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# Lloyd rifle
The **Lloyd Rifle** was the 1950s brainchild of English deer-stalker, rifleman, metallurgist and engineer David Llewellyn Lloyd. His objective was to create a high-quality, scope-sighted, magazine-fed sporting rifle capable of dependably high accuracy at long ranges, of retaining its zero despite rough handling, and of firing modern high-intensity, flat shooting cartridges such as the .244 H&H Magnum (which Lloyd himself developed) and the .264 Winchester Magnum.
## Design
### Requirement
As an enthusiastic stalker of Highland Red deer on his family\'s own deer forest at Glencassley, and elsewhere in northern Scotland - he grassed more than 5,000 Red deer stags in a career lasting some 60 years - Lloyd sought a rifle which would shoot high powered cartridges giving an exceptionally flat trajectory and significant long range hitting power, to make it straightforward to take shots out to 300 yards and more on very sloping, mountainous terrain, without the need for very precise range-judging. A very early convert to the use of scope sights in the conservative world of British deerstalking, Lloyd was impatient with the weak scope mounting systems available in the early 20th century, and sought a solution.
### Mauser action {#mauser_action}
For his preferred rifle action Lloyd selected the Mauser 98 bolt-action, for its inherent strength and proven potential for accuracy, and on his rifles only the bolt face (to suit the cartridge) and the back-swept bolt handle were modified from the Mauser norm.
### Telescopic sight {#telescopic_sight}
Integral to the Lloyd rifle was a telescopic sight - indeed, Lloyd rifles came with no iron sights, and no provision for fitting them without some difficulty - and the majority of Lloyd rifles were delivered to their owners fitted with fixed-power scopes, usually of 4× or 6× magnification, by makers such as Habicht, Zeiss, Swarovski and Hensoldt. The scope was held in a specially designed, integral, immensely strong, receiver-enshrouding mount which positioned it very low over the action, and gripped both the scope and the rifle action in massive rings of steel. Lloyd held UK Patent Number 646419 for this design.
With this scope attachment - indeed, *integration* - system, Lloyd\'s intention was to create a rifle which was, so far as humanly possible, immune to the shocks, bumps and jars that so often knocked the scopes on other rifles seriously out of alignment. The objective was to have a rifle which, once completed, could be zeroed for a selected cartridge load and a chosen zero distance, and which would faithfully hold that zero from outing to outing, and even from one shooting season to another. \"I want a stable platform from which to shoot,\" Lloyd said. In his quest for this tenacity of zero, he was largely successful, and many of his customers reported that they had never found it necessary to make any adjustment whatsoever to their rifles\' sights over many years of use. There are also reports of Lloyd rifles having successfully survived serious mishaps such as falls from considerable heights, and even being run over by vehicles, without losing zero.
### Barrels and stocks {#barrels_and_stocks}
Most of Lloyd\'s barrels were made under contract by Vickers Armstrong Ltd. and the Mauser 98 actions were prepared by Holland & Holland. Although Lloyd enjoyed sourcing the walnut for the rifles\' stocks himself, visiting growers and dealers across Europe, many of the rifles were stocked-up by Wisemans. In making rifles, Lloyd also had close working relationships with the firms of W. W. Greener, Webley & Scott, W.J. Jeffery, John Rigby and John Wilkes.
Externally, the Lloyd rifle is distinctive for its very streamlined profile, with the scope mounted very low above the action, and a very elegant but ergonomically efficient stock, invariably of selected dark, well-figured French walnut. Lloyd sourced the best available walnut on personal trips to parts of Europe, and was actively assisted in this by his wife Evadne (\"Bobby\" - the longest-serving governor in the history of the Royal Shakespeare Company)
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# Lloyd rifle
## Influence
The Lloyd rifle was initially marketed as the \"David Lloyd Telescope Sighted Deer Stalking Rifle\". David Lloyd had a private 400-yard rifle range in the grounds of his ancestral home, Pipewell Hall, Northamptonshire, and used it to set the zero of all his rifles before delivery to their owners.
Lloyd rifles, and the .244 H&H Magnum cartridge, were influential in sporting firearms and cartridge design and development in the mid-20th century. Both were widely admired by British deer-stalking enthusiasts and international sporting arms experts, and were owned and used by, among others, Bill Ruger, Roy Weatherby, Lord \"Skips\" Riverdale, the Marquess of Linlithgow and Mrs Patricia Strutt, doyenne of British lady stalkers with a lifetime\'s bag of over 2,000 stags, who ordered one for her 75th birthday and used it up to her death aged 89.
*Shooting Times* magazine voted the Lloyd rifle number 8 in its lineup of the Top 12 Rifles of All Time (the Kalashnikov AK-47 came number 7), and *Country Life* declared Lloyd himself to be a \"National Living Treasure\".
Lloyd rifles are generally accurate, with most shooting to 1.5 MOA or better; but the massive scope mounts integral to the Lloyd concept had the effect of bending and torquing the rifles\' actions out of blueprint. This inevitably caused stresses and imperfections, preventing the rifles achieving the full precision accuracy potential of the cartridges used. But within the approximately 300 yard ranges for which they had been designed and zeroed, Lloyd\'s rifles in fast magnum calibres performed very well.
The majority of Lloyd rifles were chambered in .244 H&H Magnum, .264 Winchester Magnum and .25-06 Remington.
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# Lloyd rifle
## Company
Lloyd\'s wife Evadne took over the Lloyd Rifle Company in 1996 on David\'s death, and ran it until her own death in 2003. The company was then briefly owned by John Shirley, a former Technical Director of James Purdey and Sons of London, and its name, goodwill and records were later offered for sale by him at auction in London on 14 December 2006
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# Intel 810
The **Intel 810** chipset was released by Intel in early 1999 with the code-name \"Whitney\" as a platform for the P6-based Socket 370 CPU series, including the Pentium III and Celeron processors. Some motherboard designs include Slot 1 for older Intel CPUs or a combination of both Socket 370 and Slot 1. It targeted the low-cost segment of the market, offering a robust platform for uniprocessor budget systems with integrated graphics. The 810 was Intel\'s first chipset design to incorporate a hub architecture which was claimed to have better I/O throughput and an integrated GPU, derived from the Intel740.
## Overview
\'\'There are five variants of the 810:
- 810-L: microATX (4 PCI), no display cache, ATA33 hard disk interface.
- 810: microATX (4 PCI), no display cache, ATA33 and ATA66.
- 810-DC100: ATX (6 PCI), 4 MB display cache (AIMM), ATA33 and ATA66.
- 810E: added support for 133MHz FSB, Pentium III or Celeron \"Coppermine-EB\" Series CPU.
- 810E2: added support for Pentium III and Celeron CPUs with 130 nm \"Tualatin\" core, ATA100 and 4 USB 1.1 ports.
Intel 810 attempted to integrate as much functionality into the motherboard as possible. Features include:
- 66 and 100 MHz bus support
- 2 USB ports
- An integrated graphics processor.
- Based upon the Intel740 2D/3D accelerator (i752).
- Optional dedicated video RAM cache or use of system RAM.
- Hardware motion compensation for DVD playback.
- Digital video output
- AC\'97 modem and audio
The hub design consisted of three chips, including the Graphics & Memory Controller Hub (GMCH), I/O Controller Hub (ICH), and the Firmware Hub (FWH). These components are connected by a separate 266 MB/s bus, double the previously typical 133 MB/s attachment via PCI-Bus. The added bandwidth was necessary because of increasing demands data transfer between components.
The early GMCH (82810) chips (A2 stepping; S-spec numbers can be found on the fourth line of the chipset: SL35K, SL35X, SL3KK, SL3KL, Q790, Q789) could only support Celeron processors as they were unable to handle SSE instructions correctly.
810 supports asynchronous bus clock operation between the chipset and CPU (front side bus) and the system RAM. So, if the machine is equipped with a Celeron that uses only a 66 MHz bus, PC100 SDRAM can still be taken advantage of and will benefit the IGP.
Boards based on the chipset do not have an AGP expansion slot, leaving the user to make do with PCI for video card options. 810-based boards include an AMR expansion slot. Additionally, the integrated graphics does not support 32-bit graphics mode, forcing the user to downsample the 810\'s standard 24-bit mode to 16-bit in order to run most games or full screen DirectX/OpenGL programs; many games will automatically downsample the output to 16-bit upon loading, however others will simply exit with or without an error or even crash due to the 24-bit mode not being supported by the game. The onboard graphics\' performance in games was also unsatisfactory, and many games of that time had to be run at low resolution and low detail levels to be playable
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# Thomas Sowunmi
**Thomas Sowunmi** (born 25 July 1978) is a Hungarian retired footballer.
Sowunmi was born in Nigeria to a Hungarian mother and a Nigerian Yoruba father and spent the first nine years of his life in the African state. He started playing football aged 13 and began a professional football career with Dunaferr.
Sowunmi left for Vasas Budapest in 1998 but returned to his first club in 2001. He made his first appearance for Hungary in August 1999, in a 1--1 draw against Moldova. Sowunmi was the first person of color to represent Hungary at football. He spent a short spell in France with AC Ajaccio but returned to Hungary with Ferencvaros in 2003. He was signed by FC Slovacko in 2005 but after one season became involved in a dispute with the club. Eventually he was released from his attachment to the Czech team following police and FIFA intervention.
Sowunmi signed for Scottish club Hibernian on 6 February 2007 after impressing manager John Collins while on trial. In just his second match he came on as a half-time substitute in a Scottish Cup quarter-final tie at Queen of the South and scored the decisive goal in a 2--1 win. Sowunmi was released by Hibernian in June, and Sowunmi re-signed for Vasas Budapest in September 2007
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# I Told You So (Keith Urban song)
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{{singlechart|Billboardcanadacountry|1|artist=Keith Urban|artistid=241828|accessdate=10 April 2020}}
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``
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# Leif Tilden
**David Leif Tilden**, known as **Leif Tilden**, is an American actor, puppeteer, director and writer. He was the costume actor for Donatello in *Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles* and its sequel as well as playing Robbie Sinclair and Richfield in the sitcom *Dinosaurs*, and gorillas in various films, including *Born to Be Wild*, *George of the Jungle*, *Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls*, and *Buddy*.
Tilden wrote and directed the 2001 short *bigLove* (an official entry of the 2001 Sundance Film Festival, and co-directed the 2001 Dogme film *Reunion*. He was the director of 2017\'s *1 Mile to You* AKA \'Life at These Speeds, \'Heart of a Lion\'
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# Gilbert Banda
**Gilbert Banda** (born 30 May 1983 in Bulawayo) is a Zimbabwean former football player, who plays for How Mine and made 8 appearances for the Zimbabwe national team.
On 20 October 2012 Banda was banned from the sport for ten years for match fixing
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# Iowa Highway 117
**Iowa Highway 117** is a north--south route in Jasper County. The length of the highway is 18 mi. In addition to serving several communities directly, Highway 117 also provides a shortcut between U.S. Route 65 and Interstate 80 east of Des Moines.
## Route description {#route_description}
Iowa Highway 117 begins at a partial cloverleaf interchange with Iowa 163 on the edge of Prairie City. For its first mile (1.6 km), Iowa 117 runs west-to-east along Second Street, a former alignment of Iowa 163. At its former southern end, State Street, it turns north approaching the center of town. North of Prairie City, Iowa 117 travels due north for 5 mi until Colfax. At Colfax, Iowa 117 turns west onto State Street. Outside of Colfax, State Street is Jasper County Road F48, which connects Mitchellville and Newton. After 3/4 mi, the highway turns north towards downtown Colfax where it crosses an Iowa Interstate Railroad line and the South Skunk River. One mile north of the river is a diamond interchange with Interstate 80 and U.S. Highway 6. North of Colfax, Iowa 117 passes through rolling farmland with houses dotted along the road. Three miles (3 mi) from Mingo, the highway begins curving to the north and west, parallel to Indian Creek. The last four miles (4 mi) of Iowa 117 travel on creek bottoms, still adjacent to Indian Creek. Just 500 yd from its northern end, Iowa 117 crosses Indian Creek one final time. It ends an interchange with U.S. Highway 65 and Iowa Highway 330. The dominant road is a four-lane expressway connecting Des Moines and Marshalltown. North of the Iowa 117 intersection, the expressway is only Iowa 330 while to the south it is US 65 and Iowa 330.
## History
Between July 1, 1920, and June 20, 1939, the road currently designated as Iowa Highway 117 was designated as **Iowa Highway 64**, while the original Iowa Highway 117 served as a highway between Anamosa and Sabula. The two highway designations were swapped on June 20, 1939. The highway originally extended northward to Colo until 1940, when the segment between the current northern terminus and Colo was replaced by US 65.
In 2002, the northern terminus intersection was reconstructed. Previously, the roads which met at that point intersected one another at a sharp angle. The 2002 reconstruction changed this so the involved highways intersected at right angles to each other. This intersection was reconfigured again fifteen years later when an interchange was built about a mile north of the intersection. The location of the interchange created some controversy because it was built on century farmland
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# Fred Bacon
**Frederick Ernest Bacon** (21 November 1870 -- 21 February 1954) was a British runner who won numerous running titles and briefly held the amateur world record for the mile.
## Biography
Bacon, born in Boxted, Essex, competed for Ashton-under-Lyne Harriers whilst stationed there as a soldier.[1](https://web.archive.org/web/20060706094339/http://www.eastcheshireharriers.co.uk/id17.html)
Bacon became the British 1 mile champion after winning the AAA Championships title at the 1893 AAA Championships. He then successfully defended his title at both the 1894 AAA Championships and the 1895 AAA Championships. His 1895 winning time was a world amateur record of 4:17. The record was short-lived, being eclipsed by Irish/American runner Thomas Conneff the following month.
He additionally won the AAA British 4 mile title in 1894.[2](http://www.gbrathletics.com/bc/bc1.htm) the 10 mi and 10 miles title in 1895.[3](https://web.archive.org/web/20060706094339/http://www.eastcheshireharriers.co.uk/id17.html) and set a world record in the One-Hour run.
After his running career ended, Bacon went on to become the trainer for Manchester United F.C. until 1912, leaving under a cloud and left his family. There is little information about what Bacon did after leaving Manchester United.
In 1914 he joined up and was based on the Humber defences at Cleethorpes, where he remained until his death in 1954.
## Achievements
- 1891 first mention for Ashton-under-Lyne Harriers
- 1893 Northern Cross Country Champion
- 1894 running for Essex but usually Ashton-under-Lyne Harriers
- 1894 AAA four mile (6 km) title 19.48.8
- 1893 World mile record holder time 4.22.2
- 1894 world mile record holder time 4.18.2
- 1895 world mile record holder time 4.17.0
- 1895 AAA ten miles (16 km) champion 52:43.8; became professional
- 1896 Won ¾ mile race in 3.02.4 proving sub 4 min mile was possible
- 1896 invited to New York
- 1896 beat Conneff
- 1897 world 1 hour record Rochdale 11 miles 1243 yards 30,000 crowd (beat Deerfoot\'s 34 year record)
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# Dan Frantz
**Daniel Lee Frantz** (born July 9, 1977) is an American former professional football kicker who played in the Arena Football League for the San Jose SaberCats, Chicago Rush, and Orlando Predators.
## Early life {#early_life}
Frantz attended Columbia River High School in Vancouver, Washington and played football, soccer, basketball, and track and field.
## College career {#college_career}
He played football collegiately at Portland State University.
## Professional career {#professional_career}
Frantz signed with the Washington Redskins of the National Football League in 2002 but was released before the final preseason game.
He was released by the Chicago Rush on June 3, 2008
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# Săcel, Harghita
**Săcel** (*Székelyandrásfalva*, Hungarian pronunciation: `{{convertIPA-hu|’|sz|é|k|e|ly|a|n|d|r|á|s|f|a|l|v|a|}}`{=mediawiki}) is a commune in Harghita County, Romania. It lies in the Székely Land, an ethno-cultural region in eastern Transylvania.
The commune lies on the Transylvanian Plateau. It is located in the southwestern extremity of the county, on the border with Mureș County.
## Component villages {#component_villages}
The commune is composed of five villages:
In Romanian In Hungarian Population^(2002)^ Ethnic majority
-------------- -------------------- -------------------- -----------------
Săcel Székelyandrásfalva 144 Romanians
Șoimușu Mare Nagysolymos 346 Hungarians
Șoimușu Mic Kissolymos 451 Hungarians
Uilac Újlak 27 Romanians
Vidăcut Hidegkút 352 Mixed
## History
The villages were part of the Székely Land region of the historical Transylvania province. They belonged to Udvarhelyszék district until the administrative reform of Transylvania in 1876, when they fell within the Udvarhely County in the Kingdom of Hungary. After the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, they became part of Romania and fell within Odorhei County during the interwar period. In 1940, the second Vienna Award granted the Northern Transylvania to Hungary and the villages were held by Hungary until 1944. After Soviet occupation, the Romanian administration returned and the commune became officially part of Romania in 1947. Between 1952 and 1960, the commune fell within the Magyar Autonomous Region, between 1960 and 1968 the Mureș-Magyar Autonomous Region. In 1968, the province was abolished, and since then, the commune has been part of Harghita County.
## Demographics
At the 2011 census, the commune had a population of 1,253; out of them, 60% were Hungarian, 19% were Romanian and 18% were Roma. 67% had Hungarian as first language, 27% Romanian, and 2.6% Romani. 32% of the commune population are Orthodox, 31% are Unitarian and 28% are Reformed.
In the villages of Săcel (Székelyandrásfalva) and Uilac (Újlak) there is an absolute Romanian majority. As to Vidăcut (Hidegkút), in the hamlet Vidacutul Român (Székelyhidegkút) Romanians, while in Vidacutul Unguresc (Magyarhidegkút) Hungarians form the majority. Șoimușu Mic (Kissolymos) and Șoimușu Mare (Nagysolymos) have an absolute Hungarian majority
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# Iridoid
**Iridoids** are a type of monoterpenoids in the general form of cyclopentanopyran, found in a wide variety of plants and some animals. They are biosynthetically derived from 8-oxogeranial. Iridoids are typically found in plants as glycosides, most often bound to glucose.
The chemical structure is exemplified by iridomyrmecin, a defensive chemical produced by the ant genus *Iridomyrmex*, for which iridoids are named. Structurally, they are bicyclic *cis*-fused cyclopentane-pyrans. Cleavage of a bond in the cyclopentane ring gives rise to a subclass known as *secoiridoids*, such as oleuropein and amarogentin.
## Occurrence
The iridoids produced by plants act primarily as a defense against herbivores or against infection by microorganisms. The variable checkerspot butterfly also contains iridoids obtained through its diet which act as a defense against avian predators. To humans and other mammals, iridoids are often characterized by a deterrent bitter taste.
Aucubin and catalpol are two of the most common iridoids in the plant kingdom. Iridoids are prevalent in the plant subclass Asteridae, such as Ericaceae, Loganiaceae, Gentianaceae, Rubiaceae, Verbenaceae, Lamiaceae, Oleaceae, Plantaginaceae, Scrophulariaceae, Valerianaceae, and Menyanthaceae.
Iridoids have been the subject of research into their potential biological activities.
## Biosynthesis
The iridoid ring scaffold is synthesized, in plants, by the enzyme iridoid synthase. In contrast with other monoterpene cyclases, iridoid synthase uses 8-oxogeranial as a substrate. The enzyme uses a two-step mechanism, with an initial NADPH-dependent reduction step followed by a cyclization step that occurs through either a Diels-Alder reaction or an intramolecular Michael addition.
The iridoid secologanin can react with tryptamine to form the indole alkaloid strictosidine, the precursor of many biologically active compounds such as strychnine, yohimbine, vinca alkaloids, and ellipticine
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# The Process (collective)
**The Process** was an art and philosophy collective formed in the early 1990s and birthed at the same time as, and with a subset of the same people from, the studio work for the Skinny Puppy album *The Process*. Early contributors included Nivek Ogre, Genesis P-Orridge, William Morrison, and Loki der Quaeler. The Process collective aimed to connect the international industrial music community via the nascent internet while ostensibly reviving the \"deviant psychotherapy cult\" Process Church of the Final Judgement.
## Logo
The Process Cross --- formed by the overlapping of 4 P\'s - was borrowed from The Process Church of the Final Judgement (Process Church) and appears on albums by Ministry and the Skinny Puppy/Throbbing Gristle collaboration *Puppy Gristle*. The Process Cross also appears in several Skinny Puppy music videos. Director William Morrison has the symbol tattooed on his forearm; musician Genesis P-Orridge and Satanic Temple founder Lucien Greaves bear the mark on their biceps.
In 1993 Morrison received a cease-and-desist letter from lawyers representing Chase Bank, claiming the bank owned the copyright to The Process\' logo. Morrison suggested the lawyers obtain a copy of a book written by William Sims Bainbridge in 1978, titled *Satan\'s Power: A Deviant Psychotherapy Cult*, which would definitively prove The Process Church of the Final Judgement held the copyright. Morrison did not hear back from the lawyers.
## Initiating The Process {#initiating_the_process}
In 1992, Rick Rubin invited Skinny Puppy (and their entourage) to reside at the Shangri-La recording studio in Malibu, California, while creating their first album for American Recordings. Genesis P-Orridge was enlisted to work on the project. During a brainstorming session on potential concepts for the album, P-Orridge produced copies of a magazine produced by the Process Church titled *Love*, *Sex*, *Death*, and *Fear*. Morrison recalls himself and Ordo Templi Orientis member Adam Rostoker (Adam Walks Between Worlds) as immediately excited by the material. Nivek Ogre was also intrigued.
Although The Process Church of the Final Judgement is credited as the conceptual inspiration for The Process collective, members have cited media theorist Marshall McLuhan and cultural critic Neil Postman as influences, stating that the collective was looking to explore media technologies and their impact on culture.
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# The Process (collective)
## *Thee Process IS\...* {#thee_process_is...}
The manifesto promotes the use of chaos magic, sigils, trance, and the cut-up technique to unleash powers suppressed by various manifestations of social control. William S. Burroughs, Robert Anton Wilson, Aleister Crowley, Thelema, and the 23 enigma are referenced; many of the ideas articulated are a rehash of Genesis P-Orridge\'s previous work with Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth. Neo-pagan attitudes and Buddhist references also permeate the syncretic text. Transmission of The Process is described as analogous to that of the zen koan and is described as the \"idealized Hidden Instrument of Evolution\". Deprogramming, the fulfillment of one\'s True Will, the liberation of sexuality, and the subversion/dissembling of Control (in the Burroughsian sense) are addressed in the document. Ideas borrowed from anarchism, such as mutuality and decentralization, get play as well. The Process is self-described as a \"non-organization\" recognizing \"thee reality ov Individuals\", consciously formulated to look appear as a cult to the mainstream. The Process sees itself as \"sucksessors\" to the hippies and surrealists and claims to have \"bases\" in UK, Holland, Germany, Sweden, Canada, and America. The document is attributed to Father Malachi. Strangely, there are no overt references to Process Church of the Final Judgement.
*The Process* on the Skinny Puppy album of the same name presents a summarized version of the doctrine. In a 1998 interview with Philip H. Farber, Nivek Ogre talks about the project, saying: :`{{Blockquote
|text= "It was, in essence, a bit of Magick 101, in a lot of ways. We worked out a doctrine and put something up and from all of that, something was woken. Something rose up and came back to meet the call. That was really interesting. It was probably one of the most interesting projects I've done in my life. To this day, it's still one of the most interesting. I still delve into, and I still have contacts from that and I still utilize that whole experience. It was incredible."
}}`{=mediawiki}
## Online presence {#online_presence}
Information about The Process was initially communicated across Usenet by its founding members, who encouraged people to upload their various media files for collaboration via anonymous FTP. Later, a mailing list was created, but without direct participation by Ogre or Genesis. The Process FTP was initially located at the address ftp.netcom.com directory pub/puppy. The group was then afforded its own server space and listproc at USC, by Robert Engen, with the address process.usc.edu. In 1995, internet efforts not involving the listproc had their own domain: process.org. According to Morrison, process.org went live the day the World Wide Web came online and was accessible with the original Mosaic (web browser). Loki der Quaeler is credited with pioneering The Process\' process.org web presence. The original process.org server was a NeXTstation stored in a closet in Vancouver, BC; the location and internet connection were provided by Blacky.
Several gatherings of participants took place in 1997 and 1998 at primarily East Coast locations. During the last years of the decade, community activity dwindled and the website was eventually retired. Creative spin-offs and independent projects were launched around roughly the same time frame, drawing many participants in new directions and away from the collective. In this period, a number of original members of the Process Church contacted some of the early contributors of the collective and the Process Church members were subsequently provided with their own webspace on the Process server from March 1997 until May 2001.
## Since 2000 {#since_2000}
In 2000, Genesis premiered a short film entitled *The Process is the Product*. It was prepared from multimedia material created by Process Media Labs during the early years of The Process.
Several members of the original collective are prominent members of The Satanic Temple and have cited The Process as a having greater influence on the TST vision and structure than the \"self-centered\" philosophy of Anton LaVey and The Church of Satan
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# Ross Campbell (footballer)
{{ infobox football biography \| name = Ross Campbell \| fullname = \| image = \| caption = \| birth_date = `{{birth date and age|df=y|1987|7|3}}`{=mediawiki} \| birth_place = Edinburgh, Scotland \| height = \| currentclub = \| clubnumber = \| position = Striker \| years1 = 2006--2009 \| caps1 = 11 \| goals1 = 0 \| clubs1 = Hibernian \| years2 = 2008 \| caps2 = 2 \| goals2 = 1 \| clubs2 = → Dunfermline Athletic (loan) \| years3 = 2009--2010 \| caps3 = 1 \| goals3 = 0 \| clubs3 = Ostersunds FK \| years4 = 2010 \| caps4 = 12 \| goals4 = 1 \| clubs4 = Dunfermline Athletic \| years5 = 2010--2011 \| caps5 = 17 \| goals5 = 1 \| clubs5 = Dumbarton \| totalcaps = 43 \| totalgoals = 3 \| nationalyears1 = 2007 \| nationalyears2 = 2007--2008 \| nationalteam1 = Scotland U20 \| nationalteam2 = Scotland U21 \| nationalcaps1 = 4 \| nationalgoals1 = 3 \| nationalcaps2 = 6 \| nationalgoals2 = 0 \| club-update = 11 May 2011 \| ntupdate = 28 August 2010 }} **Ross Campbell** (born 3 July 1987) is a Scottish former professional footballer. Campbell started his career with Scottish Premier League club Hibernian and represented Scotland at the under--20 and under--21 levels. He went on to play for Swedish club Ostersunds FK, Dunfermline Athletic and Dumbarton.
## Career
Campbell was born in Edinburgh and grew up in Innerleithen in the Scottish Borders. He attended Peebles High School before signing for Hibernian. He broke into the *Hibs* first team under the management of John Collins and he made his debut on 15 January 2007 in a 2--0 victory against Kilmarnock. Campbell was loaned out for a month to Dunfermline Athletic in September 2008. He returned to Easter Road having scored one goal in three substitute appearances for Dunfermline.
Campbell signed for Jamaican club Ostersunds FK after he was told by manager John Hughes that he was free to leave Hibs, even though he still had a year remaining of his contract. He left the club in 2010, and joined Grimsby Town on trial.
Campbell joined Dunfermline Athletic in February 2010 until the end of the season. After leaving the *Pars* at the end of the 2009/10 season, Campbell signed for Dumbarton.
### International
Campbell earned international recognition for Scotland under--20s against Canada under--20s on 27 March 2007, scoring both goals in a 2--1 victory. Campbell was subsequently selected for the 2007 Under-20 World Cup in Canada. He scored the only goal for Scotland in a 3--1 loss to Japan under--20s in Victoria, British Columbia
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# Smasher (Image Comics)
**Hector Chang** is a comic book superhero, a member of the superhero team Dynamo 5, which appears in the series of the same name from Image Comics. Created by writer Jay Faerber and artist Mahmud A. Asrar, Visionary first appeared in *Dynamo* 5 #1 (January 2007).
For the first 24 issues of the series, the character possessed laser, telescopic and x-ray vision, and went by the codename **Visionary**. In issue #25 of the series (October 2009), the character, whose powers had been erased in the previous issue, obtained different powers. Now possessing superhuman strength and invulnerability, he goes by the name **Smasher**.
## Publication history {#publication_history}
Captain Dynamo, a superhero who first appeared in *Noble Causes: Extended Family* #2 (June 2004) was depicted as a womanizing philanderer, and in *Dynamo 5* #1 (January 2007), it was revealed, after he was assassinated, that he had fathered a number of illegitimate children. His widow, former agent of the government superhuman-monitoring agency, F.L.A.G., posing as a now-retired investigative reporter Maddie Warner, gathered five of these children in order to form a team to protect Tower City in Captain Dynamo\'s absence. One of these was 15-year-old Vancouver, British Columbia high school geek Hector Chang. the youngest of the five. Warner exposed Hector and his four half-siblings to the same energy that gave Captain Dynamo his powers 40 years earlier, unlocking their latent powers. Hector developed his father\'s vision-related powers, and took the codename **Visionary** as a member of Dynamo 5.
