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2025-04-05 18:25:13
2025-04-05 23:52:07
25891151
Directive on the re-use of public sector information
345, 2003-12-31, pp.90–96 |made2003-11-17 |commenced2003-12-31 now called the Open Data Directive, is an EU directive that stipulates minimum requirements for EU member states regarding making public sector information available for re-use. This directive provides a common legislative framework for this area. The Directive is an attempt to remove barriers that hinder the re-use of public sector information throughout the Union. The PSI Directive was amended again in 2019, becoming the Open Data Directive (Directive (EU)2019/1024 on open data and the re-use of public sector information), which entered into force on 16 July 2019. Member states had until 16July 2021 to transpose the new directive into national law. Definition Every day public bodies create and collect a massive amount of valuable data from many different domains, the need to open up public sector data is not something new, and the European Union started to stimulate the reuse of public government data since the end of the 1980s.   The directive on open data and the re-use of public sector information further stresses the importance of the principle of re-using and publishing open government data from public sector bodies for both commercial and non-commercial purposes. Even if the directive focused on the re-use principle, in Article 5 it clearly obliged member states to ‘encourage public sector bodies and public undertakings to produce and make available documents [...] in accordance with the principle of “open by design and by default’’. This aspect represented an important step forward because it prioritized and shifted the concept of re-use to the beginning stage in the process of data production. Furthermore, the PSI is clear in terms of who can gain value from the re-use of open government data, making no distinctions about the beneficiaries, and without any restrictions to a specific market or sector. In addition, the directive specifies that it is not necessary to have and declare a pre-identified purpose for the re-use. Moreover, another important aspect emerging from the directive, is the idea of information and data as infrastructure. In order to boost innovation and make open government data available for re-use, public bodies need to invest in structuring their data into a public infrastructural resource. Furthermore, the PSI is clear in terms of who can gain value from the re-use of open government data, making no distinctions about the beneficiaries, and without any restrictions to a specific market or sector. In addition, the directive specifies that it is not necessary to have and declare a pre-identified purpose for the re-use. High Value Datasets Another important aspect is the definition of “High Value Dataset”, which includes information from different thematic topics and is expected to play an important role for the society and economy. Datasets included in this category will have to be published completely and freely in machine-readable format and via Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) in every member state. The availability of APIs stimulates the reuse, dissemination of dynamic data and increases business opportunities. Access to real-time and dynamic data is strongly promoted by the PSI directive, and once the directive will be fully transposed, member states have to publish dynamic open government data through APIs. These categories of “High Value Dataset”, as referred to in Article 13(1) of the directive, are: * Geospatial * Earth observation and environment * Meteorological * Statistics * Companies and company ownership * Mobility Open data licensing The directive stresses the importance of open data licensing. The public sector is composed of different public bodies which release their open government data using different technical and legal frameworks, unfortunately the different variety of approaches contributes to creating obstacles in the re-use of information. The potential of data, and of open data consequently, emerges from the abilities to connect and link data from heterogeneous data sources. However, when these operations are performed, legal uncertainty and a lack of clarity emerge. As a result, sometimes it is difficult to understand the limitations of the re-use of the datasets clearly. Consequently a clear definition and standardization of open data licenses represent an important pillar in the re-use of open government data. Europe’s open license panorama is highly fragmented with many licenses adopted by the member states. The lack of uniformity in the open licenses may be problematic also from a market perspective as well, and in promoting the use of open data to stimulate the data economy and the Digital Single Market, which is one of the central aims of the PSI directive. In February 2019, the European Commission decided to standardize the usage of Creative Common licenses as the standards for open licenses under the European Commission’s re-use policy. Creative Commons licenses define how to manage copyright terms related to all creative material under copyright. This decision marks an important step in fostering the re-use of open government data produced by the European Commission and represents a best practice to facilitate the re-use of information that the institution makes publicly available online.Transposition and infringement proceedingsThe deadline for member states to implement the directive was 17 July 2021. Between September 2021 and July 2022 the Commission began infringement proceedings (letters of formal notice and reasoned opinions) against almost half the EU member states: * Belgium * Bulgaria * Czechia * Croatia * Hungary * Latvia * The Netherlands * Austria * Slovakia * Sweden * Romania * Slovenia References External links * [http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2019/1024 Directive (EU) 2019/1024] of 20 June 2019 on open data and the re-use of public sector information ** [https://eur-lex.europa.eu/procedure/EN/2018_111 Procedure 2018/0111/COD] on EUR-Lex ** [https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/ficheprocedure.do?reference2018/0111(COD)&len Procedure 2018/0111(COD)] on ŒIL * [http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2003/98 Directive 2003/98/EC] (No longer in force) * [http://data.europa.eu/eli/dir/2013/37/oj Directive 2013/37/EU] (No longer in force) Category:Copyright law of the European Union Category:European Union directives Category:2003 in law Category:2003 in the European Union Category:Articles containing video clips
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directive_on_the_re-use_of_public_sector_information
2025-04-06T15:55:50.427062
25891153
New South Wales Land and Property Information
| jurisdiction = New South Wales | headquarters = Registrar-General's building,<br/>1 Prince Albert Road, Sydney | region_code = AU-NSW | coordinates | employees | budget | minister1_name The Hon. Victor Dominello | minister1_pfo = <br>Minister for Finance, Services and Property | chief1_name = Des Mooney | chief1_position = <br>General manager | chief2_name | chief2_position | parent_agency_type = Department | parent_agency = Department of Finance, Services and Innovation | child1_agency = Board of Surveying and Spatial Information | child2_agency = Geographical Names Board | child3_agency = Valuer General of New South Wales | child4_agency | child5_agency | child6_agency | website | footnotes = }} The New South Wales Land and Property Information (NSW LPI), a division of the Department of Finance, Services and Innovation in the government of New South Wales, was the division responsible for land titles, property information, valuation, surveying, and mapping and spatial information in the Australian state of New South Wales. From 1 July 2017, the operation was transferred to Australian Registry Investments, a private consortium, under a 35-year concession with the NSW government. The LPI was subsequently renamed and replaced by the NSW Land Registry Services on 1 December 2017. The NSW government continues to guarantee title under the Torrens Assurance Fund (TAF) and will continue to retain full ownership of all land title data. The government created the Office of the Registrar General on 1 July 2016 to monitor and enforce the operator’s performance of the land titles registry business in respect of defined service levels, KPIs and the security of the data. The Office of the Registrar General is also a division of the Department of Finance, Services and Innovation, the minister of which is the Minister for Finance, Services and Property, currently Victor Dominello . The division was led by its general manager, currently Des Mooney, who reports to the secretary of the Department of Finance, Services, and Innovation. Both the general manager for Land and Property Information and the secretary of the Department reported to the Minister for Finance, Services and Property. Activities Land and Property Information achieves its aims by maintaining a secure, efficient and guaranteed system of land ownership and registry; collection, collation, and integration of property information to assist with land management, conveyancing, property development, investment, local planning, state economic and social development and historical research; maintaining impartial and transparent valuation services to assist local and state government to determine rates and land taxes; implementation and monitoring standards for the survey industry to provide certainty and confidence when establishing property locations, boundaries and the construction of public infrastructure; and converts the wealth of land data it collects into a comprehensive and authoritative range of online and hard copy mapping products and services. The division was also responsible for the Geographical Names Board of New South Wales and the New South Wales Board of Surveying and Spatial Information. History Previously known as the Land and Property Management Authority, the organisation had broader responsibilities including the above activities plus the management of certain government-owned land, the maintenance of recreational and visitor facilities, such as State Parks, Great North Walk and The Hume and Hovell Walking Track. However, on 1 April 2011, the Authority was abolished and some of its functions merged into the Department of Finance and Services, with operational divisions created including Land and Property Information, and the State Property Authority. The Authority's previous functions within the Office of Rural Affairs, Crown Lands, and the Soil Conservation Service were transferred to the Department of Trade and Investment, Regional Infrastructure and Services and Department of Primary Industries. The Australian Registry Investments, a consortium between the Hastings Funds Management Limited and the First State Super, won the rights to operate the titling and registry operations of New South Wales in April 2017, under a 35-year concession.<ref name"hastingsinfra.com"/> It took over the New South Wales Land and Property Information in July 2017, which was renamed to NSW Land Registry Services in December 2017.<ref namenamechange/> References External links * Category:Government agencies of New South Wales Category:Land management in Australia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_South_Wales_Land_and_Property_Information
2025-04-06T15:55:50.433504
25891154
John Butt (musician)
| image | alt | birth_date | birth_place = Solihull, England | occupation = | alma_mater = King's College, Cambridge | organizations = | website | awards Gramophone Award }} John Butt (born 17 November 1960, Solihull, England) is an English orchestral and choral conductor, organist, harpsichordist and scholar. He holds the Gardiner Chair of Music at the University of Glasgow and is music director of the Dunedin Consort with whom he has made award-winning recordings in historically informed performance. He is a prolific scholar, conductor and performer of works by Johann Sebastian Bach.Education and career Butt was educated at Solihull School on a music scholarship and was the organist at St Alban the Martyr, Birmingham, from 1977 to 1979. In 1979 he began his undergraduate education at University of Cambridge, where he held the position of organ scholar at King's College from 1979 to 1982. His organ teachers at Cambridge included Peter Hurford and Gillian Weir. He received his PhD at Cambridge in 1987. After graduation, he lectured at the University of Aberdeen and was a Fellow of Magdalene College at the University of Cambridge. In 1989, he became university organist and assistant professor of music at the University of California, Berkeley; in 1992, he was promoted to associate professor, as well as director of the University Chamber Chorus. He prepared that choir for Gustav Leonhardt to conduct in Bach's Magnificat and the related cantata Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, BWV 10, at the 1992 Berkeley Festival and Exhibition; Butt later said that he had come to know Leonhardt "fairly well" and that "I learned a lot when preparing choirs for him back in my California days." In 1997, he gave what one critic calls "memorable readings" of Handel's organ concertos. Musicians that he inspired during this time include the organist Robert Quinney and harpsichordist and director Julian Perkins. Since October 2001, Butt has been the Gardiner Chair of Music at the University of Glasgow; he also served as Head of the Music Department from 2001 to 2005. Since 2003 he has conducted the Dunedin Consort, a professional ensemble in Edinburgh for performances in historically informed performance. At the end of the 2013/14 academic session, Butt was also appointed Interim Director of Music of the Glasgow University Chapel Choir, after James Grossmith left that post to become chorus master of the Royal Swedish Opera. As a guest conductor, Butt has appeared with Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the English Concert, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, the Irish Baroque Orchestra, the Royal Scottish Academy of Music Chamber Orchestra and Chorus, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, the Aurora Orchestra, the Portland Baroque Orchestra, the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra, the Halle, and orchestras at the Berkeley Early Music Festival and Göttingen International Handel Festival. Publications Butt has published numerous articles for scholarly publications and for general-audience publications. Books have included In 1992, the book won the first William H. Scheide Prize of the American Bach Society.) * Bach – Mass in B Minor (Cambridge Music Handbooks, 1991) * Music Education and the Art of Performance in the German Baroque (Cambridge University Press, 1994) * Playing with History – the historical approach to musical performance (Cambridge University Press, 2002; shortlisted for the book prize of the British Academy); * ''Bach's Dialogue with Modernity: Perspectives on the Passions'' (Cambridge University Press, 2010 ; the book examines Bach's St. Matthew Passion and St. John Passion in detail, situating them with respect to pre-modernity and modernity, and considering issues they raise with respect to artistic subjectivity, rhetoric and performance practice.) He co-edited the Cambridge Companion to Bach (1997) – for which he contributed two articles on Bach's metaphysics – was consultant editor for the Oxford Companion to Bach, and joint editor (together with Tim Carter) of the Cambridge History of Seventeenth Century Music (2005). Discography As a solo harpsichordist, organist, or clavichordist, Butt made eleven recordings for the Harmonia mundi label, of music by Johann Sebastian Bach, Johann Kuhnau, Johann Pachelbel, Georg Philipp Telemann, Henry Purcell, John Blow, Matthew Locke, Juan Bautista Cabanilles, Girolamo Frescobaldi, and Sir Edward Elgar. In 2004, he recorded Bach's Pastorella for organ, BWV 590, for the Delphian label in Glasgow. In July 2013, using a harpsichord modeled on an original built by Michael Mietke, Butt recorded Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier for the Linn label; it was released in November 2014. As a continuo player, Butt has recorded with many ensembles, including the English Chamber Orchestra and American Bach Soloists. In 1991–92, for Harmonia mundi, he and Baroque violinist Elizabeth Blumenstock recorded the Bach sonatas for violin and harpsichord, BWV 1014–19, 1021 and 1023. it was released in 2015. Butt's first recording as a conductor, made in 1994 for the Centaur label, featured music of Orlando Gibbons sung by the U.C. Berkeley Chamber Choir with viol accompaniment; for the disc, he also recorded keyboard works of Gibbons on the organ. Since 2005, Butt has conducted recordings of the Dunedin Consort and Players for the Linn label, many featuring reconstructions of a specific historical performance. These include: * 2006: Handel's Messiah. This was the first recording of a reconstruction of the work in its first performance, which took place in Dublin in 1742. The release won the 2007 Gramophone Award for Best Baroque Vocal Album and the 2008 MIDEM Baroque Award at the Cannes Classical Awards. * March 2008: Bach's St Matthew Passion. This was the first recording of the version from Bach's final performance, which also took place in 1742. * November 2008: Handel's Acis and Galatea in the original performing version of 1718. This release was nominated for a Gramophone Award. * 2010: Bach's Mass in B minor. This is the first recording to use the new critical edition by Joshua Rifkin, which follows Bach's final version of the score from 1748 to 1750 exclusively from beginning to end. (Other editions have included elements from a 1733 version of the Kyrie and Gloria, and some posthumous changes by Bach's son, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach). * 2012: Handel's Esther in the first reconstructable version of the work, from 1720; Butt reconstructed the performing edition from Handel's autograph and three other historical sources. * 2013: Bach's St. John Passion, in a liturgical reconstruction based on Good Friday Vespers services in Leipzig. In March 2013 the disc was named "Record of the Month" by Gramophone and "Recording of the Month" by BBC Music Magazine. * September 2013: Bach's Brandenburg Concertos with the Dunedin Consort. It was a Gramophone "Choice" in October 2013. and was a finalist in the Baroque Instrumental category for the 2014 Gramophone Awards; it was also nominated for the International Classical Music Awards in the Baroque Instrumental category. In this recording, the ensemble used the pitch standard of A=392 or "tief-Cammerton," a whole tone below the modern standard pitch and associated with the French royal court at the time; Butt notes that many German-speaking courts, including the one at Cöthen where Bach wrote these concertos, "attempted to emulate French practice." He also mentions instruments from the time and place pitched to this standard. Still, he notes that "While Cöthen court pitch was likely to have been somewhere near this, it is unlikely that pitch was ever standardized as precisely as we might often assume or wish." * March 2014: Mozart's Requiem with the Dunedin Consort. This is the first recording of David Black's new critical edition, published in 2012, of the Franz Xaver Süssmayr completion of the Requiem. The recording seeks to re-create the forces used at the first complete performance in January, 1793; it also includes a performance of Black's reconstruction of a December 1791 performance of the Introit and Kyrie sections. Also performed is Mozart's Misericordias Domini, K. 222. In May 2014, the disc was named "Recording of the Month" by Gramophone. and in August 2014, it won the Gramophone Award for 2014 for Best Choral recording. In November 2014, it was listed among the nominees in the Choral category for the 2015 International Classical Music Awards. In December 2014, it was listed as one of the five nominees for "Best Choral Performance" in the Grammy Awards. * October, 2015: A musical reconstruction of Bach's first Christmas service in Leipzig, including the Magnificat in E-flat major, BWV 243a, the cantata Christen, ätzet diesen Tag, BWV 63, organ works by Bach (played by Butt), a motet by Giovanni Gabrieli, and period chorales, recorded in July 2014; * 2014 Bach's Violin Concertos with the group's first violinist, Cecilia Bernardini, as soloist; * September 2015 Bach's Christmas Oratorio. * 2003: election to Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. * 2006: Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship for research on the Bach Passions * 2006: election to Fellow of the British Academy. * 2010: Arts and Humanities Research Council * 2010: Kohn Foundation/Royal Academy of Music Bach Prize for his Bach scholarship and performance. * 2013: Medal of the Royal College of Organists for "organ playing, organ- and choral-related scholarship, and choral conducting," * 2013: Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the New Year Honours for services to music in Scotland. Personal life John Butt and his wife Sally have five children He is the nephew of a professional musician, – who was, Butt says, "a keen amateur" he expressed enthusiasm for the practice of tai chi, the films of Alfred Hitchcock,ReferencesExternal links * [http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/cca/staff/johnbutt/ Professor John Butt] Glasgow University Category:1960 births Category:Living people Category:English classical organists Category:Alumni of King's College, Cambridge Category:Officers of the Order of the British Empire Category:Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Category:People educated at Solihull School Category:Bach musicians Category:Bach scholars Category:Fellows of the British Academy Category:Winners of the Royal Academy of Music/ Kohn Foundation Bach Prize Category:Recipients of the Medal of the Royal College of Organists Category:Bach conductors Category:21st-century English conductors (music) Category:21st-century English organists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Butt_(musician)
2025-04-06T15:55:50.449987
25891161
Manuherikia (New Zealand electorate)
Manuherikia was a parliamentary electorate in the Otago region of New Zealand. It existed from 1866 to 1870 and was represented by two Members of Parliament. Population centres The electorate included the towns of Alexandra, Cromwell, Ranfurly and Roxburgh. History The electorate was formed for the 1866 election. It existed for one term only, i.e. until the end of the 4th New Zealand Parliament in 1870. Members The electorate was represented by two Members of Parliament: Key ElectionWinner William Baldwin David Mervyn Election results 1867 Manuherikia by-election References Category:Historical electorates of New Zealand Category:1865 establishments in New Zealand Category:1870 disestablishments in New Zealand
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuherikia_(New_Zealand_electorate)
2025-04-06T15:55:50.466994
25891163
United Nations Security Council Resolution 412
United Nations Security Council Resolution 412, adopted unanimously on July 7, 1977, after examining the application of the Republic of Djibouti for membership in the United Nations, the Council recommended to the General Assembly that Djibouti be admitted. See also List of United Nations member states List of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 401 to 500 (1976–1982) References Text of the Resolution at undocs.org External links 0412 0412 0412 Category:1977 in Djibouti Category:July 1977
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_412
2025-04-06T15:55:50.479183
25891185
Yeovil True
"Yeovil True" was a single released by the English football team Yeovil Town in 2004. It reached number 36 in the UK Singles Chart. The song was released to celebrate the side's FA Cup tie against Liverpool, which was won by Liverpool. It was available only in Yeovil, with over 3,000 copies sold in three days. It was loosely based on "Two Little Boys", a song first recorded in the American Civil War and later performed by Rolf Harris. References Category:2004 singles Category:Association football songs and chants Category:2004 songs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeovil_True
2025-04-06T15:55:50.502179
25891191
Oh Millwall
"Oh Millwall" was a single released by the English football team Millwall in 2004. It reached number 41 in the UK Singles Chart. References Category:2004 singles Category:Association football songs and chants Category:Millwall F.C. songs Category:2004 songs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oh_Millwall
2025-04-06T15:55:50.508015
25891199
2001 Finlandia Trophy
Ilia Klimkin | championladies = Sasha Cohen | championpairs | championdance Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski | championsynchro | previouscomp 2000 Finlandia Trophy | nextcomp = 2002 Finlandia Trophy }} The Finlandia Trophy is an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Finland. It was held in Helsinki on October 6–7, 2001. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. Results Men {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! SP ! FS |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Ilia Klimkin || || 1.5 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Roman Serov || || 3.0 || 2 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Gheorghe Chiper || || 5.0 || 4 || 3 |- ! 4 | Róbert Kažimír || || 5.5 || 3 || 4 |- ! 5 | Anton Klykov || || 9.0 || 6 || 6 |- ! 6 | Ari-Pekka Nurmenkari || || 9.5 || 5 || 7 |- ! 7 | Ivan Dinev || || 11.0 || 12 || 5 |- ! 8 | Stefan Lindemann || || 12.0 || 8 || 8 |- ! 9 | Dmytro Dmytrenko || || 12.5 || 7 || 9 |- ! 10 | Margus Hernits || || 16.5 || 11 || 11 |- ! 11 | Stéphane Lambiel || || 17.0 || 14 || 10 |- ! 12 | Alexei Kozlov || || 17.0 || 10 || 12 |- ! 13 | Rusty Fein || || 17.5 || 9 || 13 |- ! 14 | Hristo Turlakov || || 17.5 || 15 || 14 |- ! 15 | Angelo Dolfini || || 21.5 || 13 || 15 |} Ladies {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! SP ! FS |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Sasha Cohen || || 1.5 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Alisa Drei || || 3.5 || 3 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Viktoria Volchkova || || 4.0 || 2 || 3 |- ! 4 | Zuzana Babiaková || || 8.0 || 6 || 5 |- ! 5 | Liudmila Nelidina || || 8.5 || 9 || 4 |- ! 6 | Susanna Pöykiö || || 10.0 || 8 || 6 |- ! 7 | Tamara Dorofejev || || 10.0 || 4 || 8 |- ! 8 | Irina Nikolaeva || || 11.5 || 5 || 9 |- ! 9 | Sarah Meier || || 12.0 || 10 || 7 |- ! 10 | Galina Maniachenko || || 13.5 || 7 || 10 |- ! 11 | Tara Ferguson || || 17.5 || 13 || 11 |- ! 12 | Taru Karvosenoja || || 19.0 || 14 || 12 |- ! 13 | Zoe Jones || || 19.0 || 12 || 13 |- ! 14 | Andrea Diewald || || 19.5 || 11 || 14 |} Ice dancing {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! CD ! OD ! FD |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski || || 2.0 || 1 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Marika Humphreys / Vitaliy Baranov || || 4.0 || 2 || 2 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Chantal Lefebvre / Justin Lanning || || 6.0 || 3 || 3 || 3 |- ! 4 | Valentina Anselmi / Fabrizio Pedrazzini || || 8.0 || 4 || 4 || 4 |- ! 5 | Jessica Huot / Juha Valkama || || 11.0 || 6 || 6 || 5 |- ! 6 | Kateřina Kovalová / David Szurman || || 11.0 || 5 || 5 || 6 |- ! 7 | Anna Mosenkova / Sergei Sychov || || 14.0 || 7 || 7 || 7 |} External links * [http://www.skatecanada.ca/en/events_results/results/archives/2001/1finlandia.html 2001 Finlandia Trophy results] Category:Finlandia Trophy Finlandia Trophy, 2001 Finlandia Trophy, 2001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_Finlandia_Trophy
2025-04-06T15:55:50.531607
25891200
The Boys in the Old Brighton Blue
"The Boys in the Old Brighton Blue" was a single released by the English football team Brighton & Hove Albion to commemorate reaching the 1983 FA Cup Final. It reached number 65 in the UK Singles Chart. References Category:1983 singles Category:Association football songs and chants Category:1983 songs Category:Song articles with missing songwriters
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Boys_in_the_Old_Brighton_Blue
2025-04-06T15:55:50.533914
25891218
Leeds United (song)
"Leeds United" was a single released by the English football team Leeds United in 1972, as the official song for their appearance in the Centenary FA Cup Final. It reached number 10 in the UK Singles Chart. Its B-side was the better known song "Leeds Leeds Leeds", also known as "Marching On Together". "Leeds United" had new lyrics written by Les Reed, to the tune of "Sally Sunshine", a song originally written by Reed with Geoff Stephens. "Sally Sunshine" was recorded by the Mills Brothers for their 1972 What A Wonderful World album (Paramount, PAS 6024). It was also recorded in the German translation by Cliff Richard as "Wenn Du Lachst, Lacht das Gluck (Sally Sunshine)", released in Germany in August 1971 (Columbia Germany, 1C 006-04 903). Lyrics The lyrics to "Leeds United" celebrate the entire Leeds United team of the time. Manager Don Revie and the twelve players who are almost universally considered to be the quintessential "Revie team" are all mentioned. All long-serving players who had their greatest years at the club, they were all together at the club between 1969 and 1973. There are twelve players, rather than the usual eleven, because Paul Madeley could, and would, replace any player, covering every position except goalkeeper over his 19-year, 700+ game career for the club. FA Cup Final line-up The actual team for the FA Cup Final, which Leeds United won, did not include either Gary Sprake or Terry "Top Cat" Cooper. Sprake was replaced by David " The Viking " Harvey in the run-up to the Cup Final, while Cooper broke his leg and was replaced by Paul Madeley. References Category:1972 singles Category:Leeds United F.C. songs
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeds_United_(song)
2025-04-06T15:55:50.559080
25891226
Clanis bilineata
Clanis bilineata, the two-lined velvet hawkmoth, is a species of moth in the family Sphingidae first described by Francis Walker in 1866. Distribution It is found in Asia, but see the subspecies section for a detailed range. Description The wingspan is 94–150 mm for subspecies C. b. bilineata and 94–120 mm for subspecies C. b. tsingtauica. <gallery mode="packed"> Clanis bilineata bilineata MHNT CUT 2010 0 104 Ban Van Heun Laos male dorsal.jpg|Male C. b. bilineata Clanis bilineata bilineata MHNT CUT 2010 0 104 Ban Van Heun Laos male ventral.jpg|Male C. b. bilineata, underside Clanis bilineata bilineata MHNT CUT 2010 0 104 Ban Van Heun Laos female dorsal.jpg|Female C. b. bilineata Clanis bilineata bilineata MHNT CUT 2010 0 104 Ban Van Heun Laos female ventral.jpg|Female C. b. bilineata, underside </gallery> Biology Adults of the nominate subspecies are on wing from late February until October, with peaks in April, late July-early August, and mid-September in Hong Kong. There are multiple generations per year. Subspecies C. b. tsingtauica is on wing from May to late September in Korea. Larvae of the nominate subspecies have been recorded on Pongamia pinnata, Millettia atropurpurea and Pterocarpus marsupium in India. In southern China it has been recorded from Mucuna and Pueraria. Subspecies Some authors recognise three distinct subspecies, while others regard them as synonyms: *Clanis bilineata bilineata (southern India, then from Nepal and northern India (Sikkim) across southern China to Taiwan) *Clanis bilineata formosana (Taiwan) *Clanis bilineata tsingtauica (the Russian Far East, Japan, Korea and north-eastern China, as far south as Shaanxi and Zhejiang) <gallery mode="packed"> Clanis bilineata formosana MHNT CUT 2010 0 72 Wushe Taiwan male dorsal.jpg|Male C. b. formosana Clanis bilineata formosana MHNT CUT 2010 0 72 Wushe Taiwan male ventral.jpg|Male C. b. formosana, underside Clanis bilineata formosana MHNT CUT 2010 0 72 Wushe Taiwan female dorsal.jpg|Female C. b. formosana Clanis bilineata formosana MHNT CUT 2010 0 72 Wushe Taiwan female ventral.jpg|Female C. b. formosana, underside </gallery> References External links * * * Category:Clanis Category:Moths described in 1866 Category:Moths of Japan Category:Taxa named by Francis Walker (entomologist) Category:Moths of Taiwan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clanis_bilineata
2025-04-06T15:55:50.572943
25891234
The Australian Ugliness
The Australian Ugliness is a 1960 book by Australian architect Robin Boyd. Boyd investigates visual pollution in Australian aesthetic, in relation to architecture and the suburbs. In the text he coins the term "featurism" to describe the state of Australian architectural design. Boyd proposes that education in design, landscaping and architecture can be a means to resolve the ugliness he observed. Summary The book can be seen as an "attack" on, or criticism of, Australia's built landscape. Boyd's three main criticisms stem from three ideas: the Australian obsession with "featurism"–a fixation on parts rather than the whole, the use of building materials and styles that are unsympathetic to the country's landscape/climate, and the culling of trees in order to "divert" drains, prevent leaf clogging and other immaterial issues. Boyd's belief that trees are not a feature, or a byproduct of design, but rather a fundamental landscaping necessity, something unrecognised by Australian homeowners and city planners who opt for low maintenance. It also channeled the "cultural cringe", as well as drawing comparisons to the man-made landscapes of North America and to a lesser extent Europe. Boyd's belief was that because Australia was in its infancy at the time of his critique, it had not developed a strong historic character like Europe, and thus its architectural landscape was a bombardment of confused style and mixed ideas. Reception and influence The Australian Ugliness was first published by F. W. Cheshire, Melbourne. That firm's publishing director, Andrew Fabinyi, approved the book for publication in defiance of the "lugubrious advice of sundry experts" who claimed the book "had an impossible title and would not have public anyway". The book sold over 10,000 copies by early 1963. After the book's first publication, Boyd was criticised for being "unpatriotic" by the Australian mainstream press. The book’s Afterword acknowledges that it reads as a ‘rage’ and ‘diatribe’, and a 'satirical portrait'. As the years passed, the book became something of a classic and is now regarded as an important book regarding Australian design, culture and architecture. The book opened up debate about design, architecture and urban planning in the country. It has received various reprints and adjustments over the years. In the following years, Boyd's book inspired derivative and reactionary works, ranging from Donald Gazzard's more visual Australian Outrage (1966) and Look Here! Considering the Australian Environment (1968). It was further examined in After The Australian Ugliness, a collection edited by Naomi Stead, published in 2020 by National Gallery of Victoria and Thames & Hudson Australia. References Further reading "The triumph of ugliness", The Sydney Morning Herald, 22 March 2008 Category:Australian non-fiction books Category:Architecture in Australia Category:1960 non-fiction books Category:Architecture books
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Australian_Ugliness
2025-04-06T15:55:50.579270
25891235
National Animal Welfare Trust
The National Animal Welfare Trust (NAWT) is an animal welfare charity founded in 1971, which operates rescue and rehoming centres for companion animals. It has branches in Watford, Berkshire, Essex, Bedfordshire and Cornwall. They operate a number of premises, including Trindledown Farm, the UK's only retirement home for elderly pets. Formerly known as the Animal Welfare Trust (AWT), it originated from the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection. Origin The NAWT was founded in 1971 as a charity, and was originally known as the Animal Welfare Trust (National was added in 1996 to celebrate the charity's 25th anniversary). The origin of the organisation can be traced to 1958 when the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) established BUAV Dog Rescue. The ideals of this new rescue organisation was to prevent dogs or puppies being bought at markets, in order to prevent them from going to laboratories for vivisection. In 1965 the name was changed to BUAV Animal Aid, in recognition that the work was not limited to only dogs. In 1971 BUAV members established a separate charity named the Animal Welfare Trust as they felt the work of BUAV Animal Aid was departing from its original aims. From 1979, the AWT began to work with the Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research from its Hendon & Aldenham Boarding Kennels, in Watford, sharing facilities and staff. The Dr Hadwen Trust is now separate from the NAWT, although they work together as appropriate. The Thurrock centre is currently run out of rented boarding kennels. References External links Official website Category:Animal charities based in the United Kingdom Category:1971 establishments in the United Kingdom Category:Animal welfare organisations based in the United Kingdom
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Animal_Welfare_Trust
2025-04-06T15:55:50.583480
25891239
László Teleki
right|thumb Count László Teleki IV de Szék (11 February 1811 – 8 May 1861) was a Hungarian writer and statesman. He is remembered as the author of the drama Kegyencz ("The Favourite", 1841). In older books in English he is given the name "Ladislas Teleky". Teleki was born in Pest to László Teleki III and Johanna Mészáros. On his father's death in 1821 he was raised by his elder half-brother József Teleki (1790–1855). Throughout the 1830s he travelled through Europe. On returning to Hungary he became a politician, first in Transylvania (where his brother became governor) and then in the National Assembly, with a particular concern for the equitable representation of different nationalities within the Empire. In 1848 came news of the revolution in Paris, and he travelled to Paris as envoy. The failure of the Hungarian revolution led to his banishment, and in 1851 he was sentenced to death in absentia. During the 1850s he lived in Switzerland and did what he could to assist Lajos Kossuth, despite their disagreements. In November 1860 he travelled to Dresden under an assumed name in order to see the widow Auguszta Lipthay. He was arrested on 16 December by the Saxon police, and four days later was taken across the border into Austria where he was imprisoned until New Year's Day. After negotiation with the authorities, mediated by Emperor Franz Joseph, he was pardoned and permitted to return to Hungary on the condition that he gave up revolutionary politics and foreign travel. On his return he received a hero's welcome, and immediately resumed his political activities, directing the activities of the Resolution Party (Határozati Párt), and insisting that the proposed reforms of 1848 be carried out without compromise. He committed suicide on 8 May, the night before a significant public debate with Ferenc Deák on the constitutional status of the Emperor, for reasons that are unclear. The tragic news, coming only a year after the death of István Széchenyi, demoralized and bewildered the public. He was the dedicatee of Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Notes External links Teleki László Alapítvány (The László Teleki Institute) Category:1811 births Category:1861 deaths Category:People from Pest, Hungary Laszlo, Teleki Category:Counts of Hungary Category:Hungarian Calvinist and Reformed Christians Category:Opposition Party (Hungary) politicians Category:Resolution Party politicians Category:Members of the House of Representatives of Hungary (1848–1849) Category:Members of the House of Representatives of Hungary (1861) Category:Hungarian Freemasons Category:Writers from the Austrian Empire Category:Politicians who died by suicide
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/László_Teleki
2025-04-06T15:55:50.591632
25891260
William Arthur (botanist)
William Arthur (1680 - 1716) was a Scottish doctor who served as Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden and King's Botanist at Edinburgh. Shortly afterwards he was deeply implicated in the Jacobite rising of 1715. He fled to Italy, where he died the following year "from a surfeit of figs." Early life William was born in Elie, Fifeshire in 1680 to Patrick Arthur of Ballone, a surgeon and apothecary and Commissioner of Supply for Fifeshire. His mother was Margaret Sharp, a relative of Archbishop James Sharp of St. Andrews who had been assassinated in Fife in 1679. William travelled to Utrecht in the early 18th century to study medicine under Dutch physician and "father of physiology", Herman Boerhaave. He graduated as Doctor of Medicine in March 1707 and returned to his native Scotland, initially practising medicine in Elie. chieftain of Clan Gregor, a "gentleman of great courage". a privilege which had been conferred directly from Filippo Gualterio, Cardinal Protector of Scotland. Mar wrote posthumously on Arthur in a letter to a Jacobite agent: References Category:Scottish Jacobites Category:Scottish expatriates in Italy Category:18th-century Scottish botanists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Arthur_(botanist)
