the two countries signed another treaty that set out principles in managing relations along the border, including provisions for unencumbered border crossing privileges for traditional inhabitants of the islands nearest to the maritime boundary.
Notes
References
* Anderson, Ewan W. (2003). International Boundaries: A Geopolitical Atlas. Routledge: New York. ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54061586 OCLC 54061586]
* Charney, Jonathan I., David A. Colson, Robert W. Smith. (2005). International Maritime Boundaries. Hotei Publishing: Leiden. ; ; ; ; ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23254092 OCLC 23254092]
Category:Treaties concluded in 1989
Category:1989 in the Solomon Islands
Category:1989 in Papua New Guinea
Category:1989 in Oceania
Category:Papua New Guinea–Solomon Islands border
Category:Treaties of Papua New Guinea
Category:Treaties of the Solomon Islands
Category:Boundary treaties
Category:Papua New Guinea–Solomon Islands relations
Category:United Nations treaties
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papua_New_Guinea–Solomon_Islands_Maritime_Boundary_Treaty
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.443281
|
25887624
|
Psilocybe rickii
|
Psilocybe rickii is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
rickii
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_rickii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.445723
|
25887632
|
Psilocybe rostrata
|
Psilocybe rostrata is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
rostrata
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_rostrata
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.446860
|
25887651
|
Psilocybe brasiliensis
|
Psilocybe brasiliensis is a species of psilocybin mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. Found in Brazil, it was described as new to science in 1978 by Mexican mycologist Gastón Guzmán.
}}
External links
*
Category:Entheogens
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Psychoactive fungi
brasiliensis
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of South America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_brasiliensis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.448465
|
25887655
|
Psilocybe brunneocystidiata
|
Psilocybe brunneocystidiata is a species of psilocybin mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. Found in Papua New Guinea, it was described as new to science in 1978 by mycologists Gastón Guzmán and Egon Horak.
}}
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
brunneocystidiata
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Fungi of New Guinea
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_brunneocystidiata
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.449528
|
25887660
|
ROH World Television Championship
|
days)
|shortestreign = Will Ospreay<br>(2 days)
|oldest = Minoru Suzuki<br>()
|youngest = Adam Cole<br>()
|heaviest Shane Taylor<br>()
|lightest Komander<br>()
|pastnames =* ROH TV Championship
* ROH Television Championship
* ROH World TV Championship
* ROH World Television Championship (2010–present)
|titleretired |pastlookimages
}}
The ROH World Television Championship is a professional wrestling world television championship in the Ring of Honor (ROH) promotion. With the introduction of the ROH World Television Championship, the television type championship returned to national exposure. The reigning champion is Komander, who is in his first reign..
History
]]
On January 20, 2010, the creation of the ROH World Television Championship was announced via ROH's official website. An eight-man single elimination tournament was then planned to determine the inaugural champion. The tournament was to start on February 4 and conclude on February 6 at The Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the tapings of ROH's television program Ring of Honor Wrestling. Regarding the new championship addition, ROH President Cary Silkin said: "We've been talking about adding a secondary championship for some time. Not only will this give the athletes of Ring of Honor another tremendous goal to work towards, it will also give our great partner, HDNet, a championship that is sure to be defended on the television program. We’re happy to publicly give thanks to HDNet for giving us the chance to add this title to the television show." After the ROH World Television Championship announcement, wrestling columnist James Caldwell gave his comments: "I like the idea. It gives mid-card wrestlers on ROH's roster something to fight for in the context of trying to win a wrestling match to "move up the company ladder." Caldwell further remarked that "ROH bringing back the TV Title to national TV is consistent with ROH's current marketing under Jim Cornette to "re-capture an old-school flavor" to their product."Inaugural championship tournament (2010) Tournament bracket
.]]
Eddie Edwards was the inaugural champion. Samoa Joe's is the longest at days, while Will Ospreay's reign is the shortest at two days. Lethal has the longest combined reign at 798 days. Minoru Suzuki is the oldest champion, winning the title at the age of 53, while Adam Cole is the youngest when he won the title at 22 years.
Komander is the reigning champion in his first reign. He defeated previous champion Brian Cage, Willie Mack, Mark Davis, AR Fox and Blake Christian in a Survival of the Fittest match at Final Battle on December 20, 2024.
Notes
References
;General
*
*
*
;Specific
External links
* [https://www.cagematch.net/?id5&nr1272 ROH World Television Title History] at Cagematch.net
Category:Ring of Honor championships
Category:Television wrestling championships
Category:2010 in professional wrestling
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROH_World_Television_Championship
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.457573
|
25887662
|
Just Another Case
|
| producer = Yogi "Sugar Bear" Graham
| chronology = Cru
| prev_title | prev_year
| next_title = Bubblin'
| next_year = 1997
| misc =
}}
"Just Another Case" is song by American hip hop group Cru featuring a verse from Slick Rick. It was released on June 17, 1997, through Violator/Def Jam Recordings as the lead single from their debut album Da Dirty 30. Recording sessions took place at Animation Sound in New York City. Production was handled by member Yogi Bear, who used a sample of "The World Is a Place" performed by Rhythm, an interpolation of "Everybody Plays the Fool" performed by The Main Ingredient, and a sample of "Children's Story" performed by Slick Rick.
The single reached number 68 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 28 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, number 65 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay, and number 8 on the Hot Rap Songs in the United States
Track listing
Charts
{| class"wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style"text-align:center"
|-
! scope="col"| Chart (1997)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
|-
|-
|-
|}
References
External links
*
Category:1997 debut singles
Category:1997 songs
Category:Def Jam Recordings singles
Category:Slick Rick songs
Category:Songs written by Rudy Clark
Category:Songs written by Slick Rick
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_Another_Case
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.460704
|
25887671
|
Psilocybe caeruleoannulata
|
External links
*
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
caeruleoannulata
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of South America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_caeruleoannulata
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.462525
|
25887679
|
William E. Boone
|
| death_place = Seattle, Washington, U.S.
| occupation = Architect
| parents =
}}
William Boone (3 September 1830, in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania – 29 October 1921, in Seattle, Washington) was an American architect who practiced mainly in Seattle, Washington from 1882 until 1905. He was one of the founders of the Washington State chapter of the American Institute of Architects as well as its first president. For the majority of the 1880s, he practiced with George Meeker as Boone and Meeker, Seattle's leading architectural firm at the time. In his later years he briefly worked with William H. Willcox as Boone and Willcox and later with James Corner as Boone and Corner. Boone was one of Seattle's most prominent pre-fire architects whose career lasted into the early 20th century outlasting many of his peers. Few of his buildings remain standing today, as many were destroyed in the Great Seattle fire including one of his most well known commissions, the Yesler – Leary Building, built for pioneer Henry Yesler whose mansion Boone also designed. After the fire, he founded the Washington State chapter of the American Institute of Architects and designed the first steel frame office building in Seattle, among several other large brick and public buildings that are still standing in the Pioneer Square district.Early life and careerWilliam Ely Boone, said to be a direct descendant of frontiersman Daniel Boone, was born in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania near Kingston on September 3, 1830. He moved to Chicago as a young man and worked in construction as a carpenter for a railroad company before becoming involved with building design in Minneapolis from 1853 to 1856. he was lured further west by the Cariboo Gold Rush in British Columbia, where he reportedly struck it rich only to promptly lose it all from bad business decisions. In 1859 he relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area, where he worked as a journeyman architect-builder-contractor, securing over $1 million in projects during his brief residency.
While there he managed the construction of several small structures in and around that city and oversaw the design and construction of the federal prison at nearby McNeil Island, Washington, whose numerous issues kept him busy for the next 3 years. He took an active role in the local Masonic lodge and was married in 1872 to local school teacher Mercie Slocum. Boone returned to the bay area periodically throughout the 1870s where he acted as contractor on public schools, homes, churches, Oakland's second city hall building, and several buildings for the California School for the Blind, all under the supervision of other architects.
Seattle, Boone and Meeker
Boone relocated to Seattle permanently in 1881 where he worked on projects between there and Tacoma. In 1883, he formed the partnership of Boone and Meeker with George Meeker of Oakland, California, who is thought to have remained in Oakland for the majority of their partnership. The building was eventually built by Boone in 1888 but only at three floors and in a more subtle style.
At the same time as the Yesler – Leary Building, Boone was also preparing plans for a new residence for Henry Yesler. Completed in 1884, it was categorized as Eastlake style but combined elements of Victorian, Queen Anne and Eastlake. The home occupied an entire city block and was Seattle's largest home at the time. During 1884, Boone and Meeker shifted their focus to Tacoma, which had recently been selected as Northern Pacific Railway's West Coast terminus over Seattle, prompting a building boom there while Seattle's waned. There they designed the Annie Wright School and several other commercial and residential structures. The following year, Boone oversaw the construction of one of Seattle's first modern office buildings, the Boston Block at Second and Columbia. Designed by Boston firm Winslow & Wetherell, it was massive in size and practically unadorned. It reflected the principles of the Chicago School and would influence Boone's later work. The Boston Block housed the city's first passenger elevator and was one of the very few buildings in downtown to survive the great fire in 1889. In 1888 the firm submitted two different designs in a bid for Seattle's first two brick school houses. The school district wound up choosing both. Boone and Meekers first buildings in 1889 included the Ramona Hotel at 1st and Seneca Street (now demolished) and the I.O.O.F. Building in Belltown, one of his earliest surviving designs. His partnership with Meeker was dissolved in 1889 and he was once again a solo architect.
The building boom following the great Seattle fire attracted many younger architects with fresh ideas such as the prolific Elmer Fisher to the area who soon unseated Boone as Seattle's top architect. Boone was still a respected architect in the Northwest and continued to receive sizable commissions, designing such buildings as the identical McKenny & Marshall–Walker Buildings in Olympia and Seattle, respectively, and the massive 7-story New York Block, Seattle's first steel-frame skyscraper. The New York Block was credited to the short-lived firm of Boone and William Willcox from 1891 to 1892 but the design is largely credited to Boone. Boone moved his offices into the New York Block following its completion. These later buildings displayed a more simplified design along the lines of Romanesque Revival architecture that emerged in the late 1880s, shaped by the influence of Henry Hobson Richardson, as well as Burnham and Root and other architects of the Chicago School, much in contrast to most of Boone's previous work and architectural knowledge. Boone and Willcox were also architects of the Plymouth Congregational Church, a building that reflected Willcox's previous experience in church design in the American Midwest.
In 1891, Boone and Willcox were selected to plan the new campus for the University of Washington. The plan that included 16 buildings was halted after ten days of construction as a result of flaws in the legislation that created the university. Boone and Willcox dissolved their partnership in June 1892 and when construction resumed on the university in 1893, the firm's plans were dropped in favor of a competition for a single main building won by Charles Saunders.
Late career and death
Boone, as well as most architects during the time, had little work in the years following the Panic of 1893 and effectively retired, putting his focus on matters of the Seattle Chamber of commerce, of which he was a member. It appears he only designed several small residences and one commercial building during this time. Over the next several years, he only took on several small projects, collaborating with Edwin Houghton and other architects on residential and industrial improvements, and in 1896 supervised the completion of the Mutual Life Building. In 1899, with the economy in full rebound after the Yukon Gold Rush, he formed a new partnership with James Corner, who had formerly worked with Warren Skillings. Together they designed numerous large commercial buildings and warehouses that still stand in the Pioneer Square neighborhood. Many of these later buildings show a large influence of the Chicago School Style, with minimum ornamentation and facades dominated by large pivoting or picture windows. One of their biggest projects and one of Boone's last was the stone-clad Seattle High School (later known as Broadway High School) in 1902 and 1903. After 1905 Boone reduced his practice activities and by 1910 had retired altogether. He died in Seattle in October 1921 at the age of 91.ProjectsBoone and Meeker*City Building (1882, Destroyed) – 3rd Street S. (now 2nd Ave S), Seattle
*Marshall Building (1882, Destroyed) – Commercial Street (now 1st Ave. S.), Seattle
*McNaught, Walker & Renton Building (1882–3, Destroyed) – Commercial Street (now 1st Ave. S.), Seattle
*Boyd & Poncin Building (1882, Destroyed) – Front Street (now 1st Ave.), Seattle
*Yesler – Leary Building (1882–3, Destroyed) – now NE corner of 1st Ave. and Yesler Way, Seattle
*Carliss P. Stone Block (1883, Destroyed) – Front Street (now 1st Ave.), Seattle
*Schwabacher Building (1883, Destroyed) – Yesler Way West of 1st Ave., Seattle
*Annie Wright Seminary (1883–4, Destroyed) – 611 Division Ave., Tacoma
*Villard Reception Pavilion (1883, Destroyed) Seattle
*Watson C. Squire Building [Pacific House] (1883–4, Destroyed) – S. 2nd Ave & Main St, Seattle
*Seattle Safe Deposit Building (1884, Destroyed) – Front Street (now 1st Ave.), Seattle
*Eben A. Osborne House (1884, Destroyed) – 1124 4th Ave., Seattle
*Bishop Paddock House (1884, Destroyed) – Division & Tacoma Streets, Tacoma
*Wilkeson & Kandle Building (1884, Destroyed) – Pacific near 11th, Tacoma
*Henry A. Atkins House (1884, Destroyed) - SW corner 4th Ave & Columbia St, Seattle
*A.M. Brookes House (1887) Kinnear's Addition, Queen Anne, Seattle
*Mrs. Oren O. Denny Residence (1889, Demolished) 11th Ave & Seneca Street, Seattle
*Phinney Building [Carleton Block/Ramona Hotel] (1889, Demolished) – Seattle
*Sanderson Block [Merchants Cafe] (1889), Yesler Way, Seattle
*Wah Chong Building [Phoenix Hotel] (1889, Demolished) – 2nd Ave. S. and S. Washington Street, Seattle
*McNaught Building (1889, Destroyed) – S.E. corner of Second S. at Washington, Seattle
*Seattle Block [Dexter Horton Building] (1890, Demolished) – NW corner of 3rd & Cherry, Seattle
*Starr Block [Grand Pacific Hotel] (1890) - 1115-7 1st Ave, Seattle
*Sanderson Building (1890, Altered) - 409 2nd Ave Ext S, Seattle
*Post – Edwards Block [The Lusty Lady] (1890) 1315 1st Ave., Seattle
*Masonic Temple (1890–91, Demolished) Second and Pike Street, Seattle
*Marshall – Walker Building (1890–91) – 1st Ave. S. and Main, Seattle
*Leary – Walker Building (1893, Destroyed) – 2nd Ave., Seattle
*3-story building for Cyrus Walker (1899, Destroyed) – NW corner of 2nd & Spring, Seattle
*Addition of second floor to building for H.C. Henry (1900, Altered) - 119 Jackson St, SeattleBoone and Willcox
*New York Block (1890–92, Demolished) – NE Corner of 2nd & Cherry, Seattle
*McKenney Block (1890–91, Destroyed) – 4th & Capitol Way N., Olympia
*Baxter-Yesler Theater (1891, Unbuilt), SE Corner of Yesler & 3rd Ave S, Seattle
*St. Mark's Rectory (1891, Demolished) - Olive Way, Seattle
*Sander Block (1891, Altered) - 1012 1st Ave, Seattle
*John H. Sanderson House (1891, Destroyed) - 12th & Columbia, Seattle
*Chapin Building 2 (1901) - 171 S Jackson St., Seattle
*Chapin Building 3 [Pythian Building] (1901) - 1423 1st Ave at Pike Place, Seattle
*Seater & Munro Building [Palace Hotel] (1901–2, Demolished) - 912 1st Ave, Seattle
*Longfellow Public School (1902, Demolished) - 2000 E Thomas St, Seattle
*Residence for Judge Julius A. Stratton (1902) - Denny-Blaine Addition, Seattle
*Cyrus Walker Building (1902, Demolished) - NE Corner 2nd Ave and University St, Seattle
*Pacific Drug Company [U.S. Rubber Building] (1902) - 319 3rd Ave S, Seattle
*Cyrus Walker Building (Adding 2 floors) (1902, Demolished) - 1101 2nd Ave, Seattle
*Stewart & Holmes Building (1903–4) - 207-11 3rd Ave S, Seattle
*Erickson Building [Shirley Hotel] (1904) - 1514 5th Ave, Seattle
*Talbot & Walker Building [Heritage Building] (1904) - 101 S Jackson St., Seattle
*Walker Block [Seattle Quilt Building] (1904) – 316 1st Ave. S, Seattle
Notes
References
*
*
*
Category:1830 births
Category:1921 deaths
Category:19th-century American architects
Category:Architects from Seattle
Category:Architects from Pennsylvania
Category:20th-century American architects
Category:Chicago school architects
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_E._Boone
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.476760
|
25887684
|
Piaggio P.3
|
The Piaggio P.3 was an Italian night bomber prototype built by Piaggio in 1923.
Design and development
Designed by Ing Giovanni Pegna, the P.3 was a four-engine, two-bay biplane with wings of unequal span, the lower wing being greater in span than the upper. Its four 149-kilowatt (200-horsepower) S.P.A. 6A engines were mounted in tandem pairs on the lower wing, with each engine driving one of four propellers, two mounted in a tractor and two in a pusher configuration. The P.3s tail was of biplane configuration with three rudders mounted between the two planes. The crew of four consisted of a pilot, co-pilot, nose gunner, and rear gunner; the pilot and co-pilot sat side by side in a cockpit just ahead of the wings, the nose gunner manned a machine gun mounted in a cockpit in front of them, and the rear gunner manned two machine guns, one in an amidships cockpit behind the pilots and another mounted in a ventral tunnel for defense against attacks from below.
The P.3 made its first flight in 1923, and Piaggio later installed two 306-kilowatt (410-horsepower) Fiat A.20V engines on the aircraft. However, the Regia Aeronautica (Italian Royal Air Force) did not place a production order for the P.3.
Operators
Regia Aeronautica
Specifications (S.P.A. 6A engines)
P.003
Category:1920s Italian bomber aircraft
Category:Four-engined push-pull aircraft
Category:Aircraft first flown in 1923
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piaggio_P.3
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.482086
|
25887690
|
Psilocybe carbonaria
|
Psilocybe carbonaria is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybe species
Psilocybin mushroom
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
carbonaria
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Rolf Singer
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_carbonaria
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.483971
|
25887712
|
Mao Murakami
|
, also known by her stage name , is a Japanese J-pop dancer known for her robotic and machine-like dance-style. She currently lives with her family in a Buddhist temple. Her father, who is a priest at the temple, is also known by his stage name of Strong Machine 1. The two often team up to perform.
She has appeared on multiple television programs in Japan, including fifteen appearances on the Super Chample dance variety show on CTV. Murakami was featured in the music video for the 2006 single I My Me Mine by the Japanese new wave band Polysics.
References
External links
Official site
Category:1995 births
Category:Japanese female dancers
Category:Japanese dancers
Category:Living people
Category:People from Gunma Prefecture
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mao_Murakami
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.486670
|
25887718
|
Psilocybe collybioides
|
Psilocybe collybioides is a species of agaric fungus in the family Hymenogastraceae. It was first described scientifically by mycologists Rolf Singer and Alexander H. Smith in 1958, from collections made in montane habitat near Tafí del Valle, Argentina.
See also
*List of psilocybin mushrooms
*Psilocybin mushrooms
References
External links
*
Category:Entheogens
Category:Fungi described in 1958
Category:Fungi of South America
Category:Psychoactive fungi
collybioides
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Rolf Singer
Category:Taxa named by Alexander H. Smith
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_collybioides
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.489778
|
25887725
|
Psilocybe columbiana
|
Psilocybe columbiana is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae known only from the páramos of high mountains in Colombia.
