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75,468,857 |
Sunawai
|
Sunawai (Devanagari: सुनावई Sunāwaī) is a village in Kotla block of Firozabad district, Uttar Pradesh. As of 2011, it has a population of 783, in 127 households.
As of 2011, Sunawai had a population of 783, in 127 households. This population was 50.8% male (398) and 49.2% female (385). The 0-6 age group numbered 129 (75 male and 54 female), making up 16.5% of the total population. 191 residents were members of Scheduled Castes, or 24.4% of the total.
The 1981 census recorded Sunawai as having a population of 513 people (284 male and 229 female), in 87 households and 86 physical houses.
The 1961 census recorded Sunawai as comprising 1 hamlet, with a total population of 357 people (206 male and 151 female), in 61 households and 42 physical houses. The area of the village was given as 369 acres.
As of 2011, Sunawai had 1 primary school; it did not have any healthcare facilities. Drinking water was provided by tap, hand pump, and tube well/borehole; there were no public toilets. The village did not have a post office or public library; there was at least some access to electricity for residential and agricultural (but not commercial) purposes. Streets were made of both kachcha and pakka materials.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sunawai (Devanagari: सुनावई Sunāwaī) is a village in Kotla block of Firozabad district, Uttar Pradesh. As of 2011, it has a population of 783, in 127 households.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "As of 2011, Sunawai had a population of 783, in 127 households. This population was 50.8% male (398) and 49.2% female (385). The 0-6 age group numbered 129 (75 male and 54 female), making up 16.5% of the total population. 191 residents were members of Scheduled Castes, or 24.4% of the total.",
"title": "Demographics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The 1981 census recorded Sunawai as having a population of 513 people (284 male and 229 female), in 87 households and 86 physical houses.",
"title": "Demographics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The 1961 census recorded Sunawai as comprising 1 hamlet, with a total population of 357 people (206 male and 151 female), in 61 households and 42 physical houses. The area of the village was given as 369 acres.",
"title": "Demographics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "As of 2011, Sunawai had 1 primary school; it did not have any healthcare facilities. Drinking water was provided by tap, hand pump, and tube well/borehole; there were no public toilets. The village did not have a post office or public library; there was at least some access to electricity for residential and agricultural (but not commercial) purposes. Streets were made of both kachcha and pakka materials.",
"title": "Infrastructure"
}
] |
Sunawai is a village in Kotla block of Firozabad district, Uttar Pradesh. As of 2011, it has a population of 783, in 127 households.
|
2023-12-03T02:39:20Z
|
2023-12-15T02:41:19Z
|
[
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:IAST",
"Template:Rp",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Firozabad district",
"Template:Infobox settlement"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunawai
|
75,468,918 |
Immersing with a reptile in his hand
|
Immersing with a reptile in his hand is a halachic expression which is found in the teachings of Chazal.
The Halachic meaning of this expression is, someone who touches one of the eight impure reptiles mentioned in the Torah is rendered impure. In order to purify himself he must immerse in a Mikveh. However, one that immerses himself while still holding the source of his impurity (i.e. the impure reptile), does not become pure.
The expression was broadened to denote anyone that is trying to do Teshuva (repent for his sins) and mend his ways - yet at the same time still doing unwanted actions. Meaning that in order to properly repent one must completely abandon his sins.
In modern times, this expression is used for someone who is working for pure and just actions but has not left his bad and atrocious ways. Or someone that while doing a moral action does a significantly unethical action. For example while doing a Mitzvah or a small Jewish custom he disgracefully embarrasses another (similar to a Mitzva Haba'ah Ba'Aveira.
This expression is first found in Tosefta in regards to the laws of fastingand repentance. Stating that fasts and prayer are not beneficial if a person does not truthfully intend of completely abandoning sin:
"If someone has a reptile in his hand, even if he immerses in the Shiloach and in all created waters he remain impure. If he throws the reptile from his hands, then he can easily become pure in forty se'ah (the legal minimus amount for a Mikveh). It also states in the scriptures (Mishlei, 28:13) one who admits and abandons will be mercied."
A later source is found in the Talmud brought in a similar vain:
"Rav Ada Bar Ahava said: A person that has transgressed and confesses but does not abandon (the sin) to what is he similar? To a person who grasps a reptile in his hand, for even if he immerses in all the waters in the world - his immersion is invalid. If he throws (the reptile) from his hand, once he immerses in forty se'ah, his immersion is immediately valid. As it says one who admits and abandons will be mercied."
Rashi, relying on the medrash, uses this expression in its modern use.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Immersing with a reptile in his hand is a halachic expression which is found in the teachings of Chazal.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Halachic meaning of this expression is, someone who touches one of the eight impure reptiles mentioned in the Torah is rendered impure. In order to purify himself he must immerse in a Mikveh. However, one that immerses himself while still holding the source of his impurity (i.e. the impure reptile), does not become pure.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The expression was broadened to denote anyone that is trying to do Teshuva (repent for his sins) and mend his ways - yet at the same time still doing unwanted actions. Meaning that in order to properly repent one must completely abandon his sins.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In modern times, this expression is used for someone who is working for pure and just actions but has not left his bad and atrocious ways. Or someone that while doing a moral action does a significantly unethical action. For example while doing a Mitzvah or a small Jewish custom he disgracefully embarrasses another (similar to a Mitzva Haba'ah Ba'Aveira.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "This expression is first found in Tosefta in regards to the laws of fastingand repentance. Stating that fasts and prayer are not beneficial if a person does not truthfully intend of completely abandoning sin:",
"title": "Source"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "\"If someone has a reptile in his hand, even if he immerses in the Shiloach and in all created waters he remain impure. If he throws the reptile from his hands, then he can easily become pure in forty se'ah (the legal minimus amount for a Mikveh). It also states in the scriptures (Mishlei, 28:13) one who admits and abandons will be mercied.\"",
"title": "Source"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "A later source is found in the Talmud brought in a similar vain:",
"title": "Source"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "\"Rav Ada Bar Ahava said: A person that has transgressed and confesses but does not abandon (the sin) to what is he similar? To a person who grasps a reptile in his hand, for even if he immerses in all the waters in the world - his immersion is invalid. If he throws (the reptile) from his hand, once he immerses in forty se'ah, his immersion is immediately valid. As it says one who admits and abandons will be mercied.\"",
"title": "Source"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Rashi, relying on the medrash, uses this expression in its modern use.",
"title": "Source"
}
] |
Immersing with a reptile in his hand is a halachic expression which is found in the teachings of Chazal. The Halachic meaning of this expression is, someone who touches one of the eight impure reptiles mentioned in the Torah is rendered impure. In order to purify himself he must immerse in a Mikveh. However, one that immerses himself while still holding the source of his impurity, does not become pure. The expression was broadened to denote anyone that is trying to do Teshuva and mend his ways - yet at the same time still doing unwanted actions. Meaning that in order to properly repent one must completely abandon his sins. In modern times, this expression is used for someone who is working for pure and just actions but has not left his bad and atrocious ways. Or someone that while doing a moral action does a significantly unethical action. For example while doing a Mitzvah or a small Jewish custom he disgracefully embarrasses another (similar to a Mitzva Haba'ah Ba'Aveira.
|
2023-12-03T02:53:13Z
|
2023-12-06T01:31:35Z
|
[
"Template:Multiple issues",
"Template:Citation needed"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immersing_with_a_reptile_in_his_hand
|
75,468,955 |
1977 Bulawayo shooting
|
The 1977 Bulawayo shooting was a spree shooting that occurred at two locations in Bulawayo, Rhodesia, on December 4, 1977. That day, Banda Khumalo, a 38-year-old off-duty policeman, shot 13 people to death and injured 13 to 16 others before being killed by a fellow police officer.
Khumalo, a detective sergeant of the elite Special Branch security force, was a Ndebele, one of Rhodesia's two primary ethnic groups. He once had an argument with Shona people—the other major ethnic group—which motivated his shooting.
The first shooting occurred at 7:00 p.m. at a house in Mzilikazi Township. There, Khumalo shouted, "One bullet, one Shona," before fatally shooting two men and two women and injuring a fifth man with a shotgun. Some sources state that he also used a rifle.
Approximately 30 minutes later, Khumalo opened fire at houses in the Ross Police Camp, killing nine people and wounding up to 15 others. Among the dead were five children and three black policemen. Police then formed a cordon around the camp and a marksman shot the gunman to death.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 1977 Bulawayo shooting was a spree shooting that occurred at two locations in Bulawayo, Rhodesia, on December 4, 1977. That day, Banda Khumalo, a 38-year-old off-duty policeman, shot 13 people to death and injured 13 to 16 others before being killed by a fellow police officer.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Khumalo, a detective sergeant of the elite Special Branch security force, was a Ndebele, one of Rhodesia's two primary ethnic groups. He once had an argument with Shona people—the other major ethnic group—which motivated his shooting.",
"title": "Motive"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The first shooting occurred at 7:00 p.m. at a house in Mzilikazi Township. There, Khumalo shouted, \"One bullet, one Shona,\" before fatally shooting two men and two women and injuring a fifth man with a shotgun. Some sources state that he also used a rifle.",
"title": "Shootings"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Approximately 30 minutes later, Khumalo opened fire at houses in the Ross Police Camp, killing nine people and wounding up to 15 others. Among the dead were five children and three black policemen. Police then formed a cordon around the camp and a marksman shot the gunman to death.",
"title": "Shootings"
}
] |
The 1977 Bulawayo shooting was a spree shooting that occurred at two locations in Bulawayo, Rhodesia, on December 4, 1977. That day, Banda Khumalo, a 38-year-old off-duty policeman, shot 13 people to death and injured 13 to 16 others before being killed by a fellow police officer.
|
2023-12-03T03:01:52Z
|
2023-12-04T21:26:12Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox civilian attack",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977_Bulawayo_shooting
|
75,468,968 |
Minister for Major Projects (Victoria)
|
The Minister for Major Projects was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Minister for Major Projects was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Minister for Major Projects was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.
|
2023-12-03T03:04:08Z
|
2023-12-03T08:57:37Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:VictoriaAU-gov-stub",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Age in years and days",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Post-nominals",
"Template:Victorian ministries",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox official post"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minister_for_Major_Projects_(Victoria)
|
75,468,987 |
Belissa Andía Pérez
|
Belissa Andía Pérez (born 7 July 1953, Atico) is a Peruvian activist and essayist. She is the "trans secretariat" of Instituto Runa de Desarrollo y Estudios sobre Género. She is also a member of the Junta and the secretary in the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, a Latin American organization that represents the interests of transsexuals. She is also a founding council member of the Hirschfeld Eddy Foundation.
She was born in Arequipa, Peru. She went to elementary school at San Antonio de Padua and secondary school at Bartolomé Herrera. When she was a teenager, she came out to her family as a trans woman. She notes this was at a time when being gay was very taboo and that transgender people were rarely conceived of.
In her youth, she became involved with Catholic organizations practicing liberation theology. She left these Christian groups later, due to ideological contradictions. She soon was involved in leftist organizations due to their themes of meeting the demands of the working class and of sexual liberation, and finding these issues and more to berelated to capitalism.
Pérez attended university for two years are National University of San Marcos in pursuit of a degree focused on genetics, though she did not graduate.
In 2004, she became a member of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association's (IGLA's) World Board for the Latin American and Caribbean Region. By the next year, the group decided there needed to be a transgender official. Thus, at the 2005 Latin American Regional Conference, members elected Pérez to the position.
Pérez speaks on the discrimination transgender people experience. Namely, how there is a strong association of transgender people with sexually transmitted infections and mental illness. She notes: "We [transgender people] do not have a place in society because of normalisation and narrow-minded views, even today some countries punish by law people whose conduct does not conform to their ideas of a binary, man-woman world." She has also observed that transgender people are "rebels of the rule of heteronormativity, and not only in the conceptual sense, but also in the physical bodies of transgender people."
Pérez is also a secretary at the Runa Institute for Development and Gender Studies. Her work focuses on human rights, especially for transgender people.
In 2006, she ran for the Congress of the Republic of Peru with the New Left Movement. She was not elected, but made history as the first transgender candidate in Peru's general elections.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Belissa Andía Pérez (born 7 July 1953, Atico) is a Peruvian activist and essayist. She is the \"trans secretariat\" of Instituto Runa de Desarrollo y Estudios sobre Género. She is also a member of the Junta and the secretary in the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, a Latin American organization that represents the interests of transsexuals. She is also a founding council member of the Hirschfeld Eddy Foundation.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She was born in Arequipa, Peru. She went to elementary school at San Antonio de Padua and secondary school at Bartolomé Herrera. When she was a teenager, she came out to her family as a trans woman. She notes this was at a time when being gay was very taboo and that transgender people were rarely conceived of.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In her youth, she became involved with Catholic organizations practicing liberation theology. She left these Christian groups later, due to ideological contradictions. She soon was involved in leftist organizations due to their themes of meeting the demands of the working class and of sexual liberation, and finding these issues and more to berelated to capitalism.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Pérez attended university for two years are National University of San Marcos in pursuit of a degree focused on genetics, though she did not graduate.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2004, she became a member of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association's (IGLA's) World Board for the Latin American and Caribbean Region. By the next year, the group decided there needed to be a transgender official. Thus, at the 2005 Latin American Regional Conference, members elected Pérez to the position.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Pérez speaks on the discrimination transgender people experience. Namely, how there is a strong association of transgender people with sexually transmitted infections and mental illness. She notes: \"We [transgender people] do not have a place in society because of normalisation and narrow-minded views, even today some countries punish by law people whose conduct does not conform to their ideas of a binary, man-woman world.\" She has also observed that transgender people are \"rebels of the rule of heteronormativity, and not only in the conceptual sense, but also in the physical bodies of transgender people.\"",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Pérez is also a secretary at the Runa Institute for Development and Gender Studies. Her work focuses on human rights, especially for transgender people.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "In 2006, she ran for the Congress of the Republic of Peru with the New Left Movement. She was not elected, but made history as the first transgender candidate in Peru's general elections.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Belissa Andía Pérez is a Peruvian activist and essayist. She is the "trans secretariat" of Instituto Runa de Desarrollo y Estudios sobre Género. She is also a member of the Junta and the secretary in the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association, a Latin American organization that represents the interests of transsexuals. She is also a founding council member of the Hirschfeld Eddy Foundation.
|
2023-12-03T03:06:49Z
|
2023-12-22T21:05:13Z
|
[
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belissa_And%C3%ADa_P%C3%A9rez
|
75,468,991 |
Ravara
|
Ravara (from Irish Ráth Bhearach 'fort of heifers') is a rural townland in County Down, Northern Ireland. It has an area of 1242.98 acres (5.03 km). It is situated in the civil parish of Killinchy and the historic barony of Castlereagh Lower, located just south of Ballygowan. It lies within the Ards and North Down Borough Council.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ravara (from Irish Ráth Bhearach 'fort of heifers') is a rural townland in County Down, Northern Ireland. It has an area of 1242.98 acres (5.03 km). It is situated in the civil parish of Killinchy and the historic barony of Castlereagh Lower, located just south of Ballygowan. It lies within the Ards and North Down Borough Council.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Ravara is a rural townland in County Down, Northern Ireland. It has an area of 1242.98 acres (5.03 km2). It is situated in the civil parish of Killinchy and the historic barony of Castlereagh Lower, located just south of Ballygowan. It lies within the Ards and North Down Borough Council.
|
2023-12-03T03:07:16Z
|
2023-12-17T17:07:47Z
|
[
"Template:Use British English",
"Template:Etymology",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Down-geo-stub",
"Template:County Down",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox UK place",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ravara
|
75,468,992 |
2024 in Burkina Faso
|
Events in the year 2024 in Burkina Faso.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in Burkina Faso.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Events in the year 2024 in Burkina Faso.
|
2023-12-03T03:07:36Z
|
2023-12-03T03:28:10Z
|
[
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Year in Burkina Faso",
"Template:Horizontal TOC",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Portal bar",
"Template:Year in Africa",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Dynamic list",
"Template:Years in Burkina Faso"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Burkina_Faso
|
75,468,994 |
Cyber Beast
|
Cyber Beast, Cyberbeast, Cybeast, Cybernetic Beast, Cyborg Beast, Cyberspace Beast, may refer to:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Cyber Beast, Cyberbeast, Cybeast, Cybernetic Beast, Cyborg Beast, Cyberspace Beast, may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] |
Cyber Beast, Cyberbeast, Cybeast, Cybernetic Beast, Cyborg Beast, Cyberspace Beast, may refer to:
|
2023-12-03T03:08:04Z
|
2023-12-06T08:15:45Z
|
[
"Template:TOCright",
"Template:Canned search",
"Template:Dab"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyber_Beast
|
75,468,995 |
Rick Dickinson (politician)
|
Rick Dickinson is an American politician.
Dickinson was born in Sabula, Iowa on 29 August 1953. He earned a degree in history and business administration at William Penn College. He then worked for H.B. Fuller as a national accounts manager, as a manager of the American market for Franklin International, and senior sales representative for Borden Chemical.
Dickinson has served as an adult probation officer within Seventh Judicial District Correctional Services. Politically, he is affiliated with the Democratic Party, and has been treasurer of the Jackson County branch of the Iowa Democratic Party, as well as co-chair of the Jackson County Democratic Central Committee. Prior to serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 between 14 January 1991 and 8 January 1995, Dickinson was a member of the Jackson County board of supervisors, and mayor and city council member in his hometown of Sabula.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Rick Dickinson is an American politician.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Dickinson was born in Sabula, Iowa on 29 August 1953. He earned a degree in history and business administration at William Penn College. He then worked for H.B. Fuller as a national accounts manager, as a manager of the American market for Franklin International, and senior sales representative for Borden Chemical.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Dickinson has served as an adult probation officer within Seventh Judicial District Correctional Services. Politically, he is affiliated with the Democratic Party, and has been treasurer of the Jackson County branch of the Iowa Democratic Party, as well as co-chair of the Jackson County Democratic Central Committee. Prior to serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 between 14 January 1991 and 8 January 1995, Dickinson was a member of the Jackson County board of supervisors, and mayor and city council member in his hometown of Sabula.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Rick Dickinson is an American politician. Dickinson was born in Sabula, Iowa on 29 August 1953. He earned a degree in history and business administration at William Penn College. He then worked for H.B. Fuller as a national accounts manager, as a manager of the American market for Franklin International, and senior sales representative for Borden Chemical. Dickinson has served as an adult probation officer within Seventh Judicial District Correctional Services. Politically, he is affiliated with the Democratic Party, and has been treasurer of the Jackson County branch of the Iowa Democratic Party, as well as co-chair of the Jackson County Democratic Central Committee. Prior to serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 between 14 January 1991 and 8 January 1995, Dickinson was a member of the Jackson County board of supervisors, and mayor and city council member in his hometown of Sabula.
|
2023-12-03T03:08:09Z
|
2023-12-04T00:24:22Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Dickinson_(politician)
|
75,468,997 |
Kannagi (2023 film)
|
Kannagi is a 2023 Indian Tamil-language drama film, directed by Yashwanth Kishore and produced by M.Ganesh and J.Dhanush under the production banners Sky Moon Entertainment and E5 Entertainment. The film stars Keerthi Pandian,Vidya Pradeep,Ammu Abhirami and Shaalin Zoya.The film features music composed by Shaan Rahman with cinematography handled by Ramji and editing done by K.Sarath Kumar.
The film's theme is about issues faced by women in today's society.
The film was announced on 17 August 2021 with reveal of the first look and title.Filming commenced in 2021.The trailer is set to be released on 3 December 2023.
The music of the film is composed by Shaan Rahman with lyrics by Karthik Netha.The first single ''Goppurane'' was released on 16 January 2023.The second single ''Idhuvellam Mayakama'' was released on 29 November 2023.
All tracks are written by Karthik Netha
The film was released on 15 December 2023.
Janani K of Indiatoday.in gave one point five star and stated thar "The way the four stories converge at a point in 'Kannagi' during the climax didn't pay off well either. It is done in a manner that could leave the audience confused." Anusha Sundar of Cinema Express wrote that "All the minute details finally lead up to the “twist”, which becomes the mother of all inconsistencies of Kannagi."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kannagi is a 2023 Indian Tamil-language drama film, directed by Yashwanth Kishore and produced by M.Ganesh and J.Dhanush under the production banners Sky Moon Entertainment and E5 Entertainment. The film stars Keerthi Pandian,Vidya Pradeep,Ammu Abhirami and Shaalin Zoya.The film features music composed by Shaan Rahman with cinematography handled by Ramji and editing done by K.Sarath Kumar.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The film's theme is about issues faced by women in today's society.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The film was announced on 17 August 2021 with reveal of the first look and title.Filming commenced in 2021.The trailer is set to be released on 3 December 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The music of the film is composed by Shaan Rahman with lyrics by Karthik Netha.The first single ''Goppurane'' was released on 16 January 2023.The second single ''Idhuvellam Mayakama'' was released on 29 November 2023.",
"title": "Music"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "All tracks are written by Karthik Netha",
"title": "Music"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The film was released on 15 December 2023.",
"title": "Release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Janani K of Indiatoday.in gave one point five star and stated thar \"The way the four stories converge at a point in 'Kannagi' during the climax didn't pay off well either. It is done in a manner that could leave the audience confused.\" Anusha Sundar of Cinema Express wrote that \"All the minute details finally lead up to the “twist”, which becomes the mother of all inconsistencies of Kannagi.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Kannagi is a 2023 Indian Tamil-language drama film, directed by Yashwanth Kishore and produced by M.Ganesh and J.Dhanush under the production banners Sky Moon Entertainment and E5 Entertainment. The film stars Keerthi Pandian,Vidya Pradeep,Ammu Abhirami and Shaalin Zoya.The film features music composed by Shaan Rahman with cinematography handled by Ramji and editing done by K.Sarath Kumar.
|
2023-12-03T03:08:19Z
|
2023-12-18T19:36:33Z
|
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"Template:Infobox film",
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kannagi_(2023_film)
|
75,469,032 |
Abram B. Steele
|
Abram Books Steele (January 10, 1845 – March 28, 1913) was an American lawyer and politician from Herkimer, New York.
Steele was born on January 10, 1845, in Columbus, Ohio, the son of farmer George C. Steele and Rebecca Fisher. His parents lived in Rochelle, Illinois, but they were visiting Columbus when he was born.
Steele attended the local common schools, took a course at the Seminary at Rochelle, and finished a two-year course at Wheaton College in 1866. Interested in becoming a lawyer, he worked as a teacher in Rochelle for nine months to pay for his legal studies. He then worked as principal of the school in Ashton for a few months. In April 1867, he went to the law office of his cousin Josiah A. Steele in Frankfort, New York. He was admitted to the bar in April 1868 and formed a partnership with his cousin known as J. A. and A. B. Steele. He practiced with the firm for a year, after which he went to Lincoln, Nebraska to see how promising the legal prospects were. He was quickly admitted to the bar and formed a copartnership with Nebraska Attorney General Seth Robinson, but after three months there he concluded there were too many lawyers in Lincoln and returned to his law practice with his cousin Josiah in Frankfurt. In February 1870, he moved to Herkimer while Josiah stayed in Frankfort. Josiah also moved to Herkimer in 1874, and the law firm continued until it was dissolved in 1880. He practiced alone until 1882, when he formed a law with William C. Prescott that lasted until his death.
Steele served as attorney for the village of Herkimer from 1873 to 1875, during which time he secured a charter that incorporated the village and conferred the authority for the expenditure for such funds for public improvements as the citizens should vote. He also secured a charter for the incorporation of the Herkimer and Mohawk Street Railway, which later became the forerunner to a system connecting the villages of Herkimer, Mohawk, Ilion, and Frankfort. He spent a few months in Europe in 1878 for health reasons. In 1879, he was elected district attorney of Herkimer County, an office he was reelected to in 1882. As district attorney, he was called upon to try many capital crime cases, including the Druse murder, and convicted the first person executed in the county. He was trustee of the village of Herkimer from 1887 to 1888, during which time the water works were put in. He was president of the village for two terms, from 1890 to 1891, during which time an electric light system was installed in the village. He was also town clerk of Frankfort at one point.
Steele was a delegate to the 1894 New York State Constitutional Convention. He was a member of the Herkimer Board of Education for at least a decade. In 1903, he was elected to the New York State Assembly as a Republican, representing Herkimer County. He served in the Assembly in 1904, 1905, and 1906. He became a charter member of the Fort Dayton Hose Company, and when the Company was disbanded in 1893 he became an exempt fireman. He was also chairman of the law committee of the State Firemen's Association and a trustee of the Firemen's Home in Hudson.
Steele joined the Empire State Society of the Sons of the American Revolution in 1896. He was also a member of the Freemasons, the Herkimer County Historical Society, the New York State Bar Association, the Herkimer County Bar Association, and the Herkimer County Agricultural Association. In 1885, he married Franc Irwin of Poland, Herkimer County, New York. They had no children.
Steele died at home from cirrhosis of the liver with uraemic poisoning on March 28, 1913. Rev. E. Scott Farley officiated his funeral at the Baptist Church. The funeral was attended by the local Freemasons, the Herkimer County Bar Association, the Fort Dayton Hose Company, the Down and Out Club, and the Mohawk Valley Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. The honorary pallbearers were trustees of the Baptist Church, and the active pallbearers were members of the Little Falls Commandery. He was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Abram Books Steele (January 10, 1845 – March 28, 1913) was an American lawyer and politician from Herkimer, New York.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Steele was born on January 10, 1845, in Columbus, Ohio, the son of farmer George C. Steele and Rebecca Fisher. His parents lived in Rochelle, Illinois, but they were visiting Columbus when he was born.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Steele attended the local common schools, took a course at the Seminary at Rochelle, and finished a two-year course at Wheaton College in 1866. Interested in becoming a lawyer, he worked as a teacher in Rochelle for nine months to pay for his legal studies. He then worked as principal of the school in Ashton for a few months. In April 1867, he went to the law office of his cousin Josiah A. Steele in Frankfort, New York. He was admitted to the bar in April 1868 and formed a partnership with his cousin known as J. A. and A. B. Steele. He practiced with the firm for a year, after which he went to Lincoln, Nebraska to see how promising the legal prospects were. He was quickly admitted to the bar and formed a copartnership with Nebraska Attorney General Seth Robinson, but after three months there he concluded there were too many lawyers in Lincoln and returned to his law practice with his cousin Josiah in Frankfurt. In February 1870, he moved to Herkimer while Josiah stayed in Frankfort. Josiah also moved to Herkimer in 1874, and the law firm continued until it was dissolved in 1880. He practiced alone until 1882, when he formed a law with William C. Prescott that lasted until his death.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Steele served as attorney for the village of Herkimer from 1873 to 1875, during which time he secured a charter that incorporated the village and conferred the authority for the expenditure for such funds for public improvements as the citizens should vote. He also secured a charter for the incorporation of the Herkimer and Mohawk Street Railway, which later became the forerunner to a system connecting the villages of Herkimer, Mohawk, Ilion, and Frankfort. He spent a few months in Europe in 1878 for health reasons. In 1879, he was elected district attorney of Herkimer County, an office he was reelected to in 1882. As district attorney, he was called upon to try many capital crime cases, including the Druse murder, and convicted the first person executed in the county. He was trustee of the village of Herkimer from 1887 to 1888, during which time the water works were put in. He was president of the village for two terms, from 1890 to 1891, during which time an electric light system was installed in the village. He was also town clerk of Frankfort at one point.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Steele was a delegate to the 1894 New York State Constitutional Convention. He was a member of the Herkimer Board of Education for at least a decade. In 1903, he was elected to the New York State Assembly as a Republican, representing Herkimer County. He served in the Assembly in 1904, 1905, and 1906. He became a charter member of the Fort Dayton Hose Company, and when the Company was disbanded in 1893 he became an exempt fireman. He was also chairman of the law committee of the State Firemen's Association and a trustee of the Firemen's Home in Hudson.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Steele joined the Empire State Society of the Sons of the American Revolution in 1896. He was also a member of the Freemasons, the Herkimer County Historical Society, the New York State Bar Association, the Herkimer County Bar Association, and the Herkimer County Agricultural Association. In 1885, he married Franc Irwin of Poland, Herkimer County, New York. They had no children.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Steele died at home from cirrhosis of the liver with uraemic poisoning on March 28, 1913. Rev. E. Scott Farley officiated his funeral at the Baptist Church. The funeral was attended by the local Freemasons, the Herkimer County Bar Association, the Fort Dayton Hose Company, the Down and Out Club, and the Mohawk Valley Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. The honorary pallbearers were trustees of the Baptist Church, and the active pallbearers were members of the Little Falls Commandery. He was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.",
"title": "Life"
}
] |
Abram Books Steele was an American lawyer and politician from Herkimer, New York.
|
2023-12-03T03:16:47Z
|
2023-12-16T16:30:05Z
|
[
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"Template:S-end",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:S-start",
"Template:S-par"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abram_B._Steele
|
75,469,052 |
Lynn Ames
|
Lynn Ames (born October 10, 1960) is an American writer whose works feature female protagonists, past and present. She has authored sixteen novels spanning a variety of genres, including historical fiction, thrillers, and LGBTQ+ romance, and a biography of softball player and bowler Dot Wilkinson. Ames has collected six Goldie Awards from the Golden Crown Literary Society (GCLS) and was keynote speaker at the 2023 GCLS annual conference. Her contemporary romance novel, All That Lies Within, won the GCLS Ann Bannon Popular Choice Award in 2013 and was a Lambda Literary Award finalist for Lesbian Romance.
Ames was born in the suburbs of New York City, the youngest of three children. At age ten, she was a “tomboy—better than many of the boys on my block where I was the only girl competing with them in every sport,” including tennis, softball, and basketball. She wrote her first novel at age ten and even then “understood that writing and creating characters” provided “an outlet to escape—to be whoever I wanted to be. I could rescue the girl and live happily ever after.”
In 1982, she graduated cum laude from Middlebury College with a bachelor's degree in history and a minor in psychology. She received the Marci J. Stewart Award for “the student in history who has shown outstanding personal and academic qualities.”
Ames began her career as a broadcast journalist, news anchor, and news director for WQBK AM & FM, a radio station in Albany, New York. In 1987, she was named press secretary to New York State Senate Minority Leader Manfred Ohrenstein. In 1989, Governor Mario Cuomo tapped her to become spokesperson for the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, then the third-largest prison system in the country.
In 2001, after a six-year stint as Vice President of the New York State Credit Union Association, Ames established her own public relations firm where she specialized in image, crisis communications planning, and crisis management.
In 2004, Ames published her first novel, The Price of Fame, with Intaglio Publications. Her next four novels also were published by Intaglio. In 2010, Ames took back the rights to all of her works and created Phoenix Rising Press. In addition to issuing second editions of her first five novels, Phoenix Rising Press became publisher of record for her eleven subsequent works of fiction.
According to an Authors Guild profile, Ames’ mission throughout her career has been to “use my voice and my writing to lift up lives and stories that have been too long ignored, undervalued, and/or banned. I tell stories of strong women whose contributions and lives have been erased from history.”
When introducing her keynote speech at the 2023 GCLS conference, Board President Betsy Carswell said of Ames, “Words are her superpower. She uses this superpower to take her life experience, the world around us, and her imagination to create stories that inspire and empower.”
Ames draws on her experience as a journalist and governmental spokesperson to create plots and characters. This is particularly notable in The Price of Fame, the first book in the Kate & Jay series. As described in The Lesbian Review, Jay “is in Albany to interview the Governor of New York when she turns on the TV in her hotel room and sees a face she’s been thinking about for five years.” Kate “is at the state capitol building, covering the wreckage after an explosion and helping as many survivors as she can.” The two women reconnect, resulting in a “page turner” that is “a lot of fun to read.”
Ames’ academic major in history also influences her writing. Goldie-winner Brights Lights of Summer, according to Curve Magazine, takes the setting of World War II “and brings it alive for the reader. She recreates the mood, the feel—the texture of life in a bygone era for us to relive.” BuzzFeed called the book “a beautiful and quick read that should be added to your to-be-read list.”
In reviewing Chain Reactions, a Writer’s Digest honorable mention for genre fiction, Lambda Literary advised “readers who enjoy a blend of contemporary and historical fiction” to pick up the book, as it is “fascinating, compelling, and well-researched, giving a glimpse into what will be for many a little-known contribution women made to the war effort in WWII.”
Ames also has won a Goldie Award and other recognition for her humorous novel Great Bones, published in 2018, and for other comedic work.
Her self-professed interest in sports contributed to Ames becoming Dot Wilkinson's “close friend” and authorized biographer. According to The Arizona Republic, Out at the Plate: The Dot Wilkinson Story, published in 2023, “will form part of the long-hidden lesbian history of women's softball and baseball.”
Moreover, Ames undertook Wilkinson's biography “to put front and center strong women, powerful women, and particularly women who were diverse,” she told journalist Denise Kiernan at a 2023 book event. “In a sense, they were mostly LGBTQ.”
Called the “greatest catcher in women’s softball” by Smithsonian Magazine, Wilkinson played for the Ramblers, winners of the 1940, 1948, and 1949 world softball championships. The team “was an integral part of the community” and “really defined the growing up of Phoenix,” Ames told Cronkite News shortly after Wilkinson's death in March 2023. “The Ramblers were “a once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon,” she added.
According to The Lesbian Review, Out At the Plate: The Dot Wilkinson Story “isn’t simply just a story of one of the most decorated woman softball players. This is a story of a forgotten era in women’s history and one amazing woman’s place at the heart of it all.” The reviewer noted that Ames, whom she called “an amazing author,” took great care “in making sure that we hear” Dot's story in her own words. “I felt like I was sitting with Dot on her back porch, listening to her retell of events that were important to shaping who she was as a person.”
Ames resides in Asheville, North Carolina, with her wife, Cheryl Pletcher.