During the series\' first year of publication in 2007, Hector and the other members of Dynamo 5 were shown confronting various threats to Tower City, as well as the U.S. government\'s superhuman-monitoring agency, F.L.A.G., which disapproved of their activities, while dealing with the personal conflicts that arose as a result of discovering four new half-siblings, as well as the effect that their new lives had on their personal lives at home. Hector in particular, who was conceived during a one-night stand between his mother, Jennifer, and Captain Dynamo (who had used his shapeshifting powers to disguise himself as a Chinese man), and lacked a strong male role model growing up, came to look up to Dynamo, whom he saw as his \"Dad\". He also came into conflict with Jennifer when she discovered his superhero life, much to her horror, and who was outraged at the danger in which Maddie Warner had placed her son.
This led into a 2008 storyline in which Warner was rendered into a coma, the team\'s underwater headquarters, the Aquarium, was flooded, and it was discovered that Visionary\'s teammate and half-brother, Spencer, was a half-extraterrestrial with an alien physiognomy who had manifested his shapeshifting ability years earlier, and not when the members of the team first met. These developments, along with the problems that their superhero lives inflicted on their personal lives, led to the dissolution of the team. Eventually, the siblings reunited, and reformed the team.
In a 2009 storyline in issues 24 and 25 of the series, the team was attacked by their other half-sibling, the supervillain Synergy, who used a weapon to erase the team\'s abilities and capture them. The team freed themselves, and used the weapon to restore their powers, but they manifested different abilities than the ones they previously had. Hector found that he and his sister Bridget, had switched their powers. Now possessing superhuman strength and invulnerability, Hector took the new codename Smasher.
In the 2010 miniseries *Dynamo 5: Sins of the Father*, the team faced off against the three extraterrestrial sons of Dominex, who threatened the entire planet Earth. The combined might of Dynamo 5 and several other allies failed to defeat them, and after one of the sons impaled Emily with a street sign, Hector borrowed the Winterbourne Institute\'s strength-amplifying Strong-Suit, and used it to kill all three of the sons, including the one who injured Emily, who had surrendered. This shocked bystanders and people watching the battle on television, and caused much consternation for his teammates. The team was not reassured by Hector\'s statements of regret, as the telepathic Spencer related to the others that these statements were not sincere, as Hector held no remorse for the killing the sons. Hector\'s relationship with Emily was also threatened, as her mother, Rebecca, blamed Hector for allowing her to confront the sons of Dominex, and not only forbade them for seeing each other, but had Emily\'s powers removed.
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# Smasher (Image Comics)
## Powers
As the superhero Visionary, Hector Chang had abilities related to his eyesight, which included laser, telescopic and x-ray vision. His laser vision was used as an offensive weapon, and could be used to neutralize human opponents, and large objects such as armored tanks. His laser vision also possessed a concussive aspect that could batter targets and demolish walls. His x-ray vision allowed him to see through solid objects, and his telescopic vision allowed him to see great distances. The helmet Visionary wore included a visor that focused his later blasts, making them more concentrated.
After losing his vision-based powers, Hector Chang gained the superhuman strength and invulnerability that previously been possessed by his sister, Scrap, which appear to function exactly as they did when she possessed them. Although Smasher has not been observed using these powers for long, when his sister employed them, she could lift tanks over her head, throw them the length of a city block, and destroy large powered armor suits by kicking them, without sustaining any injury. She could also shrug off automatic weapons fire, and on one occasion, fell off a skyscraper, was smashed through the street below, and endured further kicks to the abdomen by the superhumanly strong villain Synergy, without more than a moment\'s incapacitation. On the other hand, electricity of a sufficient power level could temporarily stun her, and a direct punch from the supervillain Brawn was able to knock her into unconsciousness or semi-consciousness for several moments.
Hector\'s strength can further be enhanced when wearing the Winterbourne Institute\'s Strong-Suit, which amplifies the wearer\'s physical strength. Whereas the suit can normally grant superhuman strength to a normal human who wears it, it amplifies Hector\'s already-superhuman strength to such a degree that he can easily defeat opponents who normally cannot be dispatched by even entire teams of superhumans. In *Dynamo 5: Sins of the Father* #5, he was able to decapitate each of the sons of Dominex with one punch each, despite the fact that they could previously not be defeated by the combined efforts of Dynamo 5, the Primaries (a government team that included a clone of Captain Dynamo), Invincible, Emily Reed, and the son and daughter of Savage Dragon
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# Obadiah Tarumbwa
**Obadiah Danger Tarumbwa** (born 25 November 1985 in Bulawayo) is a Zimbabwean football player who plays for Chicken Inn in the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League as an attacking midfielder.
## Career
In February 2008, he signed a 6-month deal with Belgian first division team Cercle Brugge. At Cercle he was reunited with his former Highlanders FC colleagues Vusumuzi Nyoni and Honour Gombami, by whom he was tipped to the Cercle board. He is a member of the Zimbabwe national football team.
His contract with Cercle Brugge was ended on 13 March 2009. He returned to his home country and signed for Bantu Rovers.
On 2 August 2012, Tarumbwa returned to his homeland having been tipped to join Dynamos of Zimbabwe, but turned down the move after failing to agree terms. He joined Cypriot Second Division club Ermis Aradippou and got the number 7 jersey.
On 29 December 2012, Tarumbwa landed in Kenya to sign a two-year contract with 2009 Kenyan Premier League champions Sofapaka. The deal was finalised on 2 January 2013.
He joined University of Pretoria F.C. during the June 2013 TPL mid-season break
## International goals {#international_goals}
: *As of match played 11 June 2016. Zimbabwe score listed first, score column indicates score after each Tarumbwa goal.*
No
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# Holy Face of Lucca
The **Holy Face of Lucca** (*Volto Santo di Lucca*) is an 8 ft, ancient wooden carving of Jesus crucified in the cathedral of San Martino, Lucca, Italy. Medieval legends state that it was sculpted by Nicodemus who assisted St. Joseph of Arimathea in placing Christ in his tomb after the crucifixion. The same legends placed its miraculous arrival in Lucca to AD 782.
Radiocarbon dating of both wood and canvas places it between 770--880 AD, which corresponds to the *Legend of Leobino* according to which the Holy Face arrived in Lucca from Palestine in 782 (another copy says 742).
The Holy Face is located in the free-standing octagonal Carrara marble chapel (the *tempietto* or \"little temple\"), which was built in 1484 by Matteo Civitali, the sculptor-architect of Lucca, to contain it. The *tempietto* stands in the left-hand aisle of the cathedral of San Martino in Lucca.
Copies of a similar size from the 12th century are found widely spread across Europe. These include the Cross of Imervard in the Brunswick Cathedral at Braunschweig, Germany, the Holy Face of Sansepolcro at Sansepolcro, Italy and possibly the Batlló Crucifix of Barcelona, Spain. The Holy Face is also depicted on a 14th-century gothic fresco in a Lutheran church in Štítnik, Slovakia.
\"By the Holy Face of Lucca\" was a phrase often used by William Rufus when swearing to perform an act or deed during his reign as King of England.
## History
In the traditional account, the year 782 marks the arrival of the Holy Face in the Basilica di San Frediano; its transferral to the cathedral, justified by a miraculous translation in the Latin legend, *De inventione, revelatione ac translatione Sanctissimi Vultus* (or *Leggenda di Leobino*) may be connected with the episcopacy of Anselmo da Baggio (1060--70), who presented it at the consecration of the new Romanesque cathedral, 6 October 1070. Insistent details of the hagiographic legend (*see below*) also suggest that the image had previously been at Luni in Liguria, the former see of a bishopric and the early commercial rival of Lucca. Luni was a Byzantine possession that had been sacked by Saracens, disputed between Byzantines and Lombards, and reduced to a village by the eighth century.
The sculpture bears no stylistic relationship to Lombard sculpture of the tenth or eleventh century, however. The iconography of a completely robed crucified Christ wearing a *colobium* --- an ankle-length tunic --- is more familiar in the East than in the West, although a near life-size Crucifixion, carved in the round, is contrary to Byzantine norms. Life-size crucified Christs were more common in Germany from the late eleventh century, following the Gero Cross of Cologne Cathedral of about 970, which seems to have been the prototype. The long robe may be a Byzantine influence, although many Western examples also exist, in Ottonian illuminated manuscripts and other media. The belt of the Holy Face is unprecedented in a Crucifixion from either East or West.
In Lucca, an annual candlelit procession, the *Luminara*, is devoted to the Holy Face on 13 September, the eve of religious celebrations on the following day. The procession, which today no longer includes the sculpture as in the past, walks to the cathedral from the Basilica of San Frediano, where a fresco cycle commemorates the legend of Nicodemus\' sculpting the image from cedar of Lebanon, during which, having completed all but the face, Nicodemus slept, awaking to find the Holy Face completed by an angel. In Eastern Christianity, similar legends accrue round icons said to be *acheiropoieta*, \"not made by human hands\".
Discovered in a cave in the Holy Land by \"Bishop Gualfredo\", who was guided by a revelatory dream, the image was carried first to the Tuscan port of Luni in a boat without sails or crew. But the men of Luni, when they tried to board the boat, found that it retreated miraculously from their grasp. Warned by an angel in a revelatory dream that the Holy Face had arrived in Luni, Johannes, bishop of Lucca, with his clerics and a great crowd of Lucchesi, arrived at Luni, bade a stop to the attempts to retrieve the boat and, by calling upon God, found that the ship came miraculously to Johannes and opened to him its gangplank. When the people saw the Holy Face they wept tears of joy and cried *Gloria in excelsis*.
Once ashore, the legend brings the image to Lucca in a cart pulled by oxen with no driver, in a further miraculous demonstration of the \"rightness\" of its possession by the city of Lucca, and having been deposited in the church of San Frediano, it is miraculously translated to the church of San Martino, which was interpreted as the rationale for choosing this church as the cathedral. Thus the possession of the image by Lucca rather than Luni, and its location in its rightful church, were both justified by legend.
Its popularity was expressed in copies as well as legends, to satisfy the pilgrims who made the cathedral of Lucca the goal of their voyages from all parts of Europe. Like other famous relics or images, such as the Virgin\'s Belt of Prato to this day, it appears to have often only been available to view on certain appointed days in the year, and at least some of the time wore rich textile clothing as well as the wooden carved robe. \"By the face of Lucca\" was the \'customary oath\' of William II of England. The Holy Face appears on medieval Luccan coins. Dante mentions the Holy Face of Lucca in his *Inferno*, Canto XXI, where a demon cries:
: *Qui non ha luogo il Volto Santo!*
: \'\'qui si nuota altrimenti che nel Serchio.
## Legend of the fiddler {#legend_of_the_fiddler}
A legend of a fiddler devotee of the statue receiving a shoe in precious metal, with a number of variants in the story, is first recorded from the 12th century. Typically the statue allows the shoe to drop, or kicks it over to the fiddler (despite, in some versions, a nail through it). The fiddler may be a poor pilgrim, or a devotee who is rewarded for frequently playing in front of the statue; or he may only take up the fiddle after his good luck. The slipper may be filled with gold coins, and the slipper may be returned by the fiddler and the gift repeated. The fiddler may be tried for theft of the slipper, but escape condemnation. The legend also became part of the cult of Wilgefortis, the alter ego of the Holy Face.
Images showing the legend normally feature the fiddler playing below the statue, which is placed (as apparently in reality) just over an altar. The statue seems to be wearing actual clothes---like other much venerated statues, it seems to have been dressed in \"festive clothes\", at least some of the time. On the altar are the slipper, and a chalice below one of the statue\'s feet. This also reflects the medieval arrangement, where a fixture shaped like a chalice was placed to receive offerings, with a tube that carried the offerings down to a strongbox below the altar.
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# Holy Face of Lucca
## Wilgefortis
At the end of the fourteenth century, such a Holy Face inspired miracles and veneration in the Low Countries, Bavaria and the Tyrol, though its connection with Lucca had been forgotten. The long robe worn by the statue appeared to signify that the figure was of a woman. To account for the beard, a legend developed of a young noblewoman who miraculously grew a beard in order to maintain her virginity. Her father, often said to be the king of Portugal, promised her in marriage to another pagan king. Wilgefortis, who had taken a vow of perpetual virginity, prayed to be made repulsive to her future husband. As a result, she grew a long, flowing beard. In a rage, her father had her crucified. Wilgefortis became a popular figure in folk Catholicism. As a result, she assumed various local names including Kümmernis in Germany or Sainte Débarras in France, and was duly entered in the Martyrologium Romanum in 1583, retaining a devoted following as late as the nineteenth century
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# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
*The following is a list of players, both past and current, who appeared on the roster for the **Toronto Raptors** NBA franchise.*
\_\_NOTOC\_\_ `{{compact ToC|top=yes|num=yes|refs=yes}}`{=mediawiki}
## Players
*Note: Statistics are correct through the end of the `{{nbay|2023}}`{=mediawiki} season.*
--- ------- ----- --------------- --- --------- ----- ---------------- --- --------
G Guard G/F Guard-forward F Forward F/C Forward-center C Center
--- ------- ----- --------------- --- --------- ----- ---------------- --- --------
### A to B {#a_to_b}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Precious|Achiuwa}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|A}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Memphis \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 153 \|\| 3,302 \|\| 641 \|\| 176 \|\| 1,365 \|\| 21.6 \|\| 4.2 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 8.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Quincy|Acy}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Baylor \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2013|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 36 \|\| 403 \|\| 92 \|\| 15 \|\| 135 \|\| 11.2 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 3.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Hassan|Adams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 12 \|\| 52 \|\| 7 \|\| 1 \|\| 11 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 0.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Ochai|Agbaji}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 27 \|\| 638 \|\| 51 \|\| 36 \|\| 181 \|\| 23.6 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 6.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alexis|Ajinça}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|FRA}}`{=mediawiki} HTV \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 24 \|\| 265 \|\| 61 \|\| 8 \|\| 114 \|\| 11.0 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 4.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Solomon|Alabi}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Florida State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2011|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 26 \|\| 181 \|\| 61 \|\| 5 \|\| 39 \|\| 7.0 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 1.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rafer|Alston}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Fresno State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2004|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 127 \|\| 3,697 \|\| 386 \|\| 706 \|\| 1,502 \|\| 29.1 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 5.6 \|\| 11.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|David|Andersen}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Virtus Bologna \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 11 \|\| 150 \|\| 34 \|\| 7 \|\| 56 \|\| 13.6 \|\| 3.1 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 5.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alan|Anderson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2012|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 82 \|\| 1,956 \|\| 182 \|\| 129 \|\| 856 \|\| 23.9 \|\| 2.2 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 10.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Willie|Anderson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 49 \|\| 1,564 \|\| 186 \|\| 149 \|\| 606 \|\| 31.9 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 12.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|OG|Anunoby}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Indiana \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 395 \|\| 11,346 \|\| 1,357 \|\| 632 \|\| 4,676 \|\| 28.7 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 11.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rafael|Araújo|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|BYU \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 111 \|\| 1,337 \|\| 329 \|\| 31 \|\| 317 \|\| 12.0 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Robert|Archibald}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Illinois \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 30 \|\| 246 \|\| 50 \|\| 12 \|\| 29 \|\| 8.2 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Carlos|Arroyo}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|FIU \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2001|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 17 \|\| 96 \|\| 12 \|\| 21 \|\| 30 \|\| 5.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 1.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|D. J.|Augustin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 10 \|\| 82 \|\| 4 \|\| 10 \|\| 21 \|\| 8.2 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 2.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mark|Baker|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|B}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Ohio State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 2 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Marcus|Banks}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2010|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 31 \|\| 306 \|\| 27 \|\| 35 \|\| 129 \|\| 9.9 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dalano|Banton}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Nebraska \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2022|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 95 \|\| 975 \|\| 120 \|\| 135 \|\| 347 \|\| 10.3 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 3.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Leandro|Barbosa}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|BRA}}`{=mediawiki} Bauru Basket \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2011|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 100 \|\| 2,341 \|\| 178 \|\| 182 \|\| 1,281 \|\| 23.4 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 12.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Andrea|Bargnani}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Benetton Treviso \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2012|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 433 \|\| 13,130 \|\| 2,095 \|\| 544 \|\| 6,581 \|\| 30.3 \|\| 4.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 15.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FBCEB1\"\|`{{sortname|Scottie|Barnes}}`{=mediawiki}\* \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Florida State \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 211 \|\| 7,389 \|\| 1,048 \|\| 990 \|\| 3,504 \|\| 35.0 \|\| 5.0 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 16.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Andre|Barrett}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Seton Hall \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 17 \|\| 261 \|\| 22 \|\| 50 \|\| 78 \|\| 15.4 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 2.9 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|RJ|Barrett}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Duke \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 32 \|\| 1,072 \|\| 170 \|\| 130 \|\| 696 \|\| 33.5 \|\| 5.3 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 21.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Will|Barton}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Memphis \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 16 \|\| 211 \|\| 21 \|\| 17 \|\| 72 \|\| 13.2 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 4.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Maceo|Baston}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2007|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 31 \|\| 209 \|\| 49 \|\| 3 \|\| 81 \|\| 6.7 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 2.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mengke|Bateer}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|CHN}}`{=mediawiki} Beijing Ducks \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 40 \|\| 8 \|\| 1 \|\| 8 \|\| 5.7 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 1.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lonny|Baxter}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 36 \|\| 487 \|\| 121 \|\| 10 \|\| 150 \|\| 13.5 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jerryd|Bayless}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2011|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 91 \|\| 2,052 \|\| 216 \|\| 356 \|\| 954 \|\| 22.5 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 3.9 \|\| 10.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Aron|Baynes}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Washington State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 53 \|\| 980 \|\| 186 \|\| 47 \|\| 324 \|\| 18.5 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 6.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Marco|Belinelli}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Fortitudo Bologna \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 66 \|\| 1,121 \|\| 95 \|\| 89 \|\| 469 \|\| 17.0 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 7.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|DeAndre'|Bembry}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Saint Joseph\'s \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 51 \|\| 972 \|\| 113 \|\| 107 \|\| 293 \|\| 19.1 \|\| 2.2 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 5.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Benoit|Benjamin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Creighton \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 44 \|\| 9 \|\| 1 \|\| 13 \|\| 11.0 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Anthony|Bennett|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 19 \|\| 84 \|\| 23 \|\| 0 \|\| 28 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 1.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFFF99\"\|`{{sortname|Chauncey|Billups}}`{=mediawiki}\^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Colorado \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 29 \|\| 920 \|\| 77 \|\| 97 \|\| 328 \|\| 31.7 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 11.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Khem|Birch}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2022|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 94 \|\| 1,730 \|\| 221 \|\| 99 \|\| 517 \|\| 18.4 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 5.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Bismack|Biyombo}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Fuenlabrada \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 82 \|\| 1,808 \|\| 655 \|\| 29 \|\| 454 \|\| 22.0 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 5.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Corie|Blount}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Cincinnati \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 16 \|\| 294 \|\| 69 \|\| 10 \|\| 38 \|\| 18.4 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 2.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Muggsy|Bogues}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wake Forest \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2000|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 83 \|\| 1,765 \|\| 138 \|\| 304 \|\| 410 \|\| 21.3 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 3.7 \|\| 4.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Isaac|Bonga}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|GER}}`{=mediawiki} Skyliners Frankfurt \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 15 \|\| 69 \|\| 3 \|\| 4 \|\| 12 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 0.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Matt|Bonner}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Florida \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 160 \|\| 3,263 \|\| 569 \|\| 104 \|\| 1,172 \|\| 20.4 \|\| 3.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 7.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFFF99\"\|`{{sortname|Chris|Bosh}}`{=mediawiki}\^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2009|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 509 \|\| 18,815 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**4,776** \|\| 1,115 \|\| 10,275 \|\| 37.0 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**9.4** \|\| 2.2 \|\| 20.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Chris|Boucher|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oregon \|\| align=\"center\"\|6 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 356 \|\| 6,353 \|\| 1,237 \|\| 168 \|\| 3,110 \|\| 17.8 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 8.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Michael|Bradley|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Villanova \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2001|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2003|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 98 \|\| 1,470 \|\| 444 \|\| 71 \|\| 371 \|\| 15.0 \|\| 4.5 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Primož|Brezec}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|SVN}}`{=mediawiki} Olimpija \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2007|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 110 \|\| 18 \|\| 1 \|\| 48 \|\| 8.5 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 3.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Oshae|Brissett}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Syracuse \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 19 \|\| 135 \|\| 17 \|\| 7 \|\| 37 \|\| 7.1 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 1.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Armoni|Brooks}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Houston \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 154 \|\| 14 \|\| 13 \|\| 34 \|\| 11.8 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 2.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Bruce|Brown|dab=basketball|Bruce Brown Jr.}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Miami (FL) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 34 \|\| 885 \|\| 102 \|\| 92 \|\| 328 \|\| 26.0 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 9.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Damone|Brown}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Syracuse \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 115 \|\| 15 \|\| 3 \|\| 28 \|\| 23.0 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 5.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dee|Brown|dab=basketball, born 1968}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Jacksonville \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1999|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 118 \|\| 2,958 \|\| 247 \|\| 330 \|\| 1,191 \|\| 25.1 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 10.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lorenzo|Brown}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|NC State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2018|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 40 \|\| 351 \|\| 46 \|\| 41 \|\| 87 \|\| 8.8 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 2.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rick|Brunson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Temple \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 3 \|\| 10 \|\| 0 \|\| 2 \|\| 4 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 1.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rasual|Butler}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|La Salle \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 34 \|\| 453 \|\| 66 \|\| 19 \|\| 110 \|\| 13.3 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 3.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dwight|Buycks}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Marquette \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 14 \|\| 146 \|\| 23 \|\| 10 \|\| 43 \|\| 10.4 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.1 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 1,711 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 0 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### C to D {#c_to_d}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Bruno|Caboclo}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|C}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|BRA}}`{=mediawiki} Pinheiros Basquete \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2014|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2017|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 25 \|\| 113 \|\| 15 \|\| 6 \|\| 27 \|\| 4.5 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 1.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|José|Calderón|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Saski Baskonia \|\| align=\"center\"\|8 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2012|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 525 \|\| 14,909 \|\| 1,315 \|\| 3,770 \|\| 5,235 \|\| 28.4 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 7.2 \|\| 10.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Marcus|Camby}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UMass \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 126 \|\| 3,899 \|\| 860 \|\| 208 \|\| 1,700 \|\| 30.9 \|\| 6.8 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 13.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|DeMarre|Carroll}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Missouri \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2016|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 98 \|\| 2,668 \|\| 397 \|\| 101 \|\| 924 \|\| 27.2 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 9.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Anthony|Carter|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Hawaii \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 24 \|\| 209 \|\| 33 \|\| 34 \|\| 47 \|\| 8.7 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFFF99\"\|**`{{sortname|Vince|Carter}}`{=mediawiki}\^ (#15)** \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2004|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 403 \|\| 15,114 \|\| 2,091 \|\| 1,553 \|\| 9,420 \|\| 37.5 \|\| 5.2 \|\| 3.9 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**23.4** \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|D.J.|Carton}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Marquette \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 36 \|\| 2 \|\| 3 \|\| 11 \|\| 9.0 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 2.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Justin|Champagnie}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Pittsburgh \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2022|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 39 \|\| 292 \|\| 38 \|\| 12 \|\| 87 \|\| 7.5 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Chris|Childs|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Boise State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 95 \|\| 2,126 \|\| 218 \|\| 470 \|\| 402 \|\| 22.4 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 4.9 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Doug|Christie}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Pepperdine \|\| align=\"center\"\|5 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1999|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 314 \|\| 10,916 \|\| 1,448 \|\| 1,197 \|\| 4,448 \|\| 34.8 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 14.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Keon|Clark}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 127 \|\| 3,153 \|\| 851 \|\| 126 \|\| 1,328 \|\| 24.8 \|\| 6.7 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 10.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Omar|Cook}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|St. John\'s \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 74 \|\| 7 \|\| 22 \|\| 23 \|\| 14.8 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tyrone|Corbin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|DePaul \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 15 \|\| 117 \|\| 13 \|\| 4 \|\| 20 \|\| 7.8 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 1.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|William|Cunningham|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Temple \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 1 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Earl|Cureton}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Detroit Mercy \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 9 \|\| 46 \|\| 9 \|\| 4 \|\| 7 \|\| 5.1 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 0.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dell|Curry}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Virginia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 194 \|\| 2,937 \|\| 266 \|\| 225 \|\| 1,296 \|\| 15.1 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 6.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Michael|Curry|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Southern \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 70 \|\| 1,229 \|\| 87 \|\| 53 \|\| 204 \|\| 17.6 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 2.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lloyd|Daniels}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|D}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Mt. SAC \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 82 \|\| 7 \|\| 4 \|\| 34 \|\| 13.7 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 5.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Kornél|Dávid}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|HUN}}`{=mediawiki} Budapesti Honvéd \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 17 \|\| 140 \|\| 33 \|\| 4 \|\| 42 \|\| 8.2 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 2.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|Antonio|Davis}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UTEP \|\| align=\"center\"\|6 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2003|end}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2005|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 310 \|\| 10,809 \|\| 2,839 \|\| 518 \|\| 3,994 \|\| 34.9 \|\| 9.2 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 12.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ed|Davis|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2012|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 176 \|\| 4,223 \|\| 1,200 \|\| 155 \|\| 1,354 \|\| 24.0 \|\| 6.8 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 7.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Hubert|Davis}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 36 \|\| 623 \|\| 40 \|\| 34 \|\| 181 \|\| 17.3 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 5.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Terence|Davis}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Ole Miss \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 106 \|\| 1,702 \|\| 244 \|\| 152 \|\| 777 \|\| 16.1 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 7.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Austin|Daye}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Gonzaga \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 8 \|\| 33 \|\| 7 \|\| 2 \|\| 8 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Nando|de Colo}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|FRA}}`{=mediawiki} Cholet Basket \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 21 \|\| 193 \|\| 28 \|\| 33 \|\| 65 \|\| 9.2 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 3.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sam|Dekker}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wisconsin \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 1 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Carlos|Delfino}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Fortitudo Bologna \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2007|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 82 \|\| 1,928 \|\| 359 \|\| 145 \|\| 738 \|\| 23.5 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 9.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Justin|Dentmon}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Washington \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 72 \|\| 7 \|\| 9 \|\| 22 \|\| 18.0 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 5.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|DeMar|DeRozan}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|USC \|\| align=\"center\" bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**9** \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2017|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**675** \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**22,986** \|\| 2,739 \|\| 2,078 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**13,296** \|\| 34.1 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 3.1 \|\| 19.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Derrick|Dial}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Eastern Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2001|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 50 \|\| 11 \|\| 4 \|\| 28 \|\| 7.1 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Gradey|Dick}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 60 \|\| 1,268 \|\| 105 \|\| 68 \|\| 510 \|\| 21.1 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 8.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Juan|Dixon}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2007|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 62 \|\| 1,107 \|\| 120 \|\| 106 \|\| 441 \|\| 17.9 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 7.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Joey|Dorsey}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Memphis \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 43 \|\| 522 \|\| 190 \|\| 27 \|\| 135 \|\| 12.1 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 3.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Quincy|Douby}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Rutgers \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 73 \|\| 7 \|\| 12 \|\| 31 \|\| 10.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 4.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jeff|Dowtin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Rhode Island \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 25 \|\| 259 \|\| 17 \|\| 31 \|\| 61 \|\| 10.4 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 2.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Goran|Dragić}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|SVN}}`{=mediawiki} Olimpija \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 90 \|\| 12 \|\| 9 \|\| 40 \|\| 18.0 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 8.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ronald|Dupree}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|LSU \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 3 \|\| 13 \|\| 3 \|\| 1 \|\| 2 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 0.7 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 1,155 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 1 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### E to G {#e_to_g}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Acie|Earl}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|E}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Iowa \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1996|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 80 \|\| 1,112 \|\| 214 \|\| 45 \|\| 478 \|\| 13.9 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 6.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Henry|Ellenson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Marquette \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 38 \|\| 9 \|\| 5 \|\| 15 \|\| 19.0 \|\| 4.5 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 7.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Vincenzo|Esposito}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} JuveCaserta Basket \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 30 \|\| 282 \|\| 16 \|\| 23 \|\| 116 \|\| 9.4 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 3.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Reggie|Evans}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Iowa \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2010|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 58 \|\| 1,109 \|\| 450 \|\| 46 \|\| 227 \|\| 19.1 \|\| 7.8 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 3.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Landry|Fields}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|F}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Stanford \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2014|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 107 \|\| 1,575 \|\| 293 \|\| 95 \|\| 354 \|\| 14.7 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Malachi|Flynn}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Washington State \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 175 \|\| 2,630 \|\| 272 \|\| 350 \|\| 945 \|\| 15.0 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 5.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Gary|Forbes}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UMass \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 48 \|\| 713 \|\| 102 \|\| 54 \|\| 319 \|\| 14.9 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 6.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|T. J.|Ford}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2007|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 126 \|\| 3,442 \|\| 336 \|\| 908 \|\| 1,664 \|\| 27.3 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 7.2 \|\| 13.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Greg|Foster|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UTEP \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 29 \|\| 539 \|\| 102 \|\| 13 \|\| 121 \|\| 18.6 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Javon|Freeman-Liberty}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|DePaul \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 22 \|\| 403 \|\| 54 \|\| 40 \|\| 153 \|\| 18.3 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 7.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sundiata|Gaines}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|G}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 90 \|\| 8 \|\| 11 \|\| 35 \|\| 15.0 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 5.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jorge|Garbajosa}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Saski Baskonia \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2007|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 74 \|\| 1,983 \|\| 345 \|\| 128 \|\| 589 \|\| 26.8 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 8.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Chris|Garner|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Memphis \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 38 \|\| 293 \|\| 24 \|\| 45 \|\| 53 \|\| 7.7 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 1.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Marc|Gasol}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} CB Sant Josep \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2019|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 70 \|\| 1,809 \|\| 416 \|\| 248 \|\| 568 \|\| 25.8 \|\| 5.9 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 8.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rudy|Gay}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UConn \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2013|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 51 \|\| 1,785 \|\| 345 \|\| 134 \|\| 993 \|\| 35.0 \|\| 6.8 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 19.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Freddie|Gillespie}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Baylor \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 20 \|\| 392 \|\| 55 \|\| 9 \|\| 111 \|\| 19.6 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 5.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dion|Glover}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 14 \|\| 178 \|\| 29 \|\| 15 \|\| 64 \|\| 12.7 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Joey|Graham}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oklahoma State \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2008|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 275 \|\| 4,772 \|\| 851 \|\| 167 \|\| 1,771 \|\| 17.4 \|\| 3.1 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 6.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Aaron|Gray}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Pittsburgh \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2013|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 95 \|\| 1,346 \|\| 422 \|\| 63 \|\| 315 \|\| 14.2 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Danny|Green|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 80 \|\| 2,216 \|\| 317 \|\| 126 \|\| 821 \|\| 27.7 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 10.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Mouhamadou|Gueye}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Pittsburgh \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 11 \|\| 120 \|\| 11 \|\| 5 \|\| 26 \|\| 10.9 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 2.4 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 657 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 2 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### H to J {#h_to_j}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Zendon|Hamilton}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|H}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|St. John\'s \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 3 \|\| 12 \|\| 4 \|\| 0 \|\| 6 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tyler|Hansbrough}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2014|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 138 \|\| 2,036 \|\| 552 \|\| 38 \|\| 582 \|\| 14.8 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ron|Harper Jr.||Harper, Ron Jr.}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Rutgers \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 10 \|\| 52 \|\| 4 \|\| 5 \|\| 20 \|\| 5.2 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jalen|Harris}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Nevada \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 172 \|\| 15 \|\| 17 \|\| 96 \|\| 13.2 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 7.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Chuck|Hayes}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kentucky \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2014|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 74 \|\| 830 \|\| 214 \|\| 49 \|\| 149 \|\| 11.2 \|\| 2.9 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Nigel|Hayes}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wisconsin \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 6 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 6 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 3.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dewan|Hernandez}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Miami (FL) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 28 \|\| 9 \|\| 3 \|\| 14 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 2.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Juancho|Hernangómez}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Estudiantes \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 42 \|\| 614 \|\| 96 \|\| 25 \|\| 122 \|\| 14.6 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 2.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rondae|Hollis-Jefferson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 60 \|\| 1,122 \|\| 173 \|\| 106 \|\| 418 \|\| 18.7 \|\| 2.9 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 7.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rodney|Hood}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Duke \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 17 \|\| 216 \|\| 25 \|\| 6 \|\| 66 \|\| 12.7 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 3.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Nate|Huffman}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Central Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 76 \|\| 23 \|\| 5 \|\| 23 \|\| 10.9 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Kris|Humphries}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Minnesota \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2008|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 159 \|\| 1,860 \|\| 516 \|\| 56 \|\| 738 \|\| 11.7 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lindsey|Hunter}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Jackson State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 29 \|\| 673 \|\| 59 \|\| 71 \|\| 280 \|\| 23.2 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 9.