}}
columbiana
Category:Fungi of Colombia
Category:Altiplano Cundiboyacense
Category:Páramo fungi
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_columbiana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.491363
|
25887737
|
Psilocybe coprinifacies
|
Panaeolus coprinifacies is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
coprinifacies
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_coprinifacies
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.492746
|
25887745
|
Jacob Anderson-Minshall
|
| birth_place = Inkom, Idaho, U.S.
| known_for | alma_mater Earlham College (BA)<br>Idaho State University (MA)
| employer | occupation Author
| spouse =
| website =
}}
Jacob Anderson-Minshall (born September 14, 1967) is an American author.
He received a B.A. in Peace and Global Studies from Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana and a master's degree in Communication from Idaho State University in Pocatello.
Career
After graduating he canvassed for anti-nuclear group SANE/FREEZE and other efforts before focusing on lesbian and gays rights. He was disabled in a work-related injury in 2003; at which point Anderson-Minshall returned to writing. From 2005–2009, Anderson-Minshall authored the syndicated column "TransNation", which ran in LGBT publications like San Francisco Bay Times, Windy City Times, and Boston's Bay Windows.
In 2016, with his wife, Anderson-Minshall launched the editorial services company Retrograde Communications, which took over the editorial services for Plus magazine (for those affected by HIV) and HIVPlusMag.com from Here Media. A year later the company took over the editorial for the print edition of the LGBT news magazine The Advocate now owned by Pride Media. Anderson-Minshall now serves as the deputy editor of Plus and the deputy editor of The Advocate.
Anderson-Minshall and his wife have co-authored the Blind Eye mystery series, including Blind Curves, Blind Leap and 2008 Lambda Literary Award finalist Blind Faith, published by Bold Strokes Books.
In 2015, Anderson-Minshall became the first openly transgender author to win a Goldie award from the Golden Crown Literary Society; he shared the award for best creative non-fiction book with his wife Diane Anderson-Minshall for Queerly Beloved: A Love Story Across Genders.
In 2018, Anderson-Minshall released his first novel, Swimming Upstream, through Transgress Press.
References
External links
* [http://anderson-minshall.com/ Anderson-Minshall.com]
Category:1967 births
Category:American feminist writers
Category:Earlham College alumni
Category:Idaho State University alumni
Category:American LGBTQ journalists
Category:LGBTQ people from Idaho
Category:Living people
Category:American male feminists
Category:Transfeminists
Category:Transgender male writers
Category:Transgender novelists
Category:Transgender journalists
Category:American mystery writers
Category:American male novelists
Category:People from Bannock County, Idaho
Category:Novelists from Idaho
Category:21st-century American novelists
Category:American LGBTQ novelists
Category:20th-century American male writers
Category:21st-century American male writers
Category:20th-century American non-fiction writers
Category:21st-century American non-fiction writers
Category:American male non-fiction writers
Category:American transgender men
Category:American transgender writers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Anderson-Minshall
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.499113
|
25887747
|
Psilocybe cordispora
|
Psilocybe cordispora is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
cordispora
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_cordispora
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.500312
|
25887755
|
Psilocybe dumontii
|
Psilocybe dumontii is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
dumontii
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_dumontii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.501302
|
25887759
|
Psilocybe egonii
|
Psilocybe egonii is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
egonii
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_egonii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.502261
|
25887761
|
1983 France–United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention
|
| location_signed = Paris, France
| date_sealed | date_effective 12 April 1984
| condition_effective | date_expiration
| signatories | parties
*
*
| ratifiers | depositor United Nations Secretariat
| language | languages English; French
| wikisource =
}}
The 1983 France – United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention is a 1983 treaty between France and the United Kingdom which establishes the maritime boundary between French Polynesia and the British territory of the Pitcairn Islands.
The treaty was signed in Paris on 25 October 1983. The text of the treaty sets out a boundary that is an equidistant line between the nearest islands of the two territories. The boundary is roughly north–south and consists of five straight-line maritime segments defined by six individual coordinate points.
The convention came into force on 12 April 1984, after both states had ratified it. In 1993, after the United Kingdom declared an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) around the Pitcairn Islands, the two states agreed that the boundary set out in the 1983 treaty should also be the boundary between the French and British EEZs in the South Pacific.
The full name of the treaty is Convention on Maritime Boundaries between the Government of the French Republic and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
See also
*1996 France–United Kingdom Maritime Delimitation Agreements
Notes
References
* Anderson, Ewan W. (2003). International Boundaries: A Geopolitical Atlas. Routledge: New York. ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54061586 OCLC 54061586]
* Charney, Jonathan I., David A. Colson, Robert W. Smith. (2005). International Maritime Boundaries, 5 vols. Hotei Publishing: Leiden. ; ; ; ; ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23254092 OCLC 23254092]
External links
*[http://www.vliz.be/vmdcdata/marbound/documents/FRA-GBR1983MB.pdf Full text of convention]
France - United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention
France - United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention
France - United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention
France - United Kingdom Maritime Boundary Convention
Category:Treaties concluded in 1983
Category:French Polynesia–Pitcairn Islands border
Category:Boundary treaties
Category:History of the Pitcairn Islands
Category:France–United Kingdom treaties
Category:Treaties entered into force in 1984
Category:United Nations treaties
Category:Treaties extended to French Polynesia
Category:Treaties extended to the Pitcairn Islands
Category:October 1983 in Europe
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_France–United_Kingdom_Maritime_Boundary_Convention
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.504494
|
25887765
|
Psilocybe fagicola
|
External links
*
*
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
fagicola
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi described in 1959
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_fagicola
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.506834
|
25887784
|
Psilocybe farinacea
|
Psilocybe farinacea is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
farinacea
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_farinacea
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.508523
|
25887789
|
Psilocybe fuliginosa
|
Psilocybe fuliginosa is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
*List of Psilocybin mushrooms
*Psilocybin mushrooms
*Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
fuliginosa
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_fuliginosa
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.509821
|
25887794
|
Phacelia marcescens
|
Phacelia marcescens is a species of phacelia known by the common name persistentflower phacelia. It is endemic to the Sierra Nevada and its foothills in California, where it grows in meadows, forests, and other mountain habitat.
Description
Phacelia marcescens is an annual herb growing mostly erect to a maximum height near 20 centimeters. It is glandular and coated in short, stiff hairs. The leaves are 1 to 5 centimeters long, oval in shape, and smooth-edged, sometimes with small lobes near the bases of the blades. The hairy inflorescence is a one-sided curving or coiling cyme of bell-shaped flowers. Each flower is about half a centimeter long and purple in color, often with a paler throat.
External links
Jepson Manual Treatment: Phacelia marcescens
Phacelia marcescens Photo gallery
marcescens
Category:Endemic flora of California
Category:Flora of the Sierra Nevada (United States)
Category:Flora without expected TNC conservation status
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phacelia_marcescens
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.510777
|
25887798
|
Psilocybe furtadoana
|
Psilocybe furtadoana is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
furtadoana
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_furtadoana
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.511875
|
25887806
|
2010 ECHL All-Star Game
|
The 2010 ECHL All-Star Game presented by Reebok was the held at the Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California, United States, home of the Ontario Reign. The game was held between two teams, each representing a conference (American and National) of the ECHL.
The game was part of a two-day event of activities. On Tuesday, a skills competition among the ECHL players, called the ECHL All-Star Skills Competition presented by Reebok Hockey and was also sponsored by Toyota and the city of Ontario, California. It was the 13th edition of the skills challenge. The All-Star Game itself was played on a Wednesday evening.
Skills Competition
The 13th edition of the skills competition was held on the evening of Tuesday, January 19, 2010. The competition included seven individual competitions that tested the participants' hockey skills, each of which was sponsored. Sponsors for the event included ice hockey equipment maker Sher-Wood Hockey (both puck control relays), athletic apparel company Reebok (fastest skater and hardest shot), outdoor barbecue grill producer Bull Outdoor Products (rapid fire), game-worn jersey supplier MeiGray Group (accuracy shooting competition) and Southern California-based ice hockey rink company Ice Town (breakaway relay).
The first competition of the night was the Sher-Wood Hockey Puck Control Relay which consisted of three players from each conference, was won by the National Conference team of Evan Barlow (Idaho), Chris d'Alvise (Stockton) and John Lammers (Alaska). The Sher-Wood Hockey Individual Puck Control Relay followed and was won by the National Conference's Peter Lenes (Ontario) who defeated the American Conference's Jacob Micflikier (Florida).
The next event was the Reebok Faster Skater, a time trial style race around the rink which consisted of three members from each conference was won by the National Conference with an average time of 14.406 seconds to the American Conference's 14.462. The National Conference's Adam Miller (Las Vegas) had the fastest individual time at 14.287. The Reebok 8.0.8 Hardest Shot competition was won by the American Conference with an average slap shot speed of 97.9 m.p.h. to 94.7 m.p.h. The American Conference's A. J. Thelen (Florida) had the hardest shot at 101.9 m.p.h.
The Bull Outdoor Products Rapid Fire competition tested a goaltender's skills with the player facing 10 shots, alternating from each face off circle. All six goaltenders that were selected to the All-Star Game competed. The American Conference won the competition with a score of 22 saves to 20 and the American Conference's Braden Holtby (South Carolina) had the most saves with nine.
The MeiGray Group Accuracy Shooting Competition consisted of three players from each conference attempting to hit four targets placed at each corner of the net. The players had six shots to hit the four total targets. The National Conference won the competition hitting 11 targets to the American Conference's 9 and the National Conference's Ryan Kinasewich (Utah) had the best score hitting four targets in four shots.
The final competition of the evening was the Ice Town Breakaway Relay which would have each of the six goaltenders facing off against six shooters from the opposing conference's team and an amateur player, with each goaltender attempting to block each participant on a breakaway. The American Conference won the event with 7 goals scored to the National Conference's 5. The American Conference's Braden Holtby had the best score, stopping six of seven shooters and won the Outstanding Goaltender award having stopped a total of 15 shots through the two goaltender competitions.
The National Conference would win the overall competition with a score of 11 to 10, winning the skills competition for the third straight time and the fifth time in the past six skills competitions.
Rosters
The National Conference roster was announced on December 30, 2009 and the American Conference roster was announced the following day.
National Conference American Conference Coach: Derek Laxdal (Idaho Steelheads) Cail MacLean (South Carolina Stingrays) Assistant Coach: Marty Raymond (Bakersfield Condors) Derek Wilkinson (Charlotte Checkers) Captains: David Walker J. C. Sawyer Starters: 1 – G David Shantz (Victoria Salmon Kings)
6 – D Sasha Pokulok (Bakersfield Condors)
27 – D David Walker (Ontario Reign) – (C)
21 – F Greg Hogeboom (Ontario Reign)
9 – F Ryan Kinasewich (Utah Grizzlies)
20 – F John Lammers (Alaska Aces) 34 – G Todd Ford (South Carolina Stingrays)
12 – D J. C. Sawyer (Toledo Walleye) – (C)
4 – D Zach Tarkir (South Carolina Stingrays)
27 – F Justin Donati (Elmira Jackals)
76 – F Ben Gordon (Reading Royals)
11 – F Jacob Micflikier (Florida Everblades) Reserves: 31 – G Richard Bachman (Idaho Steelheads)
33 – G Timo Pielmeier (Bakersfield Condors)
7 – D Vic Bartley (Utah Grizzlies)
2 – D Taylor Ellington (Victoria Salmon Kings)
17 – D Brendan Milnamow (Idaho Steelheads)
29 – D Eric Regan (Bakersfield Condors)
19 – F Evan Barlow (Idaho Steelheads)
23 – F Judd Blackwater (Stockton Thunder)
8 – F Chris d'Alvise (Stockton Thunder)
3 – F Peter Lenes (Ontario Reign)
42 – F Nick Mazzolini (Alaska Aces)
12 – F Adam Miller (Las Vegas Wranglers)
37 – F A. J. Perry (Utah Grizzlies)
22 – F John Swanson (Idaho Steelheads)
18 – F Shawn Weller (Bakersfield Condors) 31 – G Braden Holtby (South Carolina Stingrays)
30 – G Jeremy Smith (Cincinnati Cyclones)
23 – D Mitch Ganzak (Wheeling Nailers)
6 – D Drew Paris (Gwinnett Gladiators)
7 – D Sam Roberts (Gwinnett Gladiators)
49 – D A. J. Thelen (Florida Everblades)
84 – F Brandon Buck (Florida Everblades)
19 – F Rick Cleaver (Kalamazoo Wings)
93 – F Maxime Gratchev (Elmira Jackals)
17 – F Nikita Kashirsky (South Carolina)
20 – F Matt Pierce (Cincinnati Cyclones)
43 – F Jeff Prough (Trenton Devils)
24 – F Matt Schepke (Charlotte Checkers)
15 – F Connor Shields (Johnstown Chiefs)
61 – F Maxime Tanguay (Toledo Walleye)
References
All-Star Game
Category:ECHL All-Star Games
Category:Sports in Ontario, California
ECHL All-Star
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_ECHL_All-Star_Game
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.532488
|
25887813
|
Nonami
|
Nonami is the area in Tempaku-ku, Nagoya surrounding Nonami Station.
Because it is located on the border of Midori-ku, Nagoya and Tempaku-ku, Nagoya, many customers from Tempaku-ku patronize businesses in Nonami.
Overview
Although there are numerous establishments (bookstores, convenience stores, etc.) close to the station, big shopping malls are not visible from the station.
While there are many old buildings, for the sake of having many modern buildings, in the downtown area, there are many kinds of streets especially more modern ones.
About a five-minute walk from the station, by Tempaku River, are noticeable construction facilities.
Nonami Station is the last stop on the Sakura-dōri Line. Line extension plans are underway for the future because ridership is very high.
Transportation
Nonami Station on the Sakura-dōri Line.
"Nonami" bus stop serviced by the Nagoya City Municipal Bus service.
References
Category:Neighbourhoods of Nagoya
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonami
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.533524
|
25887815
|
Yutaka Yano
|
| image | caption
| office = Mayor of Komae
| term_start = 1996
| term_end = 2012
| predecessor | successor Kunihiko Takahashi
| constituency | majority
| birth_date
| birth_place = Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan
| death_date | death_place
| party = Independent (Japanese Communist Party)
| relations | residence
| alma_mater | occupation
| religion | signature
| website = [https://web.archive.org/web/20100706080149/http://yanoy.dip.jp/ http://yanoy.dip.jp]
| footnotes =
}}
was the mayor of Komae, Tokyo in Japan. A member of the Japanese Communist Party, he was first elected in 1996. References *
Category:20th-century mayors of places in Japan
Category:21st-century mayors of places in Japan
Category:Mayors of places in Tokyo
Category:People from Komae, Tokyo
Category:People from Setagaya
Category:1946 births
Category:Living people
Category:Japanese Communist Party politicians
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yutaka_Yano
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.534951
|
25887819
|
Psilocybe guatapensis
|
Psilocybe guatapensis is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. It is very small and is known only from Colombia.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
External links
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
guatapensis
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_guatapensis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.536341
|
25887826
|
2009–10 Mexican Primera División season
|
The 2009–10 Primera División de México season is the 63rd professional season of Mexico's top-flight football league, and 13th season in which the Apertura and Clausura system is used. The season is split into two tournaments—the Torneo Apertura and the Torneo Bicentenario—each with identical formats and each contested by the same eighteen teams.
Clubs
|position=right
|mark20TransparentPlaceholder.svg |lat2020.70 |long20-103.30 |label20<small>Atlas</small> |position20=left
|mark21TransparentPlaceholder.svg |lat2120.20 |long21-103.30 |label21<small>Guadalajara</small> |position21=left
|mark22TransparentPlaceholder.svg |lat2218.75 |long22-99.40 |label22<small>Toluca</small> |position22=left
|caption=Locations of the 2009–10 Primera División teams
}}
Seventeen teams returned for this season. Necaxa was relegated the previous season after accumulating the lowest coefficient over the past three seasons. They were replaced by Querétaro, who was promoted from the Liga de Ascenso.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Club
!Home City
!Stadium
!Capacity
|-
|América
|Mexico City
|Azteca
|105,000
|-
|Atlante
|Cancún
|Andrés Quintana Roo
|20,000
|-
|Atlas
|Guadalajara
|Jalisco
|56,700
|-
|Chiapas
|Tuxtla Gutiérrez
|Víctor Manuel Reyna
|31,100
|-
|Ciudad Juárez
|Ciudad Juárez
|Olímpico Benito Juárez
|22,300
|-
|Cruz Azul
|Mexico City
|Estadio Azul
|35,000
|-
|Estudiantes Tecos
|Guadalajara
|3 de Marzo
|30,000
|-
|Guadalajara
|Guadalajara
|Jalisco
|56,700
|-
|Monterrey
|Monterrey
|Tecnológico
|38,000
|-
|Morelia
|Morelia
|Morelos
|41,500
|-
|Pachuca
|Pachuca
|Hidalgo
|30,000
|-
|Puebla
|Puebla
|Cuauhtémoc
|42,650
|-
|Querétaro
|Querétaro
|La Corregidora
|40,785
|-
|San Luis
|San Luis Potosí
|Alfonso Lastras Ramírez
|24,000
|-
|Santos Laguna
|Torreón
|Nuevo Corona
|30,000
|-
|Toluca
|Toluca
|Nemesio Díez
|27,000
|-
|UANL
|Monterrey
|Universitario
|45,000
|-
|UNAM
|Mexico City
|Olímpico Universitario
|63,000
|}
Managerial changes
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Team
! Outgoing<br>manager
! Manner of<br>departure
! Date of<br>vacancy
! Replaced by
! Date of<br>appointment
! Position in <br>table
|-
| Querétaro
| Héctor Medrano
| Resigned
| Aug. 23, 2009
| Carlos Reinoso
| Aug. 26, 2009
| 16th
|-
| Guadalajara
| Francisco Ramírez
| Sacked
| Sep. 12, 2009
| Raúl Arias
| Sep. 15, 2009
| 15th
|-
| Ciudad Juárez
| Héctor Hugo Eugui
| Sacked
| Sep. 28, 2009
| José Treviño
| Oct. 11, 2009
| 17th
|-
| San Luis
| Juan Antonio Luna
| Resigned
| Oct. 12, 2009
| Miguel Ángel López
|
| 10th
|-
| Guadalajara
| Raúl Arias
| Sacked
| Nov. 3, 2009
| José Luis Real
| Nov. 3, 2009
| 14th
|-
!colspan=7|Changes during the Bicentenario
|-
| Ciudad Juárez
| José Treviño
| Sacked
| March 1, 2010
| TBA
| TBA
| 18th
|}
Torneo Apertura
The 2009 Torneo Apertura was the first tournament of the season. The tournament began on July 24 and ended on December 13. Defending champion UNAM failed to defend their title after missing the playoffs. On December 13, 2009, Monterrey defeated Cruz Azul 6–4 in aggregate score to win their third title. Cruz Azul forward Emanuel Villa won his first golden boot after scoring 17 goals, five more than Héctor Mancilla who won it the two previous tournaments.
