page_id
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2.54M
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29.9k
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62,101,490 |
File:Jpakshi.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,491 |
Category:Rugby League World Cup 9s
|
[] |
|
62,101,492 |
Farnsfield, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Farnsfield
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 95
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Farnsfield had a population of 95 people.
== Demographics ==
In the , Farnsfield had a population of 124 people.
In the , Farnsfield had a population of 95 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Farnsfield. The nearest government primary schools are Cordalba State School in Cordalba to the south-west, Goodwood State School in neighbouring Goodwood to the east, and Childers State School in Childers to the south. The nearest government secondary school is Isis District State High School, also in Childers.
|
[
"Bundaberg Region",
"Childers, Queensland",
"Isis District State High School",
"North Isis, Queensland",
"North Gregory, Queensland",
"Redridge, Queensland",
"Division of Hinkler",
"Gregory River, Queensland (Bundaberg Region)",
"Cordalba",
"Queensland Government",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"Electoral district of Burnett",
"Bundaberg CBD",
"Goodwood, Queensland",
"AEST",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)"
] |
62,101,498 |
Diplolepis fructuum
|
Diplolepis fructuum (Rübsaamen, 1895) is a hymenopteran gall wasp which causes a galls on wild roses. The species is closely related to D. rosae and D. mayri but it produces its galls in the seeds of wild roses thus damaging its hips. The species is distributed mainly in the Northern regions of the Middle East, the Caucasus region and Northern shores of the Black Sea.
|
[
"gall wasp",
"gall",
"hymenoptera",
"Ewald Heinrich Rübsaamen",
"Diplolepis rosae",
"Diplolepis mayri"
] |
62,101,502 |
1991–92 1. FC Köln season
|
The 1991–92 1. FC Köln season was the 43rd season in the club's history and the 29th consecutive season playing in the Bundesliga. Köln finished fourth in the league.
The club also participated in the DFB-Pokal where it reached the third round, losing 0–2 to Bayer Leverkusen.
==Competitions==
===Overview===
===Bundesliga===
===DFB Pokal===
==Statistics==
===Squad statistics===
|}
|
[
"Rheinstadion",
"Fritz-Walter-Stadion",
"1. FC Köln",
"Kicker (magazine)",
"Burkhard Reich",
"Dresden",
"Wildparkstadion",
"Munich",
"Eyjólfur Sverrisson",
"1. FC Kaiserslautern",
"1990–91 1. FC Köln season",
"Fritz Walter (footballer, born 1960)",
"Stuttgart",
"Rudolf-Harbig-Stadion",
"Waldstadion (Frankfurt)",
"MSV Duisburg",
"Kaiserslautern",
"Parkstadion",
"German Football Association",
"Stuttgarter Kickers",
"Bayer 04 Leverkusen",
"Aron Schmidhuber",
"Souleyman Sané",
"Rico Steinmann",
"Peter Sendscheid",
"Rainer Krieg",
"Alfons Higl",
"Thomas Kastenmaier",
"Duisburg",
"1. FC Nürnberg",
"Hansi Flick",
"Ostseestadion",
"Thomas Epp",
"SV Werder Bremen",
"Hans-Werner Moser",
"Ralf Falkenmayer",
"Flemming Povlsen",
"Heiko Bonan",
"Rostock",
"Lohrheidestadion",
"1991–92 DFB-Pokal",
"Wolfgang Funkel",
"Düsseldorf",
"BayArena",
"MHPArena",
"Heiko Scholz",
"Demir Hotić",
"Henrik Andersen",
"Axel Kruse",
"Martin Max",
"Horst Heldt",
"Fortuna Düsseldorf",
"Borussia Dortmund",
"Josef Nehl",
"Patrick Weiser",
"Borussia Mönchengladbach",
"André Trulsen",
"Henri Fuchs",
"VfB Stuttgart",
"Ingo Anderbrügge",
"Karlsruhe",
"Frank Greiner",
"Cologne",
"Ralf Sturm",
"Wolfgang Rolff",
"F.C. Hansa Rostock",
"1992–93 1. FC Köln season",
"Thomas von Heesen",
"VfL Bochum",
"Bremen",
"Bochum",
"Peter Müller (footballer)",
"Volksparkstadion",
"RheinEnergieStadion",
"Jann Jensen",
"FC Schalke 04",
"Sergio Zárate",
"Stefan Persigehl",
"Martin Kree",
"Weser-Stadion",
"Bundesliga",
"Uwe Rahn",
"Karsten Baumann",
"Max-Morlock-Stadion",
"Frank Ordenewitz",
"Martin Wagner (footballer, born 1968)",
"Manfred Amerell",
"Eintracht Frankfurt",
"Bodo Illgner",
"Aleksandr Borodyuk",
"Dortmund",
"Falko Götz",
"Hamburg",
"Andrzej Rudy",
"Michael Zorc",
"Ruhrstadion",
"Frankfurt",
"Dieter Eckstein",
"Dynamo Dresden",
"Stefan Kuntz",
"Leverkusen",
"FC Bayern Munich",
"Uwe Kober",
"Franz-Josef Steininger",
"Maurice Banach",
"Pierre Littbarski",
"Markus Merk",
"Wattenscheid",
"Jörg Berger",
"Hamburger SV",
"Olympiastadion (Munich)",
"SG Wattenscheid 09",
"Bökelbergstadion",
"Holger Fach",
"Hermann Albrecht",
"Olaf Janßen",
"1991–92 Bundesliga",
"Andrzej Buncol",
"Gelsenkirchen",
"Hellmut Krug",
"Frank Mill",
"Anders Giske",
"Nürnberg",
"Wernigerode",
"Uwe Fuchs",
"Bernd Heynemann",
"Andreas Fischer (footballer)",
"Mönchengladbach",
"Stéphane Chapuisat",
"Wedaustadion",
"Kay Friedmann",
"Westfalenstadion",
"Stefan Effenberg",
"Thorsten Fink",
"Köln",
"Stefan Kohn",
"Wernigeröder SV Rot-Weiß",
"Sven Demandt",
"Michael Rummenigge",
"Karlsruher SC",
"Alexander Bade"
] |
62,101,507 |
Eureka, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Eureka
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 223
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Eureka had a population of 223 people.
== Demographics ==
In the , Eureka had a population of 170 people.
In the , Eureka had a population of 223 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Eureka. The nearest primary schools are in Childers, Booyal, Cordalba and Dallarnil. The nearest secondary schools is in Childers (Isis District State High School).
|
[
"Kullogum, Queensland",
"Bundaberg Region",
"Childers, Queensland",
"Isis District State High School",
"Dallarnil",
"Apple Tree Creek, Queensland",
"Division of Hinkler",
"Queensland Government",
"The Brisbane Courier",
"Cordalba",
"Queensland",
"Electoral district of Burnett",
"Isis Central, Queensland",
"Booyal, Queensland",
"Golden Fleece, Queensland",
"AEST",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)"
] |
62,101,508 |
Template:Did you know nominations/Intelligence Community Campus-Bethesda
|
[
"Wikipedia talk:Did you know",
"Intelligence Community Campus-Bethesda",
"Army Map Service",
"WP:DYKR",
"{{TALKPAGENAME}}",
"Bethesda, Maryland",
"WP:DYKSG",
"Talk:{{SUBPAGENAME}}",
"Defense Mapping Agency"
] |
|
62,101,509 |
Category:Film series introduced in 1914
|
[] |
|
62,101,514 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/drivers24.in
|
== Links ==
drivers24.in resolves to [//207.174.212.181 207.174.212.181]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 2 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,101,515 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/drivers24.in
|
== Links ==
drivers24.in resolves to [//207.174.212.181 207.174.212.181]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
== Selected additions ==
Displayed 2 additions out of 2 total. For more info see Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/drivers24.in
== Entry ==
Log entry for the MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist:
\bdrivers24\.in\b # ADMINNAME # see [[Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/Local/drivers24.in]]
== Discussion ==
See COIBot report for more details.
New data reported. No links left in here mentioned edits. Marked stale. --COIBot (talk) 08:13, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist/log",
"</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/Local/drivers24.in",
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,101,519 |
Kullogum, Queensland
|
{{Infobox Australian place
| type = suburb
| name = Kullogum
| city =
| state = qld
| image =
| caption =
| coordinates =
| pop = 120
| pop_year =
| pop_footnotes = In the , Kullogum had a population of 120 people.
The Isis Highway enters the locaity from the north (Childers) and exits to the north-west (Eureka).
== History ==
In 1877, of land were resumed from the Kullugum pastoral run to establish smaller farms. The land was offered for selection on 17 April 1877.
== Demographics ==
In the , Kullogum had a population of 118 people.
In the , Kullogum had a population of 120 people.
== Education ==
There are no schools in Kullogum. The nearest government primary schools are Childers State School in neighbouring Childers to the north and Dallarnil State School in Dallarnil to the west. The nearest government secondary school is Isis District State High School in Childers.
|
[
"South Isis, Queensland",
"Doongul, Queensland",
"Electoral district of Maryborough (Queensland)",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"Bundaberg CBD",
"Isis River, Queensland",
"Childers",
"Hervey Bay",
"Childers, Queensland",
"Pastoralism",
"Isis District State High School",
"Dallarnil",
"Apple Tree Creek, Queensland",
"Queensland Government",
"Eureka, Queensland",
"Isis Highway",
"Electoral district of Burnett",
"Suburbs and localities (Australia)",
"Bundaberg Region",
"Division of Hinkler",
"The Brisbane Courier",
"Duckinwilla, Queensland",
"Golden Fleece, Queensland",
"AEST"
] |
62,101,520 |
Manuel Arturo Peña Batlle
|
Manuel Arturo Peña Batlle (26 February 1902 – 15 April 1954) was a Dominican Republic lawyer, historian, diplomat, and politician who served as a Foreign Minister of the Dominican Republic between 1943 and 1946 and shaped its relation with Haiti in the 1940s.
Peña Batlle was born in the city of San Carlos on 26 February 1902. At the age of 21, he graduated from the University of Santo Domingo with a degree in international law. He wrote a number of works on the history of the Dominican Republic statehood and is considered one of the most important Dominican Republic historians.
A metro station in Santo Domingo is named after him.
|
[
"Dominican Republic",
"San Carlos, Distrito Nacional",
"Manuel Arturo Peña Batlle metro station",
"Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo",
"Haiti",
"Vanguardia del Pueblo"
] |
62,101,523 |
File:USANetworkThursdayNightBaseball.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,101,525 |
File:The Missing Truth poster.png
|
==Summary==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"The Missing Truth"
] |
62,101,536 |
Category:Book series introduced in 1914
|
[] |
|
62,101,540 |
File:Jagan84.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,549 |
Category:Book series introduced in 1933
|
[] |
|
62,101,551 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/burdafashion.com
|
== Links ==
burdafashion.com resolves to [//212.123.41.105 212.123.41.105]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
Balajijagadesh
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups sysop, rollbacker on some wikis
Csar62
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group rollbacker on some wikis
Mohammad hajeer
User is whitelisted: User is in trusted groups rollbacker, reviewer on some wikis
Tradubot
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group bot on some wikis
== Additions ==
Displayed all 9 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,101,556 |
Category:Parks in Riyadh
|
Parks in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
|
[
"Riyadh",
"Park",
"Saudi Arabia"
] |
62,101,561 |
File:USANetworkMondayNightNHL.png
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,101,564 |
Category:Jewish economists
|
[] |
|
62,101,581 |
Lensgreve (Danish title)
|
Lensgreve is the name of the highest noble rank in Denmark, and refers to a count (greve) holding an estate with the status of a (len) county. They rank above ordinary (titular) counts, and their position in the Danish aristocracy as the highest-ranking noblemen is broadly comparable to that of dukes in other European countries.
The rank was introduced in 1671 by a regulation establishing counties and baronies.
|
[
"baron",
"county",
"Count",
"Duke",
"Denmark",
"County"
] |
62,101,590 |
Airpower Museum
|
Airpower Museum may refer to:
Airpower Museum (Antique Airfield), established in 1965 in Blakesburg, Iowa, U.S.
American Airpower Heritage Museum, an affiliate organization of the Commemorative Air Force (CAF), headquartered at Dallas Executive Airport in Dallas, Texas, U.S.
American Airpower Museum, established in 1998 at Republic Airport in East Farmingdale, New York, U.S.
CAF Airpower Museum, formerly located in Midland, Texas, U.S. (1991–2015)
|
[
"Imperial War Museum Duxford",
"List of aerospace museums",
"National Air and Space Museum",
"American Airpower Museum",
"Airpower Museum (Antique Airfield)",
"CAF Airpower Museum",
"Aviation museum",
"American Airpower Heritage Museum"
] |
62,101,592 |
Mychell Chagas
|
Mychell Ruan da Silva Chagas (born 6 June 1989), commonly known as Mychell Chagas, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Swiss 1. Liga club Young Fellows Juventus.
==Club career==
On 22 December 2017 he would join second tier football club Servette. He would go on to win the 2018–19 Swiss Challenge League division with the club and promotion to the top tier.
On 22 September 2020, Chagas joined China League One club Nantong Zhiyun.
In June 2022, Chagas joined Liga 1 club PSS Sleman.
In July 2023, Chagas returned to China and signed a with China League One club Yanbian Longding.
On 2 February 2024, Chagas returned to Switzerland and signed a with Swiss 1. Liga club FC Dietikon.
==Career statistics==
===Club===
Notes
==Honours==
===Club===
FC Rapperswil-Jona
Swiss Promotion League: 2016–17
Servette FC
Swiss Challenge League: 2018–19
|
[
"association football",
"PSS Sleman",
"Forward (association football)",
"RSSSF",
"SC Young Fellows Juventus",
"Swiss Super League",
"2018–19 Swiss Challenge League",
"China League One",
"2021 China League One",
"2022–23 Liga 1 (Indonesia)",
"Swiss Challenge League",
"FC Winterthur",
"Servette FC",
"2019–20 Swiss Challenge League",
"2017–18 Swiss Challenge League",
"FC Grenchen",
"Swiss Cup",
"Swiss Promotion League",
"2016–17 1. Liga Promotion",
"Nantong Zhiyun F.C.",
"2020 China League One",
"FC Rapperswil-Jona",
"2006–07 Swiss Challenge League",
"Yanbian Longding F.C.",
"Recife",
"Grasshopper Club Zürich",
"FC Zürich",
"Liga 1 (Indonesia)",
"2014–15 1. Liga Promotion",
"Swiss 1. Liga (football)",
"FC Dietikon",
"2019–20 Swiss Super League",
"2015–16 1. Liga Promotion"
] |
62,101,601 |
Vafessa Fofana
|
Vafessa Fofana (born 12 June 1992) is a French-Ivorian basketball player. He plays for the French League side BCM Gravelines-Dunkerque and the Ivory Coast national basketball team.
==Club career==
In 2009, Fofana started his club career with the Cholet Basket under 21 at the age of 17, he averaged 4.3 points, 2.8 rebounds and 0.3 blocks. In his second season at Cholet Basketball Under 21, he averaged 9.3 points, 3.5 rebounds and 0.6 blocks. In his third season at the Cholet Basketball Under 21, he averaged 13.4 points, 4 rebounds and 0.6 blocks.
In 2012, he played for the Saint-Vallier basketball team where he averaged 1.8 points, 1.6 rebounds and 0.3 blocks. In 2013, he played for the Denain Voltaire Basket where he averaged 4.1 points, 2.7 rebounds and 0.1 blocks.