(All works published by Phoenix Rising Press unless noted)
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Lynn Ames (born October 10, 1960) is an American writer whose works feature female protagonists, past and present. She has authored sixteen novels spanning a variety of genres, including historical fiction, thrillers, and LGBTQ+ romance, and a biography of softball player and bowler Dot Wilkinson. Ames has collected six Goldie Awards from the Golden Crown Literary Society (GCLS) and was keynote speaker at the 2023 GCLS annual conference. Her contemporary romance novel, All That Lies Within, won the GCLS Ann Bannon Popular Choice Award in 2013 and was a Lambda Literary Award finalist for Lesbian Romance.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Ames was born in the suburbs of New York City, the youngest of three children. At age ten, she was a “tomboy—better than many of the boys on my block where I was the only girl competing with them in every sport,” including tennis, softball, and basketball. She wrote her first novel at age ten and even then “understood that writing and creating characters” provided “an outlet to escape—to be whoever I wanted to be. I could rescue the girl and live happily ever after.”",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1982, she graduated cum laude from Middlebury College with a bachelor's degree in history and a minor in psychology. She received the Marci J. Stewart Award for “the student in history who has shown outstanding personal and academic qualities.”",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Ames began her career as a broadcast journalist, news anchor, and news director for WQBK AM & FM, a radio station in Albany, New York. In 1987, she was named press secretary to New York State Senate Minority Leader Manfred Ohrenstein. In 1989, Governor Mario Cuomo tapped her to become spokesperson for the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, then the third-largest prison system in the country.",
"title": "Early professional career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2001, after a six-year stint as Vice President of the New York State Credit Union Association, Ames established her own public relations firm where she specialized in image, crisis communications planning, and crisis management.",
"title": "Early professional career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In 2004, Ames published her first novel, The Price of Fame, with Intaglio Publications. Her next four novels also were published by Intaglio. In 2010, Ames took back the rights to all of her works and created Phoenix Rising Press. In addition to issuing second editions of her first five novels, Phoenix Rising Press became publisher of record for her eleven subsequent works of fiction.",
"title": "Writing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "According to an Authors Guild profile, Ames’ mission throughout her career has been to “use my voice and my writing to lift up lives and stories that have been too long ignored, undervalued, and/or banned. I tell stories of strong women whose contributions and lives have been erased from history.”",
"title": "Writing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "When introducing her keynote speech at the 2023 GCLS conference, Board President Betsy Carswell said of Ames, “Words are her superpower. She uses this superpower to take her life experience, the world around us, and her imagination to create stories that inspire and empower.”",
"title": "Writing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Ames draws on her experience as a journalist and governmental spokesperson to create plots and characters. This is particularly notable in The Price of Fame, the first book in the Kate & Jay series. As described in The Lesbian Review, Jay “is in Albany to interview the Governor of New York when she turns on the TV in her hotel room and sees a face she’s been thinking about for five years.” Kate “is at the state capitol building, covering the wreckage after an explosion and helping as many survivors as she can.” The two women reconnect, resulting in a “page turner” that is “a lot of fun to read.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Ames’ academic major in history also influences her writing. Goldie-winner Brights Lights of Summer, according to Curve Magazine, takes the setting of World War II “and brings it alive for the reader. She recreates the mood, the feel—the texture of life in a bygone era for us to relive.” BuzzFeed called the book “a beautiful and quick read that should be added to your to-be-read list.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "In reviewing Chain Reactions, a Writer’s Digest honorable mention for genre fiction, Lambda Literary advised “readers who enjoy a blend of contemporary and historical fiction” to pick up the book, as it is “fascinating, compelling, and well-researched, giving a glimpse into what will be for many a little-known contribution women made to the war effort in WWII.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Ames also has won a Goldie Award and other recognition for her humorous novel Great Bones, published in 2018, and for other comedic work.",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Her self-professed interest in sports contributed to Ames becoming Dot Wilkinson's “close friend” and authorized biographer. According to The Arizona Republic, Out at the Plate: The Dot Wilkinson Story, published in 2023, “will form part of the long-hidden lesbian history of women's softball and baseball.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "Moreover, Ames undertook Wilkinson's biography “to put front and center strong women, powerful women, and particularly women who were diverse,” she told journalist Denise Kiernan at a 2023 book event. “In a sense, they were mostly LGBTQ.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Called the “greatest catcher in women’s softball” by Smithsonian Magazine, Wilkinson played for the Ramblers, winners of the 1940, 1948, and 1949 world softball championships. The team “was an integral part of the community” and “really defined the growing up of Phoenix,” Ames told Cronkite News shortly after Wilkinson's death in March 2023. “The Ramblers were “a once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon,” she added.",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "According to The Lesbian Review, Out At the Plate: The Dot Wilkinson Story “isn’t simply just a story of one of the most decorated woman softball players. This is a story of a forgotten era in women’s history and one amazing woman’s place at the heart of it all.” The reviewer noted that Ames, whom she called “an amazing author,” took great care “in making sure that we hear” Dot's story in her own words. “I felt like I was sitting with Dot on her back porch, listening to her retell of events that were important to shaping who she was as a person.”",
"title": "Writing influences"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "Ames resides in Asheville, North Carolina, with her wife, Cheryl Pletcher.",
"title": "Personal"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "(All works published by Phoenix Rising Press unless noted)",
"title": "Works"
}
] |
Lynn Ames is an American writer whose works feature female protagonists, past and present. She has authored sixteen novels spanning a variety of genres, including historical fiction, thrillers, and LGBTQ+ romance, and a biography of softball player and bowler Dot Wilkinson. Ames has collected six Goldie Awards from the Golden Crown Literary Society (GCLS) and was keynote speaker at the 2023 GCLS annual conference. Her contemporary romance novel, All That Lies Within, won the GCLS Ann Bannon Popular Choice Award in 2013
and was a Lambda Literary Award finalist for Lesbian Romance.
|
2023-12-03T03:21:02Z
|
2023-12-18T18:22:11Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Official",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox artist",
"Template:ISBN"
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Ames
|
75,469,062 |
Robert Anderson (sex offender)
|
Robert Anderson (February 20, 1928 – November 27, 2008) was an American doctor and sex offender. In 2022, the University of Michigan agreed to a $490 million settlement to 1050 victims who were abused by Anderson during routine medical examinations. Attorneys for Anderson's victims say this may have been the largest case of sex abuse by a single person in American history, surpassing the scale of similar cases such as that of Larry Nassar and the Ohio State University abuse scandal.
Anderson was born on February 20, 1928, in L'Anse, Michigan, and graduated from high school as valedictorian. He graduated from Michigan State University in 1950, and went on to get his medical degree from the University of Michigan School of Medicine in 1953. He did a residency at University of Michigan Hospital before moving to a private practice until 1966, when he began working at the university's health center, and also began to work for the university's athletic department in 1968, and was made director of the health center that same year. Anderson also did physicals for pilots, air traffic controllers, and others involved in aviation while working for the FAA.
During Anderson's era, sports medicine was a new field, and he lobbied the coaches to make physical examinations a requirement for athletes. After LGBT activists reported his alleged rapes, Vice President of Student Life Tom Easthope forced his resignation from the health center, but unknown to Easthope, he continued to work for the athletic department. Anderson retired from the university in 1998, and died in 2008.
During his long career with the University of Michigan, Anderson sexually assaulted and raped patients during medical examinations, subjecting them to unnecessary genital and rectal examinations. Although he occasionally sexually assaulted female patients, 90% of his victims were male. 40% of his victims were black, and NFL linebacker Jon Vaughn claimed that Anderson collected semen from him to create the "perfect black athlete". Anderson was widely known for sexually abusing patients among Michigan staff and athletes, earning nicknames such as "Dr. Drop Your Drawers Anderson". A report commissioned by the university after his death found that more than two dozen officials knew about Anderson's behavior, including athletic director Don Canham and legendary football coach Bo Schembechler, whose own son was raped by Anderson. Anderson also was reported to have raped pilots, air traffic controllers, and other employees of the FAA when he worked there. The total number of sexual assaults reported against Anderson was over 2,100.
The allegations were not public known until Anderson's death. Following letters written to athletic director Warde Manuel in 2018 and 2020, an internal investigation against Anderson was opened, which found that the university failed to take action against Anderson multiple times. After several years in a legal stalemate, the university reached a $490 million settlement with 1050 victims.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Robert Anderson (February 20, 1928 – November 27, 2008) was an American doctor and sex offender. In 2022, the University of Michigan agreed to a $490 million settlement to 1050 victims who were abused by Anderson during routine medical examinations. Attorneys for Anderson's victims say this may have been the largest case of sex abuse by a single person in American history, surpassing the scale of similar cases such as that of Larry Nassar and the Ohio State University abuse scandal.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Anderson was born on February 20, 1928, in L'Anse, Michigan, and graduated from high school as valedictorian. He graduated from Michigan State University in 1950, and went on to get his medical degree from the University of Michigan School of Medicine in 1953. He did a residency at University of Michigan Hospital before moving to a private practice until 1966, when he began working at the university's health center, and also began to work for the university's athletic department in 1968, and was made director of the health center that same year. Anderson also did physicals for pilots, air traffic controllers, and others involved in aviation while working for the FAA.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "During Anderson's era, sports medicine was a new field, and he lobbied the coaches to make physical examinations a requirement for athletes. After LGBT activists reported his alleged rapes, Vice President of Student Life Tom Easthope forced his resignation from the health center, but unknown to Easthope, he continued to work for the athletic department. Anderson retired from the university in 1998, and died in 2008.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "During his long career with the University of Michigan, Anderson sexually assaulted and raped patients during medical examinations, subjecting them to unnecessary genital and rectal examinations. Although he occasionally sexually assaulted female patients, 90% of his victims were male. 40% of his victims were black, and NFL linebacker Jon Vaughn claimed that Anderson collected semen from him to create the \"perfect black athlete\". Anderson was widely known for sexually abusing patients among Michigan staff and athletes, earning nicknames such as \"Dr. Drop Your Drawers Anderson\". A report commissioned by the university after his death found that more than two dozen officials knew about Anderson's behavior, including athletic director Don Canham and legendary football coach Bo Schembechler, whose own son was raped by Anderson. Anderson also was reported to have raped pilots, air traffic controllers, and other employees of the FAA when he worked there. The total number of sexual assaults reported against Anderson was over 2,100.",
"title": "Sexual assault allegations"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The allegations were not public known until Anderson's death. Following letters written to athletic director Warde Manuel in 2018 and 2020, an internal investigation against Anderson was opened, which found that the university failed to take action against Anderson multiple times. After several years in a legal stalemate, the university reached a $490 million settlement with 1050 victims.",
"title": "Sexual assault allegations"
}
] |
Robert Anderson was an American doctor and sex offender. In 2022, the University of Michigan agreed to a $490 million settlement to 1050 victims who were abused by Anderson during routine medical examinations. Attorneys for Anderson's victims say this may have been the largest case of sex abuse by a single person in American history, surpassing the scale of similar cases such as that of Larry Nassar and the Ohio State University abuse scandal.
|
2023-12-03T03:23:24Z
|
2023-12-12T05:39:14Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Anderson_(sex_offender)
|
75,469,071 |
Merryland-Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC
|
Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club (Vietnamese: Câu lạc bộ bóng đá Quy Nhơn Bình Định), is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000.
In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.
The team was founded in 1975 as “Binh Dinh Youth”.The first important milestone of the team was the friendly match between the Quy Nhon youth football team and the An Nhon youth football team which took place on May 1, 1975. After this match, the Binh Thanh Youth Football Team Dinh was established with the core force from the two above teams led by Mr. Luu, with players Phan Kim Lan (Lan Ve), Dang Gia Man (Man Lùn), Tong Anh Hoang (commonly known as A ), Le Thanh Huy, Le Van Minh, Nguyen Van Thin, Vo Van Cang, Nguyen Van Ha (Son Dia), goalkeeper Lan Mom... After its establishment, in May 1975, the team had 2 friendly matches with Khanh Hoa team in Ninh Hoa and Nha Trang and 2 friendly matches with Quang Nam Da Nang team in Hoi An and Da Nang.
In 1976, the team participated in the Truong Son Football Tournament and won the style award. After this tournament, the team participated in national tournaments to be promoted to Class A movement and was considered one of the local teams with notable performance achievements.
In 1980, the Nghia Binh Workers' Football Team was established with the core of the Binh Dinh Youth Team, adding players such as: Duong Ngoc Hung, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Tran Minh Canh... and participating in the A1 national football tournament. country. At this tournament, the team is in Group A, along with the teams of Cang Saigon, Hanoi Police, Military Region 3, Food Industry and Tien Giang FC. In the group stage, the team ranked 4th with 9 points, scored 11 goals and conceded 16 goals.
After the 1989 season, the team split into two separate teams. Players Bui Van Sy, Ta Manh Thoi... return to Quang Ngai Football Team. The remaining members formed the Binh Dinh Football Club, with additional players Nguyen Ngoc Thai, Phan Ton Quyen, Le Ngoc Dung, Nguyen Xuan Hoanh, Nguyen Van Cuong, Tran Kim Duc, Nguyen Cong Long, Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung...
In the 1995 season, the team did not compete in the play-off round with Quang Nam-Da Nang, Long An FC, and Song Be to react to the tournament organizers about negative issues, so they were disciplined and get relegated.
After winning promotion, with the 1998 season being unsuccessful, the team was relegated again and only returned to the highest league in the 2001-2002 season. In this tournament, the team ranked fourth overall, with 26 points overall, winning 7, drawing 5 and losing 6.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club (Vietnamese: Câu lạc bộ bóng đá Quy Nhơn Bình Định), is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The team was founded in 1975 as “Binh Dinh Youth”.The first important milestone of the team was the friendly match between the Quy Nhon youth football team and the An Nhon youth football team which took place on May 1, 1975. After this match, the Binh Thanh Youth Football Team Dinh was established with the core force from the two above teams led by Mr. Luu, with players Phan Kim Lan (Lan Ve), Dang Gia Man (Man Lùn), Tong Anh Hoang (commonly known as A ), Le Thanh Huy, Le Van Minh, Nguyen Van Thin, Vo Van Cang, Nguyen Van Ha (Son Dia), goalkeeper Lan Mom... After its establishment, in May 1975, the team had 2 friendly matches with Khanh Hoa team in Ninh Hoa and Nha Trang and 2 friendly matches with Quang Nam Da Nang team in Hoi An and Da Nang.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1976, the team participated in the Truong Son Football Tournament and won the style award. After this tournament, the team participated in national tournaments to be promoted to Class A movement and was considered one of the local teams with notable performance achievements.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 1980, the Nghia Binh Workers' Football Team was established with the core of the Binh Dinh Youth Team, adding players such as: Duong Ngoc Hung, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Tran Minh Canh... and participating in the A1 national football tournament. country. At this tournament, the team is in Group A, along with the teams of Cang Saigon, Hanoi Police, Military Region 3, Food Industry and Tien Giang FC. In the group stage, the team ranked 4th with 9 points, scored 11 goals and conceded 16 goals.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "After the 1989 season, the team split into two separate teams. Players Bui Van Sy, Ta Manh Thoi... return to Quang Ngai Football Team. The remaining members formed the Binh Dinh Football Club, with additional players Nguyen Ngoc Thai, Phan Ton Quyen, Le Ngoc Dung, Nguyen Xuan Hoanh, Nguyen Van Cuong, Tran Kim Duc, Nguyen Cong Long, Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung...",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In the 1995 season, the team did not compete in the play-off round with Quang Nam-Da Nang, Long An FC, and Song Be to react to the tournament organizers about negative issues, so they were disciplined and get relegated.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "After winning promotion, with the 1998 season being unsuccessful, the team was relegated again and only returned to the highest league in the 2001-2002 season. In this tournament, the team ranked fourth overall, with 26 points overall, winning 7, drawing 5 and losing 6.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.",
"title": "Current squad"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.",
"title": "Current squad"
}
] |
Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club, is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000. In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.
|
2023-12-03T03:24:48Z
|
2023-12-03T03:24:48Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Bronze3",
"Template:Fs start",
"Template:Fs mid",
"Template:V-League",
"Template:Infobox football club",
"Template:Silver2",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Updated",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Vietnam-footyclub-stub",
"Template:Gold1",
"Template:Fs end",
"Template:Lang-vi",
"Template:Fs player"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merryland-Quy_Nhon_Binh_Dinh_FC
|
75,469,081 |
Ho Ro Bin
|
Ho Ro Bin (Chinese: 何諾賓; pinyin: hé nuò bīn) is a retired competitive wushu taolu athlete and actor from Malaysia. He is the first Malaysian athlete who have won gold medals in all major international wushu competitions including the World Wushu Championships, Asian Games, Asian Wushu Championships, and the SEA Games.
Born in Penang, Ho started wushu at the age of 12 under Chiong Ah Chaw. At the age of 18, he moved to Kuala Lumpur to train under Chin Hoong Yip and joined the first full-time Malaysian Wushu Team in 2000.
Ho's international debut was at the 1996 Asian Wushu Championships where he won the bronze medal in nanquan. A year later, he competed in the 1997 SEA Games and won a silver medal in nanquan and a bronze medal in qiangshu. At the 1998 Asian Games, he won a bronze medal in men's nanquan as part of a three-way tie. He then competed in the 1999 World Wushu Championships where he became the first world champion in nandao. Ahead of the 2001 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, Ho considered retiring from wushu and becoming a coach. At the event, he won gold medals in nanquan and nandao/nangun combined and thus withdrew his retirement plans.
A year later, Ho won the gold medal in men's nanquan at the 2002 Asian Games. He was then voted to be Olympian of the Year by the Olympic Council of Malaysia. At the 2003 World Wushu Championships, Ho won the silver medal in nanquan and the bronze medal in nangun. He then won the gold medal in nandao and the silver medal in nanquan at the 2004 Asian Wushu Championships. A year later, Ho competed in the 2005 SEA Games and won the silver medal in nanquan. His last major competition was then at the 2005 World Wushu Championships where he was once again the world champion in nandao.
In 2006, Ho announced his retirement from competitive wushu. The following year, he starred in Kinta 1881 which is viewed as Malaysia's first martial arts film. He also opened his own wushu school, the Ho Ro Bin Wushu Centre.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ho Ro Bin (Chinese: 何諾賓; pinyin: hé nuò bīn) is a retired competitive wushu taolu athlete and actor from Malaysia. He is the first Malaysian athlete who have won gold medals in all major international wushu competitions including the World Wushu Championships, Asian Games, Asian Wushu Championships, and the SEA Games.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in Penang, Ho started wushu at the age of 12 under Chiong Ah Chaw. At the age of 18, he moved to Kuala Lumpur to train under Chin Hoong Yip and joined the first full-time Malaysian Wushu Team in 2000.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Ho's international debut was at the 1996 Asian Wushu Championships where he won the bronze medal in nanquan. A year later, he competed in the 1997 SEA Games and won a silver medal in nanquan and a bronze medal in qiangshu. At the 1998 Asian Games, he won a bronze medal in men's nanquan as part of a three-way tie. He then competed in the 1999 World Wushu Championships where he became the first world champion in nandao. Ahead of the 2001 SEA Games in Kuala Lumpur, Ho considered retiring from wushu and becoming a coach. At the event, he won gold medals in nanquan and nandao/nangun combined and thus withdrew his retirement plans.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "A year later, Ho won the gold medal in men's nanquan at the 2002 Asian Games. He was then voted to be Olympian of the Year by the Olympic Council of Malaysia. At the 2003 World Wushu Championships, Ho won the silver medal in nanquan and the bronze medal in nangun. He then won the gold medal in nandao and the silver medal in nanquan at the 2004 Asian Wushu Championships. A year later, Ho competed in the 2005 SEA Games and won the silver medal in nanquan. His last major competition was then at the 2005 World Wushu Championships where he was once again the world champion in nandao.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2006, Ho announced his retirement from competitive wushu. The following year, he starred in Kinta 1881 which is viewed as Malaysia's first martial arts film. He also opened his own wushu school, the Ho Ro Bin Wushu Centre.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Ho Ro Bin is a retired competitive wushu taolu athlete and actor from Malaysia. He is the first Malaysian athlete who have won gold medals in all major international wushu competitions including the World Wushu Championships, Asian Games, Asian Wushu Championships, and the SEA Games.
|
2023-12-03T03:25:45Z
|
2023-12-26T10:34:48Z
|
[
"Template:Family name hatnote",
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Footer World Champions Men's Nandao",
"Template:Footer Asian Games Champions Men's Nanquan",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox sportsperson",
"Template:Zh"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ho_Ro_Bin
|
75,469,085 |
Azor (surname)
|
Azor is a surname of Spanish origin. It may refer to the following notable people:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Azor is a surname of Spanish origin. It may refer to the following notable people:",
"title": ""
}
] |
Azor is a surname of Spanish origin. It may refer to the following notable people: Bidrece Azor, Haitian-Italian football player
Hurby Azor, Haitian musician and hip-hop music producer
John Azor Kellogg (1828–1883), American lawyer, politician, and Union Army officer
Juan Azor (1535–1603), Spanish philosopher and Jesuit priest
|
2023-12-03T03:27:30Z
|
2023-12-03T03:27:30Z
|
[
"Template:Surname"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azor_(surname)
|
75,469,087 |
The Go Getters
|
The Go Getters is a Swedish neo-rockabilly band formed in 1988 by lead singer, standup drummer, and lyricist Peter Sandberg. Other members include Johnny Andersson, and Pascal Guimbard, a founding member of the French rockabilly band The Sprites. Guitarist Robin Johnson, who had joined the band in 19902 died in a motorcycle accident in 2011. In 2018 The Go Getters won the "Best Rockabilly Group" award at the Ameripolitan Music Awards show held in Memphis, Tennessee.
The Go Getters headline at major rockabilly events around the world and have amassed a global following. In 1993 The Go Getters released Real Gone, their first of eight albums and distributed by Part Records. Their most recent album Love & Hate, which includes a cover of "Ring of Fire (song)" by Johnny Cash was released in 2018 by the European rockabilly label Goofin’ Records. Over the years the group has recorded rockabilly versions of famous rock songs such as "Run Rudolph Run," "Should I Stay or Should I Go," "Blitzkrieg Bop," and "Tainted Love."
In November 2013, The Go Getters celebrated their 25th anniversary near Västerås, Sweden, the hometown of Peter Sandberg. In 2018 the band released their most recent album Love and Hate, which includes a tribute to Lemmy Kilmister the founder of the English rock band Motörhead. In 2019 The Go Getters performed at the Ameripolitan Awards in Memphis, Tennessee at The Guesthouse at Graceland. Two of their songs are heard in the TV series True Blood
In 2018 The Go Getters won the "Best Rockabilly Group" award at the Ameripolitan Music Awards show held in Memphis, Tennessee.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Go Getters is a Swedish neo-rockabilly band formed in 1988 by lead singer, standup drummer, and lyricist Peter Sandberg. Other members include Johnny Andersson, and Pascal Guimbard, a founding member of the French rockabilly band The Sprites. Guitarist Robin Johnson, who had joined the band in 19902 died in a motorcycle accident in 2011. In 2018 The Go Getters won the \"Best Rockabilly Group\" award at the Ameripolitan Music Awards show held in Memphis, Tennessee.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Go Getters headline at major rockabilly events around the world and have amassed a global following. In 1993 The Go Getters released Real Gone, their first of eight albums and distributed by Part Records. Their most recent album Love & Hate, which includes a cover of \"Ring of Fire (song)\" by Johnny Cash was released in 2018 by the European rockabilly label Goofin’ Records. Over the years the group has recorded rockabilly versions of famous rock songs such as \"Run Rudolph Run,\" \"Should I Stay or Should I Go,\" \"Blitzkrieg Bop,\" and \"Tainted Love.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In November 2013, The Go Getters celebrated their 25th anniversary near Västerås, Sweden, the hometown of Peter Sandberg. In 2018 the band released their most recent album Love and Hate, which includes a tribute to Lemmy Kilmister the founder of the English rock band Motörhead. In 2019 The Go Getters performed at the Ameripolitan Awards in Memphis, Tennessee at The Guesthouse at Graceland. Two of their songs are heard in the TV series True Blood",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2018 The Go Getters won the \"Best Rockabilly Group\" award at the Ameripolitan Music Awards show held in Memphis, Tennessee.",
"title": "Awards and achievements"
}
] |
The Go Getters is a Swedish neo-rockabilly band formed in 1988 by lead singer, standup drummer, and lyricist Peter Sandberg. Other members include Johnny Andersson, and Pascal Guimbard, a founding member of the French rockabilly band The Sprites. Guitarist Robin Johnson, who had joined the band in 19902 died in a motorcycle accident in 2011. In 2018 The Go Getters won the "Best Rockabilly Group" award at the Ameripolitan Music Awards show held in Memphis, Tennessee. The Go Getters headline at major rockabilly events around the world and have amassed a global following. In 1993 The Go Getters released Real Gone, their first of eight albums and distributed by Part Records. Their most recent album Love & Hate, which includes a cover of "Ring of Fire (song)" by Johnny Cash was released in 2018 by the European rockabilly label Goofin’ Records. Over the years the group has recorded rockabilly versions of famous rock songs such as "Run Rudolph Run," "Should I Stay or Should I Go," "Blitzkrieg Bop," and "Tainted Love." In November 2013, The Go Getters celebrated their 25th anniversary near Västerås, Sweden, the hometown of Peter Sandberg. In 2018 the band released their most recent album Love and Hate, which includes a tribute to Lemmy Kilmister the founder of the English rock band Motörhead. In 2019 The Go Getters performed at the Ameripolitan Awards in Memphis, Tennessee at The Guesthouse at Graceland. Two of their songs are heard in the TV series True Blood
|
2023-12-03T03:27:41Z
|
2023-12-28T08:33:00Z
|
[
"Template:Commons",
"Template:Official website",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox musical artist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Go_Getters
|
75,469,088 |
Azor (given name)
|
Azor is a masculine given name that may refer to the following notable people:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Azor is a masculine given name that may refer to the following notable people:",
"title": ""
}
] |
Azor is a masculine given name that may refer to the following notable people: Azor, an ancestor of Jesus from the tribe of Judah
Azor (landowner), one of the most powerful English landowners in the 11th century
Azor Adelaide (1922–1971), Mauritian Creole political activist
Azor Betts (1740–1809), American Loyalist doctor
Azor Matusiwa, Dutch football midfielder
Azor Orne (1731–1796), colonial American merchant and politician
Azor Taber (1798–1858), American politician
|
2023-12-03T03:27:42Z
|
2023-12-03T03:27:42Z
|
[
"Template:Given name"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azor_(given_name)
|
75,469,091 |
Anne C. Perry
|
Anne C. Perry is an American politician who is serving as a member of the Maine House of Representatives. She currently represents Maine's 9th House district.
She was elected to the 140th district in the 2008 Maine House of Representatives election. In 2010 she was term limited. She ran for election to the senate in the 2012 Maine Senate election, but lost. She ran for election to the senate in the 2014 Maine Senate election, but lost. She was elected to the house in the 2016 Maine House of Representatives election. She was reelected to the house in the 2018 Maine House of Representatives election. She was reelected to the house in the 2020 Maine House of Representatives election. Due to redistricting, she was elected to the 9th district in the 2022 Maine House of Representatives election.
Perry earned a Bachelor of Science in nursing from the University of Maine in 1970 and an Master of Science in nursing from Husson University in 1998.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Anne C. Perry is an American politician who is serving as a member of the Maine House of Representatives. She currently represents Maine's 9th House district.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "She was elected to the 140th district in the 2008 Maine House of Representatives election. In 2010 she was term limited. She ran for election to the senate in the 2012 Maine Senate election, but lost. She ran for election to the senate in the 2014 Maine Senate election, but lost. She was elected to the house in the 2016 Maine House of Representatives election. She was reelected to the house in the 2018 Maine House of Representatives election. She was reelected to the house in the 2020 Maine House of Representatives election. Due to redistricting, she was elected to the 9th district in the 2022 Maine House of Representatives election.",
"title": "Electoral history"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Perry earned a Bachelor of Science in nursing from the University of Maine in 1970 and an Master of Science in nursing from Husson University in 1998.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Anne C. Perry is an American politician who is serving as a member of the Maine House of Representatives. She currently represents Maine's 9th House district.
|
2023-12-03T03:27:58Z
|
2023-12-16T03:24:49Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Maine-politician-stub",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Maine House of Representatives",
"Template:Primary sources",
"Template:Update after",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Better source needed",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_C._Perry
|
75,469,110 |
MerryLand Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC
|
MerryLand Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club (Vietnamese: Câu lạc bộ bóng đá MerryLand Quy Nhơn Bình Định), or Binh Dinh FC, is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000.
In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.
The team was founded in 1975 as “Binh Dinh Youth”.The first important milestone of the team was the friendly match between the Quy Nhon youth football team and the An Nhon youth football team which took place on May 1, 1975. After this match, the Binh Thanh Youth Football Team Dinh was established with the core force from the two above teams led by Mr. Luu, with players Phan Kim Lan (Lan Ve), Dang Gia Man (Man Lùn), Tong Anh Hoang (commonly known as A ), Le Thanh Huy, Le Van Minh, Nguyen Van Thin, Vo Van Cang, Nguyen Van Ha (Son Dia), goalkeeper Lan Mom... After its establishment, in May 1975, the team had 2 friendly matches with Khanh Hoa team in Ninh Hoa and Nha Trang and 2 friendly matches with Quang Nam Da Nang team in Hoi An and Da Nang.
In 1976, the team participated in the Truong Son Football Tournament and won the style award. After this tournament, the team participated in national tournaments to be promoted to Class A movement and was considered one of the local teams with notable performance achievements.
In 1980, the Nghia Binh Workers' Football Team was established with the core of the Binh Dinh Youth Team, adding players such as: Duong Ngoc Hung, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Tran Minh Canh... and participating in the A1 national football tournament. country. At this tournament, the team is in Group A, along with the teams of Cang Saigon, Hanoi Police, Military Region 3, Food Industry and Tien Giang FC. In the group stage, the team ranked 4th with 9 points, scored 11 goals and conceded 16 goals.
After the 1989 season, the team split into two separate teams. Players Bui Van Sy, Ta Manh Thoi... return to Quang Ngai Football Team. The remaining members formed the Binh Dinh Football Club, with additional players Nguyen Ngoc Thai, Phan Ton Quyen, Le Ngoc Dung, Nguyen Xuan Hoanh, Nguyen Van Cuong, Tran Kim Duc, Nguyen Cong Long, Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung...
In the 1995 season, the team did not compete in the play-off round with Quang Nam-Da Nang, Long An FC, and Song Be to react to the tournament organizers about negative issues, so they were disciplined and get relegated.
After winning promotion, with the 1998 season being unsuccessful, the team was relegated again and only returned to the highest league in the 2001-2002 season. In this tournament, the team ranked fourth overall, with 26 points overall, winning 7, drawing 5 and losing 6.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "MerryLand Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club (Vietnamese: Câu lạc bộ bóng đá MerryLand Quy Nhơn Bình Định), or Binh Dinh FC, is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The team was founded in 1975 as “Binh Dinh Youth”.The first important milestone of the team was the friendly match between the Quy Nhon youth football team and the An Nhon youth football team which took place on May 1, 1975. After this match, the Binh Thanh Youth Football Team Dinh was established with the core force from the two above teams led by Mr. Luu, with players Phan Kim Lan (Lan Ve), Dang Gia Man (Man Lùn), Tong Anh Hoang (commonly known as A ), Le Thanh Huy, Le Van Minh, Nguyen Van Thin, Vo Van Cang, Nguyen Van Ha (Son Dia), goalkeeper Lan Mom... After its establishment, in May 1975, the team had 2 friendly matches with Khanh Hoa team in Ninh Hoa and Nha Trang and 2 friendly matches with Quang Nam Da Nang team in Hoi An and Da Nang.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1976, the team participated in the Truong Son Football Tournament and won the style award. After this tournament, the team participated in national tournaments to be promoted to Class A movement and was considered one of the local teams with notable performance achievements.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 1980, the Nghia Binh Workers' Football Team was established with the core of the Binh Dinh Youth Team, adding players such as: Duong Ngoc Hung, Nguyen Ngoc Thien, Tran Minh Canh... and participating in the A1 national football tournament. country. At this tournament, the team is in Group A, along with the teams of Cang Saigon, Hanoi Police, Military Region 3, Food Industry and Tien Giang FC. In the group stage, the team ranked 4th with 9 points, scored 11 goals and conceded 16 goals.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "After the 1989 season, the team split into two separate teams. Players Bui Van Sy, Ta Manh Thoi... return to Quang Ngai Football Team. The remaining members formed the Binh Dinh Football Club, with additional players Nguyen Ngoc Thai, Phan Ton Quyen, Le Ngoc Dung, Nguyen Xuan Hoanh, Nguyen Van Cuong, Tran Kim Duc, Nguyen Cong Long, Nguyen Hoang Anh Dung...",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In the 1995 season, the team did not compete in the play-off round with Quang Nam-Da Nang, Long An FC, and Song Be to react to the tournament organizers about negative issues, so they were disciplined and get relegated.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "After winning promotion, with the 1998 season being unsuccessful, the team was relegated again and only returned to the highest league in the 2001-2002 season. In this tournament, the team ranked fourth overall, with 26 points overall, winning 7, drawing 5 and losing 6.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.",
"title": "Current squad"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.",
"title": "Current squad"
}
] |
MerryLand Quy Nhon Binh Dinh Football Club, or Binh Dinh FC, is a Vietnamese professional association football club based in Quy Nhơn, Bình Định Province that plays in the top tier of Vietnamese football, the V.League 1. Their home stadium is Quy Nhơn Stadium which has a capacity of 20,000. In August 2023, the team changes its name to Quy Nhon Binh Dinh FC with the intention to promote the image of Quy Nhơn city to a larger public.
|
2023-12-03T03:31:36Z
|
2023-12-31T05:25:45Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox football club",
"Template:Fs start",
"Template:Fs player",
"Template:Bronze3",
"Template:Gold1",
"Template:Updated",
"Template:V-League",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Lang-vi",
"Template:Silver2",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Fs end",
"Template:Fs mid",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MerryLand_Quy_Nhon_Binh_Dinh_FC
|
75,469,157 |
Ivan Naumovich Yazev
|
Ivan Naumovich Yazev (Russian: Иван Наумович Язев; 28 September 1895 – 18 April 1955) was a Soviet astronomer, geodesist, and professor. Born to a peasant family in Russia, he begot a dynasty of Russian astronomers, including Sergei Arkturovich Yazev [ru], who has served as the head of Irkutsk State University's astronomical observatory since 1997.
Yazev was born in Tatarsk, then a part of the Russian Empire, on 28 September 1895. He was the only one of his siblings to be educated. In 1922, he graduated from Omsk State Agrarian University and began teaching geodesy there. In 1926, he became an employee of the Pulkovo Observatory, moving to the Mykolaiv Observatory in 1929. In 1934, he transferred to the Poltava Gravimetric Observatory [ru], participating in an expedition to observe the total solar eclipse on 19 June 1936 in Vengerovo.
As a professor, he taught at the universities in Novosibirsk, including at Siberian State University of Telecommunications and Informatics and the Siberian Institute of Military Transport Engineers (now Siberian State Transport University). He was one of the founders of the Siberian State University of Geodesy and Technology [ru] in 1933. There, he was the deputy director and head of the Department of Astronomy between 1939 and 1945. At the Siberian Institute of Military Transport Engineers, he served as the head of the Department of Geodesy.
In 1948, he was accused of having been a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party and working with local authorities during the White movement. For this, he was expelled from the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), his doctoral dissertation's defense was disapproved, he was fired from his job, and then evicted from his apartment in Novosibirsk. Despite this, he was brought to head the astronomical observatory at Irkutsk State University. He remained director there until his death in 1955. He is buried in Lisikhinskoye Cemetery [ru] in Irkutsk.
Yazev had two children, both of whom he named after stars: Arktur (after Arcturus, the brightest star in Boötes) and Gemma (after Gemma, the brightest star in Corona Borealis). Arktur (1930-2010) himself became an astronomer, working for both Irkutsk State University and the East Siberian branch of the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute for Physical-Engineering and Radiotechnical Metrology as an observer using transit instruments at the observatories. Arktur's wife, Kira Sergeevna Mansurova, was a notable astronomer as well; she worked at the ISU observatory starting in 1957 and served as its director between 1972 and 1988. The Mansurova asteroid is named in her honor. They had a son, Sergei (b. 1958), who now heads the Irkutsk State University observatory.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ivan Naumovich Yazev (Russian: Иван Наумович Язев; 28 September 1895 – 18 April 1955) was a Soviet astronomer, geodesist, and professor. Born to a peasant family in Russia, he begot a dynasty of Russian astronomers, including Sergei Arkturovich Yazev [ru], who has served as the head of Irkutsk State University's astronomical observatory since 1997.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Yazev was born in Tatarsk, then a part of the Russian Empire, on 28 September 1895. He was the only one of his siblings to be educated. In 1922, he graduated from Omsk State Agrarian University and began teaching geodesy there. In 1926, he became an employee of the Pulkovo Observatory, moving to the Mykolaiv Observatory in 1929. In 1934, he transferred to the Poltava Gravimetric Observatory [ru], participating in an expedition to observe the total solar eclipse on 19 June 1936 in Vengerovo.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "As a professor, he taught at the universities in Novosibirsk, including at Siberian State University of Telecommunications and Informatics and the Siberian Institute of Military Transport Engineers (now Siberian State Transport University). He was one of the founders of the Siberian State University of Geodesy and Technology [ru] in 1933. There, he was the deputy director and head of the Department of Astronomy between 1939 and 1945. At the Siberian Institute of Military Transport Engineers, he served as the head of the Department of Geodesy.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1948, he was accused of having been a member of the Socialist Revolutionary Party and working with local authorities during the White movement. For this, he was expelled from the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), his doctoral dissertation's defense was disapproved, he was fired from his job, and then evicted from his apartment in Novosibirsk. Despite this, he was brought to head the astronomical observatory at Irkutsk State University. He remained director there until his death in 1955. He is buried in Lisikhinskoye Cemetery [ru] in Irkutsk.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Yazev had two children, both of whom he named after stars: Arktur (after Arcturus, the brightest star in Boötes) and Gemma (after Gemma, the brightest star in Corona Borealis). Arktur (1930-2010) himself became an astronomer, working for both Irkutsk State University and the East Siberian branch of the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute for Physical-Engineering and Radiotechnical Metrology as an observer using transit instruments at the observatories. Arktur's wife, Kira Sergeevna Mansurova, was a notable astronomer as well; she worked at the ISU observatory starting in 1957 and served as its director between 1972 and 1988. The Mansurova asteroid is named in her honor. They had a son, Sergei (b. 1958), who now heads the Irkutsk State University observatory.",
"title": "Family"
}
] |
Ivan Naumovich Yazev was a Soviet astronomer, geodesist, and professor. Born to a peasant family in Russia, he begot a dynasty of Russian astronomers, including Sergei Arkturovich Yazev, who has served as the head of Irkutsk State University's astronomical observatory since 1997.
|
2023-12-03T03:36:34Z
|
2023-12-07T02:07:59Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:About",
"Template:Infobox scientist",
"Template:Lang-ru",
"Template:Endash",
"Template:Ill",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Family name hatnote",
"Template:Multiple issues",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite journal"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Naumovich_Yazev
|
75,469,208 |
M. Peter Middleton
|
M. Peter Middleton (born 17 April 1946) is a British-born American politician.
Born in Cardiff, Wales, on 17 April 1946, Middleton graduated from Waterloo East High School in 1964. He successively earned an associate of arts from Rochester State Junior College in 1966, a bachelor of science from Morningside College in 1966, and a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Iowa College of Law in 1974. While attending Morningside, Middleton was a wrestler and named a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics wrestling team All-American in 1967.