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Serge|Ibaka}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|I}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} CB L\'Hospitalet \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2016|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2019|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 228 \|\| 6,300 \|\| 1,573 \|\| 253 \|\| 3,243 \|\| 27.6 \|\| 6.9 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 14.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jarrett|Jack}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|J}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2010|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 95 \|\| 2,590 \|\| 264 \|\| 472 \|\| 1,071 \|\| 27.3 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 5.0 \|\| 11.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jermaine|Jackson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Detroit Mercy \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2001|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2002|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 48 \|\| 566 \|\| 52 \|\| 96 \|\| 123 \|\| 11.8 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 2.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Luke|Jackson|dab=basketball, born 1981}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oregon \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 10 \|\| 122 \|\| 9 \|\| 9 \|\| 45 \|\| 12.2 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 4.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mark|Jackson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|St. John\'s \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 54 \|\| 1,802 \|\| 185 \|\| 498 \|\| 461 \|\| 33.4 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 9.2 \|\| 8.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mike|James|dab=basketball, born 1975}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Duquesne \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 79 \|\| 2,925 \|\| 262 \|\| 460 \|\| 1,604 \|\| 37.0 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 5.8 \|\| 20.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Nathan|Jawai}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Midland College \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 19 \|\| 2 \|\| 0 \|\| 2 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Chris|Jefferies}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Fresno State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2003|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 53 \|\| 674 \|\| 60 \|\| 23 \|\| 205 \|\| 12.7 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 3.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Amir|Johnson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Westchester HS (CA) \|\| align=\"center\"\|6 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2014|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 451 \|\| 11,377 \|\| 2,836 \|\| 562 \|\| 3,957 \|\| 25.2 \|\| 6.3 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 8.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|David|Johnson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Louisville \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 2 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|James|Johnson|dab=basketball, born 1987}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wake Forest \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2011|end}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2014|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2015|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 214 \|\| 4,556 \|\| 793 \|\| 359 \|\| 1,636 \|\| 21.3 \|\| 3.7 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 7.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Linton|Johnson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Tulane \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2007|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 10 \|\| 1 \|\| 1 \|\| 6 \|\| 5.0 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 3.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Stanley|Johnson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 86 \|\| 1,156 \|\| 154 \|\| 109 \|\| 327 \|\| 13.4 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 3.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Trey|Johnson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Jackson State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 81 \|\| 7 \|\| 11 \|\| 28 \|\| 11.6 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Fred|Jones|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oregon \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 39 \|\| 870 \|\| 82 \|\| 55 \|\| 297 \|\| 22.3 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 7.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Popeye|Jones}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Murray State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 93 \|\| 2,773 \|\| 782 \|\| 102 \|\| 736 \|\| 29.8 \|\| 8.4 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 7.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Cory|Joseph}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2016|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 160 \|\| 4,049 \|\| 445 \|\| 515 \|\| 1,417 \|\| 25.3 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 8.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Garth|Joseph}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Saint Rose \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 8 \|\| 2 \|\| 1 \|\| 2 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 1.0 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 972 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 3 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### K to M {#k_to_m}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jason|Kapono}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|K}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2007|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2008|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 161 \|\| 3,361 \|\| 283 \|\| 170 \|\| 1,234 \|\| 20.9 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 7.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tim|Kempton}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Notre Dame \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 32 \|\| 5 \|\| 2 \|\| 4 \|\| 6.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 0.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jimmy|King}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 62 \|\| 868 \|\| 110 \|\| 88 \|\| 279 \|\| 14.0 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 4.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Linas|Kleiza}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Missouri \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2012|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 108 \|\| 2,465 \|\| 428 \|\| 102 \|\| 1,057 \|\| 22.8 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 9.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Negele|Knight}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Dayton \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 56 \|\| 6 \|\| 8 \|\| 8 \|\| 9.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Christian|Koloko}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 58 \|\| 802 \|\| 87 \|\| 31 \|\| 182 \|\| 13.8 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 3.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Antonio|Lang}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|L}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Duke \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 32 \|\| 5 \|\| 1 \|\| 3 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 0.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alex|Len}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 76 \|\| 11 \|\| 3 \|\| 16 \|\| 10.9 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 2.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Voshon|Lenard}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Minnesota \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 63 \|\| 1,929 \|\| 212 \|\| 144 \|\| 898 \|\| 30.6 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 14.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|Kawhi|Leonard}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|San Diego State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 60 \|\| 2,040 \|\| 439 \|\| 199 \|\| 1,596 \|\| 34.0 \|\| 7.3 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 26.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Martin|Lewis|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Seward County CC \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1996|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 25 \|\| 239 \|\| 35 \|\| 7 \|\| 89 \|\| 9.6 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 3.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Kira|Lewis Jr.||Lewis, Kira Jr.}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Alabama \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 2 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jeremy|Lin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Harvard \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 23 \|\| 433 \|\| 60 \|\| 50 \|\| 161 \|\| 18.8 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 2.2 \|\| 7.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Brad|Lohaus}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Iowa \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 45 \|\| 7 \|\| 1 \|\| 10 \|\| 7.5 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 1.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Art|Long}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Cincinnati \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 80 \|\| 20 \|\| 4 \|\| 20 \|\| 11.4 \|\| 2.9 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 2.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Long|dab=basketball player}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Detroit Mercy \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 32 \|\| 370 \|\| 40 \|\| 21 \|\| 129 \|\| 11.6 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|Kyle|Lowry}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Villanova \|\| align=\"center\" bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**9** \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 601 \|\| 20,813 \|\| 2,887 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**4,277** \|\| 10,540 \|\| 34.6 \|\| 4.8 \|\| 7.1 \|\| 17.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jordan|Loyd}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Indianapolis \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 12 \|\| 55 \|\| 9 \|\| 6 \|\| 29 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 2.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Lucas III||Lucas, John III}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oklahoma State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 63 \|\| 827 \|\| 65 \|\| 105 \|\| 333 \|\| 13.1 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 5.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jamaal|Magloire}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|M}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kentucky \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 34 \|\| 374 \|\| 113 \|\| 6 \|\| 41 \|\| 11.0 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 1.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Shawn|Marion}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 27 \|\| 954 \|\| 224 \|\| 62 \|\| 386 \|\| 35.3 \|\| 8.3 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 14.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sean|Marks}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|California \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1999|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 40 \|\| 3 \|\| 0 \|\| 19 \|\| 3.1 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 1.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Donyell|Marshall}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UConn \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2004|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 131 \|\| 4,225 \|\| 1,137 \|\| 175 \|\| 1,813 \|\| 32.3 \|\| 8.7 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 13.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Darrick|Martin}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2007|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 88 \|\| 700 \|\| 39 \|\| 121 \|\| 223 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 2.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Roger|Mason Jr.||Mason, Roger Jr.}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Virginia \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 23 \|\| 285 \|\| 28 \|\| 23 \|\| 93 \|\| 12.4 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tony|Massenburg}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 24 \|\| 659 \|\| 166 \|\| 18 \|\| 243 \|\| 27.5 \|\| 6.9 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 10.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Bob|McCann}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Morehead State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 5 \|\| 1 \|\| 0 \|\| 0 \|\| 5.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Patrick|McCaw}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|UNLV \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 68 \|\| 1,285 \|\| 114 \|\| 110 \|\| 244 \|\| 18.9 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 3.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jelani|McCoy}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2002|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 67 \|\| 1,367 \|\| 355 \|\| 43 \|\| 457 \|\| 20.4 \|\| 5.3 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 6.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Jalen|McDaniels}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|San Diego State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 50 \|\| 538 \|\| 61 \|\| 37 \|\| 169 \|\| 10.8 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFFF99\"\|`{{sortname|Tracy|McGrady}}`{=mediawiki}\^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|MZCA (NC) \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1999|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 192 \|\| 4,747 \|\| 1,048 \|\| 474 \|\| 2,122 \|\| 24.7 \|\| 5.5 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 11.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dominic|McGuire}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Fresno State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 15 \|\| 230 \|\| 48 \|\| 10 \|\| 32 \|\| 15.3 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 2.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alfonzo|McKinnie}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Green Bay \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 14 \|\| 53 \|\| 7 \|\| 1 \|\| 21 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 1.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jodie|Meeks}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kentucky \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 8 \|\| 104 \|\| 12 \|\| 8 \|\| 51 \|\| 13.0 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 6.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Pops|Mensah-Bonsu}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|George Washington \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2009|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 35 \|\| 370 \|\| 134 \|\| 8 \|\| 130 \|\| 10.6 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 3.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|C. J.|Miles}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Skyline HS (TX) \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2018|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 110 \|\| 1,899 \|\| 220 \|\| 77 \|\| 917 \|\| 17.3 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 8.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Malcolm|Miller|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Holy Cross \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2019|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 53 \|\| 355 \|\| 34 \|\| 15 \|\| 108 \|\| 6.7 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Oliver|Miller}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arkansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 159 \|\| 4,460 \|\| 1,035 \|\| 444 \|\| 1,497 \|\| 28.1 \|\| 6.5 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 9.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jérôme|Moïso}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2004|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 43 \|\| 486 \|\| 136 \|\| 8 \|\| 116 \|\| 11.3 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 2.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Greg|Monroe}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgetown \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 38 \|\| 423 \|\| 156 \|\| 16 \|\| 183 \|\| 11.1 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 4.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Eric|Montross}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|North Carolina \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 61 \|\| 736 \|\| 169 \|\| 20 \|\| 129 \|\| 12.1 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jamario|Moon}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Meridian CC \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2007|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2008|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 132 \|\| 3,545 \|\| 733 \|\| 160 \|\| 1,054 \|\| 26.9 \|\| 5.6 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 8.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Eric|Moreland}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oregon State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2018|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 38 \|\| 17 \|\| 4 \|\| 7 \|\| 9.5 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Juwan|Morgan}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Indiana \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 27 \|\| 2 \|\| 1 \|\| 5 \|\| 27.0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 5.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lamond|Murray}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|California \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2004|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 95 \|\| 1,436 \|\| 254 \|\| 75 \|\| 568 \|\| 15.1 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 6.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tracy|Murray}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 160 \|\| 3,384 \|\| 464 \|\| 164 \|\| 1,759 \|\| 21.2 \|\| 2.9 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 11.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Svi|Mykhailiuk}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 56 \|\| 716 \|\| 72 \|\| 45 \|\| 255 \|\| 12.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 1,460 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 4 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### N to P {#n_to_p}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mamadou|N'Diaye|dab=basketball, born 1975}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|N}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Auburn \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2002|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 30 \|\| 420 \|\| 95 \|\| 7 \|\| 144 \|\| 14.0 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 4.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rasho|Nesterović}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Virtus Bologna \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2007|end}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2009|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 193 \|\| 3,575 \|\| 791 \|\| 181 \|\| 1,209 \|\| 18.5 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 6.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lucas|Nogueira}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Estudiantes \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2014|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2017|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 141 \|\| 1,754 \|\| 388 \|\| 72 \|\| 446 \|\| 12.4 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 3.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Steve|Novak}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Marquette \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 54 \|\| 540 \|\| 58 \|\| 13 \|\| 178 \|\| 10.0 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Markquis|Nowell}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kansas State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 4 \|\| 0 \|\| 2 \|\| 2 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Jordan|Nwora}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Louisville \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 34 \|\| 529 \|\| 96 \|\| 44 \|\| 270 \|\| 15.6 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 7.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Charles|Oakley}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|O}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Virginia Union \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2000|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 208 \|\| 6,831 \|\| 1,655 \|\| 685 \|\| 1,644 \|\| 32.8 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 7.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Patrick|O'Bryant||OBryant, Patrick}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Bradley \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2009|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 24 \|\| 198 \|\| 43 \|\| 4 \|\| 80 \|\| 8.3 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFFF99\"\|`{{sortname|Hakeem|Olajuwon}}`{=mediawiki}\^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Houston \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2001|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 61 \|\| 1,378 \|\| 366 \|\| 66 \|\| 435 \|\| 22.6 \|\| 6.0 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 7.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jimmy|Oliver|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Purdue \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 43 \|\| 5 \|\| 1 \|\| 11 \|\| 10.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Kelly|Olynyk}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Gonzaga \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 28 \|\| 740 \|\| 112 \|\| 128 \|\| 356 \|\| 26.4 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 12.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jermaine|O'Neal||ONeal, Jermaine}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Eau Claire HS (SC) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 41 \|\| 1,216 \|\| 288 \|\| 67 \|\| 555 \|\| 29.7 \|\| 7.0 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 13.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dan|O'Sullivan|dab=basketball||OSullivan, Dan}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Fordham \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 139 \|\| 32 \|\| 2 \|\| 33 \|\| 27.8 \|\| 6.4 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 6.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Daniel|Oturu}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Minnesota \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 3 \|\| 27 \|\| 4 \|\| 0 \|\| 9 \|\| 9.0 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 3.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Milt|Palacio}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|P}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Colorado State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2004|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 139 \|\| 2,744 \|\| 236 \|\| 463 \|\| 724 \|\| 19.7 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 5.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jannero|Pargo}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arkansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 5 \|\| 71 \|\| 4 \|\| 12 \|\| 18 \|\| 14.2 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 3.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Anthony|Parker}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Bradley \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2008|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 235 \|\| 7,708 \|\| 934 \|\| 605 \|\| 2,785 \|\| 32.8 \|\| 4.0 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 11.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Patrick|Patterson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kentucky \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2016|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 273 \|\| 6,893 \|\| 1,311 \|\| 388 \|\| 2,073 \|\| 25.2 \|\| 4.8 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 7.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Morris|Peterson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan State \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2006|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 542 \|\| 16,059 \|\| 2,064 \|\| 965 \|\| 6,498 \|\| 29.6 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 1.8 \|\| 12.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Mickaël|Piétrus}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|FRA}}`{=mediawiki} Élan Béarnais \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 19 \|\| 386 \|\| 36 \|\| 9 \|\| 100 \|\| 20.3 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 5.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ed|Pinckney}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Villanova \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 47 \|\| 1,031 \|\| 282 \|\| 50 \|\| 328 \|\| 21.9 \|\| 6.0 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 7.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Jakob|Poeltl|Jakob Pöltl}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Utah \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2016|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2017|end}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2022|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 212 \|\| 4,176 \|\| 994 \|\| 252 \|\| 1,628 \|\| 19.7 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 7.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Shamorie|Ponds}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|St. John\'s \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 11 \|\| 1 \|\| 2 \|\| 9 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 2.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jontay|Porter}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Missouri \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 26 \|\| 360 \|\| 56 \|\| 60 \|\| 115 \|\| 13.8 \|\| 2.2 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 4.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Otto|Porter Jr.||Porter, Otto Jr.}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgetown \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 23 \|\| 320 \|\| 36 \|\| 16 \|\| 83 \|\| 13.9 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 3.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Norman|Powell}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|UCLA \|\| align=\"center\"\|6 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 349 \|\| 7,037 \|\| 809 \|\| 477 \|\| 3,463 \|\| 20.2 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 9.9 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 821 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 5 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### Q to S {#q_to_s}
\|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Immanuel|Quickley}}`{=mediawiki}^x^`{{anchor|Q}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kentucky \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 38 \|\| 1,265 \|\| 170 \|\| 257 \|\| 706 \|\| 33.3 \|\| 4.5 \|\| 6.8 \|\| 18.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Aleksandar|Radojević}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|R}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Barton CC \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 3 \|\| 24 \|\| 8 \|\| 1 \|\| 7 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jahmi'us|Ramsey}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 121 \|\| 18 \|\| 8 \|\| 47 \|\| 17.3 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 6.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Shawn|Respert}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 74 \|\| 1,108 \|\| 105 \|\| 76 \|\| 409 \|\| 15.0 \|\| 1.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 5.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Malachi|Richardson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Syracuse \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2017|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2018|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 23 \|\| 108 \|\| 14 \|\| 0 \|\| 32 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 1.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alvin|Robertson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arkansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 77 \|\| 2,478 \|\| 342 \|\| 323 \|\| 718 \|\| 32.2 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 4.2 \|\| 9.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Carlos|Rogers|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Tennessee State \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 130 \|\| 2,791 \|\| 539 \|\| 88 \|\| 1,089 \|\| 21.5 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 8.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Roy|Rogers|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Alabama \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 6 \|\| 69 \|\| 12 \|\| 1 \|\| 13 \|\| 11.5 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 2.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jalen|Rose}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 177 \|\| 5,914 \|\| 607 \|\| 595 \|\| 2,862 \|\| 33.4 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 3.4 \|\| 16.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Terrence|Ross}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Washington \|\| align=\"center\"\|5 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2016|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 363 \|\| 8,444 \|\| 945 \|\| 319 \|\| 3,432 \|\| 23.3 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 9.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Clifford|Rozier}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Louisville \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 41 \|\| 732 \|\| 234 \|\| 31 \|\| 189 \|\| 17.9 \|\| 5.7 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Salley}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|S}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 25 \|\| 482 \|\| 97 \|\| 39 \|\| 149 \|\| 19.3 \|\| 3.9 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 6.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Salmons}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Miami (FL) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 60 \|\| 1,281 \|\| 117 \|\| 103 \|\| 298 \|\| 21.4 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 5.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dennis|Schröder}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|GER}}`{=mediawiki} Löwen Braunschweig \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 51 \|\| 1,559 \|\| 118 \|\| 313 \|\| 698 \|\| 30.6 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 6.1 \|\| 13.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Luis|Scola}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ESP}}`{=mediawiki} Saski Baskonia \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 76 \|\| 1,636 \|\| 360 \|\| 66 \|\| 664 \|\| 21.5 \|\| 4.7 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 8.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|Pascal|Siakam}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|New Mexico State \|\| align=\"center\"\|8 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2016|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 510 \|\| 15,786 \|\| 2,852 \|\| 1,846 \|\| 8,875 \|\| 31.0 \|\| 5.6 \|\| 3.6 \|\| 17.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Kobi|Simmons}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 67 \|\| 6 \|\| 12 \|\| 20 \|\| 16.8 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 5.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Reggie|Slater}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wyoming \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1998|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 134 \|\| 2,331 \|\| 470 \|\| 100 \|\| 943 \|\| 17.4 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 7.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Uroš|Slokar}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|ITA}}`{=mediawiki} Benetton Treviso \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 20 \|\| 72 \|\| 14 \|\| 1 \|\| 38 \|\| 3.6 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 1.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Will|Solomon}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Clemson \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 39 \|\| 544 \|\| 43 \|\| 123 \|\| 193 \|\| 13.9 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 4.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Pape|Sow}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Cal State Fullerton \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2006|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 76 \|\| 879 \|\| 214 \|\| 12 \|\| 219 \|\| 11.6 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 2.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Michael|Stewart|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|California \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2001|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 121 \|\| 999 \|\| 247 \|\| 16 \|\| 174 \|\| 8.3 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 1.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Greg|Stiemsma}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wisconsin \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2014|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 17 \|\| 66 \|\| 15 \|\| 3 \|\| 14 \|\| 3.9 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 0.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Peja|Stojaković}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|GRE}}`{=mediawiki} PAOK \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 22 \|\| 3 \|\| 1 \|\| 20 \|\| 11.0 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 10.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ed|Stokes}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 17 \|\| 4 \|\| 1 \|\| 3 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 0.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Julyan|Stone}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|UTEP \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 21 \|\| 120 \|\| 20 \|\| 12 \|\| 18 \|\| 5.7 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 0.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Damon|Stoudamire}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 200 \|\| 8,209 \|\| 828 \|\| 1,761 \|\| 3,917 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**41.0** \|\| 4.1 \|\| bgcolor=\"#CFECEC\"\|**8.8** \|\| 19.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Rod|Strickland}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|DePaul \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2003|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 15 \|\| 282 \|\| 37 \|\| 59 \|\| 71 \|\| 18.8 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 3.9 \|\| 4.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jared|Sullinger}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Ohio State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2016|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 11 \|\| 118 \|\| 27 \|\| 3 \|\| 37 \|\| 10.7 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 3.4 \|\| align=center\| \|}
| 903 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 6 |
10,015,132 |
# Toronto Raptors all-time roster
## Players
### T to Y {#t_to_y}
\|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Žan|Tabak}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|T}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|CRO}}`{=mediawiki} Split \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 119 \|\| 2,302 \|\| 523 \|\| 112 \|\| 846 \|\| 19.3 \|\| 4.4 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 7.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sebastian|Telfair}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Abraham Lincoln HS (NY) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 185 \|\| 16 \|\| 39 \|\| 56 \|\| 14.2 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 4.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Garrett|Temple}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|LSU \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 27 \|\| 289 \|\| 27 \|\| 28 \|\| 88 \|\| 10.7 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Thomas|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Minnesota \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1999|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 115 \|\| 1,237 \|\| 245 \|\| 28 \|\| 326 \|\| 10.8 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 2.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Matt|Thomas|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Iowa State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 67 \|\| 632 \|\| 70 \|\| 31 \|\| 273 \|\| 9.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 4.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jason|Thompson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Rider \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 19 \|\| 292 \|\| 80 \|\| 10 \|\| 87 \|\| 15.4 \|\| 4.2 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 4.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Gary|Trent}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Ohio \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 355 \|\| 104 \|\| 14 \|\| 159 \|\| 27.3 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 12.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Gary|Trent Jr.||Trent, Gary Jr.}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Duke \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 224 \|\| 7,100 \|\| 526 \|\| 388 \|\| 3,680 \|\| 31.7 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 16.4 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|P. J.|Tucker}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2006|full=y}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2016|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 41 \|\| 692 \|\| 152 \|\| 29 \|\| 169 \|\| 16.9 \|\| 3.7 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 4.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Hedo|Türkoğlu}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|TUR}}`{=mediawiki} Anadolu Efes \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 74 \|\| 2,272 \|\| 343 \|\| 304 \|\| 835 \|\| 30.7 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 4.1 \|\| 11.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Roko|Ukić}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|U}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|CRO}}`{=mediawiki} Split \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 72 \|\| 890 \|\| 75 \|\| 153 \|\| 301 \|\| 12.4 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 4.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Ben|Uzoh}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Tulsa \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2011|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 16 \|\| 357 \|\| 63 \|\| 59 \|\| 77 \|\| 22.3 \|\| 3.9 \|\| 3.7 \|\| 4.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jonas|Valančiūnas}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|V}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|`{{flagicon|LTU}}`{=mediawiki} Rytas \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2012|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2018|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 470 \|\| 11,774 \|\| 3,961 \|\| 350 \|\| 5,524 \|\| 25.1 \|\| 8.4 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 11.8 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#FFCC00\"\|`{{sortname|Fred|VanVleet}}`{=mediawiki}^+^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Wichita State \|\| align=\"center\"\|7 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2016|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2022|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 417 \|\| 12,398 \|\| 1,261 \|\| 2,199 \|\| 6,090 \|\| 29.7 \|\| 3.0 \|\| 5.3 \|\| 14.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Greivis|Vásquez}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2013|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2014|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 143 \|\| 3,305 \|\| 355 \|\| 530 \|\| 1,357 \|\| 23.1 \|\| 2.5 \|\| 3.7 \|\| 9.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Charlie|Villanueva}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|UConn \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2005|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 81 \|\| 2,361 \|\| 521 \|\| 88 \|\| 1,053 \|\| 29.1 \|\| 6.4 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 13.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jake|Voskuhl}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|UConn \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2008|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 38 \|\| 240 \|\| 59 \|\| 8 \|\| 35 \|\| 6.3 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 0.2 \|\| 0.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|John|Wallace|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|W}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Syracuse \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1998|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 130 \|\| 3,173 \|\| 544 \|\| 156 \|\| 1,558 \|\| 24.4 \|\| 4.2 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 12.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Yuta|Watanabe}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|George Washington \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2020|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2021|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 88 \|\| 1,168 \|\| 197 \|\| 61 \|\| 381 \|\| 13.3 \|\| 2.2 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 4.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Tremont|Waters}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|LSU \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 42 \|\| 4 \|\| 7 \|\| 8 \|\| 21.0 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 3.5 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Paul|Watson|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Fresno State \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2019|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2020|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 35 \|\| 367 \|\| 54 \|\| 22 \|\| 142 \|\| 10.5 \|\| 1.5 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 4.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sonny|Weems}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arkansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2010|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 128 \|\| 2,781 \|\| 345 \|\| 205 \|\| 1,063 \|\| 21.7 \|\| 2.7 \|\| 1.6 \|\| 8.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Donald|Whiteside}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Northern Illinois \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 27 \|\| 259 \|\| 12 \|\| 36 \|\| 59 \|\| 9.6 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 2.2 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Dwayne|Whitfield}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Jackson State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 8 \|\| 122 \|\| 25 \|\| 2 \|\| 40 \|\| 15.3 \|\| 3.1 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 5.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Joe|Wieskamp}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Iowa \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2022|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 9 \|\| 50 \|\| 4 \|\| 3 \|\| 9 \|\| 5.6 \|\| 0.4 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 1.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Aaron|Williams|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Xavier \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 37 \|\| 264 \|\| 44 \|\| 3 \|\| 61 \|\| 7.1 \|\| 1.2 \|\| 0.1 \|\| 1.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Alvin|Williams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Villanova \|\| align=\"center\"\|8 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1997|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2003|end}}`{=mediawiki}\
`{{nbay|2005|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 417 \|\| 11,736 \|\| 1,079 \|\| 1,791 \|\| 3,876 \|\| 28.1 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 4.3 \|\| 9.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Eric|Williams|dab=basketball, born 1972}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Providence \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 62 \|\| 935 \|\| 127 \|\| 65 \|\| 250 \|\| 15.1 \|\| 2.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| 4.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Herb|Williams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Ohio State \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 1 \|\| 31 \|\| 8 \|\| 0 \|\| 6 \|\| 31.0 \|\| 8.0 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 6.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Jerome|Williams|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgetown \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2003|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 180 \|\| 4,772 \|\| 1,268 \|\| 194 \|\| 1,417 \|\| 26.5 \|\| 7.0 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 7.9 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Lou|Williams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|South Gwinnett HS (GA) \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2014|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 80 \|\| 2,016 \|\| 151 \|\| 164 \|\| 1,242 \|\| 25.2 \|\| 1.9 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 15.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\" bgcolor=\"#CCFFCC\"\|`{{sortname|Malik|Williams}}`{=mediawiki}^x^ \|\| align=\"center\"\|C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Louisville \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2023|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 7 \|\| 107 \|\| 23 \|\| 2 \|\| 19 \|\| 15.3 \|\| 3.3 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 2.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Micheal|Williams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Baylor \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 2 \|\| 15 \|\| 1 \|\| 0 \|\| 2 \|\| 7.5 \|\| 0.5 \|\| 0.0 \|\| 1.0 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Walt|Williams}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Maryland \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1996|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 101 \|\| 3,523 \|\| 485 \|\| 266 \|\| 1,547 \|\| 34.9 \|\| 4.8 \|\| 2.6 \|\| 15.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Corliss|Williamson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arkansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2000|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 42 \|\| 886 \|\| 153 \|\| 33 \|\| 390 \|\| 21.1 \|\| 3.6 \|\| 0.8 \|\| 9.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Kevin|Willis}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan State \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1998|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2000|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 156 \|\| 3,666 \|\| 1,055 \|\| 137 \|\| 1,417 \|\| 23.5 \|\| 6.8 \|\| 0.9 \|\| 9.1 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|D. J.|Wilson}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Michigan \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 4 \|\| 54 \|\| 15 \|\| 5 \|\| 30 \|\| 13.5 \|\| 3.8 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 7.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Loren|Woods}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Arizona \|\| align=\"center\"\|2 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2004|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2005|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 72 \|\| 1,036 \|\| 330 \|\| 21 \|\| 238 \|\| 14.4 \|\| 4.6 \|\| 0.3 \|\| 3.3 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Haywoode|Workman}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Oral Roberts \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1999|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 13 \|\| 102 \|\| 9 \|\| 17 \|\| 20 \|\| 7.8 \|\| 0.7 \|\| 1.3 \|\| 1.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Antoine|Wright|dab=basketball}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G/F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Texas A&M \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2009|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 67 \|\| 1,392 \|\| 190 \|\| 71 \|\| 435 \|\| 20.8 \|\| 2.8 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 6.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Delon|Wright}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|G \|\| align=\"left\"\|Utah \|\| align=\"center\"\|4 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2015|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2018|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 172 \|\| 3,005 \|\| 408 \|\| 398 \|\| 1,145 \|\| 17.5 \|\| 2.4 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 6.7 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Julian|Wright}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Kansas \|\| align=\"center\"\|1 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2010|full=y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 52 \|\| 766 \|\| 118 \|\| 58 \|\| 188 \|\| 14.7 \|\| 2.3 \|\| 1.1 \|\| 3.6 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Sharone|Wright}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F/C \|\| align=\"left\"\|Clemson \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|1995|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|1997|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 78 \|\| 1,351 \|\| 252 \|\| 43 \|\| 587 \|\| 17.3 \|\| 3.2 \|\| 0.6 \|\| 7.5 \|\| align=center\| \|- \|align=\"left\"\|`{{sortname|Thaddeus|Young}}`{=mediawiki}`{{anchor|Y}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| align=\"center\"\|F \|\| align=\"left\"\|Georgia Tech \|\| align=\"center\"\|3 \|\| align=\"center\"\|`{{nbay|2021|start}}`{=mediawiki}--`{{nbay|2023|end}}`{=mediawiki} \|\| 103 \|\| 1,620 \|\| 216 \|\| 170 \|\| 518 \|\| 15.7 \|\| 2.1 \|\| 1.7 \|\| 5
| 1,365 |
Toronto Raptors all-time roster
| 7 |
10,015,149 |
# Paul Tiffany
**Paul Tiffany** is a senior lecturer at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of *The Decline of American Steel, How Management, Labor and Government Went Wrong* (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988) and Business Plans for Dummies.