2025-04-06T15:55:50.603640
25891277
Swimming at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships – Men's 50 metre freestyle
The Men's 50m Freestyle event at the 10th FINA World Aquatics Championships swam on 25–26 July 2003 in Barcelona, Spain. Preliminary and Semifinal heats swam on July 25, while the Final swam July 26. Prior to the championships, the following World (WR) and Championship (CR) records were: WR: 21.64 swum by Alexander Popov (Russia) on 16 June 2000 in Moscow, Russia CR: 22.05 swum by Anthony Ervin (USA) on 22 July 2001 in Fukuoka, Japan Results Final Place Lane Swimmer Nation Time Notes 1 4 Alexander Popov 21.92 CR 2 1 Mark Foster 22.20 3 7 Pieter van den Hoogenband 22.29 4 3 Johan Kenkhuis 22.30 5 6 Julien Sicot 22.38 6 2 Oleksandr Volynets 22.40 7 8 Brett Hawke 22.41 8 5 Jason Lezak 22.44 Semifinals Rank Heat + Lane Swimmer Nation Time Notes 1 S2 L4 Alexander Popov 21.99 2 S1 L4 Jason Lezak 22.14 3 S2 L5 Johan Kenkhuis 22.31 4 S1 L5 Julien Sicot 22.32 5 S2 L2 Oleksandr Volynets 22.34 6 S2 L3 Pieter van den Hoogenband 22.36 7 S1 L2 Mark Foster 22.43 8 S2 L6 Brett Hawke 22.45 9 S1 L6 Ryk Neethling 22.46 10 S2 L8 Frédérick Bousquet 22.47 11 S1 L1 Vyacheslav Shyrshov 22.57 12 S2 L7 Eduard Lorente 22.60 13 S1 L3 Peter Mankoč 22.61 14 S2 L1 Michele Scarica 22.64 14 S1 L8 Denis Pimankov 22.64 16 S1 L7 Karel Novy 22.66 Preliminaries Rank Heat+Lane Swimmer Nation Time Notes 1 H22 L4 Alexander Popov 21.98 q, CR 2 H22 L5 Jason Lezak 22.29 q 3 H21 L4 Johan Kenkhuis 22.32 q 4 H20 L1 Julien Sicot 22.36 q 5 H22 L2 Pieter van den Hoogenband 22.51 q 6 H18 L5 Peter Mankoč 22.54 q 6 H21 L3 Brett Hawke 22.54 q 8 H20 L2 Ryk Neethling 22.56 q 9 H20 L3 Oleksandr Volynets 22.57 q 10 H21 L2 Mark Foster 22.59 q 11 H20 L7 Eduard Lorente 22.60 q 12 H18 L4 Karel Novy 22.63 q 12 H20 L8 Michele Scarica 22.63 q 12 H22 L6 Vyacheslav Shyrshov 22.63 q 15 H22 L8 Frédérick Bousquet 22.64 q 16 H17 L5 Denis Pimankov 22.69 q 17 H20 L6 Roland Schoeman 22.74 17 H21 L6 Salim Iles 22.74 17 H22 L3 Anthony Ervin 22.74 20 H20 L4 Bartosz Kizierowski 22.75 20 H20 L5 Lorenzo Vismara 22.75 20 H22 L7 Stefan Nystrand 22.75 23 H21 L7 Fernando Scherer 22.80 24 H21 L1 Ricardo Bousquet 22.83 25 H19 L8 Pedro Silva 22.86 26 H19 L7 Torsten Spanneberg 22.93 26 H21 L5 Ashley Callus 22.93 28 H19 L3 Milorad Čavić 22.95 29 H16 L8 Matti Rajakylä 23.02 29 H18 L6 Rolandas Gimbutis 23.02 31 H19 L5 Jader Souza 23.04 32 H21 L8 Julio Santos 23.10 33 H19 L6 Jere Hård 23.11 34 H22 L1 Kim Min-Suk 23.13 35 H17 L7 Brent Hayden 23.14 35 H19 L4 Renaat Dreesen 23.14 37 H18 L8 Camilo Becerra 23.17 38 H17 L4 Danil Haustov 23.19 39 H18 L3 Attila Zubor 23.20 40 H17 L6 Eric La Fleur 23.23 41 H18 L2 Ales Volcansek 23.25 42 H16 L1 Paulius Viktoravicius 23.34 42 H18 L1 Chen Zuo 23.34 44 H16 L4 Christoph Bühler 23.36 45 H19 L2 Yannick Lupien 23.37 46 H19 L1 Apostolos Tsagkarakis 23.42 47 H15 L3 Lee Chung-Hee 23.49 48 H17 L3 Rastislav Kanuk 23.56 49 H14 L7 Octavio Alesi 23.64 50 H17 L1 Duje Draganja 23.65 51 H14 L2 Romāns Miloslavskis 23.67 51 H15 L2 Mihály Flaskay 23.67 53 H16 L6 Raymond Rosal 23.68 54 H15 L4 Carl Probert 23.70 55 H13 L4 Ryan Pini 23.74 56 H10 L3 Matjaž Markič 23.83 57 H16 L7 Francisco Picasso 23.85 57 H18 L7 Arwut Chinnapasaen 23.85 59 H16 L3 Stavros Michaelides 23.89 60 H14 L3 Liu Yu 23.92 61 H16 L2 Allen Ong 23.96 62 H12 L2 Heidar Ingi Marinosson 24.02 63 H17 L2 Octavian Guţu 24.04 64 H12 L1 Zeljko Panic 24.05 65 H13 L3 Paul Kutscher 24.08 66 H15 L8 Harbeth Fu Wing 24.10 67 H12 L6 Terrence Haynes 24.15 67 H17 L8 Chrysanthos Papachrysanthou 24.15 69 H11 L5 Wickus Nienaber 24.18 69 H13 L7 Martyn Forde 24.18 71 H15 L1 Howard Hinds 24.33 72 H13 L5 Ismael Ortiz 24.34 73 H13 L8 Nicholas Bovell 24.40 73 H14 L4 Roberto Sanso 24.40 75 H15 L6 Aleksandr Agafonov 24.41 76 H12 L3 Gregory Arkhurst 24.46 77 H12 L8 Afolabi Adeleke-Adedoyin 24.47 78 H13 L6 Vyacheslav Titarenko 24.51 79 H15 L5 Ashby Brendan 24.54 80 H11 L4 Carles Ridaura 24.60 81 H15 L7 Sven Schneider 24.61 82 H11 L8 Adil Bellaz 24.67 83 H05 L6 Mauricio Prudencio 24.70 84 H11 L1 Gentle Offoin 24.74 85 H12 L5 Maximiliano Schnettler 24.76 86 H14 L6 Aloïs Dansou 24.81 87 H13 L1 Lim Yu Lung Lubrey 24.83 88 H08 L6 Onan Orlando Thom 24.84 88 H10 L8 Kenny Roberts 24.84 90 H08 L4 Lao Kuan Fong 24.86 91 H11 L2 Kin Lun Doo 24.90 92 H11 L6 Zaid Almarafi 24.92 93 H12 L7 Fadi Jalabi 24.93 94 H11 L7 Gustavo Adolfo Martinez 24.96 95 H11 L3 Levan Berdize 24.98 96 H13 L2 Cem Pasaoglu 24.99 97 H10 L2 V. Arun Vellore 25.00 98 H14 L1 Ayoub Al-Mas 25.05 99 H14 L5 Maran Cruz 25.07 100 H09 L3 Davy Bisslik 25.10 100 H10 L6 Joao Aguiar 25.10 102 H08 L7 Carlos Castro 25.11 103 H10 L4 Le Ba Lam 25.14 104 H09 L2 Rama Vyombo 25.25 105 H09 L8 Wong Wing Cheung Victor 25.28 106 H09 L4 Abed Rahman Kaaki 25.31 106 H10 L5 Jamie Peterkin 25.31 108 H07 L5 Hesham Shehab 25.35 109 H08 L1 Ranui Teriipaia 25.53 109 H09 L1 Babak Farhoudi 25.53 111 H09 L5 Timur Irgashev 25.55 112 H06 L5 Miguel Angel Navarro 25.60 113 H06 L1 Othmane Elghnimi 25.78 114 H06 L2 Aung Yan Lin 25.82 114 H06 L8 Bradford Worrell 25.82 116 H07 L3 Yann Lausan 25.83 117 H07 L4 Ahmed Mohamed Jewel 25.85 118 H06 L4 Loren Lindborg 25.87 119 H05 L7 Cole Shade Sule 25.96 120 H08 L5 Abdoulaye Mbow 25.98 120 H08 L3 Gordon Touw Ngie Tjouw 25.98 122 H09 L6 Jean Luc Razakarivony 26.11 123 H09 L7 Tamir Andryei 26.19 123 H10 L7 Urnultsaikhan Ganbold 26.19 125 H07 L2 Connor H Keith 26.21 126 H07 L6 Moe Aung Kyaw 26.24 126 H08 L8 Benjamin Wells 26.24 128 H07 L1 Ronald Ying 26.35 129 H05 L2 Jean Laurent Ravera 26.37 130 H04 L1 Peter James Linch 26.44 131 H07 L8 Amar Shah 26.46 132 H04 L3 Rony Bakale 26.47 133 H05 L5 Patrick Boustant 26.51 134 H05 L1 Anderson Bonabart 26.55 135 H07 L7 Ibrahim Maliki 26.58 136 H05 L3 Kin−Vincent Duenas 26.61 137 H05 L4 Kreshnik Gjata 26.64 138 H06 L3 Mohammed Abbas 26.75 139 H10 L1 Nuno Rola 26.83 140 H06 L6 Orkhan Samadov 26.84 141 H04 L4 Fernando Medrano 26.87 142 H05 L8 Clark Randrianandraina 26.89 143 H04 L7 Welbert Samuel 26.93 144 H04 L6 Stephenson Wallace 27.01 145 H04 L8 Issam Halawani 27.14 146 H03 L4 Chisela Kanchela 27.33 147 H04 L5 Fidel Davis 27.40 148 H01 L3 Hassan Mubah 27.51 149 H06 L7 Aldi Gugushka 27.52 150 H01 L5 Hem Kiri 27.56 151 H02 L8 Joshua Marfleet 27.68 152 H03 L6 Sikhounxay Ounkhamphanyavong 27.71 153 H03 L5 Edgar Luberenga 27.81 154 H02 L4 Carlos Notarianni 28.48 155 H03 L7 Bounthanom Vongphachanh 28.68 156 H03 L2 Hojamamed Hojamamedov 29.07 157 H03 L3 Gilbert Kaburu 29.09 158 H01 L7 Mamadou Ouedraogo 29.19 159 H03 L1 Mohammed Sultan Judat 29.82 160 H02 L6 Leonce Sekama 30.57 161 H02 L7 Blaise Pascal Gasabira 31.22 162 H02 L2 Malique Williams 34.04 163 H02 L1 Glyn Tonge 35.15 - H01 L4 A.A. Romain Belemtougri DQ - H02 L3 Ali Maiga Akibou DQ - H16 L5 Nuno Laurentino DNS - H14 L8 Ayoub Salem Mallalah DNS - H08 L2 Ahmed Ouattata Zie DNS - H04 L2 Alain Ives Mewoutou DNS - H03 L8 Aiah Emerson Mansa Musai DNS - H02 L5 Abubakarr Ialloh DNS - H01 L6 Herve Nkurunziza DNS References Category:Swimming at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swimming_at_the_2003_World_Aquatics_Championships_–_Men's_50_metre_freestyle
2025-04-06T15:55:51.009533
25891283
United Nations Security Council Resolution 403
United Nations Security Council Resolution 403, adopted on January 14, 1977, after hearing representations from the Minister of External Affairs of Botswana, condemned attacks by the "illegal minority regime" in Southern Rhodesia. The resolution recalled previous resolutions on the topic, including the right to self-determination of the people of Southern Rhodesia. The Council reaffirmed the legal responsibility of the Government of the United Kingdom over Southern Rhodesia, and demanded the latter cease all hostile acts. The resolution, noting the economic hardship caused by the attacks, requested all relevant agencies of the United Nations and other member states to assist in various projects in Botswana. The resolution was adopted with 13 votes; the United Kingdom and United States abstained from voting. See also List of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 401 to 500 (1976–1982) References Text of the Resolution at undocs.org External links 0403 Category:1977 in Botswana 0403 0403 Category:January 1977 Category:Botswana–Rhodesia relations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_403
2025-04-06T15:55:51.016848
25891289
Data.gov.uk
|current_status = active |content_licence= Open Government Licence |programming_language= *repository software: CKAN *API: REST }} data.gov.uk is a UK Government project to make available non-personal UK government data as open data. It was launched as closed beta in , and publicly launched in . As of February 2015, it contained over 19,343 datasets, rising to over 40,000 in 2017, and more than 47,000 by 2023. data.gov.uk is listed in the Registry of Research Data Repositories re3data.org. and developers had already built a site that showed the location of schools according to the rating assigned to them by education watchdog Ofsted. Data available . The interactive map visualises public expenditure data by UK region.|alt=]] data.gov.uk contains over 30,000 data sets from many UK Government departments. All data is non-personal, and provided in a format that allows it to be reused. data.gov.uk intends to increase the use of Linked Data standards, to allow people to provide data to data.gov.uk in a way that allows for flexible and easy reuse.Ordnance Survey dataWhen data.gov.uk was officially launched in January 2010, Ordnance Survey (OS) data was one of the key data sets that Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Prof Nigel Shadbolt wanted to see opened up as part of the project. Ordnance Survey data was included in data.gov.uk on 1 April 2010 and provides information on geographical locations. According to Shadbolt, it "will make a real difference to the way that people make sense of the information". The Combined Online Information System, known as COINS, operates as the UK Government's central accounting system. COINS data details the spend of all government departments, and their major spending programmes. The 4.3 GB of COIN data included 3.2 million items for the financial year 2009/10, and was released using BitTorrent. At the time, the UK government stated that data for the current financial year (2010/11) will be released in June 2011. In the past, the HM Treasury had refused requests to release COIN data, on the grounds that it contained FOI-exempt data on future defence and security services spending. The Open Government Licence (OGL) applies to Crown copyright data, and permits anyone to copy, distribute, and transmit the data, adapt the data, exploit the data commercially, whether by sub-licensing it, combining it with other data, or by including it in products and applications. The terms of the licence are aligned with any Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Hence data.gov.uk data can be mixed with information licensed under Creative Commons licences to create derivative work, which can be distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. When users submit information to data.gov.uk, they grant the Crown a non-exclusive, irrevocable right to use and pass on all public information submitted, such as descriptions of ideas and screenshots of apps, as well as the right to re-use allow the re-use of that information. All content on the site is placed under the same licence terms as the data, though user ideas and application remain their own. Registers were structured raw datasets that are intended to be a canonical, reliable, and always up-to-date source of data. Registers shared a common API, and can be read by both humans and machines. They were offered as JSON, CSV, and RDF files, the latter allowing to link multiple registers together. The Registers service was retired on 15 March 2021. In the United States of America, the Obama administration launched data.gov, which opens up data from various departments, including the United States Department of Defense (US DoD) and NASA. The European Commission (EC) has created two portals for the European Union (EU): the EU Open Data Portal, which gives access to open data from the EU institutions, agencies, and other bodies, and the PublicData portal that provides datasets from local, regional, and national public bodies across Europe. In the Netherlands, the DataverseNL Network hosts data deposited by Dutch Universities and Institutes. See also *Government 2.0 *GOV.UK *Linked data *Merton Thesis *Open access (publishing) *Open content *Open data *Open research *TheyWorkForYou References Further reading * *External links *[https://www.data.gov.uk data.gov.uk] — official homepage *[https://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/transparency Cabinet Office - Transparency] *[https://transparency.number10.gov.uk 10 Downing Street - Transparency] *[https://www.theguardian.com/politics/video/2010/jan/21/uk-national-data-website-launched Guardian video: Tim Berners-Lee on the UK national data website launch] Category:Open data Category:Government services web portals in the United Kingdom Category:Open government in the United Kingdom Category:Semantic Web Category:Public bodies and task forces of the United Kingdom government
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data.gov.uk
2025-04-06T15:55:51.028410
25891308
Clanis undulosa
Clanis undulosa, the wavy velvet hawkmoth, is a moth of the family Sphingidae first described by Frederic Moore in 1879. The nominate subspecies is found in the southern Russian Far East, the Korean Peninsula and north-eastern China, as far as south and west as Shaanxi and Hebei. South from Sichuan (Baoxing), Hubei, Jiangxi (Guling) and Zhejiang (Tianmu Shan), it is replaced by ssp. gigantea, which ranges west to Nepal and south, through Thailand and Vietnam, to Peninsular Malaysia. Description <gallery mode"packed" heights"160px"> Clanis undulosa MHNT CUT 2010 0 23 Pulau Assan Indonesia dorsal.jpg|Male dorsal view Clanis undulosa MHNT CUT 2010 0 23 Pulau Assan Indonesia ventral.jpg|Male ventral view Clanis undulosa MHNT CUT 2010 0 443 Pulau Assan Indonesia - Female dorsal.jpg|Female dorsal view Clanis undulosa MHNT CUT 2010 0 443 Pulau Assan Indonesia - Female ventral.jpg|Female ventral view </gallery> The wingspan is 100–120 mm for subspecies C. u. undulosa and 118–160 mm for subspecies C. u. gigantea. Adults of the nominate subspecies are on wing from June to early August in Korea. Biology The food plants of the nominate subspecies are unknown. The larvae of subspecies C. u. gigantea have been recorded on Lespedeza viatorum in Guangdong and on Lespedeza thompsoni in north-eastern India. Subspecies *Clanis undulosa undulosa (southern Russian Far East, the Korean Peninsula and northeastern China, as far south and west as Shaanxi and Hebei) *Clanis undulosa gigantea <small>Rothschild, 1894</small> (South from Sichuan, Hubei, Jiangxi and Zhejiang west to Nepal and north-eastern India and south, through Thailand and Vietnam, to Peninsular Malaysia) References External links * * Category:Clanis Category:Moths described in 1879 Category:Moths of Malaysia Category:Taxa named by Frederic Moore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clanis_undulosa
2025-04-06T15:55:51.042435
25891359
Synaulia
Synaulia is a team of musicians, archeologists, paleontologists and choreographers dedicated to the application of their historical research to ancient music and dance, in particular to the ancient Etruscan and Roman periods. History 160px|right|thumb|Apollo citaredo. Painted plasterwork, Roman work from the Augustan era. From the Scalae Caci on Palatinum, Rome The name comes from the Ancient Greek "συναυλία" (), which in ancient Rome referred to a group of instruments consisting mainly of wind instruments. The group was founded and at first sponsored by the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden, Netherlands in 1995 by Italian paleorganologist Walter Maioli and choreographer and anthropologist Natalie Van Ravenstein. In the beginning the Synaulia's task was mainly educational: the reconstruction of ancient musical instruments for the Dutch archeological center, Archeon. Later the scope was widened to include a more profound study into Italy's music and dance focusing primarily on ancient Rome. The fruits of Synaulia's intensive study were used as material for films, serials and documentaries about ancient Rome (among them Gladiator by Ridley Scott and the television series Rome), the use of the instruments for scholastic purposes, as well as in the publication of numerous articles on the subject. The archeological-musical research work 150px|left|thumb|Ludovisi Throne: Woman playing aulòs or double pipes (5th century BC, Rome, National Roman Museum) In the absence of a system of musical notation for the period in question, the reconstruction and study of ancient musical expression was based on comparative studies of iconography, textual analysis, social studies and customs, also drawing from paleorganology, ethnomusicology, archeology and historiography. The richness of the iconographic documentation, the abundance of tested theories and numerous literary connections facilitated the study and reproduction of a wide range of antique musical instruments, helping to determine, among other points of interest, their melodic and harmonic possibilities and acoustic quality. 200px|right|thumb|Fresco representing a woman playing the “cithara”. H Room of the P. Fannius Synistor Boscoreale, around 40–30 AD. Armed with this historical information, the group's research was then subdivided into several main research branches. The first branch was dedicated to wind instruments. The research led to the reconstruction of instruments such as syrinx, fistulae, tibiae, cornu, tuba, bucina, iynx, and rhombus. The second branch dealt with string instruments: among others the lyra, cithara, sambuca, cordae and pandura were reconstructed. The Greeks and Romans did not invent string instruments, but rather improved and created variations on the existing ones. The first mentions of antique string instruments such as zithers, lyres and harps were documented in the area from the Nile to Mesopotamia around 3000 BC. The lyre in particular had an essential role in Greek-Roman life. The Greek lyre was a strongly symbolic instrument made of tortoise shell (representing the intermediate life between Sky and Earth), a piece of stretched leather (a symbol of sacrifice) and two horns to which the cords were affixed (representing the celestial Bull). This instrument represented a symbolic altar, uniting Sky with Earth. In many representations other instruments often accompany the string instruments. The most common duo is the lyrae et citarae drawn together by the Pan flute. Other frequently represented combinations are stringed instruments and tibiae, double instruments with reed and double pipes with the tympanum and other percussion instruments. The third branch was dedicated to percussion, and work was undertaken to reconstruct the tympanum, cymbal, scabillum, sistrum, rasum and other celebrated instruments from the late imperial period, the so-called “Golden Age” (aurea aetas). Scientific collaborations Other collaborators as consultants and collaborators of the project are Nathalie van Ravenstein, Luce Maioli, Ivan Gibellini, Anna Maria Liberati (Museo della Civiltà Romana, Maurizio Pellegrini (Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia, Rome) Romolo Staccioli e Maria Grazia Iodice (Università La Sapienza, Rome), Paola Elisabetta Simeoni (Museo Nazionale delle Arti e Tradizioni Popolari), Maria Grazia Siliato, Marcus Junkelmann Ratzennhofen (Germany), Carlo Merlo (Clesis, Rome), Magdi Kenawy (Accademia d’Egitto, Rome), Werner Hilgers (Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn, Germany), il H.P. Kuhnen (Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Trier Germany), Maria Paola Guidobaldi (Sovrintendenza di Pompei), Febo Guizzi (Milan), Gerard Ijzereef (Amsterdam) e Fabrizio Felice Ridolfi (Rome). Discography Synaulia, Music of Ancient Rome, Vol. I – Wind Instruments – Amiata Records ARNR 1396, Florence, 1996 Synaulia, Music of Ancient Rome, Vol. II – String instruments – Amiata Records, ARNR 0302, Rome, 2002 Filmography 100px|right|thumb|Female cymbal player. Particular fresco, Villa dei Misteri, 60 AD. ca. Pompei Compositions and variations of Synaulia, Music of Ancient Rome vol. I and vol. II were used in soundtracks of documentaries, games, and films, like: A Midsummer Night's Dream by Michael Hoffman, 1999 Gladiator by Ridley Scott, 2000 Carvilius – Un enigma dall’antica Roma, Discovery Channel, 2002 The Village by Night Shyamalan, 2004 Lo sport tra Grecia ed Etruria, 2004 Empire, TV series serie produced by Touchstone Television/Abc, 2005 Rome, TV series produced by BBC-HBO, 2005–2007 Alexander the Great, Beyond the Movie, National Geographic, 2006 Storia del teatro Italiano by Giorgio Albertazzi and Dario Fo, Rai 2, Rai trade, 2006 La donna si fa bella, moda costume e bellezza nell’Italia antica, 2006 The Nativity Story, New Line Cinema, 2006 Demetra e il Mito, by Maurizio Pellegrini and Ebe Giovannini, 2007 La via Clodia, by Ebe Giovannini, 2007 Storia del vino nell’età antica, Ministry of Cultural Activities and Heritage, Supervision for Archeological Heritage of the Southern Etruria, 2008 Sid Meyer's Civilization VI, as main and Ambient themes of The Roman Empire. Bibliography Bonanni, Filippo (1964). Antique Musical Instruments and their Players, Dover Publications reprint of the 1723 work, Gabinetto armonico Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus. De institutione musica.(English edition as Fundamentals of Music. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989.) Grout, Donald J., and Claude V. Palisca (1996). A History of Western Music, New York: W.W. Norton. Pierce, John R (1983), The Science of Musical Sound, New York: Scientific American Books. Scott, J. E. (1957). 'Roman Music' in The New Oxford History of Music, vol.1: 'Ancient and Oriental Music,' Oxford: Oxford University Press. Smith, William (1874). A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. New York: Harper. Suetonius. Nero, xli, liv. Ulrich, Homer, and Paul Pisk (1963). A History of Music and Musical Style. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanoich. Walter, Don C (1969) Me and Music in Western Culture, New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. Williams, C. F. (1903). The Story of the Organ. New York: Charles Scribner & Sons. References External links Centro del suono Archeon Amiata Records Musica Romana Category:Ancient music
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synaulia
2025-04-06T15:55:51.079426
25891372
Charles Devineau
| birth_place = Cholet, France | height = 1.71m | position = Defensive midfielder | currentclub = La Roche VF (Manager) | clubnumber | youthyears1 1994–1998 | youthclubs1 = Nantes | years1 = 1998–2002 | clubs1 = Nantes | caps1 = 51 | goals1 = 6 | years2 = 2000–2001 | clubs2 = → Laval (loan) | caps2 = 13 | goals2 = 1 | years3 = 2002–2005 | clubs3 = Laval | caps3 = 95 | goals3 = 9 | years4 = 2005–2006 | clubs4 = FC La Châtaigneraie | caps4 = 15 | goals4 = 0 | years5 = 2006–2010 | clubs5 = Cholet | caps5 = 36 | goals5 = 5 | years6 = 2010–2011 | clubs6 = La Roche VF | caps6 = 6 | goals6 = 1 | nationalyears1 = 2001 | nationalteam1 = France U-21 | nationalcaps1 = 3 | nationalgoals1 = 0 | manageryears1 = 2011–2014 | managerclubs1 = Cholet | manageryears2 = 2014–2017 | managerclubs2 = Nantes (U19) | manageryears3 = 2017–2019 | managerclubs3 = Lyon Féminin (assistant) | manageryears4 = 2019– | managerclubs4 = La Roche VF }} Jean Charles Devineau (born 2 August 1979) is a former French footballer and currently the manager of La Roche VF.CareerDevineau played for FC Nantes, winning the Ligue 1 in 2001 and twice becoming runners-up in the Coupe de France in 1999 and 2000.International careerDevineau played 3 times for the France national under-21 football team. Manager career In the summer of 2011, SO Cholet hired Devineau as head coach for the start of the 2011–2012 season. Honours Club Nantes * Ligue 1: 2001 * Coupe de France: 1999, 2000 * DH Atlantique: 2009 * Trophée des Champions: 1999References Category:1979 births Category:Living people Category:Footballers from Maine-et-Loire Category:French men's footballers Category:France men's youth international footballers Category:France men's under-21 international footballers Category:Men's association football central defenders Category:Men's association football midfielders Category:FC Nantes players Category:Stade Lavallois players Category:SO Cholet players Category:Ligue 1 players Category:Ligue 2 players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Devineau
2025-04-06T15:55:51.091393
25891373
Sexual abuse scandal in the English Benedictine Congregation
The sexual abuse scandal in the English Benedictine Congregation was a significant episode in the series of Catholic sex abuse cases in the United Kingdom. The dates of the events covered here range from the 1960s to the 2010s. Abuse at Benedictine monasteries St Benedict's School In April 2006, civil damages were awarded jointly against Dom David Pearce, a former head of the junior school at St Benedict's School, Ealing, and Ealing Abbey in the High Court in relation to an alleged assault by Dom Pearce on a pupil while teaching at the school in the 1990s, although criminal charges were dropped. He was subsequently charged in November 2008 with 24 counts of indecent assault, sexual touching and gross indecency with six boys aged under 16. The counts related to incidents before and after 2003, when the law was changed to create an offence of sexual touching. After admitting his guilt at Isleworth Crown Court to offences dating back to 1972, Pearce was jailed for eight years in October 2009. The conduct of the Ealing monastic community, as trustee of the St. Benedict's Trust, was examined by the Charity Commission, which found that it had failed to take adequate measures to protect beneficiaries of the charity from Dom Pearce. In 2011, there was an allegation of cover-up involving Ealing Abbey and abuse towards a female pupil at St Gregory's Roman Catholic Primary School, a state school in Woodfield Rd, Ealing, with links to the abbey. The abuse is alleged to have occurred in the 1970s. In October 2017, Andrew Soper (known as Father Laurence), former abbot of Ealing Abbey, was found guilty on 19 sexual offences against pupils of St Benedict's school in the 1970s and 1980s. Buckfast Abbey Father Paul Couch was jailed for ten years in 2007, on two counts of serious sexual assault and 11 of indecent assault. He had committed the offences against six boys between 1972 and 1993 during two periods at Buckfast Abbey Preparatory School in Devon; he was a Royal Navy chaplain from 1978 until 1983 and again from 1992. Father William Manahan pleaded guilty in 2007 at Exeter Crown Court to eight charges of sexually assaulting pupils at the same school between 1971 and 1978, and was jailed for 15 months. The school closed in 1994. Ampleforth College In 1995, Fr Bernard Green, then a housemaster at Ampleforth College, was arrested after indecently assaulting a sleeping boy in one of the school's dormitories. He received two years' probation for an incident which was said to have "petrified" the boy concerned. In 2005, Fr Piers Grant-Ferris admitted 20 incidents between 1966 and 1975 including beating boys bare-handed on the buttocks, and taking temperatures rectally. The Yorkshire Post reported in 2005 that former Abbot Basil Hume did not call in police when the initial incident came to light in 1975, but removed Father Grant-Ferris. Several other incidents came to light in 2003, when the abbey hired a psychologist to conduct risk assessments on staff. Belmont Abbey Father John Kinsey of Belmont Abbey, Herefordshire was sentenced to five years at Worcester Crown Court in 2005 by Judge Andrew Geddes for a series of serious offences relating to assaults on schoolboys attending Belmont Abbey School in the mid 1980s. Due to falling pupil numbers, the school closed in the early 1990s. Douai Abbey David Smith, jailed May 2007, was an assistant housemaster at Douai School, Upper Woolhampton, West Berkshire, from 1975. He sexually abused three boys in one year at the school and continued to sexually abuse as an Anglican priest from 1981, sexually abusing a series of boys over a 30-year period. Roman Catholic Benedictine monk/priest, Father Michael Creagh was jailed in November 2017 for two counts of child sexual abuse while he was a house master in 1987 at Douai School. He had previous convictions for paedophilic offences, committed elsewhere in the 1970s. David Lowe, a paedophile and serial sexual abuser, had sexually abused young boys, firstly, at Westminster Cathedral Choir School, London, and, secondly at the Roman Catholic Benedictine Ampleforth College in Yorkshire. Subsequent to and despite his history, he moved to Douai Abbey. A married man and a father, Lowe was appointed Deputy Headmaster at the school in the 1990s, and there is no suggestion that he sexually abused at Douai. Lowe was jailed for 10 years in 2015 for indecent assaults. Father Terence Charles Fitzpatrick, Roman Catholic priest/monk of Douai School, whilst he was Roman Catholic parish priest at St Osburg's Roman Catholic church in Coventry, sexually abused a woman, Pamela Brown, between 1989 and 1991. She had psychological issues and approached him for guidance. Fitzpatrick duped her into performing sexual activity "games" under the pretense that they were part of the help she required from him, and stating that the sexual activity was carried out in the name of God. Brown was awarded damages at Birmingham County Court. Fitzpatrick returned to Douai Abbey and continued to serve four Roman Catholic parishes in Berkshire. The Douai Abbey school closed in 1999. Downside School In 2004, a Benedictine monk was jailed for 18 months after taking indecent images of schoolboys and possessing child pornography when he was a teacher at Downside School. In January 2012, Father Richard White, a monk who formerly taught at the school, was jailed for five years for gross indecency and indecent assault against a pupil in the late 1980s. White, 66, who was known to pupils as Father Nick, had been allowed to continue teaching after he was first caught abusing a child in 1987 and was able to go on to groom and assault another pupil in the junior school. He was placed on a restricted ministry after the second incident, but was not arrested until 2010. Two other Downside monks, also former teachers, received police cautions during an 18-month criminal trial. In November 2017, the national Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) started to examine evidence of children being targeted for abuse at the school, along with another major Catholic school Ampleforth Abbey, as part of its investigation into the prevalence of paedophilia in the English Benedictine Congregation and its failures in protecting young people over many decades. IICSA heard that children at the two schools could still be "at risk". The enquiry heard evidence that in 2012, the then headmaster, Father Leo Maidlow Davis, who was the senior monk at Downside Abbey from 2014 until 2018, made trips with a loaded wheelbarrow to a distant part of its grounds, where he made a bonfire, destroying staff files dating back to the early 1980s that might have contained evidence of child abuse at the school. Father Charles Fitzgerald-Lombard, abbot of Downside from 1990 to 1998, was among three Downside abbots accused by Father Aidan Bellenger, in a private letter, of tolerating child abuse. Father Aidan, abbot from 2006 to 2014, said his predecessors "protected and encouraged" paedophile monks. Wrongdoers at the school were quietly moved between Benedictine monasteries and parishes. Reference was made to instructions from Rome to destroy documents that were damaging to priests. Father Leo insisted that his decision to make a bonfire of Downside's staff files was prompted by a desire to "get rid of unnecessary old material". He accepted that the files should, under safeguarding requirements, have been kept for 70 years, conceding that he may have unintentionally destroyed information about child abuse. As recommended by the IICSA report, a new charitable company was set up for the school in 2019 to separate it from the monastery. In 2020 it was reported that the abbey had sold paintings at auction for over £400,000 to defray legal costs. Worth Abbey Worth Abbey and Worth School were initially created as the preparatory school for Downside. In 1995, Father Andrew Brenninkmeyer was suspended following complaints that he had sexually abused other monks, including Father Jonathan Monckton, who left the monastery in 1987 after no action was taken against Father Brenninkmeyer. Father Moncton was not the only complainant. In 2001, Father John Bolton was suspended for hugging a boy inappropriately. Father John died on 26 June 2013. The headmaster at the time was Father Christopher Jamison, who is currently Abbot President of the English Benedictine Congregation. On 5 June 2018, the IICSA determined that its case study of the English Benedictine Congregation would not include Worth School and Abbey because the evidence in regard of Downside and Ampleforth is sufficient to address the English Benedictine Congregation. References Category:1995 scandals Category:1990s in England Category:2000s in England Category:1990s in British law Category:2000s in British law Category:1990s in Christianity Category:2000s in Christianity Category:20th-century Catholicism Category:21st-century Catholicism Category:Christianity and law in the 21st century Category:Sexual abuse scandals in Catholic orders and societies Category:Child sexual abuse in England Category:Child sexual abuse scandals in Christianity Category:Incidents of violence against boys Category:Children's rights in England Category:Order of Saint Benedict Category:Catholic Church sexual abuse scandals in the United Kingdom Category:Scandals in England Category:Child sexual abuse cover-ups Category:Incidents of violence against girls
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_abuse_scandal_in_the_English_Benedictine_Congregation
2025-04-06T15:55:51.102973
25891377
Space Bio Charge
| length = 179 minutes | label = Victor Entertainment | producer | prev_title | prev_year | next_title | next_year = }} Space Bio Charge is a compilation album of famous Japanese composer Yoko Kanno with her band, Seatbelts, under the name Yoko Kanno Seatbelts. The full title of the album is .Track listing ;Catalog Number: VTCL-60141~3 CD 1 track list | extra3 = AKINO | note3 = Second Ending Theme of Genesis of Aquarion | title4 = | extra4 = Gabriela Robin | note4 = from Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX | title5 = What Planet is This | extra5 = Seatbelts | note5 = from Cowboy Bebop: The Movie | title6 = | extra6 = Yoko Kanno | note6 = from Darker Than Black | title7 = Ask DNA (eco. size) | extra7 = Seatbelts | note7 = Opening theme of Cowboy Bebop: The Movie | title8 = Could you bite the hand? | extra8 = Steve Conte | note8 = from ''Wolf's Rain | title9 = Player (eco. size) | extra9 = Origa with Heartsdales | note9 = Opening theme of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society | title10 = Power of the Light (eco. size) | extra10 = Yoko Kanno | note10 = from Brain Powered | title11 = | extra11 = Aki Okui | note11 = from Turn A Gundam | title12 = Dance of Curse (eco. size) | extra12 = Yoko Kanno | note12 = from The Vision of Escaflowne | title13 = Genesis of Aquarion | extra13 = AKINO feat. Bless4 | note13 = from Genesis of Aquarion | title14 = Lithium Flower | extra14 = Scott Matthew | note14 = Ending theme of Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX'' | title15 = Shiro, Long Tail's | extra15 = Yoko Kanno | note15 = from ''Wolf's Rain | title16 = Inner universe (eco. size) | extra16 = Origa | note16 = Opening theme of Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX'' | title17 = | extra17 = May'n & Nakajima Megumi | note17 = First Opening theme of Macross Frontier | title18 = | extra18 = Gabriela Robin | note18 = from Earth Girl Arjuna | title19 = | extra19 = Yoko Kanno | note19 = from ''Wolf's Rain }} CD 2 track list | extra3 = Maaya Sakamoto | note3 = from The Vision of Escaflowne | title4 = Be Human | extra4 = Scott Matthew | note4 = from Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX | title5 = Get9 (hyper eco. size) | extra5 = jillmax | note5 = from Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX | title6 = | extra6 = Maaya Sakamoto feat. Steve Conte | note6 = from RahXephon | title7 = Coracao Selvagem | extra7 = Joyce | note7 = from ''Wolf's Rain | title8 = Hamduche | extra8 = Seatbelts | note8 = from Cowboy Bebop: The Movie | title9 = Voices | extra9 = Akino Arai | note9 = from Macross Plus | title10 = Cloe (eco. size) | extra10 = Gabriela Robin | note10 = from Earth Girl Arjuna | title11 = White Falcon | extra11 = Yoko Kanno | note11 = from Turn A Gundam | title12 = The Real Folk Blues (save money size) | extra12 = Mai Yamane | note12 = from Cowboy Bebop | title13 = I do | extra13 = Ilaria Graziano | note13 = from Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX | title14 = | extra14 = Yoko Kanno | note14 = from Turn A Gundam | title15 = | extra15 = Maaya Sakamoto | note15 = from The Vision of Escaflowne movie | title16 = | extra16 = SEIKA | note16 = from Please Save My Earth | title17 = Blue | extra17 = Mai Yamane | note17 = from Cowboy Bebop | title18 = The Story of Escaflowne (eco. size) | extra18 = Yoko Kanno | note18 = from The Vision of Escaflowne }} CD 3 track list | extra1 = Aoi Tada | note1 = from Cowboy Bebop | title2 = Doggy Dog (hungry size) | extra2 = Seatbelts | note2 = from Cowboy Bebop'' | title3 = | extra3 = Gabriela Robin | note3 = from The Vision of Escaflowne | title4 = | extra4 = Masashi Ehara | note4 = from Cowboy Bebop | title5 = Wo Qui Non Coin | extra5 = Aoi Tada | note5 = from Cowboy Bebop | title6 = No money (more money size) | extra6 = Seatbelts | note6 = from Cowboy Bebop | title7 = | extra7 = Sukoshi | note7 = from Ōban Star-Racers | title8 = Cat’s Delicacy | extra8 = Gabriela Robin | note8 = from The Vision of Escaflowne | title9 = | extra9 = Sakiko Tamagawa | note9 = from Ghost in the Shell STAND ALONE COMPLEX | title10 = | extra10 = Megumi Nakajima & Kenta Miyake | note10 = from Macross Frontier | title11 = ABC Mouse Parade | extra11 = Gabriela Robin | note11 = from Please Save My Earth | title12 = | extra12 = Maaya Sakamoto | note12 = from Napple Tale }} Charts {| class="wikitable" !Chart !Peak<br>position !Sales |- |Oricon Weekly Albums |align"center"|6 |38,316 |} References Category:2009 albums Category:Yoko Kanno albums Category:Victor Entertainment albums
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Bio_Charge
2025-04-06T15:55:51.112902
25891410
Tomoaki Seino
|birth_place=Agano, Niigata, Japan |death_date|death_place |height |position=Forward |currentclub|clubnumber |youthyears11997–1999|youthclubs1Akita Commercial High School |years12000–2002|clubs1Júbilo Iwata|caps12|goals10 |years22002–2003|clubs2Shizuoka FC|caps2|goals2 |years32004–2006|clubs3Consadole Sapporo|caps375|goals319 |years42006–2008|clubs4Shizuoka FC|caps4|goals4 |years52009|clubs5Convoy Sun Hei|caps511|goals56 |totalcaps88|totalgoals25 |nationalyears1|nationalteam1|nationalcaps1|nationalgoals1 |manageryears1|managerclubs1 |medaltemplates= }} is a former Japanese football player. Playing career Seino was born in Agano on 29 September 1981. After graduating from high school, he joined J1 League club Júbilo Iwata in 2000. On 29 April 2001, he debuted as substitute forward from the 87th minute against Nagoya Grampus Eight. However he could hardly play in the match until 2002 and was released from the club in June 2002. In November, he joined Regional Leagues club Shizuoka FC. In 2004, he moved to J2 League club Consadole Sapporo. In 2004, he played as forward all 44 matches and scored 9 goals. In 2005, although his opportunity to play decreased, he scored 10 goals. However he could hardly play in the match in 2006. In October 2006, he moved to Regional Leagues club Shizuoka FC again and played until end of 2008 season. In 2009, he moved to Hong Kong and joined Convoy Sun Hei in Hong Kong First Division League.Club statistics {| class"wikitable" style"text-align:center;" |- ! colspan=3 | Club performance ! colspan=2 | League ! colspan=2 | Cup ! colspan=2 | League Cup ! colspan=2 | Total |- ! Season ! Club ! League ! Apps !! Goals ! Apps !! Goals ! Apps !! Goals ! Apps !! Goals |- ! colspan=3 |Japan ! colspan=2 | League ! colspan=2 | Emperor's Cup ! colspan=2 | J.League Cup ! colspan=2 | Total |- |2000||rowspan"3"|Júbilo Iwata||rowspan"3"|J1 League||0||0||0||0||0||0||0||0 |- |2001||2||0||0||0||0||0||2||0 |- |2002||0||0||0||0||1||0||1||0 |- |2004||rowspan"3"|Consadole Sapporo||rowspan"3"|J2 League||44||9||4||0||colspan="2"|-||48||9 |- |2005||28||10||1||0||colspan="2"|-||29||10 |- |2006||3||0||0||0||colspan="2"|-||3||0 |- !colspan=3|Total !77||19||5||0||1||0||83||19 |} Honours * Hong Kong League Cup: 2008–09 References External links * Category:1981 births Category:Living people Category:Association football people from Niigata Prefecture Category:Japanese men's footballers Category:J1 League players Category:J2 League players Category:Hong Kong First Division League players Category:Júbilo Iwata players Category:Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo players Category:Sun Hei SC players Category:Japanese expatriate men's footballers Category:Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Hong Kong Category:Expatriate men's footballers in Hong Kong Category:Men's association football forwards Category:21st-century Japanese sportsmen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomoaki_Seino