Middleton worked as an administrative assistant for the Black Hawk County Attorney's Office and a corporate personnel assistant at Rath Packing Company. He also taught at Luther College and was executive director of the Waterloo Human Rights Commission before serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 13 January 1975 to 8 January 1977 as a Democrat.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "M. Peter Middleton (born 17 April 1946) is a British-born American politician.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in Cardiff, Wales, on 17 April 1946, Middleton graduated from Waterloo East High School in 1964. He successively earned an associate of arts from Rochester State Junior College in 1966, a bachelor of science from Morningside College in 1966, and a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Iowa College of Law in 1974. While attending Morningside, Middleton was a wrestler and named a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics wrestling team All-American in 1967.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Middleton worked as an administrative assistant for the Black Hawk County Attorney's Office and a corporate personnel assistant at Rath Packing Company. He also taught at Luther College and was executive director of the Waterloo Human Rights Commission before serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 13 January 1975 to 8 January 1977 as a Democrat.",
"title": ""
}
] |
M. Peter Middleton is a British-born American politician. Born in Cardiff, Wales, on 17 April 1946, Middleton graduated from Waterloo East High School in 1964. He successively earned an associate of arts from Rochester State Junior College in 1966, a bachelor of science from Morningside College in 1966, and a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Iowa College of Law in 1974. While attending Morningside, Middleton was a wrestler and named a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics wrestling team All-American in 1967. Middleton worked as an administrative assistant for the Black Hawk County Attorney's Office and a corporate personnel assistant at Rath Packing Company. He also taught at Luther College and was executive director of the Waterloo Human Rights Commission before serving on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 13 January 1975 to 8 January 1977 as a Democrat.
|
2023-12-03T03:40:48Z
|
2023-12-04T00:23:53Z
|
[
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._Peter_Middleton
|
75,469,214 |
The Caucasian
|
The Caucasian may refer to:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Caucasian may refer to:",
"title": ""
}
] |
The Caucasian may refer to: The Weekly Caucasian, a Missouri newspaper
The Daily Caucasian, a North Carolina newspaper
|
2023-12-03T03:42:35Z
|
2023-12-03T08:40:30Z
|
[
"Template:Disambig"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Caucasian
|
75,469,226 |
Akuila Matanibukaca
|
Akuila Matanibukaca (born 19 March 1979) is a Fijian former rugby union international.
Born in Nadi, Matanibukaca was a lock and played in Fijian rugby for the Northern Sharks. He gained four caps for Fiji in 2005, including a Test against the All Blacks, before being curtailed by a serious knee injury.
Matanibukaca, a former Poverty Bay player, was appointed coach of Puketoi in 2012.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Akuila Matanibukaca (born 19 March 1979) is a Fijian former rugby union international.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Born in Nadi, Matanibukaca was a lock and played in Fijian rugby for the Northern Sharks. He gained four caps for Fiji in 2005, including a Test against the All Blacks, before being curtailed by a serious knee injury.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Matanibukaca, a former Poverty Bay player, was appointed coach of Puketoi in 2012.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Akuila Matanibukaca is a Fijian former rugby union international. Born in Nadi, Matanibukaca was a lock and played in Fijian rugby for the Northern Sharks. He gained four caps for Fiji in 2005, including a Test against the All Blacks, before being curtailed by a serious knee injury. Matanibukaca, a former Poverty Bay player, was appointed coach of Puketoi in 2012.
|
2023-12-03T03:45:52Z
|
2023-12-03T03:50:32Z
|
[
"Template:ESPNscrum",
"Template:Infobox rugby biography",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akuila_Matanibukaca
|
75,469,234 |
Maula Bakhsh Khan (Ali Khan)
|
Maula Bakhsh Khan, also known as Ali Khan was a Qawwal from Basti Sheikh, Jullundur, British India. He was the father of Fateh Ali Khan (Qawwali singer), Mubarak Ali Khan, and Salamat Ali Khan. He was also the grandfather of both Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan, and great-grandfather of Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. Maula Bakhsh Khan was highly experienced in Qawwali, being adept in playing the violin, sitar, and harmonium. Khan was fluent in Urdu and Punjabi, and mastered verses in Persian and Arabic as well.
Khan was born in 1833, in Jullunder. Khan's family were Behsudi and had emigrated to Jullunder in the 1000s during the reign of Mahmud of Ghazni. His family had an unbroken chain of qawwali playing dating back 600 years as they adopted it as a profession. Maula Bakhsh Khan became a Qawwal and had became adept at playing instruments like the sitar.
In 1901, Fateh Ali Khan, Maula Bakhsh's son was born. Maula Bakhsh personally trained his son in the art of Indian classical music and Qawwali. Maula Bakhsh's two sons Fateh and Salamat blended forms of Indian classical music with Qawwali and popularised it in Punjab, such as Khyal and Dhrupad.
Maula Bakhsh Khan died in Jullunder. His exact date of death is unknown but it is believed to be 1920.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Maula Bakhsh Khan, also known as Ali Khan was a Qawwal from Basti Sheikh, Jullundur, British India. He was the father of Fateh Ali Khan (Qawwali singer), Mubarak Ali Khan, and Salamat Ali Khan. He was also the grandfather of both Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan, and great-grandfather of Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. Maula Bakhsh Khan was highly experienced in Qawwali, being adept in playing the violin, sitar, and harmonium. Khan was fluent in Urdu and Punjabi, and mastered verses in Persian and Arabic as well.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Khan was born in 1833, in Jullunder. Khan's family were Behsudi and had emigrated to Jullunder in the 1000s during the reign of Mahmud of Ghazni. His family had an unbroken chain of qawwali playing dating back 600 years as they adopted it as a profession. Maula Bakhsh Khan became a Qawwal and had became adept at playing instruments like the sitar.",
"title": "Family origins and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1901, Fateh Ali Khan, Maula Bakhsh's son was born. Maula Bakhsh personally trained his son in the art of Indian classical music and Qawwali. Maula Bakhsh's two sons Fateh and Salamat blended forms of Indian classical music with Qawwali and popularised it in Punjab, such as Khyal and Dhrupad.",
"title": "Family origins and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Maula Bakhsh Khan died in Jullunder. His exact date of death is unknown but it is believed to be 1920.",
"title": "Death"
}
] |
Maula Bakhsh Khan, also known as Ali Khan was a Qawwal from Basti Sheikh, Jullundur, British India. He was the father of Fateh Ali Khan, Mubarak Ali Khan, and Salamat Ali Khan. He was also the grandfather of both Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan, and great-grandfather of Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. Maula Bakhsh Khan was highly experienced in Qawwali, being adept in playing the violin, sitar, and harmonium. Khan was fluent in Urdu and Punjabi, and mastered verses in Persian and Arabic as well.
|
2023-12-03T03:48:35Z
|
2023-12-04T22:02:14Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox artist",
"Template:Citation needed",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Notability"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maula_Bakhsh_Khan_(Ali_Khan)
|
75,469,236 |
Bernard Kitungi
|
Bernard Kitungi is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi West Constituency in Mwingi County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with the support of CORD Coalition in 2013.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Bernard Kitungi is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi West Constituency in Mwingi County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with the support of CORD Coalition in 2013.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Bernard Kitungi is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi West Constituency in Mwingi County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with the support of CORD Coalition in 2013.
|
2023-12-03T03:48:57Z
|
2023-12-04T05:49:47Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Kenya-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Kitungi
|
75,469,259 |
The Weekly Caucasian
|
The Weekly Caucasian was a newspaper published in Lafayette County, Missouri in the United States from 1866 to 1875. According to one historian of Reconstruction "supporting the virtues of the Confederacy, applying the lessons of 'The Lost Cause' to Missouri, and aggressively advocating the program of the Democratic Party" was a profitable formula for the publishers. There were other newspapers with similar names and "in addition to sharing a name, the papers shared overtly white supremacist content"; a research team at the Washington University, St. Louis is trying to determine if this "was a loose network of publications or an organized one and if the papers picked up stories from each other or worked independently."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Weekly Caucasian was a newspaper published in Lafayette County, Missouri in the United States from 1866 to 1875. According to one historian of Reconstruction \"supporting the virtues of the Confederacy, applying the lessons of 'The Lost Cause' to Missouri, and aggressively advocating the program of the Democratic Party\" was a profitable formula for the publishers. There were other newspapers with similar names and \"in addition to sharing a name, the papers shared overtly white supremacist content\"; a research team at the Washington University, St. Louis is trying to determine if this \"was a loose network of publications or an organized one and if the papers picked up stories from each other or worked independently.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "External links"
}
] |
The Weekly Caucasian was a newspaper published in Lafayette County, Missouri in the United States from 1866 to 1875. According to one historian of Reconstruction "supporting the virtues of the Confederacy, applying the lessons of 'The Lost Cause' to Missouri, and aggressively advocating the program of the Democratic Party" was a profitable formula for the publishers. There were other newspapers with similar names and "in addition to sharing a name, the papers shared overtly white supremacist content"; a research team at the Washington University, St. Louis is trying to determine if this "was a loose network of publications or an organized one and if the papers picked up stories from each other or worked independently."
|
2023-12-03T03:53:29Z
|
2023-12-18T17:02:38Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Italic title",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:URL",
"Template:US-newspaper-stub",
"Template:Use American English",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Weekly_Caucasian
|
75,469,296 |
John Muchiri
|
John Muchiri is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Manyatta Constituency, Embu County on the ticket of The National Alliance and with support of Jubilee Coalition. Elected in 2013, Muchiri served on the house committee on Public Investment and Departmental Committee on Health. According to Mzalendo Trust, Muchiri is one of the “lazy MPs” in the parliament haven spoken only nine times during his term in the lowerhouse.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "John Muchiri is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Manyatta Constituency, Embu County on the ticket of The National Alliance and with support of Jubilee Coalition. Elected in 2013, Muchiri served on the house committee on Public Investment and Departmental Committee on Health. According to Mzalendo Trust, Muchiri is one of the “lazy MPs” in the parliament haven spoken only nine times during his term in the lowerhouse.",
"title": ""
}
] |
John Muchiri is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Manyatta Constituency, Embu County on the ticket of The National Alliance and with support of Jubilee Coalition. Elected in 2013, Muchiri served on the house committee on Public Investment and Departmental Committee on Health. According to Mzalendo Trust, Muchiri is one of the “lazy MPs” in the parliament haven spoken only nine times during his term in the lowerhouse.
|
2023-12-03T04:06:29Z
|
2023-12-04T05:48:57Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Muchiri
|
75,469,299 |
Romilly Newman
|
Romilly Dauphin Newman (born March 6, 1998) is an American chef, social media personality and blogger. She was referred the "Gen-Z Martha Stewart" by Town & Country magazine.
Newman was born March 6, 1998, in New York City, the youngest of three children, to Peter Ross Newman, a film producer, and French-born Antonia Beresford Dauphin, an actress. Her two elder brothers are Griffin Newman and James Newman who are both active in the entertainment industry. She was partially raised in Bedford, New York.
Being educated at Saint Ann's School in Brooklyn, she attended New York University for one year and culinary training at Le Cordon-Bleu Paris. Newman currently resides in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Romilly Dauphin Newman (born March 6, 1998) is an American chef, social media personality and blogger. She was referred the \"Gen-Z Martha Stewart\" by Town & Country magazine.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Newman was born March 6, 1998, in New York City, the youngest of three children, to Peter Ross Newman, a film producer, and French-born Antonia Beresford Dauphin, an actress. Her two elder brothers are Griffin Newman and James Newman who are both active in the entertainment industry. She was partially raised in Bedford, New York.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Being educated at Saint Ann's School in Brooklyn, she attended New York University for one year and culinary training at Le Cordon-Bleu Paris. Newman currently resides in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.",
"title": "Life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Romilly Dauphin Newman is an American chef, social media personality and blogger. She was referred the "Gen-Z Martha Stewart" by Town & Country magazine.
|
2023-12-03T04:06:58Z
|
2023-12-26T18:56:51Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:US-bio-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox person"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romilly_Newman
|
75,469,320 |
Efruxifermin
|
Efruxifermin (AKR-001) is a fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) analog developed to treat nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and type 2 diabetes.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Efruxifermin (AKR-001) is a fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) analog developed to treat nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and type 2 diabetes.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Efruxifermin (AKR-001) is a fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) analog developed to treat nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and type 2 diabetes.
|
2023-12-03T04:11:09Z
|
2023-12-31T23:08:20Z
|
[
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Efruxifermin
|
75,469,323 |
Bay Counties Championships
|
The Bay Counties Championships was a men's and women's clay court tennis tournament was founded in 1902 as a women's event called the Bay Counties Ladies Tennis Tournament. In 1904 it became a combined event called the Championship of the Bay Counties. The tournament was first played at Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, United States. It played annually through till 1974 when it was discontinued.
The tournament was first established in 1902 as the Bay Counties Ladies Tennis Tournament and was played at Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, United States. In 1904 it became a fully fledged combined me's and women's called the Championship of the Bay Counties. It continued to be played at the Golden Gate Park courts in San francisco until 1962. In 1963 it moved to the Rafael Racquet Club in san San Rafael until 1964. It moved back to San Francisco for one final edition in 1966. In 1967 it changed venue to the Tiburon Peninsula Club in Tiburon, California until 1974 where it sometimes carried the denomination of Bay Counties Invitational Championships, when it ceased to be an individual competition as part of the ILTF Independent Circuit.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Bay Counties Championships was a men's and women's clay court tennis tournament was founded in 1902 as a women's event called the Bay Counties Ladies Tennis Tournament. In 1904 it became a combined event called the Championship of the Bay Counties. The tournament was first played at Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, United States. It played annually through till 1974 when it was discontinued.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The tournament was first established in 1902 as the Bay Counties Ladies Tennis Tournament and was played at Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, United States. In 1904 it became a fully fledged combined me's and women's called the Championship of the Bay Counties. It continued to be played at the Golden Gate Park courts in San francisco until 1962. In 1963 it moved to the Rafael Racquet Club in san San Rafael until 1964. It moved back to San Francisco for one final edition in 1966. In 1967 it changed venue to the Tiburon Peninsula Club in Tiburon, California until 1974 where it sometimes carried the denomination of Bay Counties Invitational Championships, when it ceased to be an individual competition as part of the ILTF Independent Circuit.",
"title": "History"
}
] |
The Bay Counties Championships was a men's and women's clay court tennis tournament was founded in 1902 as a women's event called the Bay Counties Ladies Tennis Tournament. In 1904 it became a combined event called the Championship of the Bay Counties. The tournament was first played at Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, United States. It played annually through till 1974 when it was discontinued.
|
2023-12-03T04:12:52Z
|
2023-12-16T17:29:43Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox tennis tournament",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_Counties_Championships
|
75,469,345 |
Muriuki Njagagua
|
Muriuki Charles Njagagua is a Kenyan lawyer and politician who was a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mbeere North Constituency on the ticket of Alliance Party of Kenya (APK).
Njagagua, born in Mbeere, Embu County, studied law at the University of Nairobi from 1992 to 1996. He is managing partner of Muriuki Nyagagua & Associates law firm. He was elected to the lower house of Kenyan parliament on the ticket of APK in 2013 after defeating incumbent MP Justin Muturi of The National Alliance. Njagagua served on the house committee on Education, Research and Technology. According to Mzalendo Trust, he spoke 252 times in the parliament from 2013 to 2016. Njagagua was defeated in the 2017 election by Geoffrey Kiringa Ruku. In 2022, Njagagua announced he would give Sh2,000 to every woman who gives birth to increase the population of Mbeere North Constituency following the announcement by Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission to scrap the constituency if the population failed to grow from its current 133,000 to over 170,000 minimum population required to be a constituency.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Muriuki Charles Njagagua is a Kenyan lawyer and politician who was a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mbeere North Constituency on the ticket of Alliance Party of Kenya (APK).",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Njagagua, born in Mbeere, Embu County, studied law at the University of Nairobi from 1992 to 1996. He is managing partner of Muriuki Nyagagua & Associates law firm. He was elected to the lower house of Kenyan parliament on the ticket of APK in 2013 after defeating incumbent MP Justin Muturi of The National Alliance. Njagagua served on the house committee on Education, Research and Technology. According to Mzalendo Trust, he spoke 252 times in the parliament from 2013 to 2016. Njagagua was defeated in the 2017 election by Geoffrey Kiringa Ruku. In 2022, Njagagua announced he would give Sh2,000 to every woman who gives birth to increase the population of Mbeere North Constituency following the announcement by Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission to scrap the constituency if the population failed to grow from its current 133,000 to over 170,000 minimum population required to be a constituency.",
"title": "Education and career"
}
] |
Muriuki Charles Njagagua is a Kenyan lawyer and politician who was a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mbeere North Constituency on the ticket of Alliance Party of Kenya (APK).
|
2023-12-03T04:17:37Z
|
2023-12-13T05:54:29Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muriuki_Njagagua
|
75,469,359 |
Albert Garrison
|
Albert L. Garrison Sr. (November 7, 1927 – April 3, 2004) was an American politician.
Albert Garrison was born in Waterloo, Iowa, on November 7, 1927, to parents Frank Garrison Sr. and Cora Rounds. He graduated from Waterloo East High School, and completed a bachelor of arts at Upper Iowa University, as well as a bachelor of science at Drake University.
Garrison served in the United States Navy and the United States Air Force Reserve, retiring with the rank of major. He worked for Massey Ferguson, Sperry Rand, and Waterloo Industries as an engineer before operating the eponymous Garrison Business Services. During his tenure on the Iowa House of Representatives, Garrison was a student of the Drake University School of Law. He held the District 34 seat from January 10, 1977, to January 7, 1979, as a Democrat. Garrison was appointed a Black Hawk County magistrate immediately after stepping down from the Iowa General Assembly. His eight-year career within the United States federal government included stints with the United States Department of Defense and the Internal Revenue Service. While affiliated with the IRS, Garrison was believed to be the first African-American tax agent for the state of Iowa. Garrison later chaired the Waterloo Housing Commission.
Garrison died on April 3, 2004, of a heart attack at Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Albert L. Garrison Sr. (November 7, 1927 – April 3, 2004) was an American politician.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Albert Garrison was born in Waterloo, Iowa, on November 7, 1927, to parents Frank Garrison Sr. and Cora Rounds. He graduated from Waterloo East High School, and completed a bachelor of arts at Upper Iowa University, as well as a bachelor of science at Drake University.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Garrison served in the United States Navy and the United States Air Force Reserve, retiring with the rank of major. He worked for Massey Ferguson, Sperry Rand, and Waterloo Industries as an engineer before operating the eponymous Garrison Business Services. During his tenure on the Iowa House of Representatives, Garrison was a student of the Drake University School of Law. He held the District 34 seat from January 10, 1977, to January 7, 1979, as a Democrat. Garrison was appointed a Black Hawk County magistrate immediately after stepping down from the Iowa General Assembly. His eight-year career within the United States federal government included stints with the United States Department of Defense and the Internal Revenue Service. While affiliated with the IRS, Garrison was believed to be the first African-American tax agent for the state of Iowa. Garrison later chaired the Waterloo Housing Commission.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Garrison died on April 3, 2004, of a heart attack at Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Albert L. Garrison Sr. was an American politician. Albert Garrison was born in Waterloo, Iowa, on November 7, 1927, to parents Frank Garrison Sr. and Cora Rounds. He graduated from Waterloo East High School, and completed a bachelor of arts at Upper Iowa University, as well as a bachelor of science at Drake University. Garrison served in the United States Navy and the United States Air Force Reserve, retiring with the rank of major. He worked for Massey Ferguson, Sperry Rand, and Waterloo Industries as an engineer before operating the eponymous Garrison Business Services. During his tenure on the Iowa House of Representatives, Garrison was a student of the Drake University School of Law. He held the District 34 seat from January 10, 1977, to January 7, 1979, as a Democrat. Garrison was appointed a Black Hawk County magistrate immediately after stepping down from the Iowa General Assembly. His eight-year career within the United States federal government included stints with the United States Department of Defense and the Internal Revenue Service. While affiliated with the IRS, Garrison was believed to be the first African-American tax agent for the state of Iowa. Garrison later chaired the Waterloo Housing Commission. Garrison died on April 3, 2004, of a heart attack at Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines.
|
2023-12-03T04:19:19Z
|
2023-12-29T13:51:26Z
|
[
"Template:One source",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Garrison
|
75,469,368 |
Tan Cheong Min
|
Tan Cheong Min (Chinese: 陈昌敏; pinyin: Chén Chāngmǐn) is a wushu taolu athlete from Malaysia.
Tan made her international debut at the 2017 World Wushu Championships where she won a gold medal in duilian and the bronze medal in nangun. She then competed at the 2017 Summer Universiade where she won the silver medal in women's nanquan + nandao combined. A year later, she competed in the 2018 Asian Games and finished fourth in women's nanquan. She then competed at the 2019 World Wushu Championships where she became the world champion in nandao and won silver medals in nanquan and duilian.
At the 2023 SEA Games, Tan was a double gold medalist in nanquan and nandao + nangun combined. A few months later, she won the silver medal in women's nanquan at the 2022 Asian Games. Around a month later, she won the gold medal in women's nanquan + nandao combined at the 2023 World Combat Games. Shortly after, she won the bronze medal in nangun at the 2023 World Wushu Championships despite having a flu.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Tan Cheong Min (Chinese: 陈昌敏; pinyin: Chén Chāngmǐn) is a wushu taolu athlete from Malaysia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Tan made her international debut at the 2017 World Wushu Championships where she won a gold medal in duilian and the bronze medal in nangun. She then competed at the 2017 Summer Universiade where she won the silver medal in women's nanquan + nandao combined. A year later, she competed in the 2018 Asian Games and finished fourth in women's nanquan. She then competed at the 2019 World Wushu Championships where she became the world champion in nandao and won silver medals in nanquan and duilian.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "At the 2023 SEA Games, Tan was a double gold medalist in nanquan and nandao + nangun combined. A few months later, she won the silver medal in women's nanquan at the 2022 Asian Games. Around a month later, she won the gold medal in women's nanquan + nandao combined at the 2023 World Combat Games. Shortly after, she won the bronze medal in nangun at the 2023 World Wushu Championships despite having a flu.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Tan Cheong Min is a wushu taolu athlete from Malaysia.
|
2023-12-03T04:20:31Z
|
2023-12-03T08:48:55Z
|
[
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Footer World Champions Women's Nandao",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox sportsperson",
"Template:Family name hatnote",
"Template:Zh"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tan_Cheong_Min
|
75,469,371 |
2024 Carlton Football Club season
|
The 2024 Carlton Football Club season will be the Carlton Football Club's 161st season of competition.
It will the club's men's team's 128th season as a member of the Australian Football League, and the third under senior coach Michael Voss. The club's women's team will contest its ninth season of the AFL Women's. The club will also field its men's reserves team in the Victorian Football League and its state level women's team in the VFL Women's.
The 2023 AFL season will be the 128th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it will also be the 128th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. The club will also field its women's team in the ninth season of the AFL Women's competition, its men's reserves team in its seventh Victorian Football League season, and its VFL women's team in its sixth VFL Women's season.
Car manufacturer Hyundai, which had been a major sponsor of the club continuously since 2008, and Great Southern Bank, which became a major sponsor during the 2021 season, continued as the club's major sponsors through the 2024 season.
Luke Sayers will continue in his third year as president, Brian Cook in his third year as CEO, and Michael Voss in his third year as senior coach of the club.
The following is Carlton's squad for the 2024 season.
Statistics are correct as of end of 2023 season.
The following summarises all player changes which occurred after the 2023 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2023 national draft.
Between seasons, Carlton saw the retirements of two long-term players: Ed Curnow, after thirteen seasons and 221 games; and Lachie Plowman after eight seasons and 125 games. Fringe midfielders Zac Fisher and Paddy Dow requested and were granted trades after seven and six years with the club respectively, seeking greater opportunities in other clubs' midfields. The club also traded for former top ten draft pick Elijah Hollands – brother of 2023 first-year player Oliver – from Gold Coast.
The club's AFL Women's 2024 squad is given below, correct as of 8 December 2023. From 2023, Carlton lost inaugural AFL Women's player Phoebe McWilliams, who retired after eight seasons in the league and two with Carlton.
Carlton will field reserves teams in the men's and women's competitions during the 2023 season.
Carlton's men's reserves team will contest its seventh VFL season; and its 87th overall season of reserves and state level competition dating back to 1919.
The club will field a team in the VFL Women's competition for the sixth time.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2024 Carlton Football Club season will be the Carlton Football Club's 161st season of competition.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It will the club's men's team's 128th season as a member of the Australian Football League, and the third under senior coach Michael Voss. The club's women's team will contest its ninth season of the AFL Women's. The club will also field its men's reserves team in the Victorian Football League and its state level women's team in the VFL Women's.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The 2023 AFL season will be the 128th season of the VFL/AFL competition since its inception in 1897; and, having competed in every season, it will also be the 128th season contested by the Carlton Football Club. The club will also field its women's team in the ninth season of the AFL Women's competition, its men's reserves team in its seventh Victorian Football League season, and its VFL women's team in its sixth VFL Women's season.",
"title": "Club summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Car manufacturer Hyundai, which had been a major sponsor of the club continuously since 2008, and Great Southern Bank, which became a major sponsor during the 2021 season, continued as the club's major sponsors through the 2024 season.",
"title": "Club summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Luke Sayers will continue in his third year as president, Brian Cook in his third year as CEO, and Michael Voss in his third year as senior coach of the club.",
"title": "Senior personnel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The following is Carlton's squad for the 2024 season.",
"title": "Squad for 2023"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Statistics are correct as of end of 2023 season.",
"title": "Squad for 2023"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The following summarises all player changes which occurred after the 2023 season. Unless otherwise noted, draft picks refer to selections in the 2023 national draft.",
"title": "Playing list changes"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Between seasons, Carlton saw the retirements of two long-term players: Ed Curnow, after thirteen seasons and 221 games; and Lachie Plowman after eight seasons and 125 games. Fringe midfielders Zac Fisher and Paddy Dow requested and were granted trades after seven and six years with the club respectively, seeking greater opportunities in other clubs' midfields. The club also traded for former top ten draft pick Elijah Hollands – brother of 2023 first-year player Oliver – from Gold Coast.",
"title": "Playing list changes"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The club's AFL Women's 2024 squad is given below, correct as of 8 December 2023. From 2023, Carlton lost inaugural AFL Women's player Phoebe McWilliams, who retired after eight seasons in the league and two with Carlton.",
"title": "AFL Women's"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Carlton will field reserves teams in the men's and women's competitions during the 2023 season.",
"title": "Reserves"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Carlton's men's reserves team will contest its seventh VFL season; and its 87th overall season of reserves and state level competition dating back to 1919.",
"title": "Reserves"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "The club will field a team in the VFL Women's competition for the sixth time.",
"title": "Reserves"
}
] |
The 2024 Carlton Football Club season will be the Carlton Football Club's 161st season of competition. It will the club's men's team's 128th season as a member of the Australian Football League, and the third under senior coach Michael Voss. The club's women's team will contest its ninth season of the AFL Women's. The club will also field its men's reserves team in the Victorian Football League and its state level women's team in the VFL Women's.
|
2023-12-03T04:21:53Z
|
2023-12-16T04:27:24Z
|
[
"Template:AFL Haw",
"Template:Carlton Football Club",
"Template:2024 AFL season",
"Template:AFL Ess",
"Template:AFL PA",
"Template:Rls",
"Template:2024 AFL Women's season",
"Template:WAFL SF",
"Template:AFL BL",
"Template:VFL San",
"Template:AFL Nor",
"Template:AFL Mel",
"Template:Cite tweet",
"Template:Infobox AFL club season",
"Template:AFL Ade",
"Template:AFL Syd",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:AFL Ric",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:AFL WB",
"Template:AFL Stk",
"Template:AFL Por",
"Template:AFL GC",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:AFL Fre",
"Template:AFL Gee",
"Template:Dead link"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Carlton_Football_Club_season
|
75,469,377 |
John Steinbeck bibliography
|
The following is a complete list of books published by John Steinbeck, one of the foremost American authors of the 20th century. Steinbeck published seventeen works of fiction and ten works of nonfiction between 1929 and 1966, as well as his work writing short stories and screenplays. Born in California, his novels often center around lower-class Americans navigating life in Western states. Although The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men remain his most popular novels, Steinbeck himself regarded East of Eden as his magnum opus. He won the 1962 Nobel Prize in Literature "for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humor and keen social perception".
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The following is a complete list of books published by John Steinbeck, one of the foremost American authors of the 20th century. Steinbeck published seventeen works of fiction and ten works of nonfiction between 1929 and 1966, as well as his work writing short stories and screenplays. Born in California, his novels often center around lower-class Americans navigating life in Western states. Although The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men remain his most popular novels, Steinbeck himself regarded East of Eden as his magnum opus. He won the 1962 Nobel Prize in Literature \"for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humor and keen social perception\".",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Nonfiction"
}
] |
The following is a complete list of books published by John Steinbeck, one of the foremost American authors of the 20th century. Steinbeck published seventeen works of fiction and ten works of nonfiction between 1929 and 1966, as well as his work writing short stories and screenplays. Born in California, his novels often center around lower-class Americans navigating life in Western states. Although The Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men remain his most popular novels, Steinbeck himself regarded East of Eden as his magnum opus. He won the 1962 Nobel Prize in Literature "for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humor and keen social perception".
|
2023-12-03T04:24:10Z
|
2023-12-30T19:46:52Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox bibliography",
"Template:Dts",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Steinbeck_bibliography
|
75,469,378 |
Zulkefli Bakar
|
Zulkefli bin Bakar is a Malaysian politician from BERSATU. He has been a Member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Penanti since 2023.
Zulkefli is currently the Chairman of BERSATU Penang and BERSATU Permatang Pauh division.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Zulkefli bin Bakar is a Malaysian politician from BERSATU. He has been a Member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Penanti since 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Zulkefli is currently the Chairman of BERSATU Penang and BERSATU Permatang Pauh division.",
"title": "Political career"
}
] |
Zulkefli bin Bakar is a Malaysian politician from BERSATU. He has been a Member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Penanti since 2023.
|
2023-12-03T04:24:25Z
|
2023-12-04T03:34:59Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Malay name",
"Template:Infobox officeholder"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zulkefli_Bakar
|
75,469,391 |
Sweden's application for NATO membership
|
Connecting Wikidata...
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Connecting Wikidata...",
"title": ""
}
] |
Connecting Wikidata...
|
2023-12-03T04:27:53Z
|
2023-12-03T04:28:56Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweden%27s_application_for_NATO_membership
|
75,469,421 |
Joe Mutambu
|
Joe Musyimi Mutambu is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi Central Constituency in Kitui County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with support of CORD Coalition in 2013. He served on the house committees on Energy, Communications and Information, and Procedure and House Rules. He is recorded to have spoken 41 times throughout the session of the 11th parliament.
In February 2015, at Tana boardroom Mutambu allegedly assaulted and squeezed the genitals of Charles Kyale who was a special advisor to Kitui governor. He was charged in a magistrate court with causing bodily harm. In September same year, the bishop of Helicopter Church, Thomas Wahome accused Mutambu of threatening him with a gun, assaulting and detaining him in his office for seven hours. Thomas Wahome had gone to Mutambu's office to recover his truck he had rented to transport cement from Donholm to a construction site in Karen, Nairobi after Mutambu failed to return the truck as agreed.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Joe Musyimi Mutambu is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi Central Constituency in Kitui County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with support of CORD Coalition in 2013. He served on the house committees on Energy, Communications and Information, and Procedure and House Rules. He is recorded to have spoken 41 times throughout the session of the 11th parliament.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In February 2015, at Tana boardroom Mutambu allegedly assaulted and squeezed the genitals of Charles Kyale who was a special advisor to Kitui governor. He was charged in a magistrate court with causing bodily harm. In September same year, the bishop of Helicopter Church, Thomas Wahome accused Mutambu of threatening him with a gun, assaulting and detaining him in his office for seven hours. Thomas Wahome had gone to Mutambu's office to recover his truck he had rented to transport cement from Donholm to a construction site in Karen, Nairobi after Mutambu failed to return the truck as agreed.",
"title": "Controversies"
}
] |
Joe Musyimi Mutambu is a Kenyan politician and a member of the 11th parliament of Kenya for Mwingi Central Constituency in Kitui County. He was elected to the parliament on the ticket of Wiper Democratic Movement - Kenya (WDM-K) and with support of CORD Coalition in 2013. He served on the house committees on Energy, Communications and Information, and Procedure and House Rules. He is recorded to have spoken 41 times throughout the session of the 11th parliament.
|
2023-12-03T04:35:29Z
|
2023-12-14T09:58:15Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Mutambu
|
75,469,450 |
Aldafermin
|
Aldafermin is a fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19) analogue developed for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Aldafermin is a fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19) analogue developed for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Aldafermin is a fibroblast growth factor 19 (FGF19) analogue developed for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis.
|
2023-12-03T04:41:07Z
|
2024-01-01T00:53:26Z
|
[
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Infobox drug",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldafermin
|
75,469,480 |
2024 in Luxembourg
|
Events in the year 2024 in Luxembourg.
Source:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in Luxembourg.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] |
Events in the year 2024 in Luxembourg.
|
2023-12-03T04:49:53Z
|
2023-12-03T07:49:54Z
|
[
"Template:Year in Europe",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Year in Luxembourg",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Portal bar"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_Luxembourg
|
75,469,481 |
Eutaxia virgata
|
Eutaxia virgata is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to parts of Western Australia.
The shrub has slender and erect or straggling habit and has yellow, orange, red and brown coloured pea-like flowers that form between August and February. It is found in swampy areas from around Gingin in the north to the Albany in the south and as far as Woodanilling in the east.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Eutaxia virgata is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to parts of Western Australia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The shrub has slender and erect or straggling habit and has yellow, orange, red and brown coloured pea-like flowers that form between August and February. It is found in swampy areas from around Gingin in the north to the Albany in the south and as far as Woodanilling in the east.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Eutaxia virgata is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to parts of Western Australia. The shrub has slender and erect or straggling habit and has yellow, orange, red and brown coloured pea-like flowers that form between August and February. It is found in swampy areas from around Gingin in the north to the Albany in the south and as far as Woodanilling in the east.
|
2023-12-03T04:50:18Z
|
2023-12-03T04:53:22Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Taxonbar"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutaxia_virgata
|
75,469,483 |
Amir Hamzah Abdul Hashim
|
Amir Hamzah bin Abdul Hashim is a Malaysian politician from PAS. He is a member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Permatang Pasir since 2023.
Amir Hamzah is currently the Deputy Chief of PAS Permatang Pasir branch.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Amir Hamzah bin Abdul Hashim is a Malaysian politician from PAS. He is a member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Permatang Pasir since 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Amir Hamzah is currently the Deputy Chief of PAS Permatang Pasir branch.",
"title": "Political career"
}
] |
Amir Hamzah bin Abdul Hashim is a Malaysian politician from PAS. He is a member of Penang State Legislative Assembly representing Permatang Pasir since 2023.
|
2023-12-03T04:50:47Z
|
2023-12-03T07:44:50Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Malay name",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amir_Hamzah_Abdul_Hashim
|
75,469,606 |
Massachusetts Revised Statutes
|
General Laws of Massachusetts
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "General Laws of Massachusetts",
"title": ""
}
] |
General Laws of Massachusetts
|
2023-12-03T04:58:30Z
|
2023-12-03T04:58:30Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_Revised_Statutes
|
75,469,633 |
O'mari
|
O’mari is a Zimbabwean fintech service owned by Old Mutual Zimbabwe Limited. It offers mobile money and remittance service platforms. It comes in two wallets that is USD and ZWL, all accessed via USSD 707. USD wallet is for both purposes and ZWL for mobile money only. It was first launched in November 2022.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "O’mari is a Zimbabwean fintech service owned by Old Mutual Zimbabwe Limited. It offers mobile money and remittance service platforms. It comes in two wallets that is USD and ZWL, all accessed via USSD 707. USD wallet is for both purposes and ZWL for mobile money only. It was first launched in November 2022.",
"title": ""
}
] |
O’mari is a Zimbabwean fintech service owned by Old Mutual Zimbabwe Limited. It offers mobile money and remittance service platforms. It comes in two wallets that is USD and ZWL, all accessed via USSD 707. USD wallet is for both purposes and ZWL for mobile money only. It was first launched in November 2022.
|
2023-12-03T05:00:02Z
|
2023-12-17T02:55:14Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O%27mari
|
75,469,705 |
Graham Blanks
|
Graham Blanks is an American long-distance runner, who competes for the Harvard Crimson.
Blanks finished 6th at the 2022 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships. In spring 2023, he won the Ivy League titles in the indoor mile and 3000 metres, as well as in the outdoor 5000 metres. He capped off the season with a second-place finish in the 5 km and a 6th place in the 10 km at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He won the 2023 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships in November 2023, making him the first male runner from an Ivy league school to win the race. Two weeks later, he set the collegiate record for the indoor 5000 metres, running 13:03.78 in Boston.