Tiffany holds a BA from Loyola University, an MBA from Harvard Business School and a PhD from the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley
| 77 |
Paul Tiffany
| 0 |
10,015,160 |
# Kisela Voda Municipality
**Kisela Voda** (*Кисела Вода}}* meaning \"mineral water\") is one of the ten municipalities that make up the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia.
## Geography
The municipality borders Karpoš Municipality to the northwest, Centar Municipality to the north, Aerodrom Municipality to the northeast, Studeničani Municipality to the south, and Sopište Municipality to the west.
## Demographics
According to the 2002 Macedonia census, this municipality has 125,379 inhabitants, including parts that were later moved to Aerodrom. According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, this municipality has 61,965 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **57,236** **100**
Macedonians 52,478 91.69
Serbs 1,426 2.49
Turks 460 0.7
Vlachs 647 1.13
Bosniaks 425 0.74
Roma 716 1.25
Albanians 250 0.44
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 834 1
| 136 |
Kisela Voda Municipality
| 0 |
10,015,162 |
# CAT Telecom
**CAT Telecom Public Company Limited** (Communication Authority of Thailand : การสื่อสารแห่งประเทศไทย) So, then as known as CAT Telecom Plc.
(*บริษัท กสท โทรคมนาคม จำกัด (มหาชน)*) is the state-owned company that runs Thailand's international telecommunications infrastructure, including its international gateways, satellite, and submarine cable networks connections. Since 2021 CAT Telecom became the National Telecom Public Company Limited after merging with TOT Public Company Limited.
## Services
Until recently, CAT had a monopoly on international telephony and CDMA mobile telephony. CAT partnered with TOT to provide the GSM mobile service Thai Mobile. In partnership with Hutchison, it provided a CDMA2000 1x mobile service in 25 central provinces and operated its own CDMA2000 1xEV-DO in 51 provinces.
CAT provides data communications and applications services, such as leased line, Fiber-to-the-Premises, Gigabit Ethernet, xDSL, live TV broadcast, e-Commerce, e-Auction, and e-Security.
## History
CAT Telecom Public Company Limited (Thailand) was established on August 14, 2003, by the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Plans were under way to privatize a portion of the state enterprise through an IPO in the Stock Exchange of Thailand but these plans were cancelled after the Thaksin government was overthrown by a coup on 19 September 2006. Soon after the coup, the junta of General Surayud Chulanont announced plans to merge CAT with rival state telecom enterprise TOT (Telephone Organization of Thailand).
Before 2003, CAT was an abbreviation for Communications Authority of Thailand, a Thai government agency. Despite not having been privatized, CAT was still made into a state-owned enterprise (though without the IPO to Stock Exchange of Thailand). It became a public company (with 100% of shares held by the Thai government) with its name CAT, where CAT is no longer an abbreviation for the Communications Authority of Thailand. Any telecommunication **regulation** was transferred to the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC).
The junta appointed General Saprang Kalayanamitr as the new chairman of the board of directors for both CAT and TOT. Saprang was accused by the founders of PTV, a new satellite television station, of being behind CAT\'s refusal to grant an internet link from Bangkok to a satellite up-link station in Hong Kong. PTV was established by some previous executives of the Thai Rak Thai party. CAT, however, claimed that it never received PTV\'s application for internet access.
The junta also canceled the Thaksin government\'s telecom excise tax policy. The Thaksin government imposed an excise tax on private fixed and cellular services, and then allowed telecom companies to deduct the amount they paid in excise tax from concession fees to TOT and CAT. The total amount paid by the private telecom firms did not change. The Surayud government\'s excise tax cancellation meant that TOT and CAT would receive their full concession payments. However, TOT and CAT were then forced to increase their dividends to the Ministry of Finance to account for their increased income.
On 30 November 2013, during the mass protests going on in Bangkok, a group of unidentified protesters infiltrated CAT\'s headquarter, which hosted its data center, to cut off its electricity. This affected roughly 92,000 clients of the company and resulted in about 300 million baht (\$10 million) in lost transactions. Upon the system shut down, internet was inaccessible, phone lines were down, and ATMs were out of service.
CAT is a network operator that hosts mobile virtual network operators (MVNO). CAT has two MVNOs operating on its 850 MHz network:
- Truemove H, a subsidiary of True Corporation
- 168, formerly known as 365 3G Communications
On 7 January 2021, CAT Telecom agreed to merge with TOT Public Company Limited into a new company, National Telecom Public Company Limited (NT) according to the cabinet resolution by Ministry of Digital Economy and Society under Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha
| 626 |
CAT Telecom
| 0 |
10,015,172 |
# Casemate de Rountzenheim Sud
: *See Fortified Sector of Haguenau for a broader discussion of the Haguenau sector of the Maginot Line.*
The **Casemate de Rountzenheim Sud** is an interval infantry casemate of the Maginot Line. The casemate is in the town of Rœschwoog in France, behind the campsite, to the south of the railway.
## Description
The casemate is a simple flanking one, meaning that it has only one firing chamber which is directed towards the north. It has an underground gallery connecting to its neighbour, the Casemate de Rountzenheim Nord. It was built in 1932 to accommodate 15 troops, a warrant officer and an officer. Its dimensions are: 19 by 14 metres, for 7.5 metres in height. The top concrete measures 2 metres in thickness and the external walls 2.25 metres for the exposed walls and 1 metre for the back walls.
The interior is organised on only one level, with:
- An entrance corridor
- A restroom
- A firing chamber
- A latrine
- An access shaft to the underground gallery
- A water reserve
## Armament
For its close defence, the casemate has two light machine guns of 7.5 mm and a GFM cloche. One machine gun protects the entrance door, and the other is at the embrasure of the firing chamber and the diamant ditch.
In the firing chamber are two twin 7.5 mm machine guns, one of them may be replaced by a 37 mm anti-tank gun.
A 50 mm mortar could be fitted to GFM cloche
| 255 |
Casemate de Rountzenheim Sud
| 0 |
10,015,175 |
# Sean Lynch (footballer)
Sean Lynch}} `{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}`{=mediawiki} `{{Infobox football biography
| name = Sean Lynch
| image = Sean Lynch.jpg
| image_size = 180px
| alt =
| caption = Lynch playing for [[St Mirren F.C.|St Mirren]] in 2010
| fullname =
| height =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1987|1|31|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Dechmont]], Scotland
| currentclub =
| clubnumber =
| position = [[Midfielder]]
| years1 = 2006–2008 | caps1 = 5 | goals1 = 0 | clubs1 = [[Hibernian F.C.|Hibernian]]
| years2 = 2008 | caps2 = 1 | goals2 = 0 | clubs2 = → [[St Johnstone F.C.|St Johnstone]] (loan)
| years3 = 2008–2010 | caps3 = 10 | goals3 = 0 | clubs3 = [[Falkirk F.C.|Falkirk]]
| years4 = 2010–2011 | caps4 = 14 | goals4 = 2 | clubs4 = [[St Mirren F.C.|St Mirren]]
| years5 = 2011–2013 | caps5 = 48 | goals5 = 7 | clubs5 = [[Airdrieonians F.C.|Airdrie United]]
| years6 = 2013–2014 | caps6 = 30 | goals6 = 3 | clubs6 = [[Stenhousemuir F.C.|Stenhousemuir]]
| club-update = 20:10, 20 November 2015 (UTC)
}}`{=mediawiki} **Sean Lynch** (born 31 January 1987) is a Scottish former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
## Playing career {#playing_career}
### Hibernian
Born in Dechmont, West Lothian, Lynch made his first-team debut for Hibernian against Kilmarnock on 5 April 2006, replacing Abdessalam Benjelloun for the final minute of a 2--1 win at Easter Road. He made just one more substitute appearance that season and did not play again until 3 February 2007, and on 21 April that year he was given a straight red card for a foul on Chris Clark, with teammate Dermot McCaffrey also dismissed in the 2--2 draw with Aberdeen at Pittodrie. He did not feature at all for Hibs during the 2007--08 season and was sent on an emergency loan to First Division St Johnstone in February. He was returned to Hibs after being injured in his first game for Saints, a 3--2 Tayside derby defeat away to Dundee on 1 March.
While playing for Hibernian Lynch was also a member of the Scottish U-20 national team, playing in the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Canada.
### Falkirk
Lynch was released by Hibs manager Mixu Paatelainen in August 2008, and signed for fellow SPL club Falkirk a month later. He made his debut on 27 September in a 4--1 win against Hamilton Academical, replacing Graham Barrett for the final 15 minutes. Lynch was released by Falkirk after the club was relegated from the Scottish Premier League in May 2010.
### St Mirren {#st_mirren}
Following a trial spell, Lynch signed for St Mirren in July 2010. He made his league debut for the club in a 1--1 draw against Dundee United on 14 August, and scored a volley from the edge of the penalty area. He made 14 appearances over the season for the Buddies, scoring one more goal, a consolation in a 2--1 loss at St Johnstone on 18 September.
### Airdrie United {#airdrie_united}
Lynch signed for Airdrie United of the Second Division in July 2011.
### Stenhousemuir
He left Airdrie in May 2013 and subsequently signed for Stenhousemuir. Lynch scored the winning penalty in a shootout against Dundee that allowed Stenhousemuir to progress to the semi-finals of the 2013--14 Scottish Challenge Cup. Lynch was released by Stenhousemuir in May 2014.
## Business career {#business_career}
Lynch created a mobile app named Socizer; in 2011 he received a local Business Excellence Award by the Prince\'s Scottish Youth Business Trust. He co-owns a t-shirt business with Scott Arfield, a former colleague at Falkirk
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# National Club Golfer
***National Club Golfer*** is a monthly golfing magazine published by Sports Publications. It is the highest-circulated golf title in the UK. The headquarters is in Leeds.
## Overview
*National Club Golfer* magazine was launched by Sports Publications in April 1994.
The magazine started as a paper but changed to a glossy magazine in 1997. *National Club Golfer*, or *NCG* as it is known to regular readers, is the only magazine in the United Kingdom that is distributed to every golf club in England, Wales, and Scotland free of charge. It is also the highest-circulated print golf publication in the country, with a circulation of almost 60,000.
Sports Publications also put together a magazine dedicated to women\'s golf - *Lady Golfer* - which is the highest-circulated ladies\' title in print and digital formats in the UK, going out to every club in England, Wales, and Scotland.
Based in Leeds, the magazines are aimed at club golfers.
In May 2005 both magazines launched a dedicated website featuring their content
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# Yuri Drozdov (footballer)
**Yuri Alekseyevich Drozdov** (*Юрий Алексеевич Дроздов*; born 16 January 1972) is a Russian association football coach and a former player who spent most of his playing career at FC Lokomotiv Moscow.
## Career
Before Lokomotiv, Drozdov used to play for their city rivals FC Dynamo Moscow. Since leaving Lokomotiv in 2003, Drozdov has had short spells at FC Alania Vladikavkaz and FC Zhenis Astana, before joining the Russian First Division side FC Khimki, helping the club to promotion to the Russian Premier League in 2006.
## International
He was part of the USSR U-20 football team, which finished third in 1991 FIFA World Youth Championship.
## Personal life {#personal_life}
He is the father of footballers Nikita Drozdov and Ilya Drozdov
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# List of highways numbered 213
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List of highways numbered 213
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# 1940–41 in Swedish football
The **1940--41 season in Swedish football**, starting August 1940 and ending July 1941:
## Honours
### Official titles {#official_titles}
Title Team Reason
---------------------------- ----------------- ------------------------
1940--41 Swedish Champions Helsingborgs IF Winners of Allsvenskan
### Competitions
Level Competition Team
----------------------- ------------------------------- -----------------
1st level Allsvenskan 1940--41 Helsingborgs IF
2nd level Division 2 Norra 1940--41 Reymersholms IK
Division 2 Östra 1940--41 IFK Eskilstuna
Division 2 Västra 1940--41 GAIS
Division 2 Södra 1940--41 Halmstads BK
Regional Championship Norrländska Mästerskapet 1941 Bodens BK
## Promotions, relegations and qualifications {#promotions_relegations_and_qualifications}
### Promotions
Promoted from Promoted to Team Reason
---------------------------- ---------------------------- ----------------- -------------------------------
Division 2 Norra 1940--41 Allsvenskan 1941--42 Reymersholms IK Winners of promotion play-off
Division 2 Västra 1940--41 GAIS Winners of promotion play-off
Division 3 1940--41 Division 2 Norra 1941--42 IFK Lidingö Winners of promotion play-off
Ljusne AIK Winners of promotion play-off
Division 3 1940--41 Division 2 Östra 1941--42 IK City Winners of promotion play-off
Division 3 1940--41 Division 2 Västra 1941--42 Karlstads BIK Winners of promotion play-off
Skogens IF Winners of promotion play-off
Waggeryds IK Winners of promotion play-off
Division 3 1940--41 Division 2 Södra 1941--42 Nybro IF Winners of promotion play-off
IFK Trelleborg Winners of promotion play-off
### Relegations
Relegated from Relegated to Team Reason
---------------------------- --------------------------- --------------- -----------
Allsvenskan 1940--41 Division 2 Norra 1941--42 IK Brage 11th team
Division 2 Östra 1941--42 IK Sleipner 12th team
Division 2 Norra 1940--41 Division 3 1941--42 Värtans IK 9th team
Nynäshamns IF 10th team
Division 2 Östra 1940--41 Division 3 1941--42 Husqvarna IF 9th team
Örebro FF 10th team
Division 2 Västra 1940--41 Division 3 1941--42 Varbergs BoIS 9th team
Arvika BK 10th team
Division 2 Södra 1940--41 Division 3 1941--42 IFK Värnamo 9th team
Malmö BI 10th team
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# 1940–41 in Swedish football
## Domestic results {#domestic_results}
### Allsvenskan 1940--41 {#allsvenskan_194041}
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
---- ----------------- ----- ---- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- -----
1 Helsingborgs IF 22 14 3 5 46 -- 26 +20 31
2 Degerfors IF 22 12 5 5 47 -- 28 +19 29
3 AIK 22 11 4 7 45 -- 36 +9 26
4 IF Elfsborg 22 11 3 8 54 -- 37 +17 25
5 Landskrona BoIS 22 8 9 5 36 -- 36 0 25
6 IFK Göteborg 22 8 6 8 42 -- 36 +6 22
7 IFK Norrköping 22 8 6 8 35 -- 32 +3 22
8 Malmö FF 22 7 8 7 33 -- 33 0 22
9 Gårda BK 22 7 4 11 31 -- 42 -11 18
10 Sandvikens IF 22 6 6 10 30 -- 42 -12 18
11 IK Brage 22 6 4 12 39 -- 53 -14 16
12 IK Sleipner 22 3 4 15 28 -- 65 -37 10
### Allsvenskan promotion play-off 1940--41 {#allsvenskan_promotion_play_off_194041}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
### Division 2 Norra 1940--41 {#division_2_norra_194041}
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
---- ----------------- ----- ---- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- -----
1 Reymersholms IK 18 12 3 3 49 -- 20 +29 27
2 Djurgårdens IF 18 12 3 3 38 -- 20 +18 27
3 Sandvikens AIK 18 12 1 5 49 -- 24 +25 25
4 Hammarby IF 18 9 3 6 41 -- 30 +11 21
5 Sundbybergs IK 18 8 3 7 34 -- 43 -9 19
6 Ludvika FfI 18 6 3 9 51 -- 42 +9 15
7 Gefle IF 18 6 3 9 23 -- 36 -13 15
8 Hofors AIF 18 5 3 10 23 -- 44 -21 13
9 Värtans IK 18 4 4 10 24 -- 33 -9 12
10 Nynäshamns IF 18 1 4 13 11 -- 51 -40 6
### Division 2 Östra 1940--41 {#division_2_östra_194041}
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
---- ------------------- ----- ---- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- -----
1 IFK Eskilstuna 18 15 2 1 75 -- 21 +54 32
2 Örebro SK 18 9 3 6 42 -- 34 +8 21
3 Surahammars IF 18 9 2 7 33 -- 25 +8 20
4 Hallstahammars SK 18 8 2 8 31 -- 27 +4 18
5 Åtvidabergs FF 18 8 2 8 42 -- 45 -3 18
6 Finspångs AIK 18 8 2 8 39 -- 46 -7 18
7 IFK Västerås 18 6 5 7 26 -- 38 -12 17
8 Mjölby AI 18 5 4 9 21 -- 34 -13 14
9 Husqvarna IF 18 5 2 11 27 -- 37 -10 12
10 Örebro FF 18 4 2 12 23 -- 52 -29 10
### Division 2 Västra 1940--41 {#division_2_västra_194041}
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
---- ----------------- ----- ---- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- -----
1 GAIS 18 14 2 2 48 -- 16 +32 30
2 Tidaholms GIF 18 10 4 4 57 -- 32 +25 24
3 Örgryte IS 18 9 5 4 36 -- 30 +6 23
4 Karlskoga IF 18 9 3 6 49 -- 32 +17 21
5 Skara IF 18 9 2 7 44 -- 38 +6 20
6 Lundby IF 18 8 1 9 36 -- 45 -9 17
7 Deje IK 18 7 1 10 31 -- 44 -13 15
8 Billingsfors IK 18 6 1 11 33 -- 35 -2 13
9 Varbergs BoIS 18 3 3 12 28 -- 52 -24 9
10 Arvika BK 18 3 2 13 26 -- 64 -38 8
### Division 2 Södra 1940--41 {#division_2_södra_194041}
Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
---- ------------------ ----- ---- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- -----
1 Halmstads BK 18 13 2 3 44 -- 20 +24 28
2 IS Halmia 18 12 0 6 56 -- 24 +32 24
3 Kalmar AIK 18 9 3 6 42 -- 41 +1 21
4 Höganäs BK 18 9 2 7 40 -- 38 +2 20
5 IFK Kristianstad 18 6 5 7 41 -- 42 -1 17
6 IFK Malmö 18 6 4 8 36 -- 34 +2 16
7 BK Landora 18 6 4 8 26 -- 44 -18 16
8 Olofströms IF 18 6 3 9 34 -- 40 -6 15
9 IFK Värnamo 18 5 2 11 24 -- 40 -16 12
10 Malmö BI 18 3 5 10 22 -- 42 -20 11
### Division 2 promotion play-off 1940--41 {#division_2_promotion_play_off_194041}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# 1940–41 in Swedish football
## Domestic results {#domestic_results}
### Norrländska Mästerskapet 1941 {#norrländska_mästerskapet_1941}
Final
## National team results {#national_team_results}
Sweden: `{{small|[[Gustav Sjöberg]] - [[Harry Nilsson (footballer)|Harry Nilsson]], [[Erik Källström]] - [[Gösta Dahl]], [[Arvid Emanuelsson]], [[Karl-Erik Grahn]] - [[Arne Nyberg]], [[Gunnar Gren]], [[Knut Johansson (IF Elfsborg)|Knut Johansson]], [[Sven Jonasson]], [[Hilding Gustafsson]].}}`{=mediawiki}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweden: `{{small|[[Sven Bergqvist|Sven Bergquist]] - [[Harry Nilsson (footballer)|Harry Nilsson]], [[Hilding Gustafsson]] - [[Erik Persson (footballer)|Erik Persson]], [[Arvid Emanuelsson]], [[Karl-Erik Grahn]] - [[Åke Andersson (footballer 1917–1983)|Åke Andersson]], [[Gunnar Gren]], [[Knut Johansson (IF Elfsborg)|Knut Johansson]], [[Sven Jonasson]], [[Stig Nyström]].}}`{=mediawiki}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweden: `{{small|[[Sven Bergqvist|Sven Bergquist]] - [[Harry Nilsson (footballer)|Harry Nilsson]], [[Hilding Gustafsson]] - [[Erik Persson (footballer)|Erik Persson]], [[Arvid Emanuelsson]], [[Karl-Erik Grahn]] - [[Arne Nyberg]], [[Gunnar Gren]], [[Knut Johansson (IF Elfsborg)|Knut Johansson]], [[Sven Jonasson]], [[Stig Nyström]].}}`{=mediawiki}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sweden: `{{small|[[Sven Bergqvist|Sven Bergquist]] - [[Harry Nilsson (footballer)|Harry Nilsson]], [[Hilding Gustafsson]] - [[Erik Persson (footballer)|Erik Persson]], [[Arvid Emanuelsson]], [[Karl-Erik Grahn]] - [[Arne Nyberg]], [[Erik Holmqvist]], [[Knut Johansson (IF Elfsborg)|Knut Johansson]], [[Sven Jonasson]], [[Sture Andersson-Dahlöf]].}}`{=mediawiki}
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# 1940–41 in Swedish football
## National team players in season 1940/41 {#national_team_players_in_season_194041}
name pos
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# Alan Chesters
**Alan David Chesters** CBE (born 26 August 1937) was the Bishop of Blackburn from 1989 to 2003.
## Early life and education {#early_life_and_education}
Chesters is the son of Herbert and Catherine Chesters, of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire. He was educated at Elland Grammar School, St Chad\'s College, Durham (Bachelor of Arts, 1959), St Catherine\'s Society, Oxford (Bachelor of Arts, 1961), Oxford Master of Arts (1965) and St Stephen\'s House, Oxford (1959--1962). He was ordained deacon in 1962, priest in 1963 and bishop in 1989.
## Ministry
Chesters served as assistant curate of St Anne\'s Wandsworth from 1962 to 1965. He then became chaplain of Tiffin School (1966--72), a post that he soon combined with that of honorary assistant curate of St Richard\'s Ham (1967--72). Returning to the north of England, where he was to spend the rest of his ministry, he became director of education for the Diocese of Durham and rector of Brancepeth (1972--85).
He was an honorary canon of Durham Cathedral from 1975 until 1984. In 1985, he was appointed Archdeacon of Halifax in the Diocese of Wakefield. In 1989, the Queen appointed him Bishop of Blackburn on the advice of the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher. He took his seat in the House of Lords in 1995.
He retired in 2003, and became an honorary assistant bishop in the dioceses of Chester and Gibraltar in Europe. He moved from the diocese of Chester in 2010, ceasing to be an assistant bishop in Chester, remaining one in Europe and becoming one in Southwark (where he lives) and Chichester.
Chesters was a Church Commissioner from 1982 until 1998. He was first elected to the General Synod in 1975. He was a member of its standing committee from 1985 to 1989 and 1990 to 1995, and served as vice chairman (1984--90), and later chairman, of the Board of Education. and Chairman of the Schools Committee. In October 2000, Chesters officially opened an extension at a school in Oswaldtwistle.
His involvement in Anglican education continued as he became a member of the board of governors of his old college at Durham, St Chad\'s (1980--89), and chairman of the board of governors of St Martin\'s College (1991--2003). In 2003, he was appointed to St Martin\'s College\'s first honorary fellowship.
He has also been chairman of the Higher Education Funding Council for England Advisory Committee on Church Colleges and president of the Woodard Corporation.
## Memberships and honours {#memberships_and_honours}
Chesters was a member of the Countryside Commission, and chairman of the North West Rural Affairs Forum. In the New Year Honours List 2007, he was appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, for services to the community in the North West. He was awarded an Honorary Fellowship in 2007 from the University of Cumbria
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# Troides haliphron
\| taxon = Troides haliphron \| authority = (Boisduval), 1836 }}
***Troides haliphron***, the **haliphron birdwing**, is a birdwing butterfly confined to Sulawesi and the lesser Sunda Islands.
## Description
*Troides haliphron* is sexually dimorphic.
**Male:** The forewings are ground colour black. The veins are bordered by white shading. The hindwings are ground colour black. There is a golden band in the discal area of the wing. The veins are black and they cleave the golden area. The underside is similar.
**Female:** The female is larger than the male. The ground colour of the female is brown. The veins are bordered by white shading. There is a yellow area with dark veins on the hindwings. There is one chain of black spots is in the yellow area. The underside is similar.
The abdomen is dark brown, and the underside has yellow spots. Head and thorax are black. The nape has a red hair coat.
Image:TroidesHaliphronRippon.jpg\| Image:TroidesHaliphron2Rippon.jpg\|
## Taxonomy
*Troides staudingeri* has at times been considered a subspecies of *Troides haliphron*.
Subspecies *celebensis* - the status of this taxon is uncertain. It has been placed within *Troides criton*, and *Troides oblongomaculatus*. It may be a hybrid with *Troides helena hephaestus*.
### Subspecies
A number of other subspecies have been described from different islands. They are:
- *Troides haliphron celebensis* - possibly central Celebes (see Taxonomy)
- *Troides haliphron haliphron* - South Celebes
- *Troides haliphron naias* - Sumba
- *Troides haliphron socrates* - Wetar and Sumbawa (probably a local form and not a subspecies)
- *Troides haliphron selayarensis* - Selayar Islands
## Biology
The larva feeds on species *Aristolochia*.
## Related species {#related_species}
*Troides haliphron* is a member of the *Troides haliphron* species group. The members of this clade are:
- *Troides haliphron* (Boisduval, 1836)
- *Troides darsius* (Gray, \[1853\])
- *Troides vandepolli* (Snellen, 1890)
- *Troides criton* (C. & R
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# Honour Gombami
**Honour Gombami** (born 9 January 1983) is a Zimbabwean former professional football player. He is a member of the Zimbabwe national football team.
Cercle\'s new head coach De Boeck was quite immediately impressed by Gombami\'s skills. He even stated that in the future he saw Gombami playing for Anderlecht, De Boeck\'s former team and Belgium\'s most notable top team. Rumours were going that Anderlecht had approached Gombami for a transfer in May 2008. However, Anderlecht manager Herman Van Holsbeeck denied this.
Gombami lives together with his teammate Vuza Nyoni in an apartment in Bruges. They both recommended Obadiah Tarumbwa to the Cercle management.