2025-04-06T15:55:51.133470
25891419
Stiftung Juliusspital Würzburg
| inauguration_date = 1576 | website = }} Stiftung Juliusspital Würzburg is a foundation in Würzburg, Germany that includes the Juliusspital (hospital) and the Juliusspital winery. It was created as a hospital in 1576 by the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg, Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn. History The hospital was founded by Julius Echter, Prince-Bishop of Würzburg, in 1576 on the ground of a Jewish cemetery with the endowment of the abandoned Monastery of Sancta Vallis in Heiligenthal. It originally also accepted pilgrims, people suffering from epilepsy, and orphans. In 1878, in an article in The Examiner comparing the status of medical education in England and overseas, reported that "In Germany, the faculties are more equal. In University of Würzburg, owing to the large and rich Julius-Spital, the medical faculty is the most numerous." Notable staff and students In 1776 Carl Caspar von Siebold was appointed as head physician (Oberwundarzt) of the Juliusspital. Under his leadership, new surgical techniques were introduced, a regimen of hygiene was established, and renovation of the Theatrum Anatomicum took place. In 1805 the Juliusspital reportedly had the first modern operating theater in the world. Georg Anton Schäffer studied medicine at Juliusspital's College of Medicine. He joined the Imperial Russian service as a surgeon, serving in Moscow before 1812. In 1816, Cajetan von Textor was appointed professor of surgery and Oberwundarzt in the Juliusspital. His students included Bernhard Heine (1800–1846), inventor of the osteotome. In 1863, Franz von Rinecker became director of psychiatry at the Juliusspital, and in 1872 took on additional responsibilities as director of dermatology. In 1870, Friedrich Jolly was his assistant. Buildings and architecture Juliusspital is a Baroque hospital with a courtyard and a church originally established in 1576. However, the 160 m long northern wing was added by in 1700–4. Beneath it lies the similarly sized wine cellar. The Rococo pharmacy survived the bombing of 1945 largely undamaged. North of the Spital is a park used by the patients, fronted to the right by the Alte Anatomie (by Joseph Greising, built in 1705–14. This was renovated in 1788 and used by the medical faculty such as Albert von Kölliker, von Siebold or Rudolf Virchow to instruct up to 48 students in surgery and anatomy. The park also features a water basin by Jacob van der Auvera with stone dolphins and allegorical figures for the Franconian rivers Main, Tauber, Saale and Sinn. It sports the coat-of-arms of Johann Philipp von Greifenclau zu Vollraths. The buildings are maintained to a high standard - they had a new pipe organ built by Orgelbau Vleugels in 2005. Today Juliusspital continues to function as a hospital and retirement home. It is also the second largest winery in Germany and the biggest individual German wine grower, at 177 hectares. Weingut Juliusspital is within the Franconian wine region and a member of Association of German Prädikat Wine Estates. Gallery <gallery heights"200px" widths"200"> Würzburg - Stiftung Juliusspital, Koellikerstraße.JPG|Modern hospital wing Würzburg - Gartenpavillon des Juliusspitals, Südwestfassade.JPG|Alte Anatomie Juliusspital.jpg|Drawing after an engraving by Matthäus Merian (1648) JuliusSpital1.jpg|Arcades of the Juliusspital Juliusspital Stiftung Würzburg Weinstubenschild.JPG|Sign of the Weinstuben wine bar/restaurant JuliusSpital3.jpg|Northern Baroque wing with arcades JuliusSpital2.jpg|Inner courtyard </gallery> References Bibliography * Oberpflegeamt der Stiftung Juliusspital Würzburg (Hrsg.): Das Juliusspital Würzburg in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart: Festschrift aus Anlaß der Einweihung der wiederaufgebauten Pfarrkirche des Juliusspitals am 16. Juli 1953. Würzburg: Fränkische Gesellschaftsdruckerei 1953. * Ludwig Weiss (Bearb.), Oberpflegeamt der Stiftung Juliusspital Würzburg (Hrsg.): 400 Jahre Pfarrkirche St. Kilian im Juliusspital zu Würzburg. Würzburg 1980. * Johanna Bleker (Hrsg.): Kranke und Krankheiten im Juliusspital zu Würzburg 1819 – 1829: zur frühen Geschichte des allgemeinen Krankenhauses in Deutschland. In: Abhandlungen zur Geschichte der Medizin und der Naturwissenschaften, 72. Husum: Matthiesen, 1995, . * Andreas Mettenleiter: Die Anatomenskulpturen von Johann Peter Wagner an der Fassade des juliusspitälischen Gartenpavillons in Würzburg. Würzburger medizinhistorische Mitteilungen, 18. Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 1999. * Robert Wagner: Wein- und Fleischzeichen des Juliusspital zu Würzburg. In: Mainfränkisches Jahrbuch für Geschichte und Kunst, 25 (96), 1973, S. 145–149. External links * Category:Buildings and structures in Würzburg Juliusspital Category:1576 establishments in the Holy Roman Empire Category:Hospitals in Germany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stiftung_Juliusspital_Würzburg
2025-04-06T15:55:51.140518
25891434
KiK
Kik}} KiK Textilien und Non-Food GmbH is a German clothing discount store chain headquartered in Bönen. Overview , Poland]] KiK was founded in 1994 by Stefan Heinig and the holding company Tengelmann Group. KiK is an acronym for "" (). KiK is the largest textile discounter chain in Germany and operates about 3,500 shops in Germany, Austria (since 1998), Slovenia and Czech Republic (since 2007), Hungary and Slovakia (since 2008), Croatia (since 2011), Poland (since March 2012), and Netherlands (2013). KiK opened the first stores in Italy (2017), Romania (2018) and Portugal (2022). KiK-CEO Patrick Zahn has announced to enter the US market beginning in 2019. The first stores will be opened in the Midwest. The company employs 25,000 employees, of which the bulk share works in Germany. In 2016, the company had net revenues of €1.95 billion, making it the sixth-largest textile manufacturer in Germany. Starting in 2013, the company has undertaken a large modernisation offensive in all its shops. By the end of 2017, all shops in Germany as well as in foreign markets will be based on a new interior concept, making them look brighter and more pleasant. The dominant colour red will be largely substituted by silver. The company sells a range of women's, men's and children's clothing, baby wear and underwear, as well as toys, accessories and home textiles. Customers can buy a complete outfit for less than 30 Euros. The focus is on basic styles with only occasional changes in their assortment. This makes the company independent of trends and seasons. The orders can be produced with long lead times from nine to 12 months without time pressure. KiK buys its products from around 500 suppliers in Bangladesh, China, Pakistan and Turkey, with Bangladesh the biggest contributor, accounting for over 40% of the orders. The products are imported to Germany based on sea freight and hence distributed to the nine foreign markets KiK is operating in. KiK has been a member of the German Partnership for Sustainable Textiles since June 2015. This initiative by the German Ministry for Development and Cooperation, which is funded by commercial enterprises, non-governmental organisations, federal organisations and trade unions, is based on the belief that an improvement in manufacturing conditions in countries like Bangladesh or Pakistan cannot be brought about by individual companies alone.Online shopSince 2013 KiK has operated an online shop.MarketingKiK has, in the past, sponsored a number of football teams, namely Arminia Bielefeld, Werder Bremen, Hansa Rostock and VfL Bochum. They currently sponsor referees of the Austrian Football Bundesliga and in January 2009 also sponsored the German national team at the 2009 World Men's Handball Championship. Verona Pooth has been the face of KiK's television advertising campaign. The cooperation ended in 2015. Sustainability The company has published four sustainability reports. In October 2015, KiK banned plastic sacs from all its shops in Germany, Austria, the Netherlands and Hungary. Through this measure, the company saves about 33 million plastic sacs per year. KiK is a member of the German government's Partnership for Sustainable Textiles, a multi-stakeholder initiative to bring social, ecological and economic improvements along the textile supply chain. KiK is among over 150 members including Otto Group, Adidas, Hugo Boss and Puma and is engaged in all the initiative's working groups. It was among the first members of the Partnership to publish its catalogue of measures designed to provide greater transparency to consumers for products sold in Germany. The retailer is the first company in Germany with a contract in place which holds auditing companies legally liable for findings in the reports. Criticism Building collapse at Savar On 24 April 2013, the eight-story Rana Plaza commercial building collapsed in Savar, a sub-district near Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. At least 1,127 people died and over 2,438 were injured. The factory housed several separate garment factories employing around 5,000 people, and manufactured apparel for brands including the Benetton Group, Joe Fresh, The Children's Place, Primark, Monsoon, and Dressbarn. Of the 29 brands identified as having sourced products from the Rana Plaza factories, only 9 attended meetings held in November 2013 to agree a proposal on compensation to the victims. KiK was the second German company to contribute to the compensation fund. Several companies refused to sign including Walmart, Carrefour, Bonmarché, Mango, Auchan. The agreement was also signed by Primark, Loblaws, Bonmarché and El Corte Inglés. The retailer was one of the first German signatories of the Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh set up in May 2013 to inspect and remediate factories for fire, electrical and building safety and was also among a group of global union federations and brands that have prepared the continuation of the work of the Accord in Bangladesh once its five-year remit comes to an end in 2018.Swastika-styled clothing racksIn 2009, a man from the German state Schleswig-Holstein pressed charges against KiK under Strafgesetzbuch section 86a, which outlaws the "use of symbols of unconstitutional organisations", for the chain using swastika-styled clothing racks in their shops. KiK describes the allegations as incomprehensible. Wages for factory workers KiK has been criticised by the Clean Clothes Campaign for their bad practices in countries such as Bangladesh, where factory workers are paid low wages. In 2006, KiK has published a Code of Conduct, which imposes an obligation to suppliers to pay compensation to workers that cover at least the legal or the industrial minimum wage level, whichever is higher. KiK CEO Zahn has appealed on the government of Bangladesh to raise the minimum wage by ten percent. Secret credit ratings of staff While running almost 50,000 secret credit ratings of staff, overtime is often not paid. With the introduction of the legal minimum wage in Germany, KiK pays its staff minimum wage or higher.See also*NKD (retailer) References External links * Category:Clothing retailers of Germany Category:Companies based in North Rhine-Westphalia Category:Companies based in Bönen Category:Retail companies established in 1994 Category:1994 establishments in Germany Category:Clothing brands of Germany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KiK
2025-04-06T15:55:51.151501
25891436
Azerbaijan Square
Azerbaijan Square is the largest square in Tabriz. The square is in the vicinity of Tabriz International Airport. References Category:Buildings and structures in Tabriz Category:Squares in Iran Category:Transport in Tabriz
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azerbaijan_Square
2025-04-06T15:55:51.153788
25891475
Tommy Hendricks
|birth_place=Houston, Texas, U.S. |death_date|height_ft 6 |height_in = 2 |weight_lbs = 235 |high_school = Scarborough (Houston)<br>Eisenhower (Houston) |college=Michigan (1996–1999) |undraftedyear=2000 |teams= * Miami Dolphins (2000–2003) * Jacksonville Jaguars (2004) |highlights= * National champion (1997) * First-team All-Big Ten (1999) * Second-team All-Big Ten (1998) |statlabel1=Tackles |statvalue1=113 |statlabel2=Forced fumbles |statvalue2=1 |pfr=H/HendTo20 |HOF|CollegeHOF }} Thomas Emmett Hendricks III (born October 23, 1978) is an American former professional football player who was a linebacker in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football as a defensive back for the Michigan Wolverines from 1996 to 1999 and was a member of the undefeated 1997 Michigan Wolverines football team that was ranked No. 1 in the final AP Poll. He later played in the NFL as a backup linebacker and special teams player for the Miami Dolphins from 2000 to 2003 and the Jacksonville Jaguars during the 2004 season. Early years Hendricks was born in Houston, Texas, in 1978. He attended Scarborough High School and Eisenhower High School, both in Houston. He became known as one of the best high school defensive backs in the country while playing for Eisenhower. He enrolled in the fall of 1996 and played college football as a defensive back for head coach Lloyd Carr's Michigan Wolverines football teams from 1996 to 1999. As a sophomore, Hendricks started all 12 games at free safety for the undefeated 1997 Michigan Wolverines football team that outscored opponents 322–144, won the Big Ten Conference championship, defeated Washington State in the 1998 Rose Bowl, and was ranked #1 in the final AP Poll. Hendricks also started all 13 games at free safety for Michigan during the 1998 season, and completed a 37-game streak by starting all 12 games at strong safety for the 1999 Michigan team. He was selected by the conference coaches as a first-team defensive back on the 1999 All-Big Ten Conference football team. In four years at Michigan, Hendricks started 37 games and registered 222 tackles, 12 pass breakups and three interceptions. Professional football Hendricks was undrafted in the 2000 NFL draft. He signed as a free agent with the Miami Dolphins where he was converted to a linebacker but cut before the start of the 2000 season. One month after being cut, Miami linebacker Zach Thomas was injured, and Hendricks was re-signed. He appeared in all 16 games and got his first start at linebacker following another injury to Zach Thomas. He remained with the Dolphins through the 2003 season, appearing in 56 games, three of them as a starter. He also served as the team's special teams captain for three seasons from 2001 to 2003. Hendricks played for the Jacksonville Jaguars during the 2004 season,<ref nameFresh/> appearing in 15 games.<ref namePFR/> He started one game at linebacker for the Jaguars. NFL career statistics {| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" ! colspan="2"| Legend |- | Bold | Career high |} Regular season {| class"wikitable" style"text-align:center" |- !rowspan="2"| Year !rowspan="2"| Team !colspan="2"| Games !colspan="5"| Tackles !colspan="5"| Interceptions !colspan="4"| Fumbles |- ! GP !! GS !! Cmb !! Solo !! Ast !! Sck !! TFL !! Int !! Yds !! TD !! Lng !! PD !! FF !! FR !! Yds !! TD |- ! 2000 !! MIA | 8 || 0 || 5 || 4 || 1 || 0.0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! 2001 !! MIA | 16 || 1 || 23 || 16 || 7 || 0.0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! 2002 !! MIA | 16 || 0 || 23 || 15 || 8 || 0.0 || 1 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! 2003 !! MIA | 16 || 2 || 34 || 24 || 10 || 0.0 || 2 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 1 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! 2004 !! JAX | 15 || 1 || 28 || 22 || 6 || 0.0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! colspan="2"| !! 71 !! 4 !! 113 !! 81 !! 32 !! 0.0 !! 3 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 1 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 |} Playoffs {| class"wikitable" style"text-align:center" |- !rowspan="2"| Year !rowspan="2"| Team !colspan="2"| Games !colspan="5"| Tackles !colspan="5"| Interceptions !colspan="4"| Fumbles |- ! GP !! GS !! Cmb !! Solo !! Ast !! Sck !! TFL !! Int !! Yds !! TD !! Lng !! PD !! FF !! FR !! Yds !! TD |- ! 2000 !! MIA | 2 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0.0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 |- ! 2001 !! MIA | 1 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0.0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 1 || 0 || 0 |- ! colspan="2"| !! 3 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0.0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 0 !! 1 !! 0 !! 0 |} Later years Tommy Hendricks now resides in Houston, TX and is now a music producer that has released instrumental albums under the name Hendricks Beats. References Category:1978 births Category:American football linebackers Category:Jacksonville Jaguars players Category:Living people Category:Miami Dolphins players Category:Michigan Wolverines football players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Hendricks
2025-04-06T15:55:51.182635
25891477
Yitzhak Seiger
| death_place = Israel | office1 = Faction represented in the Knesset# | suboffice1 = Likud | subterm1 = 1981–1985 | native_name = יצחק זיגר | native_name_lang = he }} Yitzhak Seiger (; 22 February 1936 – 5 February 1985) was an Israeli politician who served as a member of the Knesset for Likud between 1981 and his death in 1985. Biography Born in Haifa during the Mandate era, Seiger studied economics, political science and law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and was certified as a lawyer. In 1969 he joined the Liberal Party. He went on to become chairman of the party's Economics Council and a member of its central committee and directorate, and was also a member of the executive committee of the Hitahdut HaIkarim. In 1981 he was elected to the Knesset on the Likud list (then an alliance of the Liberal Party, Herut and other right-wing factions). He was re-elected in 1984, but died in office the following year. His seat was taken by Ya'akov Shamai.ReferencesExternal links* Category:1936 births Category:1985 deaths Category:Politicians from Haifa Category:Jews from Mandatory Palestine Category:Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni Category:Liberal Party (Israel) politicians Category:Likud politicians Category:Members of the 10th Knesset (1981–1984) Category:Members of the 11th Knesset (1984–1988)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yitzhak_Seiger
2025-04-06T15:55:51.185609
25891483
Trams in Hobart
| operator = | lines = 8 <br /> <!-- First era -->| era1_name = Tram | era1_start_year = | era1_end_year = | era1_state = show | era1_system | era1_status | era1_lines | era1_routes | era1_owner | era1_operator | era1_gauge = 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) | era1_min_curve_radius | era1_propulsion_system Single overhead electric line | era1_el | era1_depot | era1_stock | era1_single_track_length | era1_double_track_length | era1_total_track_length | era1_route_length | era1_pass_year | era1_passengers | era1_pass_percent | era1_pass_system | era1_stops | era1_mpassengers | era1_map | era1_map_state | era1_website <!-- Second era --> | era2_name = Trolleybus | era2_start_year = | era2_end_year = | era2_state = show | era2_system | era2_status | era2_routes | era2_owner | era2_operator | era2_gauge | era2_propulsion_system = Twin overhead electric line | era2_el | era2_depot | era2_stock | era2_single_track_length | era2_double_track_length | era2_total_track_length | era2_route_length | era2_pass_year | era2_passengers | era2_pass_percent | era2_pass_system | era2_mpassengers | era2_map | era2_website }} Trams operated in Hobart, the capital of the Australian state of Tasmania, between 1893 and 1960. The city had an extensive and popular system that reached most of its suburbs. It was the first complete electric tram system in the Southern Hemisphere, and the only one in Australia to operate double-decker trams. Opened in 1893 by a private consortium, the network was taken over in 1913 by the Hobart City Council, who ran a successful network for much of the early twentieth century, reaching its peak in 1937. Following the introduction of trolleybuses in 1935, the growth of car ownership after the Second World War, and the state takeover of municipal transport networks in 1955, the system closed in 1960. In 2003 the Hobart City Council proposed a waterfront heritage tramway, and in recent years, debate over the reintroduction of light rail and trams in Hobart has been growing. History Necessity Hobart's population was growing, and by 1892 it had risen to around 24,000 living within the city boundaries, with the total population over 35,000. In an area approximately the size of a square mile, Hobart had no public transport service and relied on horse-drawn cabs and omnibuses to access out-lying towns and regions. Hobart had begun to grow and develop, and was slowly constructing the features and resources expected of a modern European city. By the late nineteenth century most major cities in Europe were developing public transport systems such as underground railways or tram networks, and the citizens of Hobart were calling for something similar for their town. Some Hobartians saw that a workable public-transport system was essential for economic growth, and had witnessed the positive benefits that such systems were bringing to the mainland capitals of Sydney and Melbourne, which had developed steam, horse and cable-powered public transport networks. A new syndicate was formed by 24 prominent citizens, each contributing £1,000 capital each. The syndicate was formed with the assistance of Henry Dobson, who was a senior member of legal firm Dobson, Mitchell and Allport, and who would be Premier when the tramways commenced. The 1884 Act was amended to be the Hobart Tramway Company's Amendment Act 1889'', which described the proposed routes of New Town, Cascades and Sandy Bay, as well as providing a time frame of completion in four years. Company directors included Charles Grant, an engineer who came to Tasmania as superintendent for the Tasmanian Main Line Railway; John Syme, director of the Cascade Brewery; and Edward Braddon, prominent politician and Tasmania's Agent-General in London.DevelopmentThe government had reservations about electrification, and countered the original electrified proposal with a new proposal which allowed for steam powered trams to operation on a 3’6" (106.68 cm) gauge track. The government wished for the first line opened to be 2.485 miles (four kilometres) of track on along Macquarie Street and Cascade Road, providing transport for workers at the Cascade Brewery. Despite the government's insistence, the project's backers would not be swayed, and with the legislative approval having already passed, the British entrepreneurs registered the Hobart Electric Tramway Company in 1886. One of the businessmen, Charles Henry Grant, personally floated the company in London. The same year they built and displayed a model tramway in the Hobart Town Hall in order to raise support for their electrified system. Hobart City Council had never felt completely happy about a privately run public transport network over which they exerted little control, and were also aggrieved that the Hobart Electric Tramway Company had not accepted their model for the tramways in the initial design stages. At the time it was widely felt amongst Australian councils that public transport systems would be best served by public ownership. As many other councils across Australia were doing at the time, the Hobart City Council sought to forcibly take control of the London-based Hobart Electric Tramway Company in 1911. Lawyers for the company successfully fought off an initial take-over attempt, forcing the Hobart City Council to consult with the State Government about a future take-over. In 1955 a new statewide statutory authority, the Metropolitan Transport Trust (MTT) was formed, and this entity took over the Hobart Tramways, as well as the Launceston Municipal Tramways on 1 March 1955, and in 1960 it also acquired Norton Coaches in the north-west, giving the State Government control of public transport in the whole State. 42 years earlier the Hobart City Council had battled for over two years to gain control of the tram network, and it had been taken off them by a single decision of the State Government. The Elizabeth Street line was the most heavily trafficked route on the Hobart tram network, and The Mercury of 25 May 1951 reported that 132 trams left the GPO on the Elizabeth St routes each weekday between 4.00 pm and 6.12 pm. * Moonah Depot served Glenorchy and Lenah Valley, and aided in alleviating space shortages in the City Depot. Initially starting life as a storage shelter purchased by the tramways in 1910, it was not until 1924 that it was developed into a larger depot, complete with its own sub-station. The depot came to accommodate 36 trams on six lines, and mainly housed double-deckers. This depot lasted until 1975, and has subsequently been developed upon. It was located on Main Road, Moonah, near its junction with Florence Street, and close to Cooleys Hotel. Main line connections Although there was never any deliberate integration, the primary city depot was located close by to Hobart Railway Station, provided a simple pedestrian connection between the depot and the mainline rail services. Further access to mainline services could be achieved by getting off the Elizabeth Street line in Moonah, or Glenorchy, where Moonah Station, Derwent Park Station and Glenorchy Station were all within a short walking distance of the tram line. Rollingstock Upon commencement in 1893, the initial fleet comprised twenty double-deck Siemens-built tram cars. The top deck was open-sided but covered by a roof, and both driving ends were exposed. These were numbered 1 to 20, and all remained in service until 1928. Hobart Electric Tramway Company self-built their first car (number 22) in 1903, but it only lasted in service until 1915. One maximum traction double-decker was built by Brush in 1904, and served as a prototype for a fleet which was never built. It remained in service until 1918, and was scrapped in 1925. 1906 saw the introduction of the first single-deck cars, which came in both four wheel, and double-bogie (eight-wheel) varieties. Although a few minor accidents did occur, such as the overturning of the number 63 double-decker in 1946, there were relatively few accidents on the Hobart Tramways and most were minor. In the late 1930s there were also three derailments which all resulted in overturning double-deckers. Minor injuries were reported in all of these accidents, but no fatalities were caused. This series of accidents led to the decision to cut down the double-decker fleet to single-deck cars. Despite being dazed by the collision, and rather than secure his own safety by jumping clear, tram conductor Raymond Donoghue guided the remaining passengers to the front of the vehicle (as it was rolling backwards), and warned motorists by continuing to ring the tram's bells and desperately trying to operate the emergency hand brakes to no avail. It is estimated that the tram built up a speed of 40 to 50 miles per hour (64 to 80 km/h). Eventually the tram collided violently with the front of the following number 137 tram, killing Donoghue instantly. Another tram, 118, which was a single-deck bogie saloon car built by Hobart Municipal Tramways in 1941, was recovered from a farm in Sorell, where it had lain abandoned since being withdrawn from service in 1960. As of 2008, Tony Colman was continuing its restoration including refitting replica original upholstery and operation metal frame windows. Bendigo Tramways will refit 3’6" (106.68 cm) gauge M&MTB No. 9 trucks. This tram had originally been number 11, but was renumbered 118 in 1947, when all standard bogie cars were numbered in the one hundred range. This car had already been the third number 11, as two previous cars (1893–1914, and 1914–52) had borne the same car number. Similarly, tram number 133 was also recovered from a farm, this time in Bridgewater where it had also laid abandoned since 1960. Unfortunately, its condition may prevent future restoration. It is currently stored at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery's Moonah workshops. Tram number 120 was recovered from private ownership in Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory in June 2005, where it had been for twenty years. Prior to that it is believed to have been used as fishing shed in Interlaken in Tasmania's Central Highlands. It was originally built in 1936, and withdrawn in 1959. {| class"wikitable sortable" styletext-align:center |- ! Type ! Number ! Built ! Withdrawn ! Preserved ! Condition ! Status ! Owner |- | Double-deck | 7 | 1917 | 1951 | 1990s | Body only | Stored | Hobart City Council |- | Double-deck | 17 | 1915 | 1954 | 1990s | Body only | Restored | Hobart City Council |- | Double-deck | 20 | 1924 | 1954 | 1990s | Body only | Under restoration | Sydney Tramway Museum |- | Double-deck | 46 | 1922 | 1954 | 1973 | Body only | Restored | Tasmanian Transport Museum |- | Drop end-combination | 39 | 1917 | 1947 | 1998 | Complete | Restored | Hobart City Council |- | Drop end-combination | 106 | 191 | 1947 | 1998 | Body only | Static | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 116 | 1941 | 1960 | 1990s | Body only | Stored | Tasmanian Transport Museum |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 118 | 1941 | 1960 | 1990s | Body only | Under restoration | Hobart City Council |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 120 | 1936 | 1960 | 2005 | Body only | Under restoration | Private owner |- |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 126 | 1943 | 1960 | N/A | Body only | Incorporated into house with 135 in Verona Sands. | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 133 | 1947 | 1960 | 1990s | Body only | Stored | Hobart City Council |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 135 | 1947 | 1960 | N/A | Body only | Incorporated into house with 126 in Verona Sands. | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 136 | 1947 | 1960 | N/A | Body only | Static | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 139 | 1947 | 1960 | N/A | Body only | Static White Beach | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 140 | 1947 | 1960 | N/A | Body only | Static Sisters Beach | Private owner |- | Single-deck Bogie Saloon | 141 | 1952 | 1960 | 1960 | Complete | Operational | Tasmanian Transport Museum |} Future Most of the fleet of trams were sold off for scrap metal, although some were placed into storage, and the early 21st century saw a Hobart City Council proposal for the restoration of a tram service, possibly as a reduced tourism heritage service along the Hobart waterfront. The proposal put forward by Hobart City Council for public consultation in 2003 was for a single line heritage tramway utilising the restored single deck number 39 tram, which would run from Salamanca along Sullivans Cove via Morrison Street and Mawson Place to Hunter Street. It was suggested that it would coincide with a proposal to redevelop Princes Wharf no. 2, which is a docking berth for large cruise ships. It was planned that the Sullivans Cove Tramway would utilise the original 3’6" (106.68 cm) gauge tracks. Significant opposition was encountered to this proposal from motorist groups, although few legitimate concerns were raised on their part. There was also internal opposition within the city council from Alderman John Freedman, although no public justification for this position was released. The proposal was subsequently shelved indefinitely. A 2009 proposal to loan the restored trams to the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery for permanent display caused further internal disputes within Hobart City Council. In 2007, a proposal was put forward by the State Government of Paul Lennon, that a new mainline rail and transport hub could be constructed at Brighton, freeing the mainline between Brighton and Hobart rail depot. Various suggestions for the reuse of this line as a commuter rail corridor to Hobart's northern suburbs were subsequently proposed. In 2009 a further proposal was put forward by University of Tasmania graduate and Hydro Tasmania electrical engineer Ben Johnston, and his wife Kristie Johnston. Their concept involves battery powered light rail. It would run on the existing Hobart northern suburban rail corridor that had been used purely for freight services since the closure of the Tasmanian Government Railways Hobart suburban service in 1975. Their proposal suggests stops at Hobart, New Town, Moonah, Glenorchy, Berriedale, Claremont, and Granton. Their carbon neutral proposal suggested battery powered carriages which recharge while passengers board and alight at each station. The battery system eliminates the overhead wires that were heavily criticised on the old Hobart tram network. In December 2009 the Johnstons presented their proposal at Moorilla Estate to an audience that included several prominent and prospective local politicians. See also *Rail transport in Tasmania *Trams in Australia *Zeehan on the west coast of Tasmania—had a tram system from 1896 to 1905 References Further reading * *Cooper, I., James, P., and Stokes, J. (1960). The Electric Tramways of Hobart. Sydney: Australian Electric Traction Association. *Cooper, I. (1993). Hobart Tramways: A Centenary Commemorative Review. Sydney: Transit Australia Publishing. (pbk.), . *Kirby, David, & Hobart (Tas.). Council (2008). ''Hobart's tram trilogy. Hobart City Council, Hobart. (hbk.), (pbk.). ** I - Elizabeth Street Trams ** II - Macquarie Street Trams ** III - Liverpool Street Trams *Richardson J. & Cooper, I. (1971). Destination G.P.O.'' Canberra : Traction Publications. . External links *[http://www.hobarttramways.com Hobart Tramways] *[http://www.railtasmania.com/pres/trams.php Tasmanian Railway Preservation Society] *[https://web.archive.org/web/20031114020236/http://www.hobartcity.com.au/ Archive of Hobart City Council’s page on Sullivans Cove Tramway] *[http://www.200years.auspost.com.au/html/loan/archive/viewdetail/1386 A letter dated 1959, from the Metropolitan Transport Trust to Master John Davenport confirming the withdrawal of trams from Hobart service] *[http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/brkfast/stories/s342842.htm "Hobart Double Decker"], Wednesday 8 August 2001, ABC Radio National *[http://www.savenkov.org/misc/IET_Mid_year_lecture_2009_slides.pdf Johnston proposal for reintroduction of suburban rail to Hobart] (PDF) Category:Transport in Hobart Hobart Hobart
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Hobart
2025-04-06T15:55:51.202914
25891503
2000 Finlandia Trophy
Evgeni Plushenko | championladies = Elena Sokolova | championpairs | championdance Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski | championsynchro | previouscomp 1999 Finlandia Trophy | nextcomp = 2001 Finlandia Trophy }} The Finlandia Trophy is an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Finland. It was held in Helsinki. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. Results Men {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! SP ! FS |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Evgeni Plushenko || || 1.5 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Yunfei Li || || 6.0 || 6 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Stanick Jeannette || || 6.0 || 2 || 5 |- ! 4 | Zhang Min || || 6.5 || 7 || 3 |- ! 5 | Anton Klykov || || 7.5 || 3 || 6 |- ! 6 | Ilia Klimkin || || 8.0 || 8 || 4 |- ! 7 | Ivan Dinev || || 9.0 || 4 || 7 |- ! 8 | Frédéric Dambier || || 12.5 || 5 || 10 |- ! 9 | Szabolcs Vidrai || || 14.0 || 12 || 8 |- ! 10 | Vitali Danilchenko || || 14.0 || 10 || 9 |- ! 11 | Alexei Kozlov || || 17.5 || 11 || 12 |- ! 12 | Gheorghe Chiper || || 20.0 || 18 || 11 |- ! 13 | Neil Wilson || || 20.0 || 14 || 13 |- ! 14 | Róbert Kažimír || || 20.5 || 13 || 14 |- ! 15 | Yuri Litvinov || || 20.5 || 9 || 16 |- ! 16 | Michael Hörrmann || || 23.5 || 17 || 15 |- ! 17 | Markus Leminen || || 24.5 || 15 || 17 |- ! 18 | Patrick Meier || || 26.0 || 16 || 18 |- ! 19 | Edvard Pyöriäinen || || 29.0 || 20 || 19 |- ! 20 | Tomas Srom || || 29.5 || 19 || 20 |} Ladies {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! SP ! FS |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Elena Sokolova || || 1.5 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Elena Liashenko || || 4.0 || 4 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Laëtitia Hubert || || 4.0 || 2 || 3 |- ! 4 | Susanna Pöykiö || || 6.5 || 5 || 4 |- ! 5 | Elina Kettunen || || 6.5 || 3 || 5 |- ! 6 | Júlia Sebestyén || || 10.0 || 8 || 6 |- ! 7 | Alisa Drei || || 10.0 || 6 || 7 |- ! 8 | Ellen Mareels || || 12.5 || 9 || 8 |- ! 9 | Olga Vassilieva || || 14.0 || 10 || 9 |- ! 10 | Erika Mervatova || || 15.5 || 11 || 10 |- ! WD | Mikkeline Kierkgaard || || || 7 || |} Ice dancing {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation ! TFP ! CD ! OD ! FD |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski || || 2.0 || 1 || 1 || 1 |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Natalia Romaniuta / Daniil Barantsev || || 4.4 || 3 || 2 || 2 |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Marika Humphreys / Vitaliy Baranov || || 5.6 || 2 || 3 || 3 |- ! 4 | Agata Błażowska / Marcin Kozubek || || 8.0 || 4 || 4 || 4 |- ! 5 | Kateřina Kovalová / David Szurman || || 11.0 || 6 || 5 || 5 |- ! 6 | Roxane Petetin / Mathieu Jost || || 11.0 || 5 || 6 || 6 |- ! 7 | Elena Solonnikova / Evgeni Polishchuk || || 14.0 || 7 || 7 || 7 |- ! 8 | Zuzana Durkovska / Marian Mesaros || || 16.4 || 9 || 8 || 8 |- ! 9 | Anna Mosenkova / Sergei Sychov || || 17.6 || 8 || 9 || 9 |} External links * [https://web.archive.org/web/20110726195514/http://ww2.isu.org/figure/events/0001/finlandia00.html 2000 Finlandia Trophy results] Category:Finlandia Trophy Finlandia Trophy, 2000 Finlandia Trophy, 2000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_Finlandia_Trophy
2025-04-06T15:55:51.267869
25891510
St. Peter and St. Paul Church, Shefa-Amr
St. Peter & St. Paul Church is located in the city of Shefa-Amr, Israel on one of the town's peaks of the old city. It has a high bell tower and a large purple dome which used to be blue until it was changed in the year of 2009. Masses are conducted in the church in Arabic and because the Greek Catholics are a majority in the city it is considered the main church of the city. History Ottoman period The church was built during the Ottoman era under Uthman al-Zahir, son of the autonomous Arab ruler Zahir al-Umar, who made a promise to build it if his fort was finished successfully, so its history goes back to that of Uthman's fort. The walls of the church started to get weak so in 1904 the whole church was strengthened and improved. It remains standing today and is the main church of the Greek Catholic community of Shefa-'Amr. Today During the years 2010-2011 the church went through a major improvement process where the walls stones were cleaned and polished, old stone walls that were covered in the past with cement were revealed to get their original old shape, the dome was re-painted and air-conditioning was installed inside. thumb|Internal View External links The church's website Category:Melkite Greek Catholic churches in Israel Category:Buildings and structures in Northern District (Israel)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Peter_and_St._Paul_Church,_Shefa-Amr
2025-04-06T15:55:51.277565
25891524
Anyone for Tennis?