Regular phase
League table
<onlyinclude></onlyinclude>
Group standings
<onlyinclude><!--
--><!--
-->
}}</onlyinclude>
Results
Final phase (Liguilla)
<!-- Remember that the winners of each round are re-seeded, so the bracket must be changed when each round finishes. -->
* <small>If the two teams are tied after both legs, the higher seeded team advances.</small>
* <small>Both finalist qualify to the 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League. The champion qualifies directly to the Group Stage, while the runner-up qualifies to the Preliminary Round.</small>
Top goalscorers
<!-- Players sorted first by goals scored, then by last name. -->
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Pos
! Player
! Club
! Goals
|-
| style="text-align:center;"|1
| Emanuel Villa
|Cruz Azul
|align=center|17
|-
| style="text-align:center;"|2
| Héctor Mancilla
|Toluca
|align=center|12
|-
| style"text-align:center;" rowspan"2"|3
| Salvador Cabañas
|América
|align=center|11
|-
| Javier Hernández
|Guadalajara
|align=center|11
|-
| style"text-align:center;" rowspan"2"|5
| Rafael Márquez
|Atlante
|align=center|9
|-
| Alfredo Moreno
|San Luis
|align=center|9
|-
| style"text-align:center;" rowspan"4"|7
| Juan Carlos Cacho
|Pachuca
|align=center|7
|-
| Aldo de Nigris
|Monterrey
|align=center|7
|-
| Luis Gabriel Rey
|Morelia
|align=center|7
|-
| Humberto Suazo
|Monterrey
|align=center|7
|}
<small>Updated to November 22, 2009<br>Source: [http://www.femexfut.org.mx/portalv2/default.aspx?s786&ep869 FeMexFut]</small>
Awards
The awards for this tournament were given out in Mexico City on January 17, 2010.
;Non-voting awards
*Super-leader: Toluca
*Champion: Monterrey
*Top-scorer: Emanuel Villa (Cruz Azul)
*Best physical trainer: Miguel Ángel Ramírez (Monterrey)
*Fair play: UNAM
;Balón de Oro
*Best manager: Víctor Manuel Vucetich (Monterrey)
*Best goalkeeper: Jonathan Orozco (Monterrey)
*Best wingback: Rogelio Chávez (Cruz Azul)
*Best centre-back: Duilio Davino (Monterrey)
*Best defensive midfielder: Gerardo Torrado (Cruz Azul)
*Best offensive midfielder: Jaime Lozano (Cruz Azul)
*Best striker: Emanuel Villa (Cruz Azul)
*Best rookie: Raúl Nava (Toluca)
*Best player: Humberto Suazo (Monterrey)
*Best referee: Armando Archundia
*Best assistant referee: José Luis Camargo
Torneo Bicentenario
The 2010 Torneo Bicentenario is the second tournament of the season. The tournament began on January 16 and ended on May 15. The tournament got its name (the Bicentennial tournament) to commemorate the bicentennial anniversary of the Mexican independence.
Regular phase
League table
}}
Group standings
}}
Results
|update=April 25, 2010
}}
Final phase (Liguilla)
<!-- Remember that the winners of each round are re-seeded, so the bracket must be changed when each round finishes. -->
;Notes:
* <small>If the two teams are tied after both legs, the higher seeded team advances.</small>
* <small>Both finalist qualify to the 2010–11 CONCACAF Champions League. The champion qualifies directly to the Group Stage, while the runner-up qualifies to the Preliminary Round.</small>
Top goalscorers
<!-- Players sorted first by source. PLEASE ONLY ADD 10 players. -->
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Pos
! Player
! Club
! Goals
|-
| style"text-align:center;" rowspan"3"| 1
| Javier Hernández
|Guadalajara
|align=center|10
|-
| Johan Fano
|Atlante
|align=center|10
|-
| Herculez Gomez
|Puebla
|align=center|10
|-
| style="text-align:center;"| 4
| Jackson Martínez
|Jaguares
|align=center|9
|-
| style="text-align:center;"| 5
| Héctor Mancilla
|Toluca
|align=center|8
|-
| style"text-align:center;" rowspan"5"| 6
| Miguel Sabah
|Morelia
|align=center|7
|-
| Ángel Reyna
|America
|align=center|7
|-
| Abraham Darío Carreño
|Monterrey
|align=center|7
|-
| Miguel Zepeda
|Atlas
|align=center|7
|-
| Fredy Bareiro
|Estudiantes Tecos
|align=center|7
|}<small>Updated to April 25, 2010<br>Source: [http://www.femexfut.org.mx/portalv2/secciones.aspx?s1368&ep908&dd1 FeMexFut]</small>Relegation
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!width=28| <br>
!width=185| Team
!width=40|
!width=40|
!width=40|
!width=40|
!width=40|
!width=40|
!width=45|
!width=45|
!width=50| <br>
|- style="text-align:center;"
|1
|align=left|Toluca
|34
|27
|27
|36
|35
|30
|189
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|2
|align=left|Santos Laguna
|38
|31
|22
|22
|27
|28
|168
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|3
|align=left|Guadalajara
|31
|33
|25
|21
|19
|32
|161
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|4
|align=left|Cruz Azul
|25
|31
|26
|13
|33
|25
|153
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|5
|align=left|Pachuca
|24
|22
|21
|36
|24
|25
|152
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|6
|align=left|Monterrey
|14
|24
|19
|26
|30
|36
|149
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|7
|align=left|Morelia
|22
|18
|24
|22
|33
|25
|144
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|8
|align=left|UNAM
|24
|20
|26
|28
|17
|28
|143
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|9
|align=left|San Luis
|29
|30
|29
|17
|21
|14
|140
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|10
|align=left|América
|26
|11
|21
|23
|30
|25
|136
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|11
|align=left|Atlante
|33
|17
|27
|17
|23
|16
|133
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|12
|align=left|Puebla
|17
|21
|15
|26
|26
|19
|124
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|13
|align=left|Estudiantes Tecos
|17
|17
|25
|25
|20
|19
|123
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|14
|align=left|Chiapas
|18
|26
|18
|21
|19
|19
|121
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|15
|align=left|Atlas
|12
|23
|22
|21
|18
|24
|120
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|16
|align=left|Querétaro
|0
|0
|0
|0
|18
|21
|39
|34
|
|- style="text-align:center;"
|17
|align=left|UANL
|16
|19
|26
|14
|22
|19
|116
|102
|
|- style="text-align:center; background:#ff8888;"
|18
|align=left|Ciudad Juárez (R)
|0
|0
|19
|23
|6
|15
|63
|68
|
|}
<small>Updated as of games played on April 25, 2010.<br>Source: [http://www.femexfut.org.mx/portalv2/secciones.aspx?s1361&ep908&dd=1 FeMexFut] </small>
{| class"wikitable" style"text-align: center;"
|-
| style="background:#ff8888; width:20px;"|
||Relegated to the Liga de Ascenso
|}
References
External links
*[http://www.femexfut.org.mx/portalv2/default.aspx FeMexFut's official website]
Category:2009–10 domestic association football leagues
1
2009
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009–10_Mexican_Primera_División_season
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.625452
|
25887838
|
Terwilliger Boulevard
|
Terwilliger Boulevard is a street in Portland, Oregon, U.S. It begins at SW 6th Avenue and SW Sheridan Street south of Portland State University. It passes through the neighborhoods of Marquam Hill, Southwest Hills, and Burlingame and by Lewis and Clark College before ending at Oregon Route 43 in Lake Oswego. For portions of its route, it is a traditional parkway through Duniway and Marquam Parks. The land surrounding Terwilliger Boulevard is heavily wooded in nature.
The road was first planned for use as a pleasure parkway in the 1903 park plan prepared by the Olmsted Brothers. The parkway was completed in 1915. It is named for James Terwilliger, who owned the land on which the parkway was built. The roadway, or portions of it, were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021.
It is the namesake of the Terwilliger curves, one of the most dangerous stretches of I-5 in Oregon, and possibly also The Simpsons character Robert Terwilliger / Sideshow Bob.
Points of interest
(listed north to south)
Duniway Park
Oregon Health & Science University campus, including
Portland Aerial Tram
Shriners Hospital
Portland VA Medical Center
Terwilliger Parkway
Marquam Nature Park
Capitol Highway
George Himes Park
Barbur Boulevard
Interstate 5
Taylors Ferry Road
Boones Ferry Road
Tryon Creek State Natural Area
Transit
North of Capitol Highway (shared by Oregon Route 10 in the area where Terwilliger crosses), the street is served by TriMet bus line 8, and south of Capitol Highway bus lines 38 and 39 serve some sections of it.
See also
List of streets in Portland, Oregon
References
External links
Category:Streets in Portland, Oregon
Category:Parkways in the United States
Category:1915 establishments in Oregon
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Portland, Oregon
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terwilliger_Boulevard
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.629249
|
25887839
|
Psilocybe heimii
|
Psilocybe heimii is a species of psilocybin mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. Described as new to science in 1978 by Gastón Guzmán, it is found in the subtropical forests of Mexico. It is named in honor of French mycologist Roger Heim.
}}
External links
*
Category:Entheogens
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Psychoactive fungi
heimii
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of Mexico
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungi without expected TNC conservation status
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_heimii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.630392
|
25887840
|
Hasan Muratović
|
}}
}}
| birth_date =
| birth_place = Olovo, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
| death_date
| death_place = Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
| nationality = Bosnian
| party = Party of Democratic Action
| spouse = Mulija Čabaravdić
| children = 2
| residence = Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
| alma_mater = }}
Hasan Muratović (11 April 1940 – 14 November 2020) was a Bosnian politician, entrepreneur and professor who served as the last Prime Minister of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina from 1996 to 1997. He also served as Minister without portfolio in all of the governments of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina throughout the Bosnian War. Muratović was the first post-war Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations, serving from 1997 to 1999. He was a member of the Party of Democratic Action.
Muratović was also known for his long-term professorship at the Faculty of Economics and the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at the University of Sarajevo. He was also rector of the University of Sarajevo from 2004 to 2006. He was a successful manager in many positions in business companies as well as a consultant in domestic and international consulting firms, including Deloitte. Muratović served as an ambassador to Croatia from 1999 to 2002, as weel as being the Vice President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe from 2002 to 2004. Up to his death, he was professor emeritus of University of Sarajevo, part-time professor and consultant.
Education
Muratović earned his Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Ljubljana in 1964, the Master of Science degree in organization sciences at the University of Sarajevo in 1972 and the PhD at the Faculty of Organizational Sciences, Belgrade in 1981.
Academic career
Muratović began teaching as an assistant professor at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering of the University of Sarajevo in 1974. In 1982, he was promoted to lecturer at Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Sarajevo and later professor in 1988 in Theory of Systems and Analyses of Information Systems where he lectured until he was elected rector. He was, at the same time, professor in Management and Organization at the Economic Faculty Sarajevo where he founded the Department of M&O and was its manager (1989–2006). As rector of the University of Sarajevo, Muratović reformed the system of high education and introduced the Bologna Process of Higher Education.
He was an author of four and co-author of six books and over 120 papers in the field of strategy, restructuring, organization structures, change, crisis management and negotiations.
Business career
Parallel with his academic career, Muratović was also active in business companies transferring his knowledge from research and university to practical projects and management. After finishing his studies in mechanical engineering, he worked in Fabrika motora Sarajevo (largely known as FAMOS) from 1964 to 1973, first as a designer in R&D department and then as a manager of production planning and the manager of strategic planning, finances and information systems. He then joined the United Bus Company of Lusaka, Zambia during the period of 1973–1977 as a regional manager, where he established state passenger transportation. After that assignment, Muratović worked for ten years as a consultant in Institute for Economic and Organization Sarajevo from 1977 until 1987. During that ten-year period, he managed development and construction of large military industry complexes in Iraq.
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Muratović managed the Institute for Research and Development of UPI, one of the ten biggest companies in the former Yugoslavia. In 1989, he established his own consulting company, BHM, which operated very successfully until the beginning of the war. Muratović was the chairman of the Bosnia version of Deloitte from 2004 to 2008, and then a consultant for Management consulting projects.
Political career
Muratović began his political career in the beginning of the Bosnian War. In June 1992, he took position of minister in the first wartime government of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He served in different ministerial positions in all six war governments, the longest period as a minister without portfolio and president of State Committee for Cooperation with UNPROFOR (United Nations Protection Force) and other international organizations. He was known as a very successful negotiator. Muratović negotiated also, through all of the war, with enemies (other two warring sides). In memoirist books written by representatives of international organizations, Muratović is described as a tough and rational negotiator. After the Dayton Agreement had been signed, in which signatory ceremony he participated, he became the last Prime Minister of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 30 January 1996, serving until 3 January 1997.
During his period as Prime Minister, Muratović created the first plan for post-war reconstruction, together with World Bank expert teams, completed negotiations with Paris and London Clubs and other international financial institutions. He also organised donor conferences held with the support of the High Representative of the UN and EU in which US5.1 billion was collected for the post-war recovery. Muratović was also governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina for the World Bank from 1996 to 1998. He acted as a leader of two election campaigns for the Party of Democratic Action (SDA) in 1996 and in 2002. In both he obtained the best results.
After the first post-war elections, Muratović became the first Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations on 3 January 1997, but resigned two years later after getting appointed as Bosnia and Herzegovina Ambassador to Croatia on 4 February 1999. In 2002, he left the ambassador role and became the Vice President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Muratović resigned from that position in 2004, taking the new position of rector at the University of Sarajevo, serving until 2006.Personal lifeMuratović lived in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina up to his death, where he was married to Mulija Čabaravdić and had two sons: Amir, film director and architect and Faruk, management consultant.DeathMuratović died on 14 November 2020, in Sarajevo, as a result of complications caused by COVID-19, amid its pandemic in Bosnia and Herzegovina.Awards and ordersAwardsMuratović received a number of awards and achievements for his work in academic, political and business fields. Among many others, he received the Golden Plaque of FAMOS in 1987, the Sixth April Award of Sarajevo in 1990, the Silver Order from the Presidency of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1998, the Croatian Order of Duke Trpimir and two Plaques of the University of Sarajevo in 1999 and in 2006.Orders*Croatia; Order of Duke TrpimirReferencesExternal links
*
Category:1940 births
Category:2020 deaths
Category:People from Olovo
Category:University of Ljubljana alumni
Category:University of Sarajevo alumni
Category:University of Belgrade alumni
Category:Rectors of the University of Sarajevo
Category:Rectors of universities in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Category:Government ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Category:Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Bosnia and Herzegovina
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasan_Muratović
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.635219
|
25887854
|
Patrick Cehlin
|
| birth_place = Stockholm, Sweden
| height_ft = 5
| height_in = 11
| weight_lb = 185
| position = Right Wing
| shoots = Right
| team = Free Agent
| league = SHL
| prospect_team | prospect_league
| former_teams = Djurgårdens IF<br>Milwaukee Admirals<br>Leksands IF<br>Rögle BK<br>Luleå HF
| ntl_team = SWE
| draft = 126th overall
| draft_year = 2010
| draft_team = Nashville Predators
| career_start = 2009
}}
Patrick Cehlin (pæt-rek se-liːn) (born July 27, 1991) is a Swedish professional ice hockey player, currently an unrestricted free agent. He most recently played for Luleå HF in the Swedish Hockey League (SHL). Cehlin was formerly a prospect for the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League.
Playing career
Cehlin joined Djurgården's U18 team in May 2006 from his first club, Flemingsbergs IK. He became Swedish U18 champion with Djurgården for the 2007–08 season. but played in Djurgården's J20-team for most of the 2008–09 season. He scored his first goal in Elitserien on October 8, 2009 against Luleå HF.
Cehlin was drafted in the 5th round (126th overall) of the 2010 NHL draft by the Nashville Predators. He was signed to a three-year entry-level contract with the Predators on June 5, 2012. Cehlin played his first North American game on October 12, 2012, against the Grand Rapids Griffins as a member of the Milwaukee Admirals where he tallied his first two career goals.
On May 19, 2015, after spending half of the previous season in Sweden on loan from the Predators with Leksands IF, Cehlin opted to continue his career in his native land in signing a two-year contract with Rögle BK.Career statisticsRegular season and playoffs{| border"0" cellpadding"1" cellspacing"0" ID"Table3" style"text-align:center; width:55em"
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan"3" bgcolor"#ffffff" |
! rowspan"99" bgcolor"#ffffff" |
! colspan="5" | Regular season
! rowspan"99" bgcolor"#ffffff" |
! colspan="5" | Playoffs
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! Season
! Team
! League
! GP
! G
! A
! Pts
! PIM
! GP
! G
! A
! Pts
! PIM
|-
| 2007–08
| Djurgårdens IF
| J20
| 22||5||3||8||8
| 4||0||1||1||4
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2008–09
| Djurgårdens IF
| J20
| 36||10||25||35||110
| 6||1||2||3||2
|-
| 2008–09
| Djurgårdens IF
| SEL
| 2||0||0||0||0
| —||—||—||—||—
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2009–10
| Djurgårdens IF
| J20
| 9||3||3||6||4
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2009–10
| Djurgårdens IF
| SEL
| 54||5||6||11||10
| 16||0||2||2||2
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2010–11
| Djurgårdens IF
| J20
| —||—||—||—||—
| 5||4||2||6||0
|-
| 2010–11
| Djurgårdens IF
| SEL
| 48||4||12||16||14
| 7||1||0||1||2
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2011–12
| Djurgårdens IF
| SEL
| 48||10||4||14||20
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2012–13
| Milwaukee Admirals
| AHL
| 70||9||23||32||28
| 4||1||0||1||0
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2012–13
| Cincinnati Cyclones
| ECHL
| 1||1||0||1||0
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2013–14
| Milwaukee Admirals
| AHL
| 38||6||18||24||33
| 2||1||1||2||0
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2014–15
| Milwaukee Admirals
| AHL
| 4||0||0||0||2
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2014–15
| Cincinnati Cyclones
| ECHL
| 9||3||1||4||6
| —||—||—||—||—
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2014–15
| Leksands IF
| SHL
| 13||2||0||2||4
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2015–16
| Rögle BK
| SHL
| 52||20||16||36||52
| —||—||—||—||—
|- bgcolor="#f0f0f0"
| 2016–17
| Rögle BK
| SHL
| 17||6||3||9||4
| —||—||—||—||—
|-
| 2017–18
| Luleå HF
| SHL
| 36||14||10||24||18
| 3||1||2||3||4
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="3" | SHL totals
! 270
! 61
! 51
! 112
! 122
! 26
! 2
! 4
! 6
! 8
|}
International
{| border"0" cellpadding"1" cellspacing"0" style"text-align:center; width:40em"
|- align"center" bgcolor"#e0e0e0"
! Year
! Team
! Event
! Result
! rowspan"99" bgcolor"#ffffff" |
! GP
! G
! A
! Pts
! PIM
|-
| 2009
| Sweden
| WJC18
| 5th
| 6||2||2||4||37
|- align"center" bgcolor"#f0f0f0"
| 2011
| Sweden
| WJC
| 4th
| 6||4||2||6||18
|-
| 2016
| Sweden
| WC
| 6th
| 4||0||0||0||0
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="4" | Junior totals
! 12!!6!!4!!10!!55
|- bgcolor="#e0e0e0"
! colspan="4" | Senior totals
! 4!!0!!0!!0!!0
|}
References
External links
*
Category:1991 births
Category:Living people
Category:Cincinnati Cyclones (ECHL) players
Category:Djurgårdens IF (men's hockey) players
Category:Leksands IF players
Category:Luleå HF players
Category:Milwaukee Admirals players
Category:Nashville Predators draft picks
Category:Rögle BK players
Category:Swedish ice hockey right wingers
Category:Ice hockey people from Stockholm
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Cehlin
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.651678
|
25887865
|
Psilocybe herrerae
|
Psilocybe herrerae is a species of psilocybin mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. The mushroom was first described by Mexican mycologist Gastón Guzmán. It contains the compounds psilocybin and psilocin. Psilocybe herrerae is known only from the states of Chiapas and Veracruz, Mexico.