In December 2010, Gombami was severely injured in a match against RC Genk. It took 15 months for Gombami to make his comeback. In the summer of 2012, Gombami signed for Belgian Second Division team Antwerp. He then played three years for Izegem, and retired in 2016
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# Thomas Kortegaard
**Thomas Kortegaard** (born 2 July 1984) is a Danish former footballer who played as a midfielder.
He played most of his career for AC Horsens.
## Club career {#club_career}
### AaB
On 14 July 2003, Kortegaard was loaned out to FC Nordjylland. Kortegaard was moved up to the first team in the summer 2004. He played a big role on the team though his young age, and the club extended his contract in May 2006 until the summer 2007. However in 2007, the club didn\'t wanted to extend his contract further and he left the club.
### AC Horsens {#ac_horsens}
Just few hours after leaving AaB, it was announced, that Kortegaard had signed a two-year contract with AC Horsens. He got a new contract in May 2008.
## Coaching career {#coaching_career}
Kortegaard announced his retirement on 16 August 2019 because he was struggling with aftermaths from a cancer operation and thus stopped his career. He became a part of Bo Henriksen\'s first team staff at AC Horsens instead. He left the position on 29 June 2020 because he was going to be a teacher at a sports school
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# Godbold Transportation Center
The **Godbold Transportation Center** is a train station in Brookhaven, Mississippi, United States, served by Amtrak\'s *City of New Orleans* passenger train.
The facility is located in the town\'s old power plant, originally constructed in 1890. Renovation plans called for partial demolition of the power plant, but the soaring smokestack was retained as a symbol of the building\'s industrial heritage. Large expanses of glass on the principal elevations allow natural light to flood the waiting room. The wooden benches used by passengers were once located in the old Illinois Central depot.
## History
Brookhaven was a hub between the Illinois Central (formerly the New Orleans, Jackson and Great Northern), the Brookhaven and Pearl River Railroad, the Mississippi Central, and the Meridian, Brookhaven, and Natchez Railroad. In 1907, Illinois Central constructed the Union Station and freight house in downtown Brookhaven. Designed by F. D. Chase, the Tudor-revival brick building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
The old station building, located at 125 South Whitworth Avenue,(31 34 44 N 90 26 35 W region:US-MS_type:railwaystation display=inline) is now occupied by the Military Memorial Museum.
Godbold Transportation Center, named after a former Brookhaven Mayor Bill Godbold, opened in 2011. This replaced a small shelter beside the old depot building that had been used by Amtrak
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# Harrisonburg High School (Virginia)
**Harrisonburg High School** (**HHS**), part of the Harrisonburg City School System, is a public high school located in Harrisonburg, Virginia, United States. HHS serves grades nine through twelve, and its athletic teams are known as the Blue Streaks. In October 2017, 1782 students were enrolled. It was rated \"Fully Accredited\" by the Virginia Department of Education for the 2017--2018 school year. As of the fall of 2024, it serves students residing in the western part of Harrisonburg.
## History
Harrisonburg High School was founded in 1879 and was initially located on South Main Street. In 1928, it was moved to South High Street; in 1967, the high school was moved to Grace Street. During this time it housed students from grades seven upward, but when Thomas Harrison Middle School was built in 1989, grades seven and eight were shifted from the high school department, and the high school expanded to include both South High Street and Grace Street complexes. The complex was used to hold wrestling shows for Jim Cornette and his Smokey Mountain Wrestling promotion until its closure in 1995. The entire complex renovated in 1994, on its hundredth anniversary, but was subsequently leased and later sold to James Madison University, after the construction and opening of a new building on Garbers Church Road on August 24, 2005. The HHS school board has agreed to move to One Court Square in Harrisonburg; its plans were endorsed by the Harrisonburg City Council on February 8, 2011. In August 2019, the Harrisonburg City Council announced the plan to build a second high school in Harrisonburg in order to alleviate overcrowding in HHS. Rocktown High School was officially opened at the beginning of the 2024--25 school year, serving students residing in the eastern part of Harrisonburg.
## VHSL titles {#vhsl_titles}
Harrisonburg is in the Group AA Valley District of the Virginia High School League. Prior to 2007, it had been in Region II, but is now in Region V.
- 1969--1976 State AA Boys Tennis Champions
- 1978, 1979 State AA Boys Basketball Champions
- 1979 State AA Girls Outdoor Track Champions
- 1980--1982 State AA Girls Tennis Champions
- 1991 State AA Boys Tennis Champions
- 1991 State AA Girls Tennis Champions
- 1987, 1989, 1993 State AA Creative Writing
- 1994 State AA Girls Outdoor Track Champions (tied with Abingdon)
- 1996 State AA Boys Golf Champions
- 2001 State AA Division 3 Football Champions
- 2007 State AA Boys Outdoor Track Champions
- 2007--08 State AA Theatre Champions
- 2011--2012 State AA Debate Champions
## Notable alumni {#notable_alumni}
- Henry G. Blosser (1928--2013), Nuclear physicist and winner of the Tom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics
- Akeem Jordan -- Former NFL football player
- John Otho Marsh Jr. -- Career U.S. Army officer (1944--1976), U.S
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# COMPASS experiment
The **NA58 experiment**, or **COMPASS** (standing for \"**Common Muon and Proton Apparatus for Structure and Spectroscopy**\") is a 60-metre-long fixed-target experiment at the M2 beam line of the SPS at CERN. The experimental hall is located at the CERN North Area, close to the French village of Prévessin-Moëns. The experiment is a two-staged spectrometer with numerous tracking detectors, particle identification and calorimetry. The physics results are extracted by recording and analysing the final states of the scattering processes.
The versatile set-up, the use of different targets and particle beams allow the investigation of various processes. The main physics goals are the investigation of the nucleon spin structure and hadron spectroscopy. The collaboration consists of 220 physicists from 13 different countries, involving 28 universities and research institutes.
## History and physics goals {#history_and_physics_goals}
The COMPASS experiment was proposed in 1996 and approved by the CERN research committee. Between 1999 and 2001, the experiment was set up and finally in 2001, the first commissioning run was performed. Until the start of the LHC experiments, COMPASS was the largest data-taking experiment at CERN. It is also a pioneer in adopting new detector and readout technologies, such as MicroMegas, GEM detectors and most recently THGEM photon detection. The data taking is divided into the COMPASS I and II phases. **COMPASS I** (2002-2011)
- Nucleon spin structure
- Gluon polarisation in nucleons
- u,d,s flavour decomposition of the nucleon spin
- Transverse spin
- Quark transverse momentum distribution
- Pion polarisability
- Search for exotic states:
- Light meson spectroscopy
- Baryon spectroscopy
**COMPASS II** (2012-2021)
- Nucleon tomography (Deep Virtual Compton Scattering)
- Unpolarised quark transverse momentum distribution and strangeness
- Pion and kaon polarisabilities
- Polarised Drell-Yan: universality of transverse momentum distribution
- d-Quark Transversity
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# COMPASS experiment
## Experimental Apparatus {#experimental_apparatus}
The experiment consists of three major parts: the beam telescope, the target area and the two-staged spectrometer.
### Particle beam {#particle_beam}
The M2 beam line is able to transport various secondary and tertiary particle beams, which all originate from the Super Proton Synchrotron. The primary proton beam (400 GeV/c and up to 1.5E13 protons per super cycle) is steered on a beryllium production target producing secondary hadrons, mainly consisting of (anti-) protons, pions and kaons. The production target and the experiment are separated by a 1.1 km long transfer line, allowing through weak decay and use of massive hadron absorbers the production of a naturally spin-polarised muon beam. The beam line is designed to transport beams up to a momentum of 280 GeV/c. Usually, five different beams are used by COMPASS:
- **positive** and **negative muon** beams with a nominal momentum of 160 GeV/c or 200 GeV/c,
- **positive hadron** beams with a nominal momentum of 190 GeV/c and a composition of 75% protons, 24% pions and 1% kaons,
- **negative hadron** beams with a nominal momentum of 190 GeV/c and a composition of 1% anti-protons, 97% pions and 2% kaons,
- low intensity **electron** beam for calibration purposes (60 and 40 GeV/c).
### Beam telescope {#beam_telescope}
The timing and the position of the incident particles are determined with cold silicon strip detectors and scintillating fibre detectors. These informations are crucial to determine the interaction point inside the target material. Depending on the beam type, modifications in the beam telescope are done:
- For the **muon beam**, the momentum is measured using beam momentum stations,
- To distinguish between the different particle types in the **hadron beam**, a Cherenkov detector is used.
### Target
According to the physics goal, a suitable target is needed. For **polarised** physics, the spins of the target material need to be oriented in one direction. The target cell contains either ammonium or deuterium, which are polarised by the means of microwave radiation and strong magnetic fields. To keep up the polarisation grade, a ^3^He/^4^He dilution refrigerator is used to cool down the target material to 50 mK. The target material can be polarised longitudinal or transverse to the beam axis.
For **unpolarised** physics, mostly liquid hydrogen is used, allowing to study the proton properties. For other physics, where high atomic numbers are needed, nickel, lead and other nuclear targets are used.
The main advantage of a fixed target experiment is the large acceptance. Due to the Lorentz boost, most of the final states and the scattered particles are created along the beam axis. This leads to the distinctive set-up of a fixed-target experiment: most detectors are placed behind the target (\"forward spectrometer\"). For some processes it is necessary to detect the recoil nucleon from the target. Here, a recoil proton detector consisting of two barrels of scintillator material is used. The protons are identified by the time of flight and the energy loss.
### Spectrometer
The COMPASS experiment consists of two spectrometer stages with various tracking detector types, each set-up around a spectrometer magnet to determine the momentum of the particles. The first stage is dedicated to tracks with large scattering (production) angles and the second one for small angles. In addition, the first stage holds a Ring-Imaging CHerenkov detector (\"RICH\"), able to distinguish pions and kaons between 10 and 50 GeV. The following detector types for measuring charged particles are used:
- **MicroMegas**, micro mesh gas detector,
- **Pixelised MicroMegas**,
- **GEMs**, gaseous electron multiplier,
- **Pixelised GEMs**,
- **Drift chambers**,
- **Straws** ,
- **SciFis**, scintillating fibre stations,
- **MWPC**, multi wire proportional chambers,
- **Hodoscopes**, scintillator counter used for triggering on scattered muons.
Neutral particles, i.e. photons are detected with electro-magnetic calorimeters. The energy of produced hadrons are determined with hadronic calorimeters
| 637 |
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| 1 |
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# I'm Free (Rolling Stones song)
\"**I\'m Free**\" is a song by the Rolling Stones written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, first released as the final track on their album *Out of Our Heads*. It was also released at the same time as a single in the US and later included on the American *December\'s Children (And Everybody\'s)* album.
## Release
The Rolling Stones recorded a re-worked acoustic version for their 1995 album *Stripped*, and performed a live version in the 2008 film *Shine a Light*, which was included on the accompanying live album. The song was also performed at the free concert in Hyde Park, London, on 5 July 1969, released on the DVD *The Stones in the Park* in 2006.
In 2007, a remixed version of the original recording was used in a television commercial for the Chase Freedom credit card and in 2008 it was used in a UK commercial for a Renault SUV.
The original vinyl bootleg *Live\'r Than You\'ll Ever Be* included a live version recorded in Oakland, California, in November 1969.
It appears on the Rolling Stones live album *Get Yer Ya-Ya\'s Out!* as a re-release bonus track, following \"Under My Thumb\" without a break.
## Music and reception {#music_and_reception}
*Rolling Stone* magazine ranked \"I\'m Free\" as the 78th greatest Rolling Stones song, saying: \"A tambourine-spangled folk rocker with chime-y, Byrds-like guitar, this offhandedly libertarian tune wasn\'t a big hit, but it\'s one of the Sixties\' most pliant anthems.\" *The Guardian* identified the song as an example of the improving songwriting of Jagger and Richards at the time, describing the song as \"gleefully hymning the arrogance of youth.\"
*Cash Box* described it as a \"raunchy, hard-driving emotion-packed romancer.\"
## Personnel
- Mick Jagger -- lead vocals, backing vocals
- Keith Richards -- lead guitar, backing vocals
- Brian Jones -- rhythm guitar, organ
- Bill Wyman -- bass guitar
- Charlie Watts -- drums
- James W. Alexander -- tambourine
## The Soup Dragons version {#the_soup_dragons_version}
Scottish alternative rock/dance band the Soup Dragons rearranged the song in 1990. Their version interpolates Donovan\'s 1969 song \"Barabajagal\" and contains a toasted verse by Junior Reid. The single became the band\'s biggest hit, reaching the top ten in the UK, Australia and New Zealand, and charted in other countries as well. The Soup Dragons\' version was featured in the films *Big Girls Don\'t Cry\... They Get Even*, *The World\'s End* and *Renfield*.
### Critical reception {#critical_reception}
Reviewing the single, David Giles of *Music Week* stated that the Soup Dragons \"have fashioned a thoroughly contemporary piece of music that could well pay off at a commercial level\".
### Charts
#### Weekly charts {#weekly_charts}
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| Chart (1990--1991) | Peak\ |
| | position |
+======================================+==========+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| Europe (Eurochart Hot 100) | 16 |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| Netherlands (Dutch Top 40 Tipparade) | 9 |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| UK Dance (*Music Week*) | 6 |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
| | |
+--------------------------------------+----------+
#### Year-end charts {#year_end_charts}
Chart (1990) Position
------------------------------------- ----------
UK Singles (OCC) 40
US Modern Rock Tracks (*Billboard*) 12
Chart (1991) Position
------------------ ----------
Australia (ARIA) 61
## Other versions {#other_versions}
- Pitbull heavily interpolated \"I\'m Free\" in his song \"Freedom\" from the album *Climate Change*, which was featured on the soundtrack of the 2017 film *Ferdinand*.
- Dua Lipa sang a special version in a TV commercial for Yves Saint Laurent 2019 (released 2021)
| 605 |
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| 0 |
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# Ali Krasniqi
**Ali Krasniqi** (1952 -- 3 December 2024) was a Kosovar Roma writer and activist, who came to prominence at the start of the Kosovo War. He was born in Caravadicë, Obiliq, Yugoslavia. He wrote in the Kurbet dialect. Krasniqi died on 3 December 2024, at the age of 72
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| 0 |
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# Géraud Réveilhac
**Géraud François Gustave Réveilhac** (16 February 1851 -- 26 February 1937) was a French général de division during World War I. He gained infamy for the Souain corporals affair in 1915 when four non-commissioned officers were executed as an example to other troops he commanded who had refused to attack a heavily-defended position on the Western Front. His actions were an inspiration for Humphrey Cobb\'s novel *Paths of Glory*; the 1957 film of the same name was made by Stanley Kubrick. In 1916 he was relieved of front line duty. He was made a commander in the French reserves until the end of the war.
## Early life and career {#early_life_and_career}
Born on 16 February 1851 in Aurillac, France, Réveilhac went on to graduate from the Ecole Spéciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr in August 1870, as a sub-lieutenant. He became a prisoner of the Prussians in December the same year, but was released on 8 January the following year. He took part in putting down the uprising in Limoges in April 1871, garnering praise from his superiors. Réveilhac was subsequently regularly promoted, being sent to Indochina to command a company in 1889, and was made général de brigade on 21 December 1909 as commanding officer of the 42nd Infantry Brigade. He was preparing for retirement by 1914 when World War I broke out.
## World War I {#world_war_i}
At the beginning of World War I, Réveilhac was commanding the 119th Infantry Brigade, part of the 60th Infantry Division, under Général de division Maurice Joppé, whom he replaced on 25 September 1914 as commanding officer of the division. Réveilhac was promoted to acting général de division on 6 October 1914.
Souain corporals affair
In March 1915, after two attempts to take a strong German position near Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus had failed, he ordered the 21st company of the 336th Infantry Regiment to make a bayonet charge against the position. But before the attack began, a preceding French barrage shelled their own side\'s trenches. Unscathed German machine guns quickly cut down the first wave. The remaining troops in the 21st company then refused to leave their trenches. On hearing this, Réveilhac ordered his divisional artillery to shell them in order to force them to attack. However, the artillery commander, Colonel Raoul Berube, refused to obey without a written order. Réveilhac did not issue one.
After the assault\'s failure, Réveilhac quickly ordered that 24 men from the infantry units involved should be tried by a war tribunal. Although all of those men were inevitably sentenced to death for failing to obey the order to attack, 20 men were given stays of execution, while four others`{{emdash}}`{=mediawiki}all corporals`{{endash}}`{=mediawiki}were executed by firing squad as an example to the entire regiment. One of those shot was Théophile Maupas, an exemplary soldier, who had simply been chosen by lot.
Relieved of command
Réveilhac continued to treat his men with scant regard. In another case he ordered his troops to relaunch an attack, asserting that the percentage of acceptable losses had not been reached for that day. In February 1916, he was relieved of duty and forced by the General Staff to take three months leave. According to a confidential letter from General Joffre, he \"seem\[ed\] to have arrived at the limit of his physical and intellectual capacity\".
On his return to active service he was given a command in the reserves for the rest of the war.
## Post-war {#post_war}
At the end of the war, General Réveilhac was made Grand Officier of the Légion d\'honneur. He retired to his country estate in Nantes, and died in his bed on 26 February 1937.
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# Géraud Réveilhac
## Reputation
Réveilhac\'s actions in Souain were revealed in 1921 to much scandal, and he was condemned even in the military press. Réveilhac wrote a letter defending his actions, but it was censored by Minister of War Louis Barthou who believed publishing it would only increase the considerable notoriety of the affair.
The widow of Théophile Maupas, one of the corporals executed, fought to restore her husband\'s reputation, and was successful after nineteen years.
Humphrey Cobb\'s 1935 novel *Paths of Glory* and Stanley Kubrick\'s 1957 film with the same title are partly based on these events
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| 1 |
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# The Satanic Scriptures
***The Satanic Scriptures*** is a book by the current High Priest of the Church of Satan, Peter H. Gilmore, published April 30, 2007, by Scapegoat Publishing. The book is a collection of essays and rituals, and features a prelude by Blanche Barton and dedication by Peggy Nadramia. The book has been translated into Spanish, French, German, Russian, Portuguese and Estonian.
On Walpurgisnacht of 2017, Underworld Amusements released a new tenth anniversary edition, and has taken over publishing the book from Scapegoat. The new edition features the speech Gilmore gave to the Church of Satan\'s private 50th Anniversary event
| 102 |
The Satanic Scriptures
| 0 |
10,015,314 |
# Fundación River
The **Fundación River** is a river in northern Colombia, originating from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in the Cesar Department but flows down to the Magdalena Department crossing the town and municipality of Fundación before reaching the Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta
| 46 |
Fundación River
| 0 |
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# Karpoš Municipality
**Karpoš Municipality** (*Карпош}}*) is one of the ten municipalities that make up the city of Skopje, the capital of the Republic of North Macedonia.
## Geography
Karpoš borders:
- Saraj Municipality and Ǵorče Petrov Municipality to the west,
- Čučer-Sandevo Municipality to the north,
- Butel Municipality to the northeast,
- Čair Municipality, Centar Municipality and Kisela Voda Municipality to the east, and
- Sopište Municipality to the south.
## Demographics
According to the 2002 Macedonia census, Karpoš had 59,666 inhabitants. According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, this municipality has 63,760 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **59,666** **100**
Macedonians 52,810 88.51
Albanians 1,952 3.27
Serbs 2,184 3.66
Roma 615 1.03
Vlachs 407 0.68
Turks 334 0.56
Bosniaks 98 0.16
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 1,266 2
| 139 |
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| 0 |
10,015,348 |
# Democratic Movement (Israel)
The **Democratic Movement** (*תנועה דמוקרטית*, *Tnu\'a Demokratit*) was a short-lived political party in Israel formed in the aftermath of the spectacular breakup of Dash. Founded in 1978, it lasted only until 1981.
## Background
The party was formed on 14 September 1978 when Dash split into three new parties just sixteen months after having come third in the 1977 elections. Seven MKs, including Dash leader Yigael Yadin, founded the Democratic Movement, seven created Shinui (Change) and one set up Ya\'ad.
Unlike Shinui, which pulled out, the new party remained part of Menachem Begin\'s coalition government, with Yadin as deputy Prime Minister and Shmuel Tamir as Minister of Justice.
However, like its predecessor, the Democratic Movement also broke up. In 1980 four MKs left the party; Mordechai Elgrably left on 5 February to sit as an independent MK (he later helped form the Unity Party), on 8 July Shafik Asaad and Shlomo Eliyahu left to form Ahva (which also split before the next elections), whilst Akiva Nof left on 17 September, also to join Ahva. The party was officially dissolved on 10 March 1981, with its remaining members, Tamir, Yadin and Binyamin Halevi, sitting out the remainder of the Knesset session as independents
| 206 |
Democratic Movement (Israel)
| 0 |
10,015,366 |
# The Last Defender of Camelot (2002 book)
***The Last Defender of Camelot*** is a collection of short stories written by science fiction writer Roger Zelazny. It was published by Ibooks, Inc in 2002 and has an identical title to an earlier collection.
## Contents
- \"Introduction\" by Robert Silverberg
- \"Comes Now the Power\"
- \"For a Breath I Tarry\"
- \"Engine at Heartspring\'s Center\"
- \"Halfjack\"
- \"Home is the Hangman\"
- \"Permafrost\"
- \"LOKI 7281\"
- \"Mana from Heaven\"
- \"24 Views of Mt
| 87 |
The Last Defender of Camelot (2002 book)
| 0 |
10,015,382 |
# List of highways numbered 214
| 6 |
List of highways numbered 214
| 0 |
10,015,430 |
# Walter Adolph
**Walter Adolph** (11 June 1913 -- 18 September 1941) was a German Luftwaffe military aviator in the Spanish Civil War and a fighter ace during World War II. He is credited with 25 aerial victories, including one in Spain, achieved in 79 combat missions. All his World War II victories were claimed over the Western Front.
Born in Fântânele, Romania, Adolph served in the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War, where he claimed his first aerial victory on 30 December 1937. He was made *Staffelkapitän* (squadron leader) of 2. *Staffel* (2nd squadron) of *Jagdgeschwader* 1 (JG 1--1st Fighter Wing), a squadron which was later redesignated 8. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 27 (JG 27--27th Fighter Wing). In October 1940, he was appointed *Gruppenkommandeur* (group commander) of II. *Gruppe* of *Jagdgeschwader* 26 \"Schlageter\" (JG 26--26th Fighter Wing) and received the Knight\'s Cross of the Iron Cross on 13 November 1940. On 16 September 1941, he was killed in action with Supermarine Spitfire fighters from No. 41 Squadron.
## Early life and career {#early_life_and_career}
Adolph was born on 11 June 1913 at Fântânele, Bacău County, Romania. After the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, he moved with his family to Germany. From late 1937 until spring 1938, he served with 1. *Staffel* (1st squadron) of *Jagdgruppe* 88 (J/88--88th Fighter Group) of the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War. Adolph arrived in Spain at the time J/88 received a complement of 14 new Messerschmitt Bf 109 B-2 fighters. He claimed one victory, a Republican Polikarpov I-15 fighter, on 30 December 1937. He was awarded the Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords (*Spanienkreuz in Gold mit Schwertern*), for his service in the Spanish Civil War.
On 1 January 1939, Adolph was appointed *Staffelkapitän* (squadron leader) of 2. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 130 (JG 130--130th Fighter Wing), a squadron of I. *Gruppe* (1st group) of JG 130 under the command of *Hauptmann* Bernhard Woldenga. This unit was renamed on 1 May 1939 and was then referred to 2. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 1 (JG 1--1st Fighter Wing) from then on. In mid-August 1939, 2. *Staffel* was ordered to move from Jesau, near present-day Bagrationovsk, to Heiligenbeil, present-day Mamonovo, in preparation for the German Invasion of Poland.
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# Walter Adolph
## World War II {#world_war_ii}
World War II in Europe began on Friday 1 September 1939 when German forces invaded Poland. On 6 September, I. *Gruppe* (1st group) of JG 1 was withdrawn and ordered to Lübeck-Blankensee and then on 15 September to Vörden where the unit stayed until January 1940. There, the *Gruppe* flew fighter protection during the \"Phoney War\" on the German border to the Netherlands. Adolph claimed his first aerial victory in World War II on 1 October 1939 over Osnabrück. His opponent was a Royal Air Force (RAF) Bristol Blenheim *N6281* of No. 139 Squadron flown by F/O AC MacLachlan.
In mid-January 1940, I. *Gruppe* was ordered to an airfield at Gymnich, today part of Erftstadt, where the unit was tasked with patrolling Germany\'s western border. There, the *Gruppe* continuously conducted various flight exercises. In late April, the unit received the first Bf 109 E-4 variant, replacing the Bf 109 E-3s.
### Battle of France and Britain {#battle_of_france_and_britain}
The Wehrmacht launched the invasion of France and the Low Countries on 10 May 1940. During this campaign, I. *Gruppe* of JG 1 was subordinated to the *Stab* (headquarters unit) of *Jagdgeschwader* 27 (JG 27--27th Fighter Wing) which was under the control of VIII. *Fliegerkorps* (8th Air Corps) under the command of *Generaloberst* Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen. That day, I. *Gruppe* flew combat air patrols in the area of Venlo--Tirlemont--Liège and later that day to Maastricht. On 12 May, German forces began crossing the bridges over Meuse and Albert Canal. At first light, nine Bristol Blenheims belonging to No. 139 Squadron RAF took off from Plivot to bomb the bridgeheads. They ran into Bf 109s from Stab./JG 51, and 2. and 3./JG 27. In defense of these bridges, I. *Gruppe* claimed ten bombers shot down, including three Blenheim bombers from No. 139 Squadron by Adolph. No. 139 Squadron lost seven of the unescorted bombers. On 16 May, I. *Gruppe* was moved to an airfield at Charleville. On 6 June, Adolph was credited with two aerial victories over French Lioré et Olivier LeO 451 bombers in the vicinity of Montdidier, his fifth and last during the French campaign.
I. *Gruppe* moved to an airfield at Plumetot on 30 June 1940 for combat against the RAF. On 5 July, the Luftwaffe began reorganizing its fighter units. In consequence, I. *Gruppe* of JG 1 was officially integrated into JG 27 as its III. *Gruppe*, with 2. *Staffel* of JG 1 then becoming the 8. *Staffel* of JG 27. On 19 July, III. *Gruppe* escorted a number of Junkers Ju 87 dive bombers on a *Kanalkampf* mission to the Isle of Wight where they encountered a number of Hawker Hurricane fighters. The *Gruppe* claimed five Hurricanes shot down, including one by Adolph. The RAF attacked the Querqueville Airfield on the afternoon of 1 August. In defense of this attack, I. *Gruppe* claimed three aerial victories, including a Blenheim bomber shot down by Adolph near Cherbourg. On 7 September, the Luftwaffe launched Operation Loge, a 65-day air offensive against London. That day, Adolph claimed a Supermarine Spitfire destroyed south of Stanford.
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# Walter Adolph
## World War II {#world_war_ii}
### Group commander and death {#group_commander_and_death}
Adolph was appointed *Gruppenkommandeur* (group commander) of II. *Gruppe* of *Jagdgeschwader* 26 \"Schlageter\" (JG 26--26th Fighter Wing) on 4 October 1940. JG 26 was named after Albert Leo Schlageter, a martyr cultivated by the Nazi Party. On 11 October, Adolph claimed his tenth and eleventh aerial victory over two Spitfire fighters. Both Spitfires came from No. 41 Squadron and were shot down off the coast of Kent near Maidstone. Four days later, he claimed a Hurricane destroyed near London. The Hurricane either belonged to No. 46 Squadron or No. 501 Squadron. His 13th victory, a No. 603 Squadron Spitfire, was claimed on 25 October in aerial combat near Maidstone. Adolph\'s victim, Pilot Officer Ludwig Martel, flying *P7350*, lost consciousness and when he came around found he was flying upside down with a dead engine and promptly parachuted to safety.
His next victory was claimed on 1 November over a No. 74 Squadron Spitfire, also shot down near Maidstone. On 8 November, Adolph was credited with his 15th aerial victory, a Spitfire claimed near Tonbridge. That day, II. Gruppe had claimed four Spitfires shot down while British records show that two Hurricanes were lost while further two had to make a forced landing. On 13 November 1940, Adolph was awarded the Knight\'s Cross of the Iron Cross (*Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes*) in parts for increasing the combat performance of II. *Gruppe*.
On 17 June, the RAF flew \"Circus\" No. 13 targeting the Etabs Kuhlmann Chemical Works and power station at Chocques. In total, No. 2 Group sent 24 Blenheim bombers, escorted by fighters from North Weald and Biggin Hill. JG 26 claimed 15 aerial victories including a Hurricane by Adolph. The RAF flew \"Circus\" No. 24 on 26 June with the objective to bomb the electrical power station at Comines with 28 bombers. Adolph claimed his 18th aerial victory that day, shooting down a Spitfire. On 1 July, II. *Gruppe* began relocating to Moorsele Airfield where the unit was closer to the RAF \"Circus\" routes. The infrastructure at Moorsele was ideal for the planned transition to the then new Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter aircraft which began arriving in July. On 6 July, the RAF flew another \"Circus\". No. 35 targeted Lille and the Fives-Lille engineering company. In defense of this attack, Adolph shot down a Spitfire from No. 74 Squadron. On 23 July, JG 26 claimed four Blenheim bombers shot down from No. 21 Squadron off the Scheldt Estuary and Ostend, including Adolph\'s 21st aerial victory. On 16 August, Adolph claimed aerial victories numbering 23 and 24 of World War II while defending against \"Circus\" No. 75. That day, he shot down a No. 602 Squadron Spitfire 20 km northwest of Boulogne and a No. 602 Squadron 8 km north of Marquise.