Anyone for Tennis? was a two-man Australian musical comedy band, writing team and performance duo. Before splitting up in 2012, the two created musical comedy, video sketches, and stand-up comedy routines. History Anyone for Tennis? (Andrew (Doody) Doodson & Jason English-Rees) formed in 2005 while studying advertising at RMIT University in Melbourne. After working in the Melbourne advertising industry together for just over 3 years and winning an MADC award the creative team downed pens and pads and began as a full-time comedy duo in 2006. They played around the Australian comedy scene for a while but it was not until 2007 when they made it through to the national final of the Raw Comedy Award, a nationwide open mic competition, that they started to get widely recognized on the mainstream comedy scene. Anyone for Tennis? performed shows in the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, recorded an EP 'Acey Deucey' and released numerous YouTube clips including 'Let's get Famous', a parody of the famous OK Go treadmill video. Anyone for Tennis recorded their first and only full-length album in June 2011 titled "Prepare to be tuned" which is a live recording of the 2011 Melbourne and Edinburgh Comedy Festival show of the same name. As a writing team Andrew Doodson and Jason English-Rees contributed material to numerous Melbourne publications such as Melbourne street press Beat Magazine, and wrote comedy sketches for Channel 31 comedy variety programme Planet Nerd in which they also appeared. Live shows Year Show Details 2007 RAW Comedy National Final – Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2008 Take Your Time – Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2009 CUTTHROAT – Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Melbourne Fringe Festival Music, Mirth & Mayhem, Mirabel – Kids Benefit – Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2010 Abacus Birdcage Gramophone Lamp – Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2011 Prepare To Be Tuned – Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Melbourne Fringe Festival Anyone For Tennis? at the Butterfly Club The Polyphonic Comic Frolic – Melbourne Fringe Festival Musical releases Very PE (Single) (2005) Coincidentally Ramsey Street (single) (2006) Bad Morning (single) (2008) Acey Deucey! EP (2008) Five Pence ('Five Cent', Aus' Title) (single) (2009) Marg (single) (2008) My Future Wife (Single) (2010) References Category:Australian comedy musical groups Category:Musical groups from Melbourne
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anyone_for_Tennis?
2025-04-06T15:55:51.290439
25891534
Marianne Haslum
Marianne Haslum (born 31 January 1974 in Lillehammer, Norway) is a Norwegian curler. At major championships, she won bronze medals in 1993, 1995, 1996, 2000 and 2002, and silver in 1997 and 2004. She has so far, however, failed in her quest to win an Olympic medal for Norway, finishing fifth in the Nagano Olympics in 1998, seventh in the Salt Lake City Olympics in 2002, and fourth in the Torino Olympics in 2006. Team mates Dordi Nordby (skip) Marianne Rørvik (second) Camilla Holth (lead) Charlotte Hovring (alternate) References External links Category:Norwegian female curlers Category:Curlers at the 2006 Winter Olympics Category:1974 births Category:Living people Category:Curlers at the 1998 Winter Olympics Category:Curlers at the 2002 Winter Olympics Category:Olympic curlers for Norway Category:Continental Cup of Curling participants Category:Sportspeople from Lillehammer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marianne_Haslum
2025-04-06T15:55:51.293482
25891544
BK Tåg
BK Tåg AB, trading as BK Tåg, is a former Swedish railway company. It operated passenger trains on public service obligation with various counties and the ministry. Owned by Karlsongruppen, it filed for bankruptcy in March 2005. References Category:Railway companies disestablished in 2005 Category:Defunct railway companies of Sweden
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BK_Tåg
2025-04-06T15:55:51.308721
25891555
Atsushi Takahashi
{| class"wikitable floatright" style"font-size: 0.9em;" |+ Minor planets discovered: 22&thinsp; }} <!-- end of reflist --> Category:20th-century Japanese astronomers Category:Discoverers of asteroids * Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsushi_Takahashi
2025-04-06T15:55:51.321463
25891592
1999 Finlandia Trophy
Roman Serov | championladies = Elena Sokolova | championpairs | championdance Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski | championsynchro | previouscomp 1998 Finlandia Trophy | nextcomp = 2000 Finlandia Trophy }} The Finlandia Trophy is an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Finland. It was held in Helsinki. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. Results Men {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Roman Serov || |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Alexei Vasilevski || |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Jeff Langdon || |- ! 4 | Ivan Dinev || |- ! 5 | Derrick Delmore || |- ! 6 | Margus Hernits || |- ! 7 | Markus Leminen || |- ! 8 | Patrick Meier || |- ! 9 | Johnny Rønne Jensen || |- ! 10 | David Jäschke || |- ! WD | Dmitri Dmitrenko || |} Ladies {| class="wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Elena Sokolova || |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" | 2 | Elena Liashenko || |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Laëtitia Hubert || |- ! 4 | Alisa Drei || |- ! 5 | Brittney McConn || |- ! 6 | Elina Kettunen || |- ! 7 | Diána Póth || |- ! 8 | Anna Lundström || |- ! 9 | Sanna-Maija Wiksten || |- ! 10 | Jekaterina Golovatenko || |- ! 11 | Marion Krijgsman || |} <ref name"results" />Ice dancing{| class"wikitable" |- ! Rank ! Name ! Nation |- bgcolor="gold" | align="center" | 1 | Albena Denkova / Maxim Staviyski || |- bgcolor="silver" | align="center" "| 2 | Federica Faiella / Luciano Milo || |- bgcolor="cc9966" | align="center" | 3 | Oksana Potdykova / Denis Petukhov || |- ! 4 | Charlotte Clements / Gary Shortland || |- ! 5 | Martina Kvarčáková / Ota Jandejsek || |- ! 6 | Marjolaine Mineau / Dana Grant || |} <ref name"results" />References Category:Finlandia Trophy Finlandia Trophy, 1999 Finlandia Trophy, 1999
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_Finlandia_Trophy
2025-04-06T15:55:51.364077
25891597
Alice Morgan
Alice Morgan is the name of: Alice Morgan Person (1840–1913), maiden name Alice Morgan, American patent medicine entrepreneur Alice Morgan (Luther), fictional character played by Ruth Wilson Alice Morgan (1865–1933), wife of American diplomat John R. Carter Alice Morgan (–1951), British woman murdered by James Inglis Alice Mary Morgan (1850–1890), married name of English painter and illustrator Alice Havers See also Alice Morgan Wright (1881–1975), American sculptor and suffragist
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Morgan
2025-04-06T15:55:51.371955
25891602
Amory–Ticknor House
thumb|right|300px|Amory–Ticknor House, Park Street, Boston. 19th-century photo by Southworth & Hawes The Amory–Ticknor House is a historic house at 9–10 Park Street and 22–22A Beacon Street in Boston, Massachusetts. It was built in 1804 by businessman Thomas Coffin Amory, and later owned by scholar George Ticknor. It sits atop Beacon Hill, across from the Massachusetts State House on Beacon Street and the Boston Common on Park Street. Numerous tenants have occupied various parts of the house through the years, including Samuel Dexter, Christopher Gore, John Jeffries, Harrison Gray Otis, Anna Ticknor's Society to Encourage Studies at Home, and temporarily in 1824, the Marquis de Lafayette. History Shortly after the house was built, its owner Thomas Amory met financial trouble and subsequently sold the property. The building was then "enlarged, and divided into 4 dwellings, whereof 2 had entrances on Beacon Street. The other 2 fronted on Park Street. thumb|right|200px|Interior, c. 1885 When Lafayette visited Boston in 1824, he stayed at the Amory house. "Soon after his arrival General Lafayette appeared upon the balcony above the entrance of the Amory mansion, to receive the greetings of the populace. He was escorted on either side by Governor William Eustis and by the former Governor John Brooks, each wearing Continental uniforms. ... On the evening of August 30, 1824, Lafayette held a reception in his apartments at the Amory house; and this function was attended by many prominent ladies of Boston. "In 1885 the entire structure was given over to trade, and to-day it is the abode of many firms in various lines of business." Architecture Around 1804, architect Charles Bulfinch designed the entirety of Park Street, including the Amory mansion. The building represents an example of Federal architecture. Its "enriched window caps" typify the style, with "a carved eagle in the center panel and a not-convincingly-well-done bracket of the inverted acanthus leaf type at either extremity of the cap, but with a beautiful thin cornice which, when repeated in a series of 5 windows ... forms a very beautiful feature." thumb|left|300px|Amory–Ticknor House, Park St., Boston, 1935 The original structure has been altered over time. Around 1885 it was "remodeled ... with 2-story Queen Anne-inspired oriel windows of black-painted pressed metal and fanciful dormers on the Park Street roofline" and "a set of black metal shop fronts that reach out and down to the falling sidewalk..." By 2008, "the once great mansion stands barely recognizable, although the basic brick volume and Adam entrance portico with fanlight and curving granite steps (one half is missing) are more or less intact. Many ground-floor shop extensions have been added, along with Queen Anne-style oriel windows and dormers on the upper floors. Though out of character, the Victorian predations had a certain disheveled charm when they were filled with odd antiques, curiosity shops, and tearooms." thumb|250px|right|WFXT's news bureau in the Amory–Ticknor House. Businesses that occupied the building's storefronts over the years have included Trefry & Partridge Jewelers, Ann's Breakfast & Sandwiches restaurant, Fill-A-Buster restaurant (now located at 142 Bowdoin St. on Beacon Hill), Au Bon Pain, a Cheers merchandise store, Curious Liquids coffeehouse, and currently No. 9 Park Street restaurant and a WFXT TV studio. 2014 renovations of the building yielded original eastern white pine interior sheathing boards, which were re-milled by a nearby reclaimed lumber company. Owners and tenants Fisher Ames Thomas Amory (1804–1807) Thomas Coffin Amory, Jr. Catherine Carter Richard Cobb (1831–1836) Katherine Dexter (c. 1816–1831) Samuel Dexter (1807 – c. 1816) Christopher Gore John Jeffries (1806–1807) John G. Mitchell (c. 1884, leased from Mrs. Curtis Burritt Raymond) Harrison Gray Otis William Payne Mrs. Lydia Newell Osgood Raymond (c. 1853) Andrew Ritchie Matthias Plant Sawyer (1836 – c. 1853) George Ticknor (1830–1871) Anna (Eliot) Ticknor (1871–1884) Lieutenant Colonel Thomas A. Kenney, MSc, MBA, U.S. Army Reserve (2024- ) See also Society to Encourage Studies at Home Notes References Works cited Burrage,Henry Sweetser. Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine, Volume 1. New York: Publisher Lewis Historical Pub. Co., 1909. Day, Sherman.Historical collections of the State of Pennsylvania: containing a copious selection of the most interesting facts, traditions, biographical sketches, anecdotes, etc., relating to its history and antiquities, both general and local, with topographical descriptions of every county Publisher: G. W. Gorton, 1843. Dexter, Franklin Bowditch.Biographical sketches of the graduates of Yale college with annals of the college history ... Volume 3 of Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College with Annals of the College History Publisher: Holt & Company, 1903. Hale, Albert. Architecture; Architecture, Colonial Old Newburyport houses. Publisher: Boston, Massachusetts, W.B. Clarke Company 1912. Hillstrom, Kevin.The industrial revolution in America, Volume 2 Publisher: ABC-CLIO, 2005 . Lawrence, Robert Means. Old Park Street and its Vicinity Boston: Publisher Houghton Mifflin company, 1922. Raymond, Marcius Denison. Gray genealogy : being a genealogical record and history of the descendants of John Gray, of Beverly, Mass., and also including sketches of other Gray families. New York: Higginson Book Company, 1887. MD Raymond. Souvenir of the Sherburne Centennial Celebration and Dedication of Monument to the Proprietors and Early Settlers, held on Wednesday, June 21, 1893. New York: M.D. Raymond, 1892. Raymond, Marcius D. Sketch of Rev. Blackleach Burritt and related Stratford families : a paper read before the Fairfield County Historical Society, at Bridgeport, Conn., Friday evening, Feb. 19, 1892. Bridgeport : Fairfield County Historical Society 1892. Raymond, Samuel. Genealogies of the Raymond families of New England, 1630-1 to 1886. With a historical sketch of some of the Raymonds of early times, their origin, etc. New York: Press of J.J. Little & Co., 1886. Further reading Robert Means Lawrence. Old Park Street and its Vicinity. Houghton Mifflin, 1922 External links Historic American Buildings Survey , Library of Congress. Amory–Ticknor House, 9 Park Street, Boston, Suffolk County, MA. No. 9 Park Restaurant Category:Houses completed in 1804 Category:Houses in Boston Category:Beacon Hill, Boston Category:History of Boston Category:Charles Bulfinch buildings
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amory–Ticknor_House
2025-04-06T15:55:51.380684
25891623
Allis-Chalmers Model WC
thumb|A 1939 Model WC. thumb|1942 Model WC at Jarrell Plantation thumb|A 1947 Model WC. thumb|A 1948 Model WC. The Model WC was a tractor made by Allis-Chalmers from 1933 to 1948. The WC was designed from its start as a nimble, low-cost, but well-powered row-crop tractor that would make the best use of pneumatic rubber tires, which Allis-Chalmers had just introduced to agriculture in 1932. A successful model at the historical height of row-crop tractor demand, the WC was the best-selling tractor model that Allis-Chalmers ever built. The WC was the Model W variant tailored to cultivating, thus the W + C (for "cultivating") name. Other W variants, such as the WD and WF, followed later (in lower numbers). The WC was popular in the Great Depression for its good value, affordable price, and frugal design elements. Two factors that lowered its cost of manufacture, and thus its sales price, near Milwaukee. In 1934, the WC was listed at USD $825 on rubber (standard), $675 on steel (optional). The tractor could also be ordered as "air front", meaning rubber tires in front and steel wheels in back.) to be square or oversquare, that is, to have an equal or shorter stroke than bore. The WC engine tested at 22 horsepower at the drawbar and 30 at the belt.) to have starter and lights as standard equipment. Other options A belt pulley was standard equipment on the WC, while a power take-off (PTO) and a mechanical power lift for the cultivator were optional. and, like other tractors of the 1920s through mid-1930s, it lacked usability in the design of its brake controls, with a hand lever on each side of the tractor, which meant that applying the brakes took the operator's hands away from other controls. Other tractors had foot pedals on both sides, but that meant that the clutch and left brake could not be operated simultaneously. The solution came in the late 30s, when various brands moved both brake pedals to the right foot. See also List of Allis-Chalmers tractors References Bibliography External links Category:Allis-Chalmers tractors Category:Vehicles introduced in 1933
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allis-Chalmers_Model_WC
2025-04-06T15:55:51.393162
25891635
Hævi Mætal og Hass
| noprose = yes }} Hævi Mætal og Hass (English: Heavy Metal and Hash, in slang) is the Danish Heavy metal band Red Warszawa's first studio album. The album is under titled "Greatest Hits 1986–1996 Volume 1". Name "Hævi Mætal og Hass" is not correct Danish spelling, but it is pronounced like that if you speak with Copenhagen accent. When you say "Heavy" in Danish the "ea" sounds like an "æ". In correct Danish the title would be "Heavy Metal og Hash". Track listing # "Sten og Trille" <small>(rock and roll) </small> # "Hurra Skolen Brænder" <small>(Hooray, The School's Burning )</small> # "Mosekonen Brygger" <small>(The Bogwoman Brews)</small> # "Norsk Black Metal" <small>(Norwegian Black Metal)</small> # "Heavy Metal og Hass" # "Analfabet" <small>(Illiterate)</small> # "Lugter af Fisk" <small>(Smells like Fish)</small> # "Børn er Dumme og Grimme" <small>(Kids are Stupid and Ugly)</small> # "Aldi" # "Singelingeling" # "Ticeman Control" # "Dødshimlen" <small>(Deathheaven)</small> # "Jeg Hader Alle Mennesker" <small>(I Hate Everyone)</small> # "Har Du Nogen Venner" <small>(Do You Have Any Friends)</small> # "Narkoøgle" <small>(Druglizard)</small> # "Søren Autonom" <small>(Søren Autonomic)</small> # "Den Sorte Sang" <small>(The Black Song)</small> # "2 Slags Geddar " <small>(Two Kinds of Guitar [mangled])</small> # "Den Dystra Staden " <small>(The Gloomy Town)</small> # "Bagermester Jensen" <small>(Baker Jensen)</small> # "Hestepik" <small>(Horsedick)</small> Track info Aldi Aldi is a German supermarket. The song is in German. Ticeman Control "Ticeman" is a word made up by the band members. It is a faux-Anglicization of the word "tissemand", a colloquial term for penis. Den Dystra Staden This song is not in Danish, but in Swedish. Personnel * "Lækre" Jens Mondrup – Vocals * "Heavy" Henning Nymand – Guitar * "Tonser" Henrik – Bass * Jan Wiegandt – Drums * Lars Schmidt – Producer References Sources * |access-date=2 November 2024}} Category:1996 albums Category:Red Warszawa albums
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hævi_Mætal_og_Hass
2025-04-06T15:55:51.420210
25891667
Bobby Oxspring
| birth_place = Hampstead, London, England | death_date | death_place = Stamford, Lincolshire, England | placeofburial = Cranwell, Lincolnshire | allegiance = United Kingdom | branch = Royal Air Force | serviceyears = 1938–1968 | rank = Group captain | servicenumber = 40743 | unit = No. 66 Squadron RAF<br/>No. 41 Squadron RAF | commands = RAF Gatow (1965–67)<br/>No. 73 Squadron RAF (1949)<br/>No. 54 Squadron RAF (1948)<br/>No. 141 Wing RAF (1944–45)<br/>No. 222 Squadron RAF (1942)<br/>No. 72 Squadron RAF (1942)<br/>No. 91 Squadron RAF (1942) | battles = Second World War * Battle of Britain | awards = Distinguished Flying Cross & Two Bars<br/>Air Force Cross<br/>Airman's Cross (Netherlands) | relations | laterwork }} Robert Wardlow Oxspring, (22 May 1919 – 8 August 1989) was a Royal Air Force officer and flying ace of the Second World War. Early life and family Oxspring was born in Hampstead, London on 22 May 1919. His father, also named Robert, had served in No. 54 Squadron RFC, and was a founder member and commander of No. 66 Squadron RFC during the First World War, in which he was credited with several aerial victories, and was twice awarded the Military Cross before being wounded in action during a mid-air collision on 30 April 1917.Military careerOxspring was granted a short service commission as an acting pilot officer on 7 May 1938, being described at the time as "a tallish, good-looking, fair-headed bloke", and served in No. 66 Squadron RAF. He was regraded to pilot officer on 7 March 1939. Flying throughout the Battle of Britain, Oxspring was promoted to flying officer on 3 September 1940, and on 25 October was shot down in Spitfire X4170 near Capel, Kent. Known as one of the battle's great aces, he was one of the fraction of The Few selected by Fighter Command to have a portrait drawn by Cuthbert Orde, sitting for it on 9 December 1940. On 8 November 1940 he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC). The citation read: Promoted to flight lieutenant (war substantive) on 3 September 1941, he became flight commander in No. 41 Squadron RAF, No. 222 Squadron RAF and No. 24 Wing. He was awarded a Bar to his DFC on 18 September 1942, with the citation: Moving to Mediterranean combat, it is thought probable that Oxspring was the pilot who shot down renowned German ace Anton Hafner of JG 51 on 2 January 1943. Having led his squadron to be the highest scoring in the North African theatre, and survived his second shooting down of the war,}} On 1 January 1944 he was promoted to temporary squadron leader, and was promoted to squadron leader (war substantive) on 15 June 1944. the rank he held when the conflict ceased in 1945. During the war he had registered 13 solo kills with 2 shared, 2 probable kills and 4 solo V-1 flying bombs destroyed and 1 shared. After the war, on 10 January 1947, he was one of the British officers given royal recognition of the award of the Dutch Airman's Cross. He was also awarded the 1939–1945 Star with Battle of Britain clasp, the Air Crew Europe Star with France and Germany clasp, the Italy Star, and the War Medal 1939–1945. He stayed on in the RAF, receiving a permanent commission as a flight lieutenant on 1 September 1945, and being promoted to substantive squadron leader on 1 August 1947. He was awarded the Air Force Cross on 1 January 1949, after leading No. 54 Squadron RAF Vampires to Canada and the US, the first jet aircraft to cross the Atlantic. On 22 September 1949 he led a flight of five Vampire Mk.3 aircraft from 73 Squadron RAF on a tour of Italy to promote the aircraft to the Italian Air force. Flying VF345 Oxspring with a broken radio was unable to find the airfield at Malpensa. Almost out of fuel he chose to land in a field with the other four Vampires also out of fuel following him. All five pilots made successful landings without any serious injuries. Promotion came twice more, to wing commander on 1 January 1953, and finally group captain on 1 January 1960. He was appointed Station Commander of RAF Gatow in Berlin, where a section of the fence was the Berlin Wall. He retired on 23 February 1968. republished 2003 by Cerberus, ). Oxspring died on 8 August 1989, and is buried at Cranwell Parish church, Lincolnshire. References Category:1919 births Category:1989 deaths Category:Military personnel from the London Borough of Camden Category:People from Hampstead Category:Royal Air Force group captains Category:British World War II flying aces Category:The Few Category:Recipients of the Air Force Cross (United Kingdom) Category:Recipients of the Airman's Cross Category:Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Oxspring
2025-04-06T15:55:51.442998
25891673
Nicholas Alexander (ski jumper)
| birth_date = | birth_place = Brattleboro, Vermont, U.S. | height | club = Lebanon Outing Club | personalbest = 184 m (604 ft)<br /><small>Planica, 19 March 2010</small> | seasons = 2010<br />2013–2016 | individual_starts = 21 | team_starts = 6 | updated = August 2, 2016 }} Nicholas Alexander (born August 24, 1988) is an American former ski jumper. who competed in the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics as a member of Team USA Career Early years He was born in Brattleboro, Vermont, and lives in Lebanon, New Hampshire. Alexander learned to ski and ski jump from members of the Lebanon Outing Club at the Storrs Hill Ski area. He made his world cup debut in Kuusamo in 2009. He is a member of the U.S. Men's Ski Jumping Team and he is an Olympian who competed in the 2010 Winter Olympics. U.S. Nationals Alexander won the 2013 Men's U.S. National Ski Jumping Championship in Lake Placid, NY on the normal Olympic hill. He was second that same year in 2013 in the Men's U.S. National Ski Jumping Championship in Park City, UT on the large Olympic hill. He also won the 2009 Men's U.S. National Ski Jumping Championship in Lake Placid, NY, on the only hill jumped that year, the normal Olympic hill. 2010 season His best winter World Cup finish was 38th in the large hill event in March 2010 in Finland. Alexander finished tenth in the team flying hill event at the FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2010 in Planica. He qualified in 29th place for the individual competition at this same event. He set his personal best 184 metres (604 ft) in this event. At the 2010 Winter Olympics, he finished 11th in the team large hill, 40th in the individual large hill, and 41st in the individual normal hill events. World Cup Standings {| class"wikitable plainrowheaders" style"background:#FFFFFF; font-size:86%; line-height:16px; border:gray solid 1px; border-collapse:collapse;" |- style="background:#CCCCCC; text-align:center;" ! scope"col" style"background:#DCDCDC; width:45px;"|Season ! scope"col" style"background:#DCDCDC; width:55px;"|Overall ! scope"col" style"background:#DCDCDC; width:55px;"| ! scope"col" style"background:#DCDCDC; width:55px;"| ! scope"col" style"background:#DCDCDC; width:55px;"| |- ! scope"row" align"center"|2009/10 | aligncenter| — || aligncenter| 56 || aligncenter| — || aligncenter|57 |- ! scope"row" align"center"|2012/13 | aligncenter| — || aligncenter| — || aligncenter| — || aligncenter|N/A |- ! scope"row" align"center"|2013/14 | aligncenter| — || aligncenter| — || aligncenter| — || aligncenter|N/A |- ! scope"row" align"center"|2014/15 | aligncenter|78 || aligncenter| — || aligncenter| — || aligncenter|N/A |- ! scope"row" align"center"|2015/16 | aligncenter| – || aligncenter|61 || aligncenter| — || aligncenter|N/A |} Individual starts (21) {| cellpadding"3" cellspacing"0" border"1" style"background:#FFFFFF; font-size:80%; line-height:13px; border:grey solid 1px; border-collapse:collapse;" |- style="background:#CCCCCC; text-align:center;" | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width65px| Season | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 1 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 2 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 3 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 4 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 5 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 6 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 7 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 8 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 9 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 10 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 11 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 12 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 13 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 14 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 15 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 16 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 17 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 18 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 19 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 20 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 21 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 22 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 23 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 24 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 25 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 26 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 27 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 28 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 29 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 30 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width15px| 31 | style"background:#DCDCDC;" width30px| Points |- |colspan=33| |- align="center" | rowspan2 width66px|2009/10 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! | rowspan2 width66px|0 |- align="center" |44 |46 | – |q |45 |42 |42 |q |48 |q |q | – | – | – | – | – |q | – | – |38 |53 |q |q ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! |- |colspan=33| |- align="center" | rowspan2 width66px|2012/13 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! | rowspan2 width66px|0 |- align="center" | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |q | – | – |q | – ! ! ! ! |- |colspan=33| |- align="center" | rowspan2 width66px|2013/14 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! | rowspan2 width66px|0 |- align="center" | – |q |q |q |q |q |q |q | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |45 | – | – |q |q |q | – | – ! ! ! |- |colspan=33| |- align="center" | rowspan2 width66px|2014/15 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! | rowspan2 width66px|4 |- align="center" |q |q | – | – |48 | – | – |45 |q |q |q |q |q | – |44 | – | – | – |42 |27 |7 |q | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |- |colspan=33| |- align="center" | rowspan2 width66px|2015/16 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! | rowspan2 width66px|0 |- align="center" | – | – | – | – | – |36 |q |38 |q |q |q | – |q | – | – |47 |50 |q |q |q |q |q | – | – | – |35 |54 |q | – | | |} References External links * * * * * Category:1988 births Category:Living people Category:American male ski jumpers Category:Olympic ski jumpers for the United States Category:Ski jumpers at the 2010 Winter Olympics Category:Ski jumpers at the 2014 Winter Olympics Category:People from Lebanon, New Hampshire Category:Sportspeople from Grafton County, New Hampshire Category:21st-century American sportsmen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Alexander_(ski_jumper)
2025-04-06T15:55:51.480093
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Mike Jackson (automotive)
| birth_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. | death_date | death_place | education St. Joseph’s University (1971) | occupation = | spouse = Alice | parents | nationality American }} Michael Jackson (also known as Mike Jackson) is the retired Chief Executive Officer (effective November 1, 2021) and former Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors (effective February 16, 2021) of AutoNation, Inc. Under his guidance the organization became the largest automotive retailer in the United States, using a more customer-focused, transparent and contemporary business model. Jackson began his career as a technician for an automotive dealership in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, just after finishing college. He served as the Managing Partner of Euro Motorcars of Bethesda, Maryland, an operator of 11 new vehicle franchises. He also served as chairman of the Mercedes-Benz National Dealer Council. Jackson then became President and CEO of Mercedes-Benz USA (from 1989 to 1999), responsible for the German automaker’s U.S. sales operation and 311 franchised dealerships. In January 2011, Jackson was listed #37 on the FORTUNE magazine list of Global Business persons of the Year. In May, Ernst & Young named him “Entrepreneur of the Year”. In the same year, Mike Jackson also received an honorary doctorate from the Livingstone College. In 2013 Mr. Jackson was appointed to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s Miami Branch Board of Directors and in 2018 appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank. Jackson was named a 2014 recipient of the Horatio Alger Award, presented to Americans who overcome adversity to achieve success; and was inducted during the award ceremony held in Washington, D.C. in April 2014. In 2015 Saint Joseph’s University honored Mike Jackson ’71, with the annual Haub School of Business (HSB) Hall of Fame Award during a dinner in his honor. In July 2018 Mr. Jackson was inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame. In 2018, Jackson was named Finance and Insurance All-Star in Automotive News, as well as number seven on Motor Trend's Power List. Jackson is married to Alice and serves on the board of trustees at Nova Southeastern UniversityReferences Category:1949 births Category:Living people Category:Businesspeople from Philadelphia Category:Saint Joseph's University alumni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Jackson_(automotive)
2025-04-06T15:55:51.489045
25891681
2010–11 United States network television schedule (daytime)