}}
Category:Entheogens
Category:Fungi described in 1978
Category:Psychoactive fungi
herrerae
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Fungi of Mexico
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungi without expected TNC conservation status
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_herrerae
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.653987
|
25887870
|
Psilocybe hispanica
|
Psilocybe hispanica is a species of fungus in the family Hymenogastraceae. It produces small brown mushrooms with conical to convex caps up to in diameter and stems long by thick. Reported as new to science in 2000, it is only known from the Pyrenees mountain range in northern Spain and southwestern France, where it grows on horse dung in grass fields at elevations of . The mushroom contains the psychoactive compound psilocybin. The possible depiction of this species in the 6,000-year-old Selva Pascuala rock art suggests that it might have been used in ancient religious rituals—the oldest evidence of such usage in prehistoric Europe.
Taxonomy
The species was described by Mexican mycologist Gastón Guzmán in a 2000 publication, based on specimens collected by Ignacio Seral Bozal near Huesca in northern Spain in 1995. Psilocybe hispanica is classified in the section Semilanceata of the genus Psilocybe because of its thick-walled spores and fruit body that bruises blue with handling.
}}
External links
*
*[http://www.mushroomjohn.org/psilocybehispanica2.htm Images]
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
hispanica
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of Europe
Category:Fungi described in 2000
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_hispanica
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.661456
|
25887876
|
Psilocybe hoogshagenii
|
External links
*
hoogshagenii
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Psychoactive fungi
Category:Entheogens
Category:Fungi of Mexico
Category:Fungi of Brazil
Category:Fungi of Colombia
Category:Fungi described in 1958
Category:Fungi without expected TNC conservation status
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_hoogshagenii
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.672553
|
25887877
|
Clare Moore
|
thumb|Clare Moore at Her Majesty's Theatre in 2018
Clare Christina Moore is an Australian musician, songwriter, arranger, producer and performer whose principal instrument is the drums. She has also performed as a keyboard player, singer and vibraphone player. Moore writes and performs with songwriter and performer Dave Graney, involved in various bands including The Moodists, Dave Graney 'n' the Coral Snakes, the Dave Graney Show, the Lurid Yellow Mist featuring Dave Graney and Clare Moore and Dave Graney & the .
She also wrote, sang and performed and released an album as part of The Dames, a band she formed with Kaye Louise Patterson (piano). Since 2018, she was in The Routines, a band with Jane Dust, Emily Jarrett and Will Hindmarsh.
History
Moore began performing in 1974, playing drums at school and at Rock Mass, in Adelaide. One of her teachers in this time was the noted musician and nun Sister Janet Mead. The Moodists first recorded two singles and a 12"EP for Au Go Go Records in Melbourne. She went to the UK in October 1983 after being signed by Red Flame Records. She also toured extensively in Europe and the USA.
The Moodists returned to Australia in 1985 after a short tour of the US to tour nationally opening for Public Image Ltd. The Moodists then returned to the UK and released a 12"single on Creation Records. With David McClymont - formerly of Postcard Records band Orange Juice - joining on bass, they released two further EPs on Tim records. The band lineup at their end in late 1986 was Clare Moore on drums, David McClymont on bass, Steve Miller on guitar and Dave Graney on vocals. In 1987, singer Dave Graney decided to pursue a solo career and, with Moore as his music director, formed Dave Graney and The Coral Snakes and recorded an EP for Fire Records produced by Barry Adamson before returning to Australia in late 1988. In Melbourne in the following five or six years they worked with Universal Records, for whom they recorded four albums, then continued independently with Dave Graney & the and also releasing albums and performing as Dave Graney and Clare Moore.
In 1994 Moore played drums and provided backing vocals on most of the tracks for former Go-Between Robert Forster's solo album I Had A New York Girlfriend - a collection of cover versions. In 2024 the album was re-issued under a new title Beautiful Hearts.
Moore also played drums in Harry Howard and the NDE for three albums and the Routines.
Moore released her debut solo album The Third Woman in 2001.
In 2005, there was also the double album Hashish and Liquor with Graney. Working with Graney, Moore co-wrote the soundtrack to the Tony Martin film Bad Eggs.
Other soundtrack work includes various ABC documentaries, the short film Ray by Tony Mahony, and the features made by Donna McRae, Johnny Ghost and Lost Gully Road.
In 2010, Moore worked on the Arts Centre project about Australian female musicians called Rock Chicks.
In 2011, Clare Moore composed and recorded the theme for TV series A Quiet Word With .... by Tony Martin.
Discography
Studio albums
+ List of studio albums, with selected chart positions and certifications Title Album details Peak chart positions AUS The Third Woman Released: 2001
Label: Chapter Music (CH35)
Formats: CD - Hashish and Liquor (with Dave Graney) Released: 2005
Label: Reverberation (REV018)
Formats: 2×CD, digital - Keepin' It Unreal (with Dave Graney) Released: 2006
Label: Reverberation (REV029)
Formats: CD, digital - We Wuz Curious (As The Lurid Yellow Mist featuring Dave Graney and Clare Moore) Released: June 2008
Label: Illustrious Artists (IARLP 204)
Formats: CD, digital - The Dames (as The Dames) Released: April 2013
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: compact disc and digital - Let's Get Tight (with Dave Graney) Released: 2017
Label: Cockaigne (COCK55)
Formats: CD, digital - One Million Years DC (with Dave Graney) Released: 2019
Label: Cockaigne
Formats: digital - Everything Was Funny (with Dave Graney) Released: October 2021
Label: Cockaigne (COCK70)
Formats: CD, digital - In a (Dave Graney and Clare Moore) Released: November 2022
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: compact disc and digital -(strangely) (emotional) (Dave Graney and Clare Moore) Released: April 2024
Label:
Formats: CD, digital -
Soundtracks
+ List of live albums, with selected chart positions and certifications Title Album details Peak chart positions AUS Bad Eggs (Clare Moore with Dave Graney) Released: July 2003
Label: Liberation Music (LIBCD5077.2)
Formats: CD - Johnny Ghost (Clare Moore with Dave Graney) Released: 2011
Label: Cockaigne
Formats: digital - Lost Gully Road (Clare Moore with Dave Graney) Released: 2017
Label: Cockaigne
Formats: digital -
Live albums
+ List of live albums, with selected chart positions and certifications Title Album details Peak chart positions AUS Point Blank (with Clare Moore and Mark Fitzgibbon) Released: April 2015
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: digital - Live in Hell (with Clare Moore, Stu Thomas and Stuart Perera) Released: April 2015
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: digital - In Concert (with Clare Moore and Robin Casinader) Released: May 2020
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: digital - "the Dove" Valentino (with Clare Moore and Malcolm Ross) Released: August 2020
Label: Wolverine Enterprises
Formats: digital - Lyve At Byrds (with Dave Graney the ) Released: February 2022
Label: Cockaigne
Formats: digital
Note: Recorded on 8 November 2019 at Bird's Basement, Melbourne -
Awards and nominations
ARIA Music Awards
The ARIA Music Awards are a set of annual ceremonies presented by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), which recognise excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of the music of Australia. They commenced in 1987.
!
|-
| 2003 || Music from the Motion Picture – Bad Eggs (Dave Graney and Clare Moore) || Best Original Soundtrack Recording
Australian Women in Music Awards
The Australian Women in Music Awards is an annual event that celebrates outstanding women in the Australian Music Industry who have made significant and lasting contributions in their chosen field. They commenced in 2018.
!
|-
| 2023
| Clare Moore
| Lifetime Achievement Award
|
|
References
Category:Australian musicians
Category:Living people
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
Category:Australian music arrangers
Category:Australian people of Greek descent
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clare_Moore
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.691293
|
25887888
|
Charles Alton Ellis
|
| death_place = Evanston, Illinois
| nationality | other_names
| occupation = structural engineer
| years_active | known_for Designing the Golden Gate Bridge structure
| notable_works =
}}
Charles Alton Ellis (1876–1949) was a professor, structural engineer and mathematician who was chiefly responsible for the structural design of the Golden Gate Bridge. Because of a dispute with Joseph Strauss, he was not recognized for his work when the bridge opened in 1937. His contributions were ultimately recognized at the bridge in a plaque installed in 2012.Early life and education
Ellis was born in Parkman, Maine, in 1876.
He earned a degree in mathematics from Wesleyan University (where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity). In 1922, he received his graduate certificate in engineering (C.E.) from the University of Illinois.Career
Ellis took a post at the American Bridge Company, where he worked on the stresses of subway tunnels crossing the Hudson River. Ellis completed coursework to extend his knowledge of structural engineering at the University of Illinois.
In 1922 he was expert enough to author a benchmark textbook in the field, Essentials in the Theory of Framed Structures.
Ellis began working on the Golden Gate Bridge in 1922, the same year he gained his engineering certificate from University of Illinois. He remained with the project until December 1931. He then opened a consultancy practice in Chicago, working as an advisor to the Public Works Administration.
During his career, he was a professor at the University of Michigan, the University of Illinois, and Purdue University. His papers are held at the Purdue University library.Golden Gate Bridge structural design
Ellis was responsible for the structural design of the bridge, working from the overall design by Strauss.
A dispute over the time it was taking to complete the design led Strauss to accuse Ellis of wasting time and money, and to dismiss him from the project. The copy of the engineering drawings for the Golden Gate Bridge on file at the Library of Congress is signed by Ellis, but the plaque placed on the bridge in 1937 did not give him any credit.
In 2012, Ellis was officially given recognition for his part in the designing process of the Golden Gate Bridge when a plaque was installed on the south tower to acknowledge his contributions.ReferencesBibliography*
* |access-dateAugust 25, 2017 |archive-urlhttps://web.archive.org/web/20110711164106/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldengate/index.html| archive-dateJuly 11, 2011 |url-statusdead}}
*
*
Category:American structural engineers
Category:Wesleyan University alumni
Category:University of Michigan faculty
Category:Purdue University faculty
Category:People from Parkman, Maine
Category:1949 deaths
Category:1876 births
Category:University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign faculty
Category:Grainger College of Engineering alumni
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Alton_Ellis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.695175
|
25887897
|
Richard Ward Greene
|
Richard Ward Greene (January 21, 1792 – March 14, 1875), was an American attorney, having graduated from Brown University and having studied law at Litchfield College and under Boston lawyer Ebenezer Rockwell. He was appointed U.S. attorney for Rhode Island in 1826 and also served in both houses of the state legislature. In May 1848 was elected as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court. He resigned on June 14, 1854. His nephew, Albert Collins Greene, was a U.S. Senator from Rhode Island. His uncle was the Revolutionary War General, Nathanael Greene.
Born at Potowomut, Rhode Island, Greene was the son of Christopher Greene and Deborah Ward. He married Katherine Celia Greene on November 12, 1851.
He died on March 14, 1875, in Providence, Rhode Island. In his will he left (USD)$75,000 to the Methodist Episcopal Sunday Schools.
References
Category:Justices of the Rhode Island Supreme Court
Greene, Richard W.
Category:Politicians from Warwick, Rhode Island
Category:Rhode Island lawyers
Category:1792 births
Category:1875 deaths
Category:19th-century American judges
Category:19th-century American lawyers
Category:Brown University alumni
Category:Greene family (Rhode Island)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Ward_Greene
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.696505
|
25887903
|
Psilocybe inconspicua
|
Psilocybe inconspicua is a species of mushroom in the family Hymenogastraceae. The mushroom contains the psychoactive compound psilocybin.
See also
List of Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybe
References
Category:Entheogens
Category:Psychoactive fungi
inconspicua
Category:Psychedelic tryptamine carriers
Category:Fungi of North America
Category:Taxa named by Gastón Guzmán
Category:Fungus species
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_inconspicua
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.697527
|
25887915
|
1996 Lithuanian parliamentary election
|
| seats_for_election = All 141 seats in the Seimas
| majority_seats = 71
| turnout = 52.92%
| leader1 = Vytautas Landsbergis
| party1 = TS
| color1 =
| seats1 = 70
| percentage1 = 31.34
| last_election1 = new
| leader2 = Algirdas Saudargas
| party2 = Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party
| seats2 = 16
| percentage2 = 10.43
| last_election2 = 10
| leader3 = Česlovas Juršėnas
| party3 = Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania
| seats3 = 12
| percentage3 = 10.01
| last_election3 = 73
| leader4 = Romualdas Ozolas
| party4 = Lithuanian Centre Union
| seats4 = 14
| percentage4 = 8.67
| last_election4 = 2
| leader5 = Aloyzas Sakalas
| party5 = Social Democratic Party of Lithuania
| seats5 = 12
| percentage5 = 6.94
| last_election5 = 8
| leader6 =
| party6 = Young Lithuania
| seats6 = 1
| percentage6 = 4.01
| last_election6 = 0
| leader7 = Kazimira Prunskienė
| party7 = LMP
| seats7 = 1
| percentage7 = 3.86
| last_election7 = new
| leader8 = Kazys Bobelis
| party8 = Christian Democratic Union (Lithuania)
| seats8 = 1
| percentage8 = 3.24
| last_election8 = 1
| leader9 = Jan Sienkiewicz
| party9 = Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania
| seats9 = 3
| percentage9 = 3.13
| last_election9 = 4
| leader10 = Mečislovas Vaškovič
| party10 = Lithuanian Citizens' Alliance
| seats10 = 1
| percentage10 = 2.55
| last_election10 = new
| leader11 =
| party11 = LTS–LDP
| last_election11 = 4
| color11 =
| seats11 = 3
| percentage11 = 2.20
| leader12 = Ginutis Vencius
| party12 = Liberal Union of Lithuania
| seats12 = 1
| percentage12 = 1.93
| last_election12 = 0
| leader13 = Albinas Vaižmužis
| party13 = Lithuanian Peasants Party
| seats13 = 1
| percentage13 = 1.75
| last_election13 = new
| leader14 = Audrius Butkevičius
| party14 = Lithuanian Union of Political Prisoners and Deportees
| seats14 = 1
| percentage14 = 1.57
| last_election14 = 2
| leader15 = –
| party15 = Independents
| seats15 = 4
| percentage15 = –
| last_election15 = 1
| title = Prime Minister
| before_election = Laurynas Stankevičius
| before_party = Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania
| after_election = Gediminas Vagnorius
| after_party = TS
}}
Parliamentary elections were held in Lithuania in two stages on 20 October and 10 November 1996. All 141 seats in the Seimas were up for election; 70 based on proportional party lists and 71 in single member constituencies. Where no candidate gained more than 50% of the vote on 20 October, a run-off was held on 10 November.
The first round of the elections was held concurrently with a referendum to amend Articles 55, 57 and 131 of the constitution, and a referendum on the use of proceeds from privatization. The second round was held concurrently with a referendum to amend Article 47 of the constitution. Due to a low turnout, none of the referendum questions succeeded in getting approval from at least 50% of registered voters.
The result was a victory for the Homeland Union – Lithuanian Conservatives, which won 70 seats. They formed a coalition with second-place Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party. The Homeland Union benefited from dissatisfaction with the ruling Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania, which had failed to reignite the economy and was plagued by financial scandals. Gediminas Vagnorius was subsequently appointed as the Prime Minister.
Electoral system
In his decree on 9 April 1996, the President of Lithuania Algirdas Brazauskas set the date of the elections to the Seimas for 20 October. Elections took place under a mixed electoral system, with 70 MPs elected on proportional party lists and 71 MPs in single member constituencies. Run-off elections were to be held on 10 November in constituencies where no candidate received at least 50% of the votes cast.
In June 1994, Political Parties' and Political Organisations' Act was passed. This act set a notion that only political parties (and coalitions consisting them) could take part in the elections. Public organisations (e. g. Association of Poles in Lithuania) had to become political parties if it wanted to part in the elections.
In June 1996, the electoral threshold for the 70 proportional seats was increased from 4% to 5%, a new threshold of 7% was introduced for electoral coalitions and the exception for electoral lists of national minorities was eliminated. This change was mainly passed by the votes of the Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania and the Homeland Union. The combined purpose of the changes was to reduce the number of small parties in the parliament.
The elections were also the first to allow voters to give preference votes to candidates on electoral lists, although their influence was limited (as some parties hadn't allowed this option for their lists). This system allowed voters to cast both positive and negative preference votes (the latter option allowed to express disapproval of candidates). Similar preference votes' system is used for Latvian parliamentary elections.
Campaign
The main contestants in the elections were the ruling Democratic Labour Party of Lithuania (LDDP) and the Homeland Union - Lithuanian Conservatives. The LDDP, led by Česlovas Juršėnas, had evolved from the Communist Party of Lithuania and won the 1992 election to the Seimas by a significant margin. Homeland Union, led by Vytautas Landsbergis, was founded in 1993 from elements of the Sąjūdis party, which started as a reform movement that had led the drive for independence from the Soviet Union.
Pre-election polls suggested a victory for the right-wing opposition over LDDP. The ruling party was suffering as a result of continued economic woes that were at the forefront of the debate: the economic situation was not improving as quickly as people expected. Financial scandals, including one involving former Prime Minister Adolfas Šleževičius, also played a major role. The opposition, on the other hand, promised improvement and stability on the domestic scene and a fight against corruption. Two of these seats were won by Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania (Vilniaus Šalčininkų and Vilniaus Trakų constituencies), one by Centre Union of Lithuania (Trakų constituency), and the last one by Alliance of the Lithuanian National Minorities (Naujosios Vilnios constituency).
Aftermath
The newly elected Seventh Seimas elected Vytautas Landsbergis as its Speaker. As Homeland Union was one seat short of the majority, they were joined by the Christian Democrats in a coalition government. Gediminas Vagnorius of the Homeland Union was appointed the Prime Minister, while the leader of the Christian Democrats, Algirdas Saudargas was appointed the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Two members of the Centre Union of Lithuania, Algis Čaplikas and Imantas Lazdinis, joined the Government, but as individuals and not delegates of their party. Vincas Babilius of the Lithuanian Confederation of Industrialists became the Minister of Economy.<ref name=SeimoIstorija />
The newly formed coalition had supermajority in the parliament, what allowed it to amend the Constitution and overturn presidential vetoes.
These election marked the first time, when liberal party members were elected to the parliament of Lithuania.
References
Category:Parliamentary elections in Lithuania
Lithuania
Parliamentary
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996_Lithuanian_parliamentary_election
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.707798
|
25887917
|
France–Saint Lucia Delimitation Agreement
|
| location_signed = Paris, France
| date_sealed | date_effective 4 March 1981
| condition_effective | date_expiration
| signatories | parties
*
*
| ratifiers | depositor United Nations Secretariat
| language | languages English; French
| wikisource =
}}
The France – Saint Lucia Agreement on Delimitation is a 1981 treaty between France and Saint Lucia which delimits the maritime boundary between Saint Lucia and the French territory of Martinique.
The treaty was signed in Paris on 4 March 1981. The text of the treaty sets out a boundary that is an equidistant line between the two islands in the Saint Lucia Channel. The boundary is set out in an east–west direction and consists of 17 straight-line maritime segments defined by 18 individual coordinate points. The far western point of the boundary is the tripoint with Venezuela and the far eastern point is the tripoint with Barbados. Commentators have noted that it is curious that the treaty does not refer to the island of Martinique.
The treaty came into force upon signature. The full name of the treaty is Agreement on Delimitation between the Government of the French Republic and the Government of Saint Lucia.