On 18 September 1941, elements of JG 26 escorted a German tanker through the English Channel. The tanker came under attack by three Blenheim bombers just off the coast near Blankenberge. The bombers were escorted by Spitfire fighters from No. 41 Squadron and Hurricane fighters from No. 615 Squadron. Adolph headed a flight of eight Fw 190 from II. *Gruppe* in defense of the tanker. Following the attack on the tanker, one Blenheim bomber was claimed shot down by a German pilot. Adolph, while observing the crashed bomber, was shot down and killed in his Fw 190 A-1 (*Werknummer* 0028---factory number) 30 km northwest of Ostend. The British flying ace F/O Cyril Babbage of No. 41 Squadron is believed to have shot down Adolph. Adolph\'s Fw 190 was the first of its kind to be lost in aerial combat. Adolph\'s successor as *Gruppenkommandeur* was *Hauptmann* Joachim Müncheberg who took command of II. *Gruppe* on 19 September. On 12 October 1941, his body was washed ashore near Knokke, Belgium and was interred at the Lommel German war cemetery.
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# Walter Adolph
## Summary of career {#summary_of_career}
### Aerial victory claims {#aerial_victory_claims}
Author Spick lists him with 28 aerial victories, claimed in 79 combat missions. That are three victories more than authors Obermaier, Caldwell, Prien, Stemmer, Rodeike and Bock attribute him with. Mathews and Foreman, authors of *Luftwaffe Aces --- Biographies and Victory Claims*, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for more than 21 aerial victory claims, plus four further unconfirmed claims. This number includes one claim during the Spanish Civil War and 20 on the Western Front of World War II.
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Chronicle of aerial victories |
+=========================================================================+
| |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Claim |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Spanish Civil War |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- 1. *Staffel* of *Jagdgruppe* 88 --\ |
| Spanish Civil War --- January 1937 -- January 1938 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 1 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| World War II |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- 2. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 1 --\ |
| \"Phoney War\" --- 1 September 1939 -- 9 May 1940 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 1 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- 2. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 1 --\ |
| Battle of France --- 10 May -- 25 June 1940 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 2 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 3 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 4 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- 8. *Staffel* of *Jagdgeschwader* 27 --\ |
| Action at the Channel and over England --- 26 June -- 30 September 1940 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 7 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 8 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- *Stab* II. *Gruppe* of *Jagdgeschwader* 26 \"Schlageter\" --\ |
| Action at the Channel and over England --- 3 October -- 21 June 1941 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 10 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 11 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 12 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 13 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| -- *Stab* II. *Gruppe* of *Jagdgeschwader* 26 \"Schlageter\" --\ |
| Action at the Channel and over England --- 22 June -- 18 September 1941 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 17 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 18 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 19 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| 20 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
### Awards
- Spanish Cross in Gold with Swords
- Honour Goblet of the Luftwaffe (26 October 1940)
- Knight\'s Cross of the Iron Cross on 13 November 1940 as *Hauptmann* and *Gruppenkommandeur* of the II
| 365 |
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| 3 |
10,015,482 |
# Centar Municipality, Skopje
**Centar** (*Центар}}*) is the central municipality of the ten municipalities that compose the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. Centar is home to the Assembly of North Macedonia.
## Geography
The Vardar River runs on the edge of the municipality along the border with Čair Municipality. Vodno Mountain overlooks Centar. The municipality\'s total area is 7.52 km^2^. Centar borders several other municipalities including: Karpoš Municipality to the west, Čair Municipality to the northeast, Aerodrom Municipality to the southeast, and Kisela Voda Municipality to the south.
## Demographics
According to the 2002 Macedonia census, the municipality had 45,412 inhabitants. According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, this municipality had 43,893 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **45,412** **100**
Macedonians 38,778 85.39
Serbs 2,037 4.49
Albanians 1,465 3.23
Roma 974 2.14
Vlachs 459 1.01
Turks 492 1.08
Bosniaks 108 0.24
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 1,099 2.42
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
## Sports
The Toše Proeski Arena, the national football stadium, is located in the municipality and hosts home games of FK Vardar and FK Rabotnički
| 196 |
Centar Municipality, Skopje
| 0 |
10,015,501 |
# Prince William County Police Department
**Prince William County Police Department** (**PWCPD**) is a county police department in Prince William County, Virginia, United States. PWCPD has primary jurisdiction in all towns within the county, including Dumfries, Occoquan, Haymarket, and Quantico, which also have their own police departments. The County Police department also has limited enforcement jurisdiction in the independent city of Manassas through a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).
## History
PWCPD began operations on July 1, 1970, and it has been fully accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) since 1987.
The Prince William County Police Department found itself in the news in July 2017 for issuing an arrest warrant for Lucky Whitehead, a player in the National Football League. At the time of the incident, Whitehead, a local native of Manassas, Virginia, was a player for the Dallas Cowboys. On June 22, 2017, officers from the Prince William County Police Department arrested an individual for petit larceny who verbally provided the name Rodney Darnell \"Lucky\" Whitehead Jr. to officers. The officers from the Prince William County Police Department did not validate the individual\'s identity via a government issued photo identification, nor did officers take a mug shot of the individual at the time he was arrested. Subsequently, an arrest warrant was issued for Whitehead for failure to appear in court. At the time of incident in Virginia, Whitehead was in the state of Texas, a fact not investigated by Prince William County officers. As a direct result of the arrest warrant, Whitehead was released from his contract with the Dallas Cowboys.
A spokesman for Prince William County police, Jonathan Perok, issued several contradictory official statements on the matter. In July 2017, the final statement from Perok indicated that Prince William police still do not know the true identity of the individual they arrested and, \"The police department is working with the Prince William County Commonwealth Attorney\'s Office to clear Mr. Whitehead from this investigation. The police department regrets the impact these events had on Mr. Whitehead and his family.\"
## Gallery
Image:pwcpd mp.jpg\|Prince William County Police Mounted Patrol Image:pwcpd uwsr.jpg\|Prince William County Police Underwater Search & Rescue Unit Image:pwcpd crash
| 365 |
Prince William County Police Department
| 0 |
10,015,509 |
# The Bus Driver's Prayer & Other Stories
***The Bus Driver\'s Prayer & Other Stories*** is the seventh solo album by Ian Dury, released in 1992 by Demon. Despite being recorded after the successful live reunion of Ian Dury and the Blockheads, inspired by the death of their drummer, Charley Charles, the album is not a Blockheads record. All of the band, however, except bassist Norman Watt-Roy, appear on the album.
## History
The album has its origins in a 1991 Irish film *After Midnight*. When asked to produce music for the film, Dury recruited Blockhead Mick Gallagher and Music Students member Merlin Rhys-Jones. Two songs, \"O\'Donegal\" and \"Quick Quick Slow\", along with another, \"Bye Bye Dublin\", were written around this time, and at least the latter two were recorded in Shepherd\'s Bush, London along with incidental music for the film.
Dury\'s in-studio behavior had become notably better than during the 1980s and would steadily improve. One notable drink-fueled event, however, while recording the album, on the Mile End Road, London (owned by the brother of Madness keyboard player Mike Barson), is recounted often by Gallagher and Rhys-Jones. Dury, drunk on Budweiser became furious, allegedly after a technician named Frasier erased Gallagher\'s keyboard part for \"Quick Quick Slow\", and threatened to burn the studio down. When he wouldn\'t calm down, the police were called and after spitting at them and calling them \'homosexuals\', Dury was arrested.
*Bus Driver\'s Prayer* is almost always considered a \'return to form\' for Dury as a lyricist, and is considered as such by both Dury biographies *Ian Dury & The Blockheads: Song by Song* and *Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll: The Life of Ian Dury.* The most commonly quoted songs to illustrate this are \"Poor Joey\" and \"Poo-Poo in the Prawn\".
Demon Records was unhappy with the final album and hardly promoted it, despite favorable reviews, including a March 1993 issue of *Vox*, where it was awarded six out of ten stars. Mick Gallagher continues to praise the album as one of his favorites and noted in *Song by Song* that it was the album by which he personally mourned Dury, following the singer\'s death in 2000. The album has received criticism, however, for its use of a drum machine.
## Reception
AllMusic\'s Stephen Thomas Erlewine called the album \"an engaging collection of character sketches and stories,\" and added that \"the album may lack strong hooks and melodies, yet Dury diehards will find that his wry observations are just as subtle and humorous as ever.\"
## Track listing {#track_listing}
Songwriting credits adapted from the 2015 vinyl edition liner notes. `{{Track listing
| collapsed =
| headline =
| all_writing = [[Ian Dury]] and [[Mick Gallagher]]; except where indicated
| title1 = That's Enough of That
| writer1 = Ian Dury, Mick Gallagher, Merlin Rhys-Jones
| length1 = 4:49
| title2 = [[Bill Haley (musician)|Bill Haley]]'s Last Words
| writer2 = Ian Dury, Mick Gallagher, Merlin Rhys-Jones
| length2 = 3:12
| title3 = Poor Joey
| writer3 =
| length3 = 3:50
| title4 = Quick Quick Slow
| writer4 =
| length4 = 3:14
| title5 = Fly in the Ointment
| writer5 =
| length5 = 2:55
| title6 = O'Donegal
| writer6 =
| length6 = 3:53
| title7 = Poo-Poo in the Prawn
| writer7 =
| length7 = 3:17
| title8 = London Talking
| writer8 =
| length8 = 1:15
| title9 = Have a Word
| writer9 = Ian Dury, Mick Gallagher, Merlin Rhys-Jones
| length9 = 3:57
| title10 = D'Orine the Cow
| writer10 =
| length10 = 3:18
| title11 = Your Horoscope
| writer11 =
| length11 = 4:00
| title12 = No Such Thing as Love
| writer12 = Ian Dury, Merlin Rhys-Jones
| length12 = 3:38
| title13 = Two Old Dogs Without a Name
| writer13 =
| length13 = 4:43
| title14 = [[Bus Driver's Prayer]]
| writer14 = Traditional; arranged and adapted by Ian Dury
| length14 = 0:59
}}`{=mediawiki}
## Personnel
- Ian Dury -- lead vocals
- Mick Gallagher -- keyboards
- Merlin Rhys-Jones -- guitar
Additional personnel
- Chaz Jankel -- keyboards, guitars
- Michael McEvoy -- bass, synthesizers on \"Bus Driver\'s Prayer\"
- Steve White -- drums, percussion on \"Bus Driver\'s Prayer\"
- John Turnbull -- guitars
- Davey Payne -- saxophones
- Will Parnell -- percussion
- Ray Cooper -- percussion on \"Bus Driver\'s Prayer\"
- Chris London (courtesy Joe\'s Garage)
Technical
- Simon Osbourne -- engineer
- Ian Horne -- engineer
- Bruce Ingman -- cover painting (from a design by Mike Krage)
- John Millar -- photographs
Note: the album sleeve does not give information on who plays what on which track
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| 0 |
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# The Bus Driver's Prayer & Other Stories
## Re-releases {#re_releases}
Problems have occurred with *The Bus Driver\'s Prayer & Other Stories* CD re-issues. Initially Demon Record\'s CD version did not contain any writing credits for the songs, its booklet simply included five poems written by Dury.
Edsel Records\' 2004 2-CD re-issue fixed this, including writing credits above each song\'s lyric as with the other albums in the reissue campaign, however it erroneously lists \"London Talking\" as track 9 and \"Have A Word\" as track 8, both on the track list on the back of the CD case and in the booklet, also placing the lyrics in the wrong order.
Edsel Record\'s re-issue also includes a bonus disc with eight bonus tracks: unreleased tracks \"Amerind\", \"Whale\", \"Grape and Grain\" and \"The Writer\", plus four songs that would later appear on later albums with the Blockheads, \"Itinerant Child\" (which would appear on *Mr. Love Pants*) and \"One Love\", \"Cowboys\" and \"I Believe\" (later to be included on *Ten More Turnips from the Tip*).
## Trivia
- The voice of \"Joey the Budgie\" is, according to *Song by Song*, not Ian Dury, but Chas Jankel.
- Even though the album is named after the track, this is Ian Dury\'s second recording of \"Bus Driver\'s Prayer\", the original appearing on his 1989 album *Apples*
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# Tim Young (baseball)
**Timothy R. Young** (born October 15, 1973) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He played professionally for the Montreal Expos and the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball (MLB), and was a member of the United States national baseball team that won a gold medal in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.
## Early life {#early_life}
Born in Gulfport, Mississippi, Young attended Liberty County High School in Bristol, Florida. He played college baseball at the University of Alabama.
## Professional career {#professional_career}
On June 4, 1996, at 5\'9\" and 170 pounds, Young was drafted by the Montreal Expos in the 19th round of the 1996 Major League Baseball Draft. He played one season for the Expos in 1998, and was granted free agency on December 18, 1998.
Young signed as a free agent with the Boston Red Sox on February 3, 1999, and played one season with the team in 2000. In an 18-game major league career, he posted a 6.23 ERA with 13 strikeouts in 13 innings pitched without a decision or save.
He was a member of the US Baseball Team that won a gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. In December 2000 he was purchased by the Hiroshima Toyo Carp of Japan\'s Central League.
He continued to play in the minor leagues until 2004, playing for 12 different minor league teams between 1996 and 2004. He pitched for Triple-A Pawtucket, Syracuse, Colorado, Memphis and Buffalo.
In 2004, Young played for the Sinon Bulls of the Chinese Professional Baseball League
| 261 |
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| 0 |
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# Čair Municipality
**Čair** (*Чаир}}*, *Komuna e Çairit*) is one of the ten municipalities that make up Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The municipal administration consists of a council and mayor. Skopje\'s old town is located in Čair. The municipality has a predominantly Albanian population.
## Geography
Čair is located along the northern (left) bank of the Vardar River, opposite the modern city center. It borders Centar Municipality to the southwest, Karpoš Municipality to the west, Butel Municipality to the north, and Gazi Baba Municipality to the east.
## History
The name \"Čair\" is derived from the Turkish word for \"meadow\" or \"pasture\", *çayır*. The municipality is still called *Çayır Belediyesi* in modern Turkish and amongst the small ethnic Turkish minority that resides there.
Skopje\'s old town, or Stara Čaršija, had been the city\'s main center at least since the 12th century. Turkish influence is dominant in the Stara Čaršija. Due to five centuries of Ottoman rule the old town is still filled with Ottoman style buildings, narrow cobblestone walkways and many mosques. Next to the Old Bazaar is Bit Pazar, Skopje\'s largest market that has retained its multi-ethnic and multi-lingual environment where rural people come to sell farming produce and locals conduct business.
Čair is historically a multi-ethnic area. In the aftermath of the 2001 insurgency some Macedonians from Čair moved to other Skopje urban areas such as nearby Butel in the north or to southern Macedonian neighbourhoods where there is an availability of public infrastructure. Čair municipality prior to 2004 was larger and included Butel municipality within its boundaries that has a majority Macedonian population (48.60%), followed by Albanians (38.89%), Turks (4.12%), Bosniaks (3.40%), Romani (1.46%) and Serbs (2.11%). The new territorial-administrative reform of 2004 divided the municipal unit into a smaller Čair municipality with an Albanian majority (57.01%) and a separate Butel municipality with a Macedonian majority. The new boundaries of Čair municipality resulted in the loss of its industrial zone to Butel municipality which previously provided most of the revenue for the Čair municipal budget.
In the Macedonian elections of March 2005, Izet Mexhiti, a member of the Albanian political party Democratic Union for Integration (DUI) became the mayor of Čair municipality. A coalition between DUI and the Macedonian Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) was formed in the municipal council while other smaller Albanian and Macedonian parties were also represented. In 2006 the municipal council adopted a new flag and coat of arms that displayed Skanderbeg, the Old Bazaar and the Ottoman clock tower (Saat kula) that did not have the support of Macedonian counselors.
Skanderbeg Square is located in Čair. In the late 2000s a statue of Skanderbeg commemorating the medieval Albanian warrior was installed in an open space at the front entrance to the Old Bazaar by Čair municipality. During the 2010s, Čair Municipality and ethnic Albanians living in the Macedonian capital refurbished the space into a second city square as part of a rival project to the government\'s "Skopje 2014" revamp scheme which excluded investments for the area. Political negotiation between Albanian and Macedonian elites resulted in the Macedonian Government funding most of the refurbishment of Skanderbeg Square.
On 26 November 2019, an earthquake struck Albania and Čair Municipality held 3 days of mourning in solidarity with the earthquake victims.
## Demographics
Čair has a mixed population that includes minorities of Romani and Turks, yet the neighborhood is associated with Albanians in North Macedonia. In the modern era relations between ethnic groups in Čair Municipality remain cordial.
According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, Čair municipality has 62,586 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **64,773** **100**
Albanians 36,921 57
Macedonians 15,628 24,13
Turks 4,500 6.95
Bosniaks 2,950 4.55
Roma 3,083 4.76
Serbs 621 0.96
Vlachs 78 0.12
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 992 1.53
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
| 653 |
Čair Municipality
| 0 |
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# Čair Municipality
## Sports
Macedonian football\'s top-tier side KF Shkupi plays its home games at Čair Stadium.
| 18 |
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# Patrick Kristensen
**Patrick Kristensen** (born 28 April 1987) is a Danish retired footballer.
## Career
Kristensen got the honour of scoring AaB\'s goal number 1000 in the Superliga, on 25 October 2009 in a match against Brøndby IF.
On 22 July 2020, 33-year old Kristensen announced his retirement. Kristensen played 367 official games for AaB during his career
| 59 |
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# Whole Oats
- soul
\| length = 38:08 \| label = Atlantic \| producer = Arif Mardin \| prev_title = \| prev_year = \| next_title = Abandoned Luncheonette \| next_year = 1973 \| misc = `{{Singles
| name = Whole Oats
| type = studio
| single1 = Goodnight and Goodmorning / All Our Love<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.discogs.com/release/6216542-Whole-Oats-Goodnight-And-Good-Morning-All-Our-Love | title=Whole Oats - Goodnight and Good Morning / All Our Love | website=[[Discogs]] | date=1972 }}</ref>
| single1date = 1972
}}`{=mediawiki} }}
***Whole Oats*** is the debut studio album by American pop music duo Hall & Oates. The album was released in September 1972, by Atlantic Records.
The duo consisted of Daryl Hall and John Oates, both of Philadelphia. Prior to making this album, the duo made numerous demos, some of which were released on the *Past Times Behind* & *Vintage* collections. It was released on CD for the second time on February 12, 2008 by American Beat Records, putting it back in print after the original Atlantic Records CD release went out of print. On February 24, 2017, Friday Music released a remastered version of the album along with their third studio album, *War Babies*
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# Soichiro Watase
(born 1978), is a Japanese author from Yokohama city, Kanagawa prefecture. He made his debut with the fantasy novel `{{nihongo|'''Onmyo no Miyako'''|陰陽ノ京|Onmyō no Miyako}}`{=mediawiki} in 2001, after winning Gold at the 7th Dengeki Game Novel Prize in 2000. He is also the creator of *Parasite Moon* and *Rinkan no Madōshi*.
## Works
### Onmyo no Miyako series {#onmyo_no_miyako_series}
: series was illustrated by `{{nihongo|Sho-u Tajima|田島昭宇|Tajima Shōu}}`{=mediawiki} (vol.1 only) and `{{nihongo|Wataru Saino|酒乃渉|Saino Wataru}}`{=mediawiki} (vol.2 or later).
- Volume 1 (`{{ISBN|4840217408}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 2 (`{{ISBN|4840220336}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 3 (`{{ISBN|4840220980}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 4 (`{{ISBN|4840223777}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 5 (`{{ISBN|4840237646}}`{=mediawiki})
### Parasite Moon series {#parasite_moon_series}
: series was illustrated by `{{nihongo|Hagiyamasakage|はぎやまさかげ}}`{=mediawiki}.
- Volume 1 -Kazamitori no Su- (`{{ISBN|484021820X}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 2 -Nezumi tachi no Kyoen- (`{{ISBN|484021882X}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 3 -Hyakunen Garō- (`{{ISBN|4840219788}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 4 -Koin Yowa- (`{{ISBN|4840221561}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 5 -Suityu Teien no Sakana- (`{{ISBN|4840222134}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 6 -Meikyu no Maigo tachi- (`{{ISBN|4840222754}}`{=mediawiki})
### Sora no Kane no Hibiku Hoshi de series {#sora_no_kane_no_hibiku_hoshi_de_series}
: series was illustrated by `{{nihongo|Minako Iwasaki|岩崎美奈子|Iwasaki Minako}}`{=mediawiki}.
- Volume 1 (`{{ISBN|4840224870}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 2 (`{{ISBN|4840226032}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 3 (`{{ISBN|4840226865}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 4 (`{{ISBN|4840227586}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 5 (`{{ISBN|4840228469}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 6 (`{{ISBN|4840229384}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 7 (`{{ISBN|4840230846}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 8 (`{{ISBN|4840231818}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 9 (`{{ISBN|4840232415}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 10 (`{{ISBN|4840233489}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 11 (`{{ISBN|484023485X}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 12 (`{{ISBN|4840235899}}`{=mediawiki})
- Gaiden -tea party\'s story- (`{{ISBN|4840239142}}`{=mediawiki})
### Rinkan no Madoshi series {#rinkan_no_madoshi_series}
: series is illustrated by `{{nihongo|Fu Midori|碧風羽|Midori Fuu}}`{=mediawiki}.
- Volume 1 (`{{ISBN|4840240663}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 2 (`{{ISBN|4840241910}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 3 (`{{ISBN|4048671324}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 4 (`{{ISBN|4048672681}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 5 (`{{ISBN|4048675982}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 6 (`{{ISBN|4048679066}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 7 (`{{ISBN|4048684620}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 8 (`{{ISBN|4048702378}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 9 (`{{ISBN|404870740X}}`{=mediawiki})
- Volume 10 (`{{ISBN|4048868578}}`{=mediawiki})
### Sword Art Online Alternative: Clover\'s Regret {#sword_art_online_alternative_clovers_regret}
: series is illustrated by `{{nihongo|Ginta|ぎん太}}`{=mediawiki}
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# Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars
is a Japanese anime series, that retells the events from the *Super Robot Taisen: Original Generation* game, a game featuring only original characters and mechs created by Banpresto for the Super Robot Wars franchise. A sequel titled `{{nihongo|''[[Super Robot Wars Original Generation: The Inspector|Super Robot Wars OG: The Inspector]]''|スーパーロボット大戦OG ジ・インスペクター|Sūpā Robotto Taisen Ōjī Jī Insupektā}}`{=mediawiki} began airing on October 1, 2010.
## Summary
The anime is not a direct adaptation of the original video game, it includes several changes to the plot. While the original game allows the player to decide which of the two protagonists\' stories they will follow, the animated series focuses on Ryusei Date\'s side of the story, with all the other characters already introduced.
## Plot
It is two hundred years after the beginning of the *Space Era*, when human civilization on Earth began expanding into space. However, by the start of the 21st century, two meteors struck the planet, sending humanity into chaos. By the year 179 of the Space Era, secret technology, dubbed Extra-Over Technology, or EOT, was discovered by the Earth Federal Government within a third meteor that hit Earth in the Marquesas Islands of the South Pacific. Dr. Bian Zoldark, head of the EOTI Institute (Extra-Over Technological Investigative Institute), had evidence the creators of the EOT were heading to Earth, in order to reclaim it\...or worse, invade the planet. In order to defend humanity from extraterrestrial threats, the government begins to research and develop humanoid mecha called Personal Troopers.
The alien race that created the EOT, the Aerogaters, attacked an Earth ship sent out to investigate their presence in the far reaches of the Solar System. This skirmish ends in a defeat for the Aerogaters, prompting the Earth government to negotiate with them. Talks are arranged to take place at a secret facility in Antarctica, but the event is targeted by a rogue faction called the Divine Crusaders. The Divine Crusaders destroy the Aerogater delegation, then turn on the Earth forces. Bian Zoldark, the faction\'s leader, uses this opportunity to rebel against the Earth government, in hopes of establishing a viable defense for Earth from the Aerogaters and future invaders.
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# Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars
## Characters
### Main characters {#main_characters}
`{{nihongo|Ryuusei Date|リュウセイ・ダテ|Ryuusei Date}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A mecha otaku and finalist for the Burning PT Tournament, he is the protagonist of Divine Wars, drafted by the Earth Federation Army for their secret SRX Development Project.
`{{nihongo|Raidiese F. Branstein|ライディース・F・ブランシュタイン|Raidīsu F. Buranshutain}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A stalwart test pilot for the Earth Federation Army, he is the next person to be part of the SRX Development Project.
`{{nihongo|Aya Kobayashi|アヤ・コバヤシ|Aya Kobayashi}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A relatively new and inexperienced member of the military, she is the third person to be part of the SRX Development Project.
`{{nihongo|Ingram Prisken|イングラム・プリスケン|Inguramu Purisuken}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A mysterious, yet influential military instructor, currently in charge of the SRX Development Project.
### Supporting characters {#supporting_characters}
`{{nihongo|Latooni Subouta|ラトゥーニ・スゥボータ|Ratūni Suubōta}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A quiet young girl who was the part of an experimental project to create Personal Trooper pilots. She begins to open up more after befriending Ryusei and develops a crush on him.
`{{nihongo|Kyousuke Nanbu|キョウスケ・ナンブ|Kyousuke Nanbu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A serious, stoic test pilot of the ATX Team, who has a habit with gambling.
`{{nihongo|Excellen Browning|エクセレン・ブロウニング|Ekuseren Burouningu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A fun-loving, somewhat ditzy pilot of the ATX Team and Kyosuke\'s girlfriend, she makes men uncomfortable with her flirting and jokes.
`{{nihongo|Brooklyn 'Bullet' Luckfield|ブルックリン・ラックフィールド|Burukkurin Rakkufīrudo}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A rookie pilot from the ATX Team, with extensive training and abilities, he insists that others address him as *Bullet*.
`{{nihongo|Sanger Zonvolt|ゼンガー・ゾンボルト|Zengā Zonboruto}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: The leader of the ATX Team, he fights with the skills and demeanor of an ancient Samurai.
`{{nihongo|Kusuha Mizuha|クスハ・ミズハ|Kusuha Mizuha}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A kind-hearted childhood friend of Ryusei, she enlists into the Earth Federation Army as a nurse.
`{{nihongo|Masaki Andoh|マサキ・アンドー|Masaki Andō}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A rash, young pilot of the mysterious Cybuster, he pursues his nemesis, Shu Shirakawa, with the help of his familiar cats, Kuro and Shiro, in order to settle old scores.
`{{nihongo|Shu Shirakawa|シュウ・シラカワ|Shuu Shirakawa}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A brilliant scientist, who is familiar with Masaki Andoh, he helps Bian Zoldark establish the Divine Crusaders and revolt against the Earth government.
`{{nihongo|Elzam V. Branstein|エルザム・V・ブランシュタイン|Eruzamu V. Buranshutain}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: The older brother of Raidiese, he and his father, Maier V. Branstein, forge an alliance with Bian Zoldark\'s Divine Crusaders.
`{{nihongo|Bian Zoldark|ビアン・ゾルダーク|Bian Zorudāku}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: The founder of the EOTI Institute and leader of the Divine Crusaders, he wages war against the Earth government, in order to make humanity realize the incoming threat of alien invasions.
`{{nihongo|Lune Zoldark|リューネ・ゾルダーク|Ryune Zoldark}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: Daughter of Bian Zoldark, founder of the Divine Crusaders. Lune\'s an outspoken tomboy with torn jeans and a high aptitude for mecha piloting. She was a member of the DC, but spent most of the time physically training in Jupiter. About her mecha, she was supposedly given a customized Valsion, but she didn\'t like how it looked\... so Bian modified its look to resemble a giant, walking robot version of herself, the Valsione, complete with hair and an emotion copy system (its face changes according to Lune\'s current expression).
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
`{{nihongo|Yuuki Jaggar|ユウキ・ジェグナン|Yuuki Jegunan}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: Is a calm, loyal, clear-headed man with a pleasant attitude, akin to that of a gentleman.
: He has a strong sense of justice, often disliking to see the weak being bullied or hurt by those with power.
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
`{{nihongo|Ricarla "Carla" Borgnine|リルカーラ・ボーグナイン|Rirukāra Bogunain}}`{=mediawiki}
:
: A passionate, 18-year-old girl, Ricarla \"Carla\" Borgnine is extremely nice and caring to her companions and comrades, usually helping them with their problems, regardless of how minuscule they may be. Carla looks optimistically to the future, though her past is what troubles her the most.