Outdoor
Indoor
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Graham Blanks is an American long-distance runner, who competes for the Harvard Crimson.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Blanks finished 6th at the 2022 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships. In spring 2023, he won the Ivy League titles in the indoor mile and 3000 metres, as well as in the outdoor 5000 metres. He capped off the season with a second-place finish in the 5 km and a 6th place in the 10 km at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He won the 2023 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships in November 2023, making him the first male runner from an Ivy league school to win the race. Two weeks later, he set the collegiate record for the indoor 5000 metres, running 13:03.78 in Boston.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Outdoor",
"title": "Personal bests"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Indoor",
"title": "Personal bests"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Graham Blanks is an American long-distance runner, who competes for the Harvard Crimson. Blanks finished 6th at the 2022 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships. In spring 2023, he won the Ivy League titles in the indoor mile and 3000 metres, as well as in the outdoor 5000 metres. He capped off the season with a second-place finish in the 5 km and a 6th place in the 10 km at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He won the 2023 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships in November 2023, making him the first male runner from an Ivy league school to win the race. Two weeks later, he set the collegiate record for the indoor 5000 metres, running 13:03.78 in Boston.
|
2023-12-03T05:08:02Z
|
2023-12-30T17:09:48Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox sportsperson",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Iaaf name",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:US-athletics-bio-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Blanks
|
75,469,725 |
Pycnodithella harveyi
|
Pycnodithella harveyi is a species of pseudoscorpion in the Chthoniidae family. It is endemic to Australia. It was described in 1989 by Australian athlete and zoologist Clarice Kennedy. The specific epithet harveyi honours arachnologist Mark Harvey for his contributions to the knowledge of the pseudoscorpion fauna of Australia.
The body length is 0.90–0.99 mm. The colour is dark brown.
The species occurs in eastern New South Wales. The type locality is the Macquarie University campus in North Ryde, Sydney. The pseudoscorpions were found in plant litter.
The pseudoscorpions are terrestrial predators.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Pycnodithella harveyi is a species of pseudoscorpion in the Chthoniidae family. It is endemic to Australia. It was described in 1989 by Australian athlete and zoologist Clarice Kennedy. The specific epithet harveyi honours arachnologist Mark Harvey for his contributions to the knowledge of the pseudoscorpion fauna of Australia.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The body length is 0.90–0.99 mm. The colour is dark brown.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The species occurs in eastern New South Wales. The type locality is the Macquarie University campus in North Ryde, Sydney. The pseudoscorpions were found in plant litter.",
"title": "Distribution and habitat"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The pseudoscorpions are terrestrial predators.",
"title": "Behaviour"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Pycnodithella harveyi is a species of pseudoscorpion in the Chthoniidae family. It is endemic to Australia. It was described in 1989 by Australian athlete and zoologist Clarice Kennedy. The specific epithet harveyi honours arachnologist Mark Harvey for his contributions to the knowledge of the pseudoscorpion fauna of Australia.
|
2023-12-03T05:09:40Z
|
2023-12-03T05:09:40Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Pseudoscorpion-stub"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pycnodithella_harveyi
|
75,469,729 |
Ben's Kosher Deli
|
Ben's Kosher Deli is a New York City-based Jewish deli chain with locations in Queens, Long Island and Boca Raton, Florida. Ben's was founded in 1972. Ben's formerly operated a midtown location which had catered events such as Broadway premieres and fashion shows, such as the 2023 Batsheva Hay show. The owner of Ben's, Ronnie Dragoon, owned at one time 7 locations. He started the business when he was 24 years old. The restaurant is glatt kosher certified. The Scarsdale location was open from 2015 until 2021. The Manhattan location merged with a kosher restaurant called Mr. Broadway.
40°47′27″N 73°46′46″W / 40.790943754232906°N 73.77933116309656°W / 40.790943754232906; -73.77933116309656
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ben's Kosher Deli is a New York City-based Jewish deli chain with locations in Queens, Long Island and Boca Raton, Florida. Ben's was founded in 1972. Ben's formerly operated a midtown location which had catered events such as Broadway premieres and fashion shows, such as the 2023 Batsheva Hay show. The owner of Ben's, Ronnie Dragoon, owned at one time 7 locations. He started the business when he was 24 years old. The restaurant is glatt kosher certified. The Scarsdale location was open from 2015 until 2021. The Manhattan location merged with a kosher restaurant called Mr. Broadway.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "40°47′27″N 73°46′46″W / 40.790943754232906°N 73.77933116309656°W / 40.790943754232906; -73.77933116309656",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Ben's Kosher Deli is a New York City-based Jewish deli chain with locations in Queens, Long Island and Boca Raton, Florida. Ben's was founded in 1972. Ben's formerly operated a midtown location which had catered events such as Broadway premieres and fashion shows, such as the 2023 Batsheva Hay show. The owner of Ben's, Ronnie Dragoon, owned at one time 7 locations. He started the business when he was 24 years old. The restaurant is glatt kosher certified. The Scarsdale location was open from 2015 until 2021. The Manhattan location merged with a kosher restaurant called Mr. Broadway.
|
2023-12-03T05:10:02Z
|
2023-12-25T09:20:23Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Coord",
"Template:For",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben%27s_Kosher_Deli
|
75,469,784 |
Urbita Hot Springs
|
Urbita Hot Springs was a historic hot springs and amusement park in San Bernardino County, California, United States. Urbita Springs Park was located between E Street and Colton Street in San Bernardino where the Inland Center mall stands today.
Urbita Springs were used by indigenous people of the area. Used for recreation by settlers as early as the 1880s, the site was first known as Midway Springs, as they stood midway between San Bernardino and Colton. Willows and cottonwoods (likely native) grew around the lake, and other ferns and flowers were later delivered by train and added to the landscape. The name Urbita means "little city" and applied first to a nearby development established in 1899. In 1905 there was an Urbita School located at H Street and Adell Street in San Bernardino.
Urbita was one of several hot springs in San Bernardino County, including Arrowhead Hot Springs, Harlem Hot Springs, and Rabel Hot Springs, which were first developed as resorts in the 1880s. The San Bernardino Valley Traction Co. ran a trolley line out to the springs, and a separate (but associated) company developed the bathhouse and surrounding parkland. The lake may have been created or significantly expanded on the "low land to the south of the present bathhouse" in 1901 when the site was purchased by A. C. Denman Jr.
Urbita Springs was ultimately developed into a 15-acre (6.1 ha; 650,000 sq ft) amusement park oriented toward working-class families. Nearby there was the Association Park racetrack, football fields, and a baseball diamond. In early days it featured sulphured water baths, rowboating on the lake, a carousel, and a small zoo. The dance hall and the plunge swimming pool were both 50 ft by 100 ft, there were 100 changing rooms, and 40 porcelain soaking tubs. The Urbita Zoo had snakes, llamas, and raccoons. Hot-air ballooning was attempted in 1911. Urbita Springs hosted the National Orange Show convention in 1918.
Operated for a time by the Pacific Electric streetcar company, and home to the Urbita Lake Railway, the site was renamed Pickering Park in 1924. Pickering Park shut down in the late 1930s due to a combination of the financial crisis of the Great Depression and a drought that depleted groundwater and dried up the park's signature lake. The Urbita Springs Ballroom survived into the 1950s. In the 1940s and 1950s, surrounding wetlands and water features also dried up and the land was subdivided for retail and residential use.
By 1960 the park was described as overgrown, abandoned, "desolate" and littered with discarded beer cans. In 1966 what had once been Urbita Springs Park became the site of Inland Shopping Center. In the 1980s, after "a succession of unusually wet winters and intentional replenishing of the water supply overloaded the underground basin," springs and underground water began emerging in places in San Bernardino where it was unexpected and unwanted, including in basements, movie theaters, and in an elevator shaft at San Bernardino City Hall. Outdoors, cattails began to grow in low places on undeveloped land...
The hot water was believed to come from 600 feet (180 m) below ground. According to an U.S. government survey of California springs first published in 1915, "About 1 mile south of San Bernardino a recreation park known as Urbita Hot Springs has been built about a group of artesian wells that yield thermal water. This water supplies a swimming plunge, tub baths, and a small lake. The warmest well yields about 200 US gallons (760 L; 170 imp gal) a minute of mildly sulphureted water that is said to have a temperature of 106 °F (41 °C). The following partial analysis shows that, like the water at Arrowhead and at Harlem springs, it is not highly mineralized, but small amounts of sulphur and iron constituents in the water cause it to stain the enameled bathtubs." The thermal springs in the area were associated with a tectonic fault at the base of the San Bernardino mountains.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Urbita Hot Springs was a historic hot springs and amusement park in San Bernardino County, California, United States. Urbita Springs Park was located between E Street and Colton Street in San Bernardino where the Inland Center mall stands today.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Urbita Springs were used by indigenous people of the area. Used for recreation by settlers as early as the 1880s, the site was first known as Midway Springs, as they stood midway between San Bernardino and Colton. Willows and cottonwoods (likely native) grew around the lake, and other ferns and flowers were later delivered by train and added to the landscape. The name Urbita means \"little city\" and applied first to a nearby development established in 1899. In 1905 there was an Urbita School located at H Street and Adell Street in San Bernardino.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Urbita was one of several hot springs in San Bernardino County, including Arrowhead Hot Springs, Harlem Hot Springs, and Rabel Hot Springs, which were first developed as resorts in the 1880s. The San Bernardino Valley Traction Co. ran a trolley line out to the springs, and a separate (but associated) company developed the bathhouse and surrounding parkland. The lake may have been created or significantly expanded on the \"low land to the south of the present bathhouse\" in 1901 when the site was purchased by A. C. Denman Jr.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Urbita Springs was ultimately developed into a 15-acre (6.1 ha; 650,000 sq ft) amusement park oriented toward working-class families. Nearby there was the Association Park racetrack, football fields, and a baseball diamond. In early days it featured sulphured water baths, rowboating on the lake, a carousel, and a small zoo. The dance hall and the plunge swimming pool were both 50 ft by 100 ft, there were 100 changing rooms, and 40 porcelain soaking tubs. The Urbita Zoo had snakes, llamas, and raccoons. Hot-air ballooning was attempted in 1911. Urbita Springs hosted the National Orange Show convention in 1918.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Operated for a time by the Pacific Electric streetcar company, and home to the Urbita Lake Railway, the site was renamed Pickering Park in 1924. Pickering Park shut down in the late 1930s due to a combination of the financial crisis of the Great Depression and a drought that depleted groundwater and dried up the park's signature lake. The Urbita Springs Ballroom survived into the 1950s. In the 1940s and 1950s, surrounding wetlands and water features also dried up and the land was subdivided for retail and residential use.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "By 1960 the park was described as overgrown, abandoned, \"desolate\" and littered with discarded beer cans. In 1966 what had once been Urbita Springs Park became the site of Inland Shopping Center. In the 1980s, after \"a succession of unusually wet winters and intentional replenishing of the water supply overloaded the underground basin,\" springs and underground water began emerging in places in San Bernardino where it was unexpected and unwanted, including in basements, movie theaters, and in an elevator shaft at San Bernardino City Hall. Outdoors, cattails began to grow in low places on undeveloped land...",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "The hot water was believed to come from 600 feet (180 m) below ground. According to an U.S. government survey of California springs first published in 1915, \"About 1 mile south of San Bernardino a recreation park known as Urbita Hot Springs has been built about a group of artesian wells that yield thermal water. This water supplies a swimming plunge, tub baths, and a small lake. The warmest well yields about 200 US gallons (760 L; 170 imp gal) a minute of mildly sulphureted water that is said to have a temperature of 106 °F (41 °C). The following partial analysis shows that, like the water at Arrowhead and at Harlem springs, it is not highly mineralized, but small amounts of sulphur and iron constituents in the water cause it to stain the enameled bathtubs.\" The thermal springs in the area were associated with a tectonic fault at the base of the San Bernardino mountains.",
"title": "Water profile"
}
] |
Urbita Hot Springs was a historic hot springs and amusement park in San Bernardino County, California, United States. Urbita Springs Park was located between E Street and Colton Street in San Bernardino where the Inland Center mall stands today.
|
2023-12-03T05:14:12Z
|
2023-12-20T21:03:51Z
|
[
"Template:Slink",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Use American English",
"Template:Infobox spring",
"Template:Gallery",
"Template:Commons category",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Convert",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urbita_Hot_Springs
|
75,469,801 |
List of Stellantis vehicles
|
This is a list of lists of vehicles produced by Stellantis and its predecessors.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "This is a list of lists of vehicles produced by Stellantis and its predecessors.",
"title": ""
}
] |
This is a list of lists of vehicles produced by Stellantis and its predecessors. List of Alfa Romeo concept cars
List of Chrysler vehicles
List of Citroën vehicles
List of Dodge vehicles
List of Fiat passenger cars
List of Jeep vehicles
List of Lancia concept cars
List of Maserati vehicles
List of Opel vehicles
List of Peugeot vehicles
List of Vauxhall vehicles
|
2023-12-03T05:14:49Z
|
2023-12-06T20:59:39Z
|
[
"Template:Stellantis"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Stellantis_vehicles
|
75,469,818 |
Interspecies design
|
Interspecies design is design practice that intentionally involves and emphasizes the contributions of multiple species, focusing on the participation and outcomes for both human and non-human lifeforms. It aims to create a mutual benefit and centers on designing for and with all life.
Interspecies design is characterized by the participation of more than one species in design activities and the use of design outcomes by multiple species. This concept extends to all design practices that could potentially involve multiple species, making it a broad and inclusive field.
The field arises from a need to include all those at risk of harm, domination, or oppression in the design process, highlighting the ethical dimension of design decisions. This approach challenges traditional practices by considering the impact on and inclusion of non-human species.
Interspecies design is related to but distinct from concepts such as interspecies cultures, multispecies design, ecocentric design, ecological engineering, and more-than-human design. It focuses on processes rather than goals, and values all expressions of life instead of focusing on select species or criteria.
Interspecies design faces challenges in defining its scope and focus. Questions arise about why to focus on species specifically, and not on other taxonomic groups, individual organisms, or broader ecological systems.
In the realm of art and design, interspecies design has been applied in creating shared spaces and experiences for multiple species, such as in the design of prosthetic habitat-structures for owls.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Interspecies design is design practice that intentionally involves and emphasizes the contributions of multiple species, focusing on the participation and outcomes for both human and non-human lifeforms. It aims to create a mutual benefit and centers on designing for and with all life.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Interspecies design is characterized by the participation of more than one species in design activities and the use of design outcomes by multiple species. This concept extends to all design practices that could potentially involve multiple species, making it a broad and inclusive field.",
"title": "Definition"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The field arises from a need to include all those at risk of harm, domination, or oppression in the design process, highlighting the ethical dimension of design decisions. This approach challenges traditional practices by considering the impact on and inclusion of non-human species.",
"title": "Need and ethics"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Interspecies design is related to but distinct from concepts such as interspecies cultures, multispecies design, ecocentric design, ecological engineering, and more-than-human design. It focuses on processes rather than goals, and values all expressions of life instead of focusing on select species or criteria.",
"title": "Synonyms and related concepts"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Interspecies design faces challenges in defining its scope and focus. Questions arise about why to focus on species specifically, and not on other taxonomic groups, individual organisms, or broader ecological systems.",
"title": "Challenges and limitations"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In the realm of art and design, interspecies design has been applied in creating shared spaces and experiences for multiple species, such as in the design of prosthetic habitat-structures for owls.",
"title": "Application in art and design"
}
] |
Interspecies design is design practice that intentionally involves and emphasizes the contributions of multiple species, focusing on the participation and outcomes for both human and non-human lifeforms. It aims to create a mutual benefit and centers on designing for and with all life.
|
2023-12-03T05:16:27Z
|
2023-12-29T01:46:52Z
|
[
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interspecies_design
|
75,469,823 |
Arizona Annotated Revised Statutes
|
[] |
eedirect Arizona Revised Statutes
|
2023-12-03T05:16:46Z
|
2023-12-03T05:16:46Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arizona_Annotated_Revised_Statutes
|
|
75,469,853 |
Parents' Bill of Rights
|
The Education (Parents' Bill of Rights) Amendment Act, 2023, commonly known as the Parents' Bill of Rights, is a 2023 piece of legislation amending the Saskatchewan Education Act. Also known as Bill 137, the legislation was introduced on October 10, 2023, during an emergency session of the 29th Saskatchewan Legislature, and it was passed on October 20, 2023, after a week of intensive debate in the Legislative Assembly. The provincial government, led by Premier Scott Moe, invoked the notwithstanding clause—Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms—to pass the legislation and protect it from legal challenges based on Charter Rights.
Bill 137 requires parental consent when students under the age of 16 wish to change their names or pronouns related to gender expression while at school. In addition, the bill places restrictions on sexual health education, making provisions for parental consent and prohibiting third-party involvement. The bill, and the process used to pass it, has drawn criticism from legal and human rights experts. It has also proven divisive among residents of the province, drawing large crowds at protests since the policies were first proposed in the summer of 2023. The bill has been cited as an example of the encroachment of American "culture wars" into Canadian politics.
The impetus for Bill 137 arose out of controversy surrounding new educational policies introduced in August 2023, only weeks before the start of the school year, by Minister of Education Dustin Duncan. On August 22, Duncan announced new policies that would require parental consent for students under 16 wishing to have their chosen names and pronouns affirmed at school; in addition, new policies would place restrictions on sexual health education, making it easier for parents to opt their children out of sexual health education and banning third parties, including experts in sexual assault, from participating in such education.
These policies were introduced less than two weeks after three provincial by-elections. While the governing Saskatchewan Party won the Lumsden-Morse by-election, the Saskatchewan United Party (SUP) finished second with nearly a quarter of the vote. SUP leader Nadine Wilson attributed the strong performance to her party's advocacy for more parental involvement in the education system. Moe stated afterwards that it was "up to our government to listen to and act on that message that has been sent here this week." Subsequently, the SUP was widely cited as an impetus for the new policies, and the party took credit for the policies on social media. At the same time, a national Christian lobbying group called "Action4Canada" took credit for influencing the Saskatchewan Party government towards the policy. The group claimed to have sent over 10,000 messages to Moe and Duncan and to have had an in-person meeting with Duncan's staff in April 2023.
In September, it was reported that the Ministry of Education took only nine days to create the policy, and did so without consulting students, school boards, the Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation, the province's youth advocate, or other experts. The government reported that it had received eighteen letters—seven of them from self-identified parents—in the spring and summer about the development of a similar policy in New Brunswick. Moe countered that while the directive to create the policy was made on August 9, the caucus had in fact been discussing the development of such a policy for months. Moreover, Moe stated that in his government's view, "the leading experts in children’s upbringing are their parents". However, it was reported in October that the government had relied on the work of a single American clinical psychologist in developing the policy.
The day the new policies were announced, the Saskatchewan Advocate for Children and Youth, Lisa Broda, announced that the advocate's office would be reviewing the policy; Broda further stated that she was "deeply troubled by the impact this policy will have on the rights of children in Saskatchewan". The advocate's office released its findings on September 15, warning that the policy risked violating "a young person's rights under provincial, constitutional, and international human rights law" and that it could result in harm to vulnerable students. The Advocate recommended extensive revisions to the policy and warned that it risked placing further pressure on existing supports in schools. At the same time, there were repeated calls to pause and revise the policies, including from the Saskatchewan School Boards Association. Experts pointed to research concluding that the practice of social affirmation—including the use of preferred pronouns—leads to healthier outcomes for gender-diverse youth, while the absence of social affirmation has been linked to increased harm. Experts also criticized the potential negative health consequences of scaling back sexual health education.
On September 1 2023, the UR Pride Centre for Sexuality and Gender Diversity at the University of Regina and Egale Canada—a national LGBTQ advocacy organization—filed a lawsuit against the Saskatchewan government over the policies. The group held their first meeting with the chief justice in Regina on September 5, and the first hearing was set for September 19. Specifically, UR Pride and Egale argued that the policies violate sections 7 and 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, those pertaining to the right to liberty, security of the person, and equality rights. The policies took effect with the start of the school year in early September, and before the first hearing occurred, Premier Moe mused openly about enshrining the policies in law and invoking the notwithstanding clause to protect them against further Charter challenges.
On September 28 2023, Court of King's Bench Justice Michael Megaw granted an injunction against the policies, writing that the policies risked causing "irreparable harm" to vulnerable students and that "the protection of these youth surpasses that interest expressed by the Government, pending a full and complete hearing into the constitutionality of this Policy". Moe characterized the injunction as "judicial overreach". That characterization drew criticism from legal experts, and the Saskatchewan Trial Lawyers' Association released a statement expressing concern that Moe's statement was "premature" and had the "potential to erode public trust" in the judiciary; as such, the STLA urged the government "to respect the role of the judiciary and to allow the court to perform its constitutional role of judicial review".
On September 28 2023, the day an injunction was granted against the parental consent policy, Premier Moe stated his intent to enshrine the policy in law and to invoke the notwithstanding clause to protect it from further Charter challenges.
Moe instructed the Lieutenant Governor to recall the Legislature early for an emergency debate on the legislation—the first such occurrence in a quarter of a century. The emergency session began on October 10 2023, with debate set to last for 40 hours. The Opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) used most of the debate time; NDP members spent the time reading into the record collected accounts of people who would be affected by the law, highlighting the court injunction granted against the initial policy, and questioning the government's process. NDP education critic Matt Love also proposed two amendments to the bill: a "do no harm" clause that would void the consent requirement in cases where a mental health professional determined that there was no safe way to involve a parent, and a provision to enact a parental engagement strategy; both amendments were defeated by the government.
At the conclusion of 40 hours of debate on October 20, the Parents' Bill of Rights passed on a 40–12 vote, with all present NDP members voting against and the lone Saskatchewan United Party member voting in favour alongside the governing Saskatchewan Party; while long-time Saskatchewan Party cabinet ministers Don Morgan and Gordon Wyant were absent for the vote, Premier Moe stated that he was "100 per cent" confident that they supported the bill. After the vote, the bill was signed into law by Lieutenant Governor Russ Mirasty.
On October 24, the provincial government's legal representative in the case brought against it by UR Pride and Egale Canada instructed the court that with the passage of the law, the government had rescinded the policy that was the subject of the case; the government expected this to end the case. The following day, Moe stated that he was "not sure how a court case would continue with no policy." However, the applicants stated an intent to amend the case, and on December 1 2023, they submitted an amended application focusing the case on the Parents' Bill of Rights.
In response to questions, Premier Moe stated on November 14 that it was up to school divisions to enforce the policies in the law, and that as such he did not know what consequences there might be for teachers that decide not to follow the law.
The Parents' Bill of Rights stipulates that a parent has a right to be the primary decision-maker with respect to their child's education, including the right to withdraw their child from sexual health education and the right to withhold consent for the use of gender-related names or pronouns if the child is under 16 years of age. The bill also stipulates that if it can be reasonably expected that obtaining parental consent could result in harm to the student, that the school will direct the students to "appropriate professionals" within the school to get help devising a plan to inform their parents. Further, the bill stipulates that no legal action can be brought against the government for harm resulting from the enactment of the law.
The Parents' Bill of Rights also includes an amendment making it mandatory for schools in the province to fly the flag of Saskatchewan alongside the flag of Canada.
Premier Moe and ministers Duncan and Jeremy Cockrill persistently stated that the new policies and the Parents' Bill of Rights were meant to be inclusive rather than exclusive, and were about the importance of involving parents in their children's education. Moe also stated that the legislation was merely codifying policies that already existed across the province. Over time, the government pointed to two specific instances that apparently helped to inform the decision to create the policies. The first was a June 2023 incident when non-school approved sexual health education material was obtained by a student after a presentation by Planned Parenthood in a Lumsden high school. The province responded by suspending Planned Parenthood from presenting in schools; following the suspension, the organization expressed surprise and disappointment that the government did not discuss the issue with them. The second was the government's discovery of an active procedure in the Regina Public School Division, which it argued deviated from the norm by explicitly stating a respect for student confidentiality. However, the School Division responded that the province never inquired about the procedure, which had been established following extensive consultations that included parents.
In regards to the provision requiring schools to fly the provincial flag, Cockrill stated that the provision was meant to boost provincial identity and pride.
The parental consent provisions of Bill 137 have inspired widespread debate and protest. Many experts and parents critical of the bill have called it transphobic, a common charge against the broader parental rights' movement. Critics have alleged that the movement seeks to roll back social gains made by LGBTQ advocates. Experts have similarly argued that the bill was influenced by far-right political ideologies.
Critics of the Bill have argued that students forced to come out to non-supportive families could face harm. Moreover, professional support workers, including social workers, have explained that the law does not align with support workers' ethics or best practices. Sexual assault experts have expressed concerns at being excluded by the law from sexual health education, stating that the exclusion puts children "at risk". Critics have noted that Saskatchewan boasts high rates of sexually transmitted infections—particularly HIV/AIDS—along with high rates of sexual assault, intimate partner violence, and teenage pregnancy. At a November Saskatchewan medical association conference in Saskatoon, medical professionals questioned Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Tim McLeod and noted that they expected an escalated mental health crisis as a result of the law.
The government has also been questioned on the need for the consent policies. Education Minister Cockrill was criticized for incorrectly claiming on August 29 that "every single government MLA" had heard from constituents that they had children who had been using different pronouns without their knowledge; the claim was immediately refuted by MLA Everett Hindley when he was asked if he had heard the same, and Premier Moe stated in an October 3 interview that he had not been made aware of any such discussions with parents. Cockrill was further criticized for claiming, without providing evidence, that the government had heard from "tens of thousands" of people in support of the policy. Moe persistently cited the popularity of the policy as a justification for its enactment, while the government dismissed polling that suggested that more than half of residents supported teacher discretion over parental consent. Several of the eighteen letters that the government received in the spring and summer of 2023 incorrectly characterized issues of gender and sexuality as "theories" and "ideologies".
On October 17 2023, while the bill was still being debated in the Legislature, Saskatchewan's human rights commissioner, Heather Kuttai, resigned in protest of the policy. Kuttai characterized the parental consent policy as "an attack" on children's rights and criticized the government for its unwillingness to heed criticism and make changes to the legislation. Two days later, the Human Rights Commission released a statement urging the government to reconsider the legislation and to work with it and other experts to revise it. The Commission committed to reviewing the law, and in November 2023 began seeking public feedback as part of that review.
Teachers in the province expressed concerns about the enactment of such policies from the outset, and in November 2023 dozens of teachers signed a petition urging school divisions not to follow the law, and committing themselves not to do so. Provincial labour unions have also been critical of the law. Labour groups, including the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour and the Saskatchewan Government Employees Union, organized a large demonstration against the legislation while it was being debated.
The government was criticized for recalling the Legislature early to hold an emergency debate on the legislation, the first such recall in the province for 25 years. The Opposition argued that the 40 hours of debate on the bill in a shortened time frame was in fact minimal compared to the debate that would have come if the legislation had been introduced in a regular session. Moe's insistence that the legislation was merely codifying rules that were already in place across the province "by policy or practice" further prompted questions as to why there was a need to hastily rush the bill through the Legislature outside of the normal process. In addition, the emergency debate raised questions about the government's priorities and why it was not holding emergency debates on issues like the broader state of the education system—with the government at an impasse with teachers over a new collective agreement—or the strained health care system. Opposition members also accused government members of streaming online entertainment during the debate; while this was unconfirmed, observers did note government members wearing headphones during debate.
The provincial government's decision to preemptively invoke the notwithstanding clause to pass Bill 137 drew widespread criticism. In September, federal Justice Minister Arif Virani called the clause a "blunt instrument" and argued that its preemptive use was not "appropriate"; he argued that the legal process should run its course before a government considers using the clause. Howard Leeson, who served as Saskatchewan's deputy minister of intergovernmental affairs under Allan Blakeney's government when it helped to create the notwithstanding clause, agreed; Leeson explained that the clause was intended for use in "exceptional circumstances" and only after court processes had been completed. He stated that it "would have been better for the government to wait until after the merits of the case itself had been argued." The day before the bill was passed, fourteen University of Saskatchewan law faculty members wrote a letter to the government urging it to allow "the normal legal process to take its course" before passing the bill, explaining that the government's use of the notwithstanding clause was "well outside of the normal legal process", which would allow judges to first rule on the constitutionality of the law.
In response to criticism, Saskatchewan's Minister of Justice Bronwyn Eyre defended the government's use of the notwithstanding clause and stated that the government was "willing to be judged" on the policy.
The amendment to require schools to fly the flag of Saskatchewan alongside the Canadian flag has also drawn controversy. A report from the Regina Leader-Post suggested that the requirement could cost schools that need to source and install additional flag poles thousands of dollars; the government did not commit to providing such funding. Critics have noted that many schools already have second flag poles that fly a variety of flags, such as Treaty flags, pride flags, and Métis flags; as such, critics have suggested that the policy is designed to act as a de facto ban on flying such flags. Critics have also questioned whether the intent of the provision is to downplay Canadian identity among Saskatchewan residents—earlier in 2023, the provincial government passed the Saskatchewan First Act, which was meant to "confirm" the province's autonomy.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Education (Parents' Bill of Rights) Amendment Act, 2023, commonly known as the Parents' Bill of Rights, is a 2023 piece of legislation amending the Saskatchewan Education Act. Also known as Bill 137, the legislation was introduced on October 10, 2023, during an emergency session of the 29th Saskatchewan Legislature, and it was passed on October 20, 2023, after a week of intensive debate in the Legislative Assembly. The provincial government, led by Premier Scott Moe, invoked the notwithstanding clause—Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms—to pass the legislation and protect it from legal challenges based on Charter Rights.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Bill 137 requires parental consent when students under the age of 16 wish to change their names or pronouns related to gender expression while at school. In addition, the bill places restrictions on sexual health education, making provisions for parental consent and prohibiting third-party involvement. The bill, and the process used to pass it, has drawn criticism from legal and human rights experts. It has also proven divisive among residents of the province, drawing large crowds at protests since the policies were first proposed in the summer of 2023. The bill has been cited as an example of the encroachment of American \"culture wars\" into Canadian politics.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The impetus for Bill 137 arose out of controversy surrounding new educational policies introduced in August 2023, only weeks before the start of the school year, by Minister of Education Dustin Duncan. On August 22, Duncan announced new policies that would require parental consent for students under 16 wishing to have their chosen names and pronouns affirmed at school; in addition, new policies would place restrictions on sexual health education, making it easier for parents to opt their children out of sexual health education and banning third parties, including experts in sexual assault, from participating in such education.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "These policies were introduced less than two weeks after three provincial by-elections. While the governing Saskatchewan Party won the Lumsden-Morse by-election, the Saskatchewan United Party (SUP) finished second with nearly a quarter of the vote. SUP leader Nadine Wilson attributed the strong performance to her party's advocacy for more parental involvement in the education system. Moe stated afterwards that it was \"up to our government to listen to and act on that message that has been sent here this week.\" Subsequently, the SUP was widely cited as an impetus for the new policies, and the party took credit for the policies on social media. At the same time, a national Christian lobbying group called \"Action4Canada\" took credit for influencing the Saskatchewan Party government towards the policy. The group claimed to have sent over 10,000 messages to Moe and Duncan and to have had an in-person meeting with Duncan's staff in April 2023.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In September, it was reported that the Ministry of Education took only nine days to create the policy, and did so without consulting students, school boards, the Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation, the province's youth advocate, or other experts. The government reported that it had received eighteen letters—seven of them from self-identified parents—in the spring and summer about the development of a similar policy in New Brunswick. Moe countered that while the directive to create the policy was made on August 9, the caucus had in fact been discussing the development of such a policy for months. Moreover, Moe stated that in his government's view, \"the leading experts in children’s upbringing are their parents\". However, it was reported in October that the government had relied on the work of a single American clinical psychologist in developing the policy.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The day the new policies were announced, the Saskatchewan Advocate for Children and Youth, Lisa Broda, announced that the advocate's office would be reviewing the policy; Broda further stated that she was \"deeply troubled by the impact this policy will have on the rights of children in Saskatchewan\". The advocate's office released its findings on September 15, warning that the policy risked violating \"a young person's rights under provincial, constitutional, and international human rights law\" and that it could result in harm to vulnerable students. The Advocate recommended extensive revisions to the policy and warned that it risked placing further pressure on existing supports in schools. At the same time, there were repeated calls to pause and revise the policies, including from the Saskatchewan School Boards Association. Experts pointed to research concluding that the practice of social affirmation—including the use of preferred pronouns—leads to healthier outcomes for gender-diverse youth, while the absence of social affirmation has been linked to increased harm. Experts also criticized the potential negative health consequences of scaling back sexual health education.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "On September 1 2023, the UR Pride Centre for Sexuality and Gender Diversity at the University of Regina and Egale Canada—a national LGBTQ advocacy organization—filed a lawsuit against the Saskatchewan government over the policies. The group held their first meeting with the chief justice in Regina on September 5, and the first hearing was set for September 19. Specifically, UR Pride and Egale argued that the policies violate sections 7 and 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, those pertaining to the right to liberty, security of the person, and equality rights. The policies took effect with the start of the school year in early September, and before the first hearing occurred, Premier Moe mused openly about enshrining the policies in law and invoking the notwithstanding clause to protect them against further Charter challenges.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "On September 28 2023, Court of King's Bench Justice Michael Megaw granted an injunction against the policies, writing that the policies risked causing \"irreparable harm\" to vulnerable students and that \"the protection of these youth surpasses that interest expressed by the Government, pending a full and complete hearing into the constitutionality of this Policy\". Moe characterized the injunction as \"judicial overreach\". That characterization drew criticism from legal experts, and the Saskatchewan Trial Lawyers' Association released a statement expressing concern that Moe's statement was \"premature\" and had the \"potential to erode public trust\" in the judiciary; as such, the STLA urged the government \"to respect the role of the judiciary and to allow the court to perform its constitutional role of judicial review\".",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "On September 28 2023, the day an injunction was granted against the parental consent policy, Premier Moe stated his intent to enshrine the policy in law and to invoke the notwithstanding clause to protect it from further Charter challenges.",
"title": "Legislative History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Moe instructed the Lieutenant Governor to recall the Legislature early for an emergency debate on the legislation—the first such occurrence in a quarter of a century. The emergency session began on October 10 2023, with debate set to last for 40 hours. The Opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) used most of the debate time; NDP members spent the time reading into the record collected accounts of people who would be affected by the law, highlighting the court injunction granted against the initial policy, and questioning the government's process. NDP education critic Matt Love also proposed two amendments to the bill: a \"do no harm\" clause that would void the consent requirement in cases where a mental health professional determined that there was no safe way to involve a parent, and a provision to enact a parental engagement strategy; both amendments were defeated by the government.",
"title": "Legislative History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "At the conclusion of 40 hours of debate on October 20, the Parents' Bill of Rights passed on a 40–12 vote, with all present NDP members voting against and the lone Saskatchewan United Party member voting in favour alongside the governing Saskatchewan Party; while long-time Saskatchewan Party cabinet ministers Don Morgan and Gordon Wyant were absent for the vote, Premier Moe stated that he was \"100 per cent\" confident that they supported the bill. After the vote, the bill was signed into law by Lieutenant Governor Russ Mirasty.",
"title": "Legislative History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "On October 24, the provincial government's legal representative in the case brought against it by UR Pride and Egale Canada instructed the court that with the passage of the law, the government had rescinded the policy that was the subject of the case; the government expected this to end the case. The following day, Moe stated that he was \"not sure how a court case would continue with no policy.\" However, the applicants stated an intent to amend the case, and on December 1 2023, they submitted an amended application focusing the case on the Parents' Bill of Rights.",
"title": "Legislative History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "In response to questions, Premier Moe stated on November 14 that it was up to school divisions to enforce the policies in the law, and that as such he did not know what consequences there might be for teachers that decide not to follow the law.",
"title": "Legislative History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "The Parents' Bill of Rights stipulates that a parent has a right to be the primary decision-maker with respect to their child's education, including the right to withdraw their child from sexual health education and the right to withhold consent for the use of gender-related names or pronouns if the child is under 16 years of age. The bill also stipulates that if it can be reasonably expected that obtaining parental consent could result in harm to the student, that the school will direct the students to \"appropriate professionals\" within the school to get help devising a plan to inform their parents. Further, the bill stipulates that no legal action can be brought against the government for harm resulting from the enactment of the law.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "The Parents' Bill of Rights also includes an amendment making it mandatory for schools in the province to fly the flag of Saskatchewan alongside the flag of Canada.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "Premier Moe and ministers Duncan and Jeremy Cockrill persistently stated that the new policies and the Parents' Bill of Rights were meant to be inclusive rather than exclusive, and were about the importance of involving parents in their children's education. Moe also stated that the legislation was merely codifying policies that already existed across the province. Over time, the government pointed to two specific instances that apparently helped to inform the decision to create the policies. The first was a June 2023 incident when non-school approved sexual health education material was obtained by a student after a presentation by Planned Parenthood in a Lumsden high school. The province responded by suspending Planned Parenthood from presenting in schools; following the suspension, the organization expressed surprise and disappointment that the government did not discuss the issue with them. The second was the government's discovery of an active procedure in the Regina Public School Division, which it argued deviated from the norm by explicitly stating a respect for student confidentiality. However, the School Division responded that the province never inquired about the procedure, which had been established following extensive consultations that included parents.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "In regards to the provision requiring schools to fly the provincial flag, Cockrill stated that the provision was meant to boost provincial identity and pride.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "The parental consent provisions of Bill 137 have inspired widespread debate and protest. Many experts and parents critical of the bill have called it transphobic, a common charge against the broader parental rights' movement. Critics have alleged that the movement seeks to roll back social gains made by LGBTQ advocates. Experts have similarly argued that the bill was influenced by far-right political ideologies.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "Critics of the Bill have argued that students forced to come out to non-supportive families could face harm. Moreover, professional support workers, including social workers, have explained that the law does not align with support workers' ethics or best practices. Sexual assault experts have expressed concerns at being excluded by the law from sexual health education, stating that the exclusion puts children \"at risk\". Critics have noted that Saskatchewan boasts high rates of sexually transmitted infections—particularly HIV/AIDS—along with high rates of sexual assault, intimate partner violence, and teenage pregnancy. At a November Saskatchewan medical association conference in Saskatoon, medical professionals questioned Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Tim McLeod and noted that they expected an escalated mental health crisis as a result of the law.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "The government has also been questioned on the need for the consent policies. Education Minister Cockrill was criticized for incorrectly claiming on August 29 that \"every single government MLA\" had heard from constituents that they had children who had been using different pronouns without their knowledge; the claim was immediately refuted by MLA Everett Hindley when he was asked if he had heard the same, and Premier Moe stated in an October 3 interview that he had not been made aware of any such discussions with parents. Cockrill was further criticized for claiming, without providing evidence, that the government had heard from \"tens of thousands\" of people in support of the policy. Moe persistently cited the popularity of the policy as a justification for its enactment, while the government dismissed polling that suggested that more than half of residents supported teacher discretion over parental consent. Several of the eighteen letters that the government received in the spring and summer of 2023 incorrectly characterized issues of gender and sexuality as \"theories\" and \"ideologies\".",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "On October 17 2023, while the bill was still being debated in the Legislature, Saskatchewan's human rights commissioner, Heather Kuttai, resigned in protest of the policy. Kuttai characterized the parental consent policy as \"an attack\" on children's rights and criticized the government for its unwillingness to heed criticism and make changes to the legislation. Two days later, the Human Rights Commission released a statement urging the government to reconsider the legislation and to work with it and other experts to revise it. The Commission committed to reviewing the law, and in November 2023 began seeking public feedback as part of that review.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "Teachers in the province expressed concerns about the enactment of such policies from the outset, and in November 2023 dozens of teachers signed a petition urging school divisions not to follow the law, and committing themselves not to do so. Provincial labour unions have also been critical of the law. Labour groups, including the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour and the Saskatchewan Government Employees Union, organized a large demonstration against the legislation while it was being debated.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "The government was criticized for recalling the Legislature early to hold an emergency debate on the legislation, the first such recall in the province for 25 years. The Opposition argued that the 40 hours of debate on the bill in a shortened time frame was in fact minimal compared to the debate that would have come if the legislation had been introduced in a regular session. Moe's insistence that the legislation was merely codifying rules that were already in place across the province \"by policy or practice\" further prompted questions as to why there was a need to hastily rush the bill through the Legislature outside of the normal process. In addition, the emergency debate raised questions about the government's priorities and why it was not holding emergency debates on issues like the broader state of the education system—with the government at an impasse with teachers over a new collective agreement—or the strained health care system. Opposition members also accused government members of streaming online entertainment during the debate; while this was unconfirmed, observers did note government members wearing headphones during debate.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 23,
"text": "The provincial government's decision to preemptively invoke the notwithstanding clause to pass Bill 137 drew widespread criticism. In September, federal Justice Minister Arif Virani called the clause a \"blunt instrument\" and argued that its preemptive use was not \"appropriate\"; he argued that the legal process should run its course before a government considers using the clause. Howard Leeson, who served as Saskatchewan's deputy minister of intergovernmental affairs under Allan Blakeney's government when it helped to create the notwithstanding clause, agreed; Leeson explained that the clause was intended for use in \"exceptional circumstances\" and only after court processes had been completed. He stated that it \"would have been better for the government to wait until after the merits of the case itself had been argued.\" The day before the bill was passed, fourteen University of Saskatchewan law faculty members wrote a letter to the government urging it to allow \"the normal legal process to take its course\" before passing the bill, explaining that the government's use of the notwithstanding clause was \"well outside of the normal legal process\", which would allow judges to first rule on the constitutionality of the law.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 24,
"text": "In response to criticism, Saskatchewan's Minister of Justice Bronwyn Eyre defended the government's use of the notwithstanding clause and stated that the government was \"willing to be judged\" on the policy.",
"title": "Reaction"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 25,
"text": "The amendment to require schools to fly the flag of Saskatchewan alongside the Canadian flag has also drawn controversy. A report from the Regina Leader-Post suggested that the requirement could cost schools that need to source and install additional flag poles thousands of dollars; the government did not commit to providing such funding. Critics have noted that many schools already have second flag poles that fly a variety of flags, such as Treaty flags, pride flags, and Métis flags; as such, critics have suggested that the policy is designed to act as a de facto ban on flying such flags. Critics have also questioned whether the intent of the provision is to downplay Canadian identity among Saskatchewan residents—earlier in 2023, the provincial government passed the Saskatchewan First Act, which was meant to \"confirm\" the province's autonomy.",
"title": "Reaction"
}
] |
The Education Amendment Act, 2023, commonly known as the Parents' Bill of Rights, is a 2023 piece of legislation amending the Saskatchewan Education Act. Also known as Bill 137, the legislation was introduced on October 10, 2023, during an emergency session of the 29th Saskatchewan Legislature, and it was passed on October 20, 2023, after a week of intensive debate in the Legislative Assembly. The provincial government, led by Premier Scott Moe, invoked the notwithstanding clause—Section 33 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms—to pass the legislation and protect it from legal challenges based on Charter Rights. Bill 137 requires parental consent when students under the age of 16 wish to change their names or pronouns related to gender expression while at school. In addition, the bill places restrictions on sexual health education, making provisions for parental consent and prohibiting third-party involvement. The bill, and the process used to pass it, has drawn criticism from legal and human rights experts. It has also proven divisive among residents of the province, drawing large crowds at protests since the policies were first proposed in the summer of 2023. The bill has been cited as an example of the encroachment of American "culture wars" into Canadian politics.