The 2010–11 daytime network television schedule for four of the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday daytime hours from September 2010 to August 2011. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, and any series canceled after the 2009–2010 season. Affiliates fill time periods not occupied by network programs with local or syndicated programming. PBS – which offers daytime programming through a children's program block, PBS Kids – is not included, as its member television stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary. Also not included are stations affiliated with Fox (as the network does not air a daytime network schedule or network news), MyNetworkTV (as the programming service also does not offer daytime programs of any kind), and Ion Television (as its schedule is composed mainly of syndicated reruns). Legend Light yellow indicates talk shows. * Green indicates soap operas. * Pink indicates game shows. * Gold indicates news programming. * White indicates local programming. * Gray indicates encore programming (e.g., reruns of prime-time programming). * Light teal indicates sporting events. * Light purple indicates children's programming. * Light blue indicates other programs not applicable to the above categorizations. }} * New series are highlighted in bold. Schedule * All times correspond to U.S. Eastern and Pacific Time scheduling (except for some live sports or events). Except where affiliates slot certain programs outside their network-dictated timeslots, subtract one hour for Central, Mountain, Alaska, and Hawaii–Aleutian times. * Local schedules may differ, as affiliates have the option to pre-empt or delay network programs. Such scheduling may be limited to preemptions caused by local or national breaking news or weather coverage (which may force stations to tape delay certain programs in overnight timeslots or defer them to a co-operated station or digital subchannel in their regular timeslot) and any major sports events scheduled to air in a weekday timeslot (mainly during major holidays). Stations may air shows at other times at their preference. Monday-Friday {| class=wikitable ! width"1.5%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan="2"|Network ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|noon ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|12:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:30 pm |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|ABC | bgcolor"gold" colspan"4"|Good Morning America | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"yellow" colspan"2"|The View | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"chartreuse" colspan"2"|All My Children | bgcolor"chartreuse" colspan"2"|One Life to Live | bgcolor"chartreuse" colspan"2"|General Hospital | bgcolor"white" colspan"5"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor="gold"|ABC World News with Diane Sawyer |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"2"|CBS ! Fall | bgcolor"gold" colspan"4" rowspan="2"|The Early Show | bgcolor"white" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"pink" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|''Let's Make a Deal | bgcolor"pink" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|The Price Is Right | bgcolor"white" rowspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"chartreuse" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|The Young and the Restless | bgcolor"chartreuse" rowspan"2"|The Bold and the Beautiful | bgcolor"yellow" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|The Talk | bgcolor"white" colspan"7" rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" rowspan1|CBS Evening News with Katie Couric |- ! Summer | bgcolor="gold"|CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|NBC | bgcolor"gold" colspan"8"|Today | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"chartreuse" colspan"2"|Days of Our Lives | bgcolor"white" colspan"9"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor="gold"|NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|CW | bgcolor"white" colspan"16"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"lightgray" colspan"2"|The Tyra Banks Show | bgcolor"lightgray" colspan"2"|The Tyra Banks Show | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming |} Notes: * (¤) As CBS was transitioning shows in the 2:00 p.m. ET timeslot at the time due to the cancellation of As the World Turns, The Price Is Right aired in that hour during the weeks of September 20 and October 4 and Let's Make a Deal filled the slot during the weeks of September 27 and October 11, prior to the premiere of The Talk. Both game shows ran first-run episodes for both time slots. * (‡) On September 19, 2011, The CW returned the 4:00 p.m. hour to its owned-and-operated stations and affiliates. Saturday {| classwikitable style"font-size:90%" ! width"1.5%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan="2"|Network ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|noon ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|12:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:30 pm |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"3"|ABC ! Fall | bgcolor"white" colspan"2" rowspan="3"|Local and/or<br>syndicated<br>programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2" rowspan="3"|Good Morning America | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|The Emperor's New School | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|The Replacements | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="2"|That's So Raven | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|Hannah Montana | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|The Suite Life of Zack and Cody | bgcolor"white" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated<br>programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12" |ESPN College Football on ABC |- ! Winter | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"4" rowspan="2"|ESPN on ABC and/or local programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"6" rowspan="2"|ESPN on ABC programming | bgcolor"gold" rowspan"2"|Local news | bgcolor"gold" rowspan"2"|ABC World News Saturday |- ! Spring | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated<br>programming | bgcolor="bf9fef"|The Emperor's New School | bgcolor="bf9fef"|The Replacements | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2" |That's So Raven | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Hannah Montana | bgcolor="bf9fef"|The Suite Life of Zack and Cody |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"3"|CBS ! Fall | bgcolor"gold" colspan"4" rowspan="3"|The Saturday Early Show | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|Busytown Mysteries | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|Doodlebops Rockin' Road Show | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|'''Sabrina's Secret Life''' | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"2"|Sabrina: The Animated Series | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"14"|SEC on CBS |- ! Winter | bgcolor"99ccff" rowspan"2"colspan="6"|CBS Sports and/or local programming | bgcolor"99ccff" rowspan"2"colspan="6"|CBS Sports programming | bgcolor"gold"rowspan"2"|Local news | bgcolor"gold"rowspan"2"|CBS Evening News |- ! Spring | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"|Horseland | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"|Busytown Mysteries | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Doodlebops Rockin' Road Show | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Trollz |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|NBC | bgcolor"gold" colspan"4"|Today | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated<br>programming | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Turbo Dogs | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Shelldon | bgcolor="bf9fef"|The Magic School Bus | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Babar | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Willa's Wild Life | bgcolor="bf9fef"|Pearlie | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"4"|NBC Sports and/or local programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"6"|NBC Sports programming | bgcolor="gold"|Local news | bgcolor="gold"|NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"1" rowspan=2|Fox ! Fall | bgcolor"white" rowspan2 colspan="6"|Local and/or<br>syndicated<br>programming | bgcolor"abbfff" rowspan2 colspan="4"|Weekend Marketplace | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"14"|Fox Sports and/or local programming |- ! April | bgcolor=99ccff|This Week In Baseball | bgcolor99ccff colspan13|Fox Sports and/or local programming |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"3"|The CW ! Fall | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="2"|Cubix: Robots for Everyone | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="3"|Sonic X | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"3"|Yu-Gi-Oh! | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="1"|Dragon Ball Z Kai | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="1"|Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"1"|Dinosaur King | bgcolor"white" colspan"18" rowspan="3"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming |- ! October | bgcolorbf9fef rowspan2|Sonic X | bgcolorbf9fef colspan2 rowspan=2|Dragon Ball Z Kai | bgcolorbf9fef colspan2 rowspan=1|Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's |- ! Spring | bgcolor"bf9fef" colspan"2"rowspan="1"|Magi-Nation | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"1"|Yu-Gi-Oh! | bgcolor"bf9fef" rowspan"1"|Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's |} Sunday {| class=wikitable ! width"1.5%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan="2"|Network ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|7:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|8:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|9:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|10:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:00 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|11:30 am ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|noon ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|12:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|1:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|2:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|3:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|4:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|5:30 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:00 pm ! width"4%" bgcolor"#C0C0C0"|6:30 pm |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|ABC | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2"|Good Morning America | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2"|This Week with Christiane Amanpour | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"14"|ESPN on ABC and/or local programming | bgcolor="gold"|Local news | bgcolor="gold"|ABC World News Sunday |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"2"|CBS ! Fall | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"3"rowspan="2"|CBS News Sunday Morning | bgcolor"gold" colspan"1"rowspan="2"|Face the Nation | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"2" rowspan="1"|NFL Today | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12" rowspan="1"|NFL on CBS |- ! Mid-winter | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12" rowspan="1"|CBS Sports and/or local programming | bgcolor"gold" rowspan"1"|Local news | bgcolor"gold" rowspan"1"|CBS Evening News |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" colspan"2"|NBC | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2"|Today | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2"|Meet the Press | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12""|NBC Sports and/or local programming | bgcolor="gold"|Local news | bgcolor="gold"|NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt |- ! bgcolor"#C0C0C0" rowspan"2"|Fox ! Fall | bgcolor"white" colspan"4" rowspan="2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"gold" colspan"2" rowspan="2"|Fox News Sunday | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"2"|Fox NFL Sunday | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12"|Fox NFL (and sometimes local programming) |- ! Mid-winter | bgcolor"white" colspan"4"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming | bgcolor"99ccff" colspan"12"|Fox Sports and/or local programming | bgcolor"white" colspan"2"|Local and/or<br>syndicated programming |} By network ABC Returning series: *ABC Kids **The Emperor's New School **Hannah Montana **The Replacements **The Suite Life of Zack and Cody **That's So Raven *ABC World News with Diane Sawyer *All My Children *General Hospital *Good Morning America *One Life to Live *This Week with Christiane Amanpour *The View Not returning from 2009–10: *ABC Kids **Mighty Morphin Power Rangers **Power Rangers RPM CBS Returning series: *The Bold and the Beautiful *CBS Sunday Morning *CBS Evening News with Katie Couric *CBS Sports **NFL on CBS **SEC on CBS **The NFL Today *Cookie Jar TV **Busytown Mysteries **Horseland **Sabrina: The Animated Series **Sabrina's Secret Life **Doodlebops Rockin' Road Show **Trollz *The Early Show *Face the Nation *Let's Make a Deal *The Price Is Right *The Young and the Restless New series: *The Talk Not returning from 2009–10: *As the World Turns *Cookie Jar TV **Noonbory and the Super Seven **Strawberry Shortcake Fox Returning series: * Fox News Sunday * Fox Sports ** Fox NFL ** Fox NFL Sunday ** This Week In Baseball * Weekend Marketplace NBC Returning series: *Days of Our Lives *Meet the Press *NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams *Qubo (shared with Ion Television) **Babar **Shelldon **The Magic School Bus (moved from Fox Kids) **Turbo Dogs **Willa's Wild Life *Today with Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira / Ann Curry **Today with Hoda and Kathie Lee New series: *Qubo (shared with Ion Television) **Pearlie Not returning from 2009–10: *Qubo (shared with Ion Television) **3-2-1 Penguins! **Jacob Two-Two **Jane and the Dragon **My Friend Rabbit **The Zula Patrol The CW Returning series: *Toonzai **Cubix: Robots for Everyone **Dinosaur King **Dragon Ball Z Kai **Magi-Nation **Sonic X **Yu-Gi-Oh! **Yu-Gi-Oh! 5Ds *The Tyra Banks Show Not returning from 2009–10: *Toonzai **Chaotic: Secrets of the Lost City **Huntik: Secrets & Seekers **RollBots **TMNT: Back to the Sewer **Kamen Rider: Dragon Knight Renewals and cancellations Cancellations/series endings ABC *All My Children—Canceled after 41 years on April 14, 2011; the series concluded its ABC run on September 23, 2011. *One Life to Live''—Canceled after 43 years on April 14, 2011; the series concluded its ABC run on January 13, 2012.<ref nameabc/>See also *2010–11 United States network television schedule (prime-time) *2010–11 United States network television schedule (late night) References Sources * * * Category:United States weekday network television schedules Category:2010 in American television Category:2011 in American television
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010–11_United_States_network_television_schedule_(daytime)
2025-04-06T15:55:51.528926
25891719
Samuel Kanaka Prasad
| birth_place = Telangana | nationality = Indian | religion = Christianity | residence = Secunderabad | parents = Smt. Esther and Sri Thalari Samuel | occupation = Priesthood | previous_post = Pastor | education | alma_mater | motto | signature | signature_alt | coat_of_arms | coat_of_arms_alt = <!---------- Sainthood ----------> | feast_day | venerated | saint_title | beatified_date | beatified_place | beatified_by | canonized_date | canonized_place | canonized_by | attributes | patronage | shrine | suppressed_date = <!---------- Other ----------> | module | other }} Bishop Emeritus T. S. Kanaka Prasad was the sixth successor of Frank Whittaker and seventh Bishop–in–Medak for the Diocese of Medak of the Church of South India (CSI) during the period 2009–2012. Ministerial formation During the bishopric of H. D. L. Abraham, Kanaka Prasad entered the priesthood and studied spirituality in ecclesiastical institutions in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Andhra Pradesh Ramayapatnam Kanaka Prasad first underwent a year of propadeutic studies at the STBC-Ramayapatnam Baptist Theological College in Ramayapatnam in Nellore district during the principalship of Louis F. Knoll where he was also taught by the Old Testament scholar, G. Solomon and the Church historian R. Joseph.RajahmundryAfter a year of study at Ramayapatnam, Kanaka Prasad moved to the Andhra Christian Theological College<ref name"Punnaiah"/> then located at Rajahmundry where he enrolled for spiritual studies during the principalship of W. D. Coleman and studied under notable faculty including G. Devasahayam, W. P. Peery, G. Solomon, M. Victor Paul, S. Joseph, Victor Premasagar, B. E. Devaraj, Eric J. Lott, Muriel Spurgeon Carder and Waldo Penner.<ref name"Punnaiah"/>TelanganaKanaka Prasad then studied at the Andhra Christian Theological College, which by then had moved to Hyderabad,<ref name"Punnaiah"/> during the period of the Old Testament scholars, Victor Premasagar, CSI and G. Babu Rao, CBCNC. Bishopric When B. P. Sugandhar retired from the bishopric, T. S. Kanaka Prasad contested the vacant bishopric and was elected as the eighth Bishop in Medak and consecrated on 17 August 2009 at the CSI-Medak Cathedral by then Moderator, The Most Reverend John Wilson Gladstone, the principal consecrator and The Right Reverend Christopher Asir, the co-consecrator in the presence of bishops including S. J. Theodore, Bishop - in - Karimnagar, P. J. Lawrence Bishop - in - Nandyal and others as well as clergy from the Diocese of Medak led by A. C. Solomon Raj, who succeeded Kanaka Prasad to the bishopric of Medak. References Further reading * * * * Category:Living people Category:Telugu people Category:Anglican bishops of Medak Category:People from Medak Category:Senate of Serampore College (University) alumni Category:1950 births Category:Church of South India clergy Category:Indian Christians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Kanaka_Prasad
2025-04-06T15:55:51.540208
25891726
Richard G. Mitchell
Richard G Mitchell is an English composer of music primarily for movies and television. Mitchell was born in Manchester, England and brought up in Preston, Lancashire. He attended Hutton Grammar School and later St Martins School of Art in the late 1970s where he graduated with a BA (Hons) in Fine Art. Was awarded an Ivor Novello Award and is best known for scoring the movies: To Kill a King, Grand Theft Parsons, A Good Woman and the 1996 BBC period TV series The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Original Scores Mitchell is an English composer best known for his writing and arranging period movie scores for choir and orchestra, though his compositions span a very wide range of styles varying from classical to more contemporary electronic genres such as drum and bass and trip hop. He also has a reputation for working in a diverse range of world music styles, such as the Tibetan score for Nick Gray's Escape from Tibet in contrast to a country and western pedal steel guitar-based score for Grand Theft Parsons, successful with film music critics at the 2004 Sundance Festival. His original score for To Kill a King in 2004 continued his successful relationship with director Mike Barker, for whom he scored A Good Woman in 2005, and later the Sea Wolf in 2008, followed by Moby Dick. His score for the film Trial by Fire won an Ivor Novello Award in 2000 and the BBC period drama The Tenant of Wildfell Hall won Best Score at the Royal Television Society Awards in 1998. In 2005, Mitchell composed the music for The Call of the Toad, written by Günter Grass and directed by Robert Gliński. The score was recorded with the Polish Symphony Orchestra, and nominated for a Polish Academy Award. Other commissions Aside from composing original scores for Film, Mitchell has scored music for Theatre Productions and Live Events which include the Opening Ceremony for Euro '96 at Wembley Stadium. He was commissioned to write the score for one-man theatre show Ousama with Nadim Sawalha directed by Corin Redgrave at the Brixton Shaw Theatre, and a jazz suite for the Francis Bacon Retrospective Exhibition at the Tate Britain in 2008. Credits Filmography 2024 Oddity 2020 Caveat 2011 Moby Dick 2006 Almost Heaven 2005 The Call of the Toad A Good Woman 2004 Tempesta 2003 Grand Theft Parsons 2002 To Kill a King 2000 Children of the Holocaust 1998 La Coupe de la Gloire (Official World Cup Movie) 1997 Basil 1992 The Bridge 1986 Born American 1983 Rush Hour 1980 Beastly Treatment Original Soundtrack Albums 2012 Moby Dick 2009 Sea Wolf 2006 A Good Woman 2003 To Kill a King Grand Theft Parsons 2001 The Glass 1998 Invasion: Earth 1996 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 1992 The Bridge Television Work 2009 Sea Wolf 2006 Perfect Day: The Millennium 2005 How to Have a Good Death Class of '76 The Stepfather 2002 Helen West 2001 The Glass True Originals ("Latika Rana") 2000 Brits Abroad Where There's Smoke 1999 Trial by Fire Trauma Team QED 1998 Get Real Invasion: Earth 1997 Coast to Coast Escape From Tibet Bridget Jones Diary Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction 1996 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (3 episodes) Euro 96 Opening Ceremony 1995 Harry SuperMax (First Tuesday) Stolen Brides (Network First) Scotland Yard 1994 Brat Pack 1990 Cluedo MasterChef 1989 War and Peace in the Nuclear Age 1988 Across the Lake Seoul Olympic Theme 1987 Worlds Beyond Truckers 1986 In The Footsteps Of Scott Awards Won Ivor Novello Award for "Trial By Fire" (2000) Nominated Polish Academy Award for "The Call of the Toad" (2005) Nominated Royal Television Society Award for "The Glass" (2001) Won Royal Television Society Award for "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall Won The New York Film and TV Festival best original score for "Rush Hour" (1985) Notes Category:1956 births Category:Alumni of Saint Martin's School of Art Category:English composers Category:English film score composers Category:English male composers Category:English male film score composers Category:English male television composers Category:English television composers Category:Ivor Novello Award winners Category:Living people Category:Musicians from Manchester
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_G._Mitchell
2025-04-06T15:55:51.559446
25891727
Peter Frenette
thumbnail Peter Frenette (born February 24, 1992) is an American ski jumper who has competed since 2009. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, he finished 11th in the team large hill, 32nd in the individual large hill, and 41st in the individual normal hill events. Though he has not competed in the World Cup, Frenette's best finish has been second in an HS 102 event in an FIS Cup event in Germany in January 2010. Frenette grew up in Saranac Lake, NY in the upstate New York Adirondacks. References 20 January 2010 US Ski Team announcement of the 2010 US Olympic ski jumping team. – accessed 21 January 2010. Category:1992 births Category:Living people Category:American male ski jumpers Category:Olympic ski jumpers for the United States Category:Ski jumpers at the 2010 Winter Olympics Category:Ski jumpers at the 2014 Winter Olympics Category:Sportspeople from Saranac Lake, New York Category:21st-century American sportsmen
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Frenette
2025-04-06T15:55:51.647249
25891732
Wesleyan Methodist Church (Great Britain)
The Wesleyan Methodist Church (also named the Wesleyan Methodist Connexion) was the majority Methodist movement in England following its split from the Church of England after the death of John Wesley and the appearance of parallel Methodist movements. The word Wesleyan in the title differentiated it from the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists (who were a majority of the Methodists in Wales) and from the Primitive Methodist movement, which separated from the Wesleyans in 1807. The Wesleyan Methodist Church followed John and Charles Wesley in holding to an Arminian theology, in contrast to the Calvinism held by George Whitefield, by Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon (founder of the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion), and by Howell Harris and Daniel Rowland, the pioneers of Welsh Methodism. Its Conference was also the legal successor to John Wesley as holder of the property of the original Methodist societies.Name and originsThe name "Wesleyan" emerged as early as 1740 to distinguish John Wesley's followers from other Methodists, such as "Whitefieldites" and the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion. But it did not come into more general and formal use until early in the 19th century, when it served to differentiate the "Original Connexion" from its offshoots and, in Wales, from Calvinistic Methodism. Broadly, the term Wesleyan (in the sense of "deriving from the Wesleys") has been used to describe Methodist theology held by almost all Methodist groups in England and America. History Although it was not his intention to establish a new Christian denomination, John Wesley's clandestine ordinations in 1784 had made separation from the established Church of England virtually inevitable. Later in the same year, Wesley pronounced the first official Methodist Conference of 100 members, who were to govern the society of the Methodist movement after his death. In 1787 Wesley, under legal advice, decided to license his chapels and itinerant preachers under the Toleration Act 1689, albeit "not as dissenters but simply 'preachers of the gospel. Wesley died in 1791. The estrangement between the Church of England and the Wesleyan Methodists was entrenched by the decision of the Methodist Conference of 1795 to permit the administration of the Lord's Supper in any chapel where both a majority of the trustees and a majority of the stewards and leaders allowed it. This permission was extended to the administration of baptism, burial and timing of chapel services, bringing Methodist chapels into competition with the local parish church. Consequently, known Methodists were often excluded from the Church of England, accelerating the trend for Methodism to become entirely separate from the established church. For half a century after Wesley's death, the Methodist movement was characterised by a series of divisions, normally on matters of church government (e.g. Methodist New Connexion) and separate revivals (e.g. Primitive Methodism in Staffordshire, 1811, and the Bible Christian Church in south-west England, 1815). The original movement became known as the "Wesleyan Methodist Connexion" to distinguish itself from these groups. During the Napoleonic era, the Wesleyan Methodist hierarchy was eager to display loyalty to a government wary of radicalism, leading to a politically conservative stance among both the leadership and many members, in contrast to other Methodist groups. In 1898, Robert Perks, MP for Louth, proposed the creation of the Wesleyan Methodist Twentieth Century Fund (also known as the 'One Million Guinea Fund') which aimed to raise one million guineas (£1.1s. or £1.05) from one million Methodists to build a Central London church to build a world centre of Wesleyan Methodism and to expand the mission of the Wesleyan Church at home and overseas. On 8 November 1898, the fund was officially launched at Wesley's Chapel in City Road, London. The fund had raised £1,073,682 by the time it closed in 1909, part of which was used to purchase the former Royal Aquarium site for the construction of the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster, and to support construction and extension of other Wesleyan Methodist churches and Sunday schools around the UK and overseas. Unification In 1932, the Wesleyan Methodist Church in England had 447,122 members, against a combined total of 338,568 from the Primitive Methodist and United Methodist Churches. That same year, the "Methodist Union" saw the Wesleyan Methodists reunite with these groups. proposed in 1843 that 700 new Methodist day-schools be established within seven years. Though a steady increase was achieved, that ambitious target could not be reached, in part limited by the number of suitably qualified teachers, mostly coming from the institution founded in Glasgow by David Stow. The outcome of the Wesleyan Education Report for 1844 was that planning began for permanent Wesleyan teacher-training college, resulting in the foundation of Westminster Training College in Horseferry Road, Westminster in 1851, with the Rev. Scott as its first principal.Gallery <gallery> File:Godshill Methodist Church, High Street, Godshill (May 2016) (2).JPG|A typical smaller Methodist chapel in Godshill, Isle of Wight. Built in 1838 as a Wesleyan chapel; now Grade II-listed. File:Hinde Street Methodist Church - geograph.org.uk - 1203729.jpg|Hinde Street Methodist Church in London, home of the West London Mission. Built 1807-10 and rebuilt in the 1880s; now Grade II-listed. File:AylesburyMethodistChurch.jpg|Aylesbury Methodist Church. Built in 1893 as a Wesleyan church. File:Tomb of John Wesley (29944306907).jpg|Tomb of John Wesley at the City Road Wesleyan Methodist chapel </gallery> See also *List of presidents of the Methodist Conference *English Wesleyan Mission (Wesleyan Mission Society) *Manchester and Salford Wesleyan Methodist Mission *Wesleyan theology § Background *The Sunday Service of the Methodists Notes References * This has a detailed history of the Church's early years. * Turner, John Munsey (2002). John Wesley: The Evangelical Revival and the Rise of Methodism in England. Epworth Press. Category:Former Methodist denominations Category:Methodism in the United Kingdom Category:Methodist denominations established in the 18th century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wesleyan_Methodist_Church_(Great_Britain)
2025-04-06T15:55:51.663574
25891747
Teledyne CAE J402
The Teledyne CAE J402 is an American small turbojet engine. Several variants have been developed to power unmanned air vehicles such as missiles and target drones. Developed in the 1970s for the Harpoon anti-ship missile, the J402 was the first jet engine to be designed as a "wooden round", meaning that the engine had to be able to sit for long periods without maintenance or inspection and work right away. Development and design The J402 engine was designed for the Harpoon missile from the beginning. Its size and weight were dictated by the already-planned missile (just over 12 inches (30 cm) in diameter, about 100 lb (45 kg) in weight). The engine also had to be designed to be inexpensive; the military wanted to produce and store large quantities of the missile. To meet these requirements, Teledyne aerodynamically scaled their J69-T-406 turbojet to just 32% air capacity. This brought thrust and size down to the desired levels. The J402-CA-400, the original Harpoon variant, was qualified in 1974 and proved to be extremely reliable, failing only twice in 131 flights through mid 1980. The J402-powered Harpoon had an excellent service record, including sinking two Libyan warships during the 1986 Gulf of Sidra incident. Through 1988, the oldest J402 engine fired in a Harpoon was over eleven years old, exceeding the original five year "wooden round" requirement. Soon after development of the -400 variant for the Harpoon began, Teledyne began work on a new variant, the J402-CA-700 for the new MQM-107 Streaker aerial target drone. These target drones were not "one-time-use" vehicles like the Harpoon missiles were, so the lifetime of the engine had to be extended from one hour to 15 hours. To accomplish this, the turbine temperature was reduced, as well as the rotational speeds. A new starter system was included to give the engine the ability to restart. The result was an engine that was slightly less powerful, at 640 lbf (2.8 kN) versus the -400's 660 lbf (2.9 kN), but had the required service life. An additional variant, the J402-CA-702, was developed internally by the company. This variant added an additional axial compressor stage (bringing the total to two axial stages), which increased the engine length by only 4 in (10 cm), yet increased the thrust to 970 lbf (4.3 kN). The engine was later selected to power the MQM-107D, an improved version of the target drone. The addition of additional compressor stage increased the pressure ratio and overall airflow through the engine, and necessitated the development of a new turbine section. Teledyne designed and tested the new two stage axial compressor early in the J402's life (mid 1970s), but did not work on the new turbine (and subsequently the -702 variant of the engine) until nearly a decade later in the mid-1980s. The resulting engine was 45% more power than the -400/-700 variants, yet also had a 24% lower thrust specific fuel consumption (SFC). The most recent variant of the J402 is the J402-CA-100, developed for the AGM-158 JASSM cruise missile. This derivative, like the -700, is based on the original -400 variant. The primary changes are an aerodynamically refined axial compressor and turbine section, resulting in a more fuel efficient engine at the same thrust levels as the -400. Variants J402-CA-100 Variant of the engine used in the AGM-158 JASSM. J402-CA-400 Baseline model. Designed for the Harpoon anti-ship missile. Also used in the AGM-84E Standoff Land Attack Missile and AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER. J402-CA-700 First variant developed for target drone use (MQM-107 Streaker). Slightly de-rated version of the -400 variant to improve service life. J402-CA-702 More powerful variant. Include additional axial compressor stage. Used in the D variant of the MQM-107 Streaker. Applications AGM-84E Standoff Land Attack Missile AGM-84H/K SLAM-ER AGM-158 JASSM Harpoon MQM-107 Streaker Specifications (J402-CA-400) See also References Notes Bibliography Category:1970s turbojet engines J402 Category:Centrifugal-flow turbojet engines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teledyne_CAE_J402
2025-04-06T15:55:51.680043
25891791
Jabez A. Bostwick
| birth_place = Delhi, New York, U.S. | death_date = | death_place = Mamaroneck, New York, U.S. | resting_place = Woodlawn Cemetery | education | known_for Co-founder of Standard Oil | party | spouse Helen Celia Ford | children = 3 | relations = Joe Carstairs (granddaughter) }} Jabez Abel Bostwick (September 23, 1830 – August 16, 1892) was an American businessman who was a founding partner of Standard Oil. Early life Bostwick was born in Delhi, New York on September 23, 1830. He was a son of Abel Bostwick (1798–1861) and Sally (née Fitch) Bostwick (1797–1869). While still a boy, his family moved to a farm in Ohio. As a young man, Jabez Bostwick first worked in a hardware store then opened his own. Career He next ventured into the cotton brokerage business in Cincinnati but soon moved to New York City where he became involved in the production side of the oil business through his firm, Tilford & Bostwick established in 1866. He bought out Tilford and in 1878 went into successful partnership with Henry Flagler and the Rockefeller brothers, John and William. Jabez Bostwick served as the Secretary-Treasurer of the Standard Oil Trust. Jabez Bostwick was also a major shareholder and President of the New York and New England Railroad, a substantial shareholder in the Housatonic Railroad, a member of the New York Cotton Exchange, and who sat on numerous other corporate boards. In spite of the enormous wealth he obtained, Bostwick was known as a modest man of exemplary character who was a devout member of the Baptist Church. He donated money to his church and to educational institutions such as Wake Forest College in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Richmond College in Richmond, Virginia. Personal life Bostwick was married to Helen Celia Ford (1848–1920). Helen was the daughter of Smith Reed Ford and Frances Lee (née Fox) Ford. Together, they were the parents of: * Nellie Ford Bostwick (1868–1906), who married Francis Lee Morrell (1863–1893) in 1887. After his death, she remarried to Hamilton Wilkes Cary (1862–1917) in 1895. * Frances Evelyn "Fannie" Bostwick (1872–1921), who married Capt. Albert J. Carstairs (1862–1927) in 1895. They divorced and she married Francis Francis (1853–1928), son of English writer Francis Francis, in 1903. They also divorced and she married Count Roger Marie Felix Symon de Perigny (1875–1945) in 1915. They also divorced and she married Dr. Serge Abrahamovitch Voronoff (1866–1951) in 1919. During the fire he tried to save his horses and carriages. As he and the stable hands pushed a coach from the carriage house he got overrun by a Private Coach weighing 2000/3000 lbs. His widow, Helen C. Bostwick, upon her death on April 27, 1920 left an estate per public record that was valued at $29,264,181.00, including nearly $20 million of Standard Oil stock. Descendants Through his daughter Fannie, he was the grandfather of Marion Barbara "Joe" Carstairs (1900–1993), a power boat racer known for her speed and her eccentric lifestyle, and Francis Francis (1906–1982), a pilot. Through his son Albert, he was the grandfather of five grandchildren, including: Dorothy Stokes Bostwick (1899–2001), a philanthropist and the first woman to hold a helicopter pilot's license; Albert C. Bostwick Jr. (1901–1980), a thoroughbred racehorse owner and breeder whose horse Mate won the 1931 Preakness Stakes; Lillian Bostwick Phipps (1906–1987), an owner of Thoroughbred steeplechase racehorses who won the American Grand National eight times and who married Ogden Phipps; Dunbar Wright Bostwick (1908–2006), the chairman of the Aviation Instrument Manufacturing Corp. who was a standardbred horse breeder; and George Herbert "Pete" Bostwick (1909–1982), a Hall of Fame polo player, U.S. Racing Hall of Fame steeplechase jockey and horse trainer. See also *Bostwick family References External links * Category:1830 births Category:1892 deaths Category:Deaths from fire in the United States Category:Accidental deaths in New York (state) Category:Burials at Woodlawn Cemetery (Bronx, New York) Category:American businesspeople in the oil industry Category:Philanthropists from New York (state) Category:Founders of the petroleum industry Category:American railway entrepreneurs Category:People from Delhi, New York Category:19th-century American businesspeople Category:Bostwick family Category:Baptists from New York (state)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jabez_A._Bostwick
2025-04-06T15:55:51.722617
25891801
Skal Vi Lege Doktor?
}} [http://gaffa.dk/anmeldelse/15245 link] }} Skal vi Lege Doktor? (Danish for "Shall we Play Doctor?") is the Danish Heavy metal band Red Warszawa's second studio album. The album is under titled "Greatest Hits 1986–1997 Volume 2". Track listing # "Skal Vi Lege Doktor" <small>(Shall we Play Doctor) </small> # "Slå Ihjel" <small>(Kill)</small> # "Den Sorte Garderobe" <small>(The Black Wardrobe)</small> # "Satanisk Kommunisme" <small>(Satanic Communism)</small> # "Fjæsing" <small>(Weever)</small> # "MC Nymands Rap" # "Sindsyg af Natur" <small>(Insane by Nature)</small> # "Børnenes Domstol" <small>(The Children's Court)</small> # "Strandvasker" <small>(Beach Washer)</small> # "Onnanitta" # "Noas Ark" # "Ulrikkensborg Plads" # "Lumrefismanden" <small>(The Sultryfartman)</small> # "Nord for Nordkap" <small>(North of North Cape)</small> # "Julemandens Selvmordsbrev" <small>(The Santa Claus' Suicide Letter)</small> # "Instant Drunk" Cover * [http://www.rw.dk/svld.jpg The album cover] Personnel "Lækre" Jens Mondrup – Vocals <br /> "Heavy" Henning Nymand – Guitar<br /> "Tonser" Henrik – Bass<br /> Lars Gerrild – Drums<br /> Bo Lund, Michael Krogh – Producer References Sources * |access-date=2 November 2024}} * Category:1998 albums Category:Red Warszawa albums
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skal_Vi_Lege_Doktor?