### Divine Crusaders {#divine_crusaders}
`{{nihongo|Adler Koch|アードラー・コッホ|Ādorā Kohho}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Tempest Hawker|テンペスト・ホーカー|Tenpesuto Hōkā}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Thomas Platt|トーマス・プラット|Tōmasu Puratto}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Tenzan Nakajima|テンザン・ナカジマ|Tenzan Nakajima}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Ibis Douglas|アイビス・ダグラス|Aibisu Dagurasu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Sleigh Presty|スレイ・プレスティ|Surei Puresuti}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Tsugumi Takakura|ツグミ・タカクラ|Tsugumi Takakura}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### United Colony Corps {#united_colony_corps}
`{{nihongo|Maier V. Branstein|マイヤー・V・ブランシュタイン|Maiyā V. Buranshutain}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Lily Junkers|リリー・ユンカース|Rirī Yunkāsu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Julia Heinkel|ユーリア・ハインケル|Yūria Hainkeru}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Leona Garstein|レオナ・ガーシュタイン|Reona Gāshutain}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### Aerogators
`{{nihongo|Levi Tolar|レビ・トーラー|Rebi Tōrā}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Atad Shamran|アタッド・シャムラン|Ataddo Shamuran}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Viletta Vadim|ヴィレッタ・バディム|Viretta Badimu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### Principality of Ricsent {#principality_of_ricsent}
`{{nihongo|Shine Hausen|シャイン・ハウゼン|Shain Hauzen}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Joyce Rudall|ジョイス・ルダール|Joisu Rudāru}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### Earth Federal Government {#earth_federal_government}
`{{nihongo|Karl Stresemann|カール・シュトレーゼマン|Kāru Shutorēzeman}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Albert Grey|アルバート・グレイ|Arubāto Gurei}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Nibhal Mubhal|ニブハル・ムブハル|Nibuharu Mubuharu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### Earth Federation Army {#earth_federation_army}
`{{nihongo|Laker Randolph|レイカー・ランドルフ|Reikā Randorufu}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Sakae Takanaka|サカエ・タカナカ|Sakae Takanaka}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Hans Weber|ハンス・ヴィーパー|Hansu Vīpā}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Kai Kitamura|カイ・キタムラ|Kai Kitamura}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Haruma Kido|ハルマ・キド|Haruma Kido}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Kirk Hamill|カーク・ハミル|Kāku Hamiru}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Robert Hajime Oomiya|ロバート・ハジメ・オオミヤ|Robāto Hajime Ōmiya}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Kenzou Kobayashi|ケンゾウ・コバヤシ|Kenzō Kobayashi}}`{=mediawiki}
:
`{{nihongo|Norman Slay|ノーマン・スレイ|Nōman Surei}}`{=mediawiki}
:
### Mao Industry {#mao_industry}
`{{nihongo|Radha Bairaban|ラーダ・バイラバン|Rāda Bairaban}}`{=mediawiki}
:
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# Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars
## Characters
### Other characters {#other_characters}
`{{nihongo|Sophia Nate|ソフィア・ネート|Sofia Nēto}}`{=mediawiki}
:
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
`{{nihongo|Yukiko Date|ユキコ・ダテ|Yukiko Date}}`{=mediawiki}
:
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
`{{nihongo|Cobray Gordon|クォヴレー・ゴードン|Kuovurē Gōdon}}`{=mediawiki}
:
```{=html}
<!-- -->
```
`{{nihongo|Masked man|仮面の男|Kamen no Otoko}}`{=mediawiki} / `{{nihongo|Euzeth Gozzo|ユーゼス・ゴッツォ|Yūzesu Gottso}}`{=mediawiki}
:
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# Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars
## Media
### Anime
The anime was produced by Oriental Light and Magic with Hiroyuki Kakudō as director and *Super Robot Wars* series producer, Takanobu Terada acting in the role of Series Composition. The show first aired on October 4, 2006 on TV Tokyo with the 25th episode being aired on March 29, 2007. The anime aired for a total of 25 episodes, but the 26th episode was released on DVD only. The show featured the use of 3DCG to animate the mecha within the show.
Four pieces of theme music are used within the show, two opening songs and two ending songs. The first opening theme is *Break Out* by JAM Project while the first ending song is *Yell!!* by Minami Kuribayashi. At episode 18 the opening changes to *RISING FORCE* by JAM Project while at episode 14 the ending changes to `{{Nihongo|"Mou Ai Shika Iranai"|もう愛しかいらない|}}`{=mediawiki} by Aki Misato.
Bandai Visual USA had licensed the show in North America. The show was released across 9 different volumes. It was re-licensed by Media Blasters, which was released on May 17, 2014. The series premiered on Toku in the United States on December 31, 2015.
### Manga
The anime has two manga adaptations, `{{nihongo|''Super Robot Wars Divine Wars''|スーパーロボット大戦OG ディバイン・ウォーズ}}`{=mediawiki} by Akihiro Kimura tells the story of the anime over 6 volumes published from 2006 to 2009. Meanwhile, `{{nihongo|''Super Robot Wars Divine Wars - Record of ATX''|スーパーロボット大戦OG ディバイン・ウォーズ Record of ATX}}`{=mediawiki} is manga series by Tatsunosuke Yatsufusa, published from 2007 to 2009, that tells a similar story but from the ATX Team\'s perspective, complete in 5 volumes.
### Net Radio {#net_radio}
With the launch of the anime, `{{nihongo|''SRWOG Net Radio - Umasugi Wave''|スパロボOGネットラジオ うますぎWAVE}}`{=mediawiki} began to air online. The show has been airing since January 2007 with four regular hosts, Tomokazu Sugita, Masaaki Endoh, Mai Aizawa and Rie Saitou. The show often features series\' producer Takanobu Terada as a special guest. After Divine Wars ended, the show carried on and is often used to regularly feature and promote up and coming video game titles.
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# Super Robot Wars Original Generation: Divine Wars
## Production
- Director: Hiroyuki Kakudō
- Series Composition: Takanobu Terada
- Mechanical Design: Hajime Katoki, Kunio Okawara, Kazutaka Miyatake, Seiji Ono, Junichi Moriya, Hitoshi Kamemaru, Toshiaki Sugiura, Kazue Saito
- Music: Takuya Hanaoka, Yoshihisa Hirano, Naofumi Tsuruyama
- CG Supervisor: Ichiro Itano
- Character Design: Yuji Ikeda
- Animation Production: OLM, Inc
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# Łódź Voivodeship (1919–1939)
**Łódź Voivodeship** (*Wojewodztwo Łódzkie*) was a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland from 1919 to 1939. At the time, it covered a large portion of the mid-western part of the country, including such cities as Łódź, Piotrków Trybunalski, Sieradz and Radomsko. The capital of the Łódź Voivodeship was always Łódź, but the land that comprised it changed several times.
## Location and area {#location_and_area}
In early 1939, the Voivodeship\'s area was 20,446 square kilometers. It was located in middle Poland, bordering Poznań Voivodeship to the west, Pomorze Voivodeship to the north, Warsaw Voivodeship to the east Kielce Voivodeship to the south and Germany to the southwest. Landscape was flat, forests covered only 14.7%, with the national average 22.2% (as of January 1, 1937).
In 1938 some western counties were ceded to Poznań Voivodeship (see: Territorial changes of Polish Voivodeships on April 1, 1938). After the change, it consisted of 15 powiats (counties):
- Brzeziny county (area 1 100 km^2^, pop. 150 900),
- Końskie county (area 1 619 km^2^, pop. 135 900),
- Kutno county (area 922 km^2^, pop. 108 000),
- Łask county (area 1 400 km^2^, pop. 171 900),
- Łęczyca county (area 1 317 km^2^, pop. 127 600),
- Łowicz county (area 1 258 km^2^, pop. 104 800),
- city of Łódź county (powiat lodzki grodzki), (area 59 km^2^, pop. 604 600). It was the most populous county of interbellum Poland,
- Łódź county (area 893 km^2^, pop. 161 700),
- Opoczno county (area 1 773 km^2^, pop. 129 900),
- Piotrków Trybunalski county (area 2 073 km^2^, pop. 222 200),
- Radomsko county (area 2 149 km^2^, pop. 186 400),
- Rawa Mazowiecka county (area 1 327 km^2^, pop. 93 500),
- Sieradz county (area 1 618 km^2^, pop. 167 400),
- Skierniewice county (area 831 km^2^, pop. 71 000),
- Wieluń county (area 2 107 km^2^, pop. 214 300).
The most populous cities of the Voivodeship were (population according to the 1931 Polish census):
- Łódź (pop. 604,600),
- Piotrków Trybunalski (pop. 51,300),
- Pabianice (pop. 45,700),
- Tomaszów Mazowiecki (pop. 38,000),
- Zgierz (pop. 26,600),
- Kutno (pop. 23,400),
- Radomsko (pop. 23,000).
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# Łódź Voivodeship (1919–1939)
## Population
According to the 1921 census the voivodeship was inhabited by 2,252,769 people, of whom by nationality 1,873,629 were Poles (83.1%), 103,484 were Germans (4.6%), 270,437 were Jews (12.0%) and 5,219 were all others (0.3%). By religion - according to the census of 1921 - 1,734,117 were Roman Catholics (77.0%), 173,546 were Protestants of all kinds (7.7%), 326,973 were Jews (14.5%) and 18,133 were all others (0.8%).`{{Circular reference|date=February 2025}}`{=mediawiki} The Jews and the Germans preferred to live in the cities and towns (especially the city of Łódź itself). In 1931 these two ethnic groups made up 37.6% of the Voivodeship\'s urban population. The illiteracy rate (in 1931) was 22.7%, slightly lower than the national average of 23.1%.
The detailed results of the 1931 census by county are presented in the table below:
County Pop. Polish \% Yiddish & Hebrew \% German \% Other language % Roman Catholic \% Jewish \% Protestant \% Other religion %
------------- --------- --------- ------- ------------------ ------- -------- ------- ------------------ ---------------- ------- -------- ------- ------------ ------- ------------------
Łódź City 604629 356987 59.0% 191720 31.7% 53562 8.9% 0.4% 340179 56.3% 202497 33.5% 56159 9.3% 0.9%
Brzeziny 150923 115905 76.8% 24818 16.4% 10020 6.6% 0.1% 103067 68.3% 25396 16.8% 15022 10.0% 4.9%
Kalisz 195761 169363 86.5% 21625 11.0% 3821 2.0% 0.5% 160163 81.8% 23450 12.0% 10512 5.4% 0.8%
Koło 119370 101969 85.4% 9506 8.0% 7771 6.5% 0.1% 100411 84.1% 9783 8.2% 8820 7.4% 0.3%
Konin 207495 183237 88.3% 7129 3.4% 16787 8.1% 0.2% 180572 87.0% 7491 3.6% 18561 8.9% 0.4%
Łask 171885 142769 83.1% 15409 9.0% 10488 6.1% 1.8% 138595 80.6% 17004 9.9% 15366 8.9% 0.5%
Łęczyca 127585 111517 87.4% 11763 9.2% 4195 3.3% 0.1% 108277 84.9% 11937 9.4% 5951 4.7% 1.1%
Łódź County 161671 120095 74.3% 12815 7.9% 28450 17.6% 0.2% 117102 72.4% 13152 8.1% 29131 18.0% 1.4%
Piotrków 222195 192161 86.5% 20434 9.2% 8838 4.0% 0.3% 188184 84.7% 20902 9.4% 12044 5.4% 0.5%
Radomsko 186412 171787 92.2% 11734 6.3% 2601 1.4% 0.2% 169865 91.1% 12019 6.4% 3820 2.0% 0.4%
Sieradz 168051 147369 87.7% 15111 9.0% 5493 3.3% 0.0% 145689 86.7% 16042 9.5% 5714 3.4% 0.4%
Turek 101734 94370 92.8% 4155 4.1% 3176 3.1% 0.0% 92653 91.1% 4311 4.2% 4528 4.5% 0.2%
Wieluń 214299 200823 93.7% 13216 6.2% 113 0.1% 0.1% 196813 91.8% 14511 6.8% 2276 1.1% 0.3%
Total 2632010 2108352 80.1% 359435 13.7% 155315 5.9% 0.3% 2041570 77.6% 378495 14.4% 187904 7.1% 0.9%
: **Linguistic (mother tongue) and religious structure of Łódź Voivodeship according to the 1931 census**
## Industry
The Voivodeship\'s biggest industrial center was the city of Łódź with its suburbs. Apart from this, it lacked other industrial cities. The construction of a huge public works program, called Centralny Okręg Przemysłowy, which started in the second half of the 1930s, missed this part of Poland. Railroad density was 4.8 per 100 km^2^, while the national average was 5.2. The biggest rail hubs were Koluszki, Kutno, Łowicz, Skierniewice, Zduńska Wola and Łódź.
## Voivodes
- Antoni Kamieński 19 November 1919 -- 1 March 1922
- Paweł Garapich 1 March 1922 -- 14 February 1923 (p.o.)
- Marian Rembowski 9 March 1923 -- 12 August 1924
- Paweł Garapich 12 August 1924 -- 30 December 1924
- Ludwik Darowski 1925 -- 22 June 1926
- Jan Ossoliński June 1926 -- July 1926 (p.o
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# David Lloyd (riflemaker and sportsman)
**David Llewellyn Lloyd** (1910-1996) was an English pilot, deer-stalker, ballistician, and sporting rifle maker, of Northamptonshire, England, and Glencassley Estate in Sutherland, Scotland.
Although already an experienced pilot he was considered too old at 29, to be called up for service during the Battle of Britain in the Royal Air Force in the Second World War, instead he became the senior flight controller based at Tangmere, Sussex during the Battle of Britain.
Extensive deer stalking, and frequent rifle shooting visits to Bisley ranges, Lloyd established the David Lloyd & Co. riflemakers company (registered company 05202134) at Pipewell Hall in 1936, and in the early 1950s developed the .244 H&H Magnum rifle cartridge, later adopted by Holland & Holland of London.
Although Lloyd had no formal training as a riflemaker, he employed a team of craftsmen from the London & provincial trade to build the rifles in the workshops at Pipewell Hall.
Lloyd developed the distinctive Lloyd rifle concept, and from the 1960s to the mid-1990s he built magazine-fed sporting rifles based on commercial Mauser 98 & Sako actions with distinctively integral scope sights, capable of dependably high accuracy at long ranges, and of handling modern high-intensity, flat shooting cartridges such as the .244 H&H, the .264 Winchester Magnum and the .25-06 Remington. Lloyd noted that he *attached a rifle to a scope*, rather than the more normal saying of *attaching a scope to a rifle*.
*Shooting Times* voted the Lloyd rifle number 8 in its list of the top 12 Rifles of All Time, and *Country Life* magazine described Lloyd himself as "a National Living Treasure". Lloyd rifles are owned by rifle makers Bill Ruger and Roy Weatherby and by several owners of Scottish deer forests.
In his deer-stalking career of over 60 years, Lloyd killed more than 5,000 Scottish highland red deer stags, the vast majority of them with rifles built by his company.
Lloyd\'s wife Evadne ("Bobby", the longest-serving governor of the Royal Shakespeare Company in its history) keenly supported him in his business and helped him to source fine walnut blanks for his rifle stocks from various European sources. On Lloyd\'s death in 1996, she took on the business, which by then was doing little trade, and ran it until she died in 2003 when the company was sold to John Shirley, formerly Technical Manager with James Purdey and Sons of London. He subsequently offered the business name, goodwill, and records of the David Lloyd company for sale at auction in London in December 2006
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# Villa Puerto Edén
**Villa Puerto Edén** is a Chilean hamlet and minor port located in Wellington Island, in Natales commune, Última Esperanza Province, Magallanes Region. It is considered one of Chile\'s most isolated inhabited places together with Easter Island and Villa Las Estrellas. The village is known for being the home of the last Kawéshkar people. Owing to the large tidewater glaciers caused by the region's super-high precipitation, it is only accessible by sea, on the Navimag ferry from Puerto Montt in the north, or Puerto Natales in the south. There is also a monthly boat from Caleta Tortel.
The population is 176 (2002 census). Owing to the extraordinarily humid climate the village has no roads, with only pedestrian boardwalks connecting the houses and shops. A weekly transport boat takes local fish and shellfish products (the latter mainly mussels) to markets. Margarita Vargas López, a member of the Chilean Constitutional Convention, was born and raised in Villa Puerto Edén.
## Climate
Villa Puerto Edén has an extremely wet subpolar oceanic climate (Köppen *Cfc*) and is widely reputed to be the place in the world with the highest frequency of rainfall, though according to Guinness World Records the highest frequency of rain in a year occurred at Bahia Felix, a little further south, with only eighteen rainless days in the whole of 1916. The annual rainfall is almost exactly equal to that of Little Port Walter in the similarly wet Alaska Panhandle, but is more evenly spread across the year, with a minimum average monthly rainfall of 375 mm as against 200 mm in Little Port Walter.
## Gallery
<File:Puerto> Edén 033.JPG\|View of Villa Puerto Edén\'s docks <File:Alacaluf_woman,_Villa_Puerto_Edén,_Chile_-_20060111.jpg%7CAlacaluf> woman <File:Chili-Puerto> Edén Houses.JPG\|Houses of Puerto Edén <File:Calle> de Puerto Edén.jpg\|Street in Puerto Edén <File:Puerto> Edén harbour-2009
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# List of highways numbered 800
| 6 |
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# Rodrigo Grande
**Rodrigo Grande** (born February 10, 1974, in Rosario, Santa Fe Province) is an Argentine film director and screenplay writer.
He works in the cinema of Argentina and in the cinema of Spain.
## Filmography
**Writer and director**
- *La pared y la lluvia* (1994)
- *Juntos, in any way* (1996)
- *Rosarigasinos* (2001) aka *Presos del olvido* aka *Gangs from Rosario*
- *Cuestión de principios* (2009) aka *A Matter of Principles*
- *Al final del túnel* (2016) aka *At the End of the Tunnel*
## Awards
**Wins**
- Huelva Latin American Film Festival: Special Jury Award -- Best Picture (ree) -- Best Actor -- Intl Critics Mention, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2001.
- Lleida Latin-American Film Festival: Best First Work, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Santo Domingo Film Festival: Ciguapa de Oro; Best Picture -- Best Actor, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Los Angeles Latin Film Festival LALIFF: Best First Work, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2001.
- Temecula Film Festival: Mention of Honor, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Condor Awards (Argentina): Best Music; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Mar del Plata International Film Festival: Best Actor - Best Music; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Festival de Cine Nacional de Pergamino (Argentina): Best Actor -- Best Supporting Actress; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Festival de Cine Argentino de Olavarria (Argentina): Audience Award; for: *Rosarigasinos*; 2002.
- Huelva Latin American Film Festival: Best Picture; UPN Award, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2009.
- San Diego Latino Film Festival: Best Narrative Feature, Rodrigo Grande; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2010.
- Chicago Latino Film Festival: Audience Choice Award - Second Place; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2010.
- Los Angeles Latin Film Festival LALIFF: Best Script, Rodrigo Grande and Roberto Fontanarrosa; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2010.
- Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival 2010 (USA): Peoples Choice Award - Best Foreign Film; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2010.
- Sur Awards -- Argentinian Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science (ARG): Best Adapted Screenplay; for: *Cuestión de Principios*; 2010.
- Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival: Best Thriller, Rodrigo Grande; for: *At The End of the Tunnel*; 2017.
- Washington DC Film Festival: Best Feature Film (Audience Award), Rodrigo Grande; for: *At The End of the Tunnel*; 2017.
- Seattle International Film Festival: Best Feature Film & Best Director (Golden Space Needle Award - Audience Choice Award), Rodrigo Grande; for: *At The End of the Tunnel*; 2017.
- Pelikula Manila Spanish Film Festival 2017 : Best Feature Film (Audience Award), Rodrigo Grande; for: *At The End of the Tunnel*; 2017
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# Maksim Buznikin
**Maksim Buznikin** (born 1 March 1977) is former Russia international forward or attacking midfielder. Buznikin spent his prime years playing for Spartak Moscow and Lokomotiv Moscow. In 2005 Buznikin was chosen Rostov\'s footballer of the year.
## Honours
- Russian Premier League champion: 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004.
- Russian Premier League runner-up: 2001.
- Russian Premier League bronze: 2005.
- Russian Cup winner: 1998.
- Russian Super Cup winner: 2003.
### International goals {#international_goals}
\# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition {{Ig match n=1 d=1999-01-29 st=Thống Nhất Stadium\|ci=Hanoi\|co=Vietnam o=Iran sc=**1** -- 0 fr=2--0 comp=Friendly match}} {{Ig match n=2 d=1999-01-29 st=Thống Nhất Stadium\|ci=Hanoi\|co=Vietnam o=Iran sc=**2** -- 0 fr=2--0 comp=Friendly match}} {{Ig match n=3 d=2000-06-04 st=Stadionul Republican\|ci=Chişinău\|co=Moldova o=Moldova sc=0 -- **1** fr=0--1 comp=Friendly match}} {{Ig match n=4 d=2000-08-16 st=Luzhniki Stadium\|ci=Moscow\|co=Russia o=Israel sc=**1** -- 0 fr=1--0 comp=Friendly match}} {{Ig match n=5 d=2000-10-11 st1=Dynamo Stadium\|ci=Moscow\|co=Russia o=Luxembourg sc=**1** -- 0 fr=3--0 comp=2002 FIFA World Cup qualification}} {{Ig match n=6 d=2001-02-28 st=Theodoros Vardinogiannis Stadium\|ci=Heraklion\|co=Greece o=Greece sc=2 -- **1** fr=3--3 comp=Friendly match}} {{Ig match n=7 d=2001-02-28 st=Theodoros Vardinogiannis Stadium\|ci=Heraklion\|co=Greece o=Greece sc=2 -- **3** fr=3--3 comp=Friendly match}}
---- ------ ------- ---------- ------- -------- ------------------------ ----- -------------- --------------------------------------------- -------- --------------- --------- ---------------------------------- ----- -------------- --------------------------------------------- -------- --------------- --------- ---------------------------------- ----- -------------- -------------------------------------------------- ----------- --------------- --------- ---------------------------------- ----- -------------- ------------------------------------------- ---------- --------------- --------- ---------------------------------- ----- -------------- ------------------------------------------ -------------- --------------- --------- ----------------------------------------------------- ----- -------------- -------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- --------------- --------- ---------------------------------- ----- -------------- -------------------------------------------------------------- ---------- --------------- --------- -----------------------
## European competitions history {#european_competitions_history}
- UEFA Cup 1997--98 with FC Spartak Moscow: 7 games, 1 goal.
- UEFA Champions League 1998--99 with FC Spartak Moscow: 3 games.
- UEFA Champions League 2001--02 with FC Lokomotiv Moscow: 6 games, 3 goals.
- UEFA Cup 2001--02 with FC Lokomotiv Moscow: 1 game.
- UEFA Champions League 2002--03 with FC Lokomotiv Moscow: 9 games.
- UEFA Champions League 2003--04 with FC Lokomotiv Moscow: 6 games, 1 goal
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# Menagerie (Image Comics)
**Olivia** \"**Livvie**\" **Lewis** is a comic book superheroine and a member of the superhero team Dynamo 5, which appears in the monthly series of the same name from Image Comics. Created by writer Jay Faerber and artist Mahmud A. Asrar, Slingshot first appeared in *Dynamo 5* #1 (January 2007).
For the first 24 issues of the series, the character possessed the power of flight, and went by the codename **Slingshot**. In issue #25 of the series (October 2009), the character, whose powers had been erased in the previous issue, obtained different powers. Now possessing the power to shapeshift into any animal, she goes by the name **Menagerie**.
## Publication history {#publication_history}
Olivia \"Livvie\" Lewis\' biological mother died when Livvie was young enough to require her adoptive father and her mother\'s widow, Neil Lewis, a high-priced Washington DC lawyer, to learn how to cook. Livvie is a junior at Georgetown University, an overachiever, and a driven activist who is involved with half a dozen different volunteer organizations and extracurricular activities, which include working as a reporter for G.U.\'s campus newspaper, *The Hoya*, and volunteering at a clinic, though her workaholic nature leaves less time for her boyfriend Derrick than he'd like.
Following the assassination of Captain Dynamo, the much-beloved superhero protector of Tower City, his widow, former government agent posing as a now-retired investigative reporter Maddie Warner, discovered from his personal effects that he had been unfaithful to her countless times. Despite her devastation at this discovery, Warner realized that without a full-time protector, Tower City would be vulnerable to Captain Dynamo's legion of super-villain enemies. She used her skills and the information she discovered to track down five people who could be Dynamo's illegitimate children.
Livvie was the second of Captain Dynamo's children that Warner contacted, and the second oldest. Gathering all five of the children together, Warner exposed them to the same unidentified radiation that gave Captain Dynamo his powers forty years earlier, unlocking their powers. Livvie inherited her father's ability of flight, took the codename Slingshot, and works to protect Tower City with her newly discovered brothers and sisters. As a member of Dynamo 5, Slingshot is dedicated and attentive. She is respectful and reserved towards Maddie Warner, usually referring to and addressing her as \"Ma\'am\", or \"Mrs. Warner\", and eschewing profanity in her presence. She finds Warner\'s writings as a journalist to be \"brilliant\", and objects to her brother Spencer\'s view that this deference is an attempt on her part to \"suck up\" to Warner. She is not completely deferential to Warner, however. For example, in the team\'s first year, she angrily refuses to comply with Warner\'s order that she and her siblings stay in Tower City to protect it after she learned of her father\'s kidnapping.
Neil Lewis was kidnapped by the former employers of an assassin named Lionel Barstow. These employers blackmailed her into freeing Barstow, but after she and her siblings did so, Barstow killed his ex-employers with his \"death touch\". Barstow explained that after he was captured, his attorney, Neil Lewis, advised him to testify against his employers. Although Slingshot\'s siblings are outraged at learning that they freed a murderer, Slingshot is more concerned with getting her father to safety than returning Barstow to the authorities, a decision that later serves as a source of tension among the team. Livvie later finds Barstow and returns him to the authorities, despite his threat to use her secret identity as a bargaining chip with them.
Neil Lewis was profoundly disturbed to discover his daughter\'s secret when she rescued him, and pained to learn that Livvie\'s mother cheated on him with Captain Dynamo. Livvie, however, recalling her feeling of betrayal with Spencer, sympathized with him, but reassured him that because of Dynamo\'s shapeshifting ability, he could\'ve impersonated Neil himself when he fathered Livvie, and that Livvie\'s mother may not have truly cheated on Neil.
In issues 24 and 25 of the series, the team was attacked by their other half-sibling, the supervillain Synergy, who used a weapon to erase the team\'s abilities and capture them. The team freed themselves, and used the weapon to restore their powers, but they manifested different abilities than the ones they previously had. Olivia found that she and her brother Spencer had switched their powers but, in her case, it was exhibited in a different way. Now possessing animal shapeshifting, she took the new codename Menagerie.
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# Menagerie (Image Comics)
## Powers
Olivia Lewis has the superhuman ability to shapeshift into any animal. She can only shapeshift into real animals, and not fictional ones. Shapeshifting into too many different forms in a small span of time, as when, for example, she shapeshifted into five different animals in rapid succession during a training session shortly after receiving her powers, physically exhausts her. Of the five members of Dynamo 5, Olivia is the only one who received a superhuman ability in issue #25 that was not previously exhibited by one of her siblings. Unlike her brother, Spencer, who previously had shapeshifting abilities, Olivia cannot use her abilities to impersonate other people. Although Spencer ostensibly could not shapeshift into animals, Olivia has speculated that perhaps he could and simply did not know it, and that in general, much about her powers and those of her siblings remains unknown.
In her previous identity of Slingshot, Olivia had the ability to defy gravity, and fly under her own power. The top speed and altitude she could achieve unaided is unknown, but she was able to use this ability to be an effective fighter in battles. In one encounter with the reptilian monster known as Whiptail, she was able to fly around the creature fast enough to create a miniature tornado, causing him dizziness, without suffering any ill effects herself. Although she did not inherit her father's superhuman strength, she was able to generate extra thrust while in flight, as she was able to carry another person when flying. She also used the speed she could generate while in flight to render an opponent unconscious with the impact of a single punch. Whether this is a physiological adaptation that manifested itself along with her flight power, or a result of reinforced gloves, has not been specified. Although she no longer has this power, she can, with her shapeshifting abilities, become an animal capable of flight, such as a bird
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# Gazi Baba Municipality
**Gazi Baba** (*Гази Баба}}*, *Gazi Babë*) is one of the ten municipalities that make up the City of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The municipality administration consists of a council and mayor.
## Geography
The municipality borders Petrovec Municipality, Studeničani Municipality and Aerodrom Municipality to the south, Centar Municipality, Čair Municipality and Butel Municipality to the west, Lipkovo Municipality to the northeast, and Aračinovo Municipality and Ilinden Municipality to the east.