|
2023-12-03T05:21:29Z
|
2023-12-20T18:53:20Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox legislation",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parents%27_Bill_of_Rights
|
75,469,878 |
Hemming O. Oien
|
Hemming O. Oien (July 15, 1926 – August 19, 2010) was an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the South Dakota House of Representatives.
Oien was born in Minnehaha County, South Dakota.
Oien served in the South Dakota House of Representatives from 1979 to 1988.
Oien died in August 2010, at the age of 84.
Category:1926 births Category:2010 deaths Category:People from Minnehaha County, South Dakota Category:Republican Party members of the South Dakota House of Representatives Category:20th-century American politicians
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Hemming O. Oien (July 15, 1926 – August 19, 2010) was an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the South Dakota House of Representatives.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Oien was born in Minnehaha County, South Dakota.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Oien served in the South Dakota House of Representatives from 1979 to 1988.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Oien died in August 2010, at the age of 84.",
"title": "Life and career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Category:1926 births Category:2010 deaths Category:People from Minnehaha County, South Dakota Category:Republican Party members of the South Dakota House of Representatives Category:20th-century American politicians",
"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Hemming O. Oien was an American politician. He served as a Republican member of the South Dakota House of Representatives.
|
2023-12-03T05:24:15Z
|
2023-12-03T15:44:20Z
|
[
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"Template:Short description",
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"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Citation",
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"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Draft topics"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemming_O._Oien
|
75,469,961 |
Mount Allen (Alaska)
|
Mount Allen is a 9,512-foot-elevation (2,899-meter) mountain summit in Alaska, United States.
Mount Allen is a prominent glaciated mountain set in the Wrangell Mountains. The remote peak is located 13.5 miles (21.7 km) north-northwest of Chisana, Alaska, in Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains into tributaries of the Chisana River which is a tributary of the Tanana River. Topographic relief is significant as the summit rises 6,400 feet (1,950 m) above the Chisana River in five miles (8 km).
The mountain is named for Henry Tureman Allen (1859–1930), who explored and mapped the Copper River region in 1885. He named and measured the elevations of the region's giants such as Mount Blackburn, Mount Sanford, and Mount Drum. The mountain's toponym has been officially adopted by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names. The Upper Tanana name for this mountain is "Ch 'ank än' Choh."
Based on the Köppen climate classification, Mount Allen is located in a subarctic climate zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and cool summers. Winter temperatures can drop below −20 °F with wind chill factors below −30 °F. This climate supports unnamed glaciers surrounding this peak. The months May through June offer the most favorable weather for climbing or viewing.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Mount Allen is a 9,512-foot-elevation (2,899-meter) mountain summit in Alaska, United States.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Mount Allen is a prominent glaciated mountain set in the Wrangell Mountains. The remote peak is located 13.5 miles (21.7 km) north-northwest of Chisana, Alaska, in Wrangell–St. Elias National Park and Preserve. Precipitation runoff from the mountain drains into tributaries of the Chisana River which is a tributary of the Tanana River. Topographic relief is significant as the summit rises 6,400 feet (1,950 m) above the Chisana River in five miles (8 km).",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The mountain is named for Henry Tureman Allen (1859–1930), who explored and mapped the Copper River region in 1885. He named and measured the elevations of the region's giants such as Mount Blackburn, Mount Sanford, and Mount Drum. The mountain's toponym has been officially adopted by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names. The Upper Tanana name for this mountain is \"Ch 'ank än' Choh.\"",
"title": "Etymology"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Based on the Köppen climate classification, Mount Allen is located in a subarctic climate zone with long, cold, snowy winters, and cool summers. Winter temperatures can drop below −20 °F with wind chill factors below −30 °F. This climate supports unnamed glaciers surrounding this peak. The months May through June offer the most favorable weather for climbing or viewing.",
"title": "Climate"
}
] |
Mount Allen is a 9,512-foot-elevation (2,899-meter) mountain summit in Alaska, United States.
|
2023-12-03T05:33:27Z
|
2023-12-03T05:33:27Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox mountain",
"Template:Convert",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Portal bar"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Allen_(Alaska)
|
75,469,973 |
Norfolk and Western Class Y3a
|
The Norfolk and Western Class Y3a was a class of 2-8-8-2 mallet articulated steam locomotive with a total of 30 locomotives built for the Norfolk and Western Railway in 1923.
During World War I, a government agency called the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) took over most of the major railroads. The USRA developed several standard steam locomotive designs, among them a heavy 2-8-8-2 for freight service.
The Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W) liked this design so much that after the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) had disbanded in 1922, they started building more locomotives to basically the same plan, with minor improvements. N&W had continued to refine the design and they had built the same locomotive design until 1952.
Following the success of the Norfolk and Western Railway's own class Y3 locomotives that they purchased which were originals of the USRA 2-8-8-2, the railway decided they would purchase an additional 30 locomotives from ALCO's Richmond Works in 1923 as copies of the USRA 2-8-8-2. This was where they ended up designating them as the class Y3a. Withdrawal of the class began in the 1950s and the last engine was out of service in favour of diesels and nos. 2051-2079 were cut up for scrap once the Norfolk and Western Railway had dieselized.
One member of the Class Y3a managed to survive into the preservation era, and that was No. 2050, which was the first member of the class Y3a. It was retired in 1959 and was donated to the Illinois Railway Museum at Union, Illinois.
As of 2023, Y3a #2050 currently remains on static display in Illinois Railway Museum where it is unlikely that it will ever run again.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Norfolk and Western Class Y3a was a class of 2-8-8-2 mallet articulated steam locomotive with a total of 30 locomotives built for the Norfolk and Western Railway in 1923.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "During World War I, a government agency called the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) took over most of the major railroads. The USRA developed several standard steam locomotive designs, among them a heavy 2-8-8-2 for freight service.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The Norfolk and Western Railway (N&W) liked this design so much that after the United States Railroad Administration (USRA) had disbanded in 1922, they started building more locomotives to basically the same plan, with minor improvements. N&W had continued to refine the design and they had built the same locomotive design until 1952.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Following the success of the Norfolk and Western Railway's own class Y3 locomotives that they purchased which were originals of the USRA 2-8-8-2, the railway decided they would purchase an additional 30 locomotives from ALCO's Richmond Works in 1923 as copies of the USRA 2-8-8-2. This was where they ended up designating them as the class Y3a. Withdrawal of the class began in the 1950s and the last engine was out of service in favour of diesels and nos. 2051-2079 were cut up for scrap once the Norfolk and Western Railway had dieselized.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "One member of the Class Y3a managed to survive into the preservation era, and that was No. 2050, which was the first member of the class Y3a. It was retired in 1959 and was donated to the Illinois Railway Museum at Union, Illinois.",
"title": "Preservation"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "As of 2023, Y3a #2050 currently remains on static display in Illinois Railway Museum where it is unlikely that it will ever run again.",
"title": "Preservation"
}
] |
The Norfolk and Western Class Y3a was a class of 2-8-8-2 mallet articulated steam locomotive with a total of 30 locomotives built for the Norfolk and Western Railway in 1923.
|
2023-12-03T05:34:34Z
|
2023-12-22T20:05:38Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox locomotive",
"Template:Main",
"Template:Clear",
"Template:Harvp",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norfolk_and_Western_Class_Y3a
|
75,469,974 |
Leroy A. Schreiber
|
Leroy Adolph Schreiber (December 13, 1917 – April 15, 1944) was a fighter ace in the United States Army Air Forces. During World War II, he was credited in destroying 12 enemy airplanes, before being killed in action in April 1944.
Schreiber was born on 1917 in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He attended Harvard University and graduated in 1939 with a major in mathematics.
In 1940, Schreiber entered the Aviation Cadet Program of the United States Army Air Corps and in 1941, he was commissioned as second lieutenant along with pilot wings. Following his pilot training, he was assigned as an instructor pilot and his first attempts to enter combat rejected. On 1943, during an aviation cadet graduation ceremony, Schreiber and other instructor pilots flew very low ("buzzed") over a local town. As a result, his commanding officer assigned him for combat in the overseas.
After completing transition training in the P-47 Thunderbolt, he was assigned to the 61st Fighter Squadron of the 56th Fighter Group at RAF Halesworth in England in July 1943.
Schreiber flew his first two missions and on July 30, 1944, he took part in a bomber escort of B-17 Flying Fortresses targeting factories in Kassel, Germany. Over Netherlands, the 61st FS and 62d Fighter Squadron of the 56th Fighter Group escorted the bombers back to home base in England. During the escort, the P-47s encountered a formation of Messerschmitt Bf 109s. Schreiber shot down a Bf 109 that was attacking the P-47 flown by Lt. Milton Anderson. Schreiber also claimed a probable destruction of another Bf 109 during the aerial combat which was upgraded to confirmed aerial victory after his gun camera footage of the combat was reassessed, crediting him with his first two aerial victories.
In August 1943, he was appointed as commander of the 62d Fighter Squadron. On August 24, 1943, he shot down a Focke-Wulf Fw 190 south of Paris, France, his third aerial victory. By the end of 1943, Schreiber shot down two more enemy airplanes, including one shared destruction. On February 20, 1944, during a fighter escort for bombers attacking targets at Brunswick-Leipzig region, Schreiber shot down three Bf 109s over Steinhuder Lake, bringing his total aerial victories to seven and earning the title of flying ace. For his heroism in the mission, he received the Distinguished Service Cross.
On February 22, 1944, he was credited with another shared destruction of enemy aircraft. On March 8, he shot down a Fw 190 and Bf 109 over Steinhuder Lake. On March 16, while leading his squadron in a protection cover for bombers at the vicinity of Saint Dizier, France, he intercepted and shot down a Bf 109 and shared in the destruction of a Fw 190.
On April 9, he was credited with a shared destruction of a Bf 109, his last aerial victory of the war. During the war, while flying a total of 140 missions, Schreiber was credited with the destruction of 12 enemy aircraft in aerial combat plus 4 shared destruction, 1 probable, 6 damaged, and 2 destroyed on the ground while strafing enemy airfields.
On April 15, 1944, Schreiber was killed after being shot down by anti-aircraft fire while attacking a German airfield in Flensburg, Germany. He was buried at the Ardennes American Cemetery and Memorial in Neupré, Belgium.
The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross to Captain (Air Corps) Leroy Adolph Schreiber, United States Army Air Forces, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving as Pilot of a P-47 Fighter Airplane in the 62d Fighter Squadron, 56th Fighter Group, Eighth Air Force, in aerial combat against enemy forces on 20 February 1944, in the European Theater of Operations. On this date as Captain Schreiber shot down three enemy aircraft in a single engagement. Captain Schreiber's unquestionable valor in aerial combat is in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflects great credit upon himself, the 8th Air Force, and the United States Army Air Forces.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Leroy Adolph Schreiber (December 13, 1917 – April 15, 1944) was a fighter ace in the United States Army Air Forces. During World War II, he was credited in destroying 12 enemy airplanes, before being killed in action in April 1944.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Schreiber was born on 1917 in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He attended Harvard University and graduated in 1939 with a major in mathematics.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In 1940, Schreiber entered the Aviation Cadet Program of the United States Army Air Corps and in 1941, he was commissioned as second lieutenant along with pilot wings. Following his pilot training, he was assigned as an instructor pilot and his first attempts to enter combat rejected. On 1943, during an aviation cadet graduation ceremony, Schreiber and other instructor pilots flew very low (\"buzzed\") over a local town. As a result, his commanding officer assigned him for combat in the overseas.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "After completing transition training in the P-47 Thunderbolt, he was assigned to the 61st Fighter Squadron of the 56th Fighter Group at RAF Halesworth in England in July 1943.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Schreiber flew his first two missions and on July 30, 1944, he took part in a bomber escort of B-17 Flying Fortresses targeting factories in Kassel, Germany. Over Netherlands, the 61st FS and 62d Fighter Squadron of the 56th Fighter Group escorted the bombers back to home base in England. During the escort, the P-47s encountered a formation of Messerschmitt Bf 109s. Schreiber shot down a Bf 109 that was attacking the P-47 flown by Lt. Milton Anderson. Schreiber also claimed a probable destruction of another Bf 109 during the aerial combat which was upgraded to confirmed aerial victory after his gun camera footage of the combat was reassessed, crediting him with his first two aerial victories.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In August 1943, he was appointed as commander of the 62d Fighter Squadron. On August 24, 1943, he shot down a Focke-Wulf Fw 190 south of Paris, France, his third aerial victory. By the end of 1943, Schreiber shot down two more enemy airplanes, including one shared destruction. On February 20, 1944, during a fighter escort for bombers attacking targets at Brunswick-Leipzig region, Schreiber shot down three Bf 109s over Steinhuder Lake, bringing his total aerial victories to seven and earning the title of flying ace. For his heroism in the mission, he received the Distinguished Service Cross.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "On February 22, 1944, he was credited with another shared destruction of enemy aircraft. On March 8, he shot down a Fw 190 and Bf 109 over Steinhuder Lake. On March 16, while leading his squadron in a protection cover for bombers at the vicinity of Saint Dizier, France, he intercepted and shot down a Bf 109 and shared in the destruction of a Fw 190.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "On April 9, he was credited with a shared destruction of a Bf 109, his last aerial victory of the war. During the war, while flying a total of 140 missions, Schreiber was credited with the destruction of 12 enemy aircraft in aerial combat plus 4 shared destruction, 1 probable, 6 damaged, and 2 destroyed on the ground while strafing enemy airfields.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "On April 15, 1944, Schreiber was killed after being shot down by anti-aircraft fire while attacking a German airfield in Flensburg, Germany. He was buried at the Ardennes American Cemetery and Memorial in Neupré, Belgium.",
"title": "Military career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress July 9, 1918, takes pleasure in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross to Captain (Air Corps) Leroy Adolph Schreiber, United States Army Air Forces, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations against an armed enemy while serving as Pilot of a P-47 Fighter Airplane in the 62d Fighter Squadron, 56th Fighter Group, Eighth Air Force, in aerial combat against enemy forces on 20 February 1944, in the European Theater of Operations. On this date as Captain Schreiber shot down three enemy aircraft in a single engagement. Captain Schreiber's unquestionable valor in aerial combat is in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflects great credit upon himself, the 8th Air Force, and the United States Army Air Forces.",
"title": "Awards and decorations"
}
] |
Leroy Adolph Schreiber was a fighter ace in the United States Army Air Forces. During World War II, he was credited in destroying 12 enemy airplanes, before being killed in action in April 1944.
|
2023-12-03T05:34:53Z
|
2023-12-19T02:21:30Z
|
[
"Template:Ribbon devices",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox military person"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leroy_A._Schreiber
|
75,469,976 |
Ebenezer V. Dickey
|
Ebenezer V. Dickey (December 15, 1821 – July 31, 1857) was an American politician and physician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County in 1857.
Ebenezer V. Dickey was born on December 15, 1821, to Ebenezer Dickey. He studied at Hopewell Academy and New London Academy. He started studying at Lafayette College in 1840, but later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania. He studied medicine there and graduated in 1844.
After graduating, Dickey practiced in Chester County. He was an instructor in chemistry and physiology at the Oxford Female Seminary. Dickey helped organize the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Railroad and served on the board of directors from November 1853 to 1857. In January 1857, he was elected president of the board of directors. Due to illness, he resigned from the role five months later.
Dickey was appointed clerk of elections and assistant burgess in Oxford. In 1847, he served as chief burgess in Oxford. He was a Republican. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County in 1857.
Dickey helped obtain a charter for and served as the first president of the Octoraro Bank at Oxford.
Dickey married Frances G. Ralston, daughter of Samuel Ralston. They had at least four children, including S. Ralston. His brother was reverend John Miller Dickey.
Dickey was struck with an severe cold in the winter that impacted his heart. In 1857, he traveled to Europe in hopes to combat his ailment. He died on July 31, 1857.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Ebenezer V. Dickey (December 15, 1821 – July 31, 1857) was an American politician and physician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County in 1857.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Ebenezer V. Dickey was born on December 15, 1821, to Ebenezer Dickey. He studied at Hopewell Academy and New London Academy. He started studying at Lafayette College in 1840, but later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania. He studied medicine there and graduated in 1844.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "After graduating, Dickey practiced in Chester County. He was an instructor in chemistry and physiology at the Oxford Female Seminary. Dickey helped organize the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Railroad and served on the board of directors from November 1853 to 1857. In January 1857, he was elected president of the board of directors. Due to illness, he resigned from the role five months later.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Dickey was appointed clerk of elections and assistant burgess in Oxford. In 1847, he served as chief burgess in Oxford. He was a Republican. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County in 1857.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Dickey helped obtain a charter for and served as the first president of the Octoraro Bank at Oxford.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Dickey married Frances G. Ralston, daughter of Samuel Ralston. They had at least four children, including S. Ralston. His brother was reverend John Miller Dickey.",
"title": "Personal life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Dickey was struck with an severe cold in the winter that impacted his heart. In 1857, he traveled to Europe in hopes to combat his ailment. He died on July 31, 1857.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] |
Ebenezer V. Dickey was an American politician and physician from Pennsylvania. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Chester County in 1857.
|
2023-12-03T05:35:36Z
|
2023-12-30T06:30:54Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Open access",
"Template:Commons category-inline"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebenezer_V._Dickey
|
75,469,984 |
KathNiel
|
KathNiel was a love team consisting of Filipino actors Kathryn Bernardo and Daniel Padilla. Together, they often appeared in several film and television series together as fictional couples. Their romantic relationship in real life was also the subject of public interest.
Kathryn Bernardo and Daniel Padilla first appeared together in the 2011 television series Growing Up. Bernardo played the role of high school student Ella, while Padilla played her classmate Patrick.
Bernardo and Padilla's romantic relationship was rumored to have began on May 25, 2012. However, the pair never explicitly announced a relationship until much later. They would appear in their first primetime series Princess and I, where they played main leads.
Their first feature film together, 24/7 in Love, was released in November 2012. This would be followed by their first top-billed film Must Be... Love in March 2013, and their first Metro Manila Film Festival film Pagpag.
KathNiel were featured in the 2015 film Crazy Beautiful You. In the same year, they began starring in the primetime series Pangako Sa ‘Yo, a remake of the 2000s series of the same name.
In mid-2016, Bernardo and Padilla would say that they are "exclusively dating" each other but refused to publicly give any other label to their relationship. The couple would later share their first on-screen kiss in the film Barcelona: A Love Untold.
In August 2018, at the media launch of their film The Hows of Us, the couple officially confirmed it hey have been in a romantic relationship.
Though in the same year, Bernardo said they wanted to do separate projects to advance their own careers independently but not where they would have a different on-screen partner than each other, taking into consideration the sentiment of KathNiel fans. They would mutually decide not take the same projects in both film and television for the following year.
Bernardo starred in the 2019 film Hello, Love, Goodbye alongside Alden Richards, who was part of the AlDub love team with Maine Mendoza. Hello, Love, Goodbye is currently the highest grossing Filipino film of all time.
KathNiel's return was planned to happen in 2020, with both actors signing a new three-year contract with ABS-CBN. This plan was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and the revocation of ABS-CBN's franchise. The pandemic also caused the shelving of the supposed KathNiel film After Forever, which was supposed to be set in the United States.
The pair would reunite in the streaming series The House Arrest of Us which was first released in October 2020.
KathNiel posted their first joint vlog in Bernardo's YouTube channel for a Valentine's day video in 2021.
Their last television project together would be the 2022 series 2 Good 2 Be True. They were supposed to return in a film announced in December 2022 to be directed by Cathy Garcia-Sampana.
In early November 2023, talent manager Ogie Diaz claimed on his YouTube channel that an unnamed source told him that Bernardo and Padilla have already broken up. The rumors were received negatively by KathNiel fans, who branded Diaz as a "fake news peddler."
Apparently dispelling the rumors, the two appeared together at an Omega event on November 14 where they danced together.
However, on November 30, Bernardo confirmed the end of her relationship with Padilla through her social media account, mentioning that they parted ways amicably.
Terms associated with the love team were searched heavily according to Google Trends in the Philippines following the confirmation. News of the breakup were also reported in Malaysian and Singaporean news outlets.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "KathNiel was a love team consisting of Filipino actors Kathryn Bernardo and Daniel Padilla. Together, they often appeared in several film and television series together as fictional couples. Their romantic relationship in real life was also the subject of public interest.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Kathryn Bernardo and Daniel Padilla first appeared together in the 2011 television series Growing Up. Bernardo played the role of high school student Ella, while Padilla played her classmate Patrick.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Bernardo and Padilla's romantic relationship was rumored to have began on May 25, 2012. However, the pair never explicitly announced a relationship until much later. They would appear in their first primetime series Princess and I, where they played main leads.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Their first feature film together, 24/7 in Love, was released in November 2012. This would be followed by their first top-billed film Must Be... Love in March 2013, and their first Metro Manila Film Festival film Pagpag.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "KathNiel were featured in the 2015 film Crazy Beautiful You. In the same year, they began starring in the primetime series Pangako Sa ‘Yo, a remake of the 2000s series of the same name.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "In mid-2016, Bernardo and Padilla would say that they are \"exclusively dating\" each other but refused to publicly give any other label to their relationship. The couple would later share their first on-screen kiss in the film Barcelona: A Love Untold.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "In August 2018, at the media launch of their film The Hows of Us, the couple officially confirmed it hey have been in a romantic relationship.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Though in the same year, Bernardo said they wanted to do separate projects to advance their own careers independently but not where they would have a different on-screen partner than each other, taking into consideration the sentiment of KathNiel fans. They would mutually decide not take the same projects in both film and television for the following year.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Bernardo starred in the 2019 film Hello, Love, Goodbye alongside Alden Richards, who was part of the AlDub love team with Maine Mendoza. Hello, Love, Goodbye is currently the highest grossing Filipino film of all time.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "KathNiel's return was planned to happen in 2020, with both actors signing a new three-year contract with ABS-CBN. This plan was disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and the revocation of ABS-CBN's franchise. The pandemic also caused the shelving of the supposed KathNiel film After Forever, which was supposed to be set in the United States.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "The pair would reunite in the streaming series The House Arrest of Us which was first released in October 2020.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "KathNiel posted their first joint vlog in Bernardo's YouTube channel for a Valentine's day video in 2021.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Their last television project together would be the 2022 series 2 Good 2 Be True. They were supposed to return in a film announced in December 2022 to be directed by Cathy Garcia-Sampana.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "In early November 2023, talent manager Ogie Diaz claimed on his YouTube channel that an unnamed source told him that Bernardo and Padilla have already broken up. The rumors were received negatively by KathNiel fans, who branded Diaz as a \"fake news peddler.\"",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Apparently dispelling the rumors, the two appeared together at an Omega event on November 14 where they danced together.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "However, on November 30, Bernardo confirmed the end of her relationship with Padilla through her social media account, mentioning that they parted ways amicably.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "Terms associated with the love team were searched heavily according to Google Trends in the Philippines following the confirmation. News of the breakup were also reported in Malaysian and Singaporean news outlets.",
"title": "History"
}
] |
KathNiel was a love team consisting of Filipino actors Kathryn Bernardo and Daniel Padilla. Together, they often appeared in several film and television series together as fictional couples. Their romantic relationship in real life was also the subject of public interest.
|
2023-12-03T05:37:02Z
|
2023-12-28T18:20:45Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Noteslist",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Webarchive",
"Template:Use mdy dates"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KathNiel
|
75,470,004 |
Thymallus nigrescens
|
Thymallus nigrescens, also known as the Hovsgol grayling, is a species of freshwater fish in the salmon family. It is endemic to the Mongolian Lake Khovsgol where they usually live near or on the bottom of the lake.
Hovsgol grayling can reach a recorded maximum length of 48.4 cm (19 inches) while the average size varies between 17 and 20 cm (6.6 - 7.9 inches). The specis are omnivorous and mainly feed on plankton.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Thymallus nigrescens, also known as the Hovsgol grayling, is a species of freshwater fish in the salmon family. It is endemic to the Mongolian Lake Khovsgol where they usually live near or on the bottom of the lake.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Hovsgol grayling can reach a recorded maximum length of 48.4 cm (19 inches) while the average size varies between 17 and 20 cm (6.6 - 7.9 inches). The specis are omnivorous and mainly feed on plankton.",
"title": "Description"
}
] |
Thymallus nigrescens, also known as the Hovsgol grayling, is a species of freshwater fish in the salmon family. It is endemic to the Mongolian Lake Khovsgol where they usually live near or on the bottom of the lake.
|
2023-12-03T05:40:13Z
|
2023-12-19T07:17:12Z
|
[
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Grayling",
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thymallus_nigrescens
|
75,470,007 |
B-cell lymphoma 2
|
[] |
REDIRECT [[Bcl-2]
|
2023-12-03T05:40:26Z
|
2023-12-03T19:04:18Z
|
[
"Template:R from alternative name"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-cell_lymphoma_2
|
|
75,470,012 |
Duygu Sag
|
Duygu Sag is a Turkish immunologist who contributed to the understanding of the human immune system's fight against cancer. She was the recipient of the 2018 “L'Oreal UNESCO International Rising Talent Award”, which is one of the L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Awards.
Sag's research centers on harnessing the immune system's potential to combat cancer by targeting specific tumor-associated macrophages. Her team identified that macrophages lacking the cholesterol transporter ABCG1 exhibit a transformative shift, becoming potent tumor-fighting agents and impeding bladder cancer progression in preclinical studies. The eventual goal is elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying this critical macrophage switch, with the potential to pave the way for innovative immunotherapeutic approaches in cancer treatment.
Sag completed her undergraduate studies in Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey. She completed her doctoral studies in the United States at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. Between 2009 and 2015, was a postdoctoral fellow at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology located in San Diego, California, USA. Then she returned to Turkey, becoming a faculty member at Izmir Biomedicine and Genome Center within Dokuz Eylul University. The cancer-related deaths in her immediate family motivated her to become a cancer researcher.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Duygu Sag is a Turkish immunologist who contributed to the understanding of the human immune system's fight against cancer. She was the recipient of the 2018 “L'Oreal UNESCO International Rising Talent Award”, which is one of the L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Awards.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Sag's research centers on harnessing the immune system's potential to combat cancer by targeting specific tumor-associated macrophages. Her team identified that macrophages lacking the cholesterol transporter ABCG1 exhibit a transformative shift, becoming potent tumor-fighting agents and impeding bladder cancer progression in preclinical studies. The eventual goal is elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying this critical macrophage switch, with the potential to pave the way for innovative immunotherapeutic approaches in cancer treatment.",
"title": "Research"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Sag completed her undergraduate studies in Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey. She completed her doctoral studies in the United States at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. Between 2009 and 2015, was a postdoctoral fellow at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology located in San Diego, California, USA. Then she returned to Turkey, becoming a faculty member at Izmir Biomedicine and Genome Center within Dokuz Eylul University. The cancer-related deaths in her immediate family motivated her to become a cancer researcher.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Duygu Sag is a Turkish immunologist who contributed to the understanding of the human immune system's fight against cancer. She was the recipient of the 2018 “L'Oreal UNESCO International Rising Talent Award”, which is one of the L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Awards.
|
2023-12-03T05:41:19Z
|
2023-12-25T17:35:47Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duygu_Sag
|
75,470,037 |
Thomas Buco
|
Thomas Buco is an American politician. He serves as a Democratic member for the Carroll 1st district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.
Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Place of birth missing (living people) Category:Democratic Party members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives Category:21st-century American politicians
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Thomas Buco is an American politician. He serves as a Democratic member for the Carroll 1st district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Place of birth missing (living people) Category:Democratic Party members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives Category:21st-century American politicians",
"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Thomas Buco is an American politician. He serves as a Democratic member for the Carroll 1st district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives.
|
2023-12-03T05:44:24Z
|
2023-12-03T05:45:31Z
|
[
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"Template:New Hampshire House of Representatives"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Buco
|
75,470,041 |
Let Us Prey: A Ministry of Scandals
|
Let Us Prey: A Ministry of Scandals is an American limited television documentary series about alleged abuse in the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) movement. The four-part series premiered on November 24, 2023, on Investigation Discovery. It was directed by Sharon Liese.
Let Us Prey explores accounts of physical and sexual abuse in the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) movement, a network of churches with approximately 8 million members. Accounts of abuse are made by survivors including Ruthy Heiler, Kathy Durbin, and Amanda Householder. Ruthy Heiler is the founder of the Blind Eye Movement, whose members are featured throughout the series. According to the series, the claims of abuse were allegedly covered up by various influential IFB figures, including Jack Hyles, Jack Schaap, Bruce Goddard, and Jon Jenkins. One of the stories alleges rape and abuse of a minor by a staff member at Grace Baptist Church, an IFB church in Gaylord, Michigan. The series also documents alleged crimes against youth at IFB boarding schools in Missouri, which were subsequently closed.
The series also incorporates the reporting of Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporter Sarah Smith, who has reported on numerous accounts of sexual abuse and cover-up with the IFB movement.
The series was produced by Good Caper Content, the production company that also created the 2023 docuseries Escaping Twin Flames. Initially produced for Starz, Investigation Discovery handled distribution of the series.
The first and second episodes of the series premiered on Investigation Discovery on November 24, 2023, and the third and fourth episodes released on November 25, 2023. The series was also released for streaming on Max, Discovery+, FuboTV, and Amazon Prime Video. A week after its initial release, it was the tenth most popular television series on Max.
John Anderson of The Wall Street Journal reviewed the film and wrote, "Outrage, indignation, outrage and empathy are the objectives of a series in which no shortage of pain is revealed, by very brave young women, if well beyond the point that we get the point. What is significant about 'Let Us Prey' is not the experiences of the individuals involved, but the institutional structures that not only enabled their abusers but gave them succor."