In 2016, He played for the Hermine Nantes Basket where he averaged 8 points, 4.5 rebounds and 0 blocks. In 2017, he moved to HTV Basket where he averaged 6.3 points, 3.5 rebounds and 0.3 In 2018, he moved back to Hermine Nantes Basket where he averaged 9.9 points, 5.1 rebounds and 0.4 blocks.
In 2019, He moved back to Cholet Basket.
==Ivorian National team==
Fafona represents the Ivory Coast national basketball team. He participated at 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup where he averaged 3.2 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.4 assist.
|
[
"Paris",
"Ivory Coast national basketball team",
"Forward (basketball)",
"Hermine Nantes Basket",
"AfroBasket",
"LNB Pro A",
"FIBA AfroBasket 2021",
"basketball",
"HTV Basket",
"2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup",
"France",
"BCM Gravelines-Dunkerque",
"Cholet Basket",
"Denain Voltaire Basket"
] |
62,101,617 |
Wrigley Lodge
|
Wrigley Lodge is a building at 509 N. Union, Chicago, Illinois. Owned by the Salvation Army since 1931, it most recently housed a Salvation Army Thrift Store and adult rehabilitation center.
==History==
===Early uses===
The building was designed by the architectural firm of Furst & Rudolph and was built in 1891 by Biemolt & Carter at a cost of between $40,000 and $50,000. The building was originally the Braun & Fitts Butterine Factory. In response, Braun & Fitts and Chicago's other butterine manufacturers threatened move their operations out of the state. The company's name was changed to John F. Jelke Company in 1906.
In 1912, the Dairy Farm Products Company purchased the building from the John F. Jelke Company. The Dairy Farm Products Company opened its plant in the building on October 17, 1912, manufacturing butter. In 1916, the building was sold to William Wrigley Jr. for approximately $125,000. The building would house the factory and offices of the Downey-Farrell Company, a margarine manufacturer that Wrigley was affiliated with. An addition was built in 1917, designed by Postle & Fischer, at a cost of $40,000. In 1923, the building was purchased by the Duz Company, a manufacturer of soap powder, for $384,000. Wrigley re-purchased the building in 1929.
===Salvation Army ownership===
William Wrigley Jr. gave the Salvation Army use of the building on October 11, 1930 to use as a lodging house for the unemployed. It contained 2,020 beds, and facilities to feed a similar number. Wrigley donated the property to them outright the following year, and it was re-named Wrigley Lodge. Following World War II, it served as a rehabilitation center for veterans.
In 1946, the Salvation Army began raising funds for the remodeling of Wrigley Lodge and the construction of new buildings. A new one-story warehouse was also built behind the north half of the building. The Salvation Army announced their intention to sell the complex in August 2019. In February 2021, Preservation Chicago listed Wrigley Lodge as one of Chicago's most endangered buildings. The Salvation Army closed the adult rehabilitation center and thrift store in March 2022.
|
[
"The Salvation Army",
"Bureau of Animal Industry",
"butterine",
"Albert Nelson Marquis",
"Preservation Chicago",
"William Wrigley Jr.",
"Streamline Moderne",
"Farmers' Review",
"Charles Rudolph",
"United States Department of Agriculture",
"David E. Postle",
"Chicago Tribune",
"American Institute of Architects",
"University of Illinois Press",
"Curbed",
"Chicago, Illinois",
"Congress Expressway",
"World War II",
"the Salvation Army"
] |
62,101,622 |
File:Lugano Tigers logo.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,630 |
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets of Jknutson1978
|
[] |
|
62,101,638 |
Winnifred Ntumi
|
Winnifred Ntumi (born 28 September 2002) is a Ghanaian weightlifter, competing in the 45 kg category and representing Ghana at international competitions. She competed at world championships, most recently at the 2018 Africa Youth Championship, 2019 Africa Weightlifting Championship in Egypt and the 2019 Africa Games in Morocco.
== Weightlifting ==
In 2019, she won a bronze medal at the 2019 African Weightlifting Championship, competing in the 49 kg category, making her the first Ghanaian to compete and win a medal at the championship. Prior to that, she represented Ghana at the 2018 Africa Youth Championship and won a bronze medal for competing in the women's 48 kg category in Egypt.
She competed in the women's 49 kg event at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The 2021 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships were also held at the same time and her total result gave her the bronze medal in this event.
She finished in 9th place in the women's 49 kg event at the 2022 Commonwealth Games held in Birmingham, England.
At the 2023 African Games hosted in Accra, Ghana she competed in the women's 45 kg and 49 kg category events. She won one gold medal and claimed two silver medals, marking the first win for Ghana at the 2023 African Games.
|
[
"2021 World Weightlifting Championships",
"2023 African Games",
"Birmingham",
"Accra",
"Weightlifting at the 2023 African Games",
"Weightlifting at the 2019 African Games",
"International Weightlifting Federation",
"Olympic weightlifting",
"bronze medal",
"2023 African Weightlifting Championships",
"African Games",
"Morocco",
"Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships",
"2019 African Games",
"2021 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships",
"Ghana",
"2022 Commonwealth Games",
"2021 World Weightlifting Championships – Women's 49 kg",
"African Weightlifting Championships",
"Egypt",
"Ghanaian",
"England",
"2019 African Weightlifting Championships",
"Weightlifting at the 2022 Commonwealth Games – Women's 49 kg"
] |
62,101,645 |
Category:Comics set in Oklahoma
|
Comics set in Oklahoma.
|
[
"Comics",
"Oklahoma"
] |
62,101,660 |
2019 Telkom Knockout
|
The 2019 Telkom Knockout was the 38th edition and final edition of the Telkom Knockout, a South African cup competition comprising the 16 teams in the Premier Soccer League. It took place between October and December 2019 and was won by Mamelodi Sundowns.
==Teams==
===Stadium and Locations===
==Round of 16==
==Quarter-finals==
==Semi-finals==
==Final==
==Statistics==
|
[
"Frédéric Nsabiyumva",
"Xolani Ndlovu",
"King Goodwill Zwelithini Stadium",
"Kermit Erasmus",
"Lebogang Manyama",
"Vusi Tshepo Sibiya",
"Durban",
"Coetzenburg Stadium",
"Luckyboy Mokoena",
"Kaizer Chiefs F.C.",
"Loftus Versfeld Stadium",
"Polokwane City F.C.",
"Terrence Dzvukamanja",
"Maritzburg United",
"Victor Gomes",
"Mothobi Mvala",
"Tendai Ndoro",
"Peter Shalulile",
"Marabastad",
"William Twala",
"Bidvest Wits F.C.",
"AmaZulu F.C.",
"Cape Town Stadium",
"Deon Hotto",
"Sibiya",
"Spiwe Given Msimango",
"Clayton Daniels",
"Gabadinho Mhango",
"Sugar Ray Xulu Stadium",
"Ben Motshwari",
"Judas Moseamedi",
"Johannesburg",
"Soweto",
"Rhulani Manzini",
"2020 Telkom Knockout",
"Thamsanqa Gabuza",
"Molibedi Mokoena",
"Pentjie Zulu",
"Stellenbosch",
"Mamelodi Sundowns F.C.",
"2018 Telkom Knockout",
"Taariq Fielies",
"Jerry Msana",
"Bloemfontein Celtic F.C.",
"Orlando Stadium",
"Bradley Grobler",
"FNB Stadium",
"Peter Mokaba Stadium",
"Mdantsane",
"Durban North",
"Teboho Mokoena (footballer, born 1997)",
"Bernard Parker",
"Gerald Phiri Jr.",
"Harry Gwala Stadium",
"Chippa United",
"Sbonelo Vusumuzi Ngubane",
"Gastón Sirino",
"Highlands Park",
"Samir Nurkovic",
"Andriamirado Aro Hasina Andrianarimanana",
"Gabriel Nyoni",
"Gaston Sirino",
"Polokwane",
"Silas Phumlani Maziya",
"Cape Town City F.C. (2016)",
"Thabiso Mokoena",
"Mbombela",
"Daniel Cardoso",
"Sisa Dukashe Stadium",
"Stellenbosch F.C.",
"Bloemfontein Celtic",
"Thohoyandou",
"Eric Mathoho",
"Port Elizabeth",
"Lehlogonolo Masalesa",
"SuperSport United F.C.",
"Ebrahim Seedat",
"Leonardo Castro (footballer, born 1989)",
"Mlungisi Mbunjana",
"Sifiso Hlanti",
"Lindokuhle Praise Mtshali",
"Edmilson Dove",
"Bloemfontein",
"Thabo Nodada",
"Black Leopards",
"Mamelodi Sundowns",
"Abel Mabaso",
"Bidvest Stadium",
"Richard Mbulu",
"Dr. Petrus Molemela Stadium",
"Maritzburg United F.C.",
"Braamfontein",
"Daylon Claasen",
"Jerry Msane",
"Clive Augusto",
"Black Leopards F.C.",
"Bevan Fransman",
"Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium",
"Lucas Masterpieces Moripe Stadium",
"Premier Soccer League",
"Tembisa",
"Princess Magogo Stadium",
"Makhulong Stadium",
"Mduduzi Mdantsane",
"Thohoyandou Stadium",
"Augustine Chidi Kwem",
"Baroka F.C.",
"Kurt Lentjies",
"Telkom Knockout",
"Highlands Park F.C.",
"Dean Furman",
"Mogamad Yusuf Jappie",
"Golden Arrows",
"Cape Town",
"Mauricio Affonso",
"Fortune Makaringe",
"Hlompho Kekana",
"Lyle Lakay",
"Chippa United F.C.",
"Lamontville Golden Arrows F.C.",
"Pietermaritzburg",
"Khama Billiat",
"Mbombela Stadium",
"Lamontville",
"Thembinkosi Lorch",
"Orlando Pirates F.C.",
"Yagan Sasman",
"Sugar Rey Xulu Stadium",
"Tapelo Nyongo",
"Motjeka Madisha",
"Mwape Musonda",
"Thapelo Morena",
"Chris Katjiukua",
"Siyanda Xulu",
"Green Point, Cape Town",
"Thabiso Kutumela",
"Moses Mabhida Stadium",
"Daniel Cardodo",
"Pogiso Sanoka",
"Pretoria",
"José Alí Meza",
"Happy Jele"
] |
62,101,661 |
Yousuf Zetuna
|
{{Infobox football biography
|name = Yousuf Zetuna
|image =
|fullname = Yousuf Salwan Zetuna
|birth_date =
|birth_place = Tel Keppe, Ninawa, Iraq
|height = 1.85 m
==Early life==
Born in Tel Keppe in the Nineveh Governorate of Iraq, Zetuna is one of four brothers, including fellow footballer Yohan Zetuna, and has one sister. Due to the family being Catholic, they faced religious persecution in Iraq, and fled initially to Turkey, living in a United Nations refugee camp. In 2016, the family relocated to Oaxaca, Mexico, as one of Zetuna's uncles was living there. Following one more Copa MX appearance, he left the club for Liga Premier de México side La Piedad, but only made two league appearances before the COVID-19 pandemic struck and the season was terminated.
He joined fellow Liga Premier side Saltillo in August 2020, and went on to score his first goal in senior football on the first matchday of the season; the equaliser in a 2–2 draw against Mineros de Fresnillo on 18 September.
Zetuna made one appearance for Oaxaca, coming on as a late substitute for Julio Cruz in a 2–0 loss to Cimarrones, before his contract expired in May 2021. He signed for Albanian Kategoria Superiore side Kastrioti in January 2022, going on to make eight appearances in all competitions before leaving the club at the end of the year.
==International career==
Zetuna was called up to the Iraq under-23 squad in August 2021. He made one appearance for the nation, in a 4–1 friendly loss to the United Arab Emirates.
==Career statistics==
===Club===
Notes
|
[
"association football",
"Tel Keppe",
"KS Kastrioti",
"Alebrijes de Oaxaca",
"Rochester, Michigan",
"Ninawa Province",
"Forward (association football)",
"Yohan Zetuna",
"Catholic",
"Copa MX",
"Assyrian people",
"Ascenso MX",
"Nineveh Governorate",
"Exhibition game",
"2020–21 Liga Premier de México season",
"C.F. La Piedad",
"Julio Cruz (Mexican footballer)",
"Adrián Marín (footballer, born 1994)",
"2021–22 Kategoria Superiore",
"Deportivo Toluca F.C.",
"Mineros de Fresnillo F.C.",
"Oaxaca",
"2019–20 Ascenso MX season",
"Serie A de México",
"United Arab Emirates national under-23 football team",
"Liga Premier de México",
"Saltillo F.C.",
"Iraq national under-23 football team",
"United Nations",
"Liga de Expansión MX",
"COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico",
"2020–21 Liga de Expansión MX season",
"Michigan",
"Cimarrones de Sonora",
"Kategoria Superiore",
"Albanian Cup"
] |
62,101,672 |
Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Eileen Collins
|
===Eileen Collins===
Voting period ends on 29 Oct 2019 at 08:54:35 (UTC)
Reason:Eileen Collins became the first woman to command a Space Shuttle and the second to command any space mission on STS-93 which launched on 23 July 1999. She is pictured here on the first day of flight at the commander's station.
Articles in which this image appears:Eileen Collins, STS-93, Women in Aviation International Pioneer Hall of Fame
FP category for this image:Wikipedia:Featured pictures/People/Science and engineering
Creator:NASA
Support as nominator – --- Coffeeandcrumbs 08:54, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Support - strong EV, not frequently seen documentation here at FPC. MER-C 09:51, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Oppose – Very cluttered. Orange thing is distracting. Should be more tightly framed. – Sca (talk) 13:49, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
This is not Commons... ;-) --Janke | Talk 18:14, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support – Bammesk (talk) 16:11, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Support Super-crowded, but it's an action shot, and I can accept that as part of the EV of her doing something notable for the first time. Colour balance typical of 90s film. Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 01:25, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
FYI. I have slightly turned down red and green to reduce yellowing. (before after) --- Coffeeandcrumbs 02:01, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support "before", but oppose "after" version; the paper and grey instrument panel are blueish in the edited version - check RGB pixel values! Also, the original color is typical of early digital cameras, IMO we shouldn't mess with that... PS: Can't get the original to display, someone please fix, thanks! --Janke | Talk 18:07, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
This isn't film - it's shot with an early, 6 Mpix Kodak DCS460 digtal camera. --Janke | Talk 11:35, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
The Kodak camera probably exposed film and then scanned it internally :-) It would have been an awesome invention Bammesk (talk) 13:21, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Impressive! It's clearly imitating 90s film. though: it has that kind of pseudo-Technicolor-colour balance, which is very 90s. It's not exactly natural, but I'm not going to vote against a historical shot because it uses historical colour balance. Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 15:38, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Impressive indeed! But in 1995, the camera cost US$35,600! See: Kodak_DCS_400_series - My own Canon bought in 2000 for about $2000 only had a 2 Mpix sensor... back then, the color balance was very similar to this, and the other digital cameras at the time. Now, they all are significantly better; photos taken with my current 24 Mpix, $1000 Canon are well-nigh perfect in that respect. Better Bayer filters, perchance? --Janke | Talk 17:43, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Perhaps they were actively trying to imitate film of the time, to make the transition easier? Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 7.1% of all FPs 21:17, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
I doubt that - I think they just did the best they could at the time... --Janke | Talk 07:16, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
I have reverted back to the original. I should have uploaded edited version as a new file anyway. --- Coffeeandcrumbs 18:53, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
OK, thanks. I struck the now unnecessary text in my support above. --Janke | Talk 07:22, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Support Very high EV, which overcomes marginal byte count. Good quality and sharpness; clutter adds to the 'you-are-there' impact. DonFB (talk) 04:12, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support. The high EV of this in-action shot makes up for cluttered composition. I don't have a strong preference between the before and after versions but the comment that the color balance is "typical of early digital cameras" tips me towards the untweaked colors. —David Eppstein (talk) 20:45, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Support Geoffroi 01:43, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
--Armbrust The Homunculus 10:22, 29 October 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"Space Shuttle Columbia",
"Technicolor",
"STS-93",
"WP:FP",
"Eileen Collins",
"Bayer filter",
"Kodak DCS 400 series",
"Women in Aviation International Pioneer Hall of Fame"
] |
62,101,680 |
Egg Firm
|
{{Infobox company
| name = Egg Firm, Inc.