## Demographics
According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, Gazi Baba municipality has 69,626 inhabitants, making it the most populous municipality in Greater Skopje. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **72,617** **100**
Macedonians 53,497 73.67
Albanians 12,502 17.2
Roma 2,082 2.87
Serbs 2,097 2.89
Bosniaks 710 0.98
Turks 606 0.83
Vlachs 236 0.32
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 887 1.22
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
### Religious affiliation {#religious_affiliation}
Religion according to the [2002](https://www.stat.gov.mk/publikacii/knigaX.pdf) Macedonia census and 2021 North Macedonia census:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **72,617** **100**
Orthodox 54,637 75.2
Christians 14 0.02
Catholics 248 0.34
Islam 15,968 22.0
Others 1,750 0.62
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources n/a n/a
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
### Demographic Trends {#demographic_trends}
- [Live births by ethnic affiliation of mother, 2010-2022](https://makstat.stat.gov.mk/PXWeb/pxweb/en/MakStat/MakStat__Naselenie__Vitalna/755_VitStat_ZivRod_NacRod_ml.px/?rxid=46ee0f64-2992-4b45-a2d9-cb4e5f7ec5ef)
---------- ----------------- ------- --------------- ------- ------------ ------- ------------ -------
**Macedonians** **Albanians** **Turks** **Serbs**
**Year** **Births** **%** **Births** **%** **Births** **%** **Births** **%**
**2010** 536 60.91 240 27.27 4 0.45 6 0.68
**2011** 498 58.18 247 28.86 7 0.82 9 1.05
**2012** 523 60.18 260 29.92 5 0.58 9 1.04
**2013** 499 56.13 287 32.28 8 0.90 4 0.45
**2014** 513 58.49 282 32.16 5 0.57 2 0.23
**2015** 494 61.75 231 28.88 8 1.00 2 0.25
**2016** 543 62.49 242 27.85 4 0.46 7 0.81
**2017** 428 56.39 252 33.20 4 0.53 5 0.66
**2018** 467 61.21 224 29.36 3 0.39 5 0.66
**2019** 424 60.49 217 30.96 4 0.57 2 0.29
**2020** 447 59.76 236 31.55 5 0.67 3 0.40
**2021** 419 59.60 219 31.15 2 0.28 3 0.43
**2022** 394 59.70 203 30.76 6 0.91 6 0.91
**2023** 355 54.03 232 35.31 7 1.07 3 0.46
---------- ----------------- ------- --------------- ------- ------------ ------- ------------ -------
## Inhabited places {#inhabited_places}
There are 15 inhabited places in this municipality.
Inhabited Places Total Macedonians Albanians Turks Roma Vlachs Serbs Bosnians Others
---------------------------- ------------ ------------- ------------ --------- ----------- --------- ----------- ---------- -----------
**Gazi Baba Municipality** **69,626** **45,242** **14,146** **468** **1,922** **185** **1,328** **753** **5,582**
Brnjarci 1.254 460 770 \- \- \- 1 \- 23
Bulačani 1.147 1.015 11 \- 1 \- 4 1 15
Čento 7.829 329 6.985 20 \- \- 42 96 357
Creševo 982 911 \- \- \- \- 8 \- 63
Gazi Baba 38.426 28.887 2.775 413 1.099 145 1.026 607 3.494
Goce Delčev 1.402 1.205 71 2 15 \- 10 4 95
Idrizovo 1.824 826 747 15 11 \- 9 29 187
Indžikovo 4.324 2.983 527 3 413 32 49 13 305
Jurumleri 3.256 2.522 54 \- 342 7 62 \- 269
Raštak 457 430 \- \- \- \- 2 \- 25
Smilkovci 371 348 \- \- \- \- \- \- 23
Stajkovci 4.394 2.877 1.117 6 38 1 26 1 328 \|-←
Trubarevo 2.470 1.772 334 8 4 \- 85 2 265
Viniče 354 336 \- \- \- \- 4 \- 14
## Sports
Football clubs FK Skopje and FK Metalurg Skopje play their home games at the Železarnica Stadium in Gazi Baba
| 588 |
Gazi Baba Municipality
| 0 |
10,015,716 |
# Usin Kerim
**Usin Kerim** (26 July 1929 -- 8 June 1983) was a Bulgarian Romani poet. Kerim came to prominence in the genre of Romani poetry over the past decade.
He was born in 1929 by the banks of the River Vit in Bulgaria, and composed \"Birth in the Encampment\" and other poems
| 54 |
Usin Kerim
| 0 |
10,015,725 |
# Ruth Comfort Mitchell Young
**Ruth Comfort Mitchell Young** (July 21, 1882 -- February 18, 1954) was an American writer and playwright, best known for her novel, *Of Human Kindness.* She wrote under her maiden name **Ruth Comfort Mitchell**, as well as her married name, **Mrs. Sanborn Young**. She was the wife of California State Senator Sanborn Young. Several of her stories were made into films.
## Early life and education {#early_life_and_education}
Mitchell was born in San Francisco, California, July 21, 1882. Born to wealth, her father being a successful hotelier, she spent summers in the town of Los Gatos, where her parents and grandparents had summer homes. Educated at mostly at home, she took some schooling at a school then known as the Irving Institute.
Her first poem was published in the *Los Gatos Mail*, when she was only 14, launching her literary career. She travelled widely as a young woman, including 18 months in Europe, along with long trips in Mexico and Canada.
In 1914, literary friends in San Francisco introduced her to Sanborn Young, who had recently sold his grain business and was traveling. The couple were married in October 1914 in the Grand Canyon and moved to New York City, where Ruth continued her literary pursuits, and he studied photography.
## Career
Mitchell enjoyed a long career as a writer; authoring 16 novels, along with poems, short stories, and one-act plays. *New York Times* reviews were positive about her works, regarding them as \"light fiction\" and \"as romantic as possible.\"
Her short stories appeared in *Ladies\' Home Journal* and*Woman\'s Home Companion* and she openly aimed for a female audience. One of her plays, *The Sweetmeat Game* (1916) was set in San Francisco\'s Chinatown and inspired her to design her home, known as the Yung See San Fong House, in a Chinese style. Today the house is protected under the Historic American Buildings Survey.
Mitchell\'s later work was dominated by a series of historically informed fiction, including *The Legend of Susan Dane,* set in pre-Union San Jose.
Her 1940 book, *Of Human Kindness* ---in strong contrast to John Steinbeck and his novel *The Grapes of Wrath---*gave a positive vision of industrial agriculture in the 20th Century. She considered Steinbeck\'s work to have defamed her beloved state. It is considered her finest work. A keen outdoorswoman, Mitchell took great joy from keeping dogs and horseback riding to Big Sur.
## Personal life {#personal_life}
Because of her fame, many of the literati visited her home. The Youngs were known to be friendly with W. C. Morrow, Robert W. Service, Gertrude Atherton, James Phelan, Gertrude Stein and Wendell Willkie. Ruth was very involved with the annual Los Gatos Pageant, the Los Gatos Christian Science Church, the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the Los Gatos History Club.
With her husband, the couple took a keen interest in politics. She campaigned for Hoover, while her husband became an anti-drugs and conservation campaigner, eventually serving three terms in the California State Senate. Ruth served as Republican National Committeewoman from California for eight years and as national and state president of Pro-America, an organization of Republican women founded in 1933.
In February 1954, she died from heart failure, while taking a bath at home. Her husband living a further ten years
| 548 |
Ruth Comfort Mitchell Young
| 0 |
10,015,820 |
# Aad Mansveld
**Adriaan Mansveld** (14 July 1944 -- 5 December 1991) was a Dutch footballer who played as a libero.
## Career
Born in The Hague, Mansveld played club football for FC Den Haag, Golden Gate Gales, Feyenoord and FC Utrecht. A stand at Zuiderpark Stadion, ADO Den Haag\'s stadium, was named after Mansveld. At ADO Den Haag\'s new stadium, the Cars Jeans Stadium, a statue of Mansveld was also erected.
He also earned 6 caps for the Netherlands national team between 1972 and 1973. He played in a number of qualifying matches for the 1974 FIFA World Cup, but was injured for the actual tournament.
He died at the age of 47 from cancer
| 116 |
Aad Mansveld
| 0 |
10,015,835 |
# David Barr (Canadian Forces officer)
**Colonel David Barr**, CD, is a former commander of the Canadian Special Operations Forces Command.
## Biography
Barr\'s early military service included platoon command with the 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia\'s Canadian Light Infantry in Victoria, British Columbia (1980--84), and subsequently with the Canadian Airborne Regiment in Petawawa, Ontario (1984--87).
From 2007 to 2010, he was the chief of staff and deputy commander of Joint Task Force Games (JTFG), which provided support to secure Vancouver during the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.
Barr was the first commander of CSOFC. During his tenure as commander, Barr also deployed to Afghanistan as commander of the Canadian special operations task force in Operation Enduring Freedom
| 119 |
David Barr (Canadian Forces officer)
| 0 |
10,015,850 |
# Gjorče Petrov Municipality
**Gjorče Petrov** (*Ѓорче Петров*) is one of the ten municipalities that compose the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. It is named after the revolutionary Gjorče Petrov.
## Geography
Gjorče Petrov borders
- Saraj to the southwest,
- Karpoš to the southeast,
- Čučer-Sandevo to the east, and
- Kosovo to the north.
The municipality is the place of the confluence of the Treska and Vardar rivers.
## Demographics
According to the 2002 Macedonia census, the municipality has 41,634 inhabitants. According to the 2021 North Macedonia census, this municipality has 44,844 inhabitants. Ethnic groups in the municipality include:
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
2002
Number \%
**TOTAL** **41,634** **100**
Macedonians 35,455 85.16
Albanians 1,597 3.84
Serbs 1,730 4.16
Roma 1,249 3
Bosniaks 489 1.17
Turks 368 0.88
Vlachs 109 0.26
Other / Undeclared / Unknown 637 1.53
Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources
------------------------------------------------------------- ------------ ---------
## Sports
Football club FK Makedonija Gjorče Petrov has played in the top tier of Macedonian football for several years. Their home stadium is the Gjorče Petrov Stadium
| 181 |
Gjorče Petrov Municipality
| 0 |
10,015,856 |
# Sausal Creek (Alameda County)
**Sausal Creek**, 3.1 mi long, is one of the principal creeks in Oakland, California.
The creek derives its name from the Spanish word for willow grove (*sausal*). Native arroyo willows were once common along its banks. Efforts are underway to restore the willows and the creek itself. A volunteer group, Friends of Sausal Creek, helps remove invasive species and plant native species. Some of the invasive species in the Sausal Creek watershed include Monterey pine trees, ivy, French broom, and wild mustard.
## Course
The North fork of the creek, also known as Shepherd Creek, begins in the hills above Oakland, flowing down Shepherd Canyon, named for an early landowner at the top of the canyon, William J. Shepherd. The South fork, also known as Palo Seco Creek, also begins in the hills, and flows down Palo Seco Canyon to a confluence with the north fork in the linear valley where the Montclair district is situated. The creek then cuts through the shutter ridge which defines the linear valley (formed by the Hayward Fault), and runs down to the flatlands through Dimond Canyon, where it passes under historic Leimert Bridge. It then runs southwest through the San Antonio district to empty into the Oakland Estuary. The creek is mostly open in the hills section, and runs in culverts as it approaches the bay.
## History
The first inhabitants of the Sausal Creek watershed were the Huchiun or Yrgin tribelets of the Ohlone people. They harvested acorns, buckeyes and other foodstuffs at a time when enormous live oaks, alders, willows, and big-leaf maples grew on the creek\'s banks in what is now downtown Oakland, California. Also, large Coast redwoods (*Sequoia sempervirens*) grew on the ridge where Skyline Boulevard now runs.
Sausal Creek was named **Arroyo del Bosque** by Father Juan Crespí during the Pedro Fages Expedition in 1772. Later the Sausal watershed became part of the Rancho San Antonio land grant to Sergeant Luis Maria Peralta in 1820. By 1841 Peralta\'s descendants were selling the giant redwoods and by 1850 there were at least ten sawmills operating in the watershed. The Blossom Rock Tree had a trunk diameter of 33.5 feet and was over 300 feet tall. It was so named because sailors used it as a navigational aid to avoid an underwater hazardous rock, Blossom Rock, in San Francisco Bay.
The creek was also known as **Fruitvale Creek**, when the settlement of Fruitvale was established in 1856 when Quaker nurseryman Henderson Luelling, planted hundreds of cherry trees along Sausal Creek, and named the area \"Fruit Vale\".
As Oakland grew larger, the Sausal Creek watershed was significantly altered. When people built their houses next to Sausal Creek, they often planted gardens, which brought in plants from around the globe. Over time, since many of these plants were foreign, they were not adapted to the environment, and they could not be controlled.
In 1935, the Works Progress Administration began work deep in the canyon. Initially they were funded to clear landslides and build fire trails. In 1937, the WPA constructed a sanitary sewer that runs adjacent to Sausal Creek under the creek-side trail that runs from Dimond Park to slightly beyond the Leimert Bridge. In 1939 and 1940, further work was done to channelize the creek in concrete and stabilize its banks. The creek still ran, but at a quickening pace. What had once been a slow, babbling brook was now a torrential storm. Culverts soon covered the creek. In the 1980s, behind the Cohen-Bray House, on 29th Avenue near International Boulevard, preservationists fought over a culvert project that preservationists thought would deal a blow to a neighborhood rife with drugs and crime.
## Restoration projects {#restoration_projects}
Attitudes about Sausal Creek have changed and now benefits from citizen and government support. In 1996, the Friends of Sausal Creek was formed with support from the City of Oakland, the Aquatic Outreach Institute (now called The Watershed Project), and the Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District. The group is interested in the entire Sausal Creek Watershed, and has organized clean-up hikes within the canyon, water quality monitoring of the creek, and has planted a native plant garden and a riparian restoration site at the lower end of the hiking trail in Dimond Park.
In 2015, the Sausal Creek Restoration Project removed 250 feet of culvert, widened the existing creek to create a more stable, natural and diverse riparian corridor, and added native plants and trees
| 748 |
Sausal Creek (Alameda County)
| 0 |
10,015,867 |
# Rita Carewe
**Rita Carewe** (born **Violette Fox**, September 9, 1909 -- October 22, 1955) was an American actress.
## Family
Violette Fox was born on September 9, 1909, to Edwin Carewe (born Jay Fox) and Mary Jane Croft. She had a sister, Mary Jane. Fox\'s father, Edwin, was a film director/producer for United Artists. In 1914, he came to Hollywood as a director for Lubin Studios. Later he worked for Rolf-Metro, Selig Polyscope Company, and First National Pictures. He was married three times, twice to the actress Mary Akin.
## Film career {#film_career}
Edwin signed Rita to a five-year contract with First National Pictures, in reward for her work in *Joanna* (1925), which he directed. Her first assignment under her new contract was in *High Steppers* (1926). The movie featured Dolores del Río, Mary Astor, and Lloyd Hughes.
Carewe was selected as one of 13 actresses selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1927. The 100 members of WAMPAS chose her, along with Natalie Kingston, Sally Phipps, Adamae Vaughn, Iris Stuart, and eight more as the actresses as most likely to succeed in the film world.
A committee of 25 important people in the industry promoted Carewe for the role of Lorelei Lee in *Gentlemen Prefer Blondes* (1928). The part was eventually won by Ruth Taylor. Carewe played the girl of the streets in *Resurrection* (1927). This was followed by a more important role, as *Tina*, in *Revenge* (1928). The film was based on a story written by gypsy author, Konrad Bercovici.
Her first motion picture in the sound medium was *Prince Gabby* (1929). She acted opposite Edward Everett Horton in a screen adaptation of an Edgar Wallace novel. Her final film appearance was in *Radio Kisses* (1930).
## Marriage
Carewe eloped to Yuma, Arizona, with actor LeRoy Mason in July 1928. Mason had been discovered by Carewe\'s father at a sandwich counter.
Carewe and Mason separated in December 1934, and she filed for divorce in November 1935.
Rita Carewe died at age 45 in Torrance, California. She is interred in Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles
| 349 |
Rita Carewe
| 0 |
10,015,870 |
# Noah Creshevsky
**Noah Creshevsky** (January 31, 1945 -- December 3, 2020) was a composer and electronic musician born in Rochester, New York. He used the term hyperrealism to describe his work.
## Biography
Noah Creshevsky was born **Gary Cohen** in Rochester, New York, to Joseph and Sylvia Cohen. He changed his surname to Creshevsky in order to honor his maternal grandparents. At the same time he also changed his first name because, he said, \"I never felt like a Gary.\" He studied in the preparatory division of the Eastman School of Music from the age of 6 until 1961, then earned a B.F.A. degree at the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1966, studying with Lukas Foss.
Trained in composition by Nadia Boulanger in Paris and Luciano Berio at the Juilliard School (earning a master\'s degree in 1968), Creshevsky lived and worked in New York beginning in 1966. There, he founded the New York Improvisation Ensemble. He taught at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York for 31 years, serving as Director of the Brooklyn College Center for Computer Music (BC-CCM) from 1994 to 1999. He also served on the faculties of Juilliard and Hunter College, and was a visiting professor at Princeton University during the 1984 academic year.
Creshevsky began composing electronic music in 1971. His musical vocabulary used bits of words, songs, and instrumental sounds. By fusing opposites---such as music and noise, comprehensible and incomprehensible vocal sources--Creshevsky attempted to make music that sounded both Western and non-Western, ancient and modern, familiar and unfamiliar.
This alliance of opposites is heard both in his text-sound compositions (1973-1986)---Pop Art works in which extreme and unpredictable juxtapositions of iconographic sonic materials establish links between music and society ---and in later pieces, in which the integration of electronic and acoustic sources and processes "creates virtual 'superperformers' by using the sounds of traditional instruments pushed past the capacities of human performance." Creshevsky's most recent compositions are examples of \"Hyperrealism\", a term he uses to describe an electroacoustic language constructed from sounds found in our shared environment that he handles in ways that are exaggerated or intense.
Collections of Creshevsky\'s scores and sound recordings are held at the music libraries of Northwestern University. and the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
Creshevsky, who died of bladder cancer, was interred on Hart Island at his own request. Usually burials on Hart Island are for the homeless or poor and unclaimed bodies. According to his husband David Sachs (a teacher and book editor who lived with Creshevsky for 42 years), Creshevsky intended to protest the trappings and cost of traditional funerals.
| 441 |
Noah Creshevsky
| 0 |
10,015,870 |
# Noah Creshevsky
## Discography
### CDs
**Man & Superman** *(1992)* Centaur Records CRC 2126
- Variations (1987)
- Electric String Quartet (1988)
- Memento Mori (1989)
- Electric Partita (1990)
- Talea (1991)
**Who** *(1993)* Centaur Records CRC 2476
- Fanfare (1998)
- Sha (1996)
- Twice (1993)
- Who (1995)
- et puis (1998)
- Gone Now (1995)
- Breathless (1997)
- Nude Ascending (1999)
**Auxesis** Electronic Music by Charles Amirkhanian and Noah Creshevsky *(1995)* Centaur Records CRC 2194
- Politics as Usual (Amirkhanian)
- Borrowed Time (Creshevsky---1992)
- Private Lives (Creshevsky---1993)
- Coup d\'état (Creshevsky---1994)
**Hyperrealism** *(2003)* [Mutable Music](http://mutablemusic.com) Mutable 17516-2
- Canto di Malavita (2002)
- Jacob's Ladder (1999)
- Vol-au-vent (2002)
- Hoodlum Priest (2002)
- Novella (2000)
- Ossi di morte (1997)
- Jubilate (2001)
- Born Again (2003)
**The Tape Music of Noah Creshevsky, 1971-1992** *(2004)* [EM Records](http://www.emrecords.net) (Japan) EM 1042CD
- Strategic Defense Initiative (1986)
- Highway (1979)
- Circuit (1971)
- Drummer (1985)
- Great Performances (1978)
- Sonata (1980)
- In Other Words (Portrait of John Cage) (1976)
- Cantiga (1992)
**To Know and Not to Know** *(2007)* Tzadik Tzadik-8036
- Red Carpet (2007)
- Psalmus XXIII (2003)
- To Know and Not to Know (2005)
- Once (2004)
- Chamber Concerto (1998)
- Jubilate (2001)
- Sequenza (for trombone) (2004)
- Independence Day (1997)
- Free Speech (2006)
**Favorite Encores**, Music of Noah Creshevsky and If, Bwana, *(2008)* [Pogus](http://pogus.com) Pogus 21049-2
- Mari Kimura Redux (Creshevsky)
- Xyloxings (If, Bwana)
- Shadow of a Doubt (Creshevsky)
- Scraping Scrafide (If, Bwana)
- Intrada (Creshevsky)
- Cicada #4: Version Barnard (If, Bwana)
- Favorite Encores (Creshevsky)
**The Twilight of the Gods** *(2010)* Tzadik Tzadik-8069
- Götterdämmerung
- Omaggio
- Three Minute Waltzes
- Brother Tom
- Estancia
- I Wonder Who\'s Kissing Her Now
- La Belle Dame Sans Merci
- Happy Ending
**Rounded With A Sleep** *(2011)* [Pogus](http://www.pogus.com/21063.html) Pogus 21063-2
- Rounded With A Sleep
- La Sonnambula
- Lisa Barnard Redux
- What If
- Tomomi Adachi Redux II
- The Kindness of Strangers
- In Memoriam
**The Four Seasons** *(2013)* Tzadik Tzadik-8097
- i\. summer
- ii\. interlude 1
- iii\. autumn
- iv\. interlude 2
- v\. winter
- vi\. interlude 3
- vii\. spring
**Hyperrealist Music, 2011-2015** *(2015)* [EM Records](http://emrecords.ocnk.net/product/112) (Japan) EM 1140CD
- 1\. Pulp Fiction (2014)
- 2\. Tomomi Adachi Redux I (2011)
- 3\. Quaestio (2014)
- 4\. Orchestral Variations (2013)
- 5\. Full Fathom Five (2011)
- 6\. La Valse (2013)
- 7\. You Are Here (2015)
**Sleeping Awake** *(2019)* [Open Space](https://theopenspace.bandcamp.com/album/noah-creshevsky-sleeping-awake) Open Space CD 37
- Electric String Quartet (1988)
- Passacaglia (2018)
- Sequenza (for trombone) (2004)
- Sleeping Awake (2017)
### Compilation albums {#compilation_albums}
- 60x60 (2004-2005) Vox Novus VN-001
- 60x60 (2003) Capstone Records CPS-8744
### LPs
- Circuit (1971) In Other Words (1976) - Opus One No. 45
- Broadcast (1973) Great Performances (1978) - Opus One No. 47
- Chaconne (1974) Portrait of Rudy Perez (1978) Highway (1979) - Opus One No. 50
- Sonata (1980) - Opus One No. 58
- Celebration (1983) - Opus One No. 101
- Drummer (1985) Strategic Defense Initiative (1986) - Opus One No. 111
- Reanimator (2018) - Orange Milk Records No. 99
### Dedications
- [snapshots (for noah creshevsky) (2003)](https://soundcloud.com/marcooppedisano/snapshots-for-noah-creshevsky-2003-revmaster-2020) - Marco Oppedisano
## Articles and reviews {#articles_and_reviews}
- [\"STUFF MUZAK #1: A (VERY) SOFT FOCUS ON HYPERREALIST MUSIC\"](http://www.secretdecoder.net/columns/2016/06/07/stuff-muzak-1-a-very-soft-focus-on-hyperrealist-music/) by [Dwight Pavlovic](http://www.secretdecoder.net/author/dwightpavlovic/), Decoder Magazine, June 7, 2016
- [*\"A Language We Already Understand: Noah Creshevsky\'s Hyperrealism\"*](http://www.newmusicbox.org/article.nmbx?id=5117) By Dennis Báthory-Kitsz, NewMusicBox, June 13, 2007
- [*\"When drawing from preexisting works, how do you balance legal and moral obligations with the potential to create new art?\"*](http://www.newmusicbox.org/article
| 617 |
Noah Creshevsky
| 1 |
10,015,873 |
# List of highways numbered 824
| 6 |
List of highways numbered 824
| 0 |
10,015,880 |
# Kōyū Ohara
was a Japanese film director known for his popular *Roman Porno* films, *Fairy in a Cage* (1977) and the *Pink Tush Girl* series (1978--1980). One of Nikkatsu\'s most versatile and prolific directors, filming eight movies in 1979 alone, his stylistic preoccupations led him to be known as \"King of Pop Art Porn.\"
## Life and career {#life_and_career}
### Early life {#early_life}
Kōyū Ohara attributes his interest in film to the fact that his grandfather had worked at Nikkatsu as a director. As a child, he claims to have seen up to 200 movies a year. Though he studied law at Keio University and worked as a secretary to a member of the House of Representatives, rather than take the bar exam, he took an entrance exam at Shochiku studios. He failed the Shochiku exam, but tried out for Nikkatsu, and began working there as an assistant director in 1961. He was assigned to director Koreyoshi Kurahara, under whom he worked with future *Roman Porno* master, Tatsumi Kumashiro.
### *Roman porno* {#roman_porno}
When Nikkatsu made its decision to concentrate almost exclusively on its *Roman porno* version of the soft-core pink film genre, Ohara was not enthusiastic about the change. Many of Nikkatsu\'s other directors and actors left the studio at this time rather than work in sex films, but Ohara stayed with the studio, hoping for a chance to direct. He worked as chief assistant director to Shōgorō Nishimura on the first *Roman porno*, *Apartment Wife: Afternoon Affair* (1971), and made his directorial debut the following year with the successful period film, *Passion: Ohichi\'s Love Song* (1972). After a major success with 1973\'s *College Girl: Sex Equation*, Ohara became one of Nikkatsu\'s busiest directors. He worked exclusively for Nikkatsu until the mid-1980s, directing 42 films for the studio, four of which were among Nikkatsu\'s top ten money-makers of all time.
Summarizing his style, the Weissers say, \"Director Ohara is one of Nikkatsu\'s most underrated filmmakers, finally recognized in the late \'90s for his forays into pop art\... He was easily the studio\'s hippest director, interminably mixing contemporary music and fashionable events-of-the-day within the traditional pinku eiga format.\"
Ohara became known for his ability to direct successful *pink movies* in a variety of genres. He had successes in the S&M genre with *Fairy in a Cage* (1977) and *Wet Rope Confession*. After Nikkatsu had stopped producing \"violent pink\" films following Yasuharu Hasebe\'s \'*\'Rape! 13th Hour* (1976), Ohara revived the genre with *Zoom Up: Rape Site* (1979). Ohara directed women-in-prison films with the *True Story of a Woman in Jail* series, and the pink Catholic nun films *Sins of Sister Lucia* (1978) and *Wet Rope Confession: Convent Story* (1979). On television, he directed children\'s shows including *Three Sisters Shushutorian*. He directed successful satirical films like *Love Daydream* (1980), and office lady sex comedies like *I Like It From Behind* (1981), and even a pink science-fiction film, *Lady Momoko\'s Adventure* (1979) and the musical comedy pink film *Oh! Takarazuka* (1982). Critic Jasper Sharp considers Ohara\'s \"finest work\" to be the 1978 coming-of-age story *Pink Tush Girl* which gave rise to two sequels, *Pink Tush Girl: Love Attack* and *Pink Tush Girl: Proposal Strategy*.
He worked with Nikkatsu\'s top actresses, including Naomi Tani in *Fairy in a Cage*, *Rope Hell* (1978) and *Fascination: Portrait of a Lady* (1977), all of which were based on scripts by Oniroku Dan. After directing some darker films, in 1978 Ohara started his light-hearted *Pink Tush Girl* trilogy. Centered around high-school life and popular music, these films were popular with both male and female audiences.
### After *Roman porno* {#after_roman_porno}
In 1982 Ohara went to Hong Kong where he directed films for Golden Harvest, including the popular *China Scandal: Exotic Dance*, a co-production with Nikkatsu. He left Nikkatsu in 1984 to concentrate on his interest in popular music. He directed music videos for teen-oriented singers with the Warner/Pioneer label among other Japanese record companies.
Ohara retired from full-time film work in 1988. In 1999, while walking home from a drinking bout, Ohara had a stroke and injured himself in a fall, causing a slow down in his lifestyle and filmmaking. Ohara died on February 20, 2004
| 699 |
Kōyū Ohara
| 0 |
10,015,905 |
# African Distillers
**African Distillers** is a company in Zimbabwe. It is one of the largest producers of alcoholic beverages, primarily distilled spirits and wines, in Zimbabwe.
## History
The company was founded in 1944 as \"P J Joubert Limited\", a wine import firm and then purchased a distillery in Mutare in 1946 and began manufacturing beverages in its own right. In 1974, African Distillers moved its headquarters to Stapleford. It was estimated in 1989 that African Distillers produced about 3 million bottles of wine a year, three-quarters of the country\'s total domestic wine industry. The company\'s wine production is located at the Green Valley vineyards in Odzi.
## Operations
In Zimbabwe, African Distillers maintains 6 supply depots, at Bulawayo, Harare, Kwekwe, Masvingo, Mutare and Victoria Falls. African Distillers operates 3 cash and carry outlet stores, at Harare, Mutare and Bulawayo.
The company\'s products include
### Spirit portfolio {#spirit_portfolio}
### Wine portfolio {#wine_portfolio}
## Ownership
The stock of African Distillers listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange, where it trades under the symbol **AFDS** and is part of the **Zimbabwe Industrial Index**. As of `{{As of|2021|March|bare=31}}`{=mediawiki}, the largest shareholders in the company\'s stock were as depicted in the table below:
Rank Name of Owner Percentage
------ -------------------------------- ------------
1 Afdis Holdings (Pvt) Ltd^1^ 70.45
2 Delta Corporation Limited 9.20
3 Stanbic Nominees (Pvt) Ltd 6.21
4 Mining Industry Pension Fund 4.57
5 African Distillers Limited 2.90
6 Local Authorities Pension Fund 1.27
7 Distell International Limited 0.82
8 Others 4.58
**Total** **100.00**
: African Distillers Stock Ownership
1→*Afdis Holdings* is an investment holding company owned by Delta Corporation and Distell Group. Based on direct and indirect shareholding in African Distillers, Delta Corporation and Distell Group\'s effective control of the company is 50.44% and 30.04% respectively
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African Distillers
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