Rick Pidcock of Baptist News Global noted that the series examines "similar IFB ministries from Amazon Prime’s Shiny Happy People that released in June" and commented that "the blunt communication and sexually focused themes of Let Us Prey make this docuseries very difficult to watch at times."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Let Us Prey: A Ministry of Scandals is an American limited television documentary series about alleged abuse in the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) movement. The four-part series premiered on November 24, 2023, on Investigation Discovery. It was directed by Sharon Liese.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Let Us Prey explores accounts of physical and sexual abuse in the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) movement, a network of churches with approximately 8 million members. Accounts of abuse are made by survivors including Ruthy Heiler, Kathy Durbin, and Amanda Householder. Ruthy Heiler is the founder of the Blind Eye Movement, whose members are featured throughout the series. According to the series, the claims of abuse were allegedly covered up by various influential IFB figures, including Jack Hyles, Jack Schaap, Bruce Goddard, and Jon Jenkins. One of the stories alleges rape and abuse of a minor by a staff member at Grace Baptist Church, an IFB church in Gaylord, Michigan. The series also documents alleged crimes against youth at IFB boarding schools in Missouri, which were subsequently closed.",
"title": "Summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The series also incorporates the reporting of Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporter Sarah Smith, who has reported on numerous accounts of sexual abuse and cover-up with the IFB movement.",
"title": "Summary"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The series was produced by Good Caper Content, the production company that also created the 2023 docuseries Escaping Twin Flames. Initially produced for Starz, Investigation Discovery handled distribution of the series.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The first and second episodes of the series premiered on Investigation Discovery on November 24, 2023, and the third and fourth episodes released on November 25, 2023. The series was also released for streaming on Max, Discovery+, FuboTV, and Amazon Prime Video. A week after its initial release, it was the tenth most popular television series on Max.",
"title": "Release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "John Anderson of The Wall Street Journal reviewed the film and wrote, \"Outrage, indignation, outrage and empathy are the objectives of a series in which no shortage of pain is revealed, by very brave young women, if well beyond the point that we get the point. What is significant about 'Let Us Prey' is not the experiences of the individuals involved, but the institutional structures that not only enabled their abusers but gave them succor.\"",
"title": "Reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Rick Pidcock of Baptist News Global noted that the series examines \"similar IFB ministries from Amazon Prime’s Shiny Happy People that released in June\" and commented that \"the blunt communication and sexually focused themes of Let Us Prey make this docuseries very difficult to watch at times.\"",
"title": "Reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "External links"
}
] |
Let Us Prey: A Ministry of Scandals is an American limited television documentary series about alleged abuse in the Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB) movement. The four-part series premiered on November 24, 2023, on Investigation Discovery. It was directed by Sharon Liese.
|
2023-12-03T05:45:18Z
|
2023-12-31T04:46:07Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Reli-documentary-film-stub",
"Template:Infobox television",
"Template:Episode table"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_Us_Prey:_A_Ministry_of_Scandals
|
75,470,045 |
Minister for Innovation (Victoria)
|
The Minister for Innovation was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Minister for Innovation was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Reference list"
}
] |
The Minister for Innovation was a minister within the Executive Council of Victoria.
|
2023-12-03T05:45:28Z
|
2023-12-06T22:03:25Z
|
[
"Template:Victorian ministries",
"Template:VictoriaAU-gov-stub",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Infobox official post",
"Template:Post-nominals",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Age in years and days"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minister_for_Innovation_(Victoria)
|
75,470,069 |
Rubber shingle roof
|
[] |
2023-12-03T05:46:52Z
|
2023-12-03T08:39:27Z
|
[] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_shingle_roof
|
||
75,470,071 |
Mick Terrill
|
Michael Gordon John Terrill (born 17 June 1983) is an English kickboxer and bare-knuckle boxer. He currently competes in the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, where he is the current BKFC Heavyweight Champion. As a kickboxer, he has fought in the SUPERKOMBAT Fighting Championship.
In June 2014, Terrill participated in the SUPERKOMBAT World Grand Prix III 2014 cruiserweight tournament. In the semi-finals he defeated Patrick van Rees by unanimous decision, but in the finals he lost to Moisés Baute by TKO.
In his BKFC debut, Terrill faced Arnold Adams at BKFC 19 on July 23, 2021. He lost the bout via third-round knockout.
Terrill then faced Sam Shewmaker on August 20, 2022, at BKFC 27: London. He won the bout by first-round technical knockout.
In the heavyweight title eliminator match, Terrill faced Steve Banks on 26 November 2022, at the main event of BKFC Fight Night: Newcastle. He won the bout by second-round TKO via doctor stoppage.
Terrill faced Arnold Adams in a rematch for the vacant BKFC Heavyweight Championship on December 2, 2023, at BKFC 56. He won the bout by fourth-round knockout, thus winning the title. This fight earned him the Knockout of the Night award.
Terrill lives in North Shields, England is married to Karmen Terrill and is a father of three children.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Michael Gordon John Terrill (born 17 June 1983) is an English kickboxer and bare-knuckle boxer. He currently competes in the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, where he is the current BKFC Heavyweight Champion. As a kickboxer, he has fought in the SUPERKOMBAT Fighting Championship.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In June 2014, Terrill participated in the SUPERKOMBAT World Grand Prix III 2014 cruiserweight tournament. In the semi-finals he defeated Patrick van Rees by unanimous decision, but in the finals he lost to Moisés Baute by TKO.",
"title": "Kickboxing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "In his BKFC debut, Terrill faced Arnold Adams at BKFC 19 on July 23, 2021. He lost the bout via third-round knockout.",
"title": "Bare-knuckle boxing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Terrill then faced Sam Shewmaker on August 20, 2022, at BKFC 27: London. He won the bout by first-round technical knockout.",
"title": "Bare-knuckle boxing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In the heavyweight title eliminator match, Terrill faced Steve Banks on 26 November 2022, at the main event of BKFC Fight Night: Newcastle. He won the bout by second-round TKO via doctor stoppage.",
"title": "Bare-knuckle boxing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Terrill faced Arnold Adams in a rematch for the vacant BKFC Heavyweight Championship on December 2, 2023, at BKFC 56. He won the bout by fourth-round knockout, thus winning the title. This fight earned him the Knockout of the Night award.",
"title": "Bare-knuckle boxing career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Terrill lives in North Shields, England is married to Karmen Terrill and is a father of three children.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] |
Michael Gordon John Terrill is an English kickboxer and bare-knuckle boxer. He currently competes in the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, where he is the current BKFC Heavyweight Champion. As a kickboxer, he has fought in the SUPERKOMBAT Fighting Championship.
|
2023-12-03T05:47:16Z
|
2023-12-26T11:46:01Z
|
[
"Template:Yes2",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:MMArecordbox",
"Template:End",
"Template:MMA record start",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:BoxRec",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Dts",
"Template:No2",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox martial artist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_Terrill
|
75,470,108 |
Dongfeng Nammi
|
Dongfeng Nammi, previously known as Dongchuang Zilian (Wuhan) New Energy Technology, is the electric vehicle division of Chinese State-owned automaker Dongfeng Motor Corporation, specializing in designing and developing budget electric cars.
The company used to be specifically responsible for the domestic sales of electric passenger vehicles produced by eGT New Energy Automotive, a joint venture between Dongfeng and Renault-Nissan Alliance, but became a independent brand which has its own production base since 2023. The vehicles of Dongfeng Nammi shares the production line and supply chain with eGT New Energy Automotive in Shiyan city of Hubei.
Dongchuang Zilian (Wuhan) New Energy Technology was established on October 28, 2020, with Dongfeng Group holding 100% of the shares. It was primarily responsible for the domestic sales of vehicles manufactured by eGT New Energy Automotive Co., Ltd. in China. It used to be a sales company.
In February 2023, Dongchuang Zilian was renamed as Dongfeng Motor Nammi Technology Co., Ltd. Following this renaming, Dongfeng Nami officially assumed the role of a second-tier unit within the Dongfeng Motor Group, embarking on an independent path of brand operation.
During the same month, Dongfeng Nami announced the investment a total of 5.31 billion Yuan in establishing a production base in Xiangyang, Hubei Province. Another vehicle production base is in Shiyan city of Hubei. Dongfeng Nami also announced its S3 platform, a EV architecture focus on the pure electric small car platform specially developed by Dongfeng Motor for Dongfeng Nammi.
On August 2023, Dongfeng Motor formally launched its pure-electric vehicle brand, Dongfeng Nammi, dedicated to small-sized battery electric vehicle (BEV).
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dongfeng Nammi, previously known as Dongchuang Zilian (Wuhan) New Energy Technology, is the electric vehicle division of Chinese State-owned automaker Dongfeng Motor Corporation, specializing in designing and developing budget electric cars.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The company used to be specifically responsible for the domestic sales of electric passenger vehicles produced by eGT New Energy Automotive, a joint venture between Dongfeng and Renault-Nissan Alliance, but became a independent brand which has its own production base since 2023. The vehicles of Dongfeng Nammi shares the production line and supply chain with eGT New Energy Automotive in Shiyan city of Hubei.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Dongchuang Zilian (Wuhan) New Energy Technology was established on October 28, 2020, with Dongfeng Group holding 100% of the shares. It was primarily responsible for the domestic sales of vehicles manufactured by eGT New Energy Automotive Co., Ltd. in China. It used to be a sales company.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In February 2023, Dongchuang Zilian was renamed as Dongfeng Motor Nammi Technology Co., Ltd. Following this renaming, Dongfeng Nami officially assumed the role of a second-tier unit within the Dongfeng Motor Group, embarking on an independent path of brand operation.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "During the same month, Dongfeng Nami announced the investment a total of 5.31 billion Yuan in establishing a production base in Xiangyang, Hubei Province. Another vehicle production base is in Shiyan city of Hubei. Dongfeng Nami also announced its S3 platform, a EV architecture focus on the pure electric small car platform specially developed by Dongfeng Motor for Dongfeng Nammi.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "On August 2023, Dongfeng Motor formally launched its pure-electric vehicle brand, Dongfeng Nammi, dedicated to small-sized battery electric vehicle (BEV).",
"title": "History"
}
] |
Dongfeng Nammi, previously known as Dongchuang Zilian (Wuhan) New Energy Technology, is the electric vehicle division of Chinese State-owned automaker Dongfeng Motor Corporation, specializing in designing and developing budget electric cars. The company used to be specifically responsible for the domestic sales of electric passenger vehicles produced by eGT New Energy Automotive, a joint venture between Dongfeng and Renault-Nissan Alliance, but became a independent brand which has its own production base since 2023. The vehicles of Dongfeng Nammi shares the production line and supply chain with eGT New Energy Automotive in Shiyan city of Hubei.
|
2023-12-03T05:55:38Z
|
2023-12-03T11:17:10Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox company",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Dongfeng Motor"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dongfeng_Nammi
|
75,470,129 |
Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow
|
Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow is a British writer whose debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. The novel tells of a friendship that develops between Sunday, an autistic woman living in a Lake District home, and her newly arrived eccentric neighbor Vita, who emigrated from London with her husband Rollo. The friendship between the two women eventually sours as Sunday's daughter Dolly begins to favor the relationship with Vita while neglecting her mother.
The Booker Prize judging panel stated the work was a "lyrical and poignant debut novel [that] offers a deft exploration of motherhood, vulnerability and the complexity of human relationships". James Smart, writing for The Guardian described the work as a "tightly focused story, set almost entirely in two neighbouring houses on a quiet street, that’s also a gleeful skewering of social codes, a raw portrait of family life and a revealing account of neurodivergence."
Lloyd-Barlow obtained her PhD in creative writing from the University of Kent, with Amy Sackville serving as her doctoral adviser. Lloyd-Barlow's debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was developed as a result of her PhD studies. She became the first autistic author to be nominated for a Booker Prize with the novel's longlisting in 2023.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow is a British writer whose debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. The novel tells of a friendship that develops between Sunday, an autistic woman living in a Lake District home, and her newly arrived eccentric neighbor Vita, who emigrated from London with her husband Rollo. The friendship between the two women eventually sours as Sunday's daughter Dolly begins to favor the relationship with Vita while neglecting her mother.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Booker Prize judging panel stated the work was a \"lyrical and poignant debut novel [that] offers a deft exploration of motherhood, vulnerability and the complexity of human relationships\". James Smart, writing for The Guardian described the work as a \"tightly focused story, set almost entirely in two neighbouring houses on a quiet street, that’s also a gleeful skewering of social codes, a raw portrait of family life and a revealing account of neurodivergence.\"",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Lloyd-Barlow obtained her PhD in creative writing from the University of Kent, with Amy Sackville serving as her doctoral adviser. Lloyd-Barlow's debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was developed as a result of her PhD studies. She became the first autistic author to be nominated for a Booker Prize with the novel's longlisting in 2023.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow is a British writer whose debut novel, All the Little Bird-Hearts, was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. The novel tells of a friendship that develops between Sunday, an autistic woman living in a Lake District home, and her newly arrived eccentric neighbor Vita, who emigrated from London with her husband Rollo. The friendship between the two women eventually sours as Sunday's daughter Dolly begins to favor the relationship with Vita while neglecting her mother. The Booker Prize judging panel stated the work was a "lyrical and poignant debut novel [that] offers a deft exploration of motherhood, vulnerability and the complexity of human relationships". James Smart, writing for The Guardian described the work as a "tightly focused story, set almost entirely in two neighbouring houses on a quiet street, that’s also a gleeful skewering of social codes, a raw portrait of family life and a revealing account of neurodivergence."
|
2023-12-03T05:58:39Z
|
2023-12-04T05:27:24Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:ISBN",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktoria_Lloyd-Barlow
|
75,470,136 |
Omar Miskawi
|
Omar Miskawi (born 1935) is a Lebanese lawyer and politician who was a member of the Lebanese Parliament. He served as the minister of state for transport and then minister of transport from 1992 to 1998. He is a long-term deputy head of the Higher Islamic Council.
Miskawi was born in Tripoli in 1935. He graduated from Cairo University receiving a degree in law in 1961. He also graduated from Al-Azhar University.
Miskawi started his career as a lawyer in Tripoli in 1961. He was a member of the municipality of Tripoli. He became a member of the Higher Council of Islamic Sharia in 1964. He was elected a member of the Parliament from Tripoli in the 1992 elections. He won his seat again in the 1996 elections.
Miskawi was appointed state minister for transport to the first cabinet of Rafic Hariri in 1992. He was named as the minister of transport in 1996 in the third cabinet led by Hariri. Miskawi's term ended in 1998.
Miskawi is the deputy head of the Higher Islamic Council.
Miskawi is married to Mona Abdulghani Oubar, and they have three daughters.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Omar Miskawi (born 1935) is a Lebanese lawyer and politician who was a member of the Lebanese Parliament. He served as the minister of state for transport and then minister of transport from 1992 to 1998. He is a long-term deputy head of the Higher Islamic Council.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Miskawi was born in Tripoli in 1935. He graduated from Cairo University receiving a degree in law in 1961. He also graduated from Al-Azhar University.",
"title": "Early life and education"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Miskawi started his career as a lawyer in Tripoli in 1961. He was a member of the municipality of Tripoli. He became a member of the Higher Council of Islamic Sharia in 1964. He was elected a member of the Parliament from Tripoli in the 1992 elections. He won his seat again in the 1996 elections.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Miskawi was appointed state minister for transport to the first cabinet of Rafic Hariri in 1992. He was named as the minister of transport in 1996 in the third cabinet led by Hariri. Miskawi's term ended in 1998.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Miskawi is the deputy head of the Higher Islamic Council.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Miskawi is married to Mona Abdulghani Oubar, and they have three daughters.",
"title": "Personal life"
}
] |
Omar Miskawi is a Lebanese lawyer and politician who was a member of the Lebanese Parliament. He served as the minister of state for transport and then minister of transport from 1992 to 1998. He is a long-term deputy head of the Higher Islamic Council.
|
2023-12-03T05:59:09Z
|
2023-12-17T10:11:00Z
|
[
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omar_Miskawi
|
75,470,172 |
Sitaram Aadivashi
|
Sitaram Aadivashi (born 1 January 1959) is an Indian politician who represented Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency in the 15th Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. In 2018, he was elected as MLA from Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency as a member of the Bhartiya Janta Party.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sitaram Aadivashi (born 1 January 1959) is an Indian politician who represented Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency in the 15th Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. In 2018, he was elected as MLA from Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency as a member of the Bhartiya Janta Party.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Sitaram Aadivashi is an Indian politician who represented Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency in the 15th Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. In 2018, he was elected as MLA from Vijaypur, Madhya Pradesh Assembly constituency as a member of the Bhartiya Janta Party.
|
2023-12-03T06:03:25Z
|
2023-12-05T22:44:55Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Citeweb"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitaram_Aadivashi
|
75,470,197 |
Kenneth A. Robinson
|
Kenneth Albert Robinson (29 September 1914 – 30 April 2004) was an American politician and newspaper publisher.
Kenneth Robinson was born in Panora, Iowa, on 29 September 1914 to parents Albert M. Robinson and Ola Maynard. A year before graduating from Panora High School, Robinson contracted polio. He earned his high school diploma in 1934, followed by a degree in economics at Drake University. While attending Drake, Robinson was managing editor of the student newspaper, The Times Delphic and also wrote for The Des Moines Register and the Des Moines Tribune. He became owner and publisher of the Bayard News and Bagley Gazette in 1940 and relinquished those positions upon retirement in 1999. He served in the same dual roles for the Guthrie County Vedette in his birthplace of Panora from 1943 to 1945 and the Stuart Herald from 1945 to 1946.
Robinson was active in Democratic Party politics as seventh district chairman of Guthrie County Democratic Central Committee, and later as chairman of the Guthrie County Democratic Party. He served on the Bayard City Council for ten years, then from 1953 to 1964, Robinson was mayor of Bayard. He subsequently served a single two-year term on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 11 January 1965 to 8 January 1967. After leaving the Iowa General Assembly, Robinson served another thirteen years as mayor and was appointed to the Iowa Civil Rights Commission.
Robinson married Stuart native Mary Louise Moulton on 6 October 1946, and died on 30 April 2004 at the Bayard Nursing and Rehab Center.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Kenneth Albert Robinson (29 September 1914 – 30 April 2004) was an American politician and newspaper publisher.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Kenneth Robinson was born in Panora, Iowa, on 29 September 1914 to parents Albert M. Robinson and Ola Maynard. A year before graduating from Panora High School, Robinson contracted polio. He earned his high school diploma in 1934, followed by a degree in economics at Drake University. While attending Drake, Robinson was managing editor of the student newspaper, The Times Delphic and also wrote for The Des Moines Register and the Des Moines Tribune. He became owner and publisher of the Bayard News and Bagley Gazette in 1940 and relinquished those positions upon retirement in 1999. He served in the same dual roles for the Guthrie County Vedette in his birthplace of Panora from 1943 to 1945 and the Stuart Herald from 1945 to 1946.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Robinson was active in Democratic Party politics as seventh district chairman of Guthrie County Democratic Central Committee, and later as chairman of the Guthrie County Democratic Party. He served on the Bayard City Council for ten years, then from 1953 to 1964, Robinson was mayor of Bayard. He subsequently served a single two-year term on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 11 January 1965 to 8 January 1967. After leaving the Iowa General Assembly, Robinson served another thirteen years as mayor and was appointed to the Iowa Civil Rights Commission.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Robinson married Stuart native Mary Louise Moulton on 6 October 1946, and died on 30 April 2004 at the Bayard Nursing and Rehab Center.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Kenneth Albert Robinson was an American politician and newspaper publisher. Kenneth Robinson was born in Panora, Iowa, on 29 September 1914 to parents Albert M. Robinson and Ola Maynard. A year before graduating from Panora High School, Robinson contracted polio. He earned his high school diploma in 1934, followed by a degree in economics at Drake University. While attending Drake, Robinson was managing editor of the student newspaper, The Times Delphic and also wrote for The Des Moines Register and the Des Moines Tribune. He became owner and publisher of the Bayard News and Bagley Gazette in 1940 and relinquished those positions upon retirement in 1999. He served in the same dual roles for the Guthrie County Vedette in his birthplace of Panora from 1943 to 1945 and the Stuart Herald from 1945 to 1946. Robinson was active in Democratic Party politics as seventh district chairman of Guthrie County Democratic Central Committee, and later as chairman of the Guthrie County Democratic Party. He served on the Bayard City Council for ten years, then from 1953 to 1964, Robinson was mayor of Bayard. He subsequently served a single two-year term on the Iowa House of Representatives for District 34 from 11 January 1965 to 8 January 1967. After leaving the Iowa General Assembly, Robinson served another thirteen years as mayor and was appointed to the Iowa Civil Rights Commission. Robinson married Stuart native Mary Louise Moulton on 6 October 1946, and died on 30 April 2004 at the Bayard Nursing and Rehab Center.
|
2023-12-03T06:06:20Z
|
2023-12-04T00:19:11Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_A._Robinson
|
75,470,211 |
Roger C. Heath
|
Roger C. Heath (January 21, 1943 – May 18, 2023) was an American politician. He served as a Republican member for the Carroll 3rd and 4th district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives. He also served as a member for the 3rd district of the New Hampshire Senate.
Category:1943 births Category:2023 deaths Category:Republican Party members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives Category:Republican Party New Hampshire state senators Category:20th-century American politicians
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Roger C. Heath (January 21, 1943 – May 18, 2023) was an American politician. He served as a Republican member for the Carroll 3rd and 4th district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives. He also served as a member for the 3rd district of the New Hampshire Senate.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Category:1943 births Category:2023 deaths Category:Republican Party members of the New Hampshire House of Representatives Category:Republican Party New Hampshire state senators Category:20th-century American politicians",
"title": "References"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Roger C. Heath was an American politician. He served as a Republican member for the Carroll 3rd and 4th district of the New Hampshire House of Representatives. He also served as a member for the 3rd district of the New Hampshire Senate.
|
2023-12-03T06:07:52Z
|
2023-12-03T06:33:44Z
|
[
"Template:AfC submission",
"Template:Citation",
"Template:NewHampshire-politician-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Draft topics",
"Template:AfC topic",
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_C._Heath
|
75,470,217 |
Wangpang Konyak
|
Wangpang Konyak is an Indian politician from Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party who won 2023 Nagaland by-poll with 10,053 votes and will be the member of Nagaland Legislative Assembly from Tapi Assembly constituency.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Wangpang Konyak is an Indian politician from Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party who won 2023 Nagaland by-poll with 10,053 votes and will be the member of Nagaland Legislative Assembly from Tapi Assembly constituency.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Wangpang Konyak is an Indian politician from Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party who won 2023 Nagaland by-poll with 10,053 votes and will be the member of Nagaland Legislative Assembly from Tapi Assembly constituency.
|
2023-12-03T06:08:17Z
|
2023-12-03T08:28:31Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wangpang_Konyak
|
75,470,243 |
List of years in Tunisia
|
This is a timeline of Tunisian history. Each article deals with events in Tunisia in a given year.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "This is a timeline of Tunisian history. Each article deals with events in Tunisia in a given year.",
"title": ""
}
] |
This is a timeline of Tunisian history. Each article deals with events in Tunisia in a given year. 1950s: 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960s: 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970s: 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980s: 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 19861987 1988 1989 1990s: 1990 1991 1992 19931994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000s: 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010s: 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020s: 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
|
2023-12-03T06:11:57Z
|
2023-12-03T15:36:22Z
|
[
"Template:Tunisia topics",
"Template:Africa topic"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_years_in_Tunisia
|
75,470,248 |
Digitaria setigera
|
Digitaria setigera, also more commonly called East Indian crabgrass, is a species of perennial grass in the family of Poaceae.
Digitaria setigera has cauline leaves that are a little over 30mm (1.1 inches) long and 3mm (0.1 inches) wide. It also has spikelets that consist of 3-16 spike-like branches.
This species of grass is native to many subtropical regions such as Africa, Temperate Asia, Tropical Asia, Australasia, India, and Bangladesh. Additionally, it is native to Australia, where it is found in Northern Territory and Queensland.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Digitaria setigera, also more commonly called East Indian crabgrass, is a species of perennial grass in the family of Poaceae.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Digitaria setigera has cauline leaves that are a little over 30mm (1.1 inches) long and 3mm (0.1 inches) wide. It also has spikelets that consist of 3-16 spike-like branches.",
"title": "Description"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "This species of grass is native to many subtropical regions such as Africa, Temperate Asia, Tropical Asia, Australasia, India, and Bangladesh. Additionally, it is native to Australia, where it is found in Northern Territory and Queensland.",
"title": "Distribution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
Digitaria setigera, also more commonly called East Indian crabgrass, is a species of perennial grass in the family of Poaceae.
|
2023-12-03T06:12:32Z
|
2023-12-21T15:35:34Z
|
[
"Template:Taxonbar",
"Template:Poaceae-stub",
"Template:Speciesbox",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitaria_setigera
|
75,470,266 |
Pradhan (film)
|
Pradhan is a 2023 Bengali language socio-political action drama film directed by Avijit Sen. The film stars Dev, Anirban Chakrabarti, Paran Bandyopadhyay, Soham Chakraborty and Soumitrisha Kundu in the lead roles. The action sequences in this film are designed by Aejaz Gulab. This film marks the third collaboration between Sen and Dev after the blockbusters Tonic and Projapoti. It is produced by Dev, Atanu Raychaudhuri and Pranab Kumar Guha under Dev Entertainment Ventures and Bengal Talkies.
The film marked the big - screen debut of Mithai fame Soumitrisha Kundu. It was released on 22 December 2023, on the occasion of Christmas weekend.
Deepak Pradhan (Dev), a newly married police officer, gets transferred to Dharmapur, a remote village in North Bengal. He moves there with his wife Rumi, and rents a house from Jibon Krishna Sarkar, a retired school teacher and his wife Shanti.
Deepak meets Bibek (Soham), another police officer, who tells him about the history of Dharmapur and the atrocities committed by Jatileshwar Mukherjee (Anirban Chakrabarti), the panchayat head, who has been ruling the village for over a decade without any elections. Jatileshwar is involved in various illegal activities, such as land grabbing, extortion, murder, and rape. He also controls the local school, where he siphons off the funds meant for midday meals and education.
Deepak decides to take action against Jatileshwar and his goons, and starts investigating their crimes. He also befriends the villagers and tries to help them with their problems. He exposes Jatileshwar's involvement in a hotel project that would destroy the natural beauty and resources of the village. He also rescues a girl who was kidnapped and raped by Jatileshwar's son. He also organizes a cultural program to celebrate the village's diversity and heritage.
Jatileshwar, who is enraged by Deepak's interference, plots to kill him and his family. He sets fire to the slum area where many of Deepak's supporters live, and also sends his men to attack Deepak's house. Deepak manages to save his wife and his landlord's family, but gets injured in the process. He is admitted to the hospital, where he learns that Jatileshwar has also bribed his senior officer and the local media to frame him for the fire and other crimes.
Deepak, who is determined to expose Jatileshwar and bring him to justice, escapes from the hospital with the help of Bibek and some villagers. He gathers evidence against Jatileshwar and his associates, and confronts him in a public rally, where he challenges him to face a fair election. He also reveals Jatileshwar's involvement in the murder of Jibon Krishna Sarkar's son, who was a journalist and an activist. He also exposes Jatileshwar's links with some politicians and businessmen, who were supporting his illegal activities.
The villagers, who are inspired by Deepak's courage and honesty, support him and demand Jatileshwar's arrest. Jatileshwar, who realizes that he has lost his power and influence, tries to escape, but is caught by Deepak and his team. He is handed over to the police, who promise to conduct a fair trial. Deepak is hailed as a hero by the villagers, who also elect him as their new panchayat head. He decides to stay in Dharmapur and continue his service to the people. He also reconciles with his wife and his grandmother, who are proud of him. The movie ends with Deepak and Rumi celebrating their anniversary with the villagers.
Dev took to his social media handles to announce the film on 15 April 2023. The shooting was started from 25 August 2023. Both Dev and Soham went through huge physical transformation with cupping therapy and gym to lose weight for their roles in the film. On 10 November Dev announced wrap for the film.
The principal photography took place in Chalsa, Dooars, Samsing, Rocky Island, Mondol Gaon, Ranichera in North Bengal and Kolkata. During the shooting Dev fell ill and succumbed to high fever, but he recovered soon.
An announcement poster was released on 25 August 2023 to mark the beginning of filming. On 10 November 2023, the first poster was released at a press conference at Nandan. The trailer was released on 4 December 2023.
The music of the film will be composed by Shantanu Moitra, Anupam Roy and Rathijit Bhattacharjee. Bhattacharjee will also compose the background score. The lyrics are written by Prasen and Anupam Roy.
The film was released in the theatres on 22 December 2023 on the occasion of Christmas weekend.
The film received positive reviews from critics. The Telegraph India reviewed the film and wrote "Although the three-hour runtime makes it too long, the breathtaking cinematography, brilliant acting and well-placed songs elevates the film." Santanu Das of Hindustan Times wrote "The movie depicts the bitter reality of today's political and social scenario with a directorial infusion of surprise and intrigue. Although the film gets depictable, the cast has presented a commendable performance." Shamayita Chakraborty of OTTPlay reviewed the film and wrote "Pradhan is a perfect example of a Bengali commercial film that are not made today. It has Bengali sensibilities juxtaposed with high-octane drama." Sangbad Pratidin reviewed the film and praised the acting of the cast and the directorial mettle."
Souvik Saha of CineKolkata rated teh film 3.5 out of 5 stars and wrote "It provides a Bengali film with strong performances, effective direction and a gripping narrative. Despite some drawbacks like the length and weak comedy, overall it puts a positive impact. Virat Verma of Flickonclick rated the film 4 out of 5 stars and wrote "The film delivers a thought provoking message while keeping the audience engaged with its well-paced plot and strong performances."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Pradhan is a 2023 Bengali language socio-political action drama film directed by Avijit Sen. The film stars Dev, Anirban Chakrabarti, Paran Bandyopadhyay, Soham Chakraborty and Soumitrisha Kundu in the lead roles. The action sequences in this film are designed by Aejaz Gulab. This film marks the third collaboration between Sen and Dev after the blockbusters Tonic and Projapoti. It is produced by Dev, Atanu Raychaudhuri and Pranab Kumar Guha under Dev Entertainment Ventures and Bengal Talkies.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The film marked the big - screen debut of Mithai fame Soumitrisha Kundu. It was released on 22 December 2023, on the occasion of Christmas weekend.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Deepak Pradhan (Dev), a newly married police officer, gets transferred to Dharmapur, a remote village in North Bengal. He moves there with his wife Rumi, and rents a house from Jibon Krishna Sarkar, a retired school teacher and his wife Shanti.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Deepak meets Bibek (Soham), another police officer, who tells him about the history of Dharmapur and the atrocities committed by Jatileshwar Mukherjee (Anirban Chakrabarti), the panchayat head, who has been ruling the village for over a decade without any elections. Jatileshwar is involved in various illegal activities, such as land grabbing, extortion, murder, and rape. He also controls the local school, where he siphons off the funds meant for midday meals and education.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Deepak decides to take action against Jatileshwar and his goons, and starts investigating their crimes. He also befriends the villagers and tries to help them with their problems. He exposes Jatileshwar's involvement in a hotel project that would destroy the natural beauty and resources of the village. He also rescues a girl who was kidnapped and raped by Jatileshwar's son. He also organizes a cultural program to celebrate the village's diversity and heritage.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Jatileshwar, who is enraged by Deepak's interference, plots to kill him and his family. He sets fire to the slum area where many of Deepak's supporters live, and also sends his men to attack Deepak's house. Deepak manages to save his wife and his landlord's family, but gets injured in the process. He is admitted to the hospital, where he learns that Jatileshwar has also bribed his senior officer and the local media to frame him for the fire and other crimes.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Deepak, who is determined to expose Jatileshwar and bring him to justice, escapes from the hospital with the help of Bibek and some villagers. He gathers evidence against Jatileshwar and his associates, and confronts him in a public rally, where he challenges him to face a fair election. He also reveals Jatileshwar's involvement in the murder of Jibon Krishna Sarkar's son, who was a journalist and an activist. He also exposes Jatileshwar's links with some politicians and businessmen, who were supporting his illegal activities.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The villagers, who are inspired by Deepak's courage and honesty, support him and demand Jatileshwar's arrest. Jatileshwar, who realizes that he has lost his power and influence, tries to escape, but is caught by Deepak and his team. He is handed over to the police, who promise to conduct a fair trial. Deepak is hailed as a hero by the villagers, who also elect him as their new panchayat head. He decides to stay in Dharmapur and continue his service to the people. He also reconciles with his wife and his grandmother, who are proud of him. The movie ends with Deepak and Rumi celebrating their anniversary with the villagers.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Dev took to his social media handles to announce the film on 15 April 2023. The shooting was started from 25 August 2023. Both Dev and Soham went through huge physical transformation with cupping therapy and gym to lose weight for their roles in the film. On 10 November Dev announced wrap for the film.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "The principal photography took place in Chalsa, Dooars, Samsing, Rocky Island, Mondol Gaon, Ranichera in North Bengal and Kolkata. During the shooting Dev fell ill and succumbed to high fever, but he recovered soon.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "An announcement poster was released on 25 August 2023 to mark the beginning of filming. On 10 November 2023, the first poster was released at a press conference at Nandan. The trailer was released on 4 December 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "The music of the film will be composed by Shantanu Moitra, Anupam Roy and Rathijit Bhattacharjee. Bhattacharjee will also compose the background score. The lyrics are written by Prasen and Anupam Roy.",
"title": "Soundtrack"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "The film was released in the theatres on 22 December 2023 on the occasion of Christmas weekend.",
"title": "Release"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "The film received positive reviews from critics. The Telegraph India reviewed the film and wrote \"Although the three-hour runtime makes it too long, the breathtaking cinematography, brilliant acting and well-placed songs elevates the film.\" Santanu Das of Hindustan Times wrote \"The movie depicts the bitter reality of today's political and social scenario with a directorial infusion of surprise and intrigue. Although the film gets depictable, the cast has presented a commendable performance.\" Shamayita Chakraborty of OTTPlay reviewed the film and wrote \"Pradhan is a perfect example of a Bengali commercial film that are not made today. It has Bengali sensibilities juxtaposed with high-octane drama.\" Sangbad Pratidin reviewed the film and praised the acting of the cast and the directorial mettle.\"",
"title": "Reception"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Souvik Saha of CineKolkata rated teh film 3.5 out of 5 stars and wrote \"It provides a Bengali film with strong performances, effective direction and a gripping narrative. Despite some drawbacks like the length and weak comedy, overall it puts a positive impact. Virat Verma of Flickonclick rated the film 4 out of 5 stars and wrote \"The film delivers a thought provoking message while keeping the audience engaged with its well-paced plot and strong performances.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
Pradhan is a 2023 Bengali language socio-political action drama film directed by Avijit Sen. The film stars Dev, Anirban Chakrabarti, Paran Bandyopadhyay, Soham Chakraborty and Soumitrisha Kundu in the lead roles. The action sequences in this film are designed by Aejaz Gulab. This film marks the third collaboration between Sen and Dev after the blockbusters Tonic and Projapoti. It is produced by Dev, Atanu Raychaudhuri and Pranab Kumar Guha under Dev Entertainment Ventures and Bengal Talkies. The film marked the big - screen debut of Mithai fame Soumitrisha Kundu. It was released on 22 December 2023, on the occasion of Christmas weekend.
|
2023-12-03T06:15:11Z
|
2023-12-31T23:21:05Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Infobox album",
"Template:Track listing"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pradhan_(film)
|
75,470,270 |
Saba Nayagan
|
Saba Nayagan is an 2023 Indian Tamil-language coming-of-age romantic comedy film written and directed by C. S. Karthikeyan in his directorial debut and produced by Aravind Jayabalan, Iyyappan Gnanavel and Captain Megavanan Isaivanan under the production banners Clear Water Films INC., I Cinema and Captain Mega Entertainment. The film stars Ashok Selvan, Megha Akash, Karthika Muralidharan and Chandini Chowdary in the lead roles and the late actor Mayilsamy and others in supporting roles. The film features music composed by Leon James with cinematography handled by Balasubramaniem, Dinesh Purushothaman and Prabhu Rhagav and editing done by Ganesh Siva.
This coming-of-age drama follows Saba, the happy-go-lucky protagonist, through the years leading up to his adulthood and highlighting events of friendship and romance along the way.
The film was announced in July 2022 with Ashok Selvan in the lead. The film marked the directorial debut of C. S. Karthikeyan, who has previously worked as an assistant director of Kamal Haasan in Vishwaroopam and Vishwaroopam II. Leon James who had earlier worked with Ashok Selvan in Oh My Kadavule was signed as the music director. Filming commenced in 2022. The title was revealed as Saba Nayagan with first look and teaser releasing on 25 April 2023. The trailer was released on 25 November 2023.
The music of the film is composed by Leon James. The first single ''Babyma'' was released on 25 November 2023. The second single ''Seemakaariye'' was released on 5 December 2023. The third single ''Sikkikita'' was released on 15 December 2023.