2025-04-06T15:55:51.746286
25891809
Donald Friske
|birth_place = Tomahawk, Wisconsin, U.S. |children = 3 |branch = United States Army |serviceyears = 1979–1985 }} Donald Friske (born November 9, 1961) is an American politician and businessman who served as a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from 2001 to 2011. Early life and education Born in Tomahawk, Wisconsin, Friske graduated from the Tomahawk High School and served in the United States Army from 1979 to 1985. Career Friske served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from January 3, 2001, through January 2, 2011. In March 2010, Friske announced his retirement from the State Assembly, and was succeeded by Tom Tiffany. Friske now operates Carquest AutoParts franchises in Merrill and Tomahawk, Wisconsin. He had previously worked as a deputy sheriff. Friske also served as Assistant Deputy Secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. Personal life He lives in Merrill, Wisconsin. Friske is married and has three children.Notes Category:People from Tomahawk, Wisconsin Category:Military personnel from Wisconsin Category:Businesspeople from Wisconsin Category:1961 births Category:Living people Category:People from Merrill, Wisconsin Category:Republican Party members of the Wisconsin State Assembly Category:21st-century members of the Wisconsin Legislature
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Friske
2025-04-06T15:55:51.749445
25891810
Stress–strength analysis
Stress–strength analysis is the analysis of the strength of the materials and the interference of the stresses placed on the materials, where "materials" is not necessarily the raw goods or parts, but can be an entire system. Stress-Strength Analysis is a tool used in reliability engineering. Environmental stresses have a distribution with a mean <math>\left(\mu_x\right)</math> and a standard deviation <math>\left(s_x\right)</math> and component strengths have a distribution with a mean <math>\left(\mu_y\right)</math> and a standard deviation <math>\left(s_y\right)</math>. The overlap of these distributions is the probability of failure <math>\left(Z\right)</math>. This overlap is also referred to stress-strength interference. Reliability If the distributions for both the stress and the strength both follow a Normal distribution, then the reliability (R) of a component can be determined by the following equation: <math>R = 1 - P(Z)</math>, where <math>Z = -\frac{\mu_y - \mu_x}{\sqrt{ s_x^2 + s_y^2}}</math> P(Z) can be determined from a Z table or a statistical software package. See also * First-order reliability method References External links * ReliaSoft}} * Category:Mechanical failure Category:Reliability engineering Category:Risk analysis Category:Systems engineering
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress–strength_analysis
2025-04-06T15:55:51.752972
25891822
10th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment (Union)
The 10th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Service The 10th Tennessee Cavalry was organized August 25, 1863, in Nashville, Tennessee, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment under the command of Lieutenant Colonel George Washington Bridges. The regiment was attached to District of North Central Kentucky, Department of the Ohio, to January 1864. Defenses of Nashville & Northwestern Railroad, Department of the Cumberland, to April 1864. 2nd Brigade, 4th Division, Cavalry Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to October 1864. 2nd Brigade, 4th Division, Cavalry Corps, Military Division Mississippi, to November 1864. 1st Brigade, 5th Division, Cavalry Corps, Military Division Mississippi, to February 1865. 1st Brigade, 7th Division, Cavalry Corps, Military Division Mississippi, to March 1865. Department of Mississippi to May 1865. District of Nashville, Tennessee, Department of the Cumberland, to August 1865. The 10th Tennessee Cavalry mustered out of service on August 1, 1865, at Nashville, Tennessee. Detailed service Duty in District of North Central Kentucky until January 1864. At Nashville and Pulaski, Tenn., and on line of the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad and Nashville & Northwestern Railroad until November 1864. Scouts in Hickman and Maury Counties May 2–12, 1864. Long's Mill, near Mulberry Creek, July 28. Clifton August 15–16. Skirmish at Rogersville August 21, 1864. Pursuit to Greenville August 21–23. Blue Springs August 23. Operations against Forrest's Raid in northern Alabama and middle Tennessee September 16-October 10. Richland Creek, near Pulaski, September 26. Pulaski September 26–27. Guard Tennessee River October. Florence October 30. On line of Shoal Creek November 5–11. Nashville Campaign November–December. On line of Shoal Creek November 16–20. Near Maysville and near New Market November 17. On front of Columbia November 24–27. Crossing of Duck River November 28. Franklin November 30. Battle of Nashville December 15–16. Pursuit of Hood to the Tennessee River December 17–28. Hollow Tree Gap and West Harpeth River December 17. Rutherford Creek December 19. Richland Creek December 24. Pulaski December 25–26. Hillsboro December 29. Leighton December 30. At Gravelly Springs, Ala., until February 1865. Moved to Vicksburg, Miss., thence to New Orleans, La., February 6-March 10. Ordered to Natchez, Miss., March, and duty there and at Rodney, Miss., until May 25. Ordered to Nashville, Tenn., May 25. Garrison duty at Johnsonville, Tenn., until August. Throughout its term of service, the 10th Tennessee Cavalry was poorly equipped and greatly under strength. Brigadier General Richard W. Johnson, Commanding 6th Division, at Fayetteville, Tennessee, reported on February 8, 1865: "The troops under my command have killed 18 guerrillas and captured 12, since my arrival here, not counting a number of men belonging to the 10th and 12th Tennessee Cavalry Regiments, (U.S.A.) who had deserted and become guerrillas of the worst type, who have been captured and forwarded to their regiments." Commanders Lieutenant Colonel George Washington Bridges - arrested for neglect of duty and relieved of command in November 1864 Lieutenant Colonel James T. Abernathy Major William P. Story - commanded during the battle of Nashville Casualties The regiment lost a total of 207 men during service; 1 officer and 24 enlisted men killed or mortally wounded, 1 officer and 181 enlisted men died of disease or accident. See also List of Tennessee Civil War units Tennessee in the Civil War References Dyer, Frederick H. A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion (Des Moines, IA: Dyer Pub. Co.), 1908. Wiefering, Edna. Tennessee Union Soldiers Vol. 6 (Cleveland, TN: Cleveland Public Library), 1996. Attribution External links Brief unit history, including officers' names, regimental strengths, etc. Category:Military units and formations established in 1863 Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1865 Category:Units and formations of the Union army from Tennessee Category:1865 disestablishments in Tennessee Category:1863 establishments in Tennessee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10th_Tennessee_Cavalry_Regiment_(Union)
2025-04-06T15:55:51.766213
25891850
Lil' Ed Williams
| birth_place = Chicago, Illinois, United States | death_date | origin | instrument = Guitar, vocals | genre = Chicago blues, electric blues, contemporary blues | occupation = Guitarist, singer, songwriter | years_active = Early 1980s–present | label = Alligator, Earwig Music | associated_acts = Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials | website = [http://www.liledblues.com/ LilEdBlues.com] }} '''Lil' Ed Williams''' (born April 8, 1955, Chicago, Illinois) is an American blues slide guitarist, singer and songwriter. With his backing band, the Blues Imperials, he has built up a loyal following. Guitar Player called the band "a snarling boogie-blues machine." A decade later, Alligator Records offered them the chance to record a track, "Young Thing", for a compilation album, New Bluebloods (1987). Producer and label owner Bruce Iglauer encouraged them to record additional material, and they cut a full album's worth of material at that session, released as Roughhousin' (1986). They then appeared at music festivals and toured widely. Their second album, Chicken, Gravy & Biscuits, was released in 1989, and their third, What You See Is What You Get, in 1992. At this point the group disbanded. Williams issued two solo albums, Keep On Walking, on which he was joined by Dave Weld, a former member of the Blues Imperials, and ''Who's Been Talking (1998), pairing Williams with Willie Kent. Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials have appeared multiple times at the Chicago Blues Festival and festivals and clubs around the world. In June 2008, Williams played on three tracks on Magic Slim & the Teardrops's album Midnight Blues. In June 2009, Williams was a guest on the radio quiz show ''Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!'', produced by Chicago Public Radio and National Public Radio. Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials have been nominated for eight Blues Music Awards as Band of the Year and have won that award twice. Lil’ Ed and the Blues Imperials are 2024 inductees of the Blues Foundation's Blues Hall of Fame. Discography Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials *Roughhousin' (1986), Alligator *Chicken, Gravy and Biscuits (1989), Alligator *What You See Is What You Get (1992), Alligator *Get Wild (1999), Alligator *Heads Up! (2002), Alligator *Rattleshake (2006), Alligator *Full Tilt (2008), Alligator *Jump Start (2012), Alligator *The Big Sound Of.... (2016), Alligator Solo *Keep On Walkin' (1996), Earwig Music *''Who's Been Talking'' (1998), Earwig Music See also *List of Chicago blues musicians References Category:1955 births Category:Living people Category:American blues guitarists Category:American male guitarists Category:American blues singers Category:American male singers Category:Songwriters from Illinois Category:Singers from Chicago Category:American slide guitarists Category:Blues musicians from Illinois Category:Guitarists from Chicago Category:20th-century American guitarists Category:20th-century American male musicians Category:Earwig Music artists Category:Alligator Records artists Category:American male songwriters
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil'_Ed_Williams
2025-04-06T15:55:51.782665
25891866
2000–01 Hibernian F.C. season
Season 2000–01 was Hibs' second season in the Scottish Premier League, after gaining promotion from the First Division in 1999. 2000–01 proved to be a successful season for Hibs, as they started the season extremely well and eventually finished third, qualifying for the 2001–02 UEFA Cup. The club also had a good Scottish Cup run, reaching the 2001 Scottish Cup Final, but were beaten 3–0 by treble winners Celtic at Hampden Park. Rangers manager Dick Advocaat dismissed Hibs' chances, but Hibs responded with a "scintillating display" as they won 6–2 in an Edinburgh derby days later, with Mixu Paatelainen scoring a hat-trick. Celtic eventually ran away with the league championship, but Hibs continued to challenge for second place until a losing run in March effectively ended their chances of finishing above Rangers. Their early season form, however, meant that Hibs finished well clear of the other SPL clubs in third place, qualifying for the following season's UEFA Cup competition. }} <br /> Fenwick <br /> O'Neil |team2 = Dundee |goals2 |stadium Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 12,379 |referee = McCurry }} |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Laursen |stadium = Rugby Park, Kilmarnock |attendance = 6,385 |referee = McCurry }} <br /> Zitelli <br /> Zitelli <br /> Latapy |team2 = St Mirren |goals2 = Gillies <br /> Gillies |stadium = Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 8,872 |referee = Toner }} |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Libbra |stadium = Celtic Park, Glasgow |attendance = 60,063 |referee = Dougal }} |team2 = Motherwell |goals2 = Strong |stadium = Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 9,500 |referee = Clark }} |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 |stadium Pittodrie Stadium, Aberdeen |attendance = 9,357 |referee = Young }} <br /> Hampshire |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Murray |stadium = East End Park, Dunfermline |attendance = 7,547 |referee = Underhill }} <br /> Lovenkrands |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 |stadium McDiarmid Park, Perth |attendance = 4,346 |referee = Dallas }} |team2 = Kilmarnock |goals2 = Cocard |stadium = Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 8,224 |referee = Clark }} <br /> Zitelli |stadium = Dens Park, Dundee |attendance = 6,659 |referee = Somers }} <br /> Libbra |team2 = Celtic |goals2 = McNamara <br /> McNamara <br /> Larsson <br /> Stubbs <br /> Moravcik |stadium = Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 8,728 |referee = Rowbotham }} <br /> de Boer <br /> de Boer <br /> Vidmar |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 |stadium Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow |attendance = 46,179 |referee = McDonald }} Final table Scottish League CupAs one of the SPL clubs who failed to qualify for European competition, Hibs entered at the second round stage of the competition, in which they defeated Stenhousemuir 2–1. Another 2–1 win, after extra time against Falkirk, sent Hibs through to a quarter-final against Kilmarnock. In that match, Hibs took an early lead through a Russell Latapy goal, but conceded two second half goals to lose 2–1 and exit the competition.Results |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = McManus <br /> Lehmann |stadium = Ochilview Park, Stenhousemuir |attendance = 1,545 |referee = Smith }} |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Latapy <br /> Latapy |stadium = Brockville Park, Falkirk |attendance = 4,292 |referee = Clark }} <br /> Dargo |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Latapy |stadium = Rugby Park, Kilmarnock |attendance = 7,819 |referee = Dallas }} Scottish Cup Results <br /> Jack <br /> Sauzee <br /> Paatelainen <br /> Lehmann <br /> Lehmann |team2 = Clyde |goals2 = McLaughlin |stadium = Easter Road, Edinburgh |attendance = 9,494 |referee = Freeland }} <br /> Graham |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 = Sauzee <br /> O'Neil <br /> McManus |stadium = Forthbank Stadium, Stirling |attendance = 3,700 |referee = Rowbotham }} |stadium = Rugby Park, Kilmarnock |attendance = 8,287 |referee = McCurry }} <br /> Zitelli <br /> O'Neil |team2 = Livingston |goals2 |stadium Hampden Park, Glasgow |attendance = 24,658 |referee = Young }} <br /> Larsson <br /> Larsson |team2 = Hibernian |goals2 |stadium Hampden Park, Glasgow |attendance = 51,824 |referee = Clark }} Transfers The only major transfer involving Hibs during the season was the sale of Kenny Miller, Hibs' top goalscorer in the previous season, to Rangers for £2M in total. A curious bit of transfer activity involved Didier Agathe, who Hibs signed as a free agent on a short-term contract in the 2000 close season. After a few good performances for Hibs, Agathe was offered the chance to double his salary by Celtic manager Martin O'Neill. This prompted Hibs to sell Agathe to Celtic for the relatively small fee of £50,000, given that the player only had weeks remaining on his contract, and could have signed for Celtic for no transfer fee when it expired. None of the players appeared in every match, but goalkeeper Nick Colgan played in all but one of the league matches and in all eight of the cup ties. Gary Smith and Mathias Jack also appeared in 37 league matches, as Hibs fielded a relatively settled side. |} See also *List of Hibernian F.C. seasons Notes External links *[https://web.archive.org/web/20080512011551/http://www.soccerbase.com/results2.sd?teamid=1227 Hibernian 2000/2001 results and fixtures], Soccerbase Category:Hibernian F.C. seasons Hibernian
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000–01_Hibernian_F.C._season
2025-04-06T15:55:51.856198
25891872
Kokopelli Winery
Kokopelli Winery & Bistro is a winery in Arizona, United States. It is one of the largest wineries in the state of Arizona. History The winery planted its first grapes in 1991 on land about 20 miles north of Willcox, Arizona, first harvested in 1994, and opened in 1995. The winery was founded by Don and Carol Michella, and Herve and Florent Lescombes. Herve Lescombes was a sixth generation winemaker, with a family history of making wine in France and North Africa. Kokopelli wines have won multiple awards in regional wine competitions. See also Arizona wine References External links Kokopelli Winery & Bistro Category:Wineries in Arizona
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kokopelli_Winery
2025-04-06T15:55:51.865599
25891892
Sanford J. Greenburger Associates
Sanford J. Greenburger Associates is a major New York literary agency. It represents a wide variety of world-renowned writers, including Franz Kafka, Jean-Paul Sartre, as well as contemporary best-selling authors, such as Dan Brown and Nelson Demille. The agency was founded in 1932 by Sanford J. Greenburger, an agent who pioneered book scouting, and was a privately owned company until 1971. Following Greenburger's death in 1971, the agency became a partnership owned by the affiliated agents. It currently has eleven partner agents, a foreign rights director, and support staff. Sanford J. Greenburger Associates is known as a prestige launch pad for literary agents and book editors, many of whom began their publishing careers as assistants or junior agents at the agency. Several former high-level editors and publishers have also joined the agency's staff. References Category:Companies based in New York (state) Category:American literary agencies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanford_J._Greenburger_Associates
2025-04-06T15:55:51.886512
25891905
Dobrava ob Krki
|elevation_footnotes |elevation_m 171 |elevation_ft |postal_code_type |postal_code = 8312 |area_code |blank_name |blank_info |blank1_name |blank1_info |website |footnotes = }} Dobrava ob Krki () is a small village on the right bank of the Krka River east of Podbočje in the Municipality of Krško in eastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Lower Sava Statistical Region. Name The name of the settlement was changed from Dobrava to Dobrava ob Krki in 1953. References External links *[https://www.geopedia.world/#T12_L362_F2473:536_x1723809.9025486966_y5758864.6281646285_s15_b2345 Dobrava ob Krki on Geopedia] Category:Populated places in the Urban Municipality of Krško
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobrava_ob_Krki
2025-04-06T15:55:51.892356
25891909
Freddie Santos
}} | birth_place = Quezon City, Philippines | death_date | death_place | occupation film director, television director, theater director, and concert director }} Freddie Santos (February 29, 1956 – December 17, 2020) was a Filipino film director, television director, theater director, and concert director. Theatre career Santos was born in Quezon City, Metro Manila. His early studies were at Lourdes School (Quezon City), Sacred Heart School. For his college education, he initially enrolled at the University of the Philippines at Cebu in Lahug, Cebu City and later transferred to the University of Southern Philippines (Cebu City). As a Rotex Scholar in Arvada West, Colorado, he was trained by David Helm in drama and by Rex Nelson in music. Upon his return to Manila, he was hired by advertising company Dentsu to join its copy department and within three months, he was promoted to copy chief at the age of eighteen. After two years he moved to working in theatre. He was mentored in voice by his uncle, the baritone Aurelio Santos Estanislao, who at that time headed the Voice Department at the College of Music, University of the Philippines. Santos joined Repertory Philippines as well as Teatro Pilipino, Musical Theater Philippines, and SRO Philippines. At twenty, he was awarded "Most Outstanding Youth" in Theatre. He was professionally involved, either as actor, coach, assistant director or director in more than a hundred stage plays and musicales. After five years with Repertory Philippines where he was also active in the research and publicity committees, he eventually moved to SRO Philippines where the focus was on dinner theater and where he found the freedom to further develop his other skills. Here, Santos wrote an original play adapted from the book Paper Moon and headlined by a very young Lea Salonga during its premiere run. He also nurtured his skill in stage lighting, make-up and choreography. A major highlight of his theater career came in the early 1980s where he toured the musical Walang Sugat (No Wound) through 10 cities in America as Technical Director, honing his craft as he worked the technical controls of places like the San Francisco Opera House, the Chicago Civic Opera House, and Avery Fisher Hall at the Lincoln Center, among others. All told, Freddie Santos has been involved with the performing arts for over forty years now, winning thrice the Aliw Award for Best Stage Director in the country, the first to win the award in both categories of Stage Musical ('87, '00) and Concert ('08). He has written and staged the musical plays First Name, Joseph the Dreamer, So David..., Widows, Orphans, and Wildebeests, Janno Gibbs, Ogie Alcasid, The Dawn, NeoColours, Introvoys, Raymond Lauchengco, Rico J. Puno, Imelda Papin, Rey Valera, Hajji Alejandro, groups like Tux, Men and Music, Boys Will Be Boys, newbies Morrisette Amon and Tanya Manalang, and opera singers Rachelle Gerodias and Byeong-in Park, as well as Grammy winners like Sandi Patti, First Call, David Pomeranz, and Broadway/West End artists Leo Valdez, Jose Llana, and Mig Ayesa. His directing career also gave him a chance to direct concerts at New York's Carnegie Hall and at Manhattan Town Hall. On top of that, he has also written a number of pop songs, several of which have gone platinum, like Yakapin Mo Ako (Embrace Me), Points of View, Could You Be Messiah, as well as Lea Salonga's wedding song, "Two Words." He has often worked as lyricist to award-winning composers, such as Louie Ocampo, Von de Guzman, Dan and Geri Gil, Marvin Querido, and Gerard Salonga." Other work He served as corporate events director for companies such as Sony (10 National Conventions, 2 World Conventions), Bayer (5 Bayer Young Environmental Envoy Programme Awards, 1st Bayer-UNDP Eco-Forum), Microsoft (Philippine Launch of XP, OS2000), Citibank (2 Citibank Excellence Awards, Voice of Citibank affairs), Philippine Airlines (5 Sales Awards Nights), Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company (80th Anniversary Launch, PLDT/Smart Foundation Launch), Smart Communications (Annual Smart Infinity Golf Classic, various company events), Kia (Launch of Kia Pride), Destiny Cable (Launch of Various Products), NXP (Philippine Launch), Concepcion Industries (Conventions/Product Launches in Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong, Manila), Young Presidents' Organization World Convention, SMX Convention Center (Launch), Philippine International Convention Center (15th Anniversary Celebration). He has directed social events including five state dinners/presentations for HRH Bolkiah of Brunei with guests of honor Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and Prince Charles of the UK, Grand Philippine Reception/Performance for former Prime Minister of the UK and Ireland Mr. Tony Blair, as well as the 80th Birth Anniversary and 50th Wedding Anniversary of Taipan Henry Sy. He has directed over two dozen reunion homecomings of the country's most prestigious schools like La Salle, St. Scholastica's, Assumption, and St. Therese's College, Manila. He has done quite a number of spoken word recordings, several of which serve as vocal guide for the permanent exhibits of the Ayala Museum in Makati, and the Aguinaldo Shrine in Kawit, Cavite. His recordings were aired as well in several countries on European Radio. Several of his sessions were aired on national television in two high-rating weekly musical shows and in a well-received podcast—one of the first Filipinos to air one. He was regularly viewed on GMA-7 as one of the judges in the high-rating Starstruck and Celebrity Duets. In television, Santos directed 'Yan Ang Bata (Channel 7, Catholic Mass Media Awards Winner), Musikatbp. (Channel 5, 13, CMMA Winner), The Manilyn Reynes Musical Show (Channel 13), The CBN Drama Special (USA, Sequence Director), Mikael (Indonesia, Sequence Director), Love Lea (Channel 4, Sequence Director), Triple Treat (Channel 2 Sequence Director), and 24 music videos for Channel 13. His latest achievement in video is the 10-part documentary on the life and works of International Spanish artist, Philippine Presidential Order of Merit Recipient, and Cross of Isabella Awardee -- Juvenal Sanso. Since the 1990s, he has also been a board member of House of Refuge, a shelter devoted to looking after abused and abandoned streetchildren. In exploring new techniques and formats, Santos wrote Sabel: Love and Passion, which combined poetry/ballet/pop singing/telenovela into a 1 ½-hour spectacle. Inspired by the Sabel paintings of National Artist Ben Cabrera, and given impetus by BBC broadcaster Rico Hizon, the show, with music composed by Louie Ocampo, won a Stage Crossover Award for its leading lady, Iza Calzado, from Broadway World Philippines, and a nomination for Best New Concept from the Aliw Awards. Because he is a Hall of Famer, Santos himself can no longer be nominated at future Aliw Awards. But for several straight years, he served as director of the annual anniversary staging of the Aliw Awards, headlining its Hall of Famers. Over the decades, unsurprisingly, Santos was part of the formation of several crucial coalitions, among them, the Organisasyon ng Pilipinong Mang-Aawit (Organization of Philippine Singers), Philstage (composed of various professional theater and dance companies), and Trumpets, Asia's first fully-professional gospel theatre group. In 2018, he shifted once more in his career path and joined Manila Hotel, one of Asia's oldest and most prestigious hotels, to become its Events Consultant primarily handling entertainment. In line with this, he took charge of Manila Hotel's CSR campaign involving the clean-up of Manila Bay, and for which Santos directed nearly 3 dozen short videos in 2019 featuring local art and showbiz personalities. With National Artist Ryan Cayabyab writing the music, Santos penned the lyrics of the theme song of the campaign: ''Manila Bay, Atin 'to! (This is ours!). In the same year, Santos wrote three dozen poems which he produced into a video book with the help of Strong Media Corporation of Enar and Sisa Karlsson. Entitled Random:Unsung,'' the poems were done in spoken word by Santos, Isabella Gonzales, and Jamie Wilson. In the mid-2010s, he was granted his own star in the Eastwood Walk of Fame, and in 2020, he was unanimously voted to be given the Natatanging Buhay (Distinguished Life) Award by Philstage. Death Santos died on December 17, 2020, at age 64. He also had diabetes.References Category:1956 births Category:2020 deaths Category:Filipino film directors Category:Filipino television directors Category:Male actors from Cebu Category:Singers from Cebu City
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freddie_Santos
2025-04-06T15:55:51.900237
25891924
B. G. Prasada Rao
| title = The Right Reverend | image | image_size | alt | caption | church = Church of South India (A Uniting church comprising Wesleyan Methodist, Congregational, Calvinist, Presbyterian and Anglican missionary societies – ABCFM, Dutch Reformed Church, SPG, WMMS, LMS, Basel Mission, CMS, and the Church of England) | archdiocese | province | metropolis | diocese Medak | see | elected <!-- or | appointed = --> | term 1976–1981 1916–1998) was the third successor of Frank Whittaker as Bishop in Medak.StudiesPrasada Rao studied theology at the United Theological College, along with Joshua Russell Chandran and Stanley Jedidiah Samartha, and again between 1953 and 1956 when he undertook an M.Th. A. B. Masilamani retired as the Auxiliary Secretary of the Bible Society of India Andhra Pradesh Auxiliary, Prasada Rao was appointed by rural Pastor, A. E. Inbanathan, the then General Secretary of the Bible Society of India. Then Bishop - in - Medak, H. D. L. Abraham loaned the services of Prasada Rao to the Bible Society of India. It was during Prasada Rao's tenure at the Bible Society of India that Common Language Translation of the Telugu Bible (Old Testament) was undertaken by Suppogu Israel and G. Babu Rao. Incidentally, G. Babu Rao later became the Auxiliary Secretary between 1998 and 2001. In 1975, H. D. L. Abraham retired from the Bishopric of Medak on reaching superannuation. B. G. Prasada Rao also contested the vacant Bishopric and was declared elected by the then Moderator of the Synod of the Church of South India, N. D. Ananda Rao Samuel. Prasada Rao was principally consecrated in 1976 by N. D. Ananda Rao Samuel, then Moderator. In 1981, Prasada Rao retired from the Bishopric on reaching superannuation and became Coordinator and Director for the Haggai Institute of World Evangelism. References ;Notes ;Further reading * * * Category:Anglican bishops of Medak Category:20th-century Anglican bishops in India Category:Indian Christian theologians Category:Senate of Serampore College (University) alumni Category:1916 births Category:1998 deaths Category:20th-century translators Category:Anglican biblical scholars Category:Indian biblical scholars Category:Church of South India clergy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._G._Prasada_Rao
2025-04-06T15:55:51.910836
25891928
Rocco Nacino
| birth_place = Baguio, Philippines | height = 5 ft 7 in | citizenship | education | alma_mater = Mapúa University<br />(formerly Mapúa Institute of Technology) | occupation = Actor, model | years_active = 2005–present | agent = GMA Artist Center (2009–present) | spouse = | children = 1 | awards = StarStruck V – 2nd Prince<br />9th Golden Screen Awards for Breakthrough Performance by an Actor<br />28th PMPC Star Awards for Movies – New Movie Actor }} Enrico Raphael Quiogue Nacino (born March 21, 1987), known professionally as Rocco Nacino (), is a Filipino actor. He won the title of Second Prince in the fifth season of StarStruck. He is an exclusive artist under GMA Artist Center. Early and personal life Nacino was born in Baguio and was raised in Singapore and Laguna, his father's hometown. He studied Nursery up to Primary 6 in Singapore, and also learned to speak Mandarin during his grade school days. During his first year of college at Mapua Makati, he participated in the Mister and Miss Cardinals and won as Mister Cardinals 2005. This opened new opportunities for him to appear on TV commercials and print media. Among his projects were endorsements for Vaseline, Skyflakes, Goya, Jollibee, Chowking, Smart, Pepsi and STI. His sports are jiujitsu, muay thai, mixed martial arts, boxing, arnis and basketball. He also trains wing chun regularly. He also plays drums and a little of guitar. He is a nephew of the late Manuel Quiogue, former president and COO of GMA Marketing and Productions, Inc. Nacino proposed to Melissa Gohing on November 20, 2020, in Antipolo City, and they married on January 21, 2021, aboard a naval ship.CareerNacino joined the Myx VJ Search in 2007 but failed to win. He then joined Star Struck V and won as the 2nd Prince. His biggest break on television was when he bagged a role in Sine Novela Presents: Gumapang Ka sa Lusak, opposite Jennylyn Mercado and Dennis Trillo. This was followed by another teleserye at GMA Network’s Dramarama sa Hapon block, Koreana, with Kris Bernal as his love interest. His performance in Koreana gave him his first acting nomination from the Entertainment Press Society (Enpres) as Finalist for Outstanding Performance by an Actor for the Golden TV Awards in 2011. With the large viewership and high ratings garnered by Koreana, Nacino was given a more challenging project in the first-ever dance serye Time of My Life, with Kris Bernal and Mark Herras. He was part of the weekly fantasy sitcom, Kaya ng Powers, with Rhian Ramos, Sheena Halili, Elmo Magalona, Joey Marquez and Rufa Mae Quinto. He also did a cameo in the finale week of Amaya, where he played the role of Adult Banuk. He also top-billed a 5-episode weekly series, Love Bug presents: Mistaken Identity, where he was paired with Lovi Poe. Nacino's first indie film was an entry at the 2011 Cinemalaya Film Festival, Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa, with Paulo Avelino and Jean Garcia, where he showcased his acting capabilities and earned his first prestigious acting awards when he was chosen by the Philippine Movie Press Club as the "New Movie Actor of the Year" in the 28th PMPC Star Awards for Movies; and by the Entertainment Press Society (Enpres) as "Best Breakthrough Performance by an Actor" in the 9th Golden Screen Awards. Nacino also did cameo roles in the movies My Valentine Girls and My Kontrabida Girl. He also played the brother of Judy Ann Santos at the 37th Metro Manila Film Festival, My House Husband: Ikaw Na!, directed by Jose Javier Reyes. He portrayed the Philippines' national hero Jose Rizal in Howie Severino's multi-awarded documentary Pluma: Ang Dakilang Manunulat. The documentary was nominated as Best Documentary at the New York Film Festival. He then starred in The Good Daughter, opposite Kylie Padilla. He also played the title role, Lam-ang – an epic movie that was shot in Ilocos, with Rochelle Pangilinan as his leading lady. He also appears weekly in Party Pilipinas and Bubble Gang. His indie film, I Love You, Pare Ko, opposite to Rodjun Cruz, was released in 2012. On April 9, 2023, he became an honorary Naval Special Operations Command member after spending four years as a reservist with the unit.FilmographyTelevision{| class"wikitable sortable" |- ! Year !! Title !! Role !! Network |- | rowspan"2"| 2009–2010 || StarStruck V || Himself / Contestant / Second Prince || rowspan"10" | GMA Network |- | SOP Fully Charged || Himself / Performer |- | 2010 || Sine Novela: Gumapang Ka Sa Lusak || RJ Guatlo |- | 2010–2013 || Party Pilipinas || rowspan="2"| Himself / Performer |- | rowspan="2" | 2010 || Bubble Gang |- | Kaya ng Powers || Clinton Llib |- | 2010–2011 ||Koreana || Benjamin "Benjo" Bautista Jr. |- | 2010 || Puso ng Pasko: Artista Challenge || Challenger |- | rowspan="5" | 2011 || Maestra || Kiko |- | Maynila: Bestfriends & A Girl || Bogs |- | PLUMA: Rizal, Ang Dakilang Manunulat || Jose Rizal|| GMA News TV |- | Mistaken Identity || Sinag || rowspan="8"|GMA Network |- | Time of My Life || Jason |- | rowspan="3" | 2012 || Amaya || Adult Banuk |- | The Good Daughter || Darwin Alejandro |- | Makapiling Kang Muli || Ferdinand |- | 2012–2013 || ''Yesterday's Bride || Justin Ramirez |- | 2012 || Aha! || Himself / Guest Host |- | rowspan="2" | 2013 || Unforgettable || Terrence Rosario |- | Bayan Ko|| Joseph Santiago || GMA News TV |- | 2013–2015 || Sunday All Stars || Himself / Performer || GMA Network |- | rowspan="2" | 2013 || Titser || Joseph Santiago || GMA News TV |- | Akin Pa Rin ang Bukas || Gerardo "Jerry" Sebastian || rowspan="2"|GMA Network |- | 2013–2014 || Out of Control || Himself / Co-host |- | 2013 || Wagas: The Jiggy and Marnie Manicad Love Story || Jiggy Manicad || GMA News TV |- | 2014 || Magpakailanman: Ama Ina Anak || Marlon || rowspan="25" |GMA Network |- | 2014–2015 || Hiram na Alaala || Joseph Corpuz |- | rowspan="5" | 2015 || Ang Lihim ni Annasandra || Reneé |- | Eat Bulaga Lenten Special: Pangako ng Pag-ibig || Michael |- | Karelasyon || Eric |- | Magpakailanman: Alab ng Puso || Nicky DC. Nacino |- | Beautiful Strangers || Noel Ilagan |- | rowspan="2" | 2016 || Dear Uge: 2nd Mom ko si ma'am! || Miguel Sandoval |- | Dear Uge: Ang triplets ng Tres Marias || Adam / Elmer / Brian |- | 2016–2017 || Encantadia || Aquil |- | 2017 || Magpakailanman: Losing Jeffrey, Finding Jayson || Jayson Tomas / Jeffrey |- | 2017–2018 || Haplos || Gerald Cortez / John "Janjan" Montecines |- | 2017 || Alaala: A Martial Law Special || Jose "Pete" Lacaba |- | rowspan="2"| 2018 || Tadhana || Roger |- | Pamilya Roces || Hugo Javellana |- | rowspan"2"| 2020 || Descendants of the Sun || Diego Ramos |- | Imbestigador || Mike Enriquez |- | rowspan="2"| 2021 || Owe My Love|| Kenneth Paul |- | To Have & to Hold || Gavin Ramirez |- | 2022 || First Lady|| Moises Valentin |- | 2022–2023 || Maria Clara at Ibarra || Elias |- | 2023 || The Missing Husband || Antonino "Anton" Rosales / Lemuel |- | 2024 || Lilet Matias: Attorney-at-Law || Samson Guerrero |- | rowspan="3" | 2025 | Lolong: Bayani ng Bayan | Flavio Elustrisimo (antagonist) |- | Encantadia Chronicles: Sang'gre || Aquil |- | It's Showtime || Judge of Showtime Sexy Babe season 2 || Kapamilya Channel / A2Z / ALLTV / GMA Network |} Film {| class="wikitable sortable" ! Year !! Title !! Role !! Studio |- | rowspan="4"|2011 || My Valentine Girls || Marvin || GMA Films & Regal Entertainment |- | Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa|| Dennis || Cinemalaya |- | Tween Academy: Class of 2012|| Cameo || GMA Films |- | My House Husband: Ikaw Na!|| Erik || OctoArts Films & GMA Films |- | rowspan="2"|2012 || My Kontrabida Girl || || GMA Films |- | Madaling Araw Mahabang Gabi|| Roland || Panoramanila Pictures |- | rowspan="3"|2013 || I Luv U, Pare Ko|| Sam || Krix Film Productions |- | My Lady Boss || Henry Posadas Enrile || GMA Films & Regal Entertainment |- | Pedro Calungsod: Batang Martir || Pedro Calungsod || Wings Entertainment |- | 2014 || Hustisya || Atty. Gerald ||Likhang Silangan Entertainment |- | rowspan="2"|2015 || Balut Country || Jun || Sinag Maynila Film Festival |- | Flotsam || Tisoy || Banana Pancake Trail Productions |- | 2017 || Bar Boys || Torran Jose ||TropicFrills Film Productions & Wild Sound Studios |- | 2019 || Write About Love || Male Writer || TBA Studios & GMA Films |} Awards and nominations {| class="wikitable sortable" !Year !Award !Category !Nominated work !Result |- | 2010 | StarStruck V | Second Prince | StarStruck V | |- | 2011 | ENPRESS Golden Screen TV Awards | Outstanding Breakthrough Performance by an Actor | Koreana | |- |rowspan="5" | 2012 | 28th PMPC Star Awards for Movies | New Movie Actor | Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa | |- | 9th Golden Screen Awards | Breakthrough Performance by an Actor | Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa | |- | 43rd Box-Office Entertainment Awards | Most Promising Male Star of the Year | | |- | Yahoo! OMG Awards | Most Promising Actor of the Year | | |- | FMTM Awards | Daytime Prince | | |- | 2013 | 39th Metro Manila Film Festival | Best Festival Actor | Pedro Calungsod: Batang Martir | |- | 2014 | Golden Screen TV Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Single Drama/Telemovie Program | San Pedro Calungsod | |- | rowspan="2" | 2015 | 17th Gawad PASADO Awards | Pinakapasadong Katuwang na Aktor | rowspan="2" | Hustisya | |- | 63rd FAMAS Awards | Best Actor | |- | 2017 | 31st PMPC Star Awards for TV | German Moreno Power Tandem Award with (Sanya Lopez) | | |- | 2019 | 45th Metro Manila Film Festival | Best Festival Actor | Write About Love | |- | 2020 | RAWR Awards | Beshie Ng Taon | Descendants of the Sun | |} References External links * [http://www.igma.tv/profile/rocco-nacino Rocco Nacino] at iGMA.tv * Category:1987 births Category:Living people Category:Filipino Christians Category:Filipino evangelicals Category:Filipino male television actors Category:Filipino male models Category:Filipino video jockeys Category:Filipino people of Chinese descent Category:GMA Network (company) people Category:Tagalog actors Category:Actors from Baguio Category:People from Cainta Category:StarStruck (Philippine TV series) participants Category:Mapúa University alumni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocco_Nacino