| logo = Egg Firm Logo.png
| native_name = 株式会社EGG FIRM
| romanized_name = Kabushiki-gaisha Eggu Fāmu
| native_name_lang = ja
| type = Kabushiki gaisha
| foundation =
| founder = Nobuhiro Osawa
| hq_location = Honchō
| hq_location_city = Nakano, Tokyo
| hq_location_country = Japan
| owner = {{ubl|Nobuhiro Osawa
==Works==
===Television series===
Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? (2015–2023) – Production Cooperation
Gate (2015) – Production Cooperation
Schoolgirl Strikers: Animation Channel (2017) – Production
Kino's Journey —the Beautiful World— the Animated Series (2017) – Production
Konohana Kitan (2017) – Production Cooperation
Sword Art Online Alternative: Gun Gale Online (2018–2024) – Production
Sword Art Online: Alicization (2018–2020) – Production
Endro! (2019) – Production
No Guns Life (2019–2020) – Production
Kandagawa Jet Girls (2019) – Production
(2020–2023) – Production
Mushoku Tensei: Jobless Reincarnation (2021–2024) – Production
Rumble Garanndoll (2021) – Production
The Executioner and Her Way of Life (2022) – Production
Immoral Guild (2022) – Production
Onimai: I'm Now Your Sister! (2023) – Production
My Love Story with Yamada-kun at Lv999 (2023) – Production
World Dai Star (2023) – Production
I Got Married to the Girl I Hate Most in Class (2025) – Production
Uglymug, Epicfighter (2025) – Production
Ruri no Hōseki (2025) – Production
===Films===
Accel World: Infinite Burst (2016) – Production Cooperation
Sword Art Online Progressive: Aria of a Starless Night (2021) – Production
Sword Art Online Progressive: Scherzo of Deep Night (2022) – Production
===Other===
Seishun Buta Yarō wa Bunny Girl Senpai no Yume o Minai with Sakura-sō no Pet na Kanojo (2016; ) – Production
Triple Monsters (2018; video game) – Planning Cooperation
|
[
"Famitsu",
"Oricon",
"I Got Married to the Girl I Hate Most in Class",
"Uglymug, Epicfighter",
"Honchō, Tokyo",
"Mantan Web",
"The Disastrous Life of Saiki K.",
"Onimai: I'm Now Your Sister!",
"Reki Kawahara",
"Anime",
"My Love Story with Yamada-kun at Lv999",
"Comic Natalie",
"Rumble Garanndoll",
"World Dai Star",
"Sword Art Online Progressive: Scherzo of Deep Night",
"Endro!",
"Gate (novel series)",
"Last Period",
"UQ Holder!",
"Anime News Network",
"The Executioner and Her Way of Life",
"Studio Bind",
"Akiyuki Shinbo",
"Animate Times",
"Genco",
"anime",
"Sword Art Online: Alicization",
"Kazuma Miki",
"Sword Art Online Alternative: Gun Gale Online",
"Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?: Arrow of the Orion",
"Sword Art Online the Movie: Ordinal Scale",
"Accel World: Infinite Burst",
"Nakano, Tokyo",
"Mushoku Tensei",
"Japanese yen",
"Ruri no Hōseki",
"Kandagawa Jet Girls",
"Kabushiki gaisha",
"Sword Oratoria",
"Knight's & Magic",
"Sword Art Online Progressive: Aria of a Starless Night",
"Prison School",
"Schoolgirl Strikers: Animation Channel",
"Ichiro Okouchi",
"Dengeki Online",
"Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?",
"Immoral Guild",
"Shimoneta",
"No Guns Life",
"Konohana Kitan",
"Rin-ne",
"Kino's Journey"
] |
62,101,687 |
Troy Jones
|
Troy Jones (born 11 June 1988) is an American kickboxer who competes in the Glory Kickboxing welterweight division.
==Martial arts career==
Jones made his Glory debut against Paul Banasiak at Glory 52: Los Angeles on March 31, 2018. He won the fight by unanimous decision.
After notching stoppage victories against Kit Ruddock at MECCA XII on May 12, 2018, and Ariel Abreu at Friday Night Fights on June 16, 2018, Jones was scheduled to face Casey Greene at Glory 58: Chicago on September 14, 2018. He won the fight by a first-round head kick knockout.
Jones was scheduled to face Omari Boyd at Glory 63: Houston on February 1, 2019. He won the fight by unanimous decision.
Jones was scheduled to face Ammari Diedrick at Glory 68: Miami on September 28, 2019. He won the fight by a first-round technical knockout.
Jones was scheduled to face Murthel Groenhart for the interim Glory Welterweight Championship at Glory 70: Lyon on October 26, 2019. He took the fight on a short notice, as a replacement for Cédric Doumbé. He lost the fight by a second-round knockout.
Jones was scheduled to face Miguel Angel Padilla for the WMC Pan American 170 lbs title at TRIUMPHANT 11 on June 12, 2021. He won the fight by a first-round technical knockout.
Jones was scheduled to face Alim Nabiev at Glory: Collision 3 on October 23, 2021. He lost the fight by unanimous decision.
==Titles and accomplishments==
Amateur
2014 Thai Boxing Association Novice 185 lbs Champion
2014 Annual Muay Thai Classic C-Class Champion
2015 Extreme Striking Promotions Welterweight Champion
2015 IFMA Royal World Cup B-Class -75kg
2015 Annual Muay Thai Classic A-Class Champion
2016 Friday Night Fights Super Middleweight Champion
2016 IFMA Pan American Games
Professional
2017 Bangla Stadium Champion
2021 WMC Pan American 170 lbs Champion
==Kickboxing record==
|- style="background:#fbb"
| 2021-10-23|| Loss ||align=left| Alim Nabiev || Glory: Collision 3 || Arnhem, Netherlands || Decision (Unanimous) || 3 || 3:00
|-
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2021-06-12 || Win ||align=left| Miguel Angel Padilla || TRIUMPHANT 11 || Miami, USA || TKO (Punches) ||1 ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- align="center" bgcolor= "#FFBBBB"
| 2019-10-26|| Loss ||align=left| Murthel Groenhart || Glory 70: Lyon || Lyon, France || KO (Punches) || 2 || 2:38
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2019-09-28|| Win ||align=left| Ammari Diedrick || Glory 68: Miami || Miami, United States || TKO (3 Knockdowns Rule) || 1 || 2:28
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2019-02-01|| Win ||align=left| Omari Boyd || Glory 63: Houston || Houston, USA || Decision (Unanimous) || 3 || 3:00
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2018-09-14|| Win ||align=left| Casey Greene || Glory 58: Chicago || Chicago, United States || KO (Head kick) || 1 || 1:00
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2018-06-16|| Win ||align=left| Ariel Abreu || Friday Night Fights || New York, United States || KO (Right elbow) || 1 || 1:20
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2018-05-12|| Win ||align=left| Kit Ruddock || MECCA XII || Minnesota, United States || KO (Right elbow) || 3 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2018-03-31|| Win ||align=left| Paul Banasiak || Glory 52: Los Angeles || Los Angeles, United States || Decision (Unanimous) || 3 || 3:00
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2017-06-21|| Win ||align=left| || Bangla Boxing Stadium || Phuket, Thailand || KO (Straight right) || 2 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#fbb;"
| 2017-06-04 || Loss ||align=left| Pornsawan Petchrambo || Max Muay Thai|| Thailand || KO || 1 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2017-03-22 || Win ||align=left| || WMO international Thai martial arts festival, Final || Bangkok, Thailand || || ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2017-03-20 || Win ||align=left| || WMO international Thai martial arts festival, Semi Final || Bangkok, Thailand || TKO (Right kick)|| 2 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2017-02-19 || Win||align=left| Armin || Bangla Boxing Stadium || Phuket, Thailand || TKO (Doctor Stoppage/Elbow) || 2 ||
|- style="text-align:center; background:#cfc;"
| 2017-01-27 || Win ||align=left| || Bangla Boxing Stadium || Phuket, Thailand || TKO (Left body knee) || 3 ||
|-
| colspan=9 | Legend:
|- style="background:#fbb;"
| 2017-07-29 || Loss ||align=left| Vitaly Gurkov || I.F.M.A. World Games 2017, Semi Finals -75 kg || Poland || TKO || 3 ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2017-07-28 || Win ||align=left| Johane Beausejour || I.F.M.A. World Games 2017, Quarter Finals -75 kg || Poland || Decision || 3 || 3:00
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-12-04|| Win ||align=left| Giovanni Mazzetti || I.F.M.A. World Muaythai 2016 Pan American Games, Finals || Lima, Peru || Decision || 3 || 3:00
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-12-03|| Win ||align=left| Scott Mackenzie || I.F.M.A. World Muaythai 2016 Pan American Games, Semi Finals || Lima, Peru || Decision || 3 || 3:00
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-12-02|| Win ||align=left| || I.F.M.A. World Muaythai 2016 Pan American Games, Quarter Finals || Lima, Peru || Forfeit || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-09-24 || Win ||align=left| || Extreme Striking Promotions 10 || United States || TKO || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-06-04 || Win ||align=left| || Grand Casino Hinckley || New York, United States || || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#fbb;"
| 2016-05-25|| Loss ||align=left| Tengnueng Sitjaesairoong || I.F.M.A. World Muaythai 2016 Championships || Sweden || || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-05-21|| Win ||align=left| || I.F.M.A. World Muaythai 2016 Championships || Sweden || KO || 1 ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2016-04-29 || Win ||align=left| Ramon Maldonado || Friday Night Fights || New York, United States || Decision (Unanimous) || 5 || 3:00
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#c5d2ea;"
| 2016-01-16|| No Contest ||align=left| Jason Strzelecki || DRILLER PROMOTIONS MECCA 7 || Minnesota, United States || || 1 ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-08|| Win ||align=left| Osman Ceken || IFMA Royal World Cup, Final || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-08|| Win ||align=left| Aittainoun || IFMA Royal World Cup, Semi Final || Bangkok, Thailand || TKO || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-08|| Win ||align=left| Tomas Mendez || IFMA Royal World Cup, Quarter Final || Bangkok, Thailand || Decision || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-08|| Win ||align=left| Yani || IFMA Royal World Cup, Round of 16 || Bangkok, Thailand || TKO || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-05-27|| Win ||align=left| || Thai Boxing Association, Final || Iowa, United States || KO || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-05-26|| Win ||align=left| || Thai Boxing Association, Semi Final || Iowa, United States || KO || ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-05-25|| Win ||align=left| || Thai Boxing Association, Quarter Final || Iowa, United States || Decision (Unanimous)|| ||
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2015-02-21|| Win ||align=left| Tyler Durocher || Extreme Striking Promotions 9|| United States || || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|- style="background:#cfc;"
| 2014-03-01|| Win ||align=left| || Unite Fight Charity || United States || || ||
|-
! style=background:white colspan=9 |
|-
| colspan=9 | Legend:
|
[
"Los Angeles",
"List of male kickboxers",
"Glory (kickboxing)",
"Kickboxing",
"France",
"Muay Thai",
"Minnesota",
"Phuket, Thailand",
"Minneapolis",
"United States",
"Poland",
"2018 in Glory",
"2019 in Glory",
"World Muay Thai Council",
"Bangkok, Thailand",
"Tengnueng Sitjaesairoong",
"Cédric Doumbé",
"Lyon",
"Miami, USA",
"Chicago",
"Sweden",
"New York (state)",
"Lima, Peru",
"Minnesota Martial Arts Academy",
"Alim Nabiev",
"Thailand",
"International Federation of Muaythai Amateur",
"Vitaly Gurkov",
"Arnhem, Netherlands",
"Murthel Groenhart",
"Houston, USA",
"Max Muay Thai",
"2021 in Glory",
"Miami",
"Iowa",
"Minnesota, United States"
] |
62,101,696 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Jack Venturi
|
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. Barkeep49 (talk) 20:43, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Jack Venturi===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
WP:BLP1E applies. Mccapra (talk) 09:00, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of People-related deletion discussions. Mccapra (talk) 09:00, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Law-related deletion discussions. Mccapra (talk) 09:00, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of New Jersey-related deletion discussions. Mccapra (talk) 09:00, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete a non-notable lawyer.John Pack Lambert (talk) 22:13, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete, no indication of notability. His main claim to fame, the Michael Behn case (State v. Behn, 868 A.2d 329 (2005)), is an intermediate appellate case that does not appear to be notable. If it really was "one of the key cases that got the Federal Bureau of Investigation to stop using Comparative Bullet Lead Analysis", the case (but not Venturi) is worthy of a mention in Comparative bullet-lead analysis. TJRC (talk) 00:04, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
Comment - I need some time to look into this one. Bearian (talk) 19:48, 25 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete. Fails WP:SIGCOV. While Venturi has been involved with two notable cases, he himself is not the main subject of any of the sources. His cases are the focus. There is no independent source talking about his career as a whole or his life. The important content from this article can all be covered on pages about the individual court cases or on the film that was made. The evidence just isn't there to support this article.4meter4 (talk) 17:14, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"WP:BLP1E",
"Comparative bullet-lead analysis",
"Jack Venturi",
"WP:SIGCOV"
] |
62,101,700 |
33Across
|
33Across is a publisher monetization company, founded in 2008 by Eric Wheeler, the CEO of 33Across. The 33Across platform delivers programmatic video and display ad revenue to publishers across devices. Its headquarters are in Sunnyvale, California. The platform connects buyers and sellers through attention-focused ad formats and has offices and employees in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, the UK, India, and Japan.
== History ==
33Across was among the first companies to leverage social data to build predictive targeting for brands. The company grew quickly with Series A venture backing from First Round Capital. Flybridge provided Series B, providing the capital to acquire San Franciscobased Tynt, a sharing technology on about 800,000 websites in over 195 countries that reaches 1 billion global users monthly. After heavy revenue losses in 2012 and plateauing in 2013, the company downsized and began to build a new business focused on securing quality in-view ad impressions.
In 2014, 33Across signed its one millionth publisher. In 2017, the company promoted Yuri Burka to managing director of the EU and Shyam Kuttikad to CTO. After four years of triple-digit growth, in 2018, the company expanded to Europe and Asia. 33Across marked its strongest year in its 14-year history with EBITDA growth of 500% from 2019 to 2020. In 2021, Paul Bell was appointed as president.
In 2021, the company launched Lexicon; an identity solution created specifically to help publishers succeed without cookies. In June, 2022, it was announced that Lexicon saw 15X year-over-year growth in daily cookieless revenue for publishers as well as 300% increase in fill rates and 150% increase in cookieless CPMs.
Today, 33Across has over 800,000 integrated global publishers, over 1 billion global users, and over 500 billion in monthly traffic.
|
[
"Chief technology officer",
"display ad",
"Sunnyvale, California",
"First Round Capital"
] |
62,101,707 |
Category:Labor history of Romania
|
[] |
|
62,101,711 |
Category:Labor relations in Romania
|
[] |
|
62,101,714 |
Category:Cultural depictions of Greek queens
|
[] |
|
62,101,716 |
Rodolfo Sulia
|
Rodolfo Eduardo III Sulia Herrera (born August 8, 2002) is a Puerto Rican football player who currently plays as a defender for Academia Quintana in the Liga Puerto Rico.