The film was initially slated for release on 15 December 2023. However, due to post-production and certification delays owing to Cyclone Michaung, the film was released theatrically on 22 December 2023 and received positive reviews from critics.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Saba Nayagan is an 2023 Indian Tamil-language coming-of-age romantic comedy film written and directed by C. S. Karthikeyan in his directorial debut and produced by Aravind Jayabalan, Iyyappan Gnanavel and Captain Megavanan Isaivanan under the production banners Clear Water Films INC., I Cinema and Captain Mega Entertainment. The film stars Ashok Selvan, Megha Akash, Karthika Muralidharan and Chandini Chowdary in the lead roles and the late actor Mayilsamy and others in supporting roles. The film features music composed by Leon James with cinematography handled by Balasubramaniem, Dinesh Purushothaman and Prabhu Rhagav and editing done by Ganesh Siva.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "This coming-of-age drama follows Saba, the happy-go-lucky protagonist, through the years leading up to his adulthood and highlighting events of friendship and romance along the way.",
"title": "Plot"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The film was announced in July 2022 with Ashok Selvan in the lead. The film marked the directorial debut of C. S. Karthikeyan, who has previously worked as an assistant director of Kamal Haasan in Vishwaroopam and Vishwaroopam II. Leon James who had earlier worked with Ashok Selvan in Oh My Kadavule was signed as the music director. Filming commenced in 2022. The title was revealed as Saba Nayagan with first look and teaser releasing on 25 April 2023. The trailer was released on 25 November 2023.",
"title": "Production"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The music of the film is composed by Leon James. The first single ''Babyma'' was released on 25 November 2023. The second single ''Seemakaariye'' was released on 5 December 2023. The third single ''Sikkikita'' was released on 15 December 2023.",
"title": "Music"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The film was initially slated for release on 15 December 2023. However, due to post-production and certification delays owing to Cyclone Michaung, the film was released theatrically on 22 December 2023 and received positive reviews from critics.",
"title": "Release and Reception"
}
] |
Saba Nayagan is an 2023 Indian Tamil-language coming-of-age romantic comedy film written and directed by C. S. Karthikeyan in his directorial debut and produced by Aravind Jayabalan, Iyyappan Gnanavel and Captain Megavanan Isaivanan under the production banners Clear Water Films INC., I Cinema and Captain Mega Entertainment. The film stars Ashok Selvan, Megha Akash, Karthika Muralidharan and Chandini Chowdary in the lead roles and the late actor Mayilsamy and others in supporting roles. The film features music composed by Leon James with cinematography handled by Balasubramaniem, Dinesh Purushothaman and Prabhu Rhagav and editing done by Ganesh Siva.
|
2023-12-03T06:15:33Z
|
2023-12-31T04:14:00Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox album",
"Template:Track listing",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:IMDb title",
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Infobox film",
"Template:Colbegin",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Colend"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saba_Nayagan
|
75,470,326 |
Cyclone Michaung
|
Severe Cyclonic Storm Michaung (Burmese pronunciation: [mɪʔtɕʰaʊɰ̃]) was a moderate tropical cyclone which formed in the Bay of Bengal during the 2023 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Michuang originated as a low-pressure area in the Gulf of Thailand which crossed into the Bay of Bengal and became a deep depression on December 2. It developed into a cyclonic storm thereafter and was named Michaung. It was the ninth depression and the sixth named cyclonic storm of the season. The cyclone gradually moved north-west over the next few days towards the eastern coast of India. The storm peaked with sustained winds of 110 km/h (70 mph) causing heavy rainfall in north-eastern Tamil Nadu including Chennai and south-eastern Andhra Pradesh before making landfall near Bapatla in Andhra Pradesh on December 5.
In late November 2023, a low-pressure area crossed into the Bay of Bengal from the Gulf of Thailand. On December 1, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said the disturbance had developed into a depression in the South Andaman Sea, and was expected to move towards the northwest while strengthening in the Bay of Bengal. On December 2, the system intensified into a deep depression located about 440 kilometres (270 mi) east-southeast of Puducherry. Thereafter, it intensified into a cyclonic storm, and was assigned the name Michaung by Myanmar.
On December 4, cyclone Michaung reached peak intensity as it approached the coast of Tamil Nadu with winds of 110 kilometres per hour (68 mph), equivalent to a high-end tropical storm on the Saffir–Simpson scale. Michaung moved almost directly northward along the coast. On December 5, the storm made landfall between Nellore and Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh, weakening as it moved inland. By December 6, the storm had weakened to a depression over central Andhra Pradesh.
According to the IMD reports, INSAT-3D satellite imagery on December 5 indicated a cloud mass with broken low to medium clouds and intense convection extending over west-central Bay of Bengal and the coastal region of Andhra Pradesh, spanning from latitude 13.5°N to 17.5°N and longitude 80.0E to 82.5E. The minimum cloud top temperature was recorded at −90 °C (−130 °F). Coastal surface observations from various locations on the coast indicated a maximum wind speed of 60 knots (110 km/h; 69 mph) and a minimum sea level pressure of 988 hectopascals (29.2 inHg). Nungambakkam in Chennai recorded the maximum rainfall of 530 mm (21 in) in the three-day period between December 2 and 4.
As the storm approached the east coast of India, India's meteorological department issued a red alert for the region. In Tamil Nadu, over 500 personnel of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and Tamil Nadu Disaster Response Force (TNDRF) were deployed. 121 multi-purpose centers and 4,967 relief centers were set-up in the eight coastal districts of Tamil Nadu to help in the aftermath of the cyclone. In Andhra Pradesh, 181 relief camps were set up across the eight districts, with the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and AP State Disaster Response Force (APSDRF) deploying five teams each to assist in the affected areas. Southern districts of Odisha were also to receive heavy rainfall due to the cyclone, and the Odisha Disaster Rapid Action Force were deployed to assist local authorities.
Heavy rain and strong winds battered the coastal areas. Persistent rains caused widespread flooding and inundation in Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu. Rivers including Cooum and major lakes overflowed in Chennai causing further water logging in the low-lying areas along the banks. At least 17 people were killed, and more than 41,000 people were evacuated and temporarily relocated, including 32,158 in Tamil Nadu and 9,500 in Andhra Pradesh. Power supply was cut off by the government in flooded areas in Chennai as a preventive measure to avert electrocution.
Chennai International Airport closed its operations on December 4 due to flooding in the apron and runways, with flights being diverted or cancelled and operations resuming the next day. Schools and offices were closed due to heavy rains and flooding. Southern Railways and East Coast Railways re-directed and cancelled several trains. Several businesses and industries in Chennai were impacted adversely as operations were ceased due to power shortages, flooding and damage to equipment. In Andhra Pradesh, crop damage and losses were reported due to the flooding of fields. There was also a shortage of essential commodities including milk which was exacerbated by panic buying.
The Indian Air Force air dropped more than 2,300 kilograms (5,100 lb) of food packets and relief supplies in affected areas of Chennai, while the Indian Navy, in collaboration with the Indian Army and National Disaster Response Force, was tasked with rescuing people and providing supplies using inflatable boats. Greater Chennai Corporation pressed more workers for flood recovery and aiding stranded people while citing staff crunch for delays in clearing fallen trees and garbage. Volunteers engaged in distributing food packets, milk, water bottles and rescuing stranded people through boats in the inundated areas.
Relief materials were sent from various districts of Tamil Nadu to the affected areas. Various NGOs, religious and volunteer groups helped in the relief effort. On December 9, Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu M. K. Stalin announced a relief of ₹5 lakh (US$6,300) for families of those who lost their lives, ₹37,500 (US$470) for individuals who lost cattle, ₹17,000 (US$210) per hectare for paddy cultivators who lost the crop and ₹8,000 (US$100) for who lost their homes. A relief package worth ₹6,000 (US$75) was announced to be distributed through Public Distribution System (PDS) outlets for those who were impacted by the cyclone. Many political parties including AIADMK, DMK and BJP ran relief campaigns and distribution programmes.
Stalin donated one month salary to the state disaster relief fund and appealed to others to donate. TVS Motors and Ashok Leyland contributed ₹3 crore (US$380,000) each to flood relief. Actors Surya and Karthi donated ₹10 lakh (US$13,000) each to the relief fund.
As many personal and transport vehicles were damaged during the floods, auto companies announced various aid measures. Maruti Suzuki helped mobilize tow trucks, provide road side assistance; Hyundai announced a relief package of ₹3 crore (US$380,000) for flood relief; Tata Motors announced an extension of the warranty, maintenance contracts and provided emergency road assistance; Mahindra announced complimentary roadside assistance, no-cost inspection and financial discounts; Toyota set-up special emergency helpline and designated personnel for immediate assistance. Companies like Tata Group also assisted in the relief effort.
On December 4, Home minister Amit Shah spoke to chief ministers of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh assuring of all the help required and stating that the NDRF and Armed forces will be pressed into action. Member of Parliament Kanimozhi stated on December 5 that the government of Tamil Nadu have taken proactive measures to address the impact of the cyclone with the establishment of over 400 shelters for the affected population, pumping of stagnant water and restoration of electricity. On December 6, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed condolences to the families of those who lost their loved ones and prayed for those injured or affected. He also stated that the authorities have been working tirelessly to assist those affected and will continue to work towards normalization. Opposition MPs appealed to the Central government to extend its full assistance to Tamil Nadu in managing the repercussions of the cyclone. They demanded that the disaster be declared as a national calamity.
On December 6, chief minister of Tamil Nadu M.K.Stalin wrote to the Prime Minister seeking ₹5,060 crore (US$630 million) for interim flood relief from the disaster response fund. Defence minister Rajnath Singh conducted an aerial survey of the affected areas in Tamil Nadu on December 7 and met with chief minister Stalin. On December 7, Central government released a second installment of ₹450 crore (US$56 million) to the Tamil Nadu disaster relief fund and ₹493.50 crore (US$62 million) to the Andhra Pradesh disaster relief fund having already released the same amount earlier. Amit Shah announced that the Prime Minister has already approved the first urban flood mitigation project of ₹561.29 crore (US$70 million) for urban flood management activities for Chennai under the National Disaster Mitigation Fund (NDMF) with a central assistance of ₹500 crore (US$63 million).
On December 8, representatives of various micro, small and medium enterprises sought time to repay loans and electricity charges due to flood related losses and damages. On December 9, Union minister of state Rajeev Chandrasekhar visited Chennai to assess the damages and coordinate with the state government for further assistance
Australian cricketer David Warner shared his concern for those affected by the floods and advised safety.
People from various localities in Chennai expressed their disappointment at the water stagnation, power outages and lack of support from the authorities. Actor Vishal expressed his disappointment with the flood situation in Chennai and criticized the Chennai Mayor and other authorities for not building adequate infrastructure to handle the floods. Ministers of the state government and elected representatives were heckled by the angry public during their visits at various places in Chennai. Prominent people including Ravichandran Ashwin, Jwala Gutta and Srinath Narayanan came out and shared their difficult experience.
On December 7, leader of the opposition K. Palaniswami demanded the chief minister of Tamil Nadu to release a white paper on the completed and ongoing stormwater drain work in Chennai. On December 10, he further criticized the state government for the lack of preparedness and demanded the flood relief to be increased to ₹12,000 (US$150). Tamil Nadu state president of BJP, Annamalai expressed his displeasure on the flooding and demanded the relief to be increased to ₹10,000 (US$130).
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Severe Cyclonic Storm Michaung (Burmese pronunciation: [mɪʔtɕʰaʊɰ̃]) was a moderate tropical cyclone which formed in the Bay of Bengal during the 2023 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Michuang originated as a low-pressure area in the Gulf of Thailand which crossed into the Bay of Bengal and became a deep depression on December 2. It developed into a cyclonic storm thereafter and was named Michaung. It was the ninth depression and the sixth named cyclonic storm of the season. The cyclone gradually moved north-west over the next few days towards the eastern coast of India. The storm peaked with sustained winds of 110 km/h (70 mph) causing heavy rainfall in north-eastern Tamil Nadu including Chennai and south-eastern Andhra Pradesh before making landfall near Bapatla in Andhra Pradesh on December 5.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "In late November 2023, a low-pressure area crossed into the Bay of Bengal from the Gulf of Thailand. On December 1, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said the disturbance had developed into a depression in the South Andaman Sea, and was expected to move towards the northwest while strengthening in the Bay of Bengal. On December 2, the system intensified into a deep depression located about 440 kilometres (270 mi) east-southeast of Puducherry. Thereafter, it intensified into a cyclonic storm, and was assigned the name Michaung by Myanmar.",
"title": "Meteorological history"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On December 4, cyclone Michaung reached peak intensity as it approached the coast of Tamil Nadu with winds of 110 kilometres per hour (68 mph), equivalent to a high-end tropical storm on the Saffir–Simpson scale. Michaung moved almost directly northward along the coast. On December 5, the storm made landfall between Nellore and Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh, weakening as it moved inland. By December 6, the storm had weakened to a depression over central Andhra Pradesh.",
"title": "Meteorological history"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "According to the IMD reports, INSAT-3D satellite imagery on December 5 indicated a cloud mass with broken low to medium clouds and intense convection extending over west-central Bay of Bengal and the coastal region of Andhra Pradesh, spanning from latitude 13.5°N to 17.5°N and longitude 80.0E to 82.5E. The minimum cloud top temperature was recorded at −90 °C (−130 °F). Coastal surface observations from various locations on the coast indicated a maximum wind speed of 60 knots (110 km/h; 69 mph) and a minimum sea level pressure of 988 hectopascals (29.2 inHg). Nungambakkam in Chennai recorded the maximum rainfall of 530 mm (21 in) in the three-day period between December 2 and 4.",
"title": "Meteorological history"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "As the storm approached the east coast of India, India's meteorological department issued a red alert for the region. In Tamil Nadu, over 500 personnel of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and Tamil Nadu Disaster Response Force (TNDRF) were deployed. 121 multi-purpose centers and 4,967 relief centers were set-up in the eight coastal districts of Tamil Nadu to help in the aftermath of the cyclone. In Andhra Pradesh, 181 relief camps were set up across the eight districts, with the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and AP State Disaster Response Force (APSDRF) deploying five teams each to assist in the affected areas. Southern districts of Odisha were also to receive heavy rainfall due to the cyclone, and the Odisha Disaster Rapid Action Force were deployed to assist local authorities.",
"title": "Preparations and impact"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Heavy rain and strong winds battered the coastal areas. Persistent rains caused widespread flooding and inundation in Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu. Rivers including Cooum and major lakes overflowed in Chennai causing further water logging in the low-lying areas along the banks. At least 17 people were killed, and more than 41,000 people were evacuated and temporarily relocated, including 32,158 in Tamil Nadu and 9,500 in Andhra Pradesh. Power supply was cut off by the government in flooded areas in Chennai as a preventive measure to avert electrocution.",
"title": "Preparations and impact"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Chennai International Airport closed its operations on December 4 due to flooding in the apron and runways, with flights being diverted or cancelled and operations resuming the next day. Schools and offices were closed due to heavy rains and flooding. Southern Railways and East Coast Railways re-directed and cancelled several trains. Several businesses and industries in Chennai were impacted adversely as operations were ceased due to power shortages, flooding and damage to equipment. In Andhra Pradesh, crop damage and losses were reported due to the flooding of fields. There was also a shortage of essential commodities including milk which was exacerbated by panic buying.",
"title": "Preparations and impact"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "The Indian Air Force air dropped more than 2,300 kilograms (5,100 lb) of food packets and relief supplies in affected areas of Chennai, while the Indian Navy, in collaboration with the Indian Army and National Disaster Response Force, was tasked with rescuing people and providing supplies using inflatable boats. Greater Chennai Corporation pressed more workers for flood recovery and aiding stranded people while citing staff crunch for delays in clearing fallen trees and garbage. Volunteers engaged in distributing food packets, milk, water bottles and rescuing stranded people through boats in the inundated areas.",
"title": "Relief efforts"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Relief materials were sent from various districts of Tamil Nadu to the affected areas. Various NGOs, religious and volunteer groups helped in the relief effort. On December 9, Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu M. K. Stalin announced a relief of ₹5 lakh (US$6,300) for families of those who lost their lives, ₹37,500 (US$470) for individuals who lost cattle, ₹17,000 (US$210) per hectare for paddy cultivators who lost the crop and ₹8,000 (US$100) for who lost their homes. A relief package worth ₹6,000 (US$75) was announced to be distributed through Public Distribution System (PDS) outlets for those who were impacted by the cyclone. Many political parties including AIADMK, DMK and BJP ran relief campaigns and distribution programmes.",
"title": "Relief efforts"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Stalin donated one month salary to the state disaster relief fund and appealed to others to donate. TVS Motors and Ashok Leyland contributed ₹3 crore (US$380,000) each to flood relief. Actors Surya and Karthi donated ₹10 lakh (US$13,000) each to the relief fund.",
"title": "Relief efforts"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "As many personal and transport vehicles were damaged during the floods, auto companies announced various aid measures. Maruti Suzuki helped mobilize tow trucks, provide road side assistance; Hyundai announced a relief package of ₹3 crore (US$380,000) for flood relief; Tata Motors announced an extension of the warranty, maintenance contracts and provided emergency road assistance; Mahindra announced complimentary roadside assistance, no-cost inspection and financial discounts; Toyota set-up special emergency helpline and designated personnel for immediate assistance. Companies like Tata Group also assisted in the relief effort.",
"title": "Relief efforts"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "On December 4, Home minister Amit Shah spoke to chief ministers of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh assuring of all the help required and stating that the NDRF and Armed forces will be pressed into action. Member of Parliament Kanimozhi stated on December 5 that the government of Tamil Nadu have taken proactive measures to address the impact of the cyclone with the establishment of over 400 shelters for the affected population, pumping of stagnant water and restoration of electricity. On December 6, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed condolences to the families of those who lost their loved ones and prayed for those injured or affected. He also stated that the authorities have been working tirelessly to assist those affected and will continue to work towards normalization. Opposition MPs appealed to the Central government to extend its full assistance to Tamil Nadu in managing the repercussions of the cyclone. They demanded that the disaster be declared as a national calamity.",
"title": "Response"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "On December 6, chief minister of Tamil Nadu M.K.Stalin wrote to the Prime Minister seeking ₹5,060 crore (US$630 million) for interim flood relief from the disaster response fund. Defence minister Rajnath Singh conducted an aerial survey of the affected areas in Tamil Nadu on December 7 and met with chief minister Stalin. On December 7, Central government released a second installment of ₹450 crore (US$56 million) to the Tamil Nadu disaster relief fund and ₹493.50 crore (US$62 million) to the Andhra Pradesh disaster relief fund having already released the same amount earlier. Amit Shah announced that the Prime Minister has already approved the first urban flood mitigation project of ₹561.29 crore (US$70 million) for urban flood management activities for Chennai under the National Disaster Mitigation Fund (NDMF) with a central assistance of ₹500 crore (US$63 million).",
"title": "Response"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "On December 8, representatives of various micro, small and medium enterprises sought time to repay loans and electricity charges due to flood related losses and damages. On December 9, Union minister of state Rajeev Chandrasekhar visited Chennai to assess the damages and coordinate with the state government for further assistance",
"title": "Response"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "Australian cricketer David Warner shared his concern for those affected by the floods and advised safety.",
"title": "Response"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "People from various localities in Chennai expressed their disappointment at the water stagnation, power outages and lack of support from the authorities. Actor Vishal expressed his disappointment with the flood situation in Chennai and criticized the Chennai Mayor and other authorities for not building adequate infrastructure to handle the floods. Ministers of the state government and elected representatives were heckled by the angry public during their visits at various places in Chennai. Prominent people including Ravichandran Ashwin, Jwala Gutta and Srinath Narayanan came out and shared their difficult experience.",
"title": "Criticism"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "On December 7, leader of the opposition K. Palaniswami demanded the chief minister of Tamil Nadu to release a white paper on the completed and ongoing stormwater drain work in Chennai. On December 10, he further criticized the state government for the lack of preparedness and demanded the flood relief to be increased to ₹12,000 (US$150). Tamil Nadu state president of BJP, Annamalai expressed his displeasure on the flooding and demanded the relief to be increased to ₹10,000 (US$130).",
"title": "Criticism"
}
] |
Severe Cyclonic Storm Michaung was a moderate tropical cyclone which formed in the Bay of Bengal during the 2023 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. Michuang originated as a low-pressure area in the Gulf of Thailand which crossed into the Bay of Bengal and became a deep depression on December 2. It developed into a cyclonic storm thereafter and was named Michaung. It was the ninth depression and the sixth named cyclonic storm of the season. The cyclone gradually moved north-west over the next few days towards the eastern coast of India. The storm peaked with sustained winds of 110 km/h (70 mph) causing heavy rainfall in north-eastern Tamil Nadu including Chennai and south-eastern Andhra Pradesh before making landfall near Bapatla in Andhra Pradesh on December 5.
|
2023-12-03T06:25:10Z
|
2023-12-26T13:10:50Z
|
[
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] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclone_Michaung
|
75,470,328 |
The Collapse of Nationalist China
|
The Collapse of Nationalist China: How Chiang Kai-shek Lost China's Civil War is a 2023 non-fiction book by Parks Coble, published by Cambridge University Press. It is about the decisions by Chiang Kai-shek (CKS) during the Chinese Civil War and how they contributed to Chiang's losses.
The author argues that the hyperinflation damaged the Chinese military.
Linh D. Vu of Arizona State University described the book as "a counter-narrative to" pro-CKS revisionist history.
The Hoover Institution's archival materials were used in making this book. Sources consulted include diaries written by Chiang and documents by H.H. Kung and T.V. Soong, as well as The Inflationary Spiral: The Experience in China: 1939–1950 by Chang Kia-ngau and China’s Wartime Finance and Inflation by Arthur N. Young, as well as The Chinese Press Review.
The book's scope is historical events from 1944 to 1948.
There are six chapters in total.
Chapter 1 discusses how the war augmented hyperinflation in Republican China.
Chapter 2 describes Kung and Soong, as well as their conflict with one another to gain supremacy in the ROC government.
Chapter 3 describes Chiang's decisions, which Coble refers to as "inept administration" which made "series of bad policy decisions", and it explains how the ROC further declined despite the surrender of Japan.
Chapter 4 describes how the ROC failed to build up the country's ability to manufacture goods.
Chapter 5 stated that several issues continued to fester in 1947 that appeared previously.
Chapter 6 describes the failure of the gold yuan.
Harold Tanner of the University of North Texas wrote that the reasoning that the military was harmed by hyperinflation "is convincing" and that the author's concept that betrayal came because of that same complex "is consistent with the evidence."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Collapse of Nationalist China: How Chiang Kai-shek Lost China's Civil War is a 2023 non-fiction book by Parks Coble, published by Cambridge University Press. It is about the decisions by Chiang Kai-shek (CKS) during the Chinese Civil War and how they contributed to Chiang's losses.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The author argues that the hyperinflation damaged the Chinese military.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Linh D. Vu of Arizona State University described the book as \"a counter-narrative to\" pro-CKS revisionist history.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "The Hoover Institution's archival materials were used in making this book. Sources consulted include diaries written by Chiang and documents by H.H. Kung and T.V. Soong, as well as The Inflationary Spiral: The Experience in China: 1939–1950 by Chang Kia-ngau and China’s Wartime Finance and Inflation by Arthur N. Young, as well as The Chinese Press Review.",
"title": "Background"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The book's scope is historical events from 1944 to 1948.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "There are six chapters in total.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Chapter 1 discusses how the war augmented hyperinflation in Republican China.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Chapter 2 describes Kung and Soong, as well as their conflict with one another to gain supremacy in the ROC government.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Chapter 3 describes Chiang's decisions, which Coble refers to as \"inept administration\" which made \"series of bad policy decisions\", and it explains how the ROC further declined despite the surrender of Japan.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Chapter 4 describes how the ROC failed to build up the country's ability to manufacture goods.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Chapter 5 stated that several issues continued to fester in 1947 that appeared previously.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "Chapter 6 describes the failure of the gold yuan.",
"title": "Contents"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Harold Tanner of the University of North Texas wrote that the reasoning that the military was harmed by hyperinflation \"is convincing\" and that the author's concept that betrayal came because of that same complex \"is consistent with the evidence.\"",
"title": "Reception"
}
] |
The Collapse of Nationalist China: How Chiang Kai-shek Lost China's Civil War is a 2023 non-fiction book by Parks Coble, published by Cambridge University Press. It is about the decisions by Chiang Kai-shek (CKS) during the Chinese Civil War and how they contributed to Chiang's losses. The author argues that the hyperinflation damaged the Chinese military. Linh D. Vu of Arizona State University described the book as "a counter-narrative to" pro-CKS revisionist history.
|
2023-12-03T06:25:51Z
|
2023-12-22T09:44:45Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Italictitle",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Collapse_of_Nationalist_China
|
75,470,375 |
Eureka Poker Tour
|
The Eureka Poker Tour (EKA) started in March 2011, is a major regional poker tour in the central and eastern Europe. The tour is sponsored by PokerStars.com, like its counterparts, the European Poker Tour (2004), Asia Pacific Poker Tour (2007), Latin American Poker Tour (2008) and North American Poker Tour (2010).
After a run across Central and Eastern Europe for Season 1, PokerStars.com launched the Season 2 of the Poker Tour adding a venue in Latvia for this season.
From 2013 to 2016, PokerStars.com organized more than 15 stops of EKA events across central and eastern Europe.
In 2017, the EKA series was discontinued and rebranded as the PokerStars Festival. In 2022, pokerstars.com announced the return of regional tours as EKA (Eureka Poker Tour), UKIPT (UK and Ireland Poker Tour), FPS (France Poker Series) and ESPT (Estrellas Poker Tour).
How it works? Player of the Year: the Silver tier will award points for all events with a buy-in of $600 and lower; and the Gold tier will count all other events across the EUREKA Festivals, no matter the buy-in.
How it works? Player of the Year: the Silver tier will award points for all events with a buy-in of $600 and lower; and the Gold tier will count all other events across the EUREKA Festivals, no matter the buy-in.
Up to Season 2023 EKA/EPTPrague / In case of a tie, it will be sorted alphabetically
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Eureka Poker Tour (EKA) started in March 2011, is a major regional poker tour in the central and eastern Europe. The tour is sponsored by PokerStars.com, like its counterparts, the European Poker Tour (2004), Asia Pacific Poker Tour (2007), Latin American Poker Tour (2008) and North American Poker Tour (2010).",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "After a run across Central and Eastern Europe for Season 1, PokerStars.com launched the Season 2 of the Poker Tour adding a venue in Latvia for this season.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "From 2013 to 2016, PokerStars.com organized more than 15 stops of EKA events across central and eastern Europe.",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2017, the EKA series was discontinued and rebranded as the PokerStars Festival. In 2022, pokerstars.com announced the return of regional tours as EKA (Eureka Poker Tour), UKIPT (UK and Ireland Poker Tour), FPS (France Poker Series) and ESPT (Estrellas Poker Tour).",
"title": "History"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "How it works? Player of the Year: the Silver tier will award points for all events with a buy-in of $600 and lower; and the Gold tier will count all other events across the EUREKA Festivals, no matter the buy-in.",
"title": "Season 5"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "How it works? Player of the Year: the Silver tier will award points for all events with a buy-in of $600 and lower; and the Gold tier will count all other events across the EUREKA Festivals, no matter the buy-in.",
"title": "Season 6"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Up to Season 2023 EKA/EPTPrague / In case of a tie, it will be sorted alphabetically",
"title": "Winners by country"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "",
"title": "References"
}
] |
The Eureka Poker Tour (EKA) started in March 2011, is a major regional poker tour in the central and eastern Europe. The tour is sponsored by PokerStars.com, like its counterparts, the European Poker Tour (2004), Asia Pacific Poker Tour (2007), Latin American Poker Tour (2008) and North American Poker Tour (2010).
|
2023-12-03T06:31:27Z
|
2023-12-14T19:50:21Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Poker-stub",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox sports league",
"Template:Flagicon",
"Template:Center",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eureka_Poker_Tour
|
75,470,385 |
The Many Faces of Jesus
|
The Many Faces of Jesus, alternately The Sex Life of Jesus or The Love Affairs of Jesus, is a screenplay and abandoned film by Danish writer and director Jens Jørgen Thorsen, which pornographically depicts Jesus engaged in homosexual and heterosexual sex acts, as well as drunkenness and robbery. After Thorsen announced his plans for a film in 1973, having secured funding from the government-run Danish Film Institute, the depiction of Jesus' sexuality immediately created controversy in Denmark and abroad: Thousands of Christians protested in the street, two parties ran on a platform against the film in the 1973 Danish general election, and opponents of the film firebombed the Danish ambassador's residence in Rome shortly after Pope Paul VI condemned it. Thorsen failed to secure funding in at least three countries, was blocked from producing the film in at least two, and was personally banned from entering the United Kingdom—where Queen Elizabeth II made a rare comment on a public matter, calling the planned film "obnoxious". Even after Thorsen abandoned his plans in 1978, Canada's Revenue Minister banned import of the film despite acknowledging uncertainty as to whether it existed.
A Danish translation of the screenplay was published as a book in Denmark in 1975; Grove Press in the United States declined to publish an English version in subsequent years. Thorsen won a partial legal victory in 1989, when a Danish court overturned the government's determination that The Many Faces of Jesus violated the moral rights of the authors of the canonical gospels, but declined to regrant the funding. He subsequently made a non-pornographic film about Jesus, The Return [da], which received lackluster reviews. In the United States, a long-running hoax emerged falsely claiming that a movie similar to The Many Faces was in production, which has endured as a chain letter for 40 years.
After Denmark legalized pornography in 1969, director Jens Jørgen Thorsen became involved in the production of erotic films, including Quiet Days in Clichy, then post-war Denmark's most successful film. Thorsen, a provocateur, used pornography to, in the words of author Jack Stevenson, "provoke the authorities and unsettle the bourgeoisie" in a country that used censorship to control the population. Thorsen was fascinated with both Jesus and sex, Creating a pornographic film about Jesus became his greatest goal. He explained:
I believe the best way to give the Pope a forceful kick in the ass is to turn up the heat on Jesus. ... In the film when Jesus rises up out of the grave he'll ball a farmer girl. A nice blonde girl. That by itself signifies in my opinion what Jesus ought to stand for, instead of standing for the repression of life and eroticism.
In 1973, Thorsen announced plans to produce The Many Faces of Jesus, a film depicting Jesus as a drunk, a bank robber, and a lover of both John the Baptist and Mary Magdalene. In one scene, Jesus was to strip in the presence of a group of prostitutes and chant "Prophet save us, God Hare Krishna, Hallelujah, Red Front, Heil Hitler". Thorsen secured a location for shooting in France. Journalist Flemming Behrendt [da] and director Gert Fredholm both had authority to approve grants of the government-run Danish Film Institute (DFI). Behrendt declined to fund Thorsen's plans, but Fredholm authorized a grant of 600,000 kr., at the same time acknowledging that the film was poised to be "blasphemous, pornographic, sadistic, obscene, and poetic".
The decision quickly led to both domestic and international controversy, exacerbated by media coverage that included Thorsen astride a rocket, which he said Jesus' penis would match in size in the film. Five thousand Christians protested in the street in Denmark. The German Catholic newspaper Neue Bildpost [de] called upon Queen Margrethe II to intervene; she never did. Usage of Denmark's blasphemy law was discussed but never invoked. The film became a major campaign issue in the 1973 Danish general election, contributing to the Christian People's Party and Progressive Party's entrance to power.
Internationally, Pope Paul VI condemned the film on 26 August, to which Thorsen responded with an offer to play Judas. The Danish ambassador's residence in Rome was attacked with Molotov cocktails on 28 August, while the embassy in Madrid received bomb threats around the same time. Culture Minister Niels Matthiasen [da] criticized the church as "reactionary", a characterization which was in turn criticized by Minister for Ecclesiastical Affairs Dorte Bennedsen. Also on 28 August, André Astoux [fr], director of the French Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée, banned the film from being produced in the country, where it was on the eve of being filmed in Apt. Astoux cited a desire to not blaspheme against the world's one billion Christians. The leftist newspaper L'Humanité condemned the decision as setting a "grave precedent" (précédent grave) for suppressing freedom of expression at the whims of pressure groups. Thorsen, no longer able to provide a shooting schedule, lost his grant.
Thorsen's first attempt at producing the film led to calls to reform the DFI grant process. Under Poul Hartling's Venstre government, Justice Minister Nathalie Lind vowed to block any further efforts at producing the film in the absence of such a reform. In 1975, with the Social Democrats back in power, Thorsen again applied for funding, having secured a new location in Turkey. Director Stig Björkman, a DFI consultant, recommended approving a grant of 900,000 kr., 30% of the film's budget. According to DFI member Sven Grønlykke, Matthiasen implied potential political consequences to granting the request. Member Erik Thygesen [da] said that Matthiasen feared a grant of funding could lead to the Anker Jørgensen government's removal from power. The DFI nonetheless approved a grant of 900,000 kr., and then resigned en masse. In 1976, however, the Danish Ministry of Culture ruled the project to be against the moral rights of the apostles Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, overruling the DFI. Later that year, the Swedish Film Institute refused to fund the film. Finnish members of Parliament moved to prevent production in May 1976; a 1977 National Catholic News Service item mentions in passing an unsuccessful effort at production there.
Thorsen did publish a Danish translation of his screenplay, which at that point had the working title The Love Affairs of Jesus Christ, as a book in Denmark in 1975—Thorsens Jesusfilm ('Thorsen's Jesus film'). An unrelated hardcore pornographic film, Jesus Is in the House, was produced in Denmark in 1975 to capitalize on the controversy about The Many Faces of Jesus. It depicts Jesus amidst groups of people having sex, but does not show him engaging in it.
In 1976, Thorsen initiated plans to produce the film in the United Kingdom. Conservative activist Mary Whitehouse and the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (NVALA) strongly objected both to the notion of the film and to Thorsen's presence in the country. Michael Ramsey (the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury) and Basil Hume (the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster) opposed the film, and Hume called for Equity actors to refuse to participate in the production, a request the union refused. Prime Minister James Callaghan said that Thorsen would be "a most unwelcome and undesirable visitor to these shores"; NVALA members wrote letters to Queen Elizabeth II, who responded that the planned film was "obnoxious", an unusual public comment. In response, Thorsen criticized Elizabeth for "talk[ing] about my future famous film without knowing anything at all about it".
Brits were overwhelmingly opposed to Thorsen. Ramsey, Callaghan, and The Times raised the prospect of action under the United Kingdom's blasphemy laws. None was brought, but it did influence Whitehouse's subsequent blasphemy prosecution of Gay News over a poem depicting Jesus as gay. The NVALA commissioned an English translation of the screenplay and sent it to William Whitelaw, the shadow home secretary, and urged the Home Office to deny Thorsen entry. Member of Parliament Ivan Lawrence sought to have the film banned outright; Home Secretary Merlyn Rees said that this was not within the office's power, but expressed openness to denying Thorsen entry. Thorsen countered that he had a right to enter the United Kingdom as a citizen of a European Economic Community (EEC) country, a point which was debated in legal circles for several months.
On 9 February 1977, Thorsen arrived at Heathrow Airport to promote a different film, Promise of 13. Upon learning that Thorsen was carrying a copy of the Many Faces of Jesus screenplay, the immigration officer denied him entry. Rees explained, to cheers in Parliament, that the action was "on the grounds that his exclusion was conducive to the public good", an exception to EEC freedom of movement rules. Thorsen, before departing the country, told the press that the queen's commentary on the matter was not "bright", but that "then again, it was the first time she had used her brains, so perhaps it was a good thing". Whitehouse's biographers Michael Tracey and David Morrison describe the affair as "one of the few occasions for a very long time when there had been a massive and public consensus on a moral issue".
Overlapping with the British controversy, Thorsen sought to produce the film in Israel. The Israeli Ministry of Interior said in January 1977 that it would act "to prevent offense to the sensitivities of the believer any faith". In response to a query by Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum on behalf of Mother Basilea Schlink, the ministry wrote that Thorsen had "not applied to enter Israel for the purposes of filming", but that if he did so "he would be denied entry" because of the offense the film might cause.
Thorsen next attempted to produce the film in the United States, which has relatively strong freedom of speech and of the press. In August 1977, U.S. media reported that David Grant, a British producer of pornographic films, had facilitated a deal to publish the screenplay as a book in the United States, with a US$600,000 advance going to Thorsen. By September, Grant was reporting that he had raised most of a $1.2 million budget to shoot the film in the United States. As in other countries, the plans sparked controversy, including inspiring a song, "Hey Jesus, Don't You Worry" by Ed Boucher of Maine. Outrage among Baptists, partly due to an incorrect statement by a prominent pastor that the film was under production in the United States, prompted letters to Grove Press, to which Thorsen had submitted the book version of the screenplay, and to Senator Mark Hatfield, requesting legislation to censor the book. Hatfield, also a Baptist, responded that neither Congress nor president Jimmy Carter had the power to prevent the film's production.
In February 1978, the Baptist Press reported that Thorsen had failed to find a producer, but remained in discussions with Grove Press. Several weeks later, they reported that that plan had fallen through as well, with Grove's Barney Rosset rejecting the work on "aesthetic grounds". However, in a statement to The Tennessean in the intervening period, Rosset's wife said that Grove had rejected the book over a year prior and "never had any intention of publishing it". An aide to Hatfield countered that he had spoken to a Grove employee during that year and had been told the book remained under consideration. Hatfield's office had thus directed concerned letter-writers to Grove, which was in turn innundated with letters requesting that they not publish the book. Rosset's wife stressed that the decision not to publish predated the letter-writing campaign.