See also
* Barbados–France Maritime Delimitation Agreement
Notes
References
* Anderson, Ewan W. (2003). International Boundaries: A Geopolitical Atlas. Routledge: New York. ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54061586 OCLC 54061586]
* Charney, Jonathan I., David A. Colson, Robert W. Smith. (2005). International Maritime Boundaries, 5 vols. Hotei Publishing: Leiden. ; ; ; ; ; [https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23254092 OCLC 23254092]
External links
*[http://untreaty.un.org/unts/60001_120000/9/5/00016239.pdf Full text of agreement]
Category:1981 in France
Category:1981 in Saint Lucia
Category:Treaties concluded in 1981
Category:Treaties entered into force in 1981
Category:Boundary treaties
Category:Martinique–Saint Lucia border
Category:Treaties of Saint Lucia
Category:1981 in the Caribbean
Category:Bilateral treaties of France
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France–Saint_Lucia_Delimitation_Agreement
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.710287
|
25887940
|
Bolelli
|
Bolelli is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Simone Bolelli (born 1985), Italian tennis player
Franco Bolelli (1950–2020), Italian philosopher
Daniele Bolelli (born 1974), Italian writer and martial artist, son of Franco Bolelli
Category:Italian-language surnames
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolelli
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.711443
|
25887945
|
Sān miào wán
|
Sān miào wán () is a traditional Chinese medicine consisting of three components:
* 33% huáng bǎi (黃栢 or "yellow fir"), also known as Cortex Phellodendri, the bark of Phellodendron chinense Schneid. or Phellodendron amurense Rupr.
* 50% cāng zhú (蒼术 or "[black] atractylodes"), also known as Atractylodis Rhizoma, the root of Atractylodes lancea (thunb.) Dc or Atractylodes chinensis (dc.) Koidz.
* 17% huái niú xī (懷牛膝 or "ox knee"), also known as Archyanthis bidentatae Radix, the root of Achyranthes bidentata.
The preparation, as well as related herbal combinations such as èr miào wán (二妙丸, "two marvel pill", which contains equal proportions of huáng bǎi and cāng zhú) and sì miào wán (四妙丸, "four marvel pill"), has been used traditionally in treatment of gout. Sān miào wán has been reported to lower serum and liver uric acid concentration in mice with hyperuricemia, but not normal mice, by suppressing xanthine oxidase and downregulating production of mRNA for renal uric acid transporter mURAT1. References
Category:Traditional Chinese medicine pills
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sān_miào_wán
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.714979
|
25887954
|
Phacelia mohavensis
|
Phacelia mohavensis is a species of phacelia known by the common name Mojave phacelia. It is endemic to southern California, where it is mostly limited to the San Gabriel Mountains and San Bernardino Mountains. It grows in the forests and wooded slopes of the mountains in sandy and gravelly substrates.
Description
Phacelia mohavensis is an annual herb producing a mostly unbranched erect stem up to 25 centimeters tall. It is glandular and coated lightly in stiff hairs. The leaves are linear or lance-shaped, smooth-edged, and up to 4.5 centimeters in length.
The hairy, glandular inflorescence is a one-sided curving or coiling cyme of bell-shaped flowers. Each flower is just under a centimeter long and white to pale blue in color with a yellowish tubular throat. It has a calyx of long, narrow, fuzzy-haired sepals.
External links
Jepson Manual Treatment — Phacelia mohavensis
Phacelia mohavensis — Photo gallery
mohavensis
Category:Endemic flora of California
Category:Natural history of the California chaparral and woodlands
Category:Natural history of the Transverse Ranges
~
~
Category:Flora without expected TNC conservation status
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phacelia_mohavensis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.716133
|
25887977
|
The Wall (Heroes)
|
| production=418
| writer=Adam Armus and Kay Foster
| director=Allan Arkush
| guests=
*Ashley Crow as Sandra Bennet
*Madeline Zima as Gretchen Berg
*Jimmy Jean-Louis as the Haitian
*Deanne Bray as Emma Coolidge
*Elisabeth Röhm as Lauren Gilmore
*Todd Stashwick as Eli
*Sherri Saum as Kate Bennet
*Stephen Monroe Taylor as Richard
*Eric Roberts as Eric Thompson
*Harry Perry as Damien
| prev= The Art of Deception
| next= Brave New World
|episode_list = List of Heroes episodes
|season_article = Heroes season 4
}}
"The Wall" is the seventeenth and penultimate episode of the fourth season of the NBC superhero drama series Heroes, and the seventy-sixth episode overall. The episode aired on February 1, 2010.
Plot
Lauren Gilmore enters the carnival in order to find some medical supplies to clean her bullet wound when she is confronted by Emma Coolidge who begins to tend to her wound. She reveals that she came with the intent to stop Samuel Sullivan whom she tells Emma has done very bad things and has manipulated the people of the carnival like the guru of a cult. When Samuel approaches to visit Emma, Lauren hides, only to have Emma tell Samuel she is there. When Samuel confronts her, he gets Eli to deal with her, but she escapes.
Samuel still wishes for Claire Bennet to join his carnival family, so in one final move, he brings Claire to her father who is being held in the House of Mirrors.Damien reveals Noah Bennet's past memories to Claire in hopes that she will lose all respect for her father and join him. This prompts Claire to storm out of the House of Mirrors and confront Samuel, who uses his ability to trap Claire and her father underground as the carnival packs up to head to Central Park.
Upon entering the mental prison Matt Parkman trapped Sylar in, Peter Petrelli yells out in the hope that Sylar will answer and he will be able to find him. Sylar hears a noise, and shifts himself to street level where he confronts Peter. Peter reveals to Sylar that he intends to free him from the nightmare. While reluctantly accepting what Peter tells him, Sylar dares him to free them, only to have Peter fail in his attempt. Peter then proceeds to simply avoid Sylar, with months seeming to go by. When they finally start talking again, Sylar reveals he does not really want to escape for he feels he deserves this punishment. Just then, a brick wall manifests in front of them which they realize they must break through in order to escape. Peter sledges away at it for years, while Sylar attempts to apologize for killing his brother. Eventually, Peter learns to let go of his anger, forgive Sylar and accept that he is truly a changed man, thus allowing them to break through the wall and escape the mental prison.
Critical reception
Steve Heisler of The A.V. Club rated this episode a C−.
Robert Canning of IGN gave the episode 7.5 out of 10.
References
External links
*
Category:Heroes season 4 episodes
Category:2010 American television episodes
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wall_(Heroes)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.719394
|
25887989
|
Matt Rendell
|
| birth_place | death_date
| death_place = Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
| originalteam = West Torrens
| draftpick = 76th overall, 1991 National Draft
| height = 200 cm
| weight = 103 kg
| position = Ruckman
| guernsey = 9
| statsend = 1992
| years1 = 1977–1980
| club1 = West Torrens
| games_goals1 = 79 (39)
| years2 = 1981–1991
| club2 =
| games_goals2 = 164 (101)
| years3 = 1992
| club3 =
| games_goals3 = 13 (7)
| games_goalstotal = 256 (147)
| careerhighlights = *Fitzroy captain: 1985–1987
*Fitzroy Club Champion: 1982, 1983
*All-Australian team: 1983, 1987
}}
Matthew Rendell (18 April 1959 – 28 June 2023) was an Australian rules footballer who played in the Australian Football League and South Australian National Football League (SANFL).
Rendell played as a ruckman and made his debut with the West Torrens Football Club in the SANFL in 1977 where he played 79 games. He left South Australia in 1981 to play with the Fitzroy Football Club in the VFL, wearing the No. 9 guernsey. In his first year, he played mainly at full forward and kicked forty-five goals, but he admitted in later years he did not enjoy it. With the return of Ron Alexander to Western Australia, however, Rendell was to make the ruck position his own, barring injuries, until 1987. Rendell did have quite a number of injuries, however, after 1983, with the result that he played only 26 of 43 games in 1984 and 1985.
Rendell won Fitzroy's 1982 and 1983 best and fairest awards, and was appointed captain from 1985 to 1987. In one game, Rendell, who had not kicked a goal in his previous seventeen games for Fitzroy, was used as a seventh forward to counter North Melbourne's Gary Dempsey's habit of marking in the last line of defence; as a result of this strategy, Rendell kicked eight goals and the Lions won the game by 150 points, which at the time more than doubled the previous biggest loss by a minor premier.
Rendell played just one game with the Lions in 1988, the rest of the year spent in the reserves, which Rendell put down to a misunderstanding with coach David Parkin. He played 18 games in 1989 and played well enough throughout the season to secure four Brownlow votes in a drive to the finals that was deflated by an injury to top forward Richard Osborne.
Rendell retired at the end of 1991 after 164 games and 101 goals with Fitzroy. However, he soon reversed that decision and moved to the Brisbane Bears, who persuaded him to continue playing. He did so in his final year in 1992, playing 13 games and booting seven goals for the Bears before retiring for good.
Rendell was an assistant coach and match-day tactician with the St Kilda Football Club, alongside Grant Thomas, until he was sacked at the end of 2006 with the appointment of Ross Lyon. In 2007, he returned to South Australia, joining the Adelaide Football Club as their recruitment manager. Rendell resigned as Adelaide's recruiting manager on 16 March 2012 following issues around reported comments in relation to the recruitment of Indigenous players. He was later, with the AFL's permission, hired by Collingwood as part of their recruiting department. In 2015 he also took up the part-time task of coaching Collingwood's ruckmen.
Rendell's brother Tim was a promising ruckman who also played for West Torrens and was recruited by Fitzroy; however, Tim did not play a game due to chronic injury.
Matt Rendell died on the afternoon of 28 June 2023, after suffering a cardiac arrest on 25 June while walking his dog. He was 64.References
Category:1959 births
Category:2023 deaths
Category:Australian rules footballers from South Australia
Category:Fitzroy Football Club players
Category:Brisbane Bears players
Category:West Torrens Football Club players
Category:Mitchell Medal winners
Category:All-Australians (1953–1988)
Category:South Australian State of Origin players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Rendell
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.722594
|
25887995
|
Neville Bruns
|
| birth_place | death_date
| death_place | originalteam Leitchville
| debutdate = Round 7: 13 May 1978
| debutteam = Geelong
| debutopponent = Melbourne
| debutstadium = VFL Park
| height = 176 cm
| weight = 77 kg
| position | statsend 1992
| years1 = 1978–1992
| club1 = Geelong
| games_goals1 = 223 (174)
| careerhighlights =
}}
Neville Bruns (born 3 October 1958) is a former Australian rules footballer in the Victorian/Australian Football League for Geelong Football Club. He wore the number 19 during his tenure at the club and played often in the wing and rover positions. From 1978 to 1992 he played 223 games (including the 1989 and 1992 Grand Finals) and kicked 174 goals. He received a total of 33 Brownlow votes in his career.
In 1985, Leigh Matthews infamously king hit Bruns and broke his jaw. Although no reports were made at the time, the Victorian Football League (VFL) Commissioners subsequently investigated the incident, found Matthews to be responsible and deregistered him for four weeks. Matthews then faced a criminal charge of assault, to which he pleaded guilty, and was fined $1,000. This resulted in much debate over the role of the police in sporting incidents.
Neville Bruns formerly worked as the Victorian State Manager for Sportsco and was also the National Operations Manager for an Australian trade and industrial tool retailer, Total Tools. He is now retired and lives with his wife Karen in the Geelong area.
Neville Bruns also worked as a teacher at Geelong College in the 1980s.ReferencesExternal links
*
Category:1958 births
Category:Geelong Football Club players
Category:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (state)
Category:Living people
Category:Victorian State of Origin players
Category:Australia international rules football team players
Category:20th-century Australian sportsmen
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neville_Bruns
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.725392
|
25888001
|
Komae High School
|
|website =
}}
is a public high school located in Komae, Tokyo, Japan. There are over 2000 male and female students at Komae from grades 10 to 12. The school was established on April 1, 1972. Komae High is a sister school of Kirrawee High School, located in Sydney, Australia. It is overseen by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.
Access
The school is located approximately 3 minutes walk from Izumi-Tamagawa Station on the Odakyū Odawara Line. Notable alumni * Hajime Mizoguchi, cellist
References
Category:High schools in Tokyo
Category:Educational institutions established in 1972
Category:Komae, Tokyo
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komae_High_School
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.727818
|
25888019
|
St. Mary's-By-The-Sea (Northeast Harbor, Maine)
|
| locmapin = Maine#USA
| built = 1902
| architect = Henry Vaughan
| architecture = Late Gothic Revival
| added = July 5, 2000
| area = less than one acre
| refnum 00000761
}}
'''St. Mary's-By-The-Sea''' is a historic Gothic Revival church at 20 South Shore Road in Northeast Harbor, Maine. Designed by English architect Henry Vaughan and built in 1902, it is one of a number of architect-designed summer chapels built around the turn of the 20th century with funding from wealthy summer residents. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.
The church is one of three in Maine known to be the work of English architect Henry Vaughan, and is the only one executed in stone. It was built in 1902 to replace an earlier chapel which the summer congregation had outgrown. It was built in part using granite quarried from a roadbed that the community had concluded needed to be lowered. Funding was raised by subscription from the congregation, which was then composed mainly of wealthy summer residents.<ref nameNRHP/>See also*National Register of Historic Places listings in Hancock County, MaineReferencesExternal links
*[http://maryjude.org/ Parish of St. Mary and St. Jude web site]
Category:Churches completed in 1902
Category:20th-century churches in the United States
Category:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Maine
Category:Gothic Revival church buildings in Maine
Category:Churches in Hancock County, Maine
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Hancock County, Maine
Category:1902 establishments in Maine
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Mary's-By-The-Sea_(Northeast_Harbor,_Maine)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.729473
|
25888028
|
Wattle Ridge
|
Wattle Ridge may refer to:
Wattle Ridge, New South Wales, a locality in Wingecarribee Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wattle Ridge, Queensland, a locality in the Toowoomba Region, Queensland, Australia
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattle_Ridge
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.729889
|
25888043
|
Pioneer Conference (Indiana)
|
The Pioneer Conference in Indiana|thumb|220px|right
The Pioneer Conference is an IHSAA-sanctioned athletic conference formed in 2009. It is made up of ten small private, military, laboratory, and/or charter schools from Delaware, Hamilton, Johnson, Madison, Marion, and Wayne counties. All schools are Class 1A or 2A IHSAA members, aside from the much larger Indianapolis Shortridge Charter School, which is a 4A member.
Members
School Location Mascot Colors County Size 20-21 IHSAA Class Year joined Previous conference affiliation Anderson Prep Anderson Jets 48Madison 241 A 2015 Independents Bethesda Christian Brownsburg Patriots 31Hendricks 107 A 2018 Independents Greenwood Christian Greenwood Cougars 41 Johnson 166 A 2009 Independent IndianapolisShortridge Indianapolis Blue Devils 49 Marion 1,025 AAAA 2010 none (reopened 2009) International Indianapolis Gryphons 49 Marion 138 A 2009 Independent Liberty Christian Anderson Lions 48 Madison 126 A 2009 Independent Muncie Burris Muncie Owls 18 Delaware 423 AA 2015 Independents(MEC 2014) Indianapolis Park Tudor Indianapolis Panthers 49 Marion 378 AA 2019 Indiana Crossroads Seton Catholic Richmond Cardinals 89 Wayne 78 A 2015 Independents University Carmel Trailblazers 29 Hamilton 343 AA 2015 Independents
Former members
School City Mascot Colors County Year joined Previous conference Year left Conference joined Indianapolis Crispus Attucks Indianapolis Tigers 49 Marion 2009 Indianapolis 2018 Independents Central Christian Indianapolis Chargers 49 Marion 2009 Central Indiana Christian Conference 2021 Greater Indianapolis
History
The conference was formed in 2009, with four Indianapolis-area private schools (Baptist, Greenwood Christian, International, Liberty Christian) joining with recently reopened IPS school Attucks, whose medical focus causes the school to be smaller than its public counterparts. The 2010–11 school year also brought another small IPS school into the fold, Shortridge. The Conference expanded outside of the immediate Indianapolis area in 2015, adding three Independent schools (Anderson Prep, Seton Catholic, and University), as well as Muncie Burris, who had been voted out of the Mid-Eastern Conference the year before. Indianapolis Attucks left in 2018, and was replaced by Bethesda Christian. Park Tudor would also join the conference in 2019.
Membership timeline
DateFormat = yyyy
ImageSize = width:750 height:auto barincrement:20
Period = from:2009 till:2021
TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal
PlotArea = right:30 left:0 bottom:50 top:5
Colors = id:barcolor value:rgb(0.99,0.7,0.7)
id:line value:black
id:bg value:white
PlotData=
width:15 textcolor:black shift:(5,-5) anchor:from fontsize:s
bar:1 color:red from:2009 till:2018 text:Attucks (2009-2018)
bar:2 color:red from:2009 till:end text:Baptist (2009-present)
bar:3 color:red from:2009 till:end text:Greenwood Christian (2009-present)
bar:4 color:red from:2009 till:end text:International (2009-present)
bar:5 color:red from:2009 till:end text:Liberty Christian (2009-present)
bar:6 color:red from:2010 till:end text:Shortridge (2010-present)
bar:7 color:red from:2015 till:end text:Anderson Prep (2015-present)
bar:8 color:red from:2015 till:end text:Muncie Burris (2015-present)
bar:9 color:red from:2015 till:end text:Seton Catholic (2015-present)
bar:10 color:red from:2015 till:end text:University (2015-present)
bar:11 color:red from:2018 till:end text:Bethesda Christian (2018-present)
bar:12 color:red from:2019 till:end text:Park Tudor (2019-present)
ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:1 start:2009
TextData =
fontsize:L
textcolor:black
pos:(175,30) # tabs:(0-center)
text:"Pioneer Membership History"
Conference championships
Boys basketball
# Team Seasons 3 Greenwood Christian 2011, 2012, 2014* 2 Attucks 2015, 2017 2 Liberty Christian 2013*, 2016 2 Shortridge 2013*, 2014* 1 Baptist 2010 4 University 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 0 Anderson Prep 0 Burris 0 International 0 Seton Catholic
Girls basketball
# Team Seasons 4 Attucks 2011, 2015, 2016, 2017 (W) 3 Shortridge 2012, 2013, 2014 2 Greenwood Christian 2010 2021 1 Liberty Christian 2017 (E) 0 Baptist 0 International 0 Anderson Prep 0 Burris 0 Seton Catholic 2 University 2019 2020 - 1 Bethesda Christian 2018
Baseball
#TeamSeasons1Greenwood Christian2016*1Seton Catholic2016*3University2016* 2018 20191Liberty Christian 20171Park Tudor 2021
Boys' Tennis
# Team Seasons 1 University 2016 0 Shortridge 0 Baptist 0 Liberty Christian 0 Attucks 0 International
All-Conference Teams
Baseball
2016
NameClassSchoolTristan WilliamsFr.Anderson PrepKrae SparksSr.Greenwood ChristianJoel StinnettSo.Greenwood ChristianNate WeemsSr.Greenwood ChristianIsaiah BreesSo.Liberty ChristianPeyton QuinnJr.Liberty ChristianMatt ArmstrongSr.Muncie BurrisCliff DickmanSr.Seton CatholicNick MatthewsSeton CatholicVince MoseyJr.Seton CatholicColten PippengerSr.Seton CatholicHudson BeboSo.UniversityDawson EstepFr.UniversityJohn LawickiJr.UniversityZach NerneySr.University
References
External links
Conference Membership
IHSAA
Category:Education in Indianapolis
Category:Indiana high school athletic conferences
Category:Marion County, Indiana
Category:Sports competitions in Indianapolis
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pioneer_Conference_(Indiana)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.758564
|
25888069
|
1996 UEFA Futsal Championship
|
| count = 1
| second_other =
| third_other =
| fourth_other =
| matches | goals
| attendance | top_scorer Konstantin Eremenko (8 goals)
| player = Paulo Roberto
| nextseason = 1999
}}
The 1996 UEFA Futsal Championship was the first official edition of the UEFA-governed European Championship for national futsal teams. It was held in Spain, between January 8 and January 14, 1996, in one venue located in the city of Córdoba.