2025-04-06T15:55:51.935421
25891934
Dol, Krško
|elevation_footnotes |elevation_m 231.2 |elevation_ft |postal_code_type |postal_code = 8312 |area_code |blank_name |blank_info |blank1_name |blank1_info |website |footnotes = }} Dol () is a small settlement in the hills south of Podbočje in the Municipality of Krško in eastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Lower Sava Statistical Region. References External links *[https://www.geopedia.world/#T12_L362_F2473:5802_x1722847.8217998496_y5756654.8761248235_s15_b2345 Dol on Geopedia] Category:Populated places in the Urban Municipality of Krško
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dol,_Krško
2025-04-06T15:55:51.954723
25891938
Tikkakoski secondary school
thumb|Tikkakoski secondary school Tikkakoski secondary school () is a school in Tikkakoski, Jyväskylä, Finland. The school has about 350 pupils. It was built in 1938 in Suojärvi, but it had to be disbanded the next year because of the Winter War. The school moved to Tikkakoski in 1944 where it remains. Category:Secondary schools in Finland Category:Jyväskylä Category:Buildings and structures in Central Finland
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tikkakoski_secondary_school
2025-04-06T15:55:51.959421
25891939
Book scouting
Book scouting is the process whereby a book in one language or market is brought to the attention of a publisher in another language or market. thumb|220px|alt=text|An open book. Information Book scouts are the individuals who carry out this process. Many book scouts in a particular market work on retainer for one or more publishers or literary agencies in another market. When a potentially interesting book in the book scout's market is published, he or she will make his or her clients in the other market aware of this literary property. There is no conflict of interest for the book scout in representing multiple publishers, so long as there is no overlap in the type of book being scouted. For instance, a book scout cannot represent two or more romance novel publishers, but is free to represent a business publisher and a science publisher for the same particular market. There are also book scouts for Hollywood, ferreting out books from the publishing industry and presenting them to Hollywood studios, producers, directors and stars. A classical book scout, or a literary scout, is a person who works with foreign publishers and helps them find the next bestseller to bring to their market. References External links Book Scouting Emily Williams, "Inside the Secret World of Literary Scouts", December 14, 2009. Emily Williams, "Inside the Secret World of Literary Scouts, Part II", December 21, 2009. "Inside the Secret World of Literary Scouts (Part III)", January 4, 2010. Jason Boog, "Literary Scout Confidential", GalleyCat, December 14, 2009. Rachel Deahl, "How to become a literary scout" , December 12, 2019. Molly Fischer, "Twist and Scout", observer.com, June 2, 2010. Category:Publishing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_scouting
2025-04-06T15:55:51.962868
25891944
Edward Blount, 2nd Baron Mountjoy
Edward Blount, 2nd Baron Mountjoy (1464 – 12 October 1475) was an English peer. Edward Blount was born in 1464 in London, the second son of Sir William Blount (c. 1442–1471) and Margaret de Echyngham. He inherited his title on the death of his grandfather Walter Blount, 1st Baron Mountjoy in 1474 after his father Sir William Blount had been killed in 1471 at the Battle of Barnet during the Wars of the Roses and his elder brother had died young in 1462. He was betrothed to Anne Cobham, the under-aged heiress daughter of Thomas Cobham, but the marriage was not consummated. On his death on 12 October 1475, the title passed to his uncle John Blount, 3rd Baron Mountjoy. His fiancée/widow, still only 9 years old, went on to marry Edward Burgh, 2nd Baron Burgh. References Sir Bernard Burke, A genealogical history of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited, and extinct peerages of the British empire, Harrison, 1866, p. 55 Surrey archaeological collections: relating to the history and antiquities of the county, Volume 2, published for the Surrey Archaeological Society by Lovell Reeve & Co., 1864, p. 155 Category:1464 births Category:1475 deaths Category:15th-century English people Category:Nobility from London Category:Barons Mountjoy (1465)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Blount,_2nd_Baron_Mountjoy
2025-04-06T15:55:51.973812
25891946
Adenochilus
and cheilos meaning "lip", Adenochilus nortonii <small>Fitzg.</small> has a restricted distribution in New South Wales, growing at altitudes of in the Blue Mountains, Barrington Tops and Point Lookout areas, often growing under Antarctic beech trees. See also * List of Orchidaceae genera References Category:Diurideae genera Category:Flora of New Zealand Category:Flora of New South Wales Category:Taxa named by Joseph Dalton Hooker
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adenochilus
2025-04-06T15:55:51.981323
25891952
Aglossorrhyncha
Aglossorrhyncha is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family Orchidaceae. It contains 13 currently recognized species, native to eastern Indonesia, New Guinea, and various islands in the Pacific Ocean. Aglossorrhyncha aurea Schltr. in K.M.Schumann & C.A.G.Lauterbach - New Guinea, Bismarcks, Solomons Aglossorrhyncha biflora J.J.Sm. - Maluku, New Guinea, Solomons, Fiji, Vanuatu Aglossorrhyncha bilobula Kores - Fiji Aglossorrhyncha fruticicola J.J.Sm. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha galanthiflora J.J.Sm. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha jabiensis J.J.Sm. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha lucida Schltr. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha lucida var. dischorensis Schltr. Aglossorrhyncha lucida var. lucida Aglossorrhyncha lucida var. wariana Schltr. Aglossorrhyncha micronesiaca Schltr. - Palau Aglossorrhyncha peculiaris J.J.Sm. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha serrulata Schltr. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha stenophylla Schltr. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha torricellensis Schltr. - New Guinea Aglossorrhyncha viridis Schltr. - New Guinea See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Arethuseae genera Category:Coelogyninae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aglossorrhyncha
2025-04-06T15:55:51.989944
25891966
Ancistrorhynchus
Ancistrorhynchus is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family Orchidaceae. It contains 16 species native to tropical Africa. Species Ancistrorhynchus akeassiae Pérez-Vera - Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Liberia Ancistrorhynchus brevifolius Finet - Congo-Brazzaville Ancistrorhynchus capitatus (Lindl.) Summerh. - Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo, Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Cameroon, Gulf of Guinea Islands, Uganda, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa) Ancistrorhynchus cephalotes (Rchb.f.) Summerh. - Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo Ancistrorhynchus clandestinus (Lindl.) Schltr. - Ivory Coast, Ghana, Rwanda, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Togo, Central African Republic, Gabon, Cameroon, Uganda, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa) Ancistrorhynchus crystalensis P.J.Cribb & Laan - Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Cameroon, Gulf of Guinea Islands Ancistrorhynchus laxiflorus Mansf. - Tanzania Ancistrorhynchus metteniae (Kraenzl.) Summerh. - Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Central African Republic, Gabon, Cameroon, Uganda, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa), Tanzania, Ethiopia, Gulf of Guinea Islands, Ancistrorhynchus ovatus Summerh. - Central African Republic, Gabon, Cameroon, Uganda, Congo-Brazzaville, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa) Ancistrorhynchus parviflorus Summerh. - Tanzania Ancistrorhynchus paysanii Senghas - Kenya Ancistrorhynchus recurvus Finet - Ghana, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, Togo, Cameroon, Uganda, Congo-Brazzaville, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa), Gulf of Guinea Islands Ancistrorhynchus schumannii (Kraenzl.) Summerh. - Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa) Ancistrorhynchus serratus Summerh - Bioko, Nigeria, Cameroon, Congo-Brazzaville Ancistrorhynchus straussii (Schltr.) Schltr. - Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa) Ancistrorhynchus tenuicaulis Summerh. - Cameroon, Gabon, Zaire (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Congo-Kinshasa), Equatorial Guinea, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Malawi See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Angraecinae Category:Orchids of Africa Category:Vandeae genera Category:Taxa named by Achille Eugène Finet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancistrorhynchus
2025-04-06T15:55:52.010907
25891970
Saulkrasti Jazz Festival
| years_active =1997–present | founders | attendance | capacity | website }} , who has participated several times]] Saulkrasti Jazz Festival is a jazz festival in Latvia. It is held annually in July in Saulkrasti. The weeklong festival consists of concerts and educational camps for young musicians. Competitions Baltic Drummers' League is an international competition for young drummers at the Saulkrasti Jazz Festival. It is organized with Riga Dome Choir School and Paiste. Competitors are divided in two groups: Juniors of 14- to 17-year-olds and the Seniors of 18- to 25-year-olds. Finals are judged by an international panel of judges. The program may not exceed 15 minutes. International panel of judges: Eric Moore (US), Aleksandr Murenko (Ukraine), Venko Poromanski (Bulgaria), Zaza Tsertsvadze (Georgia). Program: * Solo small drums (up to 3 minutes) * Solo percussion set (up to 4 minutes) * Playing on a phonogram or with an ensemble (up to 5 minutes) * Seniors only: Open solo (up to 3 minutes) References External links * Category:Saulkrasti Municipality Category:Music festivals in Latvia Category:Music festivals established in 1997 Category:Jazz festivals in Latvia Category:1997 establishments in Latvia Category:Summer events in Latvia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saulkrasti_Jazz_Festival
2025-04-06T15:55:52.013655
25891976
2010 AFC Cup group stage
The 2010 AFC Cup group stage matches took place between 23 February and 28 April 2010. The draw for the group stage was held on 7 December 2009 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Groups Group A <onlyinclude> Al-Karamah |team2SHA|name_SHA Shabab Al-Ordon |team3SAH|name_SAH Saham |team4AHL|name_AHL Al-Ahli |win_KAR4|draw_KAR2|loss_KAR0|gf_KAR12|ga_KAR=4 |win_SHA3|draw_SHA3|loss_SHA0|gf_SHA13|ga_SHA=5 |win_SAH1|draw_SAH2|loss_SAH3|gf_SAH5|ga_SAH=11 |win_AHL0|draw_AHL1|loss_AHL5|gf_AHL3|ga_AHL=13 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_AHL_KAR=0–1 |match_AHL_SAH=2–2 |match_AHL_SHA=0–1 |match_KAR_AHL=2–0 |match_KAR_SAH=2–0 |match_KAR_SHA=1–1 |match_SAH_AHL=1–0 |match_SAH_KAR=1–4 |match_SAH_SHA=0–0 |match_SHA_AHL=6–1 |match_SHA_KAR=2–2 |match_SHA_SAH=3–1 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2837 Report] |team2= Shabab Al-Ordon |goals1|goals2Fadi Lafi |stadium=Ali Muhesen Stadium, Sana'a |attendance=3,600 |referee=Banjar Al-Dosari (Qatar) }} |score=2–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2838 Report] |team2= Saham |goals1=Hassan Abdel Fattah <br />Aodi |goals2|stadiumKhaled bin Walid Stadium, Homs |attendance=9,500 |referee=Tayeb Hasan Shamsuzzaman (Bangladesh) }} ---- |score=2–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2835 Report] |team2= Al-Karamah |goals1=Shadi Abu Hash'hash <br />Saleh Nimer |goals2= Hassan Abdel Fattah <br />Abbas |stadium=King Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=2500 |referee=Pandiyan Palaniyandi (Singapore)}} |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2836 Report] |team2= Al-Ahli |goals1=Yaqoob |goals2|stadiumAl-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=500 |referee=Andre El Haddad (Lebanon)}} ---- |score=2–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2833 Report] |team2= Al-Ahli |goals1=Al Rashidi <br /> Al Shbli |goals2|stadiumKhaled bin Walid Stadium, Homs |attendance=10.000 |referee=Minoru Tōjō (Japan) }} |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2834 Report] |team2= Shabab Al-Ordon |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Al-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=1000 |referee=Çarymyrat Gurbanow (Turkmenistan)}} ---- |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2831 Report] |team2= Al-Karamah |goals1|goals2Al Taiar |stadium=Ali Muhesen Stadium, Sana'a |attendance=1,000 |referee=Dmitriy Mashentsev (Kyrgyzstan)}} |score=3–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2832 Report] |team2= Saham |goals1=Waseem Al-Bzour <br />Mustafa Shehdeh <br /> Mohammad Al-Zaabi |goals2=Salim |stadium=King Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=200 |referee=Alireza Faghani (Iran)}} ---- |score=6–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2829 Report] |team2= Al-Ahli |goals1=Griche <br/>Shadi Abu Hash'hash <br/>Fadi Lafi <br/>Ulrich Kapolongo |goals2=Hassab-Alla |stadium=King Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=1,000 |referee=Ng Chiu Kok (Hong Kong)}} |score=1–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2830 Report] |team2= Al-Karamah |goals1=Ahmed Al-Buraiki |goals2=Al Omaier <br />Hassan Abdel Fattah <br />Ibrahim |stadium=Al-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=500 |referee=Banjar Al-Dosari (Qatar)}} ---- |score=2–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2827 Report] |team2= Saham |goals1=Ebrahim <br />Ali |goals2=Yassine <br />Abdullah |stadium=Ali Muhesen Stadium, Sana'a |attendance=200 |referee=Ali Sabbagh (Lebanon) }} |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2828 Report] |team2= Shabab Al-Ordon |goals1=Al Taiar |goals2=Mohammad Khair |stadium=Khaled bin Walid Stadium, Homs |attendance=8,219 |referee=Võ Minh Trí (Vietnam) }} Group B <onlyinclude> Al-Kuwait |team2CHU|name_CHU Churchill Brothers |team3HIL|name_HIL Al-Hilal |win_KUW2|draw_KUW2|loss_KUW0|gf_KUW13|ga_KUW=5 |win_CHU2|draw_CHU1|loss_CHU1|gf_CHU6|ga_CHU=10 |win_HIL0|draw_HIL1|loss_HIL3|gf_HIL3|ga_HIL=7 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_HIL_KUW=0–2 |match_HIL_CHU=1–2 |match_KUW_HIL=2–2 |match_KUW_CHU=7–1 |match_CHU_HIL=1–0 |match_CHU_KUW=2–2 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=2–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2826 Report] |team2= Al-Hilal |goals1=Al-Kandari <br />Al Marzooqi |goals2=Basuhai <br />Al Selwi |stadium=Al Kuwait Sports Club Stadium, Kuwait City |attendance=2,000 |referee=Saeid Mozaffarizadeh (Iran) }} ---- |score=2–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2825 Report] |team2= Al-Kuwait |goals1=Okolie <br />Ogba |goals2=Osama <br />Abdullah |stadium=Fatorda Stadium, Margao |attendance=12,000 |referee=Vladislav Tseytlin (Uzbekistan)}} ---- |score=1–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2824 Report] |team2= Churchill Brothers |goals1=Basuhai |goals2=Okolie <br />Chimaokwu |stadium=Ali Mohsen Al-Muraisi Stadium, Sana'a |attendance=2,153 |referee=Banjar Al-Dosari (Qatar)}} ---- |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2823 Report] |team2= Al-Hilal |goals1=Chimaokwu |goals2|stadiumFatorda Stadium, Margao |attendance=12,000 |referee=Võ Minh Trí (Vietnam)}} ---- |score=0–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2822 Report] |team2= Al-Kuwait |goals1|goals2Ajab |stadium=Ali Mohsen Al-Muraisi Stadium, Sana'a |attendance=1,000 |referee=Andre El Haddad (Lebanon)}} ---- |score=7–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2821 Report] |team2= Churchill Brothers |goals1=Careca <br />Ajab <br />Rogerinho |goals2=Nascimento |stadium=Al Kuwait Sports Club Stadium, Kuwait City |attendance=950 |refereeRyuji Sato (Japan)}}Group C<onlyinclude> Kazma |team2NAS|name_NAS Nasaf Qarshi |team3JAI|name_JAI Al-Jaish |team4AHE|name_AHE Al-Ahed |win_KAZ4|draw_KAZ1|loss_KAZ1|gf_KAZ6|ga_KAZ=3 |win_NAS3|draw_NAS2|loss_NAS1|gf_NAS12|ga_NAS=4 |win_JAI2|draw_JAI2|loss_JAI2|gf_JAI10|ga_JAI=8 |win_AHE0|draw_AHE1|loss_AHE5|gf_AHE5|ga_AHE=18 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_AHE_JAI=1–1 |match_AHE_KAZ=1–2 |match_AHE_NAS=0–4 |match_JAI_AHE=6–3 |match_JAI_KAZ=0–1 |match_JAI_NAS=1–1 |match_KAZ_AHE=1–0 |match_KAZ_JAI=0–1 |match_KAZ_NAS=0–0 |match_NAS_AHE=4–0 |match_NAS_JAI=2–1 |match_NAS_KAZ=1–2 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2819 Report] |team2= Kazma |goals1|goals2Al Fahad |stadium=Abbasiyyin Stadium, Damascus |attendance=12,000 |referee=Çarymyrat Gurbanow (Turkmenistan) }} |score=0–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2820 Report] |team2= Nasaf Qarshi |goals1|goals2Krot <br />Shomurodov |stadium=Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=2,000 |referee=Nasser Darwish (Jordan) }} ---- |score=2–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2818 Report] |team2= Al-Jaish |goals1=Murzoev <br />Shomurodov |goals2=Al Hussain |stadium=Markaziy Stadium, Karshi |attendance=12,000 |referee=Rustam Kholov (Tajikistan) }} |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2817 Report] |team2= Al-Ahed |goals1=Al-Shammari |goals2|stadiumAl-Sadaqua Walsalam Stadium, Kuwait City |attendance=300 |referee=Mukhtar Al Yarimi (Yemen) }} ---- |score=1–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2816 Report] |team2= Kazma |goals1=Turayev |goals2=Al-Enezi <br />Naser |stadium=Markaziy Stadium, Karshi |attendance=16,000 |referee=Ebrahim Abdulnabi (Bahrain) }} |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2815 Report] |team2= Al-Jaish |goals1=El Ali |goals2=Sahiwni |stadium=Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=570 |referee=Yadollah Jahanbazi (Iran) }} ---- |score=6–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2813 Report] |team2= Al-Ahed |goals1=Al Haj <br />Hesso <br />Al Sayed <br />Al Hussain <br />Al Wakid <br />Bayazid |goals2=Maatouk <br />Alawieh |stadium=Abbasiyyin Stadium, Damascus |attendance=2,000 |referee=Tan Hai (China) }} |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2814 Report] |team2= Nasaf Qarshi |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Al-Sadaqua Walsalam Stadium, Kuwait City |attendance=1,000 |referee=Ng Chiu Kok (Hong Kong) }} ---- |score=4–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2812 Report] |team2= Al-Ahed |goals1=Karimov <br />Qodirov <br />Kadirkulov <br />Krot |goals2|stadiumMarkaziy Stadium, Karshi |attendance=12,726 |referee=Kakabaý Seýidow (Turkmenistan) }} |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2811 Report] |team2= Al-Jaish |goals1|goals2Chepita |stadium=Al-Sadaqua Walsalam Stadium, Kuwait City |attendance=500 |referee=Nasser Darwish (Jordan) }} ---- |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2809 Report] |team2= Nasaf Qarshi |goals1=Al Sayed |goals2=Filiposyan |stadium=Abbasiyyin Stadium, Damascus |attendance=8,000 |referee=Mukhtar Al Yarimi (Yemen) }} |score=1–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2810 Report] |team2= Kazma |goals1=Maatouk |goals2=Nasser |stadium=Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=215 |referee=Banjar Al-Dosari (Qatar) }} Group D <onlyinclude> Al-Qadsia |team2ITT|name_ITT Al-Ittihad |team3NEJ|name_NEJ Al-Nejmeh |team4EB|name_EB Kingfisher East Bengal |win_QAD4|draw_QAD2|loss_QAD0|gf_QAD14|ga_QAD=5 |win_ITT3|draw_ITT1|loss_ITT2|gf_ITT10|ga_ITT=8 |win_NEJ3|draw_NEJ1|loss_NEJ2|gf_NEJ12|ga_NEJ=8 |win_EB0|draw_EB0|loss_EB6|gf_EB5|ga_EB=20 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_ITT_NEJ=4–2 |match_ITT_QAD=0–0 |match_ITT_EB=2–1 |match_NEJ_ITT=1–0 |match_NEJ_QAD=1–3 |match_NEJ_EB=3–0 |match_QAD_ITT=3–0 |match_QAD_NEJ=1–1 |match_QAD_EB=4–1 |match_EB_ITT=1–4 |match_EB_NEJ=0–4 |match_EB_QAD=2–3 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2807 Report] |team2= Al-Nejmeh |goals1=Buhamad |goals2=Diop |stadium=Mohammed Al-Hamad Stadium, Hawally |attendance=4,500 |referee=Yadollah Jahanbazi (Iran)}} |score=1–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2808 Report] |team2= Al-Ittihad |goals1=Yakubu |goals2=Otobong <br />Al Agha <br />Al Salal |stadium=Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata |attendance=2,800 |referee=Võ Minh Trí (Vietnam)}} ---- |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2806 Report] |team2= Al-Qadsia |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Aleppo International Stadium, Aleppo |attendance=12,000 |referee=Kakabay Seydov (Turkmenistan)}} |score=3–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2805 Report] |team2= Kingfisher East Bengal |goals1=Diop <br />Atwi <br />Najjarin |goals2|stadiumCamille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=3,000 |referee=Mohd Nafeez Bin Abdul Wahab (Malaysia)}} ---- |score=2–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2803 Report] |team2= Al-Qadsia |goals1=Singh <br />Yakubu |goals2=Al-Mutwa <br />Al-Hussain |stadium=Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata |attendance=1,000 |referee=Saleem Ali (Maldives)}} |score=4–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2804 Report] |team2= Al-Nejmeh |goals1=Al Agha <br />Otobong <br />Fares |goals2=Diop |stadium=Aleppo International Stadium, Aleppo |attendance=15,000 |referee=Rustam Kholov (Tajikistan)}} ---- |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2802 Report] |team2= Al-Ittihad |goals1=Atwi |goals2|stadiumCamille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=3,250 |referee=Vladislav Tseytlin (Uzbekistan)}} |score=4–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2801 Report] |team2= Kingfisher East Bengal |goals1=Al-Magmed <br />Mashaan <br />Ajab <br />Al-Mutwa |goals2=Hossain |stadium=Mohammed Al-Hamad Stadium, Hawally |attendance=2,000 |referee=Fan Qi (China PR)}} ---- |score=2–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2800 Report] |team2= Kingfisher East Bengal |goals1=Kalasi <br />Rashid |goals2=Beokhokhei |stadium=Aleppo International Stadium, Aleppo |attendance=3,000 |referee=Yadollah Jahanbazi (Iran)}} |score=1–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2799 Report] |team2= Al-Qadsia |goals1=Moghrabi |goals2=Al-Hussain <br />Mashaan <br />Al-Mutwa |stadium=Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, Beirut |attendance=6,000 |referee=Ibrahim Mubarak (Oman)}} ---- |score=0–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2798 Report] |team2= Al-Nejmeh |goals1|goals2Atwi <br />Cisse <br />Najarin |stadium=Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata |attendance=1,500 |referee=Pandian Palaniyandi (Singapore) }} |score=3–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2797 Report] |team2= Al-Ittihad |goals1=Al-Mutwa <br />Al-Hussain <br />Al Sheikh |goals2|stadiumMohammed Al-Hamad Stadium, Hawally |attendance=2,500 |refereeLee Min-Hu (Korea Republic) }}Group E<onlyinclude> Al-Rayyan |team2RIF|name_RIF Al-Riffa |team3WAH|name_WAH Al-Wihdat |team4NAH|name_NAH Al-Nahda |win_RAY5|draw_RAY0|loss_RAY1|gf_RAY16|ga_RAY=7 |win_RIF4|draw_RIF1|loss_RIF1|gf_RIF7|ga_RIF=5 |win_WAH2|draw_WAH1|loss_WAH3|gf_WAH8|ga_WAH=10 |win_NAH0|draw_NAH0|loss_NAH6|gf_NAH3|ga_NAH=12 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_NAH_RAY=0–2 |match_NAH_RIF=0–1 |match_NAH_WAH=1–3 |match_RAY_NAH=3–2 |match_RAY_RIF=0–2 |match_RAY_WAH=3–0 |match_RIF_NAH=1–0 |match_RIF_RAY=1–4 |match_RIF_WAH=2–1 |match_WAH_NAH=2–0 |match_WAH_RAY=2–4 |match_WAH_RIF=0–0 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2795 Report] |team2= Al-Riffa |goals1|goals2Abdullatif |stadium=Al-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=400 |referee=Vladislav Tseytlin (Uzbekistan)}} |score=2–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2796 Report] |team2= Al-Rayyan |goals1=Abdul-Haleem |goals2=Alves <br />Montezine |stadium=King Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=14,000 |referee=Mohamed Al Zarouni (UAE)}} ---- |score=3–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2794 Report] |team2= Al-Nahda |goals1=Bechir <br />Alves |goals2=Vítor Hugo <br />Al-Farsi |stadium=Ahmed bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan |attendance=4,511 |referee=Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)}} |score=2–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2793 Report] |team2= Al-Wehdat |goals1=Jovančić <br />Mubarak |goals2=Shelbaieh |stadium=Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa |attendance=500 |referee=Hajime Matsuo (Japan)}} ---- |score=2–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2791 Report] |team2= Al-Nahda |goals1=Abdul-Haleem <br />Shelbaieh |goals2|stadiumKing Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=2,000 |referee=Alireza Faghani (Iran)}} |score=0–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2792 Report] |team2= Al-Riffa |goals1|goals2Abdullatif |stadium=Ahmed bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan |attendance=7,601 |referee=Mukhtar Al Yarimi (Yemen)}} ---- |score=1–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2790 Report] |team2= Al-Rayyan |goals1=Salman |goals2=Montezine <br />Alves |stadium=Bahrain National Stadium, Riffa |attendance=500 |referee=Andre El Haddad (Lebanon)}} |score=1–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2789 Report] |team2= Al-Wehdat |goals1=Al-Shamsi |goals2=Keshkesh <br />Abdul-Haleem <br />Shelbaieh |stadium=Al-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=200 |referee=Rustam Kholov (Tajikistan)}} ---- |score=3–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2788 Report] |team2= Al-Wehdat |goals1=Montezine <br />Alves |goals2|stadiumAhmed bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan |attendance=6,220 |referee=Çarymyrat Gurbanow (Turkmenistan)}} |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2787 Report] |team2= Al-Nahda |goals1=Mubarak |goals2|stadiumBahrain National Stadium, Riffa |attendance=200 |referee=Hedayat Mombeni (Iran)}} ---- |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2786 Report] |team2= Al-Riffa |goals1|goals2 |stadium=King Abdullah Stadium, Amman |attendance=760 |referee=Tan Hai (China PR) }} |score=0–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2785 Report] |team2= Al-Rayyan |goals1|goals2Montezine |stadium=Al-Seeb Stadium, Al-Seeb |attendance=500 |referee=Zhao Liang (China PR) }} Group F <onlyinclude> Sriwijaya |team2BD|name_BD Bình Dương |team3SEL|name_SEL Selangor |team4VIC|name_VIC Victory SC |win_SRI4|draw_SRI1|loss_SRI1|gf_SRI17|ga_SRI=3 |win_BD4|draw_BD1|loss_BD1|gf_BD14|ga_BD=2 |win_SEL1|draw_SEL1|loss_SEL4|gf_SEL7|ga_SEL=16 |win_VIC1|draw_VIC1|loss_VIC4|gf_VIC2|ga_VIC=19 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_BD_SEL=4–0 |match_BD_SRI=2–1 |match_BD_VIC=3–0 |match_SEL_BD=0–0 |match_SEL_SRI=0–4 |match_SEL_VIC=5–0 |match_SRI_BD=1–0 |match_SRI_SEL=6–1 |match_SRI_VIC=5–0 |match_VIC_BD=0–5 |match_VIC_SEL=2–1 |match_VIC_SRI=0–0 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2784 Report] |team2= Sriwijaya |goals1|goals2 |stadium=National Stadium, Male |attendance=4,100 |referee=Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka) }} |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2783 Report] |team2= Bình Dương |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam |attendance=30,000 |referee=Kenji Ogiya (Japan) }} ---- |score=6–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2782 Report] |team2= Selangor |goals1=Suyono <br />Krangar <br />Rivai <br /> Gumbs |goals2=Safee |stadium=Jakabaring Stadium, Palembang |attendance=14,000 |referee=Ng Chiu Kok (Hong Kong) }} |score=3–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2781 Report] |team2= Victory SC |goals1=Kesley Alves <br />Philani <br />Nguyễn Minh Chuyên |goals2|stadiumGò Đậu Stadium, Thủ Dầu Một |attendance=12,000 |referee=Zhao Liang (China PR) }} ---- |score=2–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2779 Report] |team2= Selangor |goals1=Naseer <br />Mohammed |goals2=Amirul Hadi |stadium=National Stadium, Male |attendance=4,500 |referee=Yu Ming-Hsun (Chinese Taipei) }} |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2780 Report] |team2= Bình Dương |goals1=Gumbs |goals2|stadiumJakabaring Stadium, Palembang |attendance=20,000 |referee=Lee Min-Hu (South Korea) }} ---- |score=2–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2778 Report] |team2= Sriwijaya |goals1=Nguyễn Anh Đức <br />Châu Phong Hòa |goals2=Yulianto |stadium=Gò Đậu Stadium, Thủ Dầu Một |attendance=18,000 |referee=Sgt. Win Cho (Myanmar)}} |score=5–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2777 Report] |team2= Victory SC |goals1=Safee <br />Rudie <br />Safiq <br />Hardi |goals2|stadiumShah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam |attendance=32,180 |referee=Liu Kwok Man (Hong Kong)}} ---- |score=5–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2776 Report] |team2= Victory SC |goals1=Obiora <br />Krangar <br />Suyono |goals2|stadiumJakabaring Stadium, Palembang |attendance=11,215 |referee=Hajime Matsuo (Japan)}} |score=4–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2775 Report] |team2= Selangor |goals1=Kesley Alves <br />Nguyễn Vũ Phong |goals2|stadiumGò Đậu Stadium, Thủ Dầu Một |attendance=20,000 |referee=Mohammad Mousa (Jordan)}} ---- |score=0–5 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2774 Report] |team2= Bình Dương |goals1|goals2Kesley Alves <br />Philani <br />Nguyễn Anh Đức |stadium=National Stadium, Male |attendance=1.350 |referee=Saeid Mozaffarizadeh (Iran)}} |score=0–4 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2773 Report] |team2= Sriwijaya |goals1|goals2Gumbs <br />Obiora <br />Astaman |stadium=Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam |attendance=34,200 |refereeFan Qi (China PR)}}Group G<onlyinclude> South China |team2MTU|name_MTU Muangthong United |team3VB|name_VB VB Sports Club |team4WAM|name_WAM Persiwa Wamena |win_SC4|draw_SC1|loss_SC1|gf_SC12|ga_SC=5 |win_MTU3|draw_MTU2|loss_MTU1|gf_MTU12|ga_MTU=7 |win_VB3|draw_VB0|loss_VB3|gf_VB12|ga_VB=11 |win_WAM0|draw_WAM1|loss_WAM5|gf_WAM8|ga_WAM=21 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_MTU_WAM=4–1 |match_MTU_SC=0–1 |match_MTU_VB=3–1 |match_WAM_MTU=2–2 |match_WAM_SC=0–2 |match_WAM_VB=2–3 |match_SC_MTU=0–0 |match_SC_WAM=6–3 |match_SC_VB=3–1 |match_VB_MTU=2–3 |match_VB_WAM=4–0 |match_VB_SC=1–0 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=2–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2771 Report] |team2= VB Sports Club |goals1=Weeks <br />Foday |goals2=Ashfaq <br />Abdul Ghani <br />Umar |stadium=Gajayana Stadium, Malang |attendance=800 |referee=Zhao Liang (China PR) }} |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2772 Report] |team2= Muangthong United |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong |attendance=5,725 |referee=Lee Min-Hu (South Korea) }} ---- |score=1–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2769 Report] |team2= South China |goals1=Ashfaq |goals2|stadiumNational Stadium, Male |attendance=2,500 |referee=Dmitriy Mashentsev (Kyrgyzstan)}} ---- |score=3–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2768 Report] |team2= VB Sports Club |goals1=Yaya <br />Koné <br />Winothai |goals2=Ashfaq |stadium=Thunderdome Stadium, Nonthaburi |attendance=8,700 |referee=Hettikamkanamge Perera (Sri Lanka)}} |score=6–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2767 Report] |team2= Persiwa Wamena |goals1=Schutz <br />Leo <br />Kwok Kin Pong <br />Lee Wai Lim |goals2=Rumaropen <br />Mambrasar <br />Weeks |stadium=Siu Sai Wan Sports Ground, Hong Kong |attendance=2,392 |referee=Nasser Darwish (Jordan)}} ---- |score=4–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2770 Report] |team2= Persiwa Wamena |goals1= Koné <br />Winothai <br />Yaya <br />Wongsa |goals2=Rumaropen |stadium=Thunderdome Stadium, Nonthaburi |attendance=12,000 |referee=Ryuji Sato (Japan)}} ---- |score=0–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2765 Report] |team2= South China |goals1|goals2Chan Wai Ho <br />Leo |stadium=Gajayana Stadium, Malang |attendance=1,000 |referee=Kenji Ogiya (Japan) }} |score=2–3 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2766 Report] |team2= Muangthong United |goals1=Toriq <br />Ashadh |goals2=Tamaphan <br />Yaya |stadium=National Stadium, Male |attendance=7,000 |referee=Zhao Liang (China PR)}} ---- |score=4–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2763 Report] |team2= Persiwa Wamena |goals1=Umar <br />Ashfaq <br />Niyaz |goals2|stadiumNational Stadium, Male |attendance=3,500 |referee=Mohd Nafeez Bin Abdul Wahab (Malaysia)}} |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2764 Report] |team2= South China |goals1|goals2Wong Chin Hung |stadium=Surakul Stadium, Phuket |attendance=6,000 |referee=Yu Ming Hsun (Chinese Taipei)}} ---- |score=2–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2761 Report] |team2= Muangthong United |goals1=Foday <br />Weeks |goals2=Thonglao <br />Koné |stadium=Gajayana Stadium, Malang |attendance=400 |referee=Rustam Kholov (Tajikistan) }} |score=3–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2762 Report] |team2= VB Sports Club |goals1=Leo <br />Leung Chun Pong |goals2=Ashfaq |stadium=Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong |attendance=9,693 |referee=Vladislav Tseytlin (Uzbekistan) }} Group H <onlyinclude> SHB Đà Nẵng |team2TP|name_TP Thai Port |team3GEY|name_GEY Geylang United |team4TAI|name_TAI Tai Po |win_DN 4|draw_DN2|loss_DN 0|gf_DN12|ga_DN =6 |win_TP3|draw_TP2|loss_TP1|gf_TP8|ga_TP=5 |win_GEY0|draw_GEY4|loss_GEY2|gf_GEY7|ga_GEY=9 |win_TAI0|draw_TAI2|loss_TAI4|gf_TAI3|ga_TAI=10 |col_A#ccffcc|text_A |result1A|result2A |show_matches=y |short_style=noflag |matches_styleFBR|solid_cellgrey |match_GEY_TAI=1–1 |match_GEY_DN=1–1 |match_GEY_TP=0–1 |match_TAI_GEY=1–1 |match_TAI_DN=1–2 |match_TAI_TP=0–1 |match_DN_GEY=3–2 |match_DN_TAI=3–0 |match_DN_TP=0–0 |match_TP_GEY=2–2 |match_TP_TAI=2–0 |match_TP_DN=2–3 |updatecomplete|source }}</onlyinclude> |score=2–3 |report[https://archive.today/20130104223708/http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2760 Report] |team2= SHB Đà Nẵng |goals1=Makarom <br />Kuldilok |goals2=Merlo <br />Hernández <br />Phan Thanh Hung |stadium=Suphachalasai Stadium, Bangkok |attendance=400 |referee=Fan Qi (China) }} |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2759 Report] |team2= NT Realty Wofoo Tai Po |goals1=Belicak |goals2=Annan |stadium=Jalan Besar Stadium, Singapore |attendance=1,061 |referee=Yu Ming-Hsun (Chinese Taipei) }} ---- |score=3–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2758 Report] |team2= Geylang United |goals1=Merlo <br />Hernández <br />Doan Hung Son |goals2=Lounis <br />Durimi |stadium=Chi Lăng Stadium, Da Nang |attendance=14,000 |referee=Ali Saleem (Maldives) }} |score=0–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2757 Report] |team2= Thai Port |goals1|goals2Kuldilok |stadium=Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground, Hong Kong |attendance=1,606 |referee=Sgt. Win Cho (Myanmar) }} ---- |score=3–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2756 Report] |team2= NT Realty Wofoo Tai Po |goals1=Huynh Quoc Anh <br />Rogerio |goals2|stadiumChi Lăng Stadium, Da Nang |attendance=15,000 |referee=Kenji Ogiya (Japan) }} |score=2–2 |report[https://archive.today/20120913184451/http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2755 Report] |team2= Geylang United |goals1=Makarom <br />Soleb |goals2=Moise <br />Tomko |stadium=Suphachalasai Stadium, Bangkok |attendance=5,000 |referee=Mohammad Mousa Khalaf (Jordan) }} ---- |score=0–1 |report[https://archive.today/20130105000439/http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2753 Report] |team2= Thai Port |goals1|goals2Ruangparn |stadium=Jalan Besar Stadium, Singapore |attendance=1,120 |referee=Hajime Matsuo (Japan) }} |score=1–2 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2754 Report] |team2= SHB Đà Nẵng |goals1=Chen Liming |goals2=Huynh Quoc Anh <br />Hernández |stadium=Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground, Hong Kong |attendance=952 |referee=Mohd Nafeez Bin Abdul Wahab (Malaysia) }} ---- |score=0–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2752 Report] |team2= Thai Port |goals1|goals2 |stadium=Chi Lăng Stadium, Da Nang |attendance=18,364 |referee=Dilan Perera (Sri Lanka) }} |score=1–1 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2751 Report] |team2= Geylang United |goals1=Chen Liming |goals2=Rahim |stadium=Tseung Kwan O Sports Ground, Hong Kong |attendance=474 |referee=Dmitriy Mashentsev (Kyrgyzstan) }} ---- |score=2–0 |report[http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2750 Report] |team2= NT Realty Wofoo Tai Po |goals1=Lilakorn <br />Camsawat |goals2|stadiumSurakul Stadium, Phuket |attendance=600 |referee=Saleem Ali (Maldives) }} |score=1–1 |report[https://archive.today/20120912070452/http://www.the-afc.com/en/component/joomleague/?viewreport&compID385&matchId2749 Report] |team2= SHB Đà Nẵng |goals1=Tomko |goals2=Merlo |stadium=Jalan Besar Stadium, Singapore |attendance=1,076 |referee=Sgt. Win Cho (Myanmar) }} References Group Stage
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_AFC_Cup_group_stage
2025-04-06T15:55:52.113869
25891979
Ania (plant)
Ania is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family Orchidaceae. Species Species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as of February 2021: }} * Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum Vols 1–3. Oxford Univ. Press. * Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Collabieae genera Category:Collabieae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ania_(plant)