Similar letter-writing campaigns took place to senior government officials in Canada. Two months after Thorsen abandoned his plans to shoot the film, the Canadian government banned importation of a film "variously titled as The Many Faces of Jesus or The Three Faces of Jesus" under the Customs Act, which permits the seizure and destruction of works deemed immoral. The Canadian Press wrote that the government was "not sure of the origin or name of the movie or whether it actually exists", nor "whether anyone actually plans to bring it into Canada, [with] no certainty of its country of origin and kn[owing] of no Canadian who has seen it". In response to a statement by Senator Jack Marshall that the film had been banned in many countries, Revenue Minister Joseph-Philippe Guay later said that, despite having ordered the ban, he did "not believe that the film ha[d] been made at all", although he was aware of a previous attempt to do so.
Even after Thorsen's U.S. plans fell through, conservative Christian outcry over the film continued, leading to a decades-long hoax. In 1977, Modern People News of Illinois ran an article on the planned film and polled its readers on whether it should be filmed in the United States. A few months later they announced the results of the poll—99% opposed—and noted that Thorsen had desisted from the attempt. (They would later argue that, by forwarding objections to the film's would-be producers, they played a role in its demise.) Beginning in 1979, however, Modern People Productions (the magazine's publisher) began to receive thousands of letters protesting the film, based on a misunderstanding that Modern People Productions was itself to produce the film. This was the result of a widely forwarded chain letter, which described The Many Faces of Jesus in broad terms without naming it or Thorsen.
Over the decades the hoax has morphed to incorporate Corpus Christi, a 1997 play that depicts Jesus as gay (although not in sexualized terms). As of 2018, regulators around the world still receive complaints about the non-existent film.
Thorsen went through various rounds of litigation with the DFI and the Ministry of Culture over the course of 11 years, centering on the decision that the screenplay violated the apostles' moral rights. A number of Danish cultural figures testified on Thorsen's behalf, including a young Lars von Trier, who was a fan of Quiet Days in Clichy.
At trial in 1989, Thorsen rebutted the claim of moral rights, arguing that the gospels were not a single work because they had too many authors and that his screenplay was not an adaptation of the Bible. The state argued that the work was blasphemous and pornographic and that the DFI members had approved it against their chairman's wishes to get a legal position, in some cases without having read the screenplay. On 10 October 1989, after a five-week trial, the court ruled that Thorsen had not violated the apostles' moral rights, but found the Ministry of Culture not liable and refused to reinstate the grant. Thorsen walked out of the courtroom midway through the verdict being read, protesting it as an act of "cultural pick-pocketing". The Christian People's Party criticized the decision from the opposite direction.
While Thorsen did not recoup the rescinded grant money, he did apply under a revised system for a grant for a new Jesus film, this one not containing pornographic content. He received 3 million kr. The resulting film, titled The Return [da] (Danish: Jesus vender tilbage; alternately The Return of Jesus Christ), was released on 13 March 1992. It depicts Jesus in a romantic relationship with a woman, but was described by Maren Pust in Information as "compared to the rumors ... exceedingly chaste". Pust compared it to a 1960s comedy, noting a scene in which the pope dances to Tom Lehrer's "The Vatican Rag". Critic Morten Piil wrote that "This Thorsen provocation, especially the erotic component, is in 1992 hopelessly past its sell-by date, and what remains is a clumsy, slow-moving allegory full of old effects and shabby preachments". Jack Stevenson summarizes the reaction thusly:
Thorsen had become a bit of an artifact. His vision of sex as an assault on bourgeoisie conformity was so very '60s and clearly out of synch with the early '90s when it was well known that (unprotected) sex could just as easily kill you as liberate you Thorsen was very much a creature of his times, for better or for worse, and the movie evinced that in every frame.
Thorsen died eight years later.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The Many Faces of Jesus, alternately The Sex Life of Jesus or The Love Affairs of Jesus, is a screenplay and abandoned film by Danish writer and director Jens Jørgen Thorsen, which pornographically depicts Jesus engaged in homosexual and heterosexual sex acts, as well as drunkenness and robbery. After Thorsen announced his plans for a film in 1973, having secured funding from the government-run Danish Film Institute, the depiction of Jesus' sexuality immediately created controversy in Denmark and abroad: Thousands of Christians protested in the street, two parties ran on a platform against the film in the 1973 Danish general election, and opponents of the film firebombed the Danish ambassador's residence in Rome shortly after Pope Paul VI condemned it. Thorsen failed to secure funding in at least three countries, was blocked from producing the film in at least two, and was personally banned from entering the United Kingdom—where Queen Elizabeth II made a rare comment on a public matter, calling the planned film \"obnoxious\". Even after Thorsen abandoned his plans in 1978, Canada's Revenue Minister banned import of the film despite acknowledging uncertainty as to whether it existed.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "A Danish translation of the screenplay was published as a book in Denmark in 1975; Grove Press in the United States declined to publish an English version in subsequent years. Thorsen won a partial legal victory in 1989, when a Danish court overturned the government's determination that The Many Faces of Jesus violated the moral rights of the authors of the canonical gospels, but declined to regrant the funding. He subsequently made a non-pornographic film about Jesus, The Return [da], which received lackluster reviews. In the United States, a long-running hoax emerged falsely claiming that a movie similar to The Many Faces was in production, which has endured as a chain letter for 40 years.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "After Denmark legalized pornography in 1969, director Jens Jørgen Thorsen became involved in the production of erotic films, including Quiet Days in Clichy, then post-war Denmark's most successful film. Thorsen, a provocateur, used pornography to, in the words of author Jack Stevenson, \"provoke the authorities and unsettle the bourgeoisie\" in a country that used censorship to control the population. Thorsen was fascinated with both Jesus and sex, Creating a pornographic film about Jesus became his greatest goal. He explained:",
"title": "1973: Scandal in Denmark; condemnation by pope; ban in France"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "I believe the best way to give the Pope a forceful kick in the ass is to turn up the heat on Jesus. ... In the film when Jesus rises up out of the grave he'll ball a farmer girl. A nice blonde girl. That by itself signifies in my opinion what Jesus ought to stand for, instead of standing for the repression of life and eroticism.",
"title": "1973: Scandal in Denmark; condemnation by pope; ban in France"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 1973, Thorsen announced plans to produce The Many Faces of Jesus, a film depicting Jesus as a drunk, a bank robber, and a lover of both John the Baptist and Mary Magdalene. In one scene, Jesus was to strip in the presence of a group of prostitutes and chant \"Prophet save us, God Hare Krishna, Hallelujah, Red Front, Heil Hitler\". Thorsen secured a location for shooting in France. Journalist Flemming Behrendt [da] and director Gert Fredholm both had authority to approve grants of the government-run Danish Film Institute (DFI). Behrendt declined to fund Thorsen's plans, but Fredholm authorized a grant of 600,000 kr., at the same time acknowledging that the film was poised to be \"blasphemous, pornographic, sadistic, obscene, and poetic\".",
"title": "1973: Scandal in Denmark; condemnation by pope; ban in France"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "The decision quickly led to both domestic and international controversy, exacerbated by media coverage that included Thorsen astride a rocket, which he said Jesus' penis would match in size in the film. Five thousand Christians protested in the street in Denmark. The German Catholic newspaper Neue Bildpost [de] called upon Queen Margrethe II to intervene; she never did. Usage of Denmark's blasphemy law was discussed but never invoked. The film became a major campaign issue in the 1973 Danish general election, contributing to the Christian People's Party and Progressive Party's entrance to power.",
"title": "1973: Scandal in Denmark; condemnation by pope; ban in France"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "Internationally, Pope Paul VI condemned the film on 26 August, to which Thorsen responded with an offer to play Judas. The Danish ambassador's residence in Rome was attacked with Molotov cocktails on 28 August, while the embassy in Madrid received bomb threats around the same time. Culture Minister Niels Matthiasen [da] criticized the church as \"reactionary\", a characterization which was in turn criticized by Minister for Ecclesiastical Affairs Dorte Bennedsen. Also on 28 August, André Astoux [fr], director of the French Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée, banned the film from being produced in the country, where it was on the eve of being filmed in Apt. Astoux cited a desire to not blaspheme against the world's one billion Christians. The leftist newspaper L'Humanité condemned the decision as setting a \"grave precedent\" (précédent grave) for suppressing freedom of expression at the whims of pressure groups. Thorsen, no longer able to provide a shooting schedule, lost his grant.",
"title": "1973: Scandal in Denmark; condemnation by pope; ban in France"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Thorsen's first attempt at producing the film led to calls to reform the DFI grant process. Under Poul Hartling's Venstre government, Justice Minister Nathalie Lind vowed to block any further efforts at producing the film in the absence of such a reform. In 1975, with the Social Democrats back in power, Thorsen again applied for funding, having secured a new location in Turkey. Director Stig Björkman, a DFI consultant, recommended approving a grant of 900,000 kr., 30% of the film's budget. According to DFI member Sven Grønlykke, Matthiasen implied potential political consequences to granting the request. Member Erik Thygesen [da] said that Matthiasen feared a grant of funding could lead to the Anker Jørgensen government's removal from power. The DFI nonetheless approved a grant of 900,000 kr., and then resigned en masse. In 1976, however, the Danish Ministry of Culture ruled the project to be against the moral rights of the apostles Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, overruling the DFI. Later that year, the Swedish Film Institute refused to fund the film. Finnish members of Parliament moved to prevent production in May 1976; a 1977 National Catholic News Service item mentions in passing an unsuccessful effort at production there.",
"title": "1975: Further funding issues in Denmark and Sweden"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "Thorsen did publish a Danish translation of his screenplay, which at that point had the working title The Love Affairs of Jesus Christ, as a book in Denmark in 1975—Thorsens Jesusfilm ('Thorsen's Jesus film'). An unrelated hardcore pornographic film, Jesus Is in the House, was produced in Denmark in 1975 to capitalize on the controversy about The Many Faces of Jesus. It depicts Jesus amidst groups of people having sex, but does not show him engaging in it.",
"title": "1975: Further funding issues in Denmark and Sweden"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "In 1976, Thorsen initiated plans to produce the film in the United Kingdom. Conservative activist Mary Whitehouse and the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (NVALA) strongly objected both to the notion of the film and to Thorsen's presence in the country. Michael Ramsey (the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury) and Basil Hume (the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster) opposed the film, and Hume called for Equity actors to refuse to participate in the production, a request the union refused. Prime Minister James Callaghan said that Thorsen would be \"a most unwelcome and undesirable visitor to these shores\"; NVALA members wrote letters to Queen Elizabeth II, who responded that the planned film was \"obnoxious\", an unusual public comment. In response, Thorsen criticized Elizabeth for \"talk[ing] about my future famous film without knowing anything at all about it\".",
"title": "1976–1977: Condemnation by Queen Elizabeth; denial of entry to UK; ban in Israel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "Brits were overwhelmingly opposed to Thorsen. Ramsey, Callaghan, and The Times raised the prospect of action under the United Kingdom's blasphemy laws. None was brought, but it did influence Whitehouse's subsequent blasphemy prosecution of Gay News over a poem depicting Jesus as gay. The NVALA commissioned an English translation of the screenplay and sent it to William Whitelaw, the shadow home secretary, and urged the Home Office to deny Thorsen entry. Member of Parliament Ivan Lawrence sought to have the film banned outright; Home Secretary Merlyn Rees said that this was not within the office's power, but expressed openness to denying Thorsen entry. Thorsen countered that he had a right to enter the United Kingdom as a citizen of a European Economic Community (EEC) country, a point which was debated in legal circles for several months.",
"title": "1976–1977: Condemnation by Queen Elizabeth; denial of entry to UK; ban in Israel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "On 9 February 1977, Thorsen arrived at Heathrow Airport to promote a different film, Promise of 13. Upon learning that Thorsen was carrying a copy of the Many Faces of Jesus screenplay, the immigration officer denied him entry. Rees explained, to cheers in Parliament, that the action was \"on the grounds that his exclusion was conducive to the public good\", an exception to EEC freedom of movement rules. Thorsen, before departing the country, told the press that the queen's commentary on the matter was not \"bright\", but that \"then again, it was the first time she had used her brains, so perhaps it was a good thing\". Whitehouse's biographers Michael Tracey and David Morrison describe the affair as \"one of the few occasions for a very long time when there had been a massive and public consensus on a moral issue\".",
"title": "1976–1977: Condemnation by Queen Elizabeth; denial of entry to UK; ban in Israel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Overlapping with the British controversy, Thorsen sought to produce the film in Israel. The Israeli Ministry of Interior said in January 1977 that it would act \"to prevent offense to the sensitivities of the believer any faith\". In response to a query by Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum on behalf of Mother Basilea Schlink, the ministry wrote that Thorsen had \"not applied to enter Israel for the purposes of filming\", but that if he did so \"he would be denied entry\" because of the offense the film might cause.",
"title": "1976–1977: Condemnation by Queen Elizabeth; denial of entry to UK; ban in Israel"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 13,
"text": "Thorsen next attempted to produce the film in the United States, which has relatively strong freedom of speech and of the press. In August 1977, U.S. media reported that David Grant, a British producer of pornographic films, had facilitated a deal to publish the screenplay as a book in the United States, with a US$600,000 advance going to Thorsen. By September, Grant was reporting that he had raised most of a $1.2 million budget to shoot the film in the United States. As in other countries, the plans sparked controversy, including inspiring a song, \"Hey Jesus, Don't You Worry\" by Ed Boucher of Maine. Outrage among Baptists, partly due to an incorrect statement by a prominent pastor that the film was under production in the United States, prompted letters to Grove Press, to which Thorsen had submitted the book version of the screenplay, and to Senator Mark Hatfield, requesting legislation to censor the book. Hatfield, also a Baptist, responded that neither Congress nor president Jimmy Carter had the power to prevent the film's production.",
"title": "1977–1978: Funding issues in U.S.; import ban in Canada"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 14,
"text": "In February 1978, the Baptist Press reported that Thorsen had failed to find a producer, but remained in discussions with Grove Press. Several weeks later, they reported that that plan had fallen through as well, with Grove's Barney Rosset rejecting the work on \"aesthetic grounds\". However, in a statement to The Tennessean in the intervening period, Rosset's wife said that Grove had rejected the book over a year prior and \"never had any intention of publishing it\". An aide to Hatfield countered that he had spoken to a Grove employee during that year and had been told the book remained under consideration. Hatfield's office had thus directed concerned letter-writers to Grove, which was in turn innundated with letters requesting that they not publish the book. Rosset's wife stressed that the decision not to publish predated the letter-writing campaign.",
"title": "1977–1978: Funding issues in U.S.; import ban in Canada"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 15,
"text": "Similar letter-writing campaigns took place to senior government officials in Canada. Two months after Thorsen abandoned his plans to shoot the film, the Canadian government banned importation of a film \"variously titled as The Many Faces of Jesus or The Three Faces of Jesus\" under the Customs Act, which permits the seizure and destruction of works deemed immoral. The Canadian Press wrote that the government was \"not sure of the origin or name of the movie or whether it actually exists\", nor \"whether anyone actually plans to bring it into Canada, [with] no certainty of its country of origin and kn[owing] of no Canadian who has seen it\". In response to a statement by Senator Jack Marshall that the film had been banned in many countries, Revenue Minister Joseph-Philippe Guay later said that, despite having ordered the ban, he did \"not believe that the film ha[d] been made at all\", although he was aware of a previous attempt to do so.",
"title": "1977–1978: Funding issues in U.S.; import ban in Canada"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 16,
"text": "Even after Thorsen's U.S. plans fell through, conservative Christian outcry over the film continued, leading to a decades-long hoax. In 1977, Modern People News of Illinois ran an article on the planned film and polled its readers on whether it should be filmed in the United States. A few months later they announced the results of the poll—99% opposed—and noted that Thorsen had desisted from the attempt. (They would later argue that, by forwarding objections to the film's would-be producers, they played a role in its demise.) Beginning in 1979, however, Modern People Productions (the magazine's publisher) began to receive thousands of letters protesting the film, based on a misunderstanding that Modern People Productions was itself to produce the film. This was the result of a widely forwarded chain letter, which described The Many Faces of Jesus in broad terms without naming it or Thorsen.",
"title": "1977–1978: Funding issues in U.S.; import ban in Canada"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 17,
"text": "Over the decades the hoax has morphed to incorporate Corpus Christi, a 1997 play that depicts Jesus as gay (although not in sexualized terms). As of 2018, regulators around the world still receive complaints about the non-existent film.",
"title": "1977–1978: Funding issues in U.S.; import ban in Canada"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 18,
"text": "Thorsen went through various rounds of litigation with the DFI and the Ministry of Culture over the course of 11 years, centering on the decision that the screenplay violated the apostles' moral rights. A number of Danish cultural figures testified on Thorsen's behalf, including a young Lars von Trier, who was a fan of Quiet Days in Clichy.",
"title": "1978–1992: Danish lawsuit and The Return "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 19,
"text": "At trial in 1989, Thorsen rebutted the claim of moral rights, arguing that the gospels were not a single work because they had too many authors and that his screenplay was not an adaptation of the Bible. The state argued that the work was blasphemous and pornographic and that the DFI members had approved it against their chairman's wishes to get a legal position, in some cases without having read the screenplay. On 10 October 1989, after a five-week trial, the court ruled that Thorsen had not violated the apostles' moral rights, but found the Ministry of Culture not liable and refused to reinstate the grant. Thorsen walked out of the courtroom midway through the verdict being read, protesting it as an act of \"cultural pick-pocketing\". The Christian People's Party criticized the decision from the opposite direction.",
"title": "1978–1992: Danish lawsuit and The Return "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 20,
"text": "While Thorsen did not recoup the rescinded grant money, he did apply under a revised system for a grant for a new Jesus film, this one not containing pornographic content. He received 3 million kr. The resulting film, titled The Return [da] (Danish: Jesus vender tilbage; alternately The Return of Jesus Christ), was released on 13 March 1992. It depicts Jesus in a romantic relationship with a woman, but was described by Maren Pust in Information as \"compared to the rumors ... exceedingly chaste\". Pust compared it to a 1960s comedy, noting a scene in which the pope dances to Tom Lehrer's \"The Vatican Rag\". Critic Morten Piil wrote that \"This Thorsen provocation, especially the erotic component, is in 1992 hopelessly past its sell-by date, and what remains is a clumsy, slow-moving allegory full of old effects and shabby preachments\". Jack Stevenson summarizes the reaction thusly:",
"title": "1978–1992: Danish lawsuit and The Return "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 21,
"text": "Thorsen had become a bit of an artifact. His vision of sex as an assault on bourgeoisie conformity was so very '60s and clearly out of synch with the early '90s when it was well known that (unprotected) sex could just as easily kill you as liberate you Thorsen was very much a creature of his times, for better or for worse, and the movie evinced that in every frame.",
"title": "1978–1992: Danish lawsuit and The Return "
},
{
"paragraph_id": 22,
"text": "Thorsen died eight years later.",
"title": "1978–1992: Danish lawsuit and The Return "
}
] |
The Many Faces of Jesus, alternately The Sex Life of Jesus or The Love Affairs of Jesus, is a screenplay and abandoned film by Danish writer and director Jens Jørgen Thorsen, which pornographically depicts Jesus engaged in homosexual and heterosexual sex acts, as well as drunkenness and robbery. After Thorsen announced his plans for a film in 1973, having secured funding from the government-run Danish Film Institute, the depiction of Jesus' sexuality immediately created controversy in Denmark and abroad: Thousands of Christians protested in the street, two parties ran on a platform against the film in the 1973 Danish general election, and opponents of the film firebombed the Danish ambassador's residence in Rome shortly after Pope Paul VI condemned it. Thorsen failed to secure funding in at least three countries, was blocked from producing the film in at least two, and was personally banned from entering the United Kingdom—where Queen Elizabeth II made a rare comment on a public matter, calling the planned film "obnoxious". Even after Thorsen abandoned his plans in 1978, Canada's Revenue Minister banned import of the film despite acknowledging uncertainty as to whether it existed. A Danish translation of the screenplay was published as a book in Denmark in 1975; Grove Press in the United States declined to publish an English version in subsequent years. Thorsen won a partial legal victory in 1989, when a Danish court overturned the government's determination that The Many Faces of Jesus violated the moral rights of the authors of the canonical gospels, but declined to regrant the funding. He subsequently made a non-pornographic film about Jesus, The Return , which received lackluster reviews. In the United States, a long-running hoax emerged falsely claiming that a movie similar to The Many Faces was in production, which has endured as a chain letter for 40 years.
|
2023-12-03T06:32:48Z
|
2023-12-27T00:41:44Z
|
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Many_Faces_of_Jesus
|
75,470,425 |
Adipose tissue expandability hypothesis
|
The adipose tissue expandability hypothesis posits that metabolic dysregulation that appears to be caused by excess weight, such as type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, are triggered when an individual's capacity for storing excess calories in the subcutaneous adipose tissue is exceeded. Each individual's capacity to store excess energy varies, so the threshold at which an individual begins to experience metabolic disease is not well captured by methods such as body mass index or body fat percentage. If a person has the ability to store a large amount of body fat without experiencing metabolic disturbance, this is known as metabolically healthy obesity.
Although it was hypothesized that having a larger number of smaller adipocytes was correlated with the ability to store more fat, some evidence suggests the opposite—those with smaller adipocytes having a worse metabolic profile. The core factor, the inability to store excess fat in these cells, remains.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The adipose tissue expandability hypothesis posits that metabolic dysregulation that appears to be caused by excess weight, such as type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, are triggered when an individual's capacity for storing excess calories in the subcutaneous adipose tissue is exceeded. Each individual's capacity to store excess energy varies, so the threshold at which an individual begins to experience metabolic disease is not well captured by methods such as body mass index or body fat percentage. If a person has the ability to store a large amount of body fat without experiencing metabolic disturbance, this is known as metabolically healthy obesity.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Although it was hypothesized that having a larger number of smaller adipocytes was correlated with the ability to store more fat, some evidence suggests the opposite—those with smaller adipocytes having a worse metabolic profile. The core factor, the inability to store excess fat in these cells, remains.",
"title": ""
}
] |
The adipose tissue expandability hypothesis posits that metabolic dysregulation that appears to be caused by excess weight, such as type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, are triggered when an individual's capacity for storing excess calories in the subcutaneous adipose tissue is exceeded. Each individual's capacity to store excess energy varies, so the threshold at which an individual begins to experience metabolic disease is not well captured by methods such as body mass index or body fat percentage. If a person has the ability to store a large amount of body fat without experiencing metabolic disturbance, this is known as metabolically healthy obesity. Although it was hypothesized that having a larger number of smaller adipocytes was correlated with the ability to store more fat, some evidence suggests the opposite—those with smaller adipocytes having a worse metabolic profile. The core factor, the inability to store excess fat in these cells, remains.
|
2023-12-03T06:35:39Z
|
2023-12-03T07:31:49Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adipose_tissue_expandability_hypothesis
|
75,470,426 |
Dieter W. Bergman
|
Dieter W. Bergman (1932–2014) was an American researcher.
Bergman was born in 1932. His family emigrated to the United States when he was at a young age.
Bergman began his career in 1956 as a designer at Philco Ford in Philadelphia. His work in electronic circuit design led him to participate in meetings of the Institute of Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits (IPC) in the 1960s.
In 1974, Bergman was appointed as the first technical director of IPC by executive director Ray Pritchard. During his tenure, IPC developed into an influential organization in the realm of technical standards for electronic circuits. Bergman's work included co-authoring standards related to electronic circuit board design, land patterns, and dimensioning. He also co-founded the IPC Designers Council and contributed to IPC's global standards development.
Bergman's contributions to the field were recognized with the IPC President's Award in 1968, and he was inducted into the IPC Hall of Fame in 1985. In 2012, the PCB Design Hall of Fame was named after him by PCD&F.
Dieter Bergman IPC Fellowship Award at IPC is named after him.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Dieter W. Bergman (1932–2014) was an American researcher.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Bergman was born in 1932. His family emigrated to the United States when he was at a young age.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Bergman began his career in 1956 as a designer at Philco Ford in Philadelphia. His work in electronic circuit design led him to participate in meetings of the Institute of Interconnecting and Packaging Electronic Circuits (IPC) in the 1960s.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 1974, Bergman was appointed as the first technical director of IPC by executive director Ray Pritchard. During his tenure, IPC developed into an influential organization in the realm of technical standards for electronic circuits. Bergman's work included co-authoring standards related to electronic circuit board design, land patterns, and dimensioning. He also co-founded the IPC Designers Council and contributed to IPC's global standards development.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "Bergman's contributions to the field were recognized with the IPC President's Award in 1968, and he was inducted into the IPC Hall of Fame in 1985. In 2012, the PCB Design Hall of Fame was named after him by PCD&F.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Dieter Bergman IPC Fellowship Award at IPC is named after him.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Dieter W. Bergman (1932–2014) was an American researcher.
|
2023-12-03T06:36:08Z
|
2023-12-03T15:23:06Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dieter_W._Bergman
|
75,470,474 |
2004 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team
|
The 2004 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by second-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 7–4. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2004 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by second-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 7–4. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Schedule"
}
] |
The 2004 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by second-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 7–4. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.
|
2023-12-03T06:43:31Z
|
2023-12-12T12:59:31Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox college sports team season",
"Template:2004 NCAA Division I-AA independents football standings",
"Template:CFB schedule",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Southeastern Louisiana Lions football navbox",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Southeastern_Louisiana_Lions_football_team
|
75,470,488 |
2023 Northwestern Red Raiders football team
|
The 2023 Northwestern Red Raiders football team is an American football team that represented Northwestern College of Orange City, Iowa, as a member of the Great Plains Athletic Conference (GPAC) during the 2023 NAIA football season. In their eighth year under head coach Matt McCarty, the Red Raiders compiled a 14–1 record (10–0 against conference opponents), won the GPAC championship, and were ranked No. 1 among all NAIA programs at the end of the regular season.
The Red Raiders advanced to the NAIA football playoffs where they received a bye in the first round and defeated Dordt Defenders (7-0) in the second round, the Saint Xavier Cougars (34-17) in the quarterfinals, and the GeorgetownTigers in the semifinals. Northwestern lost to Keiser in the NAIA Championship Game on December 18 by a score of 31 to 21.
The 2022 team won the NAIA championship, and the Red Raiders compiled a 28-game winning streak dating back to the second game of the 2022 season.
Key players on the 2023 team include junior quarterback and co-captain Jalyn Gramstad, senior running back and co-captain Konner McQuillan, and senior wide receiver Michael Storey. Gramstad was named 2023 GPAC Offensive Player of the Year, and Matt McCarty was named GPAC Coach of the Year. A total of nine Northwestern players received first-team honors on the All-GPAC team, including Gramstad, McQuillen, and Storey, as well as offensive linemen Jawan Grant and Patrick Gottburg, long snapper Ty Shafer, defensive lineman Jacob Dragstra, linebacker Ben Egli, and defensive back Cody Moser.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2023 Northwestern Red Raiders football team is an American football team that represented Northwestern College of Orange City, Iowa, as a member of the Great Plains Athletic Conference (GPAC) during the 2023 NAIA football season. In their eighth year under head coach Matt McCarty, the Red Raiders compiled a 14–1 record (10–0 against conference opponents), won the GPAC championship, and were ranked No. 1 among all NAIA programs at the end of the regular season.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "The Red Raiders advanced to the NAIA football playoffs where they received a bye in the first round and defeated Dordt Defenders (7-0) in the second round, the Saint Xavier Cougars (34-17) in the quarterfinals, and the GeorgetownTigers in the semifinals. Northwestern lost to Keiser in the NAIA Championship Game on December 18 by a score of 31 to 21.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "The 2022 team won the NAIA championship, and the Red Raiders compiled a 28-game winning streak dating back to the second game of the 2022 season.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Key players on the 2023 team include junior quarterback and co-captain Jalyn Gramstad, senior running back and co-captain Konner McQuillan, and senior wide receiver Michael Storey. Gramstad was named 2023 GPAC Offensive Player of the Year, and Matt McCarty was named GPAC Coach of the Year. A total of nine Northwestern players received first-team honors on the All-GPAC team, including Gramstad, McQuillen, and Storey, as well as offensive linemen Jawan Grant and Patrick Gottburg, long snapper Ty Shafer, defensive lineman Jacob Dragstra, linebacker Ben Egli, and defensive back Cody Moser.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "",
"title": "Schedule"
}
] |
The 2023 Northwestern Red Raiders football team is an American football team that represented Northwestern College of Orange City, Iowa, as a member of the Great Plains Athletic Conference (GPAC) during the 2023 NAIA football season. In their eighth year under head coach Matt McCarty, the Red Raiders compiled a 14–1 record, won the GPAC championship, and were ranked No. 1 among all NAIA programs at the end of the regular season. The Red Raiders advanced to the NAIA football playoffs where they received a bye in the first round and defeated Dordt Defenders (7-0) in the second round, the Saint Xavier Cougars (34-17) in the quarterfinals, and the GeorgetownTigers in the semifinals. Northwestern lost to Keiser in the NAIA Championship Game on December 18 by a score of 31 to 21. The 2022 team won the NAIA championship, and the Red Raiders compiled a 28-game winning streak dating back to the second game of the 2022 season. Key players on the 2023 team include junior quarterback and co-captain Jalyn Gramstad, senior running back and co-captain Konner McQuillan, and senior wide receiver Michael Storey. Gramstad was named 2023 GPAC Offensive Player of the Year, and Matt McCarty was named GPAC Coach of the Year. A total of nine Northwestern players received first-team honors on the All-GPAC team, including Gramstad, McQuillen, and Storey, as well as offensive linemen Jawan Grant and Patrick Gottburg, long snapper Ty Shafer, defensive lineman Jacob Dragstra, linebacker Ben Egli, and defensive back Cody Moser.
|
2023-12-03T06:44:05Z
|
2023-12-27T04:33:58Z
|
[
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Infobox college sports team season",
"Template:CFB schedule",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:2023 Great Plains Athletic Conference football standings",
"Template:Cfb link",
"Template:Northwestern Red Raiders football navbox"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Northwestern_Red_Raiders_football_team
|
75,470,512 |
Murder of Arumugam Jayamani
|
On 16 October 1972, 21-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan, alias Tampines Rajah, attacked and stabbed another man Arumugam Jayamani (aged 21), alias Beatles Rajah, outside a sarabat stall in Enggor Street, Tanjong Pagar, and as a result of the stabbing, Arumugam died and Chelliah was charged with murder. It was revealed that Chelliah had stabbed Arumugam over a supposed gambling affair; both Chelliah and Arumugam belonged to the same gang society known as Hai Lok San (or 108 gang). Chelliah was found guilty of murdering Arumugam and sentenced to hang on 21 September 1973. After losing his appeals against the sentence and conviction, Chelliah was hanged on 11 April 1975.
On the night of 16 October 1972, in front of a backlane sabarat stall at Enggor Road, Tanjong Pagar, man was stabbed by another person and died. Identified as 21-year-old Arumugam Jayamani (alias Beatles Rajah), the victim was found to have suffered a stab wounds to the chest, and the detectives could not find the murder weapon from nearby the scene of crime; while the motive of the murder was yet to be established, the police interviewed several people around the area for witnesses. An autopsy report revealed that Arumugam was stabbed twice, once on the chest and another on the back, and the knife wound to the chest had penetrated his heart and this resulted in Arumugam's death.
On 14 November 1972, a 21-year-old suspect was arrested for killing Arumugam a month before. The suspect, identified as Chelliah Silvanathan (alias Tampines Rajah), was charged with murder the next day. Both Chelliah and Arumugam belonged to the same gang society known as Hai Lok San (or 108 gang).
In September 1973, Chelliah Silvanathan stood trial at the High Court for the murder of Arumugam Jayamani. During the trial, which was presided by Justice T Kulasekaram and Justice A V Winslow, Chelliah was represented by criminal lawyer Subhas Anandan, while the trial prosecutor was Lawrence Ang, who was coincidentally Anandan’s former law school classmate and friend.
The trial court heard that prior to the stabbing, Arumugam and Chelliah had an argument over a gambling affair, and this led to Chelliah going after Arumugam with a knife and stabbed him to death in front of the sabarat stall, where Arumugam was having a meal at the time he was attacked. Though there were no direct witnesses to the stabbing, the sabarat stallholder Yusof Maideen testified that he heard no commotion happening in front of his stall and only heard Arumugam crying for help as he was preparing some drinks, and witnessed Arumugam clutching his injury and staggered before he collapsed. Haridass Kutan Pillai, a friend of Chelliah, also testified in court that Chelliah had confessed to stabbing Arumugam to death when he met him the night after the stabbing. In court, Chelliah gave a defence that he never meant to kill Arumugam. He testified that after he heard Arumugam saying he would go after him over the past quarrel, Chelliah decided to go to the stall at Enggor Street to apologize to Arumugam, and only brought the knife just in case for the sake of self-defence, if Arumugam still did not accept his apology and assault him. Chelliah also said he wanted to use the knife to cause only minor hurt but nothing else. Chelliah added that when Arumugam caught sight of Chelliah, he wanted to raise a bottle to hit Chelliah and thus, Chelliah stabbed him to stop him from wielding the bottle, and he stabbed Arumugam after the victim tried to use a wooden stool to attack him, and he fled after the victim was stabbed a second time.
On 21 September 1973, the verdict was delivered by Justice Kulasekaram and Justice Winslow, the latter who pronounced the decision in court. In the verdict, the judges found that Chelliah had the intent to murder Arumugam when he stabbed him, and they also rejected his defence that he only went there to apologize with Arumugam and brought the knife along for the purpose of causing minor harm, and the two judges felt that Chelliah's decision to bring the knife was corroborative of the fact that he had intended to cause Arumugam's death, and it was not for self-defence like Chelliah claimed. Therefore, 21-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death. Chelliah was reportedly calm when the sentence was passed, but his father was devastated after hearing the verdict and reportedly knelt down in front of his son's lawyer in court and pleaded to see his son.
As of 4 February 1974, Chelliah was one of the 17 prisoners on death row awaiting their executions, and by 5 October 1974, the number was reduced to 15, with Chelliah included in the list of death row prisoners released that month.
On 25 March 1974, Chelliah's appeal was heard in the Court of Appeal before three judges - Chief Justice Wee Chong Jin, Justice Tan Ah Tah and Justice F A Chua (Frederick Arthur Chua). Without calling for the prosecution's reply, the three judges dismissed Chelliah's appeal and rejected Anandan's arguments. Like the trial judges, the appellate court agreed that Chelliah possessed the clear intention to cause death, or at least any bodily injury(s) that was sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death when he fatally stabbed Arumugam.
On 16 January 1975, Chelliah applied for special leave to appeal to the Privy Council in London for a review of his case. However, the Privy Council refused to grant Chelliah's motion and hence Chelliah lost his final court bid to escape the gallows.
Subsequently, Anandan filed for clemency on behalf of Chelliah, seeking to have Chelliah's death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. However, then President Benjamin Sheares declined to pardon Chelliah, and hence turned down Chelliah's clemency appeal, which thus finalized Chelliah's death sentence and he was set to hang in a week's time.
On 11 April 1975, 23-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan was hanged in Changi Prison at dawn. Chelliah was cremated at the Hindu Crematorium on the same date of his execution.
More than three decades after Chelliah was put to death, his former lawyer Subhas Anandan recorded his case inside his 2009 book The Best I Could. Addressing Chelliah by his nickname “Tampines Rajah” (which Anandan spelt as Tampines Raja), Anandan wrote about his experiences of defending Chelliah (who was Anandan's acquaintance), stating that he was saddened at the verdict of death and had gotten drunk that same night after the trial, and he also wrote that during his incarceration on death row, Chelliah converted himself to Christianity and expressed remorse for killing Arumugam (whom Anandan also addressed by his nickname as well), and he was grateful Anandan for defending him. He encouraged Anandan to continue defending other people and be a dedicated and good lawyer during Anandan’s final visit to prison before Chelliah was executed.
Chelliah’s case was Anandan’s first murder case during his early years as a lawyer, and although he lost the case and it ended with Chelliah hanged for the murder, it made an impact on his legal career as Anandan would manage over 1,500 criminal cases (including murder, rape and drug trafficking) through his 45-year-long legal career, until he died from a heart attack in January 2015, and Anandan became renowned for his representation of suspects charged in high-profile murder cases, including infamous wife-killer Anthony Ler, Kallang body-parts murderer Leong Siew Chor, schizophrenic child-killer Constance Chee Cheong Hin, Oriental Hotel killer Abdul Nasir Amer Hamsah, notorious gunman Tan Chor Jin, and child-killer