==Club career==
Sulia joined the reserve squad of Club Gimnasia y Esgrima of Argentina’s Primera Nacional from local side Mirabelli SA in 2019.
In February 2020 Sulia went on trial with North Texas SC of USL League One. He was originally identified by North Texas SC in 2019 when he trialed with its parent club, FC Dallas of Major League Soccer.
By 2021 he had joined reigning Liga Puerto Rico champions Metropolitan FA as it prepared for its 2021 Caribbean Club Championship campaign.
On June 9, 2021, Sulia and fellow Puerto Rican Joel Serrano joined National Independent Soccer Association club Chicago House AC.
==Career statistics==
===International===
|
[
"association football",
"Academia Quintana",
"Mirabelli SA",
"Puerto Rico Sol",
"Puerto Rico national under-20 football team",
"Major League Soccer",
"Defender (association football)",
"FC Dallas",
"Argentina",
"Satélite Norte FC",
"Primera Nacional",
"Metropolitan FA",
"Joel Serrano",
"Puerto Rico national football team",
"North Texas SC",
"2021 Caribbean Club Championship",
"Copa Simón Bolívar (Bolivia)",
"Gimnasia y Esgrima de Mendoza",
"Liga Puerto Rico",
"Chicago House AC",
"Carolina, Puerto Rico",
"USL League One",
"Fort Wayne FC",
"Bolivia",
"National Independent Soccer Association"
] |
62,101,725 |
The Salvation Army Building
|
The Salvation Army Building may refer to:
The Salvation Army Building (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
International Headquarters of The Salvation Army
Wrigley Lodge, a building in Chicago, Illinois, also known as the Salvation Army Building
Salvation Army Headquarters (Saint Paul, Minnesota)
|
[
"Salvation Army Headquarters (Saint Paul, Minnesota)",
"International Headquarters of The Salvation Army",
"Salvation Army Building (disambiguation)",
"The Salvation Army Building (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)",
"Wrigley Lodge"
] |
62,101,733 |
Azerbaijan State Film Fund
|
The Azerbaijan State Film Fund is a public fund for support of the film industry and the preservation of film history.
It was established on December 22, 1993 by the order of Cabinet of Ministers of Azerbaijan in Baku and has been operating since 1994. In 1999 the ASFF was elected a member of the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF).
The Fund operates according to the recommendations of the International Federation of Film Archives and in accordance with international standards. The Azerbaijan State Film Foundation, maintains regular contact with the headquarters of the Federation in Brussels.
== Mission ==
The Azerbaijan State Film Fund operates in 5 main areas:
Restoration and protection of films
Promotion of national and foreign cinema
Collection of archival materials
Carrying out of scientific-research works
Work on international relations
== Library ==
At the Azerbaijan State Film Fund, 64,372 film materials, approximately 20,000 different photographic documents, 14,000 original documents, exhibits and materials (literary and directorial scripts of films, mounting sheets, diplomas, and prizes are stored.
The first chronicle of the Azerbaijani national cinema shot 119 years ago ("The Oil Gush Fire in Bibiheybat", "The Oil Gush in Balakhany"), was brought from the French Film Archive and is retained by the ARDFF. In 2008, the Film Fund began publishing books and "Cinema Bulletin" talking about protected works every year.
The fund has more than 12,000 photos of cinema history. Hundreds of fiction, documentary, scientific, mass, animation films (Including Maiden Tower (1924), Bismillah (1925), Sevil (1929), Latif (1930), Ismat (1934), By the Bluest of Seas (1935), Almaz (1936), Baku People (1938), Villagers (1939), Sabuhi (1941), The Cloth Peddler (1945 and 1962), Fatali Khan (1947), The Lights of Baku (1950), Bakhtiar (1955), If Not This One, Then That One (1956)), along with foreign films dubbed into Azerbaijani. Satirical magazine Mozalan and others, originals and copies of 11,100 Azerbaijani and world cinematographic works are stored by the fund. In addition to the films, the Fund's archives keep records of documents of filmmakers, their manuscripts, documentary material and materials related to film production, movie literary scripts, mounting sheets, director scripts, diplomas and prizes.
== Promotion ==
One of the main directions of the State Film Fund is the promotion of national and foreign films. Creative evenings and anniversary events, of cinema figures are held. Film catalogs are published in Azerbaijani, Russian and English, including electronic versions.
Photo files of Gara Garayev, Fikret Amirov, Niyazi, Tofig Guliyev and Muslim Magomayev are brought to the Foundation from the Russian Federation, Canada, Georgia and other countries. From the Ukrainian Simferopol Archives, copies of documents by one of the first Azerbaijani film actors, Khayri Amirzadeh, and from the United States, archival documents of the first Azerbaijani actress Izzet Orujova, documents related to the shooting of Sevil (1929) were included in the Fund. During the search, several missing and rare silent films were discovered: In exchange (1925), The House on the Volcano (1928), Two Friend (1934), Naughty Team (1937) and other cinolents.
Scenes from the film Be Ready, directed by Mikayil Mikayilov at the Azerfilm film studio in 1939 (a short video made by Pate), features women's fashions in the late 19th century and the famous "Yablochko" dance by the Nikitchenko brothers, were found and donated to the fund.
== Museum ==
There is also a museum in the fund. There are interesting exhibits of the cinema, gifts from foreign guests to the Film Fund, personal archives of famous people, the personal possessions of some directors, etc. protected. At the end of 2009, for the first time in Azerbaijan, the ARSFF opened the Children's Cinema House with the support of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation.
|
[
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"Azerbaijan",
"The Oil Gush in Balakhany",
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"Fikret Amirov",
"Georgia (country)",
"Bakhtiar (film)",
"Gara Garayev",
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"United States",
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"International Federation of Film Archives",
"Baku",
"Heydar Aliyev Foundation",
"Niyazi",
"The Cloth Peddler (1945 film)",
"Mikayil Mikayilov"
] |
62,101,747 |
Xiaofei Yao
|
Xiaofei Yao is the Chinese e-commerce CEO of Rogrand - a company involved in pharmaceuticals e-commerce.
==Life==
She is the founder and CEO of Rogrand E-commerce. Rogrand E-commerce is based in Beijing and has eight other offices in China in Shandong, Hubei, Guangdong, Shanxi, Liaoning, Sichuan, Zhejiang and Henan. In 2016 her company launched an initiative at a conference in Lima to tie together partners in the Chinese pharmaceutical market including manufacturers, pharmacies and hospitals to manage chronic diseases using on-line resources. She emphasises the importance of data to ambitious companies.
In September 2019 the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development announced seven "eTrade for Women Advocates" from the developing world. The others were Nazanin Daneshvar, Clarisse Iribagiza, Patricia Zoundi Yao, Nina Angelovska, Claudia de Heredia and Helianti Hilman from Indonesia. The awards were announced on the periphery of the United Nations General Assembly in New York and she was one of the five winners who were present.
|
[
"Helianti Hilman",
"e-commerce",
"Nazanin Daneshvar",
"Patricia Zoundi Yao",
"Claudia de Heredia",
"United Nations Conference on Trade and Development",
"pharmaceuticals",
"Lima",
"Clarisse Iribagiza",
"Nina Angelovska",
"United Nations General Assembly"
] |
62,101,769 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/researchreportkart.com
|
== Links ==
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|
[
"en:User:COIBot",
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62,101,772 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/Research Report Kart
|
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"en:User:COIBot",
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62,101,778 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/2405:201:3200:5634:5483:C561:FF20:AFA
|
== Links ==
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Displayed all 1 additions.
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[
"en:User:COIBot",
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62,101,780 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/2402:8100:384E:538C:C483:1CE1:F069:C34A
|
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researchreportkart.com (Automonitor: reported to :en:MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist (diff))
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"en:User:COIBot",
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62,101,782 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/2409:4043:91c:2d7b:c17b:d14d:178b:21c2
|
== Links ==
== Users ==
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[] |
62,101,790 |
Victor Sebestyen
|
Victor Sebestyen (born 1956) is a journalist of Eastern Europe, Russia, and Communism.
== Career ==
Victor was born in Budapest. He was a child when his family left Hungary as refugees. As a journalist, he has worked for numerous British newspapers, including The London Evening Standard, The Times and The Daily Mail. He has contributed to many American publications, including The New York Times. He reported widely from Eastern Europe when Communism collapsed and the Berlin Wall came down in 1989. He covered the wars in former Yugoslavia and the breakup of the Soviet Union. At The London Evening Standard he was foreign editor, media editor and chief leader writer. He was an associate editor at Newsweek.
His first book, Twelve Days (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2006, Pantheon 2006), was an acclaimed history of the 1956 Hungarian Uprising. It was translated into 12 languages. His second, Revolution 1989 (W&N 2009, Pantheon 2009) was a highly praised account of the fall of the Soviet empire. In 2017 he published Lenin the Dictator, a full-scale biography of the founder of the first Communist state, which was shortlisted for the Longford Prize in the UK, the Plutarch Award and the PEN Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for biography in the US.
He has been a speaker at universities, literary festivals and conferences throughout Europe and the United States. He sat on The Advisory Council of The UK based in Wilton Park, the think tank and discussion forum for international affairs.
His latest book, The Russian Revolution, was published in June 2023.
== Lenin: The Man, The Dictator, and the Master of Terror ==
== Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire ==
==Selected publications==
Twelve Days: The Story of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. Pantheon Books, 2006.
Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. Hachette, 2009.
1946: The Making of the Modern World. Macmillan, 2014.
Budapest - Between East and West. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2022.
The Russian Revolution. Bloomsbury, 2023.
===Articles===
|
[
"wars in former Yugoslavia",
"Hungarian Revolution of 1956",
"Angelica Balabanova",
"Goethe",
"International New York Times",
"Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire"
] |
62,101,791 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/UserReports/2409:4043:91C:2D7B:11D2:6CEA:4F0:F456
|
== Links ==
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COIBot domainredlist search for link 2409:4043:91C:2D7B:11D2:6CEA:4F0:F456 gives:
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Displayed all 1 additions.
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[
"en:User:COIBot",
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62,101,793 |
File:Arthur Morgan - Red Dead Redemption 2.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"United States copyright law",
"WP:NFCC",
"Arthur Morgan (Red Dead)",
"Red Dead Redemption 2",
"fair use",
"Rockstar Games"
] |
62,101,798 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/frydge.uk
|
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Displayed all 33 additions.
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"en:User:COIBot"
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62,101,813 |
Rose Amoanimaa Yeboah
|
Rose Amoanimaa Yeboah (born December 23, 2001) is a Ghanaian high jumper.
Yeboah first gained international experience in 2019 at the XIV African U20 Championships in Abidjan, where she won the gold medal in high jump with a height of 1.83 m. In August, she also competed at the 2019 African Games in Rabat, increasing by one centimeter, and thus also won another gold medal in the high jump event. Prior to that she represented Ghana and won gold medals at both the Ecowas U-20 Championships in Abidjan and the All-Africa University Games in Egypt.
Other sports that she plays are hockey and basketball. In high school, her team Kumasi Girls Senior High School won gold at the Spriteball Championship, where she won MVP. After previously attending the University of Cape Coast, On 8 June 2024, Yeboah won the NCAA outdoor high jump national title with a 1.97m jump.
== Personal bests ==
High jump: 1.83 m, April 2019 CAA U-18 and U-20 Abidjan.
High jump: 1.84 m, 27 August 2019 in Rabat.
High jump: 1.85 m, January 2020 GUSA Games Legon.
High jump: 1.97m, June 2024, NCAA Championships
|
[
"University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign",
"Athletics at the 2023 African Games – Women's high jump",
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"Athletics at the 2019 African Games – Women's high jump",
"2019 African U18 and U20 Championships in Athletics",
"2024 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships",
"Accra",
"2022 African Championships in Athletics – Women's high jump",
"NCAA Women's Outdoor Track and Field Championship",
"Athletics at the 2021 Summer World University Games – Women's high jump",
"African Games",
"Kumasi Girls Senior High School",
"Carlos Mäder",
"2019 African Games",
"2024 African Championships in Athletics",
"Ghana",
"Abidjan",
"African Championships in Athletics",
"2022 African Championships in Athletics",
"Joseph Amoah (sprinter)",
"2021 Summer World University Games",
"University of Cape Coast",
"List of flag bearers for Ghana at the Olympics",
"Sport of athletics",
"All-Africa University Games",
"2024 Summer Olympics",
"High jump",
"World University Games"
] |
62,101,815 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/aln-consulting.de
|
== Links ==
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== Users ==
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Displayed all 1 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,101,822 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/collegedistrict.com
|
== Links ==
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[
"m:Spam blacklist",
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62,101,825 |
File:2020 IIHF World U18 Championships.png
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[
"IIHF"
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62,101,835 |
Madhavi Latha
|
Madhavi Latha Prathigudupu is a former para-athletics sportswoman who advocates for inclusion of persons with disabilities in sports and society. In 2011, she founded the Paralympic Swimming Association of Tamil Nadu, a non-governmental organization (NGO) that aims to "create awareness about the importance and rehabilitation impact of swimming". She is also the founder of the Wheelchair Basketball Federation of India (WBI), India's national wheelchair basketball body, and the founder of Yes, We Can Too, a charitable trust focused on persons with disabilities. in sports.
Madhavi Latha Prathigudupu won three gold medals at the National 15th National Paralympic Swimming Championship in 2015, among other swimming awards.
== Early life and initiation into para-sports ==
Madhavi was born as the youngest of four siblings in a small village in Telangana, to a father who was a school-teacher and a mother who was a homemaker. She was diagnosed with polio at 7 months old, a condition that caused her legs and her spinal cord to weaken, due to which she began to use a wheelchair from an early age. She was left with a paralyzed lower body, and minimal movement in her hands and even caused her to not be able to speak. Madhavi completed her schooling and pursued a college degree privately, graduating with a B.A. in mathematics. She also completed a typist to improve her job prospects, as she was instilled with the desire to be financially independent from her parents. She got a job for a state bank in Hyderabad before moving to Standard Chartered bank in Chennai in 2006. In Hyderabad, Madhavi learned to ride a scooter, and then later, a car, so that she could commute independently.
In her late 30s, the disease had progressed, causing life-threatening complications to her spine and her lungs. Her spine had compressed further owing to the disease and was putting pressure on one of her lungs, depriving her body of oxygen. Doctors gave her between six months to a year to live. It was at this time that her physiotherapist, Dr Anand Jothi, suggested that she take up hydrotherapy. The buoyancy of the water made her body weight lighter, and her legs and back were able to support the weight of her body underwater. Following her doctor's advice, Madhavi started to teach herself to swim using inflatable tubes, as she could not find a coach. It was only after she had learned how to swim freestyle that she found herself a coach, who then taught her about the other styles of swimming – butterfly stroke, breast stroke, etc. In an interview, she said, "Under water my weight is lesser. Inside the water, I can use muscle movements with little effort. I feel like a fish inside the water."
Madhavi entered the realm of competitive sports in 2010 by joining a corporate Olympiad, during her time at a global banking corporation. In that swimming competition, she was the sole participant with a disability. The event organizers made sure she was accompanied by four individuals for safety purposes. Despite this, she successfully finished the 100m freestyle race, earning significant acclaim and the honor of being named the Most Encouraging Sportsperson.
== Career ==
After her first experience in the 2010 corporate Olympiad, Madhavi went on to swim in competitive events regularly, with the highlight being when she won three gold medals in the 2011 National Paralympic Swimming Championships, in 50m freestyle, breast stroke and backstroke competitions. They aimed for wheelchair basketball to be seen as a competitive sport in India, as opposed to a rehabilitative activity, as it was generally perceived as.