2025-04-06T15:55:52.121808
25891986
Aporostylis
Aporostylis is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. At the present time, only one species is known: Aporostylis bifolia, native to New Zealand (including the Chatham Islands and the Antipodes Islands). File:Aporostylis bifolia.jpg|In Kahurangi National Park on alpine tussock land. File:Aporostylis bifolia 2.jpg|In Kahurangi National Park on alpine tussock land. File:Odd-leaved orchid (Aporostylis bifolia).jpg|Near Dunedin, in the Silverpeaks. See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Diurideae genera Category:Caladeniinae Category:Orchids of New Zealand Category:Flora of the Chatham Islands Category:Flora of the Antipodes Islands Category:Monotypic Orchidoideae genera
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aporostylis
2025-04-06T15:55:52.131003
25891993
Steve Kestell
|birth_place = Lyndon, Sheboygan County, Wisconsin |death_date |death_place |alma_mater |profession Politician |spouse |residence Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin |website = }} Steve Kestell (born June 15, 1955) is a Wisconsin politician, legislator, and business owner. Kestell was born in Lyndon, Wisconsin Kestell graduated from Plymouth High School Kestell voted against the state budget in 2013, citing too many non-fiscal policy items contained within the budget. It was Kestell's contention that policy changes should pass through the regular legislative process. Personal life Kestell is married and has three children.<ref name"sowbb"/>References Category:People from Lyndon, Sheboygan County, Wisconsin Category:Republican Party members of the Wisconsin State Assembly Category:1955 births Category:Living people Category:People from Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin Category:21st-century members of the Wisconsin Legislature Category:20th-century members of the Wisconsin Legislature
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Kestell
2025-04-06T15:55:52.142618
25891997
Arpophyllum
Arpophyllum is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains 3 species, native to Mexico, Belize, Central America, Colombia, Venezuela and Jamaica. Species As of May 2014, three species were recognized: Arpophyllum giganteum Hartw. ex Lindl. - Veracruz, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Central America, Colombia, Venezuela, Jamaica Arpophyllum giganteum subsp. alpinum (Lindl.) Dressler - Chiapas, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras Arpophyllum giganteum subsp. giganteum - Veracruz, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Central America, Colombia, Venezuela, Jamaica Arpophyllum giganteum subsp. medium (Rchb.f.) Dressler - Veracruz, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Central America Arpophyllum laxiflorum Pfitzer - eastern, central and southern Mexico Arpophyllum spicatum Lex. in P.de La Llave & J.M.de Lexarza - eastern, central and southern Mexico; south to Costa Rica See also List of Orchidaceae genera References (2006). Epidendroideae (Part One). Genera Orchidacearum 4: 193 ff. Oxford University Press. Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links Category:Laeliinae genera Category:Laeliinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arpophyllum
2025-04-06T15:55:52.153159
25891999
Arthrochilus
Arthrochilus, commonly called elbow orchids, is a genus of about fifteen species of flowering plants from the orchid family (Orchidaceae) and is found in Australia and New Guinea. The flowers are pollinated by male thynnid wasps which attempt to mate with the flower and are held in place by hooks while the pollinium is transferred between insect and flower. Description Orchids in the genus Arthrochilus are terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herbs usually with a few inconspicuous, fine roots and a single oval-shaped tuber lacking a protective fibrous sheath. (A. huntianus lacks a true tuber.) Some species form colonies, reproducing asexually from daughter tubers formed on the end of root-like stolons. The stem is short, erect and unbranched with thin, leaf-like cataphylls at each node. There are up to six leaves at or near the base of the plant, sometimes forming a rosette around the stem. The inflorescence is a raceme with a few to many non-resupinate, dull-coloured flowers on a wiry stalk. The dorsal sepal is similar to or larger than the lateral sepals and its sides curve inwards. The lateral sepals and petals are attached the base of the column, the petals similar to, but smaller than the sepals. The highly modified labellum is dominated by the callus and is hinged to the column by a flexible "claw". The callus is ornamented with feathery cilia and club-shaped structures which gives the labellum the form of a wingless, female wasp. The column has two pairs of wings, two which surround the sexual parts of the flower and two larger hook-like wings either side of the column. Elbow orchids mainly flower in summer and the fruit that follows flowering is a glabrous dehiscent capsule containing a large number of winged seeds. The scientific name of the genus is derived from the Ancient Greek words arthron meaning "joint" and cheilos meaning "lip"Species listThe following is a list of species recognised by the Index Kewensis:<ref name"Kew" /> *Arthrochilus apectus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - untidy elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus aquilus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - dark elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus byrnesii <small>Blaxell</small> - sandstone truffle orchid (N.T., W.A.) *Arthrochilus corinnae <small>D.L.Jones</small> - swamp elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus dockrillii <small>Lavarack</small> - green truffle orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus huntianus <small>(F.Muell.) Blaxell</small> - common elbow orchid (N.S.W., Tas., Vic., S.A.) *Arthrochilus irritabilis <small>F.Muell.</small> - clubbed elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus laevicallus <small>Ormerod</small> (Papua New Guinea) *Arthrochilus latipes <small>D.L.Jones</small> - robust elbow orchid (N.T.) *Arthrochilus lavarackianus <small>(D.L.Jones) Lavarack</small> - glaucous truffle orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus oreophilus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - montane elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus prolixus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - wispy elbow orchid (N.S.W., Qld.) *Arthrochilus rosulatus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - rosetted elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus sabulosus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - spotted elbow orchid (Qld.) *Arthrochilus stenophyllus <small>D.L.Jones</small> - narrow-leaved elbow orchid (Qld.) See also * List of Orchidaceae genera References External links * [http://www.ourshopfront.com/kabi/html/Natives/Arthrochilus%20prolixus.php Australian Native Orchid Society (Queensland), Kabi Group, Arthrochilus prolixus] * [http://www.retiredaussies.com/ColinsHome%20Page/Orchids/Thynninorchis/Thynninorchis%20huntianus.htm Retired Aussies, Thynninorchis huntianus, Elbow Orchid, synonym Arthrochilus huntianus] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20140521200422/http://www.orchidsonline.com.au/node/2409 Orchids Online, Arthrochilus oreophilus, Synonym: Spiculea irritabilis sensu <small>Dockr</small>.] Category:Diurideae genera Category:Orchids of Australia Category:Flora of Queensland Category:Orchids of New Guinea
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthrochilus
2025-04-06T15:55:52.161023
25892000
Artorima
* Encyclia erubescens }} Artorima is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. At present (May 2014), only one species is known: Artorima erubescens Description It is an epiphytic orchid with a thick rhizome and a broad conical-ovoid pseudobulb bearing 3-6 elliptic to oblong-lanceolate leaves 20-120 cm long, with a loose terminal panicle, few to many [6-100], fragrant flowers that bloom winter through early spring. Distribution It is found in the ever-cloud forests of Guerrero and Oaxaca in southern Mexico on the highest peaks at elevations from 2,400 to 3,100 meters in a cool place to growing cold. <gallery> File:Artorima erubescens Orchi 02.jpg|Artorima erubescens File:Artorima erubescens Orchi 06.jpg </gallery> See also * List of Orchidaceae genera References * Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.C. & Rasmussen, F.N. (2006). Epidendroideae (Part One). Genera Orchidacearum 4: 196 ff. Oxford University Press. * Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links * * Category:Laeliinae genera Category:Orchids of Mexico Category:Flora of Oaxaca Category:Flora of Guerrero Category:Monotypic Epidendroideae genera Category:Laeliinae Category:Flora of the Sierra Madre de Oaxaca Category:Flora of the Sierra Madre del Sur
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artorima
2025-04-06T15:55:52.183729
25892013
Aulosepalum
Aulosepalum is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It consists of 8 species native to Mexico and Central America. Aulosepalum hemichrea (Lindl.) Garay - Oaxaca, Chiapas, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua Aulosepalum nelsonii (Greenm.) Garay - Michoacán, Oaxaca Aulosepalum oestlundii (Burns-Bal.) Catling - Guerrero Aulosepalum pulchrum (Schltr.) Catling - Guatemala and southern Mexico Aulosepalum pyramidale (Lindl.) M.A.Dix & M.W.Dix - from central Mexico to Costa Rica Aulosepalum ramentaceum (Lindl.) Garay - Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosí Aulosepalum riodelayense (Burns-Bal.) Salazar - Oaxaca Aulosepalum tenuiflorum (Greenm.) Garay - Morelos, Guerrero See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links IOSPE photos, Aulosepalum pyramidale Andy's Orchids (Encinitas California USA), Aulosepalum nelsonii Orquídeas Mexicanas, Aulosepalum pyramidale = Kionophyton pyramidalis Orchidées in-situ du Mexique - Temascaltepec - Aulosepalum pyramidale Category:Cranichideae genera Category:Spiranthinae Category:Orchids of Mexico Category:Orchids of Central America Category:Taxa named by Leslie Andrew Garay
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aulosepalum
2025-04-06T15:55:52.203438
25892022
Baskervilla
Baskervilla is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It consists of 10 species native to Central America and South America. Species: Baskervilla assurgens Lindl. - Colombia, Ecuador, Peru Baskervilla auriculata Garay - Ecuador, Bolivia Baskervilla boliviana T.Hashim - Bolivia Baskervilla colombiana Garay - Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela Baskervilla leptantha Dressler - Costa Rica Baskervilla machupicchuensis Nauray & Christenson - Peru Baskervilla paranaensis (Kraenzl.) Schltr. - Brazil Baskervilla pastasae Garay - Ecuador Baskervilla stenopetala Dressler - Panama Baskervilla venezuelana Garay & Dunst. - Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Cranichideae genera Category:Cranichidinae Category:Orchids of Central America Category:Orchids of South America
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baskervilla
2025-04-06T15:55:52.220197
25892026
Batemannia
Batemannia is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains 5 species, native to Trinidad and South America: Batemannia armillata Rchb.f - Suriname, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru Batemannia colleyi Lindl. - Trinidad, French Guinea, Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil Batemannia leferenzii Senghas - Bolivia Batemannia lepida Rchb.f. - Suriname, Venezuela, Brazil Batemannia wolteriana Schltr. - Peru See also List of Orchidaceae genera References External links Category:Flora of Trinidad and Tobago Category:Orchids of South America Category:Zygopetalinae genera Category:Zygopetalinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batemannia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.223258
25892027
Beclardia
Beclardia is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. There are two recognized species, both native to islands in the Indian Ocean: Beclardia grandiflora Bosser - Madagascar Beclardia macrostachya (Thouars) A.Rich. - Madagascar, Mauritius, Réunion See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links Category:Vandeae genera Category:Orchids of Madagascar Category:Orchids of Mauritius Category:Orchids of Réunion Category:Angraecinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beclardia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.226384
25892029
Benzingia
nine species are recognized: # Benzingia caudata <small>(Ackerman) Dressler</small> – Peru (Cordillera del Cóndor), Ecuador # Benzingia cornuta <small>(Garay) Dressler</small> - Colombia, Ecuador # Benzingia estradae <small>(Dodson) Dodson</small> - Ecuador # Benzingia hajekii <small>(D.E.Benn. & Christenson) Dressler</small> – Peru # Benzingia hirtzii <small>Dodson</small> - Ecuador (Esmeraldas) # Benzingia jarae <small>(D.E.Benn. & Christenson) Dressler</small> – Peru # Benzingia palorae <small>(Dodson & Hirtz) Dressler</small> - Colombia, Ecuador # Benzingia reichenbachiana <small>(Schltr.) Dressler</small> - Costa Rica, Panama # Benzingia thienii <small>(Dodson) P.A.Harding</small> - Ecuador See also * List of Orchidaceae genera References External links * Category:Orchids of South America Category:Orchids of Central America Category:Zygopetalinae genera Category:Zygopetalinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzingia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.229944
25892030
Biermannia
Biermannia is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It is native to eastern India, China and Southeast Asia. Species The following species are accepted as of May 2014: Biermannia quinquecallosa King & Pantl. - Assam Biermannia sarcanthoides (Ridl.) Garay - Johor Biermannia sigaldii Seidenf. - Vietnam See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Orchids of India Category:Orchids of China Category:Orchids of Malaysia Category:Orchids of Thailand Category:Orchids of Vietnam Category:Orchids of Assam Category:Vandeae genera Category:Aeridinae Category:Taxa named by George King (botanist)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biermannia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.234857
25892036
Bipinnula
Bipinnula is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It is native to South America (Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile). Species Accepted species as of May 2014: +ImageSpeciesDistributionBipinnula biplumata (L.f.) Rchb.f.Brazil, Argentina, UruguayframelessBipinnula fimbriata (Poepp.) I.M.Johnst.ChileBipinnula gibertii Rchb.f.Uruguay, Rio Grande do SulframelessBipinnula montana Arechav.Uruguay, Rio Grande do SulframelessBipinnula penicillata (Rchb.f.) Cisternas & SalazarBrazil, Argentina, UruguayBipinnula plumosa Lindl.ChileframelessBipinnula polysyka Kraenzl.Argentina, UruguayBipinnula taltalensis I.M.Johnst.AntofagastaBipinnula volkmannii Kraenzl.Chile See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Orchids of Brazil Category:Flora of Uruguay Category:Orchids of Argentina Category:Flora of Chile Category:Orchidoideae genera Category:Chloraeinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipinnula
2025-04-06T15:55:52.246791
25892037
Bollea
Bollea may refer to: Pescatoria, a genus of orchid, formerly named Bollea Terry Gene Bollea (Hulk Hogan), wrestler Michael Allan Bollea (Horace Hogan), wrestler and nephew of Hulk Hogan Brooke Bollea (Brooke Hogan), reality TV personality and daughter of Hulk Hogan Nicholas Bollea (Nick Hogan), reality TV personality and son of Hulk Hogan See also Bollea v. Gawker, a 2013 sex tape publicity lawsuit Bollée (disambiguation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bollea
2025-04-06T15:55:52.248921
25892043
Bolusiella
Bolusiella is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It consists of 4 currently recognized species that are endemic to sub-Saharan Africa and the Comoro Islands. Bolusiella are often very small, no more than a few centimeters tall. They exhibit monopodial growth. Species and subspecies The following are accepted as of May 2014: Bolusiella fractiflexa Droissart, Stévart & Verlynde - Cameroon, Rwanda to Burundi Bolusiella iridifolia (Rolfe) Schltr. Bolusiella iridifolia subsp. iridifolia - from Ivory Coast east to Ethiopia and Tanzania, south to Angola and Zimbabwe; also Comoros Bolusiella iridifolia subsp. picea P.J.Cribb - from Burundi and Kenya south to Zimbabwe Bolusiella maudiae (Bolus) Schltr. - from Ivory Coast east to Tanzania, south to KwaZulu-Natal Bolusiella talbotii (Rendle) Summerh. in J.Hutchinson & J.M.Dalziel - from Sierra Leone to Tanzania Bolusiella zenkeri (Kraenzl.) Schltr. - from Ivory Coast east to Gabon See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links Category:Vandeae genera Category:Orchids of Africa Category:Flora of the Comoros Category:Angraecinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolusiella
2025-04-06T15:55:52.253786
25892048
Brachycorythis
* (2001) Orchidoideae (Part 1). Genera Orchidacearum 2: 265 ff. Oxford University Press. * 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart * * Category:Orchideae Category:Orchideae genera Category:Orchids of Africa Category:Orchids of Madagascar Category:Orchids of India Category:Orchids of China Category:Orchids of Thailand
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachycorythis
2025-04-06T15:55:52.271493
25892050
Brachypeza
Brachypeza, commonly known as sage orchids, is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. Orchids in this genus have short stems with fleshy leaves and arching flowering stems with short-lived flowers. The sepals and petals are similar in size and shape and the labellum is pouch-like and suspended at the base of the flower. Sage orchids occur in tropical areas from Indochina to New Guinea. Taxonomy and naming The genus Brachypeza was first formally described in 1972 by Leslie Andrew Garay and the description was published in the Botanical Museum Leaflets of Harvard University.Species listThe following is a list of Brachypeza species accepted by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families as at December 2018.<ref name"WCSP" /> * Brachypeza archytas <small>(Ridl.) Garay</small> - Christmas Island * Brachypeza cladostachya <small>(Hook.f.) Kocyan & Schuit.</small> * Brachypeza indusiata <small>(Rchb.f.) Garay</small> - Borneo, Malaysia, Maluku, Sulawesi, Sumatra, New Guinea * Brachypeza koeteiensis <small>(Schltr.) Garay</small> - Borneo * Brachypeza laotica <small>(Seidenf.) Seidenf.</small> - Laos, Thailand and possibly Vietnam * Brachypeza minimipes <small>(J.J.Sm.) Garay</small> - Sumatra * Brachypeza pallida <small>(Blume) Kocyan & Schuit.</small> * Brachypeza semiteretifolia <small>(H.A.Pedersen) Kocyan & Schuit.</small> * Brachypeza simondiana <small>(Gagnep.) Kocyan & Schuit.</small> * Brachypeza stenoglottis <small>(Hook.f.) Garay</small> - Borneo, Malaysia, Maluku, Sulawesi, Sumatra, New Guinea * Brachypeza unguiculata <small>(Lindl.) Kocyan & Schuit.</small> * Brachypeza zamboangensis <small>(Ames) Garay</small> - Borneo, Philippines See also * List of Orchidaceae genera References Category:Vandeae genera Category:Orchids of Indonesia Category:Orchids of Malaysia Category:Orchids of New Guinea Category:Orchids of the Philippines Category:Orchids of Thailand Category:Flora of Christmas Island Category:Orchids of Borneo Category:Taxa named by Leslie Andrew Garay
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachypeza
2025-04-06T15:55:52.275994
25892055
Brachystele
Brachystele is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It consists of 20 species native primarily to South America but with a few species in Mexico, Central America, and Trinidad & Tobago. Brachystele arechavaletae (Kraenzl.) Schltr. Brachystele bicrinita Szlach. Brachystele bracteosa (Lindl.) Schltr. Brachystele burkartii M.N.Correa Brachystele camporum (Lindl.) Schltr. Brachystele chlorops (Rchb.f.) Schltr. Brachystele cyclochila (Kraenzl.) Schltr. Brachystele delicatula (Kraenzl.) Schltr. Brachystele dilatata (Lindl.) Schltr. Brachystele guayanensis (Lindl.) Schltr. Brachystele luzmariana Szlach. & R.González Brachystele maasii Szlach. Brachystele oxyanthos Szlach Brachystele pappulosa Szlach Brachystele scabrilingua Szlach Brachystele subfiliformis (Cogn.) Schltr Brachystele tamayoana Szlach. Brachystele unilateralis (Poir.) Schltr Brachystele waldemarii Szlach. Brachystele widgrenii (Rchb.f.) Schltr. See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links Category:Cranichideae genera Category:Orchids of Mexico Category:Orchids of Central America Category:Orchids of South America Category:Flora of Trinidad and Tobago Category:Spiranthinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachystele
2025-04-06T15:55:52.284314
25892059
Andrew Shapiro
| instrument = Vocals, Piano, Synthesizer, Woodwinds | genre = Synthpop, Classical, Minimalism, Ambient | occupation = Composer | years_active = 1999-present | associated_acts | website }} Andrew Shapiro is an American composer and songwriter. He has characterized his music as having been primarily influenced by "80's new wave pop and Philip Glass minimalism." From 2004 to 2013 Shapiro regularly performed his solo piano compositions and improvisations at a McDonald's fast-food restaurant in downtown Manhattan for which he was profiled in The New York Times. He was described as the “Best Pianist in a Fast-Food Restaurant” in the Village Voice. Performance highlights include The Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, the Exit Festival in Novi Sad, Serbia, TED, Bard College, Joe's Pub, Gracie Mansion, Bargemusic and the Wordless Music series at Le Poisson Rouge, New York. Shapiro's music has been played on the radio worldwide and his music has been mentioned in The New Yorker, ABC News, CNN, Gramophone and Daily Candy. His synth-pop debut album, Invisible Days EP, was chosen as one of the "Top 12" independently produced recordings of 2003 by Performing Songwriter magazine. He has written original music for film and theater projects, and his pieces have been licensed for use in television projects worldwide, ranging from reality TV to a Clio Award-winning spot for cancer awareness. Shapiro is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio where he studied musical composition. Raised in Larchmont, New York, he lives in with his wife and son in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City.<ref name":0" /> Discography * Invisible Days EP - 15th Anniversary Expanded Edition (2019) * Pink Jean Mint Green (2016) * Piano 3 (2016) * The High Line & Other Places (2015) * Singles EP (2013) * Intimate Casual (2012) * 100 Houses: Gatsby Meets Caulfield (2012) * Soundesign (Expanded Edition) (2011) * Numbers, Colors and People (2009) * Quiet Kissing EP (2006) * Invisible Days EP (2003) References External links *[http://www.andrewshapiro.com Andrew Shapiro site] *[https://web.archive.org/web/20110604010359/http://www.newmusicbox.org/st_result.nmbx?id=41st16 Invisible Days EP on New Music Box magazine] *[https://www.andrewshapiro.com/about-2 Andrew Shapiro - Future Classical by Mark Prendergast] *[https://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/15/nyregion/thecity/quarter-pounder-with-keys.html Quarter Pounder With Keys] *[http://www.popmatters.com/post/andrew-shapiro-bash-street-worlds-feat-neil-gaiman-premiere/ Andrew Shapiro - "Bash Street Worlds' featuring Neil Gaiman (premiere)] Category:1975 births Category:American male composers Category:21st-century American composers Category:Songwriters from New York (state) Category:Writers from Brooklyn Category:Living people Category:Oberlin Conservatory of Music alumni Category:Musicians from Brooklyn Category:21st-century American male musicians Category:American male songwriters
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Shapiro
2025-04-06T15:55:52.293098
25892063
Steven Murdoch
| birth_name = Steven James Murdoch | image = Steven J Murdoch (cropped).jpg | nationality = British | field Security<br/>Privacy<br/>Anonymous communication | known_for Tor project<br/>EMV/Chip and PIN | website = }} Steven James Murdoch is Professor of Security Engineering in the Computer Science Department, University College London. and anonymous communication, in particular Tor. He is also known for discovering several vulnerabilities in the EMV bank chipcard payment system (Chip and PIN) and for creating Tor Browser.Education and careerMurdoch was educated at the University of Cambridge completing a PhD on computer security supervised by Markus Kuhn in 2008. In March 2022, he joined the board of Open Rights Group.Awards and honoursHe is a Fellow of the British Computer Society and Fellow of the Institution of Engineering and Technology. In 2012 he was appointed as a Royal Society University Research Fellow. References Category:Computer security specialists Category:Fellows of the British Computer Society Category:Fellows of the Institution of Engineering and Technology Category:Royal Society University Research Fellows Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:Alumni of the University of Cambridge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Murdoch
2025-04-06T15:55:52.301439
25892066
Brownleea
Brownleea is a genus of flowering plants from the family Orchidaceae native to Africa and Madagascar. Eight species are known. Brownleea coerulea Harv. ex Lindl. Brownleea galpinii Bolus Brownleea graminicola McMurtry Brownleea macroceras Sond. Brownleea maculata P.J.Cribb Brownleea mulanjiensis H.P.Linder Brownleea parviflora Harv. ex Lindl. Brownleea recurvata Sond. In a classification of orchids that was published in 2015, the genera Brownleea and Disperis constituted the subtribe Brownleeinae of the tribe Orchideae. A sister relationship between Brownleea and Disperis received only weak statistical support in a 2009 study. In Genera Orchidacearum, the subtribe Brownleeinae was placed in the tribe Diseae, but this tribe is no longer recognized because it has been shown to be paraphyletic over the tribe Orchideae. See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Further reading Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Orchids of Madagascar Category:Orchids of Africa Category:Orchideae Category:Orchideae genera
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownleea
2025-04-06T15:55:52.307415
25892067
Buchtienia
Buchtienia is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains 3 species, all native to South America: Buchtienia boliviensis Schltr. Buchtienia ecuadorensis Garay Buchtienia rosea Garay See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Cranichideae genera Category:Spiranthinae Category:Orchids of South America
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchtienia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.310362
25892070
Burnettia
Burnettia cuneata, commonly known as the lizard orchid, is the only species of the flowering plant genus Burnettia in the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It is a leafless terrestrial, mycotrophic herb with one or two leaf-like bracts and up to seven flowers that are brownish on the back and pink or white inside. It is endemic to southeastern Australia where it grows in dense thickets in swamps.DescriptionBurnettia cuneata is a leafless, mycotrophic herb with a single leaf-like, lance-shaped to egg-shaped bract long and wide near its base. The fleshy, dark purplish brown flowering stem is high and bears up to seven flowers. The flowers are long, wide, brownish on the back and pink or white inside. The sepals and petals are lance-shaped with the narrower end towards the base, long and wide with the dorsal sepal forming a hood over the column. The labellum has dark red stripes and is wedge-shaped, long with two longitudinal ridges along its midline. Flowering occurs between September and December but nearly always only after fires the previous summer.Taxonomy and namingBurnettia cuneata was first formally described in 1840 by John Lindley from a specimen collected in Tasmania and the description was published in his book The Genera and Species of Orchidaceous Plants. The specific epithet (cuneata) is a Latin word meaning "wedge-shaped". Distribution and habitat The lizard orchid grows in dense thickets of Melaleuca and Leptospermum in near coastal swamps in New South Wales, Tasmania and Victoria. In New South Wales it occurs south from the Blue Mountains and in Victoria between Portland and Mallacoota with a disjunct population in the Grampians.<ref name"Jones" /><ref name"RBGV" /><ref name"RBGS" />See also* List of Orchidaceae generaReferencesExternal links * [http://www.retiredaussies.com/ColinsHome%20Page/Orchids/Burnettia/Burnettia%20cuneata%20Lizard%20Orchid.htm Retired Aussies, Burnettia cuneata, Lizard Orchid] * [https://www.flickr.com/photos/orchidsupclose/8102427169/ Flickr, Malcolm, Burnettia cuneata] Category:Monotypic Orchidoideae genera Category:Diurideae genera Category:Orchids of Australia Category:Orchids of Victoria (state) Category:Orchids of New South Wales Category:Orchids of Tasmania Category:Megastylidinae Category:Plants described in 1840
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burnettia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.317117
25892073
Duncan Green (aid expert)
Duncan Green is Senior Strategic Adviser at Oxfam GB and Professor in Practice in International Development at the London School of Economics. Previous employment Previous jobs include Head of Research at Oxfam GB, Senior Policy Adviser on Trade and Development at the Department for International Development (DFID). He was responsible for looking at trade in goods. His post at DFID was originally a secondment from CAFOD. At CAFOD he had been their trade and globalization Policy Analyst. He has also been Head of Research and Engagement at the Just Pensions project, a member of an advisory board member to the Globalisation and Poverty Programme (www.gapresearch.org) and a board member of the Ethical Trading Initiative. Publications He has authored many books and articles including: (2016) How Change Happens (2008) From Poverty to Power: How Active Citizens and Effective States can Change the World (2003) Silent Revolution: The Rise and Crisis of Market Economics in Latin America (2003) (1997) Faces of Latin America (2004) Rethinking Tropical Agricultural Commodities (with Ian Gillson and others, DFID); (2004) Fostering Pro-sustainable Development Agriculture Trade Reform: Strategic Options Facing Developing Countries (with Jamie Morrison, ICTSD) (2003)The Northern WTO Agenda on Investment: Do as we say, not as we did (with Ha Joon Chang, South Centre/CAFOD, June) (2002)Dumping on the Poor: The Common Agricultural Policy, the WTO and International Development (with Matthew Griffith, CAFOD, September) (2001)Capital Punishment: Making International Finance Work for the World's Poor (CAFOD, September). References Category:Oxfam people Category:Development specialists Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Green_(aid_expert)
2025-04-06T15:55:52.320897
25892077
Calochilus
Calochilus, commonly known as beard orchids, is a genus of about 30 species of plants in the orchid family, Orchidaceae. Beard orchids are terrestrial herbs with a single leaf at the base of the plant, or no leaves. Their most striking feature is a densely hairy labellum, giving rise to their common name. Beard orchids, unlike some other Australian orchids, do not reproduce using daughter tubers, but self-pollinate when cross-pollination has not occurred. Most species occur in Australia but some are found in New Zealand, New Guinea and New Caledonia. Description Orchids in the genus Calochilus are terrestrial, perennial, deciduous, sympodial herbs with a few inconspicuous, fine roots and a pair of egg-shaped tubers lacking a protective fibrous sheath. The tubers produce replacement tubers on the end of a short, root-like stolons. There is either a single, linear, fleshy, convolute leaf, usually channelled, sometimes triangular in cross section, or there is no leaf.thumb|labelled image The inflorescence is a raceme with from one to many resupinate flowers. The flowering stem usually has sheathing bracts, which often appear leaf-like. The dorsal sepal is broad, erect, dished and often forms a horizontal hood over the column. The lateral sepals are similar to, but usually narrower than the dorsal sepal. The petals are shorter and narrower than the sepals and often have a hook-like tip. As is usual in orchids, one petal is highly modified as the central labellum. The labellum is longer than all the other parts of the flower, oblong near its base, triangular near the tip and densely covered with purple or metallic-coloured hairs, short near the base of the labellum increasing in length towards its tip. The sexual parts of the flower are fused to the column, which is short and broad with broad wings on its sides. The base of the column forms two rounded collars around the stigma, each often with an eye-like spot. Flowering time depends on the climatic region where the species is found and the fruit that follows flowering is a non-fleshy, dehiscent capsule containing up to 500 seeds. Brown described two species, C. campestris and C. paludosus, but did not nominate a type species. The name Calochilus is said to be derived from the Latin words calos meaning 'beautiful' and chilus meaning 'lip' referring to the bearded labellum. In classical Latin, pulcher and labium are the words for 'beautiful' and 'lip'. In ancient Greek, kalos (καλός) and cheilos (χεῖλος) are used for 'beautiful' and 'lip'. Distribution and habitat There are about thirty species of beard orchid. One species is endemic to New Caledonia with the remainder occurring in Australia, although three also occur in New Zealand and one also in New Guinea. Beard orchids are found in all Australian states. Calochilus ammobius D.L.Jones & B.Gray - sand beard orchid (Qld.) Calochilus caeruleus L.O.Williams - wiry beard orchid (New Guinea, Qld., N.T.) Calochilus caesius D.L.Jones - blue beard orchid (N.T.) Calochilus campestris R.Br. - copper beard orchid (Qld., N.S.W., Vic., S.A., Tas.) Calochilus cleistanthus D.L.Jones - pallid beard orchid (Qld) Calochilus gracillimus Rupp - late beard orchid, slender beard orchid (Qld., N.S.W.) Calochilus grandiflorus (Benth.) Domin - golden beard orchid, giant beard orchid (Qld., N.S.W.) Calochilus herbaceus Lindl. - pale beard orchid (N.S.W., S.A., Tas. North Island of New Zealand) Calochilus holtzei F.Muell. - ghostly beard orchid (N.T., W.A.) Calochilus imperiosus D.L.Jones - imperial beard orchid (Qld., N.T.) Calochilus kalaru D.L.Jones - (N.S.W.) Calochilus metallicus D.L.Jones - metallic beard orchid (Qld.) Calochilus montanus D.L.Jones - mountain beard orchid (N.S.W.) Calochilus neocaledonicus Schltr. - New Caledonia Calochilus paludosus R.Br. - red beard orchid, red beardie (Qld., N.S.W., Vic., S.A., Tas. North Island of N.Z.) Calochilus platychilus D.L.Jones - purple beard orchid (N.S.W.) Calochilus praealtus D.L.Jones - lofty beard (N.S.W.) Calochilus pruinosus D.L.Jones - mallee beard orchid (W.A.) Calochilus psednus D.L.Jones & Lavarack - Cardwell beard orchid (Qld.) Calochilus pulchellus D.L.Jones - pretty beard orchid (N.S.W.) Calochilus richiae Nicholls - bald-tip beard orchid (Vic.) Calochilus robertsonii Benth. - purple beard orchid, purplish beard orchid (Qld., N.S.W., Vic., S.A., Tas., W.A. N.Z.) Calochilus russeus D.L.Jones - reddish beard orchid (N.S.W.) Calochilus sandrae D.L.Jones - brownish beard orchid (N.S.W.) Calochilus stramenicola D.L.Jones - wandoo beard orchid (W.A.) Calochilus therophilus D.L.Jones - late beard orchid (Qld., N.S.W., A.C.T., Vic., Tas.) Calochilus uliginosus D.L.Jones - swamp beard orchid (W.A.) See also List of Orchidaceae genera References External links Category:Diurideae genera Category:Taxa named by Robert Brown (botanist, born 1773)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calochilus
2025-04-06T15:55:52.331995
25892078
Caluera
Caluera is a genus of flowering plants in the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains three species, all native to South America: Caluera surinamensis Dodson & Determann - Suriname, Venezuela, Brazil Caluera tavaresii Campacci & J.B.F.Silva - Brazil Caluera vulpina Dodson & Determann - French Guiana, Ecuador See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart Category:Oncidiinae genera Category:Oncidiinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caluera
2025-04-06T15:55:52.334866
25892082
Calymmanthera
Calymmanthera is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains 5 species, native to Maluku, New Guinea, Fiji and the Solomon Islands. Calymmanthera filiformis (J.J.Sm.) Schltr. - New Guinea Calymmanthera major Schltr. - New Guinea, Fiji and the Solomon Islands Calymmanthera montana Schltr. - - New Guinea Calymmanthera paniculata (J.J.Sm.) Schltr. - New Guinea, Morotai Calymmanthera tenuis Schltr. - New Guinea See also List of Orchidaceae genera References External links Category:Vandeae genera Category:Aeridinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calymmanthera
2025-04-06T15:55:52.344664
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Capanemia
Capanemia is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It contains 9 recognized species, all from South America: Capanemia adelaidae Porto & Brade - Brazil Capanemia brachycion (Griseb.) Schltr. - Rio Grande do Sul, northern and eastern Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay Capanemia carinata Barb.Rodr. - Minas Gerais, São Paulo Capanemia gehrtii Hoehne - Brazil Capanemia micromera Barb.Rodr. - Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay Capanemia paranaensis Schltr. - Paraná Capanemia pygmaea (Kraenzl.) Schltr. - Brazil, probably extinct Capanemia superflua (Rchb.f.) Garay - Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay Capanemia theresae Barb.Rodr. - Brazil See also List of Orchidaceae genera References Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (1999). Genera Orchidacearum 1. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2001). Genera Orchidacearum 2. Oxford Univ. Press. Pridgeon, A.M., Cribb, P.J., Chase, M.A. & Rasmussen, F. eds. (2003). Genera Orchidacearum 3. Oxford Univ. Press Berg Pana, H. 2005. Handbuch der Orchideen-Namen. Dictionary of Orchid Names. Dizionario dei nomi delle orchidee. Ulmer, Stuttgart External links Category:Oncidiinae genera Category:Oncidiinae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capanemia
2025-04-06T15:55:52.367965