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# Rasmus Marvits
**Rasmus Marvits** (born 14 July 1978) is a Danish former professional footballer who played as a defender
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# Hetzles
**Hetzles** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany. The Municipality Hetzles includes the villages of Hetzles and Honings
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# Hiltpoltstein
**Hiltpoltstein** is a market village in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany. At its centre is Hiltpoltstein Castle
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# Court of Criminal Appeal (Ireland)
The **Court of Criminal Appeal** (*An Chúirt Achomhairc Choiriúil*) was an appellate court for criminal cases in the law of the Republic of Ireland. It existed from 1924 until 2014, when it was superseded by the Court of Appeal, which can hear appeals for all types of case.
## Operation
The Court of Criminal Appeal heard appeals for indictable offences tried in the Circuit Court, the Central Criminal Court, and the Special Criminal Court. The Court sat in a division of three, with one Supreme Court judge and two High Court judges.
The court could hear appeals by a defendant against conviction, sentence or both. Leave to appeal was only given where there was a disagreement on a point of law, although an exception can be made when new evidence becomes available which could not have been presented before the original court.
The Director of Public Prosecutions could also appeal against a sentence on the grounds that it was unduly lenient.
A further appeal to the Supreme Court only lay when the Court of Criminal Appeal itself or the Attorney General certified that a point of law of exceptional public importance needed to be resolved.
## History
### Before independence {#before_independence}
The Crown Cases Act 1848 (11 & 12 Vict. c. 78) established a Court for Crown Cases Reserved in each of England and Wales and Ireland. These courts were sometimes called the \"Court of Criminal Appeal\", but only heard point of law appeals. In England and Wales, a Court of Criminal Appeal was established in 1907, but in Ireland the 1848 court remained in operation.
A Court of Criminal Appeal was temporarily established during the Irish Land War by the Prevention of Crime (Ireland) Act, 1882. This comprised the judges of the Supreme Court of Judicature except for the Lord Chancellor of Ireland. The 1882 Act expired after three years.
### After independence {#after_independence}
The Courts of Justice Act 1924 established a new court system under the terms of the 1922 Constitution of the Irish Free State. These included a new Supreme Court and High Court, and a Court of Criminal Appeal comprising judges of those two courts. The courts were re-established in 1961 under the terms of the current (1937) Constitution. The Court of Criminal Appeal was replaced on 5 November 2014 by the Court of Appeal, as mandated by the 33rd Amendment of the Constitution passed in 2013. The Court of Appeal has taken on all hearings of the Court of Criminal Appeals and the Courts-Martial Appeal Court, as well as many backlogged Supreme Court cases
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# Susan Birkenhead
**Susan Birkenhead** is an American lyricist.
Birkenhead made her Broadway debut as one of a team of songwriters contributing to *Working* (1978), for which she received her first Tony Award nomination. Her second was earned for *Jelly\'s Last Jam* (1992), which won her the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics and a Grammy Award nomination. Additional Broadway credits include *Triumph of Love* (Drama Desk nomination) and additional lyrics for the Cole Porter tunes in the 1998 revival of *High Society*.
Birkenhead\'s Off-Broadway and regional theatre credits include *What About Luv?*, a musical adaptation of the Murray Schisgal play *Luv*, for which she won the Outer Critics Circle Award; *Pieces of Eight* with Jule Styne and Michael Stewart; *Fanny Hackabout Jones* with Erica Jong and Lucy Simon; *The Night They Raided Minsky\'s* with Charles Strouse and Evan Hunter, the new musical *Minsky\'s* based on the same; and, in collaboration with Henry Krieger, two potentially Broadway-bound projects based on hit films, *The Flamingo Kid* and *Moonstruck* (with a book by screenwriter John Patrick Shanley).
Birkenhead is one of several lyricists who contributed to *Hats!*, a musical inspired by the Red Hat Society, which is enjoying an open-ended run at Harrah\'s New Orleans, after premiering at the New Denver Civic Theatre. The musical had a limited engagement at the Royal George Theatre in Chicago starting in April 2007.
*Radio Girl*, a musical based on Kate Douglas Wiggin\'s *Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm*, premiered at the Goodspeed Musicals\' Norma Terrace Theatre with music by Henry Krieger, lyrics by Birkenhead, and a book by Daniel Goldfarb. The show ran in 2010 from July 29 to August 22.
She also wrote the lyrics for the musical version of Sue Monk Kidd\'s *The Secret Life of Bees*, with music by Duncan Sheik and a book by Lynn Nottage. It premiered at the Off-Broadway Atlantic Theater Company on May 12, 2019, which was followed by a London production in 2023
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# For the Birds (The Frames album)
***For the Birds*** is the fourth studio album by Dublin based band The Frames. The album was first released in Ireland on 2 April 2001 on Plateau Records, the Frames\' own indie label. The band\'s line-up for this album featured Glen Hansard on guitar and vocals, Colm Mac Con Iomaire on violin, Joseph Doyle on bass guitar and backing vocals, Dave Odlum on lead guitar and Dave Hingerty on drums with additional keyboards by Dave Odlum\'s Brother Karl Odlum.
According to the album notes, recording took place in a wide variety of places: \"recorded by Steve Albini, Craig Ward and David Odlum at *Electrical Audio*, Chicago and in Ventry, Kerry at Joan\'s house with additional recording and mixing at various bedrooms and houses including *Black Box*, La Dionae France, Trevor Hutchinson\'s, Mic Christopher\'s and Mrs Odlums.\"
In May 2009 \"For the Birds\" was voted by writers of the Irish music website CLUAS.com as the best Irish album released between 1999 and 2009.
On 30 March 2011 The Frames played the album in full at a 10th Anniversary gig in Dublin\'s Vicar Street (featuring Dave Odlum on guitar), before playing 13 more songs, either from their back catalogue or special performances with friends. Joining the band on stage at Vicar Street were Liam O\'Maonlai, Bronagh Gallagher, Damien Rice, Interference and others.
## Track listing {#track_listing}
All songs written by Glen Hansard, except where noted.
1. \"In the Deep Shade\" (Rachel Grimes, Hansard, Dave Odlum) (3:29)
2. \"Lay Me Down\" (3:11)
3. \"What Happens When the Heart Just Stops\" (4:20)
4. \"Headlong\" (5:20)
5. \"Fighting on the Stairs\" (3:22)
6. \"Giving Me Wings\" (3:34)
7. \"Early Bird\" (5:04)
8. \"Friends and Foe\" (4:07)
9. \"Santa Maria\" (6:57)
10. \"Disappointed\" (3:09)
11
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# The Circle (song)
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# Igensdorf
**Igensdorf** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Foreland Point
Foreland}} `{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}`{=mediawiki} `{{Refimprove|date=February 2013}}`{=mediawiki}
**Foreland Point** is a rocky headland in Devon near Lynmouth, and is the most northerly point along the Devon and Exmoor coast. The highest cliff is 89 m above the high tide, although the highest point of the entire headland is near Countisbury (a village around a mile away) at 302 m. The headland is owned by the National Trust; some areas are open to public access all year, as part of the South West Coast Path, while other areas have limited access. The Trinity House-operated Lynmouth Foreland Lighthouse is also located here.
The area of the sea between Bideford and Foreland Point is a Marine Conservation Zone
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# Dopravný podnik Bratislava
**Dopravný podnik Bratislava, akciová spoločnosť** (literally Public Transport Company Bratislava, inc., abbr. DPB a.s.) is the only provider of city public transport in Bratislava. It provides 3 types of transportation:
- trams (streetcars) 230 vehicles
- buses 464 vehicles
- trolleybuses 174 vehicles
The 100% owner of the company is the city of Bratislava.
## Vehicles
DPB provides public transport using these vehicles:
Trams:
- Tatra-ČKD T3 113 vehicles (110 vehicles have digital/electronic destination sign installation and acoustic information system)
- Tatra-ČKD T3 4 vehicles are reconstructed to T3MOD (1 vehicle), T3AS (1 vehicle), T3S (2 vehicles)
- Tatra-ČKD T3P 20 vehicles
- Tatra-ČKD K2 3 historic vehicles
- Tatra-ČKD K2S 22 vehicles
- Tatra-ČKD K2G 1 vehicle (reconstructed in 1998--2005)
- Tatra-ČKD T6A5 58 vehicles (2 prototype trams delivered in 2006)
- Škoda 29 T 50 vehicles
- Škoda 30 T 40 vehicles
Buses:
- Ikarus 280 1 historic vehicle (all vehicles are reject)
- Karosa B 732 30 vehicles and 2 historic vehicles (48 vehicles are reconstructed to Karosa B732 NSTG)
- Ikarus 283 1 vehicle and 2 historic vehicles (the others vehicles are reject)
- Karosa B 741 91 vehicles (86 vehicles are reconstructed to Karosa B741 NSTG)
- TAM 260 A 180 M 1 historic vehicle
- TAM 272 A 180 M 6 vehicles and 1 historic vehicle (all vehicles are reconstructed)
- TAM 232 A 116 M 4 vehicles (all vehicles are reconstructed, one vehicle is reject)
- Ikarus 435 85 vehicles (3 vehicles are reconstructed)
- Ikarus 415 35 vehicles (1 vehicle was reconstructed abortion in years 2004--2005 to Ikarus 415 CNG)
- Ikarus 412 3 vehicles with low-floor (1 vehicle is specially using for handicapped children)
- SOR B 9.5 32 vehicles
- SOR BN 9.5 18 vehicles with low-floor
- Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 416 CDI 2 minibuses with low-floor
- Solaris Urbino 15 CNG 22 vehicles with low-floor
- Iveco Daily Way 8 minibuses with low-floor
- SOR C 10.5 8 vehicles
- Tedom C12 G 30 vehicles (lease by Tedom from January 2009 to January 2017)
- SOR BN 10.5 38 vehicles with low-floor
- Mercedes-Benz O 530 Citaro CNG 1 vehicle
- Mercedes-Benz O 530 GL CapaCity 41 vehicles
- Mercedes-Benz O 405 GN2 11 vehicles with low-floor (lease by Abuss s.r.o. Nitra from November 2009)
- SOR NB 18 City 182 vehicles
- Irisbus Citelis 12M 35 vehicles
- Iveco Urbanway 12M 40 vehicles
- Solaris Urbino 10 10 vehicles
- SOR NB 12 City 28 vehicles
- Solaris Urbino 8,6 6 vehicles
- SOR EBN 8 2 vehicles
- SOR NS 12 Electric 16 vehicles
- MAN NG 313 5 vehicles (all vehicles are from Klagenfurt)
- Solaris Urbino 18 6 vehicles (all vehicles are from Berlin BVG)
- Solaris New Urbino 18 12 vehicles
- Rošero First FCLEI 4 vehicles
- Otokar Kent C 18,75 71 vehicles
- SOR NS 12 Diesel 80 vehicles
- Solaris Urbino 12 Hydrogen 4 vehicles
Trolleybuses:
- Škoda 14Tr 65 vehicles (21 vehicles are reconstructed)
- Škoda 14TrM 12 vehicles
- Škoda 15Tr 16 vehicles (all vehicles are reconstructed)
- Škoda 15TrM 23 vehicles
- Škoda 21Tr 1 vehicle with low-floor
- Škoda 25Tr 6 vehicles with diesel-electric agregat with low-floor
- Škoda 30Tr 35 vehicles with low-floor and 15 vehicles with diesel-electric agregat with low-floor
- Škoda 31Tr 70 vehicles with low-floor
- Škoda-Solaris 24m 16 vehicles with battery with low-floor
- Škoda 27Tr 23 vehicles with battery with low-floor
- SOR TNS 12 11 vehicles with battery with low-floor
## Aggregate
1 January 2009 Public Transport Company Bratislava have 880 carry on vehicles.
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# Dopravný podnik Bratislava
## Directors
- 1895--1907 -- Karol Kakulay
- 1907--1920 -- Rudolf Pleskott
- 1920--1939 -- Ing. Jaroslav Bartošek
- 1939--1943 -- Ing. Štefan Januš
- 1943--1949 -- Dr. Vladimír Brežný
- 1949--1950 -- Ján Bauman
- 1950--1951 -- Ján Mazáček
- 1951--1954 -- Martin Hanzlík
- 1954--1960 -- Jozef Zatlkaj
- 1960--1970 -- Ladislav Studenič
- 1970--1972 -- František Mariš
- 1972--1987 -- Ing. Ladislav Moštenan
- 1986--1990 -- Ing. Ján Novotný
- 1990--1992 -- dpt. Jozef Hlavina
- 1992--1994 -- JUDr. Ivan Letaši
- 1994--1995 -- Ing. Peter Forgáč
- 1995--1997 -- Ing. Peter Klučka
- 1997--2007 -- Ing. Ján Zachar
- 2007--2009 -- Róbert Kadnár
- 2009--2011 -- Ing. Pavel Derkay
- 2011--2015 -- Ing. Ľubomír Belfi
- 2015--2019 -- Ing. Milan Urban
- 2019--present -- Ing. Martin Rybanský
## Former names of DPB {#former_names_of_dpb}
Over the course of the past century Public Transport Company Bratislava has had about 14 names.
- BEÚS -- Bratislavská elektrická účastinná spoločnosť
- BKH -- Elektrická lokálna železnica Bratislava- krajinská hranica
- BMEŽ -- Bratislavská mestská elektrická železnica
- DOZAB -- Dopravné závody hl. m. Bratislavy, komunálny podnik
- DPMB -- Dopravný podnik mesta Bratislava
- DPHMB koncern -- Dopravné podniky hl. m. SSR Bratislavy -- koncern
- DZHMB -- Dopravné závody hl. m. SSR Bratislavy, koncernový podnik
- DPB, š.p. -- Dopravný podnik Bratislava, štátny podnik
- POHéV -- Pozsony Országhatárszeli Helyiérdekú Villamos Vasút
- PVVV -- Pozsonyi Város Villamos Vasút
- LWP -- Lokalbahn Wien -- (Pozsony) Pressburg (Pressburgerbahn)
- NOLB -- Niederosterreichische Landdesbahnen -- Dolnorakúske krajinské železnice
- DPB -- Dopravný podnik Bratislava, štátny podnik
- DPB -- Dopravný podnik Bratislava, akciová spoločnosť (today)
## Gallery
<File:TRAM> ČKD K2 modernized BRATISLAVA.JPG\|TATRA ČKD K2S (Little Big City promotion) #7108, Hlavná stanica (main railway station) <File:Škoda-30T.JPG%7CŠkoda> 30 T, one of the vehicles to be used on a fast tram track to Petržalka <File:Škoda> 29 T (7409).JPG\|Škoda 29 T in Bratislava <File:T6A5> MildaStreet BA.jpg\|TATRA ČKD T6A5 from third #7955--7956 series, Miletičova ulica (Miletič street) on bus stop Záhradnícka. <File:DUOBUS> Bratislava.JPG\|ŠKODA 25Tr with diesel-electric aggregate #6704, Molecova ulica (Molecova street) on Molecova stop. <File:Urbino15> bratislava
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# Kirchehrenbach
**Kirchehrenbach** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Aetos-class destroyer
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# Auto Expo
The **Auto Expo**, previously a biennial event and held annually from 2024 under a new name, **Bharat Mobility Global Expo**, is an auto show held in Delhi NCR, India.
Till 2012, the Auto Expo was organized at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi which combined both vehicles and components. In 2014, The Auto Expo (Motor Show) moved to the new venue in NCR Region at the India Expo Mart, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh. However, The Auto Expo (Components) continued at the Pragati Maidan, New Delhi. Both the Motor Show and the Components are organised jointly by the Automotive Component Manufacturers Association (ACMA), Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM). After the opening of Bharat Mandapam in Pragati Maidan and Yashobhoomi in Dwarka, the expo returned to New Delhi with The Components Show being held at Yashobhoomi and The Motor Show being held at Bharat Mandapam.
## History
### Origin
The Auto Expo was conceived in the year 1985 and had its debut showcasing in 1986. The Auto Expo 1986 was a window for technology transfers showing how the Indian Automotive Industry was absorbing new technologies and promoting indigenous research and development for adapting these technologies for the rugged Indian conditions. The Auto Expo 1986 was marked by then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. The 9 day show was organised from 3 to 11 January 1986 at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi.
## 17th Auto Expo 2025 {#th_auto_expo_2025}
The 17th edition of Auto Expo or the 2nd Bharat Mobility Global Expo was hosted from 17th January to 22nd January 2025 at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi.
### Participant Auto Manufacturers {#participant_auto_manufacturers}
- Ashok Leyland
- BMW
- BYD
- Cummins
- EKA Mobility
- Greaves Cotton
- Hero Motocorp
- Harley Davidson
- Honda
- Hyundai
- Isuzu
- JBM Auto
- Kia
- Maruti Suzuki
- Mahindra Automotive
- Mercedes-Benz
- MG Motor
- Ola Electric
- Omega Seiki Mobility
- Porsche
- Tata Motors
- SML Isuzu
- Toyota
- Lexus
- Škoda Auto
- Suzuki
- Switch Mobility
- VE Commercial Vehicles
- Volvo Buses
- Eicher Motors
- Pinnacle Industries
- TVS Motor Company
- VinFast
- Vavye Mobility
- Yamaha Motor Company
### Production Spec Cars {#production_spec_cars}
The production spec cars displayed during Auto Expo 2025:
- Punch CNG -- Tata Motors
- Punch.ev -- Tata Motors
- Harrier.ev -- Tata Motors
- Carens -- Kia
- Carens X-Line -- Kia
- Carnival -- Kia
- Dzire -- Maruti Suzuki
- e Vitara -- Maruti Suzuki
- Land Cruiser J300 -- Toyota
- Carens -- Kia
- Innova Hycross -- Toyota
- Grand Vitara -- Maruti Suzuki
- Fronx -- Maruti Suzuki
- Jimny -- Maruti Suzuki
- Brezza -- Maruti Suzuki
- Invicto -- Maruti Suzuki
- Urban Cruiser Hyryder -- Toyota
- Ioniq 9 -- Hyundai
- Ioniq 5 -- Hyundai
- Creta Electric -- Hyundai
- Nexo -- Hyundai
- Staria -- Hyundai
- Atto 3 -- BYD
- Seal -- BYD
- Sealion -- BYD
- eMax 7 -- BYD
- Seltos X Line -- Kia
- Sonet X Line -- Kia
- EV6 -- Kia
- Seltos -- Kia
- Sonet -- Kia
- EV9 -- Kia
- Syros -- Kia
- Harrier Red Dark -- Tata Motors
- Safari Red Dark -- Tata Motors
- Hector -- MG Motor
- M9 -- MG Motor
- Cyberster -- MG Motor
- Majestor -- MG Motor
- ZS EV -- MG Motor
- Hector Plus -- MG Motor
- Camry -- Toyota
- Fortuner -- Toyota
- Fortuner Legender -- Toyota
- Vellfire -- Toyota
- bZ4X -- Toyota
- Prius PHEV -- Toyota
- Innova Hycross -- Toyota
- RX 500h -- Lexus
- RX 350h -- Lexus
- LX 500d -- Lexus
- LM 350 -- Lexus
- Tiago.ev -- Tata Motors
- Sierra -- Tata Motors
- Tiago -- Tata Motors
- Curvv -- Tata Motors
- Safari -- Tata Motors
- Elroq -- Škoda Auto
- Kylaq -- Škoda Auto
- Kodiaq -- Škoda Auto
- Superb -- Škoda Auto
- Kushaq -- Škoda Auto
- Thar Roxx -- Mahindra
- BE 6 -- Mahindra
- XEV 9E -- Mahindra
- VF7 -- VinFast
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# Auto Expo
## 16th Auto Expo 2023 {#th_auto_expo_2023}
The 16th Auto Expo was held at the India Expo Mart in Greater Noida between 11 and 18 January 2023. The interaction days for the domestic and international media, were opened from 11 January to 12 January 2023. All the gates of the 2023 Auto Expo open from 11 am to 6 pm every day. The 2023 Auto Expo focuses on new auto technologies as well as innovation. The following brands took part in the event:
- Ashok Leyland
- Atul Auto
- Cummins
- Godawari Electric Motors
- Greaves Cotton
- Hexall Motors
- Hyundai
- JBM Auto
- Jupiter Electric Mobility
- Kia
- Maruti Suzuki
- MG Motor
- MTA E-Mobility
- Omega Seiki Mobility
- Tata Motors
- BYD Auto
- SML Isuzu
- Toyota
- Lexus
- Pravaig Dynamics
- Switch Mobility
- VE Commercial Vehicles
- Volvo Buses
- Eicher Motors
- Tork Motors
- TVS Motor Company
### Concept cars {#concept_cars}
The concept cars displayed during Auto Expo 2023:
- eVX -- Maruti Suzuki
- Hilux Extreme Off-Road -- Toyota
- EV9 -- Kia
- Curvv -- Tata Motors
- Avinya -- Tata Motors
- Sierra.ev -- Tata Motors
- Harrier.ev -- Tata Motors
- LF-30 -- Lexus
- LFZ -- Lexus
- Glanza Racing -- Toyota
### Production Spec Cars {#production_spec_cars_1}
The production spec cars displayed during Auto Expo 2023:
- Punch CNG -- Tata Motors
- Altroz CNG -- Tata Motors
- Altroz Racer -- Tata Motors
- Carens Police Car -- Kia
- Carens Ambulance -- Kia
- KA4 (Carnival) -- Kia
- Fronx -- Maruti Suzuki
- Jimny -- Maruti Suzuki
- Land Cruiser J300 -- Toyota
- Carens -- Kia
- Innova Hycross -- Toyota
- Grand Vitara -- Maruti Suzuki
- Brezza -- Maruti Suzuki
- Ertiga -- Maruti Suzuki
- Baleno -- Maruti Suzuki
- WagonR Flex Fuel -- Maruti Suzuki
- Urban Cruiser Hyryder -- Toyota
- Ioniq 6 -- Hyundai
- Ioniq 5 -- Hyundai
- Alcazar -- Hyundai
- Nexo -- Hyundai
- Tucson -- Hyundai
- Atto 3 -- BYD
- Seal -- BYD
- e6 -- BYD
- Seltos X Line -- Kia
- Sonet X Line -- Kia
- EV6 -- Kia
- Seltos -- Kia
- Sonet -- Kia
- Harrier Red Dark -- Tata Motors
- Safari Red Dark -- Tata Motors
- Hector -- MG Motor
- Mifa 9 -- MG Motor
- Astor -- MG Motor
- Gloster -- MG Motor
- ZS EV -- MG Motor
- Marvel R -- MG Motor
- Hector Plus -- MG Motor
- eMG6 -- MG Motor
- eHS -- MG Motor
- MG4 -- MG Motor
- MG5 -- MG Motor
- Euniq 7 -- MG Motor
- eRX5 -- MG Motor
- Camry -- Toyota
- Fortuner -- Toyota
- Fortuner Legender -- Toyota
- Vellfire -- Toyota
- bZ4X -- Toyota
- Mirai -- Toyota
- RX 500h -- Lexus
- RX 350h -- Lexus
- LX 500d -- Lexus
- LM 350 -- Lexus
- Tiago.ev -- Tata Motors
- Tiago.ev Blitz -- Tata Motors
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# Auto Expo
## 15th Auto Expo 2020 {#th_auto_expo_2020}
The 15th Auto Expo was held at the India Expo Mart in Greater Noida between 7 and 12 February 2020. The interaction days for the domestic and international media, were opened from 5 February to 6 February 2020. All the gates of the 2020 Auto Expo open from 11 am to 6 pm every day. The 2020 Auto Expo focuses on new auto technologies as well as innovation. The following brands took part in the event:
- Force Motors
- Great Wall Motors and Haval
- Haima Automobile
- Hyundai
- Kia Motors
- Mahindra
- Maruti Suzuki
- Mercedes-Benz
- MG Motor
- Renault
- Škoda Auto
- Tata Motors
- Volkswagen
- Omega Seiki Mobility
Due to a slow down in the Indian motor industry, the organiser had considered postponing the show to 2021. Several manufacturers declined to take part including BMW, Fiat, Ford, Honda and Toyota.