== Challenges ==
As a vocal advocate for para-sports, Madhavi is outspoken about the challenges faced by people with disabilities in the sporting world. The biggest challenge, she has stated in an interview, is the access to sports facilities. She narrated an incident wherein, despite being a three-time Gold medallist in the National Para-Swimming Championships, she was denied entry at a new swimming pool that she had gone to when her regular pool was undergoing renovation. "Even after being a national champion, they told me that I cannot swim on my own, that I need to bring my medical certificate and show it to them," she said. The lack of trained instructors, coaches and sports equipment exacerbates this lack, contributing to the low uptake of para-sports in India. "We do not even have sports equipment for wheelchair-bound sportspersons. It has to be imported from abroad," she said.
Madhavi has also spoken about how the absence of para-sports in school curriculum, and the lack of media coverage that para-sports receives, means that many people do not even know about its existence. On a related note is the absence of specific government policy and regulation for para-sports.
== Awards ==
On 18 January 2016, Madhavi Latha was honoured with the "Built Tough Award" at the Adding Smiles Ambassador Awards ceremony for her efforts towards promoting sports among disabled people.
|
[
"2020 Summer Paralympics",
"para-athletics",
"Standard Chartered",
"Hyderabad",
"Tokyo",
"Chennai"
] |
62,101,837 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/fireplaceandstove.co.uk
|
== Links ==
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Displayed all 21 additions.
|
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"en:User:COIBot"
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62,101,842 |
Gonzalo Moliner
|
Gonzalo Moliner Tamborero (born 20 July 1944) is a retired Spanish judge. He served as the 47th President of the Supreme Court and 7th President of the General Council of the Judiciary from July 23, 2012 to December 11, 2013. Moliner was elected President to complete the 5-year-term of the Council after the resignation of Carlos Dívar.
Previous to this, he had served as judge in several cities and between 1990 and 1998 he served as judge in the High Court of Justice of the Valencian Community. In 1998 he became a Supreme Court Judge and in 2008 he was elected Chair of the Labour Law Chamber.
== Biography ==
Moliner graduated in Law by the University of Valencia. He joined the judicial career by public contest in 1969 and he trained himself in the Judicial School until July 1970. During the 80s, he started to work as university professor at the National University of Distance Education, the University of Valencia and the Universidad CEU San Pablo.
He started as judge in the courts of the cities of Mataró, Alcira and Valencia, although he also worked in the courts of Ciudad Real and Castellón. In 1990 he was promoted to the Labour Law Chamber of the High Court of Justice of the Valencian Community until 1998, when he was promoted to the Labour Law Chamber of the Supreme Court, acquiring the category of Supreme Court Magistrate. A month after his resignation, in July, the Plenary of the General Council of the Judiciary elected Moliner as its President and, at the same time, President of the Supreme Court for the year remaining until the end of the term of the Council.
Moliner has been considered a progressive magistrate and he's a member of the progressive judges association Judges for Democracy, an association from which he's founder. Previously, he was a member of Democratic Justice, a clandestine association during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco to democratize the Judiciary. In December 2013 the term of the Council ended and, the newly appointed Council, elected Carlos Lesmes to replace Moliner.
In 2014, Moliner retired because he reached the mandatory retirement age, 70 years.
Moliner is the author of numerous articles in specialized journals and several books, including the Labour appeal for supplication (1991), the Appeals in the Labour procedure of execution (1996) and Labour appeal for the unification of the doctrine (2003).
|
[
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"Spain",
"President of the General Council of the Judiciary",
"Universidad CEU San Pablo",
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"Supreme Court of Spain",
"Juan Carlos I of Spain",
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"Carlos Lesmes",
"Valencia",
"Alcira",
"The Most Excellent",
"Mataró",
"President of the Supreme Court (Spain)",
"Francoist Spain",
"Ciudad Real",
"Carlos Dívar"
] |
62,101,847 |
Karamjyoti Dalal
|
Karamjyoti Dalal (born 30 November 1987) is an Indian para-athlete from Haryana. She competes in discus throw F55 category. She qualified to represent 2016 Summer Paralympics and 2024 Summer Paralympics.
== Early life and education ==
Dalal is from Rohtak, Haryana. She studied at Maharishi Dayanand University, Rohtak. She represented Haryana in judo and kabaddi at the national level before her accident in 2008 where she fell from the terrace which affected her motor sensation. She is a discus thrower and a coach. She is employed as a coach at the Department of Sports and Youth Affairs, Haryana. She learned of Para Athletics through her aunt.
== Career ==
In 2014, she made her international debut at the Incheon Asian Games where she finished fourth. Unfortunately, she was unable to have a valid throw.
Dalal won a bronze medal in the Discus throw at the IPC World Para Athletics Championships 2017. She also placed 8th in the shot put. Earlier in March 2017, she won a gold medal at Fazaa International IPC Athletics Grand Prix at Dubai.
At the 2019 World Para Athletics Championships, she placed 6th in the discus throw.
She also won a bronze at the World Para Athletic Championships in London in 2014. She won a silver at the 2022 Asian Para Games held in 2023 at Hangzhou, China.
At the 2023 World Para Athletics Championships she placed 9th in the Discus throw.
Dalal qualified for the discus throw at the 2024 Summer Paralympics alongside teammate Sakshi Kasana. She placed 9th with a season’s best of 20.22 metres
|
[
"Rohtak",
"World Para Athletics Championships",
"2023 World Para Athletics Championships",
"Paralympic Games",
"Haryana",
"Maharishi Dayanand University",
"2015 World Para Athletics Championships",
"Hangzhou, China",
"Sakshi Kasana",
"Dubai",
"2019 World Para Athletics Championships",
"discus throw",
"2024 Summer Paralympics",
"2016 Summer Paralympics",
"2022 Asian Para Games",
"India",
"Shot put",
"kabaddi",
"Deepa Malik"
] |
62,101,851 |
Disilitsa
|
Disilitsa ( ) is a 2,700 m high peak in the Pirin mountain range, south-western Bulgaria. It is located on the Polezhan secondary ridge at the end of a stem between Ushitsite and the summit of Kaymakchal (2,753 m) in the south. The slopes of Disilitsa are steep and rocky; they are covered in mountain pine (Pinus mugo) at lower altitude. To the north there is a panoramic view towards the wooded slopes of the Yulen Nature Reserve and the Razlog Valley. To the north-west are located the two Perleshki Lakes and the cirque to the south-east hosts the Pleshivoto Lake, one of the highest in Pirin. The peak is built up of granite.
Although Disilitsa is relatively easily accessible, there are no marked paths passing in its vicinity. Access to the area is controlled by the administration of Pirin National Park, as the summit is situated within the boundaries of the Yulen Nature Reserve.
== Citations ==
|
[
"Pinus mugo",
"Kaymakchal",
"Razlog Valley",
"Pirin National Park",
"Blagoevgrad Province",
"Sofia",
"Pirin",
"Yulen",
"Bulgaria"
] |
62,101,862 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/innovationwiki.space
|
== Links ==
innovationwiki.space resolves to [//149.28.200.216 149.28.200.216]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
Link is blacklisted by \.space\b on [//id.wikisource.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist id.wikisource.org]
== Users ==
== Additions ==
Displayed all 2 additions.
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[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,101,865 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/vivatouchcancun.com
|
== Links ==
vivatouchcancun.com resolves to [//211.115.73.186 211.115.73.186]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
Link is globally blacklisted by \bvivatouchcancun\.com\b
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
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62,101,869 |
Molla Jalal Uddin
|
Molla Jalal Uddin (born 1946) is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and a former member of parliament for Khulna-4.
==Career==
Uddin was elected to parliament from Khulna-4 as a Bangladesh Awami League candidate in 2008.
|
[
"Bangladesh Awami League",
"Khulna-4"
] |
62,101,872 |
Roberto Lopes (footballer, born 1992)
|
Roberto Carlos Lopes (born 17 June 1992), also known as Pico, is a Cape Verdean professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Shamrock Rovers.
==Club career==
===Shamrock Rovers===
In November 2016 Lopes joined Shamrock Rovers after leaving rivals Bohemians.
In 2019 Lopes started the FAI Cup final in which Rovers went on to win after defeating Dundalk on penalties winning the cup for the first time since 1987 and for a record 25th time.
In 2020 Lopes was key member to the Shamrock Rovers squad who won the League of Ireland title for a record 18th time.
==International career==
Lopes was born in Ireland to a Cape Verdean father and Irish mother. Lopes made his international debut for the Cape Verde national team in a 2–0 friendly win over Togo in 2019.
He was included in Cape Verde's squad for the delayed 2021 Africa Cup of Nations tournament.
He was part of the Cape Verdean squad under manager Bubista in the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations tournament, where the nation made an extraordinary run to the quarter finals.
==Career statistics==
===Club===
===International===
==Honours==
Shamrock Rovers
League of Ireland Premier Division: 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023
FAI Cup: 2019
President of Ireland's Cup: 2022
Bohemians
Leinster Senior Cup: 2016
Individual
PFAI Team of the Year: 2020, 2021, 2023
|
[
"2015–16 Leinster Senior Cup",
"Bohemian F.C.",
"association football",
"Defender (association football)",
"2015 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"FAI Cup",
"2019 FAI Cup",
"2024 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2017 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2023 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"Setanta Sports Cup",
"Crumlin, Dublin",
"League of Ireland Premier Division",
"League of Ireland Cup",
"2011 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2014 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"Togo national football team",
"2022 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2020 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2012 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2023 Africa Cup of Nations",
"UEFA Europa League",
"Cape Verde national football team",
"2021 Africa Cup of Nations",
"2022 President of Ireland's Cup",
"UEFA Champions League",
"Belvedere F.C.",
"Shamrock Rovers F.C.",
"2025 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"Leinster Senior Cup (association football)",
"2021 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"UEFA Europa Conference League",
"PFAI Team of the Year",
"Bubista",
"2010 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"Republic of Ireland national under-19 football team",
"UEFA Conference League",
"Home Farm F.C.",
"2019 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"President of Ireland's Cup",
"2016 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2013 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"2018 League of Ireland Premier Division"
] |
62,101,878 |
Category:Presidents of the Supreme Court of Spain
|
[] |
|
62,101,888 |
M. Nurul Islam
|
M. Nurul Islam (2 May 1934 – 21 October 2020) was a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and a member of parliament for Khulna-4.
== Early life ==
Islam was born on 2 May 1934 in Khulna, Khulna District, East Bengal, British India.
==Career==
Islam was elected to parliament from Khulna-4 as a Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate in 2001.
== Death ==
Islam died on 21 October 2020 in Khulna City Medical College and Hospital.
|
[
"Molla Jalal Uddin",
"Khulna",
"Bangladesh Nationalist Party",
"Khulna District",
"Mostafa Rashidi Suja",
"Khulna City Medical College and Hospital",
"East Bengal",
"Khulna-4"
] |
62,101,893 |
File:Walter-Edmond-Clutterbuck.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,894 |
Category:Cultural depictions of Gilgamesh
|
Cultural depictions of Gilgamesh.
|
[
"Gilgamesh"
] |
62,101,896 |
Athletics at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games – Women's 4 × 100 metres relay
|
The women's 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games was held on 25 July at the Meadowbank Stadium in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was the first time that the metric distance was contested at the Games, replacing the 4 × 110 yards relay.
==Results==
|
[
"Pat Shiels",
"Helen Golden (athlete)",
"Evelyn Urhobo",
"Athletics at the 1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games – Women's 4 × 110 yards relay",
"Olajumoke Bodunrin",
"Meadowbank Stadium",
"Raelene Boyle",
"Patty Loverock",
"Edinburgh",
"Adrienne Smyth",
"Joan Hendry",
"Joyce Yakubowich",
"Michelle Smith (athlete)",
"Jennifer Lamy",
"4 × 100 metres relay",
"Stephanie Berto",
"Hillary Davies",
"Anne Wilson (athlete)",
"Marion Hoffman",
"Patricia Pennycook",
"Adlin Mair-Clarke",
"Madeleine Cobb",
"Emille Edet",
"Yvonne Saunders",
"Val Peat",
"Maeve Kyle",
"Athletics at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games",
"Marilyn Neufville",
"Linda Teskey",
"Modupe Oshikoya",
"Ruth Howell",
"Elizabeth Sutherland (athlete)",
"Nooline McGarvey",
"Anita Neil",
"Pam Kilborn",
"Carmen Smith-Brown",
"Athletics at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games – Women's 4 × 100 metres relay",
"Margaret Critchley"
] |
62,101,898 |
The Gunner
|
The Gunner is a 1928 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace.
==Film adaptation==
In 1962 it was turned into the film Solo for Sparrow, directed by Gordon Flemyng as part of a long-running series of Wallace films made at Merton Park Studios.
|
[
"Gordon Flemyng",
"United Kingdom",
"Merton Park Studios",
"Solo for Sparrow",
"Edgar Wallace",
"John Long Ltd",
"crime novel"
] |
62,101,901 |
Template:Taxonomy/Cryptolithus
|
[] |
|
62,101,904 |
Category:Works based on the Epic of Gilgamesh
|
Works based on the Epic of Gilgamesh.
|
[
"Epic of Gilgamesh"
] |
62,101,922 |
Sohorab Ali Sana
|
Sohorab Ali Sana (born 1 February 1946) is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and a former member of parliament for Khulna-6.
==Career==
Sana was elected to parliament from Khulna-6 as a Bangladesh Awami League candidate in 2008.
|
[
"Khulna District",
"Khulna-6",
"Bangladesh Awami League"
] |
62,101,926 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/Assessment/Yugoslav destroyer Ljubljana
|
Article promoted by Kges1901 (talk) via MilHistBot (talk) 23:20, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
« Return to A-Class review list
=== Yugoslav destroyer Ljubljana ===
Instructions for nominators and reviewers
Nominator(s):
Ljubljana was a bit of a bad-luck ship. Commissioned after WWII had begun, she came a cropper soon after, running aground. She was still under repair when the Italians captured her as part of the Axis invasion of her homeland in April 1941. Repairs were completed and she was refitted, and she then mainly worked the North Africa convoys under the Italian flag for six months before running aground again off Tunisia in heavy seas in April 1943. That was the end of her. She is part of a Good Topic on the ships of the Royal Yugoslav Navy that I am slowly moving towards Featured. Have at it. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 10:00, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
====Source review====
Again with the refbegin and end tags?
Suggest author links for Michael J. Whitley, H. T. Lenton and David K. Brown
There is a later edition of Rohwer, although I don't think that you have access to it?
Ampersand for Rohwer & Hummelchen
Footnotes consistently formatted
References are RS and consistently formatted.--Sturmvogel 66 (talk) 16:06, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
I don't have access to the newer edition of Rohwer unfortunately. The rest are fixed. You wouldn't have a source for the speed that goes with the range would you, ? Lenton and Whitley don't provide it, just the range (from Lenton). Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:34, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Sorry, no. I even checked Vego's article, but nothing. Article is good to go.--Sturmvogel 66 (talk) 02:04, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
====Support by Gog the Mild====
"and declared a total constructive loss." I am not sure what the word "constructive" adds.
Good point, deleted. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
"Despite the fact that three large destroyers were not going to be built, the idea that Dubrovnik might operate with a number of smaller destroyers persisted." I am struggling a little with this. Why should the cancellation of two (not "three", as the current wording might be read) large destroyers have any effect on whether the one which was built would operate with smaller destroyers?
"acquire three such destroyers" As both "large destroyers" and "smaller destroyers" are mentioned in the previous sentence, it is not completely clear what "such" refers to.
Rereading the first paragraph of the main article, I may have got my assumptions above wrong. Regardless, feel that you have may have boiled the information there down a little. Could you unpack it slightly?
Tried to make it clearer that the flotilla leader concept had two possible permutations, and they ended up going for the second one. See what you think? Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
I was wondering if I was being picky there. (It is always difficult when you already understand the point being explained, to decide if it is clear enough explication for a reader who doesn't.) But I am now reassured that I wasn't. Much clearer IMO. Thanks.
"had a range of 1,000 nautical miles" Usually a range is only meaningful if the speed assumed is also given.
Sadly, none of my sources have this information. I asked Sturm and he doesn't have a source for it either. My last hope is that might have one. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
OK. If we don't have it, we don't have it. Not an issue at GAN I suppose.
I had a look and couldn't find a speed for the range figure either, unfortunately. Parsecboy (talk) 12:14, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for looking, Nate. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 21:56, 22 October 2019 (UTC)
"1942–1943" The MoS suggests '1942–43'.
Not exactly. MOS:NUMRANGE says to use the full date unless constrained by space (table, etc.) or by citation format.--Sturmvogel 66 (talk) 02:00, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Very tactful Sturm: "Not exactly" as in 'not at all'? Well, I think that you are both wrong and right. I was remembering MOS:DATERANGE, but misremembering that when it says "Two-digit ending years (1881–82...) may be used in any of the following cases: (1) two consecutive years ... " there is a "may", so as you were and apologies. (MOS:NUMRANGE is only referring to non-date ranges, but very confusingly uses "pp. 1902–1911" as an example. Is one allowed to simply change that?)
"after damage by heavy seas" Perhaps 'after being damaged by heavy seas'?
Done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Good stuff. Just the trivia above for me to pick at. Gog the Mild (talk) 18:25, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for taking a look, ! See what you think of my changes to the Background section. Cheers, Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:03, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Spot on IMO. Supporting, but can I leave you with the suggestion that you link "bore" in the footnote to Gauge (firearms). Gog the Mild (talk) 06:33, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:50, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Image is appropriately licensed. Nikkimaria (talk) 21:42, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
====CommentsSupport by CPA-5====
Link Yugoslav and unlink Yugoslavia in the next sentence.
Done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Link WWI.
Not done due to sea of blue and commonality of the term. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
"were" instead of "was"?
Link full load.
These done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
No link for Hazemayer?
Linked to Siemens & Halske, of which it was apparently a subsidiary. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Link Yugoslav here.
You mean "she"?
These done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Who's the captain?
Not in the source, and not likely to be notable. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Unlink Italian due common term.
Remove "1.6 in" here because the former section already mentioned the "40 mm (1.6 in) guns".
Pipe German to Nazi Germany.
These done. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Pipe Tunisia to French Tunisia.
Already linked above. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
That's anything from me. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 12:01, 20 October 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for having a look, ! See if my edits suffice. Cheers, Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:55, 21 October 2019 (UTC)
Good to go to me. Cheers. CPA-5 (talk) 14:56, 31 October 2019 (UTC)
====Comments Support from Harrias====
No need for "of".
I'm not keen on the use of "only" here; maybe rephrase as
Do we know what the result of the investigation was?
Not that I can find. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:40, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
The lead mentions The Aegean is not mention in the body though.
"Freivogel, Zvonimir (2014)" is out of order in the references, and could do with an ISSN. I can't access the PDF, is it English language?
It opens for me. It is in English, Freivogel is/was a professor at the Coburg University of Applied Sciences in Germany, but Voennyi Sbornik is published in Russia. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:47, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
No worries. The ISSN is 2409-1707, if you would prefer that to the OCLC. Harrias talk 09:33, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
Overall a very good article with little for me to complain about, nice work. Harrias talk 11:42, 12 November 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for taking a look, . I reckon I've addressed your comments. Here are my edits. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:40, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
All good, happy to support. Harrias talk 09:33, 13 November 2019 (UTC)
|
[
"MOS:NUMRANGE",
"MOS:DATERANGE",
"Yugoslav destroyer Ljubljana",
"Gauge (firearms)"
] |
62,101,936 |
File:John-Bryan-Churcher.jpg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,940 |
Augustin Gretillat
|
Augustin Gretillat (March 16, 1837 at Fontainemelon – January 14, 1894 in Neuchâtel) was a Swiss Protestant pastor, theologian and professor of theology. He is the author of a “Systematic Theology”, of which four volumes appeared from 1885 to 1892, and he left unfinished a treatise on Christian morality which was to consist of three volumes. He succeeds John Calvin and Bénédict Pictet in the very short list of authors of complete treatises on dogmatic in the French language.
== Biography ==
He studied theology in Neuchâtel, Halle, Göttingen and Tübingen. He was ordained in 1859 by Frédéric Godet. He was a deacon in La Chaux-de-Fonds from 1860 to 1862. He was a pastor at Couvet from 1862 to 1870. He has been a professor of systematic theology at the University of Neuchâtel since 1870, and then at the Faculty of the Independent Church of 1873 to 1894. He was Chaplain of the Landeron from 1870 to 1894. He was a contributor to the Revue de théologie et de philosophie and foreign journals, including the Revue de théologie de Montauban, Theological Journal (London) and the Presbyterian and Reformed Review (Philadelphia).
== Theology ==
===Critic of predestination===
Although he was both reformed and evangelical, Augustin Gretillat was nonetheless a vigorous critic of double predestination. Not only did he join in the great Reformed theologians like Philippe Mélanchthon, Moïse Amyrault or Jacobus Arminius, but he also took up the positions of the majority of the non-liberal Reformed theologians of his time, starting with by his teacher Frédéric Godet. On this subject, Gretillat writes for example in his Systematic Theology:
The doctrine of predestination has presented the most strange and contradictory phenomena over the centuries. Considered in itself, in its motives and in its conclusions, it was the most daring challenge to reason and human conscience; an aberration of the Christian genius to which it will always be astonishing that the cause of divine truth could have survived on earth. And this doctrine, which made God a liar and the author of sin, has not less marked the great awakenings and the great regenerations of the Church.
In this regard, neo-calvinist Henri Blocher notes that Gretillat leaned toward Arminianism:
Augustin Gretillat, the last author close to orthodoxy who left a Systematic Theology in French, strongly affirms his Arminianism: the particular predestination is conditional, "relative to the acts of the human will"; "This human conditionality, in fact, is realized in two opposite alternatives, both precognized and not predetermined, which are designated in Scripture by the terms of faith and unbelief."
=== Assessment and legacy ===
With regard to his main work in systematic theology (1885-1892), his friend, the writer Philippe Godet states:
The value [of] the lessons [of Gretillat] can be measured by the great work that has produced. The exposition of Systematic Theology, of which four volumes were published from 1885 to 1892, was to be completed by three volumes of morality; at the moment of his death he had just finished the first. This vast monument, conceived according to a completely personal plan, is the first complete treatise of dogmatics which has appeared in French since Calvin, or at least since the Christian Theology of Benedict Pictet (1708).
== Publications ==
=== Books ===
=== Articles, sermons and conferences ===
.
.
|
[
"Couvet",
"treatise",
"Le Landeron",
"Double Predestination",
"theology",
"Göttingen",
"The Presbyterian Review",
"Benedict Pictet",
"dogmatic",
"Philippe Godet",
"University of Neuchâtel",
"Halle (Saale)",
"La Chaux-de-Fonds",
"Tübingen",
"Fontainemelon",
"Frédéric Louis Godet",
"Jacobus Arminius",
"Theology",
"pastor",
"Protestantism",
"systematic theology",
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"Henri Blocher",
"Conditional election",
"Switzerland",
"Philip Melanchthon",
"Arminianism",
"John Calvin",
"Neuchâtel",
"Moses Amyraut"
] |
62,101,942 |
File:Central Punjab cricket team logo.svg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,101,945 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/yahototo.site
|
== Links ==
yahototo.site resolves to [//192.64.118.106 192.64.118.106]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link would be caught by rule \.site on the monitor list (Automonitor: reported to :m:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist (diff - )).
Link is blacklisted by \.site\b on [//id.wikisource.org/wiki/Mediawiki:Spam-blacklist id.wikisource.org]
== Users ==
No users found.
== Additions ==
No additions recorded.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot",
"m:MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist"
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62,101,947 |
Shah Md. Ruhul Quddus
|
Shah Md. Ruhul Quddus is a politician of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami and a former member of parliament for Khulna-6.
==Career==
Quddus was elected to parliament from Khulna-6 as a Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami candidate in 1991 and 2001.
|
[
"Khulna-6",
"Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami"
] |
62,101,953 |
Agustín Dávila
|
Fabián Agustín Dávila Silva (born 5 January 1999) is a Uruguayan professional footballer who plays as a forward.
==Club career==
Dávila is a youth academy graduate of Peñarol. On 31 August 2017, Spanish club Real Sociedad announced the signing of Dávila on a two-year long loan deal with an option to buy. On 3 February 2018, Dávila made his debut for club's reserve team Real Sociedad B which plays in Segunda División B, the third tier of Spanish football league system. He came on as an 81st-minute substitute for Marcos Celorrio in his team's 1–0 win against SD Amorebieta.
Dávila returned to Peñarol after the expiry of loan deal, as the Basque-based side decided not to activate his purchase option. On 6 October 2019, he made his professional debut in Peñarol's 1–0 away loss against Liverpool Montevideo.
In August 2021, Dávila terminated his contract with Peñarol and joined Boston River. Boston River then loaned him to Ecuadorian Serie A club Guayaquil City for the 2023 season.
On 31 January 2024, USL League One club Forward Madison announced the signing of Dávila for the 2024 season.
==International career==
Dávila is a former Uruguay youth international. He was part of under-20 team which finished third at 2019 South American U-20 Championship.
==Personal life==
Dávila is the grandson of Walkir Silva, who notably scored Peñarol's second goal in their 2–0 win against Aston Villa in 1982 Intercontinental Cup.
==Honours==
Liverpool Montevideo
Supercopa Uruguaya: 2020
Uruguay U20
South American Youth Football Championship third place: 2019
|
[
"Real Sociedad B",
"2020 Supercopa Uruguaya",
"Forward (association football)",
"Liverpool F.C. (Montevideo)",
"Marcos Celorrio",
"Uruguay national under-20 football team",
"SD Amorebieta",
"Ecuadorian Serie A",
"Rivera",
"Peñarol",
"Spanish football league system",
"South American Youth Football Championship",
"Real Sociedad",
"Association football",
"Guayaquil City F.C.",
"Boston River",
"Forward Madison FC",
"Segunda División B",
"2019 South American U-20 Championship",
"USL League One",
"Supercopa Uruguaya",
"2024 USL League One season",
"Walkir Silva",
"Aston Villa F.C.",
"1982 Intercontinental Cup"
] |
62,101,955 |
Freek Robbers
|
Freek Robbers (born 26 December 1990) is a former Dutch rower.
He won the silver medal at the 2018 European Rowing Championships in the men's eight. He competed at the 2017, 2018 and 2019 World Rowing Championships.
Robbers didn't qualify for the 2012 Summer Olympics. As a University student he competed at the 2013 Summer Universiade in the men's double sculls in Kazan, Russia.
|
[
"Kazan",
"2018 European Rowing Championships",
"Rowing (sport)",
"2019 World Rowing Championships",
"Rowing at the 2013 Summer Universiade – Men's double sculls",
"European Rowing Championships"
] |
62,101,959 |
File:Behind the Scenes of Godzilla 1954.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,101,964 |
Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/fraserphysics.com
|
== Links ==
fraserphysics.com resolves to [//66.33.223.100 66.33.223.100]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
txexla.fraserphysics.com resolves to [//208.113.163.35 208.113.163.35]
Link is not on the blacklist.
Link is not on the domainredlist.
Link is not on the Monitorlist.
None of the mentioned users is on the blacklist.
Link is not on the whitelist.
Link is not on the monitor list.
== Users ==
Achim55
User is whitelisted: User is in a trusted group sysop on some wikis
== Additions ==
Displayed all 4 additions.
|
[
"en:User:COIBot"
] |
62,101,966 |
The Man at the Carlton
|
The Man at the Carlton is a 1931 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace.
==Film adaptation==
In 1961 it was turned into the film Man at the Carlton Tower, directed by Robert Tronson as part of a long-running series of Wallace films made at Merton Park Studios.
|
[
"Man at the Carlton Tower",
"United Kingdom",
"Merton Park Studios",
"Robert Tronson",
"Hodder & Stoughton",
"Edgar Wallace",
"Doubleday Crime Club",
"crime novel"
] |
62,101,972 |
Daisuke Araki (footballer)
|
is a Japanese footballer who currently plays for Portuguese side Pevidém.
==Career statistics==
===Club===
.
Notes
|
[
"C.D. Alcains",
"Osaka Prefecture",
"Association football",
"Campeonato de Portugal (league)",
"Moldovan National Division",
"FC Zimbru Chișinău",
"Pevidém S.C.",
"2022–23 Campeonato de Portugal",
"C.S. Marítimo",
"2019 Moldovan National Division",
"Midfielder",
"Tokyo Verdy",
"F.C. Cesarense",
"2023–24 Campeonato de Portugal"
] |
62,101,986 |
File:PremjiNirmalphoto.jpg
|
==Summary==
==Licensing==
|
[] |
62,101,988 |
Cryptolithus
|
Cryptolithus is a genus of extinct epifaunal, suspension-feeding, trinucleid trilobites that lived during the Ordovician period. They were mostly blind. They are found in the United States, Canada, Venezuela, the United Kingdom, France, the Czech Republic, Morocco and Turkey.
== Species ==
Valid species of Cryptolithus include:
Cryptolithus bellulus (Ulrich, 1879)
Cryptolithus carimatus
Cryptolithus fittsi (Ulrich & Whittington)
Cryptolithus goldfussi (Barrande)
Cryptolithus inopinatus (Whittard)
Cryptolithus intertetus (Whittard)
Cryptolithus lorerainensis (Ruedemann)
Cryptolithus lorettensis (Foerste, 1924)
Cryptolithus ornatus (Sternberg)
Cryptolithus portlockii
Cryptolithus portlockii girvanensis
Cryptolithus quadrillatus
Cryptolithus recurvus (Ulrich, 1919)
Cryptolithus tessellatus (Green, 1832)
Cryptolithus ultimus (Barrande)
|
[
"Cryptolithus carimatus",
"Period (geology)",
"Ordovician",
"Cryptolithus portlockii",
"Cryptolithus inopinatus",
"Cryptolithus recurvus",
"trilobite",
"Cryptolithus tessellatus",
"Edward Oscar Ulrich",
"Encyclopædia Britannica",
"Trinucleidae",
"August Foerste",
"National Museum of Natural History",
"Cryptolithus goldfussi",
"Cryptolithus lorerainensis",
"Joachim Barrande",
"Cryptolithus ornatus",
"Cryptolithus ultimus",
"Cryptolithus fittsi",
"Cryptolithus intertetus",
"Cryptolithus portlockii girvanensis",
"Cryptolithus quadrillatus",
"Cryptolithus bellulus",
"Jacob Green (naturalist)",
"Cryptolithus lorettensis"
] |
62,101,990 |
James Douglas Pearson
|
James Douglas Pearson (December 1911 – August 1, 1997) was a British librarian and bibliographer in the field of Islamic studies who founded the Index Islamicus.
== Life ==
James Pearson grew up in Cambridge, where he was also educated. His first job was as a book fetcher in the Cambridge University Library at the age of 16.
He grew an interest in exotic languages and was awarded a scholarship for Hebrew at St John's College. He graduated in 1936 and studied other languages such as Arabic and Persian. He was then enlisted in the Oriental Section of the Library until 1941. He was then enlisted for war service until 1945. He worked again in the same library as an assistant under-librarian from 1945 until 1950. During 1950, he was appointed as librarian of the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. Until 1972, the SOAS library expanded and developed.
In 1972, Pearson was appointed as senior fellow and professor of bibliography It is now known as MELCOM UK. This gave birth to a large series of bibliographies and research tools. Professor James Pearson was involved in the beginning of a European dimension to this activity in 1979, resulting in the formation of MELCOM International. All of these articles were published within the years from 1906 to 1955. The contents of other libraries other than SOAS were added to the bibliography.
To improve the bibliography, it had to be arranged in a classified form and to be published. This caused the creation of the first Index Islamicus, which was published in 1958.
|
[
"Cambridge",
"Hebrew language",
"University of Cambridge",
"Bibliographer",
"Cambridge University Library",
"Index Islamicus",
"Islamic studies",
"librarian",
"Europe",
"Librarian",
"Orient",
"Bibliography",
"University of London",
"stroke",
"Persian language",
"Middle East",
"London",
"St John's College, Cambridge",
"SOAS University of London",
"Arabic"
] |
62,102,003 |
Helianti Hilman
|
Helianti Hilman (born ) is a lawyer involved in e-commerce in Indonesia with "Javara". The business's mission is to market indigenous Indonesian food products. In 2019 she became one of UNCTAD's "eTrade for Women Advocate".
==Life==
Hilman was born in East Java and she was brought up there on a highland coffee plantation. She studied law at Padjadjaran University and then continued her studies at King's College London taking a master's degree in intellectual property law.
In 2014 she was a Forbes Indonesia Global Rising Star and in 2015 she was recognised as the Schwab Foundation's Social Entrepreneur of the Year.
In 2008 she formed Javara. The company is actually called PT Kampung Kearifan Indonesia and it uses modern technology to manage both its supply chain and its sales. The business's mission is to bring indigenous Indonesian food products to the market.
In September 2019 the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development announced seven "eTrade for Women Advocates" from the developing world. The awards were announced on the periphery of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The other six were Nazanin Daneshvar, Clarisse Iribagiza, Patricia Zoundi Yao, Nina Angelovska, Claudia de Heredia and Xiaofei Yao. She was one of the five winners who were present.
|
[
"UNCTAD",
"Nazanin Daneshvar",
"Xiaofei Yao",
"Patricia Zoundi Yao",
"Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship",
"United Nations Conference on Trade and Development",
"Claudia de Heredia",
"King's College London",
"Clarisse Iribagiza",
"East Java",
"Nina Angelovska",
"United Nations General Assembly",
"Padjadjaran University"
] |
62,102,005 |
Candidates of the 1970 South Australian state election
|
The 1970 South Australian state election was held on 30 May 1970.
==Retiring Members==
===Labor===
Tom Casey, MHA (Frome)
Cyril Hutchens, MHA (Hindmarsh)
Lindsay Riches, MHA (Stuart)
Ron Loveday, MHA (Whyalla)
===Liberal and Country===
Berthold Teusner, MHA (Angas)
Ernie Edwards, MHA (Eyre)
Glen Pearson, MHA (Flinders)
Bryant Giles, MHA (Gumeracha)
John Freebairn, MHA (Light)
===Independent===
Tom Stott, MHA (Ridley)
==House of Assembly==
Sitting members are shown in bold text. Successful candidates are highlighted in the relevant colour. Where there is possible confusion, an asterisk (*) is also used.
|
[
"Reg Hurst",
"John Ryan (South Australian politician)",
"Electoral district of Fisher",
"Heini Becker",
"Elliott Johnston",
"Anne Levy (politician)",
"Joyce Steele",
"Electoral district of Florey",
"Ernest Allen (Australian politician)",
"Lloyd Hughes (politician)",
"Robin Millhouse",
"Electoral district of Millicent",
"Charles Harrison (Australian politician)",
"William McAnaney",
"Allan Rodda",
"National Party of Australia (SA)",
"Stan Evans",
"Peter Arnold (politician)",
"Don Simmons (politician)",
"Electoral district of Ridley",
"Cyril Hutchens",
"Independent (politician)",
"Don Dunstan",
"Lindsay Riches",
"Electoral district of Ascot Park",
"Roger Goldsworthy (politician)",
"Electoral district of Flinders",
"Electoral district of Semaphore",
"Electoral district of Chaffey",
"Electoral district of Mitcham (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Bragg",
"Electoral district of Pirie",
"Electoral district of Gouger",
"Electoral district of Tea Tree Gully",
"1970 South Australian state election",
"Jack Jennings (politician)",
"David Tonkin",
"Geoff Virgo",
"Sam Lawn",
"Electoral district of Light",
"Gil Langley",
"Electoral district of Rocky River",
"Electoral district of Mallee",
"Independent politician",
"Charles Wells (Australian politician)",
"Communist Party of Australia",
"John Clark (Australian politician)",
"Dave McKee",
"Electoral district of Albert Park (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Mitchell (South Australia)",
"Ernie Crimes",
"Glen Pearson (Australian politician)",
"Electoral district of Alexandra",
"Steele Hall (Australian politician)",
"Des Corcoran",
"John Freebairn",
"Max Brown (politician)",
"Democratic Labor Party (Australia, 1955)",
"Electoral district of Eyre (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Hanson",
"Tom Stott",
"Electoral district of Stuart",
"Electoral district of Brighton (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Gilles",
"Ernie Edwards (politician)",
"Jack Slater (politician)",
"Electoral district of Peake",
"Electoral district of Angas",
"Bill Nankivell",
"Australian Labor Party (South Australian Branch)",
"Bryant Giles",
"Electoral district of Mawson",
"Reg Curren",
"Graham Gunn",
"John Coumbe",
"Electoral district of Norwood",
"Stephen Baker (Australian politician)",
"Electoral district of Torrens",
"Berthold Teusner",
"Glen Broomhill",
"Electoral district of Mount Gambier",
"Electoral district of Victoria",
"Terry McRae",
"Hugh Hudson (politician)",
"Douglas Credit Party",
"Don Hopgood",
"Electoral district of Price",
"Electoral district of Davenport",
"Reg Groth",
"Ron Payne",
"Electoral district of Hindmarsh",
"Electoral district of Playford",
"Electoral district of Goyder",
"Molly Byrne",
"Electoral district of Ross Smith",
"Liberal and Country League",
"Electoral district of Heysen",
"Electoral district of Kavel",
"Len King",
"Gabe Bywaters",
"Ivon Wardle",
"John Mathwin",
"Tom Casey (Australian politician)",
"Electoral district of Elizabeth (South Australia)",
"Ron Loveday",
"Bruce Eastick",
"Electoral district of Murray (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Coles",
"Howard Venning",
"Electoral district of Spence",
"Electoral district of Frome",
"Electoral district of Adelaide",
"John Carnie",
"Electoral district of Whyalla",
"Allan Burdon",
"Electoral district of Salisbury (South Australia)",
"Electoral district of Glenelg (South Australia)",
"Trevor Griffin",
"Electoral district of Gumeracha",
"Electoral district of Henley Beach",
"Brian Chatterton",
"Electoral district of Unley",
"David Brookman (Australian politician)",
"Gavin Keneally",
"James Ferguson (Australian politician)"
] |
62,102,008 |
Bombing of Obersalzberg
|
The bombing of Obersalzberg was an air raid carried out by the Royal Air Force's Bomber Command on 25 April 1945 during the last days of World War II in Europe. The operation targeted Obersalzberg, a complex of residences and bunkers in Bavaria which had been built for Adolf Hitler and other key members of Germany's leadership. Many buildings in the complex were destroyed, though Hitler's residence and the bunker network were only slightly damaged. Two Allied bombers were shot down with the loss of four airmen, and 31 Germans were killed.
Historians have identified several motives for the attack on Obersalzberg. These include supporting Allied ground forces, demonstrating the effectiveness of the British heavy bomber force, convincing die-hard Germans that the war was lost and obscuring the memory of pre-war appeasement policies. The attack was conducted by a large force of 359 heavy bombers in an attempt to destroy the bunkers located below Obersalzberg, from which the Allies feared that senior members of the German Government would command an Alpine Fortress. After difficulties locating and marking the targets were overcome, the bombers attacked in two waves. The approximately 3,000 people at Obersalzberg sheltered in bunkers, and the nearby town of Berchtesgaden was undamaged. Hitler was in Berlin at the time of the attack and Hermann Göring, the only senior Nazi at Obersalzberg, survived.
While the raid on Obersalzberg was celebrated at the time, it is little remembered today. Most of the Allied personnel involved in the operation took satisfaction from attacking Hitler's residence, and it received extensive media coverage. As the Alpine Fortress proved to be a myth, most post-war histories made little mention of the operation.
==Background==
During the period in which Germany was ruled by the Nazi Party, the Obersalzberg complex of chalets and mountain lodges was constructed near the Bavarian town of Berchtesgaden. This complex was used by Adolf Hitler and other members of the Nazi Party's elite. Hitler usually spent more than a third of each year at Obersalzberg. Prior to the outbreak of World War II, he hosted many international leaders at his residence there, the Berghof. Hitler and British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain met at the Berghof on 15 September 1938 as part of the negotiations that led to the Munich Agreement. Nazi propaganda publicised the Berghof, and it became an important symbol of Hitler's leadership in the eyes of most Germans.
Hitler continued to frequently visit Obersalzberg during World War II, and it was one of his main command centres. He spent most of early 1944 there, and left for the final time on 14 July. A sophisticated network of bunkers and tunnels was constructed under Obersalzberg during the war in response to the intensifying Allied air raids on Germany. The complex was defended by anti-aircraft guns as well as machinery capable of covering the area in a smoke screen. All of its buildings were camouflaged during early 1944 to make them difficult to locate from the air.
The Allies considered attacking Obersalzberg prior to April 1945, but decided against doing so. Obersalzberg's location was well known, and in June 1944 Allied intelligence confirmed that Hitler was directing the resistance to the Normandy landings from the Berghof. The Royal Air Force (RAF) developed a plan to attack Obersalzberg that was designated "Hellbound". United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) reconnaissance aircraft photographed the area between 16 and 20 June, and the American Fifteenth Air Force prepared flight routes to attack it from bases in Allied-controlled areas of Italy. The head of the USAAF, General "Hap" Arnold, decided against conducting the attack on 20 June. Arnold made this decision on the grounds that it was unlikely that Hitler would be killed, and attempting this was undesirable anyway as his inept leadership of the German military was to the Allies' advantage. Arnold was also concerned that the attack force would suffer heavy casualties as the area was believed to be strongly defended. He recorded in his diary "Our secret weapon is Hitler, hence do not bomb his castle. Do not let him get hurt, we want him to continue making mistakes". The British Special Operations Executive also developed plans designated Operation Foxley during mid-1944 to assassinate Hitler in the Obersalzberg area using special forces personnel. This operation was never attempted.
The Fifteenth Air Force proposed bombing the Berchtesgaden area in February 1945, but this was blocked by the USAAF's high command due to the difficulty of accurately hitting the target and a continuing belief that the Allies were better off with Hitler still in command of the German military. Shortly afterwards, plans for an attack on bridges in the Berchtesgaden area by both the Eighth and Fifteenth Air Forces were developed. These plans were never acted on.
The only attack on Berchtesgaden prior to April 1945 was made on 20 February 1945 by eight Republic P-47 Thunderbolt fighter bombers from the Fifteenth Air Force. These aircraft struck the area after being unable to complete a mission in Italy, and their commander, Major John L. Beck, was initially unaware of its importance. The Thunderbolts attacked a train, and encountered heavy anti-aircraft fire. When the attack was reported, there was disappointment among the public in Allied countries that the Berghof had not been damaged.
By April 1945, the Allies had near-complete air superiority over Germany. As a result of the weakening of the German air defences and the availability of long-ranged Allied escort fighter aircraft, the RAF's Bomber Command had been making occasional daylight raids on targets in Germany in addition to its usual night operations since late 1944. The frequency with which it conducted daylight attacks increased over time. The British Chiefs of Staff Committee directed that the area bombing of German cities cease on the 16 April, with the bombers instead focusing on providing "direct support to the allied armies in the land battle" and continuing their attacks on the remnants of the German Navy. In line with this order, Bomber Command attacked German cities that lay in the path of the Allied armies and made precision bombing raids against other targets until 25 April.
==Planning==
As the war in Europe neared its end in 1945, the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) became concerned over intelligence reports that indicated senior members of the German Government as well as Waffen-SS units would assemble at Berchtesgaden to prolong the fighting from an "Alpine Fortress". This was an intelligence failure, as the Germans made few attempts to prepare defensive positions in the Alps until the last weeks of the war. Hitler sent most of his personal staff to Berchtesgaden in April, but remained in Berlin. Most of the other senior ministers fled to other parts of Germany. The former Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring was the only highly-ranked member of the government at Obersalzberg at the time of the attack. Göring had been stripped of all his positions and was being held under house arrest on Hitler's orders as punishment for sending a telegram on 23 April seeking permission to assume Germany's leadership.
The decision to conduct an air raid on Obersalzberg was made in April 1945. The attack was proposed by the head of Bomber Command, Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Harris, and approved by SHAEF. Harris specified that the goal of the raid was to support the United States Army's XV Corps, which was rapidly advancing towards Munich from whence it would attack Berchtesgaden. The US Army opposed the attack, however, due to concerns that the complex's rubble would be easier for the Germans to defend than undamaged buildings. Two historians have stated that other factors motivated the raid. Oliver Haller has written the real reason Bomber Command conducted the attack was that Harris wanted to demonstrate that his forces could conduct precision bombing after he was criticised for terror bombing attacks on cities in early 1945. Despina Stratigakos has stated that the Allies hoped that the destruction of the Berghof would convince fanatical Nazis that the war was lost. She has also suggested that the attack aimed to "wipe from memory" the humiliation of the pre-war appeasement policies, including the Munich Agreement, which were associated with the Berghof.
The Berghof and the Kehlsteinhaus pavilion, which Hitler had occasionally used to host guests, were the raid's primary targets. Several other buildings were in the area which was to be bombed. These included the houses of other senior Nazis, a barracks used by the Waffen-SS units assigned to defend Obersalzberg and a hospital. Several secondary targets, including bridges in the city of Salzburg, were selected for the crews of aircraft which were unable to bomb Obersalzberg.
==Attack==
The bomber crews were woken during the early hours of 25 April to be briefed on the mission. The crews were informed that several senior members of the German Government were at Obersalzberg, with some being told that Hitler was there. The attack force took off from bases in the United Kingdom that morning. It comprised 359 Avro Lancaster heavy bombers drawn from 22 squadrons in No. 1 and 5 Groups. They were accompanied by 16 de Havilland Mosquito light bombers from No. 8 Group whose role was to guide the bombers to the target using the Oboe navigation system. The bombers were escorted by 13 British fighter squadrons and 98 North American P-51 Mustang fighters from the Eighth Air Force.
After leaving the UK, the bombers passed near Paris. They headed directly towards Obersalzberg upon reaching Lake Constance. While the aircraft were routed over Allied-held territory for most of the approach flight, the last had to be made over territory still controlled by German forces. They spent only a small amount of time within range of anti-aircraft guns during the approach flight and, as the Luftwaffe had almost ceased to exist, no fighters attempted to intercept them. Some of the Mustang pilots spotted an Arado 234 jet reconnaissance aircraft, and shot it down.
The first wave of bombers arrived in the Berchtesgaden area at 9:30 am, but were unable to attack immediately. The Mosquito crews had difficulty spotting the targets due to the presence of mist and snow in the area. Obersalzberg's defenders were unable to generate a smoke screen as they had exhausted their supplies of the necessary chemicals. The Mosquitos' Oboe equipment proved ineffective, as the radio signals it used were blocked by mountains. The bombers orbited until the Mosquito crews marked the target. During this period some of the aircraft flew near Salzburg and were fired on by the city's strong anti-aircraft defences. Several bombers also came close to colliding.
Once the target was marked, the first wave of bombers attacked between 9:51 and 10:11 am. The elite No. 617 Squadron RAF was the first unit to strike Obersalzberg, with its aircraft dropping large Tallboy bombs. The second wave bombed between 10:42 and 11:00 am. Over of bombs were released; it was hoped that such a heavy bombardment would be sufficient to destroy the bunkers under Obersalzberg. The bombing was very accurate.
Two Lancasters were shot down by German anti-aircraft guns. An aircraft from the Royal Australian Air Force's No. 460 Squadron was hit shortly after dropping its bombs, and all of its crew survived after the pilot made a forced landing near the German town of Traunstein. They were made prisoners of war, but were liberated within days. The other aircraft to be shot down was from No. 619 Squadron RAF. Of the bomber's crew, four were killed and three taken prisoner. These POWs were also soon rescued by Allied forces. Several other Lancasters were damaged, with one landing near Paris.
The attack produced mixed results. Of the primary targets, the Kehlsteinhaus was undamaged and the Berghof was moderately damaged by three bombs. The Waffen-SS barracks and the houses owned by Göring and the Reichsleiter Martin Bormann were destroyed. Most of the approximately 3,000 people at Obersalzberg had sheltered in the bunkers below the complex, but 31 were killed, including several children. The bunker network was not seriously damaged. The town of Berchtesgaden was undamaged, and none of its population were killed or wounded.
USAAF units attacked transport infrastructure in the general area of Obersalzberg on 25 April. These raids formed part of an operation conducted at the request of the Allied ground forces that targeted the Škoda Works munitions facilities near Pilsen in German-occupied Czechoslovakia as well as railways in Austria which were believed to be transporting German troops. The locations near Obersalzberg that were attacked included Freilassing, Hallein, Bad Reichenhall, Salzburg and Traunstein. Considerable damage was inflicted on several train stations, gasworks and hospitals in these towns. More than 300 civilians were killed.
==Aftermath==
Obersalzberg was abandoned in the days after the raid. Acting on Hitler's orders, SS personnel destroyed the Berghof before pulling out. The US Army XV Corps captured the area on 4 May. Göring, who had survived the air raid, was taken prisoner by the US Army on 9 May 1945.
American and French soldiers looted Obersalzberg, including the ruins of the Berghof, after its capture. Due to Obersalzberg's associations with the Nazi leadership, the extent of this looting was unmatched by that in any other German town occupied by Allied forces. Stratigakos has observed that this contributed to memorabilia associated with Hitler being spread across the world, which partially undermined the air raid's goal of discrediting the Nazi regime. The American photojournalist Lee Miller, who arrived at Obersalzberg shortly after it was captured, commented that "there isn't even a piece left for a museum on the great war criminal, and scattered over the breadth of the world people are forever going to be shown a napkin ring or pickle fork, supposedly used by Hitler".
The attack on Obersalzberg was the final combat operation for the majority of the Bomber Command squadrons dispatched. Most of the aircrew involved took satisfaction in attacking Hitler's personal home, though some expressed regret over the casualties incurred. Bomber Command's last raid, an attack on an oil refinery in Norway, was made on the night of 25/26 April. From 26 April until the end of the war on 8 May, Bomber Command aircraft were used to fly liberated prisoners of war to the UK as part of Operation Exodus and drop food to civilians in the Netherlands during Operation Manna.
The raid attracted considerable media coverage at the time, but is little remembered today. Contemporary news reports stated that the operation had been of strategic importance as Obersalzberg had been both an alternative command centre and a symbol of the Nazi regime. The attack was portrayed as forming part of the final efforts to defeat Hitler and Germany. Media reports of the bombing also noted Chamberlain's 1938 visit to Obersalzberg. As the Alpine Fortress proved to be a myth, postwar histories, including Harris's memoirs, made little mention of the operation.
Obersalzberg remained under the US Army's administration after the war, and a recreation centre for soldiers was established there. The ruins of the Nazi-era buildings attracted neo-Nazi pilgrimages. To stop such visits, the Bavarian Government destroyed the buildings on 30 April 1952, the seventh anniversary of Adolf Hitler's suicide in Berlin. The US Army closed its recreation centre and handed Obersalzberg to the Bavarian Government in 1996, which demolished the other buildings in the area during the early 2000s to make way for a resort complex. The Dokumentationszentrum Obersalzberg museum opened in 1999. This museum covers Obersalzberg's history during the Nazi era. A sign marking the location of the Berghof and explaining its role as a location where key decisions regarding World War II and the Holocaust were made was erected in 2008.
|
[
"precision bombing",
"Traunstein",
"Luftwaffe",
"Munich",
"Hermann Göring",
"Avro Lancaster",
"death of Adolf Hitler",
"History of the Second World War",
"special forces",
"Tallboy (bomb)",
"No. 460 Squadron RAAF",
"Salzburg",
"XV Corps (United States)",
"Lake Constance",
"heavy bomber",
"No. 1 Group RAF",
"Nazi Germany",
"15th Expeditionary Mobility Task Force",
"United States Army",
"Royal Australian Air Force",
"de Havilland Mosquito",
"No. 619 Squadron RAF",
"Neville Chamberlain",
"Special Operations Executive",
"Operations Manna and Chowhound",
"Operation Exodus (WWII operation)",
"Führer Headquarters",
"Military career of Adolf Hitler",
"No. 5 Group RAF",
"Arado 234",
"Mid-air collision",
"Dokumentationszentrum Obersalzberg",
"Reichsleiter",
"Waffen-SS",
"Eighth Air Force",
"Bad Reichenhall",
"Kriegsmarine",
"Operation Foxley",
"Berchtesgaden",
"area bombing",
"Failure in the intelligence cycle",
"air superiority",
"Henry H. Arnold",
"Mountain hut",
"Squadron (aviation)",
"smoke screen",
"Berghof (residence)",
"camouflage",
"bunker",
"Neo-Nazism",
"Bavaria",
"Adolf Hitler",
"Obersalzberg",
"Plzeň",
"Sir Arthur Harris, 1st Baronet",
"North American P-51 Mustang",
"Republic P-47 Thunderbolt",
"Propaganda in Nazi Germany",
"Allies of World War II",
"Martin Bormann",
"Hallein",
"appeasement",
"Holocaust",
"World War II",
"Nazi memorabilia",
"Škoda Works",
"Lee Miller",
"Nazi Party",
"Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force",
"terror bombing",
"RAF Bomber Command",
"Alpine Fortress",
"Holding (aeronautics)",
"Chiefs of Staff Committee",
"Kehlsteinhaus",
"No. 617 Squadron RAF",
"Oboe (navigation)",
"No. 8 Group RAF",
"Göring telegram",
"Operation Overlord",
"German occupation of Czechoslovakia",
"anti-aircraft gun",
"Freilassing",
"prisoners of war",
"Paris",
"Royal Air Force",
"Austria under National Socialism",
"United States Army Air Forces",
"chalet",
"Reichsmarschall",
"Munich Agreement",
"Politics of Bavaria"
] |
62,102,022 |
Harindanga, Falta
|
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Harindanga
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
| other_name =
| nickname =
| settlement_type = Village
| image_skyline =
| image_alt =
| imagesize = 300px
| image_caption =
| pushpin_map = India West Bengal#India
| pushpin_label_position =
| pushpin_map_alt =
| pushpin_mapsize = 300
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in West Bengal##Location in India
| coordinates =
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name =
| subdivision_type1 = State
| subdivision_name1 = West Bengal
| subdivision_type2 = District
| subdivision_name2 = South 24 Parganas
| subdivision_type3 = CD Block
| subdivision_name3 = Falta
| established_title =
| established_date =
| founder =
| named_for =
| government_type =
| governing_body =
| unit_pref = Metric
| area_footnotes =
| area_rank =
| area_total_km2 = 0.95
| elevation_footnotes =
| elevation_m = 8
| population_total = 2171
| population_as_of = 2011
| population_rank =
| population_density_km2 = auto
| population_demonym =
| population_footnotes =
| demographics_type1 = Languages
| demographics1_title1 = Official
| demographics1_info1 = Bengali
| demographics1_title2 = Additional official
| demographics1_info2 = English
Note: The map alongside presents some of the notable locations in the subdivision. All places marked in the map are linked in the larger full screen map.
===Location===
Harindanga is located at .
==Demographics==
According to the 2011 Census of India, Harindanga had a total population of 2,171, of which 1,128 (52%) were males and 1,043 (48%) were females. There were 140 persons in the age range of 0–6 years. The total number of literate persons in Harindanga was 1,722 (84.79% of the population over 6 years).
==Civic administration==
===CD block HQ===
The headquarters of the Falta CD block are located at Harindanga, PO Chaberia, The map of CD block Falta on page 471 in District Census Handbook for South 24 Parganas shows the block headquarters as being located at Harindanga.
==Transport==
A short stretch of the Fatepur-Falta Road links Harindanga to the National Highway 12.
==Education==
Sadhan Chandra Mahavidyalaya, established in 2007, is affiliated with the University of Calcutta. It offers honours courses in Bengali, English, Sanskrit, history, philosophy, education and political science, and a general course in arts.
Harindanga High School is a Bengali-medium coeducational institution established in 1948. It has facilities for teaching from class V to class Xii.
==Healthcare==
Falta Block Primary Health Centre at Falta, with 10 beds, is the major government medical facility in the Falta CD block.
|
[
"Archaeological",
"Durganagar, Diamond Harbour",
"Sangrampur, Diamond Harbour",
"Patdaha",
"South 24 Parganas",
"Mohanpur, Diamond Harbour",
"Kulpi",
"Berandari Bagaria",
"Diamond Harbour subdivision",
"Ministry of Minority Affairs",
"Diamond Harbour",
"Netra, Diamond Harbour",
"Harinarayanpur, Kulpi",
"gram panchayat",
"States and territories of India",
"Bhushna",
"Sadhan Chandra Mahavidyalaya",
"Punya, Falta",
"Bengali language",
"West Bengal",
"National Highway 12 (India)",
"Raichak",
"List of Regional Transport Office districts in India",
"Baneshwarpur",
"Fatepur, Falta",
"Falta (community development block)",
"Community development block in India",
"census town",
"2011 Census of India",
"Sarisha",
"Falta (Vidhan Sabha constituency)",
"India",
"Indian Standard Time",
"Hooghly River",
"Dhola, Diamond Harbour",
"Deulpota",
"Falta, South 24 Parganas",
"English language",
"University of Calcutta",
"Diamond Harbour (Lok Sabha constituency)",
"Hasimnagar",
"Ganges Delta",
"Parulia, Diamond Harbour",
"Ramnagar, Diamond Harbour",
"Masat, Diamond Harbour",
"Chandpala Anantapathpur"
] |
62,102,032 |
File:Northern cricket team logo.svg
|
== Summary ==
== Licensing ==
|
[] |
62,102,040 |
Sudan Humanitarian Aid Commission
|
Humanitarian Aid Commission (HAC) is the Governmental body that managed and organized all humanitarian work carried on in Sudan along with the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs.
== History and development ==
Sudan first established unit to organized and facilitate Humanitarian Aid in 1985 When Sudan experienced major drought in 1984.
== Laws and agreements ==
Humanitarian Aid Commission (HAC) is the regulating body working under the Sudanese law.
Laws organizing the humatiraian organization then developed
HAC organize the International Organization work in Sudan by the Technical agreements and Country Agreements. HAC also monitor and insure the enforcing of laws concerning the composition and operation of local and international NGOs, as well as UN agents and other multilateral aid agencies.
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[] |
62,102,050 |
Abdul Mannan (aviation executive)
|
Abdul Mannan ( – 4 August 2020) was a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and a Jatiya Sangsad member representing the Dhaka-2 constituency.
==Career==
Mannan was elected to parliament from Dhaka-2 as a Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate in 1991, 1996, and 2001. He served as the state minister of civil aviation and tourism. He was an adviser to former prime minister and chairperson of Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Khaleda Zia. In 2010, he was made the president of the Dhaka District unit of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
|
[
"Qamrul Islam",
"Bangladesh Nationalist Party",
"Dhaka-2",
"Bangladesh Pratidin",
"Burhan Uddin Khan",
"Jatiya Sangsad",
"Khaleda Zia",
"Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism"
] |
62,102,053 |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Zidan’s Model of Quantum Computing
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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was delete. — JJMC89 (T·C) 06:08, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
===:Zidan’s Model of Quantum Computing===
– (View AfDView log Stats)
()
The notability of the method has not been demonstrated, and, in additional, the article has been created by a new single-purpose account. There are four references in the article, all four are articles in the refereed journals, but none of the journals is high-impact, and the totality of the four articles come from two research groups. Ymblanter (talk) 10:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Science-related deletion discussions. Ymblanter (talk) 10:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Mathematics-related deletion discussions. Ymblanter (talk) 10:23, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete. Per nom, and also because the sources are computer science articles published in physics journals. So, the sources have probably never been reviewed by a specialist of model of computation in Quantum computing. D.Lazard (talk) 10:58, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
Delete At best, this is too soon. The ideas being advertised here were published only this year and have had to date no apparent influence on the wider community of quantum information science. The user who created the article has worked on nothing else; a conflict of interest seems likely. XOR'easter (talk) 16:11, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
|
[
"model of computation",
"Zidan’s Model of Quantum Computing",
"WP:TOOSOON",
"WP:COI"
] |
62,102,056 |
Category:Ambarnath
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[] |
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62,102,060 |
Jung Gun-joo
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Jung Gun-joo (; born May 26, 1995) is a South Korean actor. He has starred in several web dramas before venturing into TV broadcasts.
== Career ==
In 2017, Jung Gun-joo signed an exclusive contract with JYP Entertainment and made an appearance in DAY6's music video "I Like You". He starred in a web-drama by Naver "Flower Ever After".
In 2019, Jung joined Blossom Entertainment and acted as one of the main cast of Extraordinary You.
== Personal life ==
Jung served in the mandatory military service at the age of 21 during his university days. And he has a barista license based on his experience working part-time at a coffee shop. Before becoming an actor, Jung studied mechanical engineering and modeled to earn pocket money.
== Filmography ==
=== Film ===
===Television series===
===Web series===
=== Web shows ===
===Music video appearances===
==Awards and nominations==
|
[
"DAY6",
"MBC Drama Awards",
"Should We Kiss First?",
"2023 SBS Drama Awards",
"True Beauty (South Korean TV series)",
"Blossom Entertainment",
"Monthly Magazine Home",
"Check-in Hanyang",
"Day6",
"KBS Drama Special",
"HanCinema",
"2019 MBC Drama Awards",
"Sports Chosun",
"JYP Entertainment",
"Oh My Baby",
"SBS Drama Awards",
"Three Bold Siblings",
"Rebound (2023 film)",
"Digital Chosun",
"A-Teen",
"Extraordinary You",
"conscription in South Korea",
"Moonrise (Day6 album)",
"The Secret Romantic Guesthouse",
"Naver",
"Kiss Sixth Sense",
"Way Back Love",
"The Third Charm",
"South Korea"
] |