Qualification
Qualified teams
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! width=80%|Country
|-
|
|-
|
|-
|
|-
|
|-
|
|-
|
|}
Venue
{| class"wikitable" width"400"
|-
! Arena
! align="center"|Pabellón Vista Alegre
|-
! Image
|
|-
! City
| align="center"|Córdoba
|-
! Capacity
| align="center"|4,000
|}
Squads
Group stage
Group A
{| class"wikitable" style"text-align: center;"
|-
!width="175"|Team
!width="20"|Pts
!width="20"|Pld
!width="20"|W
!width="20"|D
!width="20"|L
!width="20"|GF
!width="20"|GA
!width="20"|GD
|- bgcolor="#ccffcc"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|4||2||1||1||0||4||3||+1
|- aligncenter style"background:#ccffcc;"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|3||2||1||0||1||3||2||+1
|- aligncenter style"background:#ffffff;"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|1||2||0||1||1||2||4||-2
|}
|score=2–1
|report[https://archive.today/20130205001206/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52371/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
----
| score=0–2
| report[https://archive.today/20130205012740/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52372/index.html Report]
| team2=
| goals1| goals2
| stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
| attendance| referee
| event| round
| score1| score2
| penaltyscore| penalties1
| penalties2| location
| aet=
}}
----
|score=2–2
|report[https://archive.today/20130205021501/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52373/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
Group B
{| class"wikitable" style"text-align: center;"
|-
!width="175"|Team
!width="20"|Pts
!width="20"|Pld
!width="20"|W
!width="20"|D
!width="20"|L
!width="20"|GF
!width="20"|GA
!width="20"|GD
|- bgcolor="#ccffcc"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|6||2||2||0||0||8||3||+5
|- aligncenter style"background:#ccffcc;"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|3||2||1||0||1||7||8||-1
|- aligncenter style"background:#ffffff;"
|style="text-align:left;"|
|0||2||0||0||2||5||9||-4
|}
|score=3–2
|report[https://archive.today/20130205052359/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52374/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
----
|score=6– 3
|report[https://archive.today/20130205154405/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52375/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
----
|score=5–1
|report[https://archive.today/20130205212447/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round244/match52376/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
Knockout stage
Semi-finals
|score=4–1
|report[https://archive.today/20130205074711/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round239/match52377/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
----
|score=6–2
|report[https://archive.today/20130205003754/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round239/match52378/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
Fifth-place play-off
|score3–4|aetyes
|report[https://archive.today/20130205012351/http://en.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round241/match52380/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
Third-place play-off
|score2–3|aetyes
|report[https://archive.today/20130205092546/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round240/match52379/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
Final
|score=5–3
|report[https://archive.today/20130205104104/http://es.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/round242/match52381/index.html Report]
|team2=
|goals1|goals2
|stadium=Vista Alegre, Córdoba
|attendance|referee}}
External links
* [http://it.uefa.com/competitions/futsal/history/season1995/intro.html UEFA.com]
Championship
1996
Category:International futsal competitions hosted by Spain
Category:1995–96 in Spanish futsal
Category:Sport in Córdoba, Spain
UEFA Futsal Championship
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996_UEFA_Futsal_Championship
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.769708
|
25888080
|
Battle of Wilmington order of battle: Union
|
The following Union Army units and commanders fought in the Battle of Wilmington (February 11-22, 1865) of the American Civil War. The Confederate order of battle is listed separately.
Abbreviations used
Military Rank
MG = Major General
BG = Brigadier General
Col = Colonel
Ltc = Lieutenant Colonel
Bvt = Brevet
Department of North Carolina/Wilmington Expeditionary Force
MG John M. Schofield
Chief Engineer: Bvt BG Cyrus B. Comstock
Chief Quartermaster: Col George Sullivan Dodge
XXIII Corps
MG John M. Schofield
Division Brigade Regiments and OthersSecond Division 2nd Brigade
Col Orlando H. Moore 107th Illinois
80th Indiana
26th Kentucky
23rd Michigan
111th Ohio
118th OhioThird Division
MG Jacob D. Cox 1st Brigade
Col Oscar W. Sterl 12th Kentucky
16th Kentucky
100th Ohio
104th Ohio
8th Tennessee 2nd Brigade
Bvt BG John S. Casement 65th Illinois
65th Indiana
103rd Ohio
177th Ohio
5th Tennessee 3rd Brigade
Bvt BG Thomas J. Henderson 112th Illinois
63rd Indiana
140th Indiana Artillery Battery D, 1st Ohio Light Artillery
Terry's Provisional Corps
MG Alfred H. Terry
Chief of Staff - BG Joseph R. Hawley
Division Brigade Regiments and OthersFirst Division (XXIV Corps) 2nd Brigade
Bvt BG Joseph C. Abbott 6th Connecticut
7th Connecticut
3rd New Hampshire
7th New Hampshire
16th New York Heavy ArtillerySecond Division (XXIV Corps)
BG Adelbert Ames 1st Brigade
Col Rufus Daggett 3rd New York
112th New York
117th New York
142nd New York 2nd Brigade
Maj Oliver P. Harding until 14 Feb
Ltc James A. Colvin 47th New York
48th New York
76th Pennsylvania
97th Pennsylvania
203rd Pennsylvania 3rd Brigade
Ltc Nathan J. Johnson until 14 Feb
Col George F. Granger 13th Indiana
9th Maine
4th New Hampshire
115th New York
169th New York Artillery 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery Cos. B, G, L
16th New York Independent Battery Light Artillery
2nd Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery Co. A Engineers 15th New York Engineers Cos. A, IThird Division (XXV Corps)
BG Charles J. Paine 1st Brigade
Col Delevan Bates 107th U.S. Colored Troops
Other regiments dispersed throughout division 2nd Brigade
Col John W. Ames 4th U.S. Colored Troops
6th U.S. Colored Troops
30th U.S. Colored Troops
39th U.S. Colored Troops 3rd Brigade
Col Elias Wright until 20 Feb
Col John Henry Holman 1st U.S. Colored Troops
5th U.S. Colored Troops
10th U.S. Colored Troops
27th U.S. Colored Troops
37th U.S. Colored Troops Artillery Battery E, 3rd U.S. Artillery
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron
Rear Admiral David D. Porter
Cape Fear River
USS Bat
USS Berberry
USS Chippewa
USS Emma
USS Eolus
USS Huron
USS Kansas
USS Launch No. 1
USS Launch No. 6
USS Lenapee
USS Little Ada
USS Mackinaw
USS Malvern
USS Maratanza
USS Maumee
USS Moccasin
USS Montauk
USS Nansemond
USS Nyack
USS Osceola
USS Pawtuxet
USS Pequot
USS Pontoosuc
USS Republic
USS Sassacus
USS Seneca
USS Shawmut
USS Unadilla
USS Wilderness
USS Yantic
Fort Fisher
USS Aries
USS Howquah
USS Keystone State
USS Montgomery
USS Monticello
USS R. R. Cuyler
USS Vicksburg
See also
North Carolina in the American Civil War
Notes
References
NC Historic Sites - Fort Fisher
Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, .
Category:American Civil War orders of battle
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Wilmington_order_of_battle:_Union
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.807737
|
25888083
|
The Wonder Effect
|
thumb|Cover of the first edition.
The Wonder Effect is a collection of science fiction stories by American writers Frederik Pohl and Cyril M. Kornbluth, published by Ballantine Books in 1962.
The first novelette, "Critical Mass", is a science fiction piece by Pohl and Kornbluth first published in Galaxy Science Fiction magazine in February 1962, almost four years after Kornbluth's death. According to a foreword by Pohl in the later collection Critical Mass, the story was assembled from notes Kornbluth made for three story ideas, plus one of Pohl's own from 1954. After Kornbluth's death, his widow turned over his story notes and drafts to Pohl, who completed a dozen or so stories based on this material, most of which were eventually collected in this volume and in the later Critical Mass.
Contents
"Critical Mass" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1962)
"A Gentle Dying" (Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1961)
"Nightmare with Zeppelins" (Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1958)
"Best Friend" (Super Science Novels, May 1941)
"The World of Myrion Flowers" (the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1961)
"Trouble in Time" (Astonishing Stories, December 1940)
"The Engineer" (Infinity Science Fiction, February 1956)
"Mars-Tube" (Astonishing Stories, September 1941)
"The Quaker Cannon" (Analog Science Fiction and Fact, August 1961)
Category:1962 short story collections
Category:Short story collections by Frederik Pohl
Category:Short story collections by Cyril M. Kornbluth
Category:Science fiction short story collections
Category:Literary collaborations
Category:Ballantine Books books
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wonder_Effect
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.809242
|
25888102
|
Phacelia monoensis
|
Phacelia monoensis is an uncommon species of phacelia known by the common name Mono County phacelia.
Distribution
It is native to the Great Basin plateaus east of the Sierra Nevada in Mono County, California, and central western Nevada. It grows in sagebrush, on wooded slopes, and on open expanses of alkaline clay soils.
It is apparently most abundant in disturbed areas, such as along road cuts and in areas of mining activity.
Description
Phacelia monoensis is a small, patchy annual herb producing spreading, stout stems up to about long. It is glandular and coated lightly in hairs. The leaves are long and sometimes have lobed edges.
The hairy, glandular inflorescence is a one-sided cyme of several narrow bell-shaped yellow flowers each no more than long.
References
External links
Phacelia monoensis. Jepson eFlora.
Phacelia monoensis. NatureServe.
CalPhotos.
monoensis
Category:Flora of California
Category:Flora of Nevada
Category:Flora of the Great Basin
Category:Natural history of Mono County, California
Category:Plants described in 1981
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phacelia_monoensis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.811248
|
25888110
|
Must Read After My Death
|
}}
-->
| narrator | starring
| music = Paul Damian Hogan
| cinematography | editing
| studio | distributor Gigantic Releasing
| released =
February 20, 2009 (Theatrical)
| runtime = 74 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget | gross
}}
Must Read After My Death is a 2009 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Morgan Dews. It is a story about Allis and her husband Charley, in Hartford, Connecticut in the 1960s.
The film's soundtrack was composed by the Emmy-nominated musician Paul Damian Hogan.
Synopsis
When a Hartford couple turns to psychiatry for help with their marriage, things quickly spiral out of control. Couples counseling, individual and group therapy, and 24-hour marathon sessions ensue. Their four children suffer and are given their own psychiatrists. Pills are prescribed, people are institutionalized, and shock therapy is administered. The story is told by the family itself, from a collection of audio recordings and home movies, illuminating a difficult and extraordinary time.ProductionMust Read After My Death was created after Dews found a trove of video and tape belonging to his late grandmother, Allis. The documentary does not include interviews with Allis' grown children and focuses only on her video and audio diary.DistributionThe film had its US premiere in 2008 at the LA Film Festival. Gigantic Digital released Must Read After My Death in February 2009. It was the first film to be released day-and-date in theaters and online. Gigantic managed to control the availability of the film online, blocking it in markets where the film was playing theatrically.Critical responseThe film received critical acclaim, receiving 90% positive reviews at the website Rotten Tomatoes.
Accolades
{| class=" wiki table"
! Year
! Award
! Category
! Nominee(s)
! Result
|-
| rowspan="1"| 2007
| Amsterdam International Documentary Film Festival
| Joris Ivens Award
| rowspan="7"| Must Read After My Death
|
|-
| rowspan="5"| 2008
| Marseille Festival of Documentary Film
| Grand Prix of the International Competition
|
|-
| International Documentary Film Festival of Navarra Punto de Vista
| Special Mention
|
|-
| Doclisboa International Film Festival
| Odisseia Award for 1st Documentary
|
|-
| Festival dei Popoli Florence
| Audience Award & Special Mention
|
|-
| Filmer à tout prix
| Gala Opening Film
|
|-
| rowspan="1"| 2010
| Shanghai International TV Festival
| Magnolia Award, History & Biography Documentary Golden Award
|
|}
References
Category:American documentary films
Category:2007 documentary films
Category:2007 films
Category:Documentary films about child abuse
Category:Documentary films about violence against women
Category:History of women in Connecticut
Category:1960s in Connecticut
Category:2000s English-language films
Category:2000s American films
Category:Violence against women in Connecticut
Category:English-language documentary films
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Must_Read_After_My_Death
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.815460
|
25888119
|
Christopher D. Patton
|
Christopher Patton (born 1969) is a Canadian poet.
Patton received a $10,000 writing grant from the Canada Council for the Arts in 1998, and has written at Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony. Characteristic subjects in Patton's writing include nature, spiritual experience, the connection between those two, and what it means to see. His poetry has been published in literary journals such as The Paris Review, The Antioch Review, Western Humanities Review, FIELD, and The Fiddlehead. Some of his poems were published in The New Canon: An Anthology of Canadian Poetry (Carmine Starnino, 2006).
Patton's children's book Jack Pine, illustrated by Cybèle Young, was published in July 2007 by Groundwood Books. In 2008 the Vancouver Opera commissioned a children's opera based on Jack Pine, to be performed by the Vancouver Opera in Schools touring ensemble. The opera, composed by British Columbian songwriter Veda Hille, toured British Columbia schools throughout 2009.
Patton was awarded the Bernard F. Connors Prize for Poetry for his "Broken Ground", chosen "the finest poem over 200 lines published in The Paris Review" in 2000. "Broken Ground" was included in Patton's first book of poetry, Ox, which was published by Véhicule Press in September 2007. Ox was selected as a finalist for the 2008 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize.
References
Category:20th-century Canadian poets
Category:Canadian male poets
Category:Canadian children's writers
Category:Living people
Category:1969 births
Category:20th-century Canadian male writers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_D._Patton
|
2025-04-06T15:55:34.820552
|
25888143
|
Hong Kong Recording Industry Alliance
|
Hong Kong Recording Industry Alliance Limited (HKRIA, ) is a not-for-profit copyright management organization, formed to handle copyright issues for recording companies regarding the broadcast, public performance and relevant usage of sound recordings (recorded music) and music videos in Hong Kong, Macau and other territories. The founding companies included the traditional internationally recognised Big Four Recording Companies (四大唱片公司) of EMI Group, Sony Music, Universal Music (環球) and Warner Music Group (華納). The group was established in October 2008. Later in December 2010, BMA Entertainment (博美) joined HKRIA, turning the Big Four into the Big Five.
History
As the founding members of HKRIA, the Big Four Recording Companies, Sony Music, Warner Music Group, EMI Music and Universal Music withdrew their membership from IFPI (Hong Kong) on 20 August 2008. They then assigned management of copyright, public performance and other related issues exclusively to HKRIA. On 21 December 2010, BMA Entertainment announced its new membership, joining the traditional Big Four (since reduced to three following the breakup of EMI).
On 2013, EAS Music, Soundgood Production Ltd, BEGGARS, Lemongrass, Starz Track and Equilibrium Music Group were announced its new membership.
On 2015, West One Music Group was announced its new membership.
Controversies
TVB
On December 24, 2009, HKRIA held a press conference with regards to increasing the royalties due from TVB, the dominant local free over-the-air station, with which many cantopop singers also have artiste contracts. The fees were raised for three reasons.
Value of the singers were previously underestimated.
TVB is broadcasting more music content than before.
To meet TVB's increase use of music, the rise will grant users one year of unlimited licensed use. The royalties due per year is to exceed HK$10 million. Singers Hacken Lee, Eason Chan and Kay Tse, voiced their support for their respective record labels. In the past, Hacken Lee was often dubbed as "TVB's son" due to his close working relationship with the TV station. However both he and Eason Chan were immediately pulled from their appearances on TVB's Jade Solid Gold and the 21st CASH Songwriter's Quest within days of the controversy. Prudence Liew, signed under the Universal label Cinepoly Records, was quickly dismissed of her hosting duties from the singing competition The Voice, a program she has hosted weekly since July 2009, three episodes shy of the season finale.
As a result of the ban, no artists from HKRIA record labels received any awards at the TVB-organized 2009 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation held on January 16, 2010. Singers affected included many frontrunners of the night: Universal Music's Eason Chan, Hacken Lee, Kay Tse, Hins Cheung and Mr.; Warner Music Group's Fiona Sit and Khalil Fong; and Sony Music's Jason Chan. In support of their record labels, none of the artistes signed to HKRIA record labels showed up to the TVB awards ceremony.
Beginning in 2011 the Metro Radio Hits Music Award Presentation became the only complete award to allow singers from all companies.
See also
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), also included the now-Big Three of Warner, Universal, and Sony.
References
External links
HKRIA.com official site
Category:Music industry associations
Category:Organizations established in 2008
Category:Music organisations based in Hong Kong
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Kong_Recording_Industry_Alliance
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.235653
|
25888169
|
Phacelia mustelina
|
Phacelia mustelina is an uncommon species of phacelia known by the common names weasel phacelia and Death Valley round-leaved phacelia. It is native to the desert mountains and flats of eastern California (mainly Death Valley and Inyo County) and western Nevada (Nye County), where it grows in woodland and open scrub habitat.
It is a glandular annual herb growing decumbent or upright to a maximum height around . The toothed rounded leaves are long with blades borne on petioles. The hairy, glandular inflorescence is a one-sided curving or coiling cyme of bell-shaped flowers. Each flower is up to a centimeter long and deep to light purple to nearly white in color.
External links
Jepson Manual Treatment
Nevada Natural Heritage Program Rare Plant Fact Sheet
Photo gallery
mustelina
Category:Flora of the California desert regions
Category:Flora of Nevada
Category:Death Valley
Category:Flora without expected TNC conservation status
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phacelia_mustelina
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.289184
|
25888178
|
Auburn Theological Seminary
|
| location = 475 Riverside Drive,<br/> Suite 1800,<br/> New York, New York 10115,<br/> United States
| coordinates
| founded =
| leader_name = Rev. Dr. Emma Jordan-Simpson
| leader_title = President
| leader_name2 = Rev. Patrick B. Reyes, Ph.D.
| leader_title2 = Dean
| focus = Religious education and activism
| method = Education, Research
| tax_id 15-0532053
| purpose = To equip bold, resilient leaders—religious and secular, women and men, adults and teens—with the tools and resources they need to bridge religious divides, build congregations and communities, pursue justice and heal the world.
| website = <br />
}}
Auburn Theological Seminary, located in New York City, teaches students about progressive social issues by offering workshops, providing consulting, and conducting research on faith leadership development.
The seminary was established in Auburn, New York, in 1818 to prepare young ministers for the frontier. In 1939, weakened by the Great Depression, the seminary relocated from Auburn to the Union Theological Seminary's campus in New York City, although it maintained its independence from Union Theological Seminary. In 2014, it designed and moved to a new leadership development lab in The Interchurch Center in Morningside Heights, Manhattan, New York City.
Auburn Theological Seminary houses a research center focused on the study of seminaries, divinity schools, and the preparation of faith leaders working for social justice.
It was one of the first seminaries in the country to admit African Americans (Moses A. Hopkins, 1877), Japanese (Naoomi Tamura, 1882) and later, female seminarians (Ida Thorne Parker, 1917).
History
Auburn Theological Seminary was established in Auburn, New York, by action of the Presbyterian Synod of Geneva on 16 August 1818. It obtained a charter from the New York State legislature on 14 April 1820 as a post-baccalaureate theological seminary, and it matriculated its first students in 1821. From its inception, the seminary drew support from beyond the Presbyterian Church. Its charter stipulated that "no student of any Christian denomination shall be excluded," and the first class of eleven students represented eight denominations. The Roman Catholic bishop from Boston, Bishop Chevereux, donated books for the school's library.
The school's founders and early faculty (Dirck Lansing, Matthew Perrine, and Henry Mills) rejected sterner forms of Calvinism and advocated for flexible church governance within the Presbyterian Church. These beliefs became known as the Auburn Declaration of 1837.
Under the presidency of George Black Stewart (1899–1926), the school grew to 105 students and eleven faculty. A Summer School of Theology for clergy and laity was established in 1911, and a School of Religious Education in 1921.
Auburn Theological Seminary's faculty, led by Robert Hastings Nichols, professor of church history, played a key role in what became known as the Auburn Affirmation, adopted in 1924, which defended theological freedom and prevented a fundamentalist takeover of the Presbyterian Church.
The Great Depression left Auburn Seminary with a diminished student body and strained resources. The faculty and President Paul Silas Heath (1936–1939) began conversations with several seminaries about possibly relocating. In 1939, it closed its Auburn campus and at the invitation of President Henry Sloan Coffin, moved to the campus of Union Theological Seminary in New York City, although it maintained its board of trustees and endowment.
With the move to Union Theological Seminary, Auburn Theological Seminary ceased granting degrees, instead developing new initiatives: a Program of Training for Rural Ministry in 1944, which continued its emphasis on preparing individuals for the practice of ministry, not for theological specialization; in 1964 the Center for Continuing Education was established as well as the Experimental Program for the Practice of Christian Ministry; in 1968 Auburn Studies in Theological Education was begun; in 1971 the Susquehanna Valley Project to support local ministers started; in 1985 interreligious programs for faith leaders were developed and in 1991 The Center for the Study of Theological Education was established.
Katharine Rhodes Henderson was inaugurated as president in 2009, shifting the institution's focus toward training and supporting faith leaders who work in progressive justice organizations and movements. Auburn's signature programs include: media training, Auburn Senior Fellows, Sojourner Truth Leadership Circle, digital organizing, coaching for faith leaders, and entrepreneurial ministry. Auburn Research explores the needs of theological institutions, their leaders and students, and the ways in which leaders of faith and moral courage are affecting positive social change in society.Presidents of Auburn Theological Seminary
* Henry Matthias Booth (1893–1899)
* George Black Stewart (1899–1926)
* Harry Lathrop Reed (1926–1936)
* Paul Silas Heath (1936–1939)
* Walter S. Davison, executive director (1939–1944)
* Henry Sloan Coffin, Union and Auburn Seminary president (1944–1945)
* Henry P. Van Dusen, Union and Auburn Seminary president (1945–1964)
* Robert Lynn, Dean (?–1976)
* Barbara G. Wheeler, President (1980–2009)
* Katharine Rhodes Henderson (2009–2021)
* Emma Jordan-Simpson (2021–present)
Notable alumni
* Maltbie Davenport Babcock (1858–1901)
* Dwight Baldwin (1798–1886)
* Anne McGrew Bennett (1903–1986)
* David Riddle Breed (1848–1931)
* Henry Roe Cloud (1884–1950)
* Titus Coan (1801–1881)
* Sheldon Dibble (1809–1845)
* Justus Doolittle (1824–1880)
* Photius Fisk (1809–1890)
* Josiah Bushnell Grinnell (1821–1891)
* Charles Frederic Goss (1852–1930)
* Laurentine Hamilton (1826–1882)
* Joel T. Headley (1813–1897)
* Moses A. Hopkins (1846–1886)
* Herrick Johnson (1832–1913)
* George William Knox (1853–1912)
* Lorenzo Lyons (1807–1886)
* Isaac J. Rice (1808–1880)
* Edward Payson Roe (1838–1888)
* Devello Z. Sheffield (1841–1913)
* Boon Tuan Boon-Itt (1865–1903), an early leader in the Protestant Christian community of Thailand
* Guido Verbeck (1830–1898)
Notable faculty
* James A. Forbes (born 1935)
* Laurens Perseus Hickok (1798–1888)
* William Greenough Thayer Shedd (1820–1894)
* Walter Wink
References
Category:1818 establishments in New York (state)
Category:Educational institutions established in 1818
Category:Presbyterian universities and colleges in the United States
Category:Presbyterianism in New York (state)
Category:Buildings and structures in Auburn, New York
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_Theological_Seminary
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.315651
|
25888198
|
IJtunnel
|
|map
}}
The IJtunnel, opened on 30 October 1968, is an automobile tunnel under the IJ that connects the centre of Amsterdam with Amsterdam-Noord. The tunnel is part of a route across Amsterdam that connects the Ringweg North with the Ringweg South near Duivendrecht, via Nieuwe Leeuwarderweg, Valkenburgerstraat, Weesperstraat, Wibautstraat and Gooiseweg (S112).
The total length of the tunnel, including on- and off-ramps, is 1682 metres. The covered part is 1039 metres long. The deepest point of the tunnel lies 20.32 metres below sea-level. The tunnel was built of sections of rectangular concrete constructions of 24.8 x 8.75 metres, subdivided into two tubes for automobile traffic and in between tubes for cables and pipes.
Ventilators, located in two ventilation buildings on the banks of the IJ, blow clean air into the traffic areas via tubes under the surface of the road and openings in the tunnel walls, and suck polluted air out. At the entrance on the north side there are sun-blocking lattices over the road. These lattices are missing on the south side, where the Nemobuilding is built on top of the tunnel. The traffic in the tunnel is monitored by 22 closed-circuit cameras. A heating system prevents the forming of ice on the surface of the road, and a computer regulates the intensity of light at the beginning and the end of the tunnel, so that a gradual transition from tunnel light to daylight takes place.
The route through the IJtunnel is an urban avenue, formed out of two divided tunnels, each with two lanes of traffic. This four-lane road continues to the A10 in the north and to the Prins Hendrikkade in the south, where it is reduced to two lanes, one in each direction.
Access restrictions
The IJtunnel is a class D tunnel under the ADR treaty. The classification means that no one may use the tunnel to transport dangerous goods that may cause a large explosion, or a large toxic release, or a large fire. The tunnel is also an entry point to Amsterdam's low emission zone, and there is a height limit of 4 meters.
Pedestrians, agricultural vehicles, bicycles and mopeds are generally not allowed to use the IJtunnel. However, the ban on pedestrians, bicycles and mopeds may be temporarily lifted if public transport and ferry services across the IJ are suspended: such a situation occurred in 1993, 1997, 2005 and 28 May 2019. There was also a special open day on 26 October 1968, to mark the opening of the tunnel. The tunnel is also used by runners during the annual Dam tot Damloop.
References
Category:Tunnels completed in 1968
Category:Buildings and structures in Amsterdam
Category:Road tunnels in the Netherlands
Category:Immersed tube tunnels in the Netherlands
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IJtunnel
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.341239
|
25888200
|
The Broken Wheel
|
The Broken Wheel is a 1996 young adult science fiction novel by Kerry Greenwood.
Background
The Broken Wheel was first published in Australia in 1996 by Moonstone in paperback format. It won in a tie situation with Hillary Bell's Mirror, Mirror the 1996 Aurealis Award for best young-adult novel.
Plot summary
After an apocalyptic event, the survivors have formed into groups. These include the Travellers, who trade in small goods; the medievalists in the enclave Thorngard; the Tribe, a loose gathering of nomads; and in the city the Breakers, who destroy every machine they find, blaming the machines for the disaster. Sarah, a child of the Breakers, joins with the Travellers in an attempt to save the world from destruction.
References
Category:1996 Australian novels
Category:1996 science fiction novels
Category:Children's science fiction novels
Category:Australian science fiction novels
Category:Australian young adult novels
Category:Aurealis Award–winning works
Category:HarperCollins books
Category:Australian post-apocalyptic novels
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Broken_Wheel
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.366479
|
25888205
|
Inderprastha Dental College
|
}}
| type = Dental College
| academic_affiliation = *Atal Bihari Vajpayee Medical University (2021-present)<br>
*Chaudhary Charan Singh University (2006-2021)
| chairman = Sudhir Kumar
| principal = Rahul Paul
| undergrad = Bachelor of Dental Surgery (BDS)
| postgrad = Master of Dental Surgery (MDS)
| address = 46/1, Industrial Area, Site IV
| city = Sahibabad, Ghaziabad, India
| coordinates
| website =
}}
The Inderprastha Dental College & Hospital was incorporated under the aegis of the Kunj Behari Lal Charitable Trust. The college is affiliated with Atal Bihari Vajpayee Medical University, Lucknow.
Courses offered
Inderprastha Dental College & Hospital offers course in Bachelor of Dental Surgery (B.D.S.). This is a 4-year course followed by 1 year of Internship.
The college also offers a Master of Dental Surgery (MDS) course in the following specialties.
* Prosthodontics
* Conservative & Endodontics
* Orthodontics
* Periodontics
* Pedodontics
Infrastructure
* 400 Dental Chairs Out Patient Department (OPD) in 9 Specialties + costly Express Dental Clinic
* Separate Hostels for Boys & girls
* Library
Patient care services
* Treatments for dental diseases and problems
Regulatory approvals
* Dental Council of India
* Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India
* Department of Health & Family Welfare, Government of Uttar Pradesh
* Atal Bihari Vajpayee Medical University, Lucknow
Awards
* Best Dental College in India, 2018 awarded by Katalyst Research
* Best Private Dental College in India, 2015 awarded by Prime Time Media
Sister institutions
The promoters of Kunj Behari Lal Charitable Trust are also associated with other institutes of repute:
* Inderprastha Engineering College
* Ajay Kumar Garg Engineering College is ranked as the best engineering college in the state of Uttar Pradesh by Uttar Pradesh Technical University (UPTU)
* IMS Group of Institutions
External links
*[http://www.ipdentalcollege.com/ Inderprastha Dental College & Hospital]
Category:Dental colleges in India
Category:Education in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh
Category:Universities and colleges established in 2006
Category:2006 establishments in Uttar Pradesh
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inderprastha_Dental_College
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.421722
|
25888239
|
Mark Clayton
|
Mark Clayton may refer to:
Mark Clayton (American football, born 1961), American football wide receiver for the Miami Dolphins and Green Bay Packers
Mark Clayton (American football, born 1982), American football wide receiver for the Baltimore Ravens and St. Louis Rams
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Clayton
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.664149
|
25888242
|
Yury Yarov
|
| native_name_lang = ru
| image = Яров Юрий Фёдорович.jpg
| office = CIS Executive Secretary
| term_start = 2 April 1999
| term_end = 14 July 2004
| predecessor = Ivan Korotchenya (acting)
| successor = Vladimir Rushailo
| office1 = in the Federation Council
| term_start1 = 7 December 1998
| term_end1 = 13 April 1999
| president1 = Boris Yeltsin
| predecessor1 = Anatoly Sliva
| successor1 = Vyacheslav Khizhnyakov
| office2 = Deputy Prime Minister of Russia
| term_start2 = 23 December 1992
| term_end2 = 24 June 1996
| predecessor2 = Valery Makharadze
| successor2 = Viktor Ilyushin
| birth_name = Yury Fyodorovich Yarov
| birth_date
| birth_place = Mariinsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
| caption = Yarov in 2011
}}
Yury Fyodorovich Yarov (; born April 2, 1942) is a Russian politician who was a deputy prime minister from 1992 until 1996. Previously he was the 4th Executive Secretary of the Commonwealth of Independent States from 6 November 1999 to 14 July 2004. He has the federal state civilian service rank of 1st class Active State Councillor of the Russian Federation.
Yarov also played an important role in the leadership of Yeltsin's reelection campaign.
Honours and awards
*Order of Merit for the Fatherland 4th class
*Order of Honour
*Order of Friendship
*Order of the Red Banner of Labour
*Order of the Badge of Honour
*Medal Defender of a Free Russia
*Jubilee Medal "300 Years of the Russian Navy"
*Medal "In Commemoration of the 300th Anniversary of Saint Petersburg"
*Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary since the Birth of Vladimir Il'ich Lenin"
*Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise (Ukraine)
References
Category:1942 births
Category:Living people
Category:1st class Active State Councillors of the Russian Federation
Category:Commonwealth of Independent States people
Category:Recipients of the Order of Honour (Russia)
Category:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
Category:Deputy heads of government of the Russian Federation
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yury_Yarov
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.700250
|
25888262
|
AfE-Turm
|
| start_date = 1970
| completion_date = 1972
| demolition_date = 2 February 2014
| building_type = University
| status = Demolished
| architectural_style = Brutalist
| roof
| floor_count = 38
| elevator_count | cost
| floor_area <!-- -->
| architect = Staatliches Universitätsbauamt<br>Staatliche Neubauleitung Frankfurt
| engineer = BGS Ingenieursozietät
| main_contractor = Philipp Holzmann AG
| developer | owner Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
| management | references
}}
AfE-Turm ('AfE Tower') was a 38-storey (30 floors on its south side and 22 floors on its north side), skyscraper in the Westend district of Frankfurt, Germany. It was the tallest building in Frankfurt from 1972-1974.
The building was part of the Bockenheim campus of the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University and until 2013 housed the offices and seminar rooms of the departments of Social Sciences and Education. AfE is an acronym for Abteilung für Erziehungswissenschaft (Department of Pedagogy); however, this department never moved in because it was closed before the construction of the tower was finished, which happened in 1972. The tower was demolished on 2 February 2014.
Background
Planning and construction of AfE-Turm began in the early 1960s. The building became necessary in 1961, when the College of Pedagogy was incorporated into the University, and the old Bettinaschule in the Westend turned out to be inadequate, even as a provisional arrangement. The building inherently lacked the required functionality.
The north side of the tower housed the library of the social sciences, as well as seminar rooms with 1.5 times the floor height. The south side consisted of offices only a single floor high, which required an intricate system of staircases and split-levels between the two halves, considerably complicating orientation. After the construction, a cafeteria was established in the top floor, but was closed for lack of popularity. This floor was not accessible with all lifts, and was considered a hard-to-find secret due to the good view in all directions. The student-managed TuCa (Tower Café) on the ground floor was cleared by the police at the behest of the university administration, in order to open a café managed by the Studentenwerk, named the C'AfE. Since the beginning of 2007, the TuCa sat "in exile" on the fifth floor.
The tower was designed for 2,500 students. However, the building was occupied since its opening with a multiple of that. As a result, the seven elevators had waiting periods of up to fifteen minutes.
In August 2005, a university employee was killed in an accident when her lift got stuck between two floors, and she attempted to exit. It is still controversial whether this accident was a result of human error or a series of almost daily failures of the building's technology. Since the tower was to be demolished within the next few years, the university administration had to avoid all non-essential renovation work. At intervals, however, façade repairs had to be carried out.
The tower was a popular destination for student protests, as it could be completely sealed off with relatively few helpers, in contrast to most other buildings of the university. The dramatically worsened study conditions within the tower in recent years were another motive. The resulting tower blockades were an integral part of periodic protests at the Goethe University for many years. Demolition The departments of Social Sciences and Education moved to the University's Westend Campus in Spring 2013. The building had been empty since the end of April 2013. The gradual demolition of the tower commenced in July 2013 and was finalized at the end of January 2014, when authorities gave the green light for its implosion. The implosion occurred on 2 February 2014, at 10:04 CET. It is the tallest building in Europe ever to be demolished by implosion.Subsequent Redevelopment of Its SiteIn the following years, the asset manager Commerz Real and the project development company Groß & Partner acquired the property in sections and partly in a joint venture. The Senckenberg-Quarter was built on the site by 2023 according to plans by the Cyrus Moser architectural firm. Its components are the high-rise buildings One Forty West and Senckenberg Tower, the six-story office building 21 West, and a daycare center. See also
* List of tallest buildings in Frankfurt
* List of tallest buildings in Germany
* List of tallest voluntarily demolished buildings
References
External links
*
*[http://www.aviewoncities.com/buildings/frankfurt/afeturm.htm AfE-Turm] at A View On Cities
Category:1972 establishments in West Germany
Category:2014 disestablishments in Germany
Category:Brutalist architecture in Germany
Category:Goethe University Frankfurt
Category:University and college buildings completed in 1972
Category:Skyscrapers in Frankfurt
Category:Buildings and structures demolished in 2014
Category:Former skyscrapers
Category:Demolished buildings and structures in Germany
Category:Articles containing video clips
Category:Buildings and structures demolished by controlled implosion
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AfE-Turm
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.832998
|
25888271
|
Ambat Sivarama Menon
|
| birth_place | death_date
| office = First Elected Minister of an Indian State
| term_start = 17 June 1938
| term_end = 30 August 1938
| spouse = Pallissery Thekke Komarath Kalyanikutty Amma
| children = 6 sons and 3 daughters
}}
Ambat Sivarama Menon was a pre-independence Indian politician. He was the first elected minister of an Indian state.
Born in 1878, Menon was the second of four children and only son of Ambat Ikkali Amma and Champathil Nanu Mannadiar.
Graduating from Madras Law College, Menon practised at the Madras High Court. An authority on the Marumakkathayam law of succession, he served as examiner for the law degree examinations of Madras University.
Menon was a founders and president of the Triplicane Urban Co-Operative Society in Chennai, the first consumer cooperative in India. He was also a director of Cochin Land Mortgage Bank.
Menon was a founder of the Justice Party and the editor of the party's official newspaper, The Liberator. In 1936, when he was first elected to the Cochin Legislative Council from Mulakunnathukavu constituency, he retired from legal practice and settled down in Thrissur. Two years later, in the elections held under a new Constitution ushering in dyarchy, he was returned to the Assembly from Cheruthuruthy. As leader of the Cochin Congress, he was appointed Minister for Rural Development on June 17, 1938.
Menon died due to cardiac arrest on August 30, 1938,<ref name=":0" /> during an official visit to his hometown, Chittur.
Menon was married to Kalyanikutty Amma the daughter of Pallissery Thekke Komarath Parukutty Amma and Kavithilakan Kundur Narayana Menon. They had six sons and three daughters: Sri Sankara Narayanan, Satyabala, Ananda Padmanabhan, Bhagyanathan, Swarna Kumari, Chandrasekharan, Sarojini, Sivaraman and Sivadas. Smt. Kalyanikutty Amma died in March 1960.
References
Category:Kerala local politicians
Category:1870 births
Category:1939 deaths
Category:Politicians from British India
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambat_Sivarama_Menon
|
2025-04-06T15:55:35.965586
|
25888327
|
The Butterfly Lovers (2008 film)
|
| country = Hong Kong
| language = Cantonese
| runtime = 102 minutes
| budget | gross $5,461,411
}}
The Butterfly Lovers (), also known as '''''The Assassin's Blade or Jiandie' (), is a 2008 Hong Kong film directed by Jingle Ma and starring Wu Chun, Charlene Choi, and Hu Ge. It is based on the Chinese legend of the Butterfly Lovers, but in a wuxia setting.Plot
The movie begins with an explanation of the legend of the Butterfly Lovers. Zhu Yanzhi disguises herself as a man to go to Soul Ease Clan, which she must do to learn fighting skills which will help protect her family. While there she meets Bro Shan who protects her and calls her Little Bro, unaware that she is a woman. She has a love of butterflies and decorates Bro Shan's sword with two butterflies. At first Bro Shan is angry at Yanzhi for drawing butterflies on his sword but eventually accepts it. The pair develop a close friendship. Bro Shan eventually realizes that Yanzhi is a woman and makes a butterfly pin for her. Eventually, Bro Ma, Yanzhi's childhood friend comes to pick her up and take her back to her family. Yanzhi is pleased that she will be going home but says she will miss Bro Shan, who she is now in love with. Before she leaves, Bro Shan takes her to Butterfly Valley, a beautiful grassy green field where hundreds of butterflies fly.
Yanzhi is taken back to her family and is horrified when she realizes that her parents have set up an arranged marriage between her and Bro Ma. She refuses to follow through with the marriage. However, Bro Ma chains up Yanzhi in order to force her to marry him. When Bro Shan comes to visit, he promises that he will rescue her but Bro Ma is suspicious of him and creates a plan to prevent any interference. He imprisons Yanzhi's parents and tells Yanzhi that he will kill Bro Shan and her parents unless she marries him. Fearing for their lives, she promises that she will marry Ma.
When Shan comes to visit, Yanzhi tells him that she is no longer in love with him because their backgrounds are too different. She returns the butterfly pin and cuts off a lock of her hair to give to Shan (an ancient Chinese tradition, similar to returning an engagement ring). Shan, believing that Yanzhi no longer loves him, is heartbroken and leaves.
Yanzhi is also heartbroken because now she will have to marry a man she does not wish to marry. During the night, Teacher Herbal Head, a teacher from Soul Ease Clan, visits her and gives her a herb that will make her appear dead. On the day of the wedding, Yanzhi eats this. Everyone believes her to be dead, including Bro Ma, who is horrified, and exclaims "You would rather die than marry me?!". The wedding turns into a funeral.
Bro Shan is still heartbroken, but decides that he must visit Yanzhi to wish her well, believing that Yanzhi is happy, so he should be happy. On the way there, he is met by Yanzhi's serving girl, who tells him that Yanzhi has committed suicide. Bro Shan is horrified because he realizes that Yanzhi wasn't happy and had only agreed to marry Ma in order to save him. He decides that he will bury Yanzhi in Butterfly Valley, where she will be happy.
Shan comes to Yanzhi's funeral to get her body. A bloody battle occurs between Shan and Ma. Both Ma and Shan are suffering from horrible injuries by the time Ma finally surrenders. Shan takes Yanzhi's body and carries her all the way to butterfly valley. He digs a grave for her and lays her there to rest. Finally succumbing to his injuries and exhaustion he lies down in the grave, next to Yanzhi, kisses her, and dies.
Shan's friends see the two lovers, side by side, and decide to finish what Shan had started; They fill up the grave.
Yanzhi, however, is still not really dead. She cannot move or speak, but she can hear. She wakes up and sees Shan next to her, dead, and sees Shan's friends burying them together. She whispers, "Wait for me", closes her eyes, and also dies, so that she can be with Shan.
When the grave is completely filled, the two butterflies on Shan's sword flutter off the sword and fly into the air, together. In the afterlife, we see that Yanzhi and Shan are finally together.
Cast
*Wu Chun as Liang Zhongshan
*Charlene Choi as Zhu Yanzhi
*Hu Ge as Ma Cheng'en
*Ti Lung as Zhu Gongyuan
*Harlem Yu as Uncle Caotou
*Xian Seli as Yinxin
*Li Qinqin as Zhu Yanzhi's mother
*Shaun Tam as Axe gang boss
*Hung Yan-yan as Uncle Toutuo
*Shao Bing as General Tie
*Louis Fan
References
External links
*
*
* [http://www.hkcinemagic.com/en/movie.asp?id=10573 The Butterfly Lovers] at Hong Kong Cinemagic
* [https://www.lovehkfilm.com/reviews_2/butterfly_lovers.html The Butterfly Lovers] at loveHKfilm.com
Category:2008 films
Category:2000s Cantonese-language films
Category:Wuxia films
Category:2000s romance films
Category:Films directed by Jingle Ma
Category:Hong Kong romance films
Category:Films set in the Eastern Jin (317–420)
Category:Cross-dressing in film
Category:2000s Hong Kong films
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Butterfly_Lovers_(2008_film)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.286232
|
25888356
|
Camptrodoxa
|
Camptrodoxa is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Camptrodoxa inclyta Meyrick, 1925
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camptrodoxa
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.380657
|
25888357
|
Capricornia (moth)
|
}}
Capricornia is a genus of Leafroller Moths in the moth family Tortricidae. This genus has a single species, Capricornia boisduvaliana, found in Europe and western Asia.
}}
External links
*
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capricornia_(moth)
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.411865
|
25888359
|
Celypha
|
Celypha is a genus of tortrix moths (family Tortricidae). It belongs to the tribe Olethreutini of subfamily Olethreutinae.
The closely related genus Syricoris is sometimes included in Celypha.
Taxonomy
Species
The twenty currently recognized species of Celypha are:
Celypha anatoliana (Caradja, 1916)
Celypha argyrata Razowski, 2009
Celypha atriapex Razowski, 2009
Celypha aurofasciana
Celypha capreolana (Herrich-Schäffer, 1851)
Celypha cespitana
Celypha conflictana (Kennel, 1901)
Celypha constructa (Meyrick, 1922)
Celypha cornigerus (Oku, 1968)
Celypha ermolenkoi Kostyuk, 1980
Celypha erythrana (Tengstrom, 1848)
Celypha flavipalpana (Herrich-Schäffer, 1851)
Celypha hydrangeana (Kuznetzov, 1969)
Celypha kostjukorum Budashkin & Dubatolov, 2006
Celypha kurilensis (Oku, 1965)
Celypha perfracta Diakonoff, 1983
Celypha pseudalarixicola Liu & Fang in Jianwen & Liu, 1992
Celypha rufana
Celypha rurestrana (Duponchel in Godart, 1842)
Celypha sapaecola Razowski, 2009
Celypha sistrata (Meyrick, 1911)
Celypha striana
Celypha woodiana (Barrett, 1882)
Synonyms
Obsolete scientific names (junior synonyms and others) for this genus are: listed as a synonym of Olethreutes. But the type species of the first is Tortrix flavipalpana (a junior synonym of C. flavipalpana), and that of the second is T. latifasciana (a junior synonym of C. aurofasciana). This makes Celyphoides and Loxoterma junior subjective synonyms of Celypha, at least in its present delimitation.
Celyphoides, meanwhile, was a nomen nudum for 5 years. It was first used by R. Agenjo Cecilia in 1955, but only properly established by N.S. Obraztsov in 1960.
Footnotes
References
(2009a): Online World Catalogue of the Tortricidae – Genus Celypha account. Version 1.3.1. Retrieved 2009-JAN-20.
(2009b): Online World Catalogue of the Tortricidae – Celypha species list. Version 1.3.1. Retrieved 2009-JAN-20.
(2005a): Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and some other life forms – Celypha. Version of 2005-SEP-14. Retrieved 2010-APR-15.
(2005b): Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and some other life forms – Olethreutes. Version of 2005-SEP-16. Retrieved 2010-APR-15.
Category:Olethreutini
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Taxa named by Jacob Hübner
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celypha
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.467350
|
25888360
|
Centroxena
|
Centroxena is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Centroxena ulophora Diakonoff, 1971
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centroxena
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.492176
|
25888361
|
Cephalophyes
|
Cephalophyes is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Cephalophyes cyanura (Meyrick, 1909)
Cephalophyes latens (Diakonoff, 1973)
Cephalophyes porphyrea Diakonoff, 1973
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalophyes
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.531970
|
25888362
|
Chimoptesis
|
Chimoptesis is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Chimoptesis chrysopyla Powell, 1964
Chimoptesis gerulae (Heinrich, 1923)
Chimoptesis matheri Powell, 1964
Chimoptesis pennsylvaniana (Kearfott, 1907)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimoptesis
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.556369
|
25888363
|
Cimeliomorpha
|
Cimeliomorpha is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Cimeliomorpha cymbalora (Meyrick, 1907)
Cimeliomorpha egregiana (Felder & Rogenhofer, 1875)
Cimeliomorpha nabokovi Kuznetzov, 1997
Cimeliomorpha novarana (Felder & Rogenhofer, 1875)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cimeliomorpha
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.587440
|
25888364
|
Cirrilaspeyresia
|
Cirrilaspeyresia is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Cirrilaspeyresia imbecillana (Kennel, 1901)
Cirrilaspeyresia taeniosana (Chrtien, 1915)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Józef Razowski
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirrilaspeyresia
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.612165
|
25888367
|
Clavigesta
|
Clavigesta is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Clavigesta purdeyi (Durrant, 1911)
Clavigesta sylvestrana (Curtis, 1850)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clavigesta
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.688016
|
25888368
|
Coccothera
|
Coccothera is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Coccothera albolineana Larsen, 2023
Coccothera areata (Meyrick, 1918)
Coccothera bvumbana Larsen, 2023
Coccothera carolae Razowski & Trematerra, 2010
Coccothera cipollana Larsen, 2023
Coccothera cyaneana (Agassiz, 2014)
Coccothera cyphospila (Meyrick, 1920)
Coccothera kingstoni Larsen, 2023
Coccothera nicomacha (Meyrick, 1921)
Coccothera quadropunctana Larsen, 2023
Coccothera spissana (Zeller, 1852)*
Coccothera triorbis Razowski & Trematerra, 2010
(*Including synonyms C. ferrifracta, C. pharaonana, C. victrix).
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
De Prins, J. & De Prins, W. 2014. Afromoths, online database of Afrotropical moth species (Lepidoptera). World Wide Web electronic publication (www.afromoths.net) (14.Nov.2014)
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coccothera
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.716729
|
25888370
|
Coenobiodes
|
Coenobiodes is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Coenobiodes abietiella (Matsumura, 1931)
Coenobiodes acceptana Kuznetzov, 1973
Coenobiodes euryochra (Bradley, 1962)
Coenobiodes granitalis (Butler, 1881)
Coenobiodes melanocosma (Turner, 1916)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Eucosmini
Category:Tortricidae genera
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coenobiodes
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.764504
|
25888372
|
Collogenes
|
Collogenes is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Collogenes albocingulata Horak, 2006
Collogenes dascia (Bradley, 1962)
Collogenes loricata (Diakonoff, 1959)
Collogenes percnophylla Meyrick, 1931
Collogenes plumbosa Diakonoff, 1959
Collogenes pseuta Diakonoff, 1959
Collogenes squamosa (Diakonoff, 1959)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
Category:Olethreutinae
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collogenes
|
2025-04-06T15:55:36.828173
|
25888373
|
Coniostola
|
Coniostola is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
* Coniostola cinereocostalis <small>Razowski & Bassi, 2018</small> (Gabon)
* Coniostola flavitinctana <small>Agassiz & Aarvik, 2014</small> (Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania)
* Coniostola isabelae <small>Razowski & Landry, 2008</small>
* Coniostola laikipiana <small>Agassiz & Aarvik, 2014</small> (Kenya)
* Coniostola lobostola <small>(Meyrick, 1918)</small> (Mozambique, South Africa)
* Coniostola procellosa <small>(Meyrick, 1917)</small>
* Coniostola rufitinctana <small>Agassiz & Aarvik, 2014</small> (Kenya)
* Coniostola seira <small>Razowski & Wojtusiak, 2012</small> (Gabon, Nigeria)
* Coniostola separata <small>Razowski & Trematerra, 2010</small> (Ethiopia)
* Coniostola solivaga <small>Razowski & Wojtusiak, 2012</small> (Nigeria)
* Coniostola stereoma <small>(Meyrick, 1912)</small> (Africa, Southern Asia)
* Coniostola symbola <small>(Meyrick, 1909)</small> (South Africa)
References
External links
*
*[http://www.tortricidae.com/catalogueGenusList.asp?gcode=254 tortricidae.com]
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coniostola
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2025-04-06T15:55:36.854484
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25888375
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Corethrarcha
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Corethrarcha is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corethrarcha
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2025-04-06T15:55:36.902860
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25888376
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Corticivora
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Corticivora is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Corticivora chica Brown, 1984
Corticivora clarki Clarke, 1951
Corticivora parva Brown, 1984
Corticivora piniana (Herrich-Schäffer, 1851)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Grapholitini
Category:Tortricidae genera
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corticivora
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2025-04-06T15:55:36.927143
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25888377
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Cosmetra
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Cosmetra is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Cosmetra accipitrina (Meyrick, 1913)
Cosmetra anepenthes (Razowski & Trematerra, 2010)
Cosmetra anthophaga Diakonoff, 1977
Cosmetra brunnescens Razowski, 2014
Cosmetra calliarma (Meyrick, 1909)
Cosmetra fibigeri Aarvik, 2016
Cosmetra juu Aarvik, 2016
Cosmetra larseni Aarvik, 2016
Cosmetra latiloba (Razowski & Trematerra, 2010)
Cosmetra multidentata Aarvik, 2016
Cosmetra nereidopa (Meyrick, 1927)
Cosmetra neka Razowski & Brown, 2009
Cosmetra podocarpivora Razowski & Brown, 2012
Cosmetra rythmosema Diakonoff, 1992
Cosmetra spiculifera (Meyrick, 1913)
Cosmetra taitana Razowski & Brown, 2012
Cosmetra thalameuta (Meyrick, 1918)
Cosmetra truncana Aarvik, 2016
Cosmetra tumulata (Meyrick, 1908)
Cosmetra usumbarensis Aarvik, 2016
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
Razowski & Brown, 2009. Records of Tortricidae from the Afrotropical Region, with Descriptions of New Taxa (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). SHILAP Revista de Lepidopterología, vol. 37, (147): 371-384
Razowski & Brown, 2012. Descriptions of new Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) reared from native fruit in Kenya. Zootaxa 3222: 1-27
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmetra
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2025-04-06T15:55:36.953249
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25888380
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Cosmorrhyncha
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Cosmorrhyncha is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Cosmorrhyncha acrocosma (Meyrick, 1908) (Africa)
Cosmorrhyncha albistrigulana Brown and Razowski, 2020 (TL: Costa Rica)
Cosmorrhyncha landryiBrown and Razowski, 2020 (TL: French Guiana)
Cosmorrhyncha macrospinaBrown and Razowski, 2020 (TL: Brazil)
Cosmorrhyncha microcosma Aarvik, 2004
Cosmorrhyncha obuduana Razowski & Wojtusiak, 2012 (from Nigeria)
Cosmorrhyncha ocellata (Mabille, 1900) (from Madagascar & Comoros)
Cosmorrhyncha ocelliferana (Walker, 1863)
Cosmorrhyncha osana Brown and Razowski, 2020 (TL: Costa Rica)
Cosmorrhyncha parintina Brown and Razowski, 2020 (TL: Brazil)
Cosmorrhyncha tonsana (Mabille, 1900)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
De Prins, J. & De Prins, W. 2015. Afromoths, online database of Afrotropical moth species (Lepidoptera). World Wide Web electronic publication (www.afromoths.net) (21.Jan.2015)
Revision of New World Cosmorrhyncha Meyrick, 1913 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Olethreutinae), with descriptions of five new species
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Olethreutini
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmorrhyncha
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2025-04-06T15:55:36.984596
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25888381
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Costosa
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Costosa is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Costosa allochroma Diakonoff, 1968
Costosa aphenia Diakonoff, 1973
Costosa australis Horak, 2006
Costosa rhodantha (Meyrick, 1907)
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costosa
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2025-04-06T15:55:37.009360
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25888382
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Crimnologa
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Crimnologa is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Crimnologa fletcheri Bradley, 1965
Crimnologa perspicua Meyrick, 1920
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimnologa
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2025-04-06T15:55:37.033212
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25888383
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Crocidosema
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Crocidosema is a genus of tortrix moths (family Tortricidae) belonging to the tribe Eucosmini of subfamily Olethreutinae. They are found mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, being especially common in the Neotropics. But some occur elsewhere, such as on the Hawaiian Islands.
At least some of them can be recognized by their wing veins. In the hindwings, vein 3 and 4 originate from a common stalk, and are approached by the fifth vein at its end. In the forewings, veins 4-6 converge at the termen.
These moths are mostly small and inconspicuous. But C. plebejana is an occasional pest of cotton (and some other mostly malvaceous plants) and has become widely distributed by trade in agricultural produce, while the lantana flower-cluster moth (C. lantana) is employed in Lantana biocontrol and has been deliberately introduced to some locations.
Species
As of 2010, the 29 described species of Crocidosema are:
Crocidosema accessa (Heinrich, 1931)
Crocidosema apicinota (Turner, 1946)
Crocidosema aporema (Walsingham, 1914)
Crocidosema callida Meyrick, 1917
Crocidosema calvifrons (Walsingham, 1891)
Crocidosema cecidogena (Kieffer, 1908)
Crocidosema compsoptila Meyrick, 1936
Crocidosema cosmoptila Meyrick, 1917
Crocidosema evidens (Meyrick, 1917)
Crocidosema impendens Meyrick, 1917
Crocidosema insulana Aurivillius, 1922
Crocidosema lantana Busck, 1910 – lantana flower-cluster moth, lantana tortricid moth
Crocidosema leprarum Walsingham in Sharp, 1907
Crocidosema leptozona (Meyrick, 1921)
Crocidosema longipalpana (Moschler, 1891)
Crocidosema nitsugai Vargas, 2019
Crocidosema marcidellum Walsingham in Sharp, 1907
Crocidosema meridospila (Meyrick, 1922)
Crocidosema orfilai Pastrana, 1964
Crocidosema perplexana (Fernald, 1901)
Crocidosema plebejana Zeller, 1847
Crocidosema pollutana (Zeller, 1877)
Crocidosema pristinana (Zeller, 1877)
Crocidosema pyrrhulana (Zeller, 1877)
Crocidosema roraria Meyrick, 1917
Crocidosema sediliata (Meyrick, 1912)
Crocidosema thematica (Meyrick, 1918)
Crocidosema unica (Heinrich, 1923)
Crocidosema venata Razowski & Wojtusiak, 2006
Crocidosema veternana (Zeller, 1877)
(incomplete list)
Footnotes
References
(2010a): Online World Catalogue of the Tortricidae – Genus Crocidosema account. Version 2.0. Retrieved 2011-OCT-15.
(2010b): Online World Catalogue of the Tortricidae – Crocidosema species list. Version 2.0. Retrieved 2011-OCT-15.
(1986): Pyralidae and Microlepidoptera of the Marquesas Archipelago. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 416: 1-485. PDF fulltext (214 MB!)
(2004): Butterflies and Moths of the World, Generic Names and their Type-species – Crocidosema. Version of 2004-NOV-05. Retrieved 2011-OCT-15.
Category:Eucosmini
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Taxa named by Philipp Christoph Zeller
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crocidosema
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2025-04-06T15:55:37.066511
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25888384
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Crocostola
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Crocostola is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Crocostola hyperphyes Diakonoff, 1953
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Alexey Diakonoff
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crocostola
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2025-04-06T15:55:37.089985
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25888385
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Crusimetra
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Crusimetra is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Olethreutinae of the family Tortricidae.
Species
Crusimetra verecunda Meyrick, 1912
See also
List of Tortricidae genera
References
External links
tortricidae.com
Category:Tortricidae genera
Category:Olethreutinae
Category:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crusimetra
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2025-04-06T15:55:37.115326
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