### Concept cars {#concept_cars_1}
The concept cars displayed during Auto Expo 2020:
- Futuro E -- Maruti Suzuki
- Funster -- Mahindra
- XUV300 EV -- Mahindra
- Le fil Rouge -- Hyundai
- Sonet -- Kia Motors
- Marvel X -- MG Motor
- Vision I -- MG Motor
- ID Crozz -- Volkswagen
- Taigun -- Volkswagen (Pre-Production)
- Vision IN -- Škoda
- Sierra -- Tata Motors
- HBX -- Tata Motors(Pre-Production)
- Kite -- Hyundai
- RS 2027 -- Renault
- SYMBIOZ -- Renault
- Concept H -- GWM Haval
- Vision 2025 -- GWM Haval
### Production Spec Cars {#production_spec_cars_2}
The production spec cars displayed during Auto Expo 2020:
- F7 -- GWM Haval
- F7X -- GWM Haval
- F5 -- GWM Haval
- H9 -- GWM Haval
- Ora R1 -- GWM
- IQ -- GWM
- New Creta -- Hyundai
- Tucson Facelift -- Hyundai
- I30 Fastback N -- Hyundai
- Hector Plus -- MG Motor
- Gloster -- MG Motor
- G10 -- MG Motor
- Carnival -- Kia Motors
- X Ceed -- Kia Motors
- Stonic -- Kia Motors
- E Niro -- Kia Motors
- Soul EV -- Kia Motors
- Vitara Brezza Facelift -- Maruti Suzuki
- Ignis Facelift -- Maruti Suzuki
- Jimny -- Maruti Suzuki
- Atom -- Mahindra
- E KUV100 -- Mahindra
- K-ZE -- Renault
- Zoe EV -- Renault
- Triber AMT -- Renault
- Gravitas -- Tata Motors
- New Winger -- Tata Motors
- Altroz EV -- Tata Motors
- Hexa Safari Edition -- Tata Motors
- Tiguan All-Space -- Volkswagen
- T-Roc -- Volkswagen
- Superb Facelift -- Škoda
- Karoq -- Škoda
- 7X -- Haima
- 8S -- Haima
- Bird E1 -- Haima
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# Auto Expo
## 14th Auto Expo 2018 {#th_auto_expo_2018}
The 14th Auto Expo, the biggest event of the automotive industry in India, was held from 9--14 February 2018.
Like the previous edition, this show is divided into:
- Auto Expo 2018 -- The Motor Show: scheduled from 9--14 February 2018 (at India Expo Mart, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh)
- Auto Expo 2018 -- Components: scheduled from 8--11 February 2018 (at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi)
However, the joint inauguration of Auto Expo 2018 was held on 8 February.
### Major Contributors {#major_contributors}
Among the major contributors to the EV segment, Tata is expected to launch two new electric cars, namely Tiago EV and Tigor EV. In addition to EVs, manufacturers like Tata Motors, Maruti Suzuki, Mahindra, BMW, Hyundai, etc. are expected to showcase their products.
### Two Wheelers {#two_wheelers}
In the two-wheelers segment, Hero MotoCorp is expected to offer a wide range of electric scooters, along with some new non-electric bikes. One can see the major two-wheeler manufacturers like BMW, Honda, TVS, Kawasaki, Suzuki and UM Motorcycles to showcase their new products in series.
### Concept Cars {#concept_cars_2}
Maruti Suzuki has already announced the e-survivor and Future-S concepts to be showcased at Auto Expo 2018. Other concepts on display will be Trezor Concept and Concept EQ from Renault.
### Driverless technology {#driverless_technology}
Hi Tech Robotic Systems launched AI based driver state monitoring system technology called Novus Aware in partnership with Daimler India Commercial Vehicles (DICV) for their Bharat Benz Truck**.**
### Not Participating {#not_participating}
Those not taking part in the event include the likes of Volkswagen, Nissan, Bajaj and Royal Enfield, Datsun, Skoda, Volvo, Ford, Lamborghini, Porsche, Audi, Fiat, Jeep, Jaguar, Land-Rover. Two-wheeler majors Harley Davidson and Triumph and truck makers MAN and Scania. The major reasons cited for their non-participation are the non-availability of specific Indian models and the poor return on investments.
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# Auto Expo
## 13th Auto Expo 2016 {#th_auto_expo_2016}
The **Auto Expo 2016** or **13th Auto Expo**. The Auto Expo is the biennial (once every two years) automotive show of India and second largest auto show of the world, held in the **National Capital Region** of Delhi.
This show was divided into:
- Auto Expo 2016 -- The Motor Show: held from 5--9 February 2016 (at India Expo Mart, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh)[1](http://www.autocarindia.com/auto-news/13th-delhi-auto-expo-to-be-held-from-feb-5-9-2016-393368.aspx)
- Auto Expo 2016 -- Components: held from 4--7 February 2016 (at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi)
### Organisers
The Organisers of the Auto Expo 2016 were:
- Automotive Component Manufacturers Association of India (ACMA)
- Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)
- Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM)
The motor show received accreditation from the Organisation Internationale des Constructeurs d\'Automobiles (OICA).
### Exhibitors
The following brands have taken part in the Auto Expo 2016:
- Abarth
- Ashok Leyland
- Atul Auto
- Audi India
- Bird Retail Pvt. Ltd.
- BMW India
- Chevrolet
- Datsun
- DSK Motowheels Pvt Ltd
- Eicher Motors
- Executive Modcar Trendz
- FCA India Automobiles
- Force Motors
- Ford India Private Limited
- Fiat India Automobiles
- Greenrick
- General Motors India Private Limited
- Hero MotoCorp
- Hindustan Petroleum
- Honda Cars India
- Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India (P) Ltd.
- Hyundai Motor India Limited
- India Yamaha Motor
- Indian Motocycle Manufacturing Company
- Isuzu Motors India
- JBM Auto Ltd.
- Jaguar Land Rover
- Lohia Auto Industries
- Mahindra & Mahindra
- Maruti Suzuki
- Mercedes-Benz India
- Motormind Automotive Designs
- Nissan Motor India Private Limited
- Piaggio India
- Polaris India Pvt. Ltd.
- Renault India Private Limited
- Revolta Motors India
- Speedways Electric
- Scania Commercial Vehicles India Pvt. Ltd.
- SML Isuzu India
- Speego Vehicles India
- Suzuki India
- Tata Motors
- Toyota Kirloskar Motor
- Triumph Motorcycles India Pvt Ltd
- TVS Motor Company
- UM India Two Wheelers (P) ltd.
- VE Commercial Vehicles Pvt. Ltd.
- Volkswagen Group Sales India
### Concept cars {#concept_cars_3}
The concept cars displayed during the Auto Expo 2016:
- Audi Prologue
- Chevrolet Cruze
- Chevrolet Spin
- Datsun Go-Cross
- Honda Accord
- Honda BR-V
- Hyundai Carlino
- Hyundai N 2025 Vision Gran Turismo
- Hyundai Tucson
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
- Isuzu D-Max V-cross
- Jeep Grand Cherokee
- Mahindra XUV Aero
- Maruti Suzuki Ignis
- Mercedes Benz GLC-Class
- Renault Duster Facelift
- Renault KWID AMT
- Tata Hexa
- Toyota Innova Crysta
- Toyota Prius
- Volkswagen Passat GTE
- Novus Drive by Hi Tech Robotic Systemz
### Car launches {#car_launches}
New cars launched at the 13th Auto Expo 2016:
- Audi R8 V10 Plus
- BMW X1 (F48)
- Jaguar XE
- Maruti Suzuki Vitara Brezza (Unveiled)
### Two wheeler showcase {#two_wheeler_showcase}
- Honda Navi
- Renegade Commando
- Renegade Sport S
- Renegade Classic
- Suzuki Gixxer SF FI
- Triumph Bonneville T120
- Yamaha MT-09
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# Auto Expo
## 12th Auto Expo 2014 {#th_auto_expo_2014}
The 12th Edition of the Auto Expo was divided into two events:
- 12th Auto Expo 2014 (Components) which was held at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 6 to 9 February 2014.
- 12th Auto Expo 2014 (The Motor Show) which was held at India Expo Mart, Greater Noida, Delhi-NCR from 7 to 11 February 2014, with press preview days on 5 and 6 February.
### Production car launches {#production_car_launches}
- Abarth 500 (Indian introduction)
- Ashok Leyland Dost Tipper
- Ashok Leyland MiTR
- Ashok Leyland Partner
- Audi A3 Cabriolet (Indian introduction)
- Audi A3 Sedan (Indian introduction)
- Bajaj RE60
- BMW 3 Series Gran Turismo (Indian introduction)
- BMW i8 (Indian introduction)
- BMW M6 Gran Coupe (Indian introduction)
- BMW X5 (Indian introduction)
- Chevrolet Beat facelift (Indian introduction)
- Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 (Indian introduction)
- Chevrolet Corvette Stingray (Indian introduction)
- Chevrolet TrailBlazer (Indian introduction)
- Datsun Go/Go+ (Indian introduction)
- DC Avanti
- Fiat Linea facelift (Indian introduction)
- Ford Fiesta facelift (Indian introduction)
- 2014 Ford Figo
- Honda Accord Hybrid (Indian introduction)
- Honda Jazz (Indian introduction)
- Honda Mobilio (Indian introduction)
- Hyundai Santa Fe (Indian introduction)
- Hyundai Xcent
- Isuzu D-MAX Space Cab (Indian introduction)
- Isuzu NHR (Indian introduction)
- Jaguar F-Type (Indian introduction)
- 2014 Jaguar XJ (Indian introduction)
- 2014 Land Rover Discovery (Indian introduction)
- Mahindra e2o with Quick2Charge
- Mahindra Loadking Zoom container
- Mahindra Quanto autoSHIFT
- Mahindra Torro 25
- Mahindra Tourister Cosmo 40 seater
- Maruti Celerio
- Maruti Swift Sport (Indian introduction)
- Maruti SX4 S-Cross (Indian introduction)
- Mercedes-Benz GLA-Class (Indian introduction)
- Mercedes-Benz M Guard (Indian introduction)
- Mercedes-Benz CLA 45 AMG (Indian introduction)
- MINI John Cooper Works (Indian introduction)
- Nissan Evalia facelift
- Nissan Sunny facelift
- Range Rover Long Wheelbase
- 2014 Range Rover Evoque with 9-speed AT (Indian introduction)
- Renault Duster Adventure Edition
- Renault Fluence facelift (Indian introduction)
- Renault Koleos facelift (Indian introduction)
- Renault Megane RS facelift (Indian introduction)
- Renault Zoe (Indian introduction)
- SsangYong Rodius (Indian introduction)
- SsangYong Rexton 2.0L (Indian introduction)
- Škoda Yeti facelift (Indian introduction)
- Tata Ace Zip XL
- Tata Bolt
- Tata LPS 4923 Lift Axle tractor
- Tata Prima CX 1618.T
- Tata Prima 4032.S LNG
- Tata Ultra 614
- Tata Starbus Urban FE Parallel Hybrid Bus
- Tata Starbus Urban 9/18 FE Articulated Bus
- Tata Zest
- Toyota Corolla Altis (Indian introduction)
- Toyota Etios Cross
- Toyota GT86 (Indian introduction)
- Toyota Hiace (Indian introduction)
### Concept car launches {#concept_car_launches}
- Audi Sport quattro concept (Indian introduction)
- Bajaj U-Car
- Chevrolet Adra
- Datsun redi-GO
- Fiat Avventura
- Ford Figo sub-4 meter sedan
- Honda NSX (Indian introduction)
- Honda Vision XS-1
- Hyundai HND-9
- Jaguar C-X17 (Indian introduction)
- Mahindra eMaxximo EV
- Mahindra Halo EV
- Mahindra M1 Electro Formula E race car
- Mahindra Verito EV
- Mahindra XUV500 diesel hybrid
- Maruti Ciaz
- Maruti Swift Range Extender (Indian introduction)
- Nissan Friend-ME (Indian introduction)
- Nissan GT-R GT500 race car (Indian introduction)
- Piaggio NT3 concept (Indian introduction)
- Renault KWID
- SsangYong LIV-1 (Indian introduction)
- Tata ADDVenture
- Tata ConnectNext
- Tata Magic Iris Electric
- Tata Nano Twist Active
- Tata Nano Twist F-Tronic
- Tata Nexon
- Tata Safari Storme Ladakh
- Tata Sumo Extreme
- Volkswagen Taigun
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# Auto Expo
## 12th Auto Expo 2014 {#th_auto_expo_2014}
### Two Wheeler launches {#two_wheeler_launches}
- Aprilia Caponord 1200 (Indian introduction)
- Aprilia RSV4 R ABS (Indian introduction)
- Bajaj Pulsar SS400 and CS400
- DSK Hyosung Aquila 250
- DSK Hyosung GD 250N
- DSK Hyosung RT125 D
- Harley-Davidson Street 750 (Indian introduction)
- Hero Dare 125cc scooter
- Hero Hastur
- Hero iON Hydrogen-fuel cell vehicle concept
- Hero Passion Pro TR
- Hero SimplEcity electric bike
- Hero Splendor Pro Classic Cafe Racer
- Hero ZIR 150cc scooter
- Honda Activa 125
- Honda CBR 650F
- 2014 Honda CBR1000RR SP
- 2014 Honda CB Trigger
- Honda CX01 concept
- 2014 Honda Dream Yuga
- Mahindra Cafe Racer concept
- Mahindra Mojo
- Mahindra Scrambler concept
- Moto Morini Granpasso (Indian introduction)
- Moto Morini Scrambler (Indian introduction)
- Moto Guzzi California 1400 Touring (Indian introduction)
- 2014 Moto Guzzi V7 (Indian introduction)
- Piaggio Liberty 125 (Indian introduction)
- Rexnamo Electric SuperCruiser
- Suzuki Gixxer
- Suzuki Let\'s
- Suzuki V Strom 1000 ABS (Indian introduction)
- Terra A4000i electric scooter (Indian introduction)
- Terra Kiwami electric motorcycle
- Terra T4 electric riskshaw (Indian introduction)
- Triumph Daytona 675 (Indian introduction)
- TVS Draken concept
- TVS Graphite concept
- TVS Scooty Zest 110 cc scooter
- TVS Star City+
- TVS Wego
- UM Renegade Commando
- UM Renegade Sport
- UM XTreet
- Vardenchi T5
- Vespa 946 (Indian introduction)
- Vespa S (Indian introduction)
- Yamaha Alpha 110 cc scooter
- Yamaha FZ-S concept
- Yamaha R25 concept (Indian introduction)
- Yamaha YZF-R15 Special Edition
## 11th Auto Expo 2012 {#th_auto_expo_2012}
The 11th Edition of Auto Expo was held at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 5 to 11 January 2012. The first 2 days of the event was reserved for Media and VIPs. The formal inauguration happened on 6 January 2012 and the event was open to general public from 7 to 11 January 2012. The largest automotive show in India saw around 1500 participants from 23 countries.
The 11th Edition of Auto Expo saw 50 car launches, 10 of them were global launches and 20 two-wheeler launches. For the first time Ferrari and Peugeot showcased their line-up for India.
### Production car launches {#production_car_launches_1}
### Concept car launches {#concept_car_launches_1}
### Two Wheeler launches {#two_wheeler_launches_1}
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# Auto Expo
## 10th Auto Expo 2010 {#th_auto_expo_2010}
The Silver Jubilee edition of Auto Expo happened from 5 to 11 January 2010 witnessed nearly 72 launches. This included more than 10 global launches comprising passenger vehicles and two-wheelers.
The show was inaugurated by Mr Kamal Nath, Minister of Road Transport & Highways, Government of India and Mr Vilasrao Deshmukh, Minister of Heavy Industries and Public Enterprises. The show was also visited by media from over 19 countries.
### Production and Concept car launches {#production_and_concept_car_launches}
- Volkswagen Polo
- Tata Aria
- Skoda Yeti
- Fiat Punto Trendz
- Jaguar XJ
- Honda Brio
- Toyota Etios Sedan and Hatchback
- Hyundai i10 electric concept
- Chevrolet Aveo CNG
- Chevrolet Beat
- Audi Q7
- Maruti Suzuki Kizashi
- Fiat Linea T-Jet
- Chevrolet Captiva Extreme
- Chevrolet e-Spark
- Maruti Eeco
- Mahindra Thar
### Two Wheeler launches {#two_wheeler_launches_2}
- Honda CB Twister
- Hero Honda Karizma ZMR
- Kawasaki Ninja 250R
- TVS Wego
- Bajaj Pulsar 135
- Yamaha Fazer (India)
- TVS Apache RTR 180
- TVS Jive
- Royal Enfield Classic 350
- Bajaj Pulsar 220
## 9th Auto Expo 2008 {#th_auto_expo_2008}
9th Edition of Auto Expo saw the launch of the much awaited and eagerly anticipated Tata Nano. The expo happened from 10 to 17 January 2008, it attracted 1.8 million visitors and generated business worth Rs. 20,000 Crores through 2000 exhibitors and the display area was 1.2 Lakh square. The event had 65 manufacturers and more than 1,900 auto component makers. More than 31 new product / facelift and 4 global launches happened during the expo.
### Production/Concept Car Launches {#productionconcept_car_launches}
- Tata Nano
- Chevrolet Captiva
- Mercedes C-Class
- Mercedes-Benz CLK-Class
- Audi A4
- Skoda Fabia
- Tata Sumo Grande
- Tata Indigo CS
- Tata Xenon
- Tata Indica Vista
- Volkswagen up! concept
- Volkswagen Jetta
- BMW M3 Coupe
- Bajaj small car concept
- Honda Jazz
- Honda Civic Hybrid
- Hyundai Santro LPG
- Maruti Ritz or Suzuki Splash
- Maruti Suzuki A-Star concept
- Chevrolet Adhra concept
- Mahindra Xylo
- Volvo S80
- Volvo XC60
- Volvo C70 Convertible
### Two Wheeler launches {#two_wheeler_launches_3}
- Honda Aviator
- Honda Unicorn CBF Concept
- Honda CBR600RR
- Kawasaki Ninja 1000R
## 8th Auto Expo 2006 {#th_auto_expo_2006}
The 8th Auto Expo 2006 was organised at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 12 to 17 January 2006. With more than 1,000 participants, 300 overseas companies and 22 countries---including country-level participation from China, Germany, Italy, Taiwan and UK. The Expo covers an area of over 70,000 sq meters in New Delhi\'s Pragati Maidan. The Expo was jointly organized by the Automotive Components Manufacturers Association of India (ACMA), the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), and the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM).
### Production/Concept Car Launches {#productionconcept_car_launches_1}
- Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia
- Skoda Yeti Concept
- Skoda Superb
- Skoda Octavia RS
- Skoda Laura RS
- Honda FCX concept
- Honda CRV
- Honda Civic
- Honda City ZX CVT
- Mahindra Scorpio Hybrid
- Mahindra Bijilee Concept
## 7th Auto Expo 2004 {#th_auto_expo_2004}
7th edition of Auto Expo spanned for 5 days from 7 to 11 January 2004. The key OEM exhibitors were Maruti, Hyundai, Tata Motors, Nissan, Skoda, Audi, Volkswagen and Daimler Chrysler. The display area was 10,300 m^2^.
## 6th Auto Expo 2002 {#th_auto_expo_2002}
The 6th edition of the Auto Expo was held from 15 to 22 January 2002. The show witnessed international participation from 20 countries and exhibitors from China, the Czech Republic, France, Greece, Germany, Israel, Iran, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, the UAE and the USA.
### Production/Concept Car Launches {#productionconcept_car_launches_2}
- Fiat Palio
- Ashok Leyland Luxury buses
- Honda Scooters
- Hindustan Ambassador facelift
- Hyundai Santro facelift
- Tata Indigo Marina
- Skoda Fabia
- Toyota Qualis facelift
- Toyota Camry
- Hyundai Accent
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# Auto Expo
## 5th Auto Expo 2000 {#th_auto_expo_2000}
The 5th Edition of Auto expo was held in Pragiti Maidan from 12 to 18 January 2000. The event was inaugurated by Late.Mr.Murasoli Maran, Union Minister of Commerce and Industry. The expo covered 65,000 sq.m in display area through 18 halls and 20 participating countries. The expo had close to a million visitors and more than 25 new models were launched.
## 4th Auto Expo 1998 {#th_auto_expo_1998}
The 4th Edition of Auto Expo was held at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 15 to 21 January 1998.
### Production/Concept Car Launches {#productionconcept_car_launches_3}
- Tata Indica V1
- Daewoo Matiz
- Hyundai Santro
- Fiat Palio
- Skoda Felicia
- Ford Fiesta
- Maruti Zen
- Fiat Uno
- Daewoo Cielo
- Opel Astra
- Ford Escort
- Mitsubishi Lancer
- Honda City
- Tata Safari
- Tata Sierra
- Tata Sumo
- Mahindra Armada
- Mercedes E-Class
## 3rd Auto Expo 1996 {#rd_auto_expo_1996}
The 3rd Edition of Auto Expo was held at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 21 to 27 February 1996. The event was inaugurated by the then Finance Minister of India, Dr. Manmohan Singh. The objective of the event was primarily to attract attention of global automotive players to enter India.
## 2nd Auto Expo 1993 {#nd_auto_expo_1993}
The 2nd Edition of Auto Expo was held at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi from 7 to 15 December 1993. The event was inaugurated by the then Minister of External Affairs of India, Pranab Mukherjee. The primary highlight of the event was the EU -- India Automotive Business Forum.
## 1st Auto Expo 1986 {#st_auto_expo_1986}
The Auto Expo 1986 was a window for technology transfers showing how the Indian Automotive Industry was absorbing new technologies and promoting indigenous research and development for adapting these technologies for the rugged Indian conditions. The Auto Expo 1986 was marked by then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. The 9 day show was organised from 3 to 11 January 1986 at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi
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# Cleburne Intermodal Transportation Depot
The **Cleburne Intermodal Transportation Depot** is an Amtrak train station in Cleburne, Texas, United States.
## History
For many years, Cleburne was the site of a major locomotive backshop of the Santa Fe Railroad, and many shop buildings can be seen on the east side of the track. The 1898 two-story brick depot was scaled down to one floor and ultimately demolished during the 1990s to make way for a road expansion project.
Cleburne became the northern end of the Trinity and Brazos Valley Railway in 1904, with the portion from Teague now abandoned.
Cleburne\'s current intermodal station, built in 1999, serves Amtrak trains and is the office for *Cletran*, the local bus transit. In recent history, the station has become less prestigious and the surrounding buildings have become mostly abandoned. The station is unstaffed, and all tickets must be purchased in advance
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# Kleinsendelbach
**Kleinsendelbach** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany. It is located about 17 Kilometers south of the town of Forchheim and 15 Kilometers to the east of the city of Erlangen, and is part of the administration community Dormitz.
## History
Kleinsendelbach was first mentioned in 1062. It was part of the Prince-Bishopric of Bamberg and therefore from 1500 onward part of the Franconian Circle during the Holy Roman Empire. After 1803 the village was ceded to Bavaria where it was declared a municipality in 1818. Despite its comparably small size as a municipality, Kleinsendelbach\'s independence was untouched by the territorial reforms of 1972 and 1978 though it has joined the administrative community Dormitz along with two neighboring municipalities.
## Politics
The presiding mayor is Gertrud Werner since 2008 along with the second mayor Josef Elsinger. The regional council consists of 12 members and the mayor, none of which are part of a major party.
### Coat of arms {#coat_of_arms}
Kleinsendelbach\'s coat of arms consists of a silver wolf\'s head on a blue background, a black lion head on a yellow background, and white and red stripes in the middle.
## Sights
In 1982, Kleinsendelbach was awarded with the title of the most beautiful village in the Forchheim district. There is one church (St. Heinrich, built 1952) and three chapels. Around the municipality are many lakes which are typical for the region and bank on nature protection zones.
## Organizations
Kleinsendelbach is home to multiple organizations for elderly care, traditional singing and dancing, culture preservation, fishing, and a local group of the scout association Pfadfinderbund Weltenbummler
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# Martin Heinze
**Martin Heinze** (born 28 February 1983) is a Danish former professional footballer who played as a midfielder
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# Kunreuth
**Kunreuth** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany.
The town is the location of Schloss Kunreuth. Since the 14th century the castle has belonged to the family of the Counts and Barons von Egloffstein who have also owned Egloffstein Castle since the 12th century
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# Ramon Domínguez
**Ramón A. Domínguez** (born November 24, 1976) is a retired Venezuelan jockey and Hall of Fame member in American thoroughbred horse racing.
Domínguez began riding horses at age 16 in his native Venezuela in show jumping then turned to riding thoroughbreds in flat racing events at La Rinconada Hippodrome. He emigrated to the United States where he began riding at Florida\'s Hialeah Park Race Track in 1996.
In 2001 he got his big break by becoming the winningest jockey in the United States. He repeated the feat in 2003, and in 2004 he won the Isaac Murphy Award for having the highest winning percentage among all American-based jockeys. Domínguez was the regular rider of two-time Eclipse Award-winning turf champion Gio Ponti, whom he has ridden to victories in six Grade One stakes races including Belmont Park\'s Man o\' War Stakes twice, as well as the Arlington Million, Frank E. Kilroe Mile Handicap and Shadwell Turf Mile Stakes twice. His first win in the Breeders\' Cup came in 2004 when he rode Better Talk Now to victory in the Breeders\' Cup Turf. His second Breeders\' Cup victory was the 2011 Juvenile when he rode Hansen to victory in gate-to-wire fashion over Union Rags. His third and final win in the Breeders\' Cup came in 2012, also in the Breeders\' Cup Turf, when Little Mike upset the race at 17-1 odds.
Domínguez has won six races in a day on four occasions, most recently on July 22, 2012, when he rode six winners from seven mounts at Saratoga Race Course tying the same day win record by a jockey among all New York tracks. He is the second jockey in Saratoga\'s history to win six races on a single race card. He has also won five races in a day on several occasions at Aqueduct Racetrack, most recently on February 17, 2010, when he won the first five races on the card.
In 2012 Dominguez topped the New York Racing Association (NYRA) riding circuit for the fourth straight year with 322 victories, and was also the winner of the George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award, bestowed by his peers for excellent conduct and given by Santa Anita Park. Domínguez is the recipient of the 2010, 2011, and 2012 Eclipse Award for Outstanding Jockey. In 2012 set a new mark for single-season earnings by a jockey, when his mounts brought home \$25,582,252 to shatter the 2003 bar of \$23,354,960 set by Hall of Famer Jerry Bailey.
On June 13, 2013, Dominguez announced his retirement following the advice of his doctors after a traumatic brain injury he sustained at Aqueduct Racetrack on January 18, 2013.
On April 25, 2016, Dominguez\'s induction into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame was announced
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# Eschenrode
**Eschenrode** is a village and a former municipality in the Börde district in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2010, it is part of the town Oebisfelde-Weferlingen.
## Geography
Eschenrode lies about 5 km southeast of Weferlingen, between Lappwald and the Flechtingen Hills. The nearest large towns are Braunschweig, Wolfsburg and Magdeburg.
It is surrounded on three sides by woods. Nearby lies the abandoned village of Nievoldhagen.
### Neighbouring municipalities {#neighbouring_municipalities}
These are: Hödingen, Hörsingen, Bartensleben, Schwanefeld, Walbeck and Weferlingen.
## History
The oldest mention of \"Haskenroth\" is in a confirmation document of the pope Hadrian IV for Mariental Abbey in 1158. Because the Eschenroder church dates from Hildegrim of Châlons († 827), traditionally the first bishop of the diocese of Halberstadt and said to have founded 35 parish churches, it is presumed clearly older than Eschenrode itself. The church became in the middle of the 11th century the archdeacons\' church. The Halberstädter bishops beside the aristocratic own churches bishop subordinated directly Kirchenbezirke created. The church district of Eschenrode enclosed from Bartensleben to Grafhorst 22 churches. 1224 this was transferred Archdeacon Eschenrode of the Probstei Walbeck and lost to meaning.
### Population
The number of residential buildings (54), has changed only slightly since 1842.
+-----------------------+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| Year Population | Year Population | Year Population | Year Population |
| ------ ------------ | ------------ ------------ | ------------ ------------ | ------------ ------------ |
| 1910 353 | 1981 214 | 31.12.1995 183 | 31.12.2004 172 |
| 1933 303 | 31.12.1985 199 | 31.12.2000 178 | 31.12.2005 173 |
| 1939 284 | 31.12.1989 199 | 31.12.2001 176 | 31.12.2006 174 |
| 1964 285 | 31.12.1990 192 | 31.12.2002 182 | 31.12.2007 167 |
| 1971 265 | 1993 198 | 31.12.2003 169 | |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
### Partnerships
Eschenrode has a partnership with Lehre in Lower Saxony.
## Church
The local church is dedicated to Saint Stephen which has a rare *Bodeorgel*, a baptismal angel and a bell, which according to the Nievoldhagen legend, was found in the forest. Nievoldhagen was a settlement whose foundation walls of the former church, are all that remains.
Image:Kirche1(Eschenrode).jpg\|Eschenrode church Image:Bodeorgel1(KircheEschenrode).JPG\|Bodeorgel Image:Taufengel(KircheEschenrode).JPG\|Baptismal Angel Image:Nievoldhagenglocke.JPG\|Nievoldhagenbell
## Transportation
Eschenrode is about 11 km from the B 1 which connects Braunschweig with Berlin. The nearest Autobahn is the A 2 which can be reached via the Alleringersleben exit (64), which is 14 km away
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# 1955 NCAA baseball tournament
The **1955 NCAA baseball tournament** was played at the end of the 1955 NCAA baseball season to determine the national champion of college baseball. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing in the College World Series, a double-elimination tournament in its ninth year. Eight regional districts sent representatives to the College World Series with preliminary rounds within each district serving to determine each representative. These events would later become known as regionals. Each district had its own format for selecting teams, resulting in 25 teams participating in the tournament at the conclusion of their regular season, and in some cases, after a conference tournament.
The College World Series was held in Omaha, Nebraska from June 10 to June 16. The ninth tournament\'s champion was Wake Forest, coached by Taylor Sanford. The Most Outstanding Player was Tom Borland of Oklahoma A&M.
## Tournament
### District 1 {#district_1}
Games played in Springfield, Massachusetts. `{{4TeamBracket | RD1=Semi-Finals
| RD2=Finals
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''[[1955 Springfield Maroons baseball team|Springfield]]'''
| RD1-score1=4
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Boston College Eagles|title=Boston College}}
| RD1-score2=3
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=UMass Minutemen|title=Massachusetts}}'''
| RD1-score3=1
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Holy Cross Crusaders|title=Holy Cross}}
| RD1-score4=0
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1='''Springfield'''
| RD2-score1=17
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Massachusetts
| RD2-score2=6
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 2 {#district_2}
Games played in Allentown, Pennsylvania. `{{4TeamBracket | RD1=Semi-Finals
| RD2=Finals
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Colgate Raiders|title=Colgate}}'''
| RD1-score1=7
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Penn State Nittany Lions|title=Penn State}}
| RD1-score2=4
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Ithaca Bombers|title=Ithaca}}'''
| RD1-score3=5
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Lafayette Leopards|title=Lafayette}}
| RD1-score4=0
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1='''Colgate'''
| RD2-score1=7
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Ithaca
| RD2-score2=6
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 3 {#district_3}
District 3 consisted of two separate 3-game series. The first series was played between Wake Forest and Rollins, with the winner moving on to play West Virginia in a three-game series. The winner of that series moved on to the College World Series.
Games played at Morgantown, West Virginia. `{{3TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1 = {{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Rollins Tars|title=Rollins}}
| RD1-score1-1 = 0
| RD1-score1-2 = 2
| RD1-score1-3 = –
| RD1-team2 = '''[[1955 Wake Forest Demon Deacons baseball team|Wake Forest]]'''
| RD1-score2-1 = '''4'''
| RD1-score2-2 = '''6'''
| RD1-score2-3 = –
| RD2-team1 = '''Wake Forest'''
| RD2-score1-1 = '''5'''
| RD2-score1-2 = 7
| RD2-score1-3 = '''6'''
| RD2-team2 = {{CBSB link|year=1955|team=West Virginia Mountaineers|title=West Virginia}}
| RD2-score2-1 = 1
| RD2-score2-2 = '''9'''
| RD2-score2-3 = 5
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 4 {#district_4}
District 4 consisted of two separate 3-game series. The first series was played between Alma and Western Michigan, with the winner moving on to play Ohio State in a three-game series. The winner of that series moved on to the College World Series.
Games played in Kalamazoo, Michigan. `{{3TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1 = {{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Alma Scots|title=Alma}}
| RD1-score1-1 = '''9'''
| RD1-score1-2 = 0
| RD1-score1-3 = 4
| RD1-team2 = '''[[1955 Western Michigan Broncos baseball team|Western Michigan]]'''
| RD1-score2-1 = 8
| RD1-score2-2 = '''3'''
| RD1-score2-3 = '''15'''
| RD2-team1 = '''Western Michigan'''
| RD2-score1-1 = '''1'''
| RD2-score1-2 = 5
| RD2-score1-3 = '''7'''
| RD2-team2 = {{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|title=Ohio State}}
| RD2-score2-1 = 0<sup>[[Extra innings|10]]</sup>
| RD2-score2-2 = '''8'''
| RD2-score2-3 = 5
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 5 {#district_5}
Games played in Norman, Oklahoma. `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Oklahoma State Cowboys|title=Oklahoma A&M}}'''
| RD1-score1-1=0
| RD1-score1-2='''6'''
| RD1-score1-3='''6'''
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Oklahoma Sooners|title=Oklahoma}}
| RD1-score2-1='''3'''
| RD1-score2-2=3
| RD1-score2-3=2
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 6 {#district_6}
Games played in Tucson, Arizona. `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Texas A&M Aggies|title=Texas A&M}}
| RD1-score1-1=2
| RD1-score1-2='''5'''
| RD1-score1-3=1
| RD1-team2='''[[1955 Arizona Wildcats baseball team|Arizona]]'''
| RD1-score2-1='''6'''
| RD1-score2-2=0
| RD1-score2-3='''2'''
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 7 {#district_7}
Games played in Greeley, Colorado.
### District 8 {#district_8}
District 8 consisted of two tiers of play. The first tier was a four-team double-elimination tournament with the winner moving on to play Southern California in a three-game series. The winner of that series moved onto the College World Series.
Games played in Fresno, California. `{{4Team2ElimBracket
| RD1=First Round
| RD2=Semi-Finals
| RD3=Finals
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Fresno State Bulldogs|title=Fresno State}}'''
| RD1-score1=6
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Willamette Bearcats|title=Willamette}}
| RD1-score2=3
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1955|team=San Jose State Spartans|title=San Jose State}}'''
| RD1-score3=9
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1955|team=Pepperdine Waves|title=Pepperdine}}
| RD1-score4=2
| RD1-seed5=
| RD1-team5=Willamette
| RD1-score5=11
| RD1-seed6=
| RD1-team6='''Pepperdine'''
| RD1-score6=14
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1=Fresno St.
| RD2-score1=1
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2='''San Jose State'''
| RD2-score2=3
| RD2-seed3=
| RD2-team3='''Fresno State'''
| RD2-score3=8
| RD2-seed4=
| RD2-team4=Pepperdine
| RD2-score4=7
| RD3-seed1=
| RD3-team1=San Jose State
| RD3-score1-1=4
| RD3-score1-2=1
| RD3-seed2=
| RD3-team2='''Fresno State'''
| RD3-score2-1=9
| RD3-score2-2=5
}}`{=mediawiki}
Games played in Los Angeles. `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1=Fresno State
| RD1-score1-1=2
| RD1-score1-2=2
| RD1-score1-3=-
| RD1-team2='''[[1955 USC Trojans baseball team|Southern California]]'''
| RD1-score2-1='''11'''
| RD1-score2-2='''15'''
| RD1-score2-3=-
}}`{=mediawiki}
| 840 |
1955 NCAA baseball tournament
| 0 |
10,142,110 |
# 1955 NCAA baseball tournament
## College World Series {#college_world_series}
### Participants
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| School | Conference | Record (conference) | Head coach | CWS appearances | CWS best finish | CWS record |
+========================+=============+=====================+================+=================+=================+============+
| Arizona | Border | 41--6 (6--0) | Frank Sancet | 1\ | 6th\ | 1--2 |
| | | | | (last: 1954) | (1954) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Colgate | Independent | 16--6--1 | Red O\'Hora | 0\ | none | 0--0 |
| | | | | (last: none) | | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Colorado State College | RMC | 24--2 (10--0) | Pete Butler | 2\ | 7th\ | 0--4 |
| | | | | (last: 1953) | (1953) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Oklahoma A&M | MVC | 24--1 (8--0) | Toby Greene | 1\ | 4th\ | 2--2 |
| | | | | (last: 1954) | (1954) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Springfield | Independent | 14--5 | Archie Allen | 1\ | 5th\ | 1--2 |
| | | | | (last: 1951) | (1951) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Southern California | CIBA | 30--8 (14--2) | Rod Dedeaux | 3\ | 1st\ | 5--5 |
| | | | | (last: 1951) | (1948) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Wake Forest | ACC | 24--6 (11--3) | Taylor Sanford | 1\ | 2nd\ | 2--2 |
| | | | | (last: 1949) | (1949) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Western Michigan | MAC | 22--5 (9--0) | Charlie Maher | 1\ | 3rd\ | 2--2 |
| | | | | (last: 1952) | (1952) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+----------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
### Bracket and Results {#bracket_and_results}
`{{8TeamBracket-2Elim |style=2
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''{{cbsb link|year=1955|team=Oklahoma State Cowboys|school=Oklahoma State University–Stillwater|title=Oklahoma A&M}}'''
| RD1-score1='''5'''
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2=[[1955 Springfield Maroons baseball team|Springfield]]
| RD1-score2=1
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''[[1955 Western Michigan Broncos baseball team|Western Michigan]]'''
| RD1-score3='''4'''
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4=[[1955 Arizona Wildcats baseball team|Arizona]]
| RD1-score4=1
| RD1-seed5=
| RD1-team5='''{{cbsb link|year=1955|team=Northern Colorado Bears|school=University of Northern Colorado|title=Colorado State College}}'''
| RD1-score5='''2'''
| RD1-seed6=
| RD1-team6=[[1955 USC Trojans baseball team|Southern California]]
| RD1-score6=1
| RD1-seed7=
| RD1-team7='''[[1955 Wake Forest Demon Deacons baseball team|Wake Forest]]'''
| RD1-score7='''1'''
| RD1-seed8=
| RD1-team8={{cbsb link|year=1955|team=Colgate Raiders|school=Colgate University|title=Colgate}}
| RD1-score8=0
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1=Oklahoma A&M
| RD2-score1=4
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2='''Western Michigan'''
| RD2-score2='''5'''
| RD2-seed3=
| RD2-team3=Colorado State College
| RD2-score3=0
| RD2-seed4=
| RD2-team4='''Wake Forest'''
| RD2-score4='''10'''
| RD2-seed5=
| RD2-team5=Springfield
| RD2-score5=0
| RD2-seed6=
| RD2-team6='''Arizona'''
| RD2-score6='''6'''
| RD2-seed7=
| RD2-team7=Southern California
| RD2-score7=4
| RD2-seed8=
| RD2-team8='''Colgate'''
| RD2-score8='''6'''
| RD3-seed1=
| RD3-team1='''Western Michigan'''
| RD3-score1='''9'''
| RD3-seed2=
| RD3-team2=Wake Forest
| RD3-score2=0
| RD3-seed3=
| RD3-team3=Colorado State College
| RD3-score3=0
| RD3-seed4=
| RD3-team4='''Arizona'''
| RD3-score4='''20'''
| RD3-seed5=
| RD3-team5='''Oklahoma A&M'''
| RD3-score5='''4'''
| RD3-seed6=
| RD3-team6=Colgate
| RD3-score6=2
| RD4-seed1=
| RD4-team1=Western Michigan
| RD4-score1=7
| RD4-seed2=
| RD4-team2='''Wake Forest'''
| RD4-score2='''10'''
| RD4-seed3=
| RD4-team3=Arizona
| RD4-score3=4
| RD4-seed4=
| RD4-team4='''Oklahoma A&M'''
| RD4-score4='''5'''<sup>12</sup>
| RD5-seed1=
| RD5-team1='''Wake Forest'''
| RD5-score1='''2'''
| RD5-seed2=
| RD5-team2=Oklahoma A&M
| RD5-score2=0
| RD6-seed1=
| RD6-team1=Western Michigan
| RD6-score1=6
| RD6-seed2=
| RD6-team2='''Wake Forest'''
| RD6-score2='''7'''
}}`{=mediawiki}
#### Game results {#game_results}
Date Game Winner Score Loser Notes
--------- --------- ------------------ ------------------- --------------------- -----------------------------------
June 10 Game 1 5--1 Springfield
Game 2 Western Michigan 4--1 Arizona
Game 3 2--1 Southern California
Game 4 Wake Forest 1--0
June 12 Game 5 Arizona 6--0 Springfield Springfield eliminated
Game 6 6--4 Southern California Southern California eliminated
Game 7 Western Michigan 5--4
Game 8 Wake Forest 10--0
June 13 Game 9 Arizona 20--0 Colorado State College eliminated
Game 10 4--2 Colgate eliminated
Game 11 Western Michigan 9--0 Wake Forest
June 14 Game 12 5--4 (12 innings) Arizona Arizona eliminated
Game 13 Wake Forest 10--7 Western Michigan
June 15 Game 14 Wake Forest 2--0 Oklahoma A&M eliminated
June 16 Final Wake Forest 7--6 Western Michigan Wake Forest wins CWS
### Tournament Notes {#tournament_notes}
- In 1996, coach Rod Dedeaux of USC was named to the College World Series All-Time Team (1947--95) by the *Oklahoma World-Herald* as part of the 50th CWS celebration.
- In 1996, Tom Borland of Oklahoma A&M, now known as Oklahoma State, was named to the 1940s-50s All-Decade Team by a panel of 60 voters representing CWS head coaches, media, and chairs of the Division I Baseball Committee.
- Freed Messner of Western Michigan hit the only pinch-hit grand slam home run in CWS history in the top of the 8th of Game 13 in a 10--7 loss to Wake Forest. It was also Messner\'s only hit of the CWS (1-12).
- Two-hitters were pitched by: Lawrence Bossidy of Colgate in a 1--0 loss to Wake Forest; Carl Thomas of Arizona in a 6--0 defeat of Springfield; Ken Kinnamon and Don Anderson of Oklahoma A&M in a 5--4 loss to Western Michigan; and Sam Frankel and Lawrence Bossidy of Colgate in a 4--2 loss to Oklahoma A&M.
- Wake Forest\'s championship was the last time that a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference won the CWS until the University of Virginia in 2015.
- 21,843 fans watched the CWS (10 sessions).
- The championship game was umpired by Walter Doyle, Walter Harbour, George Hametz, and John Hergert
| 866 |
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| 1 |
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# Langensendelbach
**Langensendelbach** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany with a population of over 3100. The village Bräuningshof is a part of Langensendelbach.
Langensendelbach was first mentioned on 13 July 1062. Thereafter Langensendelbach was a part of the bistum Bamberg. In 1400 St Peter and Paul chapel was built, and in the fourteenth and fifteenth century a small gothic church was built. In 1896 the priest Wölfel found an old German bodygrave from the fifth century. In World War I twenty two men from Langensendelbach died. In World War II eighty eight men had to fight; nineteen of them died in the war or in prison. A few days before the War ended, SS troops were in the village; the US Army attacked them, and three children and one man died
| 137 |
Langensendelbach
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# You've Got It Bad
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unexpected '{'
{{single chart|Scotland|4|date=19960406|rowheader=true|access-date=6 August 2021}}
^
``
| 22 |
You've Got It Bad
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10,142,121 |
# Griffith Rutherford
**Griffith Rutherford** (c. 1721 -- August 10, 1805) was an American military officer in the Revolutionary War and the Cherokee-American Wars, a political leader in North Carolina, and an important figure in the early history of the Southwest Territory and the state of Tennessee.
Originally from Ireland, Rutherford immigrated with his parents to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Colony, at the age of 18. In 1753, he moved to Rowan County, in the Province of North Carolina, where he married Elizabeth Graham.
During the French and Indian War, Rutherford became a captain in the North Carolina Militia. He continued serving in the militia until the start of the American Revolution in 1775, when he enlisted in the North Carolina militia as a colonel. He was appointed to the post of brigadier general of the \"Salisbury District Brigade\" in May 1776, and he participated in the initial phases of the wars against the Cherokee Indians along the frontier. In June 1780, Rutherford was partly responsible for the Loyalist defeat in the Battle of Ramsour\'s Mill. He was present at the Battle of Camden on August 16, 1780, and was taken prisoner by the British. After a prisoner exchange in 1781, Rutherford participated in several other campaigns, including further attacks on the Chickamauga faction of the Cherokee.
An active member of his community, Rutherford served in multiple civil occupations. He was a representative of both houses of the North Carolina House of Commons and as an unsuccessful candidate for governor. Rutherford was an Anti-Federalist and was appointed President of the Legislative Council of the Southwest Territory in 1794. He retired to Sumner County, Tennessee, where he died on August 10, 1805, at the age of 84.
## Early life {#early_life}
Little is known about Rutherford\'s early life. Born in Ireland in either 1721 or 1731 to John Rutherford, who was of Ulster Scots descent, and Elizabeth (née Griffin), who was of Welsh descent, Griffith appears clearly in records after his immigration to Philadelphia at the age of 18. His parents died during the voyage from Ireland, and for a while, he worked on a relative\'s farm, where he was taught how to survey land. In around 1753, he moved to Rowan County, North Carolina Colony and bought a tract of land about 7 mi from Salisbury, which was the first of several land purchases that he would make in the 1750s. In 1754, Rutherford married his neighbor\'s sister, Elizabeth Graham, who eventually bore him ten children.
One of their sons, James Rutherford, later became a major during the Revolutionary War and died at the Battle of Eutaw Springs. Rutherford also became friends with Daniel Boone with whom he often went on hunting and surveying expeditions.
After the French and Indian War, Rutherford became increasingly active in community affairs. He was listed as a member of the North Carolina General Assembly in 1766, a sheriff and justice of the peace of Rowan County from 1767 to 1769, and a tax collector.
## French and Indian War {#french_and_indian_war}
Rutherford began his extensive military career in 1760 during the French and Indian War. He was a participant in several battles and skirmishes, most notably the Battle of Fort Duquesne (1758); the battle at Fort Dobbs (1760); and James Grant\'s campaign against the Cherokee in the southern Appalachians (1761). By the war\'s end, Rutherford had achieved the rank of captain. Between 1769 and 1771, he embraced the cause against the rebels during the Regulator Movement and commanded a local militia that participated in the Battle of Alamance (May 16, 1771). The following month, Rutherford retired to Salem to recover from an acute attack of gout.
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# Griffith Rutherford
## Revolutionary War {#revolutionary_war}
Rutherford entered the war in 1775 as a colonel in the North Carolina militia after his appointment to the Rowan County Committee of Safety. Throughout that year, his regiment helped to disarm and disperse Loyalist groups in the South Carolina back country, most notably during the Snow Campaign in Ninety Six, South Carolina. Rutherford represented Rowan County at the Fourth Provincial Congress in Halifax, from April 4 to May 14, 1776, during which he helped develop and write the North Carolina Constitution and was promoted to brigadier general of the Salisbury District Brigade. In the summer after the conference, he raised an army of 2,400 men to campaign against local Cherokee Indians, who had been attacking colonists on the western frontier since their alliance with the British.
### Campaign against Cherokee {#campaign_against_cherokee}
Rutherford\'s regiment rendezvoused at Fort McGahey with the Guilford and Surry County regiments under Colonels James Martin and Martin Armstrong on July 23, 1776. From there, the three groups traveled through the Blue Ridge Mountains at the Swannanoa Gap, passed up the valley of Hominy Creek, and crossed the Pigeon River. They then passed through Richland Creek, near the present-day town of Waynesville, North Carolina, and crossed the Tuckasegee River near an Indian settlement. They moved further onwards towards the Cowee Gap, where they had a small engagement with a band of Cherokee in which one of Rutherford\'s men was wounded. After that conflict, they marched to the Overhill Cherokee \"Middle Towns\" (on the Tennessee River), where he met General Andrew Williamson of South Carolina on September 14 at Hiwassee. Williamson was on a similar mission and readily joined forces with the original three regiments.
The now-four regiments skirmished with hostile Indians at Valley Town, Ellijay, and near the southern Watauga settlements (present day northeast Tennessee). Eventually, the Indian tribes were subdued at the cost of three fatalities to Rutherford\'s regiment. Casualties to the Indians, however, were severe. By the end of the conflict, the four regiments had destroyed 36 Indian towns, decimated acres of corn farms, and chased off most of the Indians\' cattle. Afterwards, Rutherford returned home by the same route. He arrived back in Salisbury in early October, where he disbanded his troops.
Later that month, Rutherford authorized another punitive expedition of a recently raised cavalry force, led by Captain William Moore joined by Captain Joseph Hardin Sr., of the Tryon County Regiment (North Carolina), to attack the Middle Towns.
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# Griffith Rutherford
## Revolutionary War {#revolutionary_war}
### Southern theater {#southern_theater}
British strategists viewed the southern colonies, especially lightly-populated Georgia, as the most vulnerable of all. Despite early victories won by the Patriots at Charleston and other settlements, the South became the focus of a British attack starting in 1778. Governor Richard Caswell of North Carolina identified the threat and immediately ordered the militia to regroup. Rutherford, who had been checking on Loyalists since his return to Salisbury in 1776, received word by October. Caswell and Rutherford met in Kinston, North Carolina, on November 25 to discuss the specifics of Rutherford\'s assignment. Apparently, a fleet of British ships was en route from New York City and heavily endangered key coastal cities. Rutherford amassed a force, which reached the border of South Carolina by early December, and proceeded to establish headquarters near Savannah in Purrysburg, South Carolina, the following month.
With the cities of Savannah and Augusta taken by February, the campaign was severely weakened. Rutherford moved his troops near Augusta, where he supported General John Ashe during the Battle of Brier Creek on March 3. Soldiers\' enlistments soon began expiring, and by April 10, most of Rutherford\'s forces had returned to North Carolina.
The loss of Charleston in 1780 was a huge blow to the Patriot cause and posed a significant threat to neighboring North Carolina, which lacked adequate defenses due to expiring enlistments. Rutherford saw the danger by calling back his remaining troops stationed in South Carolina and ordering all soldiers from Salisbury to rally near Charlotte, North Carolina. A force of 900 had accumulated by early June.
#### Battle of Ramsour\'s Mill {#battle_of_ramsours_mill}
After rallying troops at Charlotte, Rutherford received information that Loyalists were gathering at arms at Ramsour\'s Mill, near present-day Lincolnton, North Carolina, and issued orders for local officers to disperse the group before they evolved into an even greater threat. After collecting troops from Rowan and Mecklenburg Counties, Rutherford moved his men to the Catawba River and crossed it at the Tuckasegee Ford on June 19. He sent word to Colonel Francis Locke of Rowan County, to rendezvous with him about 16 mi from Ramsour\'s Mill, near the forks of the Catawba. Locke accumulated a force of 400 men and encamped at Mountain Creek, which was 35 mi away from Rutherford\'s position but still approximately the same distance from Ramsour\'s Mill as Rutherford\'s position was. It was resolved by Locke and his officers that a junction with Rutherford was unrealistic because of the distance between the two regiments and the limited amount of time before the Loyalist group grew too large to engage safely, Therefore, it was decided that Locke\'s forces would attack the Loyalist position immediately. Colonel Johnson, one of Locke\'s subordinates, informed Rutherford of the new situation by 10:00 p.m.
Locke\'s forces left their encampment late in the evening of June 19 and had arrived at the Loyalist position by the early morning of June 20. The Patriots took the Loyalists by surprise. While at first bewildered and confused, the Loyalists retaliated by firing at Locke\'s cavalry, which wad forced to fall back. The Patriots eventually forced the Loyalists to retreat to their camp, but the Patriots were discovered to be regrouping on the other side of the mill stream. Then, since an immediate attack from the Loyalists was expected, messages were sent to Rutherford, who had advanced to within 6 mi of Ramsour\'s Mill, to move forward immediately. Rutherford met Locke within 2 mi of Ramsour\'s Mill, where he was informed that the Loyalists were in full retreat.
#### Battle of Camden {#battle_of_camden}
The losses at Savannah, Charleston, and the Wexhams had practically driven the Continental Army from the South, with state defenses reduced to a number of locally led partisan militias. In response to the loss of military presence, Congress sent Horatio Gates, who had distinguished himself at Saratoga, to reform the Continental Army in Charlotte, North Carolina. Against the advice of his officers and without knowing the capabilities of his troops, some of whom were untested in battle, Gates marched toward South Carolina on July 27 with over 4,000 men. He aimed to capturing the crossroads town of Camden, South Carolina, which would have been strategically important for control over the South Carolina back country. Lord Rawdon, who was stationed there with 1,000 men, alerted Lord Cornwallis of Gates\'s movements on August 9. Cornwallis arrived at Camden by August 13 with reinforcements, which increased the British presence there to over 2,000 men.
The battle ensued at dawn on August 16, 1780. Rutherford was positioned in the center of the Continental formation with other North Carolina militia. During the battle, he was wounded and taken prisoner. He was detained for ten months at Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine, Florida, and was exchanged for another prisoner in 1781.
### Later war {#later_war}
Rutherford returned to Salisbury in September 1781 after his release to find that his home had been ransacked by British troops. After a short reunion with his family, Rutherford trained and took command of 1,400 men of the Salisbury District Brigade and allegedly began to attack Tory militias and communities brutally, according to several reports sent to his superior, General Greene. Rutherford\'s tactics were criticized by Green, who warned Rutherford that those methods would only encourage the Loyalist cause. Those reports were later found to be false, but Rutherford decided to redirect his forces towards the British encampment and surrounding militias at Wilmington, North Carolina, beginning with the Loyalist force at Raft Swamp. In October and November, Rutherford continued to force the Loyalists into Wilmington, eventually surrounded the city, and successfully cut off British communications and supply lines. The commanding British officer, Major Craig, was soon informed of Cornwallis\'s surrender at Yorktown, and his forces at Wilmington were hastily evacuated.
After Wilmington, Rutherford again fought the Chickamauga in the west in 1782 and followed the same route that he had taken seven years earlier. No known accounts were written of the campaign though it was reportedly successful.
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# Griffith Rutherford
## Later life {#later_life}
Rutherford was elected to the North Carolina Senate during the war in 1779 and continued to serve in that position until 1789. He opposed the restoration of Loyalist lands and supported and assisted in their confiscation while he served in the Council of State. Rutherford ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1783.
He was an ardent Anti-Federalist during the national debate on the recently created United States Constitution. At the constitutional convention held at Hillsborough, North Carolina, in 1788, he had reservations about the Constitution, like other Anti-Federalists at the meeting. Rutherford requested to challenge some of the clauses. Each clause was challenged individually despite opposition from the Federalist Samuel Johnston and others, but Rutherford rarely contributed to discussion. His final decision to vote against the ratification of the Constitution resulted in him losing his seat in the State Senate. However, his reputation with his colleagues was relatively unaffected, and he was subsequently elected Councilor of the State.
Rutherford acquired nearly 13,000 acres of Washington District land through trading off his 700 acres in Salisbury, government grants and purchasing Continental soldier\'s tracts. With his family and eight slaves Rutherford relocated to the area in what is today Sumner County, Tennessee, in September 1792. Two years later, he was appointed President of the Legislative Council of the Southwest Territory.
Rutherford died in Sumner County, Tennessee, on August 10, 1805
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# Fred Waghorne
**Frederick Charles Albert \"Old Wag\" Waghorne Sr.** (October 16, 1865 -- June 19, 1956) was an ice hockey referee and organizer in Canada. He also made significant contributions to lacrosse in that country. He is a member of both the Hockey Hall of Fame and the Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame in the \"Builder\" category.
## League organization {#league_organization}
Waghorne was born in Tunbridge Wells, England and then moved to Canada. While mainly interested in rugby as a youth, he became interested in lacrosse and ice hockey and eventually started the Toronto Lacrosse Hockey League. This league started out fielding lacrosse teams in the summer and hockey teams in the winter, but as the popularity of hockey grew the league became simply the Toronto Hockey League.
When the Toronto Hockey League disbanded, Waghorne continued to work to provide opportunities for hockey players at all levels. In 1911, he formed the Beaches Hockey League which eventually became the Greater Toronto Hockey League, the largest minor league hockey organization in the world.
## Officiating
Waghorne is best known for his prolific career as a referee. He is known to have officiated 2,400 hockey games and 1,500 lacrosse matches. Many of the decisions he made on the ice rink became long-term rules in both amateur and professional ice hockey. Waghorne is credited with several changes and innovations to ice hockey rules, such as:
- The use of a whistle instead of the customary cow bell to stop play when fans started bringing their own cowbells to disrupt game play.
- The acceptance of professional referees in amateur hockey games.
- The practice of dropping the puck from a few feet up at faceoff rather than placing it directly on the ice, which limited player contact with the referee\'s shins and ankles during faceoffs.
- The ruling that if a half of a broken hockey puck entered the net, no goal was counted - a rule that led to the development of one-piece pucks.
## Honors
Waghorne was involved with ice hockey and lacrosse until his death in 1956 at the age of 90. He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1961, and to the Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 1965
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# Manfuhah
**Manfuha** (*منفوحة*) is an ancient village and a historic neighborhood in southern Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, located north of al-Masani and south of Skirina in the sub-municipality of al-Batʼha. Established on the edge of the narrow, fertile valley known as Wadi Hanifa, Manfuha was until the mid-20th century considered a twin village to the walled town of Riyadh, the current Saudi capital.
## Etymology
Manfuhah derives from the Arabic word of *nafaha* (*translit=nafaḥa*), which loosely translates to blowing wind or being fragrant. It was reportedly attributed to its climatic nature.
## History
According to Yaqut\'s 13th-century geographical encyclopedia *Mu\'jam Al-Buldan*, Manfuha was built a few centuries before Islam at the same time as Hajr (now Riyadh) by members of the Banu Hanifa tribe and their cousins from the tribe of Bakr. Manfuha was home to the famous Arab poet Al-A\'sha, who died at around the same time as the Muslim prophet Muhammad, but little is heard of Manfuha after that time. At the turn of the 20th century, its population was made up largely of members of Banu Hanifa and Bakr (who by now had come to identify themselves with the related tribe of \'Anizzah), as well as members of Tamim and Subay\'. Like all Nejdi towns, its population also included a large percentage of non-tribally-affiliated tradesmen (*sonnaa*\'), as well as many slaves and freedmen working as agricultural labourers. Like Riyadh, the town was surrounded by gardens and palm groves.
In the late 18th century, Manfuha fell under the rule of the energetic ruler of Riyadh, Deham ibn Dawwas, who at the time was vigorously resisting the expansion of the new Wahhabist state established by the Al Saud clan of neighbouring Diriyah (see First Saudi State). Both towns eventually succumbed to the Saudis, however, who ruled over Manfuha until their state was destroyed by an Ottoman-Egyptian invasion in 1818. From then on, the town\'s fortunes largely followed those of its neighbour, Riyadh, returning to Saudi rule under Turki ibn Abdallah in 1824, then falling under the rule of the Al Rashid clan of Ha\'il in the 1890s, before reverting to Saudi rule less than ten years later under the founder of Saudi Arabia, Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud.
As the neighbouring Saudi capital expanded exponentially in the 20th century, fueled by the country\'s oil wealth, the walls of both Manfuha and Riyadh were torn down, and Manfuha was quickly swallowed in whole by the growing metropolis. Today, Manfuha is among the poorer districts of Riyadh as most of its original inhabitants have left to newer districts of the capital. Some of the town\'s old mud-brick buildings remain, as well as an ancient observation tower. A wide avenue cuts through the centre of Manfuha, named Al-A\'sha Street, after its most famous son.
Manfuha is now a neighbourhood in southern Riyadh
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# Drive (Alan Jackson album)
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| 23 |
Drive (Alan Jackson album)
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# Michael A. Battle (attorney)
**Michael A. Battle** (born October 15, 1955) is an American attorney who served as the director of the Executive Office for United States Attorneys in the United States Department of Justice until he resigned, effective March 16, 2007. He was the person who informed seven United States Attorneys on December 7, 2006, that they were being dismissed.
## Early life and education {#early_life_and_education}
Battle was born and raised in New York City. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Ithaca College in 1977 and a Juris Doctor from the University at Buffalo Law School in 1981.
## Career
From 1985 to 1992, he was an assistant U.S. attorney in Buffalo, New York, where he served in the General Criminal Division, the Civil Division, and on the Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force. Following his admission to the New York bar, he worked as a staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society Civil Division. In 1992, he helped to establish the Rochester and Buffalo Federal Public Defender\'s Offices, where he served until 1995. In June 1996, he was appointed by Governor George Pataki to serve as a judge on the Erie County, New York Family Court and was elected the following November to a full 10-year term. From 1995 to 1996, he served as assistant in charge of the Buffalo office of the New York State Attorney General.
From January 2002 to May 2005, Battle served as United States attorney for the Western District of New York.
### Benamar Benatta {#benamar_benatta}
During his time as U.S. Attorney for the Western District of New York, Battle was responsible for the case of Benamar Benatta. Benatta was held without trial for five years following his forcible rendition from Canada on September 12, 2001. That November, the FBI concluded that Benatta was innocent; however, according to federal Magistrate Judge H. Kenneth Schroeder Jr, Battle then conspired with the FBI and immigration agents in a \"sham\" to make it appear that Benatta was being held for immigration violations.`{{failed verification|date=August 2019}}`{=mediawiki}
In October 2003, when Battle announced he was dropping charges, a Buffalo reporter asked whether he planned to apologize to Benatta. Battle responded, \"I\'m not going to address that.\"`{{failed verification|date=August 2019}}`{=mediawiki} Benatta was finally released in 2006, five years after having been cleared in November 2001.
Battle was then promoted by the White House. *The Los Angeles Times* reported that Benatta had been held for a total of 1,780 days, which gave him the distinction of being held on jail without charge longer than any other suspect in the U.S.
### Executive Office for the United States Attorneys {#executive_office_for_the_united_states_attorneys}
Battle began his service as director of the Executive Office for United States Attorneys (EOUSA) at the United States Department of Justice on June 6, 2005. He was involved the dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy, as he was the Justice Department official who, on December 7, 2006, informed seven U.S. attorneys that they were being dismissed. Just as publicity was heating up, and Congress began issuing subpoenas, he resigned on March 5, 2007, effective March 16.
### Private practice {#private_practice}
Battle is a senior partner at Schlam Stone & Dolan LLP in New York, focusing on commercial litigation, white-collar criminal defense, and appeals
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# Sunland Park Oaks
The **Sunland Park Oaks** (formerly the **WinStar Oaks**) is an American Thoroughbred horse race open to three-year-old fillies and mares racing one mile (formerly one and one sixteenth miles) on the dirt. The Oaks, an ungraded stakes event, is currently held in February at Sunland Park Racetrack & Casino (founded in 1959) in New Mexico.
Once sponsored by WinStar Farm in Kentucky where Distorted Humor and Tiznow stand, the race offers a purse of \$250,000. Begun as a one and one sixteenth mile race, then taken down to a mile, it went back to a one and one-sixteenth mile and in 2024 returned again to one mile.
Since 2013, the Oaks has been part of the Road to the Kentucky Oaks, a series of races through which fillies qualify for the Kentucky Oaks. As of 2024, the Sunland Park Oaks offers Kentucky Oaks (G1) qualifying points of 20-10-6-4-2 to the respective top five finishers.
The race was not run in 2016 due to an outbreak of equine herpesvirus. The race was not run in 2020 or 2021 due to the worldwide pandemic.
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame jockey Jerry Bailey and Mike E. Smith, as well as jockeys Patrick Valenzuela and Cash Asmussen, all began their careers at Sunland Park.
## Records
**Speed record:**
- 1:41.06 @ 1 1/16 miles: Midnight Lucky (2013) (new track record)
**Most wins by a jockey:**
- 4 - Victor Espinoza (2006, 2007, 2009, 2015)
**Most wins by a trainer:**
- 8 - Bob Baffert (2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2019)
**Most wins by an owner:**
- 2 - Karl Watson, Paul Weitman (2007, 2013)
- 2 - Peachtree Stable (2011, 2012)
- 2 - Chris G. Coleman (2004, 2023)
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# Sunland Park Oaks
## Winners
Year Winner Jockey Trainer Owner Distance Time
------ --------------------- ------------------------ --------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ---------
2025 Runnin N Gunnin Alfredo J. Juarez, Jr. Steven M. Asmussen Douglas Scharbauer 1 m 1:40.09
2024 Recharge Joel Rosario Steven M. Asmussen Winchell Thoroughbreds 1 m 1:37.27
2023 Flying Connection Alfredo J. Juarez, Jr. Todd W. Fincher Brad King, Randy Andrews, Chris G. Coleman, Jim Cone, Suzanne Kirby & Lee Lewis 1-1/16 m 1:43.90
2022 Cleopatras Charge Jorge Carreno Gary W. Cross Samuel F. Henderson 1-1/16 m 1:46.33
2021 *Race not held*
2020
2019 Chasing Yesterday Drayden Van Dyke Bob Baffert Summer Wind Equine (Jane Lyon) 1-1/16 m 1:43.18
2018 Blamed Ken S. Tohill Joel H. Marr Cleber Massey 1-1/16 m 1:43.32
2017 Ghalia José Ortiz Todd A. Pletcher Sumaya U.S. Stable 1-1/16 m 1:44.24
2016 *Race not held*
2015 Maybellene Victor Espinoza Bob Baffert Natalie J. Baffert 1-1/16 m 1:42.90
2014 Awesome Baby Mike E. Smith Bob Baffert Kaleem Shah, Inc. 1-1/16 m 1:43.80
2013 Midnight Lucky Rafael Bejarano Bob Baffert Karl Watson, Mike Pegram & Paul Weitman 1-1/16 m 1:41.06
2012 Princess Arabella Martin Garcia Bob Baffert Peachtree Stable (John P. Fort) 1-1/16 m 1:43.52
2011 Plum Pretty Martin Garcia Bob Baffert Peachtree Stable (John P. Fort) 1-1/16 m 1:43.18
2010 Harissa Tyler Baze David Hofmans Gem, Inc. 1-1/16 m 1:42.90
2009 Gabby\'s Golden Gal Victor Espinoza Bob Baffert Arnold Zetcher 1-1/16 m 1:43.31
2008 Sky Mom Garrett Gomez Steven M. Asmussen Heather Stark 1-1/16 m 1:44.50
2007 Tough Tiz\'s Sis Victor Espinoza Bob Baffert Watson and Weitman Performances, LLC 1-1/16 m 1:45.18
2006 Sweet Fourty Victor Espinoza Jeffrey L. Mullins Michael House 1-1/16 m 1:43.73
2005 Cee\'s Irish Corey Nakatani Douglas F. O\'Neill Merv Griffin Ranch Co. 1-1/16 m 1:44.66
2004 Speedy Falcon Ricardo Jaime Henry Dominguez Chris G. Coleman 1 m 1:36.57
2003 Island Fashion Ignacio Puglisi Nick Canani Everest Stable, Inc. 1 m 1:36.29
2002 No Turbulence Daryl Montoya J. Eric Kruljac Frank Lewkowitz, Dennis Grenier & Noreen Grenier 1 m 1:38.11
2001 Gems and Gold Daryl Montoya Ramon Gonzalez Anthony J. Trujillo & Aimee Trujillo 1 m 1:38
| 355 |
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# National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia
The **National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia** (*\'\'\'Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de Colombia\'\'\'*) is a Colombian orchestra based in Bogotá
## History
The orchestra was founded in 2003 following the dissolution of the Colombia Symphony Orchestra (*Orquesta Sinfónica de Colombia*) in December 2002. The Colombia Symphony Orchestra had been in operation since 1952 under the auspices of the government of Colombia and was dissolved as part of an extensive plan of state privatization. The Colombian National Symphony Orchestra is part of the \'National Association of Symphonic Music\' (*Asociación Nacional de Música Sinfónica*), a non-profit organization that receives extensive support from the Colombian government to maintain the orchestra and to provide financial support to the other professional symphony orchestras in the country.
From 2003 to 2007, the orchestra\'s artistic direction was under the management of three music directors: Luis Biava (conductor-in-residence of the Philadelphia Orchestra until 2004), Alejandro Posada (then-music director of the Symphonic Orchestra of Castile and León (*Orquesta Sinfónica de Castilla y León*)), and Eduardo Carrizosa (then the assistant conductor of the Bogota Philharmonic (*Orquesta Filarmónica de Bogotá*)). In 2007, the orchestra opened a search process for a single principal conductor and artistic director. This search led to the appointment of Baldur Brönnimann as principal conductor and artistic director, who held the post from 2008 to 2012. In 2016, Olivier Grangean became principal conductor and artistic director of the orchestra.
## Conductors in leadership positions {#conductors_in_leadership_positions}
- Luis Biava (2003--2007, joint music director)
- Alejandro Posada (2003--2007, joint music director)
- Eduardo Carrizosa (2003--2007, joint music director)
- Baldur Brönnimann (2008--2012, principal conductor and artistic director)
- Olivier Grangean (2016--2022, principal conductor and artistic director)
- Yeruham Scharovsky (2023--present, principal conductor and artistic director)
## Discography
### Live albums {#live_albums}
+-------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+----------------------+--------------------------+
| Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications |
+=============================================================+======================================+======================+==========================+
| US\ | | | |
| Classical\ | | | |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+----------------------+--------------------------+
| *Sinfónico*\ | - Released: July 9, 2014 | 17 | - ASINCOL: 3× Platinum |
| `{{small|(with [[Fonseca (singer)|Fonseca]])}}`{=mediawiki} | - Label: EMI | | |
| | - Format: CD/DVD, digital download | | |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+----------------------+--------------------------+
: List of live albums, with selected chart positions
## Awards and nominations {#awards_and_nominations}
### Latin Grammy Awards {#latin_grammy_awards}
A Latin Grammy Award is an accolade by the Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences to recognize outstanding achievement in the music industry
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# Neunkirchen am Brand
**Neunkirchen am Brand** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany.
## History
Important dates are the founding of the Canons Regular of Saint Augustine monastery, Neunkirchen am Brand monastery, in 1314 and the conferment of the status as market town in 1410. In 1803 Neunkirchen along with the Prince-Bishopric of Bamberg became part of Bavaria. Between 1886 and 1963 Neunkirchen was located near a train route from Erlangen to Eschenau.
After the Second World War, refugees settled in Neunkirchen and after the establishment of Siemens AG in Erlangen the town experienced a dramatic increase in inhabitants. Numerous suburbs were built around the traditional center of the town.
Neunkirchen is also the home of a number of industrial and trade companies. The largest industrial employer is the axles factory, the *Neunkirchener Achsenfabrik (NAF)*.
## Districts
There are the following districts (pop. statistics as of December 31, 2006):
- Neunkirchen (5995 inhabitants)
- Baad (85 inhabitants)
- Ebersbach (250 inhabitants)
- Ermreuth (921 inhabitants)
- Großenbuch (575 inhabitants)
- Rödlas (149 inhabitants)
- Rosenbach (261 inhabitants)
- Gleisenhof (near Ermreuth) and Wellucken (7 inhabitants)
Furthermore, there the farms Vogelhof, Erleinhof and Saarmühle.
## Sights and culture {#sights_and_culture}
The town is marked by well preserved gates, the former Neunkirchen am Brand Monastery, countless timbered houses and a Middle Age warehouse known as a *Zehntscheune*. In the district of Großenbuch, the Kugler family operates a restaurant that has existed in that location since the 1500s.
Image:Neunkirchen-am-Brand-Erlanger-Tor.jpeg\|Erlanger Gate of the old defensive wall Image:Neunkirchen-am-Brand-Zehntscheune.jpeg\|The Middle Age warehouse of the old monastery Image:Neunkirchen am Brand St. Michael 01.jpg\|St. Michaels Church, part of the old monastery Image:Neunkirchen-am-Brand-neues-Rathaus.jpeg\|The new city hall in the old monastery school, to the right the gate to the monastery
### Buildings
In the district of Ermreuth, the former synagogue was restored as a venue for various events. Worth seeing in this districts are also the church and the castle.
Image:Ermreuth-Synagoge.jpeg\|Ermreuth Synagogue Image:Ermreuth-Schloss.jpeg\|The front wall of the Ermreuth Castle Image:Ermreuth-Kirche.jpeg\|The village church in Ermreuth
### Regular events {#regular_events}
- On Good Friday, there is a famous and in this form very rare procession of holy figures
- On every second Saturday before St. Anna (July 26), everyone is invited to the local fair. Local clubs present themselves with their own stands and on a stage.
- The Neunkirchen church anniversary (Kirchweih or Kerwa) takes place on the weekend of the first Sunday in October.
- A Christmas market at St.-Michaels Church is always on the third weekend of Advent
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| 0 |
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# 2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's slalom
**Women\'s slalom World Cup 2004/2005**
## Final point standings {#final_point_standings}
In women\'s slalom World Cup 2004/05 all results count.
Place Name Country Total Points 3`{{flagicon|USA}}`{=mediawiki} 4`{{flagicon|USA}}`{=mediawiki} 9`{{flagicon|AUT}}`{=mediawiki} 13`{{flagicon|AUT}}`{=mediawiki} 17`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} 22`{{flagicon|CRO}}`{=mediawiki} 24`{{flagicon|SLO}}`{=mediawiki} 32`{{flagicon|SUI}}`{=mediawiki}
------- ---------------------------- --------- -------------- --------------------------------- --------------------------------- --------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------
1 Tanja Poutiainen 570 60 100 100 60 40 100 60 50
2 Janica Kostelić 400 100 \- 60 80 \- \- 80 80
3 Marlies Schild 376 \- \- 80 100 100 60 36 \-
4 Kristina Koznick 355 40 60 26 24 80 80 45 \-
5 Sarah Schleper 337 24 16 36 45 26 40 50 100
6 Anja Pärson 301 80 \- 50 45 \- \- 100 26
7 Nicole Hosp 204 50 \- \- 15 29 50 \- 60
8 Monika Bergmann-Schmuderer 194 36 \- 32 50 60 \- 16 \-
9 Veronika Zuzulová 185 22 32 11 26 50 24 20 \-
10 Nika Fleiss 183 7 29 29 13 15 32 18 40
11 Šárka Záhrobská 158 9 24 18 29 32 14 32 \-
12 Martina Ertl 152 11 20 5 36 10 20 \- 50
13 Laure Pequegnot 144 \- 40 13 22 20 \- 29 20
14 Sonja Nef 140 \- 15 12 20 22 45 26 \-
15 Christel Pascal 137 45 \- 24 6 26 7 7 22
Sabine Egger 137 10 26 40 14 \- 9 22 16
17 Manuela Mölgg 135 20 80 8 \- 3 18 6 \-
18 Florine de Leymarie 130 12 50 9 8 6 16 11 18
19 Resi Stiegler 124 15 \- 22 32 14 26 15 \-
20 Ana Jelušić 121 13 45 \- 12 9 29 13 \-
21 Annemarie Gerg 108 36 \- 20 7 45 \- \- \-
22 Elisabeth Görgl 99 18 \- 45 \- 36 \- \- \-
23 Kathrin Zettel 95 4 \- \- 10 12 \- 40 29
24 Henna Raita 92 8 11 14 10 11 5 9 24
25 Therese Borssén 88 \- 36 \- \- 16 36 \- \-
26 Julia Mancuso 83 26 \- \- \- \- 11 14 32
27 Nicole Gius 61 36 \- \- \- 8 15 2 \-
28 Lindsey Kildow 60 \- \- \- \- \- \- 24 36
29 Line Viken 58 16 18 10 \- 14 \- \- \-
30 Anna Ottosson 39 \- 10 4 \- \- 22 3 \-
31 Michaela Kirchgasser 33 \- \- 15 18 \- \- \- \-
32 Karin Truppe 32 \- \- 7 \- 20 \- 5 \-
33 Maria Pietilä-Holmner 28 14 \- \- \- \- 6 8 \-
34 Marlies Oester 26 \- 9 \- 5 \- 12 \- \-
35 Vanessa Vidal 25 \- 22 \- \- \- 3 \- \-
36 Annalisa Ceresa 24 \- \- 16 \- \- 8 \- \-
37 Lisa Bremseth 20 \- 14 6 \- \- \- \- \-
38 Britt Janyk 19 \- 12 \- \- 7 \- \- \-
39 Tina Maze 17 \- \- \- \- 5 \- 12 \-
40 Chiara Costazza 16 \- \- \- 16 \- \- \- \-
41 Katarzyna Karasińska 14 \- \- \- \- 4 10 \- \-
42 Petra Zakouřilová 13 \- 13 \- \- \- \- \- \-
Brigitte Acton 13 \- \- \- \- \- 13 \- \-
44 Maria Riesch 12 \- \- \- 12 \- \- \- \-
45 Lauren Ross 10 \- 8 \- \- \- 2 \- \-
Christine Sponring 10 \- \- \- \- \- \- 10 \-
47 Karen Putzer 7 \- 7 \- \- \- \- \- \-
48 Karina Birkelund 6 6 \- \- \- \- \- \- \-
49 Sofie Olofsson 5 5 \- \- \- \- \- \- \-
50 Daniela Zeiser 4 \- \- \- 4 \- \- \- \-
Noriyo Hiroi 4 \- \- \- \- \- 4 \- \-
Janette Hargin 4 \- \- \- \- \- \- 4 \-
- Note: In the last race only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points
| 697 |
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| 0 |
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# Obertrubach
**Obertrubach** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
| 15 |
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| 0 |
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# Hundred Mile High City
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| 0 |
10,142,261 |
# Pinzberg
**Pinzberg** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany.
Pinzberg lies in the region Upper Franconia west.
The following districts exist: Dobenreuth, Gosberg, Pinzberg, Elsenberg.
## History
Pinzberg belonged to the Prince-Bishopric of Bamberg. Since the realm deputation main conclusion of 1803, Pinzberg belongs to Bavaria. In the course of the administrative reforms in Bavaria, today\'s municipality developed with the municipality edict of 1818.
## Population
Population in the municipality in 1970 was 1,608, in 1987 was 1,696, and in the year 2000, 1,864 inhabitants were counted.
## Politics
Since 1996, there is a youth local council in Pinzberg. This was brought into being by the mayor at that time, Reinhardt Glauber. The current youth mayor (in German \"Jugendbuergermeister\") is Fabian Fridl.
The local council of Pinzberg has 13 members including the mayor.
## Coat of arms {#coat_of_arms}
The coat of arms reads: In gold an in-curved red point, therein a silver gate tower also on both sides following silver right parallelepiped wall; beseitet in front of a black three-blade clover sheet, in the back of a black grain flower bloom. Pinzberg consists of the villages Dobenreuth, Elsenberg, Gosberg and Pinzberg. All places are to be represented in the coat of arms. The tower is the landmark of Pinzberg and refers to the church tower, that at the same time serves as a gate tower of the cemetery attachment from the second half of the 15th century. The in-curved red point is the symbol of the Holy Trinity and stands for Gosberg and its branch church, which the Holy Trinity is dedicated. The clover sheet stands for Dobenreuth and symbolizes the rare Patrozinium of the holy family. Since the Middle Ages both the terrestrial and the Holy Trinity are often represented by nature forms such as clover sheets. The agriculture of Elsenberg is represented by the cornflower sheet on the coat of arms. The colors gold and black from the Pinzberg coat of arms remind of the long-lasting relationship with the diocese Bamberg. In the year 1062 Heinrich IV gave parts of today\'s territory of Pinzberg the diocese.
The emblem is used since 1988 on the legal base of a Resolution of the local council and the agreement of the government of Upper Franconia
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| 0 |
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# ConRuhr
**ConRuhr** (Consortium of the Ruhr-Universities) was the German academic liaison office that was established in 2004 by the Ruhr University Bochum, the Technical University of Dortmund and the University of Duisburg-Essen. The name has since been changed to UARuhr (University Alliance Ruhr). The three universities are located very close to each other in Germany\'s Ruhr area and characterized by a strong collaboration and joint initiatives.
With its seats in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, United States, Moscow, Russia, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, UA Ruhr\'s primary purpose is to encourage educational internationalization by exchanging researchers, teaching staff and students between the three universities and institutions in Eastern Europe and South America, finding and linking contacts in the US, CIS, Brazil and Germany, as well as promoting the Ruhr area as a center of academic excellence. The offices in Brazil are no longer active.
University Alliance Ruhr was one of several German liaison offices established through an initiative by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), which accepted combined applications from institutions of higher educations and now supports the selected offices with already established contacts and office space. It remains one of the oldest still active liaison offices in North America through this initiative
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| 0 |
10,142,267 |
# Adam Had Four Sons
***Adam Had Four Sons*** is a 1941 American romantic drama film directed by Gregory Ratoff and starring Ingrid Bergman, Warner Baxter, Susan Hayward and Fay Wray.
The film is based on Charles Bonner\'s 1940 novel *Legacy*.
## Plot
Adam Stoddard is a wealthy man who falls on hard times after the death of his wife Molly and the stock-market crash of 1907 that eliminates his wealth. Recently arrived governess Emilie works to keep the family together, but with the loss of Adam\'s fortune, the boys are sent to boarding school and elderly Cousin Phillipa pays the tuition. Emilie must return to France until Adam can afford to repurchase the family estate. Adam regains his wealth over the course of several years and invites Emilie back to the estate. The three older boys serve in World War I.
Adam\'s son David returns with his new wife Hester, whose friendly exterior hides a duplicitous, evil woman. Cousin Phillipa senses that Hester is wicked but dies before she can tell Adam. Hester schemes to rid the home of Emilie, and seduces another son, Jack, while her husband is away at war. Emilie discovers the affair but keeps quiet to preserve Adam\'s happiness and Jack\'s reputation. When Adam sees a silhouette of a man and woman in passionate embrace in Jack\'s window, he demands that Jack open his door. Emilie secretly enters the room while Hester leaves, tricking Adam to believe that she is involved with Jack and keeping the adulterous secret from Adam.
After David returns from the war, an inebriated Hester inadvertently calls Jack\'s name while David is caressing her. Realizing her infidelity, David leaves to commit suicide by flying a plane and crashing on a stormy night. However, he survives the attempt and is hospitalized. Emilie finally snaps and angrily demands that Hester leave the home. Hester tries to tell Adam that Emilie is forcing her to leave because Emilie wishes to be the only woman of the house, but Jack tells the whole truth to Adam. Adam realizes Hester\'s true nature and evicts her from the home. He professes his love to Emilie and she happily accepts his offer of marriage.
## Cast
## Production
The film\'s working title was that of the book upon which it is based, *Legacy*, but the title was changed to *Adam Had Four Sons* in January 1941 after producer Robert Sherwood sampled public opinion and determined that \"the former title had the wrong connotations.\"
The screenplay significantly deviates from the book upon which it is based. In the book, Adam has five sons, he commits a murder and one of his sons commits suicide, but none of these events are included in the film.
Composer W. Franke Harling sought to create an understated musical score that \"should enhance all the varied moods of the picture but never for a moment let the audience be aware of the fact.\"
## Release
*Adam Had Four Sons* premiered nationwide on February 18, 1941. In New York, it began its run at Radio City Music Hall on March 27, 1941, replacing *Cheers for Miss Bishop*, another romantic drama set in the earlier part of the century.
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# Adam Had Four Sons
## Reception
In a contemporary review for *The New York Times*, critic Bosley Crowther wrote:
> Columbia\'s \"Adam Had Four Sons\" is heavily charged with sentiment. It lays stress on the simple virtues and wrings the tender heart. It even is comfortably set in bygone days for nostalgic effect. \... \[T\]he current attraction has, at least, a weak but workable dramatic core and it is blessed with the talented Ingrid Bergman in the leading and only significant role. \... Miss Bergman, as the governess, does manage in a restrained and understanding performance to convey the devotion of a woman for the boys whom she helps to man\'s estate and from her alone does one catch a sincere emotional response. But Warner Baxter plays the father in a routine, surface way; none of the several young actors who play the boys stand out above the rest, and the norm lacks distinction, indeed; and Susan Hayward so coyly overacts the romantically unlicensed mischief-maker that often she is plain ridiculous. On the whole, \"Adam Had Four Sons\" is an antique tear-jerker---one of those dramas all dressed up in old clothes which never gets anywhere.
Edwin Schallert of the *Los Angeles Times* wrote a glowing review:
> It is strong in casting, excellently presented, brings Ingrid Bergman back to the screen after a protracted absence and takes Warner Baxter out of the groove in a role that is exceptionally well-rendered by him. Most arresting of all, perhaps, is the work of Susan Hayward as a character that is as diabolical as any offered on the screen in ages. There really isn\'t a deficient performance
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# Niki-class destroyer
*Pandoc failed*: ```
Error at (line 3, column 1):
unexpected '{'
{{Infobox ship image
^
``
| 19 |
Niki-class destroyer
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# Poxdorf
**Poxdorf** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# 1956 NCAA baseball tournament
The **1956 NCAA baseball tournament** was played at the end of the 1956 NCAA baseball season to determine the national champion of college baseball. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing in the College World Series, a double-elimination tournament in its tenth year. Eight regional districts sent representatives to the College World Series with preliminary rounds within each district serving to determine each representative. These events would later become known as regionals. Each district had its own format for selecting teams, resulting in 24 teams participating in the tournament at the conclusion of their regular season, and in some cases, after a conference tournament. The College World Series was held in Omaha, NE from June 9 to June 14. The tenth tournament\'s champion was Minnesota, coached by Dick Siebert, and the Most Outstanding Player was Jerry Thomas of Minnesota.
## Tournament
### District 1 {#district_1}
Games played at Springfield, Massachusetts. `{{4TeamBracket
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1 ='''{{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Vermont Catamounts|title=Vermont}}'''
| RD1-score1 ='''8'''
| RD1-team2 ={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=UMass Minutemen|title=Massachusetts}}
| RD1-score2 =1
| RD1-team3 ='''[[1956 New Hampshire Wildcats baseball team|New Hampshire]]'''
| RD1-score3 ='''5'''
| RD1-team4 ={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Boston University Terriers|title=Boston University}}
| RD1-score4 =0
| RD2-team1 ='''New Hampshire'''
| RD2-score1 ='''2'''
| RD2-team2 =Vermont
| RD2-score2 =0
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 2 {#district_2}
Games played at Allentown, Pennsylvania. `{{4TeamBracket
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1 ='''{{CBSB link|year=1956|team=St. John's Red Storm|title=St. John's}}'''
| RD1-score1 ='''3'''
| RD1-team2 ={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens|title=Delaware}}
| RD1-score2 =1
| RD1-team3 ='''[[1956 NYU Violets baseball team|NYU]]'''
| RD1-score3 ='''15'''
| RD1-team4 ={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Penn State Nittany Lions|title=Penn State}}
| RD1-score4 =7
| RD2-team1 =St. John's
| RD2-score1 =2
| RD2-team2 ='''NYU'''
| RD2-score2 ='''6'''
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 3 {#district_3}
Games played at Gastonia, North Carolina. `{{4TeamBracket
| legs = 3 | seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Duke Blue Devils|title=Duke}}'''
| RD1-score1-1=1
| RD1-score1-2='''7'''
| RD1-score1-3='''4'''
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Florida State Seminoles|title=Florida State}}
| RD1-score2-1='''2'''
| RD1-score2-2=6
| RD1-score2-3=2
| RD1-team3='''[[1956 Ole Miss Rebels baseball team|Ole Miss]]'''
| RD1-score3-1='''4'''
| RD1-score3-2='''3'''
| RD1-score3-3=—
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Tennessee Tech Golden Eagles|title=Tennessee Tech}}
| RD1-score4-1=3
| RD1-score4-2=2
| RD1-score4-3=—
| RD2-team1=Duke
| RD2-score1-1='''4'''
| RD2-score1-2=2
| RD2-score1-3=1
| RD2-team2='''Ole Miss'''
| RD2-score2-1=2
| RD2-score2-2='''6'''
| RD2-score2-3='''7'''
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 4 {#district_4}
Games played at Athens, Ohio (Ohio vs. Cincinnati and Ohio vs. Minnesota) and Minneapolis, Minnesota (Minnesota vs. Notre Dame). `{{4TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| hideomittedscores = yes
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Ohio Bobcats|title=Ohio}}'''
| RD1-score1-1='''8'''
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Cincinnati Bearcats|title=Cincinnati}}
| RD1-score2-1=6
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''[[1956 Minnesota Golden Gophers baseball team|Minnesota]]'''
| RD1-score3-1=3
| RD1-score3-2='''15'''
| RD1-score3-3='''10'''
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=Notre Dame Fighting Irish|title=Notre Dame}}
| RD1-score4-1='''4'''
| RD1-score4-2=5
| RD1-score4-3=1
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1=Ohio
| RD2-score1-1=0
| RD2-score1-2=6
| RD2-score1-3=—
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2='''Minnesota'''
| RD2-score2-1='''5'''
| RD2-score2-2='''7'''
| RD2-score2-3=—
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 5 {#district_5}
Games played in Stillwater, OK.
### District 6 {#district_6}
Games played at Tucson, Arizona. `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''[[1956 Arizona Wildcats baseball team|Arizona]]'''
| RD1-score1-1='''7'''
| RD1-score1-2='''8'''
| RD1-score1-3=—
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1956|team=TCU Horned Frogs|title=TCU}}
| RD1-score2-1=5
| RD1-score2-2=2
| RD1-score2-3=—
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 7 {#district_7}
Games played at Greeley, Colorado
| 532 |
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# Mario Božić
**Mario Božić** (`{{lang-sr-Cyrl|Марио Божић}}`{=mediawiki}, `{{IPA|sh|mâːrio bǒːʒitɕ|pron}}`{=mediawiki}; 25 May 1983 -- 3 April 2023) was a Bosnian Serb professional footballer who played as a central midfielder.
At international level, Božić made two appearances for Bosnia and Herzegovina between 2007 and 2008.
## Club career {#club_career}
Born in Tuzla, Božić moved to Serbia at an early age and started his senior career with Loznica. He also played for Radnički Stobex and Beograd, before moving to Hungarian club Fehérvár in the summer of 2004. As a regular member of the first team, Božić helped them win the 2005--06 Magyar Kupa. He also made over 100 appearances for the club in all competitions. In the 2008 winter transfer window, Božić was transferred to Újpest. He spent a total of five years in the country, amassing 126 league appearances and scoring 15 goals.
In the summer of 2009, Božić moved to Slovakia and signed with Slovan Bratislava. He spent two seasons in the country and won four major trophies with the club.
In June 2011, Božić signed with Israeli club Ashdod, but failed to make any appearance for the club. He returned to Serbia in the 2012 winter transfer window and surprisingly signed with Borac Čačak. However, after only a few weeks, Božić left the club without making his debut and moved to Chinese side Shanghai Shenhua.
In August 2012, Božić joined Azerbaijani club Simurq, becoming the club\'s top scorer with six goals in the 2012--13 season.
Božić ended his career by playing with FK Loznica in Serbian second league.
## International career {#international_career}
In March 2007, Božić received his first call-up for the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team. He made his international debut on 8 September 2007, coming on as a substitute for Darko Maletić in a 1--0 loss to Hungary. His second and final international was an August 2008 friendly match against Bulgaria.
## Post-playing career {#post_playing_career}
On 9 February 2017, Božić was appointed director of football at Loznica.
## Death
Božić died on 3 April 2023 from a brain tumor. He was 39 years old
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# Travellers Tune
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Error at (line 70, column 1):
unexpected '{'
{{single chart|Ireland2|30|song=Travellers Tune|rowheader=true|access-date=6 August 2021}}
^
``
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Travellers Tune
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# KLAY
**KLAY** (1180 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a news/talk/religious/Catholic information format. Located in Lakewood, Washington, United States, the station serves the Tacoma area. The station is owned by Sacred Heart Radio. The station features news, talk, weather, traffic, and sports reporting. KLAY has been on the air for about 53 years. Broadcasting coverage is roughly from Downtown Seattle south through the state capital of Olympia.
## History
The station went on the air as KFHA at 1480 AM and changed its call sign to KOOD in 1959, and then it's license deleted in 1972, before reactivating to KQLA in 1978 with a new license, and finally to KLAY in April 1980. On May 1, 1990, the station changed its call sign to KDFL, and on June 28, 1991 to the current KLAY
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# List of parks and gardens in Karachi
The following is a list of **parks and gardens in Karachi**, Sindh, Pakistan. Many of them are maintained by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation.
## Public parks {#public_parks}
- 5B Park (Phool Bagh), North Nazimabad Town
- Afza Altaf Park
- Agha Khan Park
- Allah Rakha Park
- Aladin Park
- Amina Park
- Amir Khusro, Clifton Cantonment
- Anu Bhai Park
- Aram Bagh Saddar Town
- Askari Amusement Park Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Aunty Park, Clifton Cantonment
- Aziz Bhatti Park Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Baara Dari Park, North Nazimabad Town
- Babul Islam Play Ground New Karachi Town
- Bagh Ibne Qasim Clifton Cantonment
- Baloch Park Saddar Town
- Baradari Old Polo Ground
- Bedhwar Library, Park Jamshed Town
- Beach View Park, Clifton Cantonment
- Boat Basin Park, Clifton Cantonment
- Botanical Garden, Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Bukhari Shah Park Kharadar
- Cantonment Park Malir Cantonment
- Central Park, Taiser Town
- Central Park, Sector T, Gulshan-e-Maymar, Taiser Town
- Chandni Chowk Park
- Chhatree ( Umbrella ) Park, Taiser Town
- Corniche Park Clifton Cantonment
- Dehli Park, Lyari Town
- Dolphin Beach Park, Clifton Cantonment
- F Block Playground, North Nazimabad Town
- Fatima Zehra Park
- Gabol Park, Lyari Town
- Go Aish, Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Hasa Singh Park, Jamshed Town
- Hasrat Mohani Model Park
- Hill Park, Jamshed Town
- Ibn-e-Insha Park, North Nazimabad Town
- Jahangir ParkSaddar Town
- Jam 11, Football Ground, Malir Town
- Jama Masjid Park, Lyari Town
- Jamaluddin Afghani Park
- Johar Park
- Kamal Park Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Kashmir Park, Jamshed Town
- Kernal Park, Jamshed Town
- Khayyal Das ParkSaddar Town
- Khori Garden, Lyari Town
- Khaja Nazimuddin Family Park
- Khatoon Park, Orangi Town
- Kidney Hill Park, Gulshan Town
- Kite Park
- Kutchi Memon Park
- Lala Gul Park 11/A, New Karachi Town
- Liaquat Park
- Lucknow Chhota Park Korangi Town
- Lucknow Bara Park, Korangi Town
- Maulana Mohammad Ali Jauhar Park
- Metroville SITE Town Park, Orangi Town
- Mir Usman Park, Lyari Town
- Mohammadi Park
- Moulvi Usman Park, Lyari Town
- Mudassir Park Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Mujahid Shaheed Model Park Korangi Town
- Naveen Bhai Ground Lyari Town
- New International Stadium, Baldia Town
- Nisar Shaheed Park, Clifton Cantonment
- Nishtar Park Jamshed Town
- Park, Taiser Town
- Park Orangi Town, Orangi Town
- Parsi Colony Park Jamshed Town
- Partab Singh Park, Saddar Town
- Playground 5A/3 New Karachi Town
- Professor Rafiq Chohan Park, Saddar Town
- Sabri Park
- Sohrab Katrak Park Jamshed Town
- The Forum Clifton Cantonment Board ParkClifton Cantonment
- Tikon Park Clifton Cantonment
- Usmania Family Park Gulshan-e-Iqbal Town
- Zamzama Park, Clifton Cantonment
- Alakhwan Park, New Karachi Town
## National parks {#national_parks}
- National Park SITE Town
- Kirthar National Park
## Private parks {#private_parks}
- [Dreamworld Resort](http://www.dreamworld
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# Pretzfeld
**Pretzfeld** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany.
## Geography
### Geographical location {#geographical_location}
The municipality is located in the south-western part of Upper Franconia, in Franconian Switzerland. The region is known for growing and processing fruit. Of the approx. 2500 ha total area, 1100 ha are forest. The town of Pretzfeld lies in the west of the municipality, near the confluence of the Trubach and the Wiesent.
### Districts
The pretzfeld municipality has 13 districts:
+-------------------+--------------------+
| - Altreuth | - Pfaffenloh |
| - Eberhardstein | - Poppendorf |
| - Hagenbach | - Pretzfeld |
| - Hetzelsdorf | - Unterzaunsbach |
| - Kolmreuth | - Urspring |
| - Lützelsdorf | - Wannbach |
| - Oberzaunsbach | |
+-------------------+--------------------+
## Economy and Infrastructure {#economy_and_infrastructure}
The largest closed sweet cherry growing area in Germany and one of the largest in western Europe extends around the Pretzfeld market. Due to the warm climate and nutrient-rich soils, there are over 200,000 sweet cherry trees on 1700 ha.
In the municipality there are the breweries Nikl-Bräu in Pretzfeld, Meister in Unterzaunsbach and Penning-Zeißler in Hetzelsdorf. There are also several distilleries, one of the best known is the Haas distillery with an annual production of approx. 60 - 70,000 bottles.
From the semiconductor laboratory initiated by Walter Schottky in 1946, a plant for power semiconductors emerged , which last operated as the Infineon subsidiary eupec (European Power-Semiconductor and Electronic Company) before it was closed in 2002.
## Architecture
- The Rococo parish church of St. Kilian was built from 1742 to 1761 by the Bamberg architect Johann Jakob Michael Küchel.
- The Pretzfeld Castle was mentioned in 1145 (or 1182) as the seat of the \"Hademar de Bretevelt\" (wide field). In its present form it dates from the middle of the 18th century. From 1375 the castle belonged to those of Wiesenthau, from 1522 to those of Stiebar, in 1754 the Bavarian Minister, Count von Seinsheim, received the fief, in 1852 the Nuremberg merchant Kohn bought property, which went to the Herrmann family through marriage, the current owners.
- The Jewish cemetery , which has existed since the 17th century, mainly contains graves from the 18th and 19th centuries
| 377 |
Pretzfeld
| 0 |
10,142,371 |
# 1957 NCAA University Division baseball tournament
The **1957 NCAA University Division baseball tournament** was played at the end of the 1957 NCAA University Division baseball season to determine the national champion of college baseball. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing in the College World Series, a double-elimination tournament in its eleventh year. Eight regional districts sent representatives to the College World Series with preliminary rounds within each district serving to determine each representative. These events would later become known as regionals. Each district had its own format for selecting teams, resulting in 23 teams participating in the tournament at the conclusion of their regular season, and in some cases, after a conference tournament. The College World Series was held in Omaha, NE from June 9 to June 14. The eleventh tournament\'s champion was California, coached by George Wolfman. The Most Outstanding Player was Cal Emery of Penn State.
## Tournament
### District 1 {#district_1}
### District 2 {#district_2}
Games played at Brooklyn, New York `{{4TeamBracket
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''[[1957 Penn State Nittany Lions baseball team|Penn State]]'''
| RD1-score1='''2'''
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Manhattan Jaspers|title=Manhattan}}
| RD1-score2=1
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1957|team=St. John's Red Storm|title=St. John's}}'''
| RD1-score3='''8'''
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Lafayette Leopards|title=Lafayette}}
| RD1-score4=3
| RD2-team1='''Penn State'''
| RD2-score1='''5'''
| RD2-team2=St. John's
| RD2-score2=0
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 3 {#district_3}
Games played at Gastonia, North Carolina `{{4Team2ElimBracket
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''[[1957 Florida State Seminoles baseball team|Florida State]]'''
| RD1-score1='''5'''
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Georgia Southern Eagles|title=Georgia Southern}}
| RD1-score2=3
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Duke Blue Devils|title=Duke}}'''
| RD1-score3='''9'''
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=George Washington Colonials|title=George Washington}}
| RD1-score4=5
| RD1-seed5=
| RD1-team5='''Georgia Southern'''
| RD1-score5='''5'''
| RD1-seed6=
| RD1-team6=George Washington
| RD1-score6=3
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1='''Florida State'''
| RD2-score1='''3'''
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Duke
| RD2-score2=2
| RD2-seed3=
| RD2-team3='''Duke'''
| RD2-score3='''21'''
| RD2-seed4=
| RD2-team4=Georgia Southern
| RD2-score4=2
| RD3-seed1=
| RD3-team1='''Florida State'''
| RD3-score1-1=6
| RD3-score1-2='''4'''
| RD3-seed2=
| RD3-team2=Duke
| RD3-score2-1='''8'''
| RD3-score2-2=1
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 4 {#district_4}
Games played at Kalamazoo, Michigan `{{4Team2ElimBracket
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1='''[[1957 Notre Dame Fighting Irish baseball team|Notre Dame]]'''
| RD1-score1='''18'''
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Alma Scots|title=Alma}}
| RD1-score2=2
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3='''{{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Western Michigan Broncos|title=Western Michigan}}'''
| RD1-score3='''11'''
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4=[[1957 Northwestern Wildcats baseball team|Northwestern]]
| RD1-score4=1
| RD1-seed5=
| RD1-team5=Alma
| RD1-score5=2
| RD1-seed6=
| RD1-team6='''Northwestern'''
| RD1-score6='''11'''
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1='''Notre Dame'''
| RD2-score1='''4'''
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Western Michigan
| RD2-score2=2
| RD2-seed3=
| RD2-team3=Western Michigan
| RD2-score3=9*
| RD2-seed4=
| RD2-team4='''Northwestern'''
| RD2-score4='''10'''*
| RD3-seed1=
| RD3-team1='''Notre Dame'''
| RD3-score1-1=2
| RD3-score1-2='''6'''
| RD3-seed2=
| RD3-team2=Northwestern
| RD3-score2-1='''9'''
| RD3-score2-2=1
}}`{=mediawiki} \*--*Indicates game required 10 innings.*
### District 5 {#district_5}
Games played at Ames, Iowa `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''[[1957 Iowa State Cyclones baseball team|Iowa State]]'''
| RD1-score1-1='''2'''
| RD1-score1-2='''3'''
| RD1-score1-3=—
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Bradley Braves|title=Bradley}}
| RD1-score2-1=0
| RD1-score2-2=0
| RD1-score2-3=—
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 6 {#district_6}
Games played at Austin, Texas `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''[[1957 Texas Longhorns baseball team|Texas]]'''
| RD1-score1-1='''7'''
| RD1-score1-2='''2'''
| RD1-score1-3=—
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Arizona Wildcats|title=Arizona}}
| RD1-score2-1=1
| RD1-score2-2=0
| RD1-score2-3=—
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 7 {#district_7}
Games played at Greeley, Colorado `{{2TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Northern Colorado Bears|title=Colorado State College}}'''
| RD1-score1-1='''8'''
| RD1-score1-2=3
| RD1-score1-3='''5'''
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Denver Pioneers|title=Denver}}
| RD1-score2-1=3
| RD1-score2-2='''4'''
| RD1-score2-3=3<sup>[[Extra innings|10]]</sup>
}}`{=mediawiki}
### District 8 {#district_8}
Games played at Portland, Oregon `{{3TeamBracket
| legs = 3
| seeds = no
| RD1-team1='''{{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Pepperdine Waves|title=Pepperdine}}'''
| RD1-score1-1=4
| RD1-score1-2='''6'''
| RD1-score1-3='''7'''
| RD1-team2={{CBSB link|year=1957|team=Portland Pilots|title=Portland}}
| RD1-score2-1='''5'''
| RD1-score2-2=5
| RD1-score2-3=6
| RD2-team1=Pepperdine
| RD2-score1-1=2
| RD2-score1-2='''10'''
| RD2-score1-3=3
| RD2-team2='''[[1957 California Golden Bears baseball team|California]]'''
| RD2-score2-1='''4'''
| RD2-score2-2=6
| RD2-score2-3='''10'''
}}`{=mediawiki}
## College World Series {#college_world_series}
### Participants
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+---------------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| School | Conference | Record (conference) | Head coach | CWS appearances | CWS best finish | CWS record |
+========================+=============+=====================+=====================+=================+=================+============+
| California | CIBA | 31--10 (12--4) | George Wolfman | 1\ | 1st\ | 2--0 |
| | | | | (last: 1947) | (1947) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+---------------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Colorado State College | RMC | 24--6 | Pete Butler | 3\ | 5th\ | 1--6 |
| | | | | (last: 1955) | (1955) | |
+------------------------+-------------+---------------------+---------------------+-----------------+-----------------+------------+
| Connecticut | Yankee | 18--8 (5--5) | J
| 722 |
1957 NCAA University Division baseball tournament
| 0 |
10,142,383 |
# 31st Air Base
The **31st Air Base** (*31. Baza Lotnicza*), commonly known as **Poznań-Krzesiny Airport** is a Polish Air Force base and military airport, located in Krzesiny, part of the Nowe Miasto district of Poznań.
The base was officially constituted on 31 December 2000, and since then has been the home base for the 3rd Tactical Squadron. It was the first base to host Polish F-16 fighters.
## History
In 1941, during its occupation of Poznań, Nazi Germany built an aircraft factory at Krzesiny (German: *Luftwaffenfliegerhorst Kreising*), along with an airfield to service it. The factory, run by Focke-Wulf, was a target for Allied bombers in the course of the war, on 29 May 1944 for Eighth Air Force. On 22 January 1945 the airfield was captured by Red Army and taken over by the Red Army Air Force. In mid-1945 the 113th Bomber Aviation Division of the 6th Bomber Aviation Corps of the 16th Air Army was reported here. In 1954 the Soviets transferred the base to the Communist Polish People\'s Army. Since then the base has hosted various units under changing designations:
- since 1954: one of squadrons of 11th Fighter Regiment (*11. Pułk Lotnictwa Myśliwskiego*) that was in this same year transformed to 62nd School-Training Fighter Regiment (*62. Pułk Szkolno-Treningowy Lotnictwa Myśliwskiego*) which was part of the 3rd Air Defence Corps (Poland).
- in 1957 the regiment was renamed to the 62nd Fighter Regiment (*62. Pułk Lotnictwa Myśliwskiego*) which, in 1958, received name of \"Insurgents of Greater Poland Uprising (1918--1919)\" (*Powstańców Wielkopolskich 1918/1919*)
- on 16 January 1994 regiment was renamed to 3rd Fighter Regiment of Poznań (*3. Pułk Lotnictwa Myśliwskiego \"Poznań\"*) that consists two squadrons
- in 1999 1st squadron was enlarged by part of personnel and aircraft of disbanded 17th Air Force Squadron (*17. Eskadra Lotnicza*) from Poznań-Ławica Airport
The organisation as an air base was implemented on 31 December 2000 to conform with NATO practices, separating the air base from the units which are based there. On this date 3rd Fighter Regiment was split into 31st Air Base (*31. Baza Lotnicza*) and 3rd Tactical Squadron (*3. Eskadra Lotnictwa Taktycznego*).
On 1 April 2008 *31st Air Base* was again joined with 3rd Tactical Squadron and 6th Tactical Squadron to form single unit named 31st Tactical Air Base.
## Confusion with Poznań--Ławica Airport {#confusion_with_poznańławica_airport}
Poznań--Krzesiny Airport has been confused by pilots with Poznań--Ławica Airport, which also has a 2500 m runway. The runways are at approximately the same orientation: Ławica\'s is 11/29 (true heading: 108/288) and Krzesiny\'s is 12/30 (true heading: 117.9/297.9). The two runways lie in a nearly straight line, with Krzesiny coming up first on approaches from the east, the ones used most often. On the other hand, the Krzesiny airbase lies southeast from the city centre, while Poznań--Ławica lies just west of it. Krzesiny had a second runway, but at an unknown date this second runway that crosses runway 12/30 was closed, as in satellite images it is marked with large white X marks.
One notable incident involving confusion between Ławica and Krzesiny happened on August 15, 2006. A Sky Airlines Boeing 737-800 operating flight SKY335 mistook the runway at Krzesiny for the one being used at Ławica. The crew didn\'t realise their error until later, when they took off to reposition the jet to the main airport.
According to Krzysztof Krawcewicz, a pilot and the editor-in-chief of the Polish monthly *Przegląd Lotniczy/Aviation Revue*, this was at least the seventh aircraft that mistakenly landed at Poznań--Krzesiny in 2006 alone. He blamed, amongst other things, the \"scandalous procedures which are in use by the air traffic control at Poznań--Ławica\" and the lack of radar use in controlling aircraft landing, which exists, but had been turned off by the Polish Air Traffic Agency (Agencja Ruchu Lotniczego)
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# Unterleinleiter
**Unterleinleiter** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Weilersbach
**Weilersbach** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# 1967 New York Film Critics Circle Awards
**33rd New York Film Critics Circle Awards**\
January 28, 1968\
(announced December 28, 1967)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Best Picture:\
**In the Heat of the Night**
The **33rd New York Film Critics Circle Awards**, honored the best filmmaking of 1967
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# Zosimo Paredes
**Zosimo Jesus \"Jess\" Paredes II** (born May 27, 1948) is a Filipino former politician.
## Politics
Paredes was elected Assemblyman of Regular Batasang Pambansa representing Ifugao from 1984 until its dissolution in 1986.
He has twice ran for the Senate namely, the 1987 Senatorial elections under the Grand Alliance for Democracy, the same party of Joseph Estrada and Juan Ponce Enrile, but placed 46th and more recently the 2007 Senatorial elections under the Ang Kapatiran Party but placed 29th.
He was the former head of Presidential Commission on the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFACom) later on resigned at the height of the Philippine government\'s perceived protection of convicted American rapist Lance Corp. Daniel Smith after the latter\'s transfer of detention from the Makati City Jail to the United States Embassy in Manila.
In 2011, he was appointed as spokesperson of the Department of National Defense, assuming office on October 5. However, he resigned from the post for unknown reasons on November 24.
## Personal life {#personal_life}
He is related to Horacio Paredes and Jim Paredes (a member of APO Hiking Society and a composer-singer)
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# Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino
The **Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino** (*Peter of Alexandria\]\]*) is an *hacienda* or *quinta* built in 1608, famous for being the death place of Simón Bolívar on December 17, 1830. The hacienda is located in the corregimiento of Mamatoco within the tourist district of Santa Marta, near the Caribbean Sea in northern Colombia.
## History
In Bolívar\'s time, the estate produced rum, honey and panela.
## Modern day {#modern_day}
Nowadays it functions as a tourist site, museum and historical landmark. There is a small entrance fee for the museum with a discount for children
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# Prouty
| 2 |
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# Where's That Fire?
***Where\'s That Fire?*** is a 1940 British comedy film, produced by Twentieth Century Fox, directed by Marcel Varnel and starring Will Hay, Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt. It was the last film Will Hay made with his most famous comic foils, Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt.
## Synopsis
Will Hay plays the incompetent Fire Captain Viking who fails to find a large fire, gets lost in the process and ends up on a newspaper headline as \'The engine that never made it\'. Finally upon arriving at the location of the fire (discovering it\'s been put out) he hears that his local town hall is on fire.
After failing to appear before the town hall burns down, Fire Captain Viking is told to put out a fire successfully or else he and his men face the sack. Viking and his crew, Albert and Harbottle, proceed to London to gain more experience of an efficient fire station, with Albert and Harbottle \"knocking-off\" several items.
Shortly after embarking on a series of dangerous exploits to improve the efficiency of his fire department including automated turn out equipment and destroying public property with a fireman\'s pole, Captain Viking accidentally creates a new form of firefighting foam that he wishes to demonstrate in London, the London fire department begins to assess the formula for the foam and intends to get in touch with them shortly after.
Meanwhile a group of criminals having seen Vikings fire engine in the newspaper wish to hire it for what Viking and his crew believe to be a film, Viking initially refuses but promises they can borrow the engine after his foam has been demonstrated in London, (Also after the criminals offer a £30 bribe to him and his crew). The criminals intent then being revealed to be the theft of the Crown jewels from the Tower of London as Vikings engine is almost identical to the Tower fire engine.
Harbottle becomes impatient waiting for his money and decides to start a large fire at a Petrol Station to allow the foam to be demonstrated and for the news to reach London, with Albert reminding them if they fail to put out this fire they will be sacked. After failing to turn out for nearly half-an-hour thanks to Vikings automated turn out equipment they arrive at the fire, after a series of problems with hoses they start spraying the blaze only to discover that their hose is hooked up to a petrol pump, the result being the entire petrol station burning to the ground.
Now facing the sack Viking and his crew enjoy a brief reprieve when the Mayors house catches fire, however upon returning to their fire station they discover their engine and horse are both missing, the engine having been stolen by the criminals and their horse simply following it.
Realizing they will now be sacked they hear that their horse has been found in the London borough of Wapping, whilst packing Viking finds a letter from the London fire brigade wishing him and his crew to demonstrate their firefighting foam in London the next day. Viking and his crew now proceed to London to recover their engine full of foam.
The eventually trace their engine to the Tower of London where the criminals are setting a fake fire to distract the Guards and gain access to the jewel tower. When Viking finds his engine and believes this to be an actual fire he sprays the entire area with his firefighting foam, stopping the criminals in the process. Shortly after this the London fire brigade and Police turn up to deal with the fire and criminals, the criminals complaining that they would have pulled off the heist had it not been for the foam, the fire brigade chief wishes to know who is responsible when Viking, Albert and Harbottle appear wearing the Crown Jewels.
## Cast
- Will Hay as Captain Viking
- Moore Marriott as Jeremiah Harbottle
- Graham Moffatt as Albert
- Peter Gawthorne as Fire Chief
- Eric Clavering as Hank Sullivan
- Hugh McDermott as Jim Baker
- Charles Hawtrey as Woodley
- Dave O\'Toole as Postman
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# Where's That Fire?
## Production
The location of the fire station (external shots only) is the former Angel and Crown pub overlooking the village pond, by the junction of Milespit Hill and High St, Mill Hill, London NW7. The pub was demolished in 2015.
## Preservation status {#preservation_status}
Although *Where\'s That Fire?* has never been officially released on home video, the British Film Institute has several prints, including a 35mm duplicating positive, in their possession since 1939. The film is copyrighted until 2076, the 2006 death of co-writer Val Guest plus 70 years. However the film is available on YouTube.
In April 2019, a 35 mm print of the film was screened by Warwick Student Cinema in collaboration with the [Will Hay Appreciation Society](https://www.photogra-fix.com/willhay)
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# Weißenohe
**Weißenohe** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Leon Murray
**Everett Leon Murray** (born January 10, 1977) is a former American football quarterback of the Arena Football League (AFL), and is a college football coach. Murray attended Tennessee State University. In 2001 Murray was the backup quarterback on the Berlin Thunder team that won World Bowl IX. Murray is currently the quarterbacks coach at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia
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# Hess Village
Hess Village is a pedestrianized area in the downtown of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Its streets, in contrast to other areas in Hamilton, are quite thin and restrict vehicle access. It is located between Main and King Street, and a block north west of city hall. It is home to various amenities and shops, notably nightclubs, bars, and historic buildings. It is named after Hess Street, a north-south Lower City collector street that travels through the centre of the area.
## History
Hess Street is named after Peter Hess, a farmer and landowner. *Peter Street* in Hamilton is also named after him, as well, *Caroline Street* was named after one of his daughters.
## Landmarks
*Note: Listing of Landmarks from North to South.*
- Canadian National Railway Yard
- Hess Street Elementary School
- Sir John A
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# Wiesenthau
**Wiesenthau** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Beethoven Quartet
The **Beethoven Quartet** (*Струнный квартет имени Бетховена*, *Strunnyĭ kvartet imeni Betkhovena*) was a string quartet founded between 1922 and 1923 by graduates of the Moscow Conservatory: violinists Dmitri Tsyganov and Vasily Shirinsky, violist Vadim Borisovsky and cellist Sergei Shirinsky (half brother of Vasily). In 1931, they changed their name from the Moscow Conservatory Quartet to the Beethoven Quartet.
From 1938, it collaborated closely with the composer Dmitri Shostakovich and premiered thirteen of his fifteen string quartets, Nos. 2 through 14. He dedicated his third and fifth quartets to the Beethoven Quartet, while later quartets were dedicated individually to the members: Quartet No. 11 to the memory of Vasily Shirinsky, Quartet No. 12 to Tsyganov, Quartet No. 13 to Borisovsky, and Quartet No. 14 to Sergei Shirinsky.
Fyodor Druzhinin took over from Borisovsky in 1964, giving a runthrough of the ninth quartet with the rest of the group. Sergei Shirinsky died during rehearsals of Shostakovich\'s fifteenth quartet. In 1977, final founding member and first violinist Dmitri Tsyganov departed and was replaced by Oleh Krysa. The group disbanded in 1987.
## Personnel
Dates indicate the years of activity
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# Mr. Jingles
***Mr. Jingles*** is a 2006 American slasher film directed by Tommy Brunswick and written by Todd Brunswick. It was followed by a 2009 reboot titled *Jingles the Clown*.
## Plot
Young Angie Randall witnesses a spree killing clown named Mr. Jingles murder her parents, before he is shot to death by Officers Baines and Guinness. Before dying, Jingles tells Angie, \"I\'ll be back for you!\" The traumatized Angie is institutionalized until she is a teenager, at which point she is released into the care of her aunt Helen Jameson, and cousins Dylan and Heidi.
At the local cemetery, a visitor is killed by someone dressed as Jingles. Baines (who is now mayor) and Guinness are called to the graveyard by the man who found the body. The stranger tells them this is just the beginning, and reveals he knows that Baines and the police force (excluding Guinness) covered up the fact that Jingles was wrongly lynched and imprisoned when Angie\'s father and several others thought he tried to abduct Angie at her 4th birthday party, when in reality he had saved her from an actual child predator. After the three men leave, two of Dylan\'s delinquent friends are slain by Jingles while trying to steal his tombstone for a prank that they, Guinness\' daughter Melanie, and a reluctant Dylan intend to play on Angie at a birthday party Heidi is setting up for her.
In his home, the stranger tells Guinness that he believes it is not a copycat, that Jingles has actually come back from the dead. The stranger (who reveals he was once employed at the penitentiary where Jingles was placed and witnessed the tortures inflicted on Jingles that drove him mad) presents occult objects that he found in Jingles\' prison cell as evidence, prompting Guinness to remember that Jingles did chant something in a strange language as he lay dying. The two grab the items necessary to banish Jingles, who confronts them as they go to leave, killing the stranger, and wounding Guinness.
While Angie, Heidi, and Heidi\'s friends are partying in the Jameson house, Melanie dresses up like Jingles with the intent of crashing the celebration, only to be axed by the real Jingles. Jingles breaks in and kills Heidi, Dylan, and the rest of the revelers, leaving only Angie. An unknown amount of time later, Baines and two police officers enter the house, and find an hysterical Angie clutching Jingles\' axes, making it appear as if she is the murderer. As she is being hauled away by a police officer, Angie is saved by Guinness, while Jingles attacks Baines and another officer.
## Cast
- Karen Turner as Mrs. Randall
- Dave Cunningham as James Randall
- Rudy Hatfield as Mr. Jingles
- Kelli Jansen as Angie Randall
- Chris Peters as Bill Guinness
- Tom Reeser as Mayor Baines
- Jon Manthei as Doctor Rudolph/Cop 1
- Nicole Majdali as Helen Jameson
- Kristin Reeser as Mayor\'s Assistant
- Doug Kolbicz as Chris
- Nathanial Ketchum as Dylan Jameson
- Heather Doba as Melanie Guinness
- Brian Zoner as Curtis
- Jessica Hall as Heidi Jameson
- John Anton as Stranger
- Michael Patrick Pilsner as Cemetery owner
- Novelle Neechi as Trisha
- Amber Whelan as Jen
- James Block as Parker
- Jacob Bailey as Rusty
- Jason Ryan as Jason
- Tommy Brunswick as Cop 2
- Shaun Buckley as Cameron (uncredited)
## Release
The film was released on DVD by Live/Artisan on July 18, 2006.
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# Mr. Jingles
## Reception
*Mr. Jingles* received predominantly negative reviews upon its release, with many criticizing the acting, script, and poor production values. Scott Weinberg from DVD Talk gave the film one out of five stars, calling it \"worthless\", and further stated that every aspect of the film was poorly executed. Dread Central rated the film an abysmal score of zero out of five, offering similar criticism towards its poor execution, calling it \"one of the worst direct-to-DVD horror films of all time\"
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# Wiesenttal
**Wiesenttal** is a municipality in the district of Forchheim in Bavaria in Germany
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# Mabry–Hazen House
The **Mabry--Hazen House** is a historic home located on an 8 acre site at 1711 Dandridge Avenue in Knoxville, Tennessee, at the crest of Mabry\'s Hill. Also known as the **Evelyn Hazen House** or the **Joseph Alexander Mabry Jr. House**, when constructed in 1858 for Joseph Alexander Mabry II it was named Pine Hill Cottage. The house was in what was then the separate town of East Knoxville. Stylistically, the house exhibits both Italianate and Greek Revival elements. Additions in 1886 increased the size of the first floor. Having operated as a museum since the death of Evelyn Hazen, the house retains its original furniture and family collections, including antique china and crystal with over 2,000 original artifacts on display making it the largest original family collection within America. The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
At the outset of the American Civil War, Joseph Mabry II, a wealthy Knoxville merchant and importer, pledged \$100,000.00 to outfit an entire regiment of Confederate soldiers. Because of this assistance to the cause, he was given the honorary title of General in the Confederate army. During the course of the war, both Union and Confederate forces occupied the strategic site of his house adjacent to Fort Hill. Confederate General Felix Zollicoffer set up his headquarters in the house in 1861, but it was Union forces who had the greatest impact when they fortified the grounds as part of their Knoxville defenses after later taking control of Knoxville.
After Mabry\'s death in 1882, his daughter Alice Evelyn Mabry and her husband Rush Strong Hazen resided in the house. Their youngest daughter, Evelyn Hazen, later occupied the house alone (except for many pet dogs and cats) for many years until her death in 1987. Her will stipulated that the house had either to become a museum or be razed to the ground. The house opened as a museum in 1992.
## Cemetery
Knoxville\'s **Confederate Cemetery**, also known as **Bethel Cemetery**, located at 1917 Bethel Avenue, occupies 2.4 acres near the house, and is owned by the same museum foundation. It contains the graves of approximately 1,600 Confederate soldiers, 50--60 Union men (prisoners) and 20 veterans. The cemetery also contains a 48 ft high monument erected in 1892, consisting of a Tennessee marble obelisk topped by a Confederate soldier facing north. The cemetery property includes a frame caretaker\'s house, built circa 1881, known as the Winstead Mansion.
## In literature {#in_literature}
Three generations of the occupants of the Mabry--Hazen House have been referenced in literary works. In *Life on the Mississippi*, Mark Twain wrote about the gunfight that killed the home\'s builder Joseph Mabry II, and his son, Joseph III (known as Joseph Jr.). Mabry\'s daughter married Rush Strong Hazen, a benefactor to Leonora Whitaker Wood, whose life was fictionalized in the novel, *Christy*. In 2007, author Jane Van Ryan published *The Seduction of Miss Evelyn Hazen*, a book chronicling the sensational lawsuit between Knoxville socialite Evelyn Hazen, granddaughter of General Mabry, and Ralph Scharringhaus, to whom she was once engaged
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# An tUltach
(`{{IPA|ga|ənˠ ˈt̪ˠʊl̪ˠt̪ˠəx}}`{=mediawiki}; meaning \"the Ulster-person\") was the official magazine of *Comhaltas Uladh*, the Ulster branch of *Conradh na Gaeilge* (the Gaelic League). It was in circulation from 1924 to 2018.
## History and profile {#history_and_profile}
Established in 1924, *An tUltach* was the oldest or second-oldest Irish language magazine in circulation in the early 2000s.
*An tUltach* promoted creative writing in Irish and had such celebrated contributors as Seosamh Mac Grianna and Muiris Ó Droighneáin. Its first editor was the founder of Comhaltas Uladh, Fr. Lorcán Ó Muireadhaigh, and its last editor was Ciarán Ó Pronntaigh with manager Seán Ó Murchadha.
*An tUltach* used to be funded in part by the Arts Council for Northern Ireland. It also received funding from Foras na Gaeilge, but at the end of June 2013 Foras na Gaeilge stated that such funding, received via a block grant to Comhaltas Uladh, was to end with immediate effect.
*An tUltach* ceased regular paper publication in April 2018 and its website has not seen an update since 2019. A manager of the magazine in November 2018 said that a public grant of £30,000 was paid to make the 100-year archive available. But as of March 2020 this had not been implemented. However the website still accepts pay subscriptions
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# Andy McAteer
**Andrew William McAteer** (born 24 April 1961) is an English former professional footballer. He played in the Football League in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s.
## Career
### Preston North End {#preston_north_end}
Signing as an apprentice in July 1977, McAteer turned professional a year later. He made his Preston North End debut as an 18-year-old on Boxing Day 1979 in a 3--0 home win over Shrewsbury Town. Quickly establishing himself as a tough-tackling attacking full back, McAteer didn\'t miss a game for the rest of the season, becoming a firm favourite with the Deepdale fans. The following season, he struggled with injury but still made 26 appearances as the club were relegated to Division Three. These were hard times for Preston, as they constantly struggled against relegation and financial ruin. McAteer, however, was a mainstay in the team making 277 appearances scoring nine goals during his first spell there.
### Blackpool
In December 1986 John McGrath accepted a bid of £17,000 from local rivals Blackpool. McAteer played for the Seasiders for eighteen months. In June 1988 he was given a free transfer, mainly due to injuries. He made 47 appearances without scoring.
### Return to Preston {#return_to_preston}
John McGrath offered McAteer a return to Preston, in the form of a two-year deal. Injury, however, restricted him initially. On returning to fitness, a game in the reserves resulted in an over-zealous YTS opposition player coming in too hard and breaking McAteer\'s tibia and fibula. He subsequently had to retire from the professional game at the age of 28. In total he had played 343 games, scoring 10 goals.
### Non-league {#non_league}
Upon leaving the full-time game, McAteer first signed, along with Oshor Williams, for Northern Premier League club Lancaster City, but new work commitments meant that he played only one game for the club
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# Go to Blazes (1942 film)
***Go to Blazes*** is a short 1942 British information film, produced by the Ministry of Information, directed by Walter Forde and starring Will Hay and Thora Hird. It was written by Diana Morgan and Angus MacPhail.
## Synopsis
When an incendiary bomb strikes his house during the Blitz, Hay fusses so ineptly with his extinguishing equipment that the bomb burns through the floor -- and obligingly falls into a bucket of water in the basement. When a second bomb strikes, his daughter shows him how to do the job properly.
## Cast
- Will Hay as father
- Thora Hird as Elsie, the daughter
- Muriel George as mother
## Reception
BFI Screenonline refers to it as a \"wittily written information film
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# Attenkirchen
**Attenkirchen** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany
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# Weigel House
The **Weigel House** is a historic house built in 1893 at 2721 Asbury Road in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is also known as the **Monday House**, or the **Osborne House**. The house was constructed in the late 19th century in the Queen Anne style. It was one of the better-known homes of the Weigel family, who immigrated from Germany in the 19th century and were prominent in the dairy business, both in East and North Knox County, for generations. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as \"Monday House\" since 2001.
## History
The estate comprised the house, a large barn, a garden patio, a detached 2 car garage, and 3 outbuildings. It is a brick structure with two and a half stories. Although the architect of the house is unknown, deed research suggests that Jonathan Osborne had the house built.
The Weigel family were the second owners of the house, and owned a chain of convenience stores.
### Shell family {#shell_family}
From 1998 until 2001, the house was used as a residence by Steven and Karla Shell and their children. The house was placed on the historical registry by the Shell family. During their ownership of this house, the Shells completed a restoration of the home in which they remodeled the kitchen and main bathroom. This restoration reversed the remodeling project undertaken by the previous owners sometime during the 1970s. In that project, the previous owners had laid carpet over the original hardwood floors and installed a drop ceiling in the kitchen, where they had also replaced all cabinetry.
### *Cruze Farm at Asbury* {#cruze_farm_at_asbury}
His son, Earl Cruze and wife, Cheri, bought land in Asbury, built a processing plant and began bottling milk in 1990 under the name Cruze Dairy Farm. In September 2017, Earl Cruze\'s daughter Colleen (née Cruze) and Manjit Bhatti purchased the Weigel House, and formed the \'Cruze Farm at Asbury\'; serving fresh churned ice cream and pizza. It started as a summer ice cream popup on Gay Street. Although some customers refer to this location as \"the farm,\" the family dairy farm is located further east in Riverdale and is not open to the public
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# Farmers Guardian
***Farmers Guardian*** is a weekly newspaper aimed at the British farming industry. It provides comprehensive and topical news with Livestock, Arable and Machinery sections; as well as business information and latest market prices. It is sold nationally and is published each Friday. Based in Preston, Lancashire, it was for many years owned by United Business Media but it, and sister title Pulse, were sold to UK business-to-business publisher AgriBriefing in February 2012 in a deal worth £10 million.
Related products in include: *Dairy Farmer*, *Arable Farming* and the [website](https://www.farmersguardian.com/). The website was launched in February 2015, and includes sections on news, arable, livestock, and machinery.
## History
The newspaper started life on 10 February 1844, priced 4½d, as the ***Preston Guardian***, and was founded by Joseph Livesey, the \"father\" of the total abstinence movement in Britain to support the campaign for the repeal of the Corn Laws. He was assisted by his sons: William, as sub-editor and manager of the business department (until forced to retire by ill health); John, who came in as editor at the age of 21; and younger sons Franklin and Howard. Livesey Snr was, however, the overall superintendent and wrote the leaders for local news items. His son James did not participate in that familial enterprise; instead he turned his hand to building railways and later made a name for himself with the construction of the Transandean Railway (1887 to 1910), \"one of the greatest engineering feats in South America\" topped by a 1-mile-long tunnel at a 10,466 ft altitude; in 1890 he also designed the first cantilever bridge built in Spain, although the company he worked for floundered and the designing engineer of the company that took over the work only retained the cantilever principle of his project.
The success of the newspaper can be attested by a remark of Richard Cobden: `{{blockquote|I never remember a case of a local newspaper succeeding as this has done in so short a time and subject to the same competition. }}`{=mediawiki} The paper lasted for 15 years under the Livesey\'s management, until 1859. By then it had become a valuable commodity and was sold to local businessman and fellow teetotaller, Councillor George Toulmin JP (father of the journalist, newspaper proprietor and Liberal Party politician George Toulmin (1857--1923)), who owned the paper until 1883. Thomas Wemyss Reid was an editor from 1864 to 1866.
In 1872, a new office building was completed in Fishergate, Preston, and the paper moved into the ground floor. The building was later shared with the *Lancashire Evening Post* and was demolished in 1989. The paper lasted under its original name until May 1958 and then continued to the present day as the *Farmers Guardian*.
John Boyle O\'Reilly, a future Irish poet, journalist and activist in the United States, worked as an apprentice at the *Preston Guardian* in the early 1860s
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# Gammelsdorf
**Gammelsdorf** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany.
It was the site of the 1313 Battle of Gammelsdorf.
Until the mid-1990s Gammelsdorf was home of the \"Circus\", formerly known as the world\'s first village cinema, and later a nightclub where many famous artists and rock bands held concerts, most notably Nirvana
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# Platonovka
**Platonovka** (*Платоновка*) is the name of several rural localities in Russia
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# Haag an der Amper
**Haag an der Amper** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany
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| 0 |
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# Yermolovka
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# Hurricane Caroline
**Hurricane Caroline** was one of two tropical cyclones to affect northern Mexico during the 1975 Atlantic hurricane season. The third named storm and second hurricane of the season, Caroline developed on August 24 north of the Dominican Republic. The system crossed Cuba and briefly degenerated into a tropical wave due to land interaction. However, upon emergence into the western Caribbean Sea, it was once again designated as a tropical depression after a well-defined circulation was observed on satellite imagery. Moving towards the west-northwest, the cyclone clipped the northern portion of the Yucatán Peninsula before entering the Gulf of Mexico. Caroline was upgraded to a tropical storm on August 29 in the central Gulf of Mexico before rapid intensification began. Early on August 31, Caroline reached its peak intensity with winds of 115 mph, before landfall south of Brownsville, Texas with winds of 105 mph shortly thereafter. After moving inland, Caroline quickly weakened and dissipated over the mountainous terrain of northeastern Mexico on September 1. There were only two deaths from Caroline, both indirect. However, there was heavy rainfall in southern Texas and Mexico, including almost 12 in at Port Isabel.
## Meteorological history {#meteorological_history}
A tropical wave exited the west coast of Africa on August 15 and rapidly moved westward at 17 mph along the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). On August 18, the system turned northeast away from the ITCZ and slowed by the time it was 600 mi northeast of Puerto Rico. On August 22 and 23, the system changed course for the second time as it turned to the southwest. By noon on August 24, satellite imagery showed the disturbance establishing a closed area of circulation with winds reaching 25 mph and the barometric pressure falling to 1011 mb. The disturbance then became Tropical Depression Five as it neared northeastern Cuba and southeastern Bahamas. It crossed Cuba where it momentarily weakened back to a tropical wave. The cyclone then regained tropical depression status on August 27 as it continued westward into the Gulf of Mexico.
After brushing the northeastern tip of the Yucatán Peninsula, Tropical Depression Five continued to move west at 8 mph as the storm entered an area favorable for intensification. On August 29, the tropical system strengthened to a tropical storm and was named *Caroline* by the National Hurricane Center. By that time the storm was only 400 mi east-southeast of Brownsville, Texas. Caroline\'s forward speed slowed to 5 mph while intensifying and on the same day, Caroline was upgraded to hurricane status. Before making landfall, two hurricane hunter aircraft\'s flew into Caroline\'s center on August 30, where data collected from the aircraft showed a barometric pressure reading of 987 mb and winds of 80 mph. Six hours later the hurricane rapidly intensified, with winds reaching 115 mph and the pressure dropping to 973 mb. The pressure then fell to 963 mb before the storm made landfall 100 mi south of Brownsville on August 31. Caroline rapidly weakened to a tropical depression twelve hours after landfall and dissipated on September 1 over northeastern Mexico.
### Experiments
Two National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Research planes conducted experiments into Caroline. The experiments were to study and measure the wind velocity and the environment inside and around the eye as well as the boundary layer of the hurricane. The results of the experiments concluded that Caroline had a higher dissipation rate than normal hurricanes, with the dissipating rate averaging at 30%. This conclusion suggested that energy in a hurricane dissipating internally above the surface layer is two times higher than energy dissipating at the surface.
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# Hurricane Caroline
## Preparations and impact {#preparations_and_impact}
Caroline brushed the southeastern Bahamas and made landfall in eastern Cuba as a tropical depression though its effects, if any, are unknown.
The National Hurricane Center issued a hurricane watch for coastal sections of south Texas and northern Mexico on August 30. Small water craft were also advised of the deteriorating conditions. In Texas, local officials in Cameron County opened storm shelters. Relief and clean up organizations were notified of the upcoming threat while several local oil rigs evacuated personnel. In addition, relief squads from the American Red Cross moved to South Texas in case the storm made landfall. Neil Frank, the director of the National Hurricane Center advised campers along the beaches to evacuate, stating that \"he doesn\'t want them trapped\".
Due to Caroline\'s compact size, sustained winds only reached 48 mph in Brownsville, Texas. The storm also dropped heavy rain the southern portion of the state, as much as 11.93 in in Port Isabel. In Brownsville, Caroline broke a record for most rainfall within a 24-hour period during the month of August. The rainfall caused minor flooding. This helped end a prolonged drought in the Rio Grande Valley. It canceled most of the Labor Day holiday season for South Padre Island, one of the busiest weekends for tourism on the island. Caroline also produced storm tides 1 -- above normal along coastal sections of southern Texas. Overall damage in southern Texas was minor, and there were two indirect fatalities due to drowning incidents in Galveston.
In Mexico, coastal residents evacuated to storm shelters south of Tampico. Elsewhere, 300 residents were evacuated to storm shelters in Soto la Marina 55 mi from Santa Rosa. In northeast Mexico, 150 residents evacuated to shelters in San Fernando, 85 mi south of Brownsville. The storm produced 10 ft storm tides to coastal sections of Mexico and 5 - of rain to inland areas. The rainfalls caused moderate flooding which caused 1,000 people to evacuate and left moderate damage to homes and businesses. The rains broke an eight-month drought that was affecting inland areas of northern Mexico that was affecting the area\'s corn production. Along the coast, several small villages sustained significant damage from the hurricane\'s storm surge
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# 2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's combined
**Women\'s combined World Cup 2004/2005**
## Final point standings {#final_point_standings}
In women\'s combined World Cup 2004/05 only one competition was held.
Place Name Country Total Points 29`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki}
------- ---------------------------- --------- -------------- ----------------------------------
1 Janica Kostelić 100 100
2 Anja Pärson 80 80
3 Emily Brydon 60 60
4 Nicole Hosp 50 50
5 Lindsey Kildow 45 45
6 Julia Mancuso 40 40
7 Renate Götschl 36 36
8 Resi Stiegler 32 32
9 Marlies Schild 29 29
10 Brigitte Acton 26 26
11 Elisabeth Görgl 24 24
12 Monika Bergmann-Schmuderer 22 22
13 Janette Hargin 20 20
14 Caroline Lalive 18 18
15 Michaela Dorfmeister 16 16
16 Kaylin Richardson 15 15
17 Šárka Záhrobská 14 14
18 Marlies Oester 13 13
19 Britt Janyk 12 12
20 Macarena Simari Birkner 11 11
21 Brigitte Obermoser 10 10
22 Jelena Lolović 9 9
23 Hilde Gerg 8 8
24 Daniela Ceccarelli 7 7
25 Isolde Kostner 6 6
26 Sherry Lawrence 5 5
27 Verena Stuffer 4 4
28 María Belén Simari Birkner 3 3
Note:
Not all points were awarded (not enough finishers)
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# Peters House (Knoxville, Tennessee)
The **Peters House** is a historic home located at 1319 Grainger Avenue in Knoxville, Tennessee. It is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is also known as **White Columns** or **Columned Portals**, as well as the **George W. Peters House**.
The oldest part of the home was built in the 1860s as a four-room house, typical of an East Tennessee farmhouse. Behind the house there was a walkway across First Creek that connected the home with the owners\' family business, the Peters & Bradley Mill, a grist mill.
A major addition and renovation was undertaken in the 1880s by William E. Peters, using an architectural design by local architect George Franklin Barber. The addition more than doubled the size of the building. Its design displays Victorian and Neoclassical influences. A prominent feature is a large two-story front porch with columns. Original drawings for the expansion are held by the McClung Historical Collection.
George Franklin Barber began publishing his homes in inexpensive, illustrated catalogs. He worked between 1887 and 1913, with a staff of approximately 50. Mr. Barber warned residents of the horrors of a house not designed by a trained architect, noting that Geo. F. Barber & Co. was \"between you and a hideous monstrosity\". Barber houses were primarily constructed in the United States, but were also found in other countries.
The Peters House is privately owned, and is not open to the public
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# Hallbergmoos
**Hallbergmoos** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany. The Isar River flows west of the town. The town is directly south-west of Munich Airport
## Economy
Augsburg Airways, a regional airline, was headquartered in Hallbergmoos until it ceased to exist in 2013. The headquarters of the Eurofighter GmbH, which co-ordinates the design, production and upgrade of the Eurofighter Typhoon, is located here.
When it existed, DBA (Deutsche BA) had its head office on the grounds of Munich International Airport and in Hallbergmoos.
## Education
Hallbergmoos has a Grund- und Hauptschule, a combined general primary and secondary general school. The Volkshochschule Hallbergmoos provides adult education services.
The Hallbergmoos Library was established in 1985.
## Recreation
The *Jugendzentrum Hallbergmoos* provides recreational services for youth
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# Kayensar
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# Hohenkammer
**Hohenkammer** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany
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10,142,806 |
# Statesview
**Statesview**, or **States View**, is a historic house located on South Peters Road off Kingston Pike in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States. Built in 1805 by Knoxville architect Thomas Hope and rebuilt in 1823 following a fire, Statesview was originally the home of surveyor Charles McClung. Following McClung\'s death, newspaper publisher Frederick Heiskell purchased the house and estate, which he renamed \"Fruit Hill.\" The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architecture and political significance.
## Design
Statesview is a simple, two-story Federal-style brick house, located on a wooded lot opposite the intersection of South Peters Road and George Williams Road. The house consists of a main section, a smaller (but still two stories) northeast wing, and a modern rear addition. The main section consists of a central entry hall flanked by rooms on either side, with a staircase leading to the second story. It is unknown how closely the current house, reconstructed following a fire in 1823, resembles the original house, or if it includes any part of the original.
## History
Statesview was built for early Knoxville surveyor Charles McClung, a son-in-law of Knoxville founder James White. McClung drew up the original 1791 plat of Knoxville and surveyed what is now Kingston Pike during the same period. Construction on Statesview, then located in an isolated area west of Knoxville, began around 1804 and was completed in 1805. To build the house, McClung hired Thomas Hope, an English-born architect and house joiner who had previously built the Ramsey House in east Knox County.
Following McClung\'s death in 1835, his heirs sold the house and estate to Frederick Heiskell. Heiskell had cofounded the *Knoxville Register*, the city\'s leading newspaper, in 1816. Prior to purchasing Statesview, he sold his interest in the paper and retired. Heiskell renamed the estate \"Fruit Hill.\"
By the time Heiskell purchased Statesview, the estate consisted of 1200 acre and included a gristmill along nearby Sinking Creek (modern Ten Mile Creek) known as \"Mansion Mill\" (replaced c.1870 by Ebenezer Mill), as well as a sawmill. Heiskell planted extensive orchards throughout the estate, where he grew apples, pears, peaches, cherries, plums, and quinces. He also raised horses, cattle, and hogs.
Around 1880, Heiskell, then in his early 90s, moved back to Knoxville. The ownership of Statesview passed to his stepson, James Fulkerson
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# Hörgertshausen
**Hörgertshausen** is a municipality in the district of Freising in Bavaria in Germany.
## History
Pre-Christian Celtic graves shows that there has been settlement for a long time. But the first official mention of the village called \"Herigoldshusa\" (the house of Herigold) was in a donation of Emperor Arnulf of Carinthia to his vasal Earl Luitbold Cholo in 899. In 1081 the possessions of Kuno II. of Rott were founded to the Cloister Rott while he fell in military service for Emperor Henry IV. From 1549 until the 19. century it was the so-called Hofmark by the Earls of Seyboltsdorf. In 1550, they built the Castle Hörgertshausen. In 1661, half of the village was destroyed by a blaze but also reconstructed in the same year. In 1848, Hörgertshausen became an autonomous municipality. In 1852, the Castle was destructed. Since 1978, Hörgertshausen is part of the association of administrations Mauern, which consists of the municipalities of Hörgertshausen, Mauern, Gammelsdorf and Wang.
## Main sights and culture {#main_sights_and_culture}
### Sights
- Parish church St. Jacob the Elder, Hörgertshausen, crayoned by Christian Winck and varnished by Roman Anton Boos in 1790/1791
- Parish church St. Margareth, Margarethenried
- Pilgrimage Church St. Alban
- Church St. Stephan, Sielstetten
- Chapel Mary solace, Doidorf
- „Albiganer Markt" an annual small market and fair at Sankt Alban
- Town hall Hörgertshausen, distinguished with the Holzbaupreis 2007
### Museum
- Museum of local history Margarethenried-Hörgertshausen
## Economy and infrastructure {#economy_and_infrastructure}
Farming and especially the cultivation of hops is the main appearance of the commune. But there are also a lot of medium-sized enterprises and the German head office of the Italian GSI Group, which is a leading company in plastics technology and is supplying for e.g. Volkswagen and AGCO.
### Mass transit {#mass_transit}
Hörgertshausen can be reached a couple of times a day with the bus line 683 from Moosburg and Mainburg
## Culture
Hörgertshausen is famous for its marching band which is leading the Riflemen at the annual Costume and Riflemen\'s Procession on the first Sunday in Munichs Oktoberfest.
## Education
- Elementary School Hörgertshausen
## Notable people {#notable_people}
- Johann Georg Graf von Seiboldsdorf (1628--1699), privy councillor, treasurer and governor of Lower Bavaria
- Prof. Dr. Philipp Fischer (\* 1. Mai 1744; † 1
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# Memento (novel)
***Memento*** (*Warning*) is a young adult novel with reporting elements, written by Czech author Radek John and published in 1986. The story is set in Prague in the 1980s. It was made into a film for the Czechoslovak Television in 1990.
## Background
The novel is written with literary language with elements of argot and slang of drug addicts. It is a subjective narration from the point of view of Michal, the main character. The author wanted to warn the public of rising drug problems in present days. Its importance lies in the fact it is the first work concerning this taboo theme in the time of the previous totalitarian communist regime in Czechoslovakia. The situation at that time was that the number of addicts was growing, but it had not been publicly discussed. It warns that escaping from problems through drugs will end badly.
## Synopsis
When the story opens, readers are introduced to Michal Otava, who is severely addicted to drugs, and who is taken to hospital because repeated injection of intravenous drugs has led to deep inflammation of his veins. His period within hospital care brackets the framework of the story. Michal recollects how he got involved with the narcotics underworld while still at high school. As time goes on, he becomes more deeply addicted.
Michal runs away from home after experiencing unrequited love for his classmate Olina. Given that that leads nowhere, he decides to run away from home with her friend, Honza. However, Michal and Honza are soon caught. Michal\'s authoritarian father is responsible for an abusive and dysfunctional context at home. Honza and Michal travel to a party of drug addicts in Prague. The addicts are informally led by the charismatic Richard. Michal falls in love with Eva, an addict whom he meets at the party. He then becomes involved within the addict subculture due to his difficulties at home and high school.
At home, Michal\'s parents are unable to deal with his drug addiction. As a consequence of his deepening addiction, he is expelled from school shortly afterwards. He immediately joins the Czech Army, where he learns to deal with his addiction, leading it to diminish. However, after a year of military service, Michal steals a box of morphine, and he becomes addicted again. After returning from his time within the armed forces, Michal becomes even more deeply addicted to drugs. Michal tries to live in a shared flat with Eva, but drugs permeate their relationship and they cannot tolerate each other\'s company without it. There are repeated attempts to go \'cold turkey,\' but always either Michal or Eva relapse and trapped in co-dependency, they both become mired within the addict subculture once more. When Michal\'s morphine runs out, the couple rob a pharmacy together. Predictably, they are caught. Neither denies complicity and Eva and Michal are both sentenced to two years in prison.
When he leaves prison, Michal tries to avoid his former social network of addicts. Honza gets in touch with him again, however. She convinces him to produce crystal meth with her. Michal is still codependent with Eva, who is still in prison. Unable to resist, he starts manufacturing crystal methamphetamine and his drug dependency further worsens. Eva is now pregnant with Michal\'s child, but neither are able to give up drugs. Consequently, unable to deal with parental responsibilities due to her addiction, Eva has an abortion. After her abortion, they drift apart. Michal is repeatedly in prison or a psychiatric hospital over the next several years. However, he never recovers from his addiction. Eva becomes pregnant again and Michal learns that she was poisoned by anhydrous ammonia (used in the manufacture of crystal meth) during that pregnancy. As a consequence, Eva kills herself. Michal is suffering from a severe stomach ulcer due to his crystal meth addiction so he initially disbelieves that Eva has committed suicide. Suffering from narcotic psychosis, he believes that Eva was murdered by someone from the initial addict network in Prague, which is now trying to kill Michal as well. After his latest period in prison, Michal and several neophyte addicts, prepare to avenge themselves against the network. Before he can do so, however, Michal overdoses and ends up in the hospital, which ends his period of recollection.
After he is released from the hospital, Michal continues to take drugs and after another overdose he is found by his mother in a comatose condition. Doctors save him but he has permanent brain damage due to his extensive drug use. Consequently, he is now unable to live independently
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# Atlantic Upland
The **Atlantic Upland**, which is cut by lowlands, stretches over most of southern Nova Scotia, Canada. The surface of the Atlantic Upland rises from sea level on the Atlantic shore to about 180 to 200 metres (about 600 to 700 feet) at the southern side of the Annapolis Valley.
Most of the rivers on the mainland part of the province radiate outward in the Atlantic Upland. The rivers are generally short and narrow. Examples of these rivers include the LaHave, Shubenacadie, and Mersey
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# Arkady Mordvinov
**Arkady Grigoryevich Mordvinov** (*Аркадий Григорьевич Мордвинов*; born **Mordvishev** (*Мордвишев*), January 27, 1896 -- July 23, 1964) was a Soviet architect and construction manager, notable for Stalinist architecture of Tverskaya Street, Leninsky Avenue, Hotel Ukraina skyscraper in Moscow and his administrative role in Soviet construction industry and architecture.
## Biography
### VOPRA years {#vopra_years}
Mordvinov was born in the village of Zhuravlikha in Nizhny Novgorod Governorate of the Russian Empire. Mordvinov\'s early work, prior to his graduation from Moscow State Technical University (MVTU) in 1930, is definitely Constructivist, best seen in his Kharkiv Post Office of the late 1920s.
In 1929-1932, Mordvinov, Karo Halabyan and Alexander Vlasov were the founding members of VOPRA, a group of young \'Proletarian Architects\' who attacked proponents of the Constructivist movement, notably Ivan Leonidov, and all other \"alien art\" like eclectics, formalism and even baroque: \"There is no class-free art, neither class-free architecture\" (\"Бесклассового искусства у нас нет и бесклассовой архитектуры тоже нет\" - Khan-Magomedov cites Mordvinov\'s March, 1928 speech). Mordvinov was also a vocal opponent of Le Corbusier\'s Tsentrosoyuz building. VOPRA was used by the state against free-minded modernist architects and to consolidate the profession under tight state control. VOPRA founders had no clear creative concept beyond these rhetorics, and could not be criticised for their art, since it never existed. They definitely understood the likely consequences of their political assaults and had no remorse for their victims (the age of show trials already began with Shakhty Trial and Industrial Party Trial).
### Executive career {#executive_career}
Despite the bitter war between VOPRA and modernist groups (ASNOVA, the OSA Group) there was an attempt to unify the architects within one voluntary union (MOVANO). With support from older generation (Alexey Shchusev), MOVANO existed in 1930-1932, however, VOPRA tried to destroy it from within and launched their own magazine, *RA* (Revolutionary Architecture), co-edited by Mordvinov; soon, he co-edited another magazine, *SA* (Soviet Architecture, 1931-1934). Formation of Union of Soviet Architects in 1932 allowed Mordvinov to move from small-time criticism to an executive position; he acquired bureaucratic muscle and set up his own workshop, present in all architectural contests of the 1930s.
Mordvinov\'s 1930s version of stalinist architecture - compared with old revivalists like Ivan Zholtovsky - was more rationalist, lacking classical order, a simplified development of Ivan Fomin\'s *Red Doric* style. This is a direct consequence of his lack of academic training. According to Khan-Magomedov, Mordvinov was influenced by the Stenberg brothers, the draftsmen who rendered his early works. In fact, during the 1930s Mordvinov gradually accepted the rules of eclectics whom he had publicly nailed in 1928, and wilfully encouraged the arrest of unrepentant Modernists such as Mikhail Okhitovich, who Mordvinov publicly denounced, implicating him in Okhitovich\'s eventual murder.
### Moscow avenues {#moscow_avenues}
His political campaigning was rewarded with a 1947 commission to rebuild the right side of Tverskaya Street. Mordvinov\'s architectural input may be disputed, but he proved himself a capable project manager, successfully implementing so-called *flow methode* of moving construction crews between buildings in different construction stages. This was followed by equally grand Leninsky Prospekt (1939-1940), Bolshaya Polyanka (1940), Moskva River embankments (1940-1941) and Novinsky Boulevard (1939-1941) projects.
This work earned him Stalin Prize in 1941; incidentally, Mordvinov himself was on the Stalin Prize Board since its establishment in 1940. Since 1937, Mordvinov also enjoyed a management seat in the Union of Soviet Architects, has been President of Academy of Architecture (1950-1955) and International Union of Architects.
### Post-war reconstruction {#post_war_reconstruction}
In 1943-1947, Mordvinov chaired the State Committee on Construction and Architecture, charged with rebuilding the damage of World War II. In particular, he supervised the first master plans of rebuilding Minsk and Smolensk.
His influence was reinforced by a 1947 commission to design one of the Moscow Skyscrapers, now known as the Hotel Ukraina, which he shared with Vyacheslav Oltarzhevsky, one of the few Soviet experts in highrise construction.
In 1955, Mordvinov received a public beating by Nikita Khrushchev for his expensive \"architectural excesses\", but even Khrushchev could not deny Mordvinov\'s management and planning skills. In 1956-1964, Mordvinov completed two major projects - redevelopment of Komsomolsky Prospekt and greenfield Cheryomushki District which became the symbol of Khrushchev\'s affordable housing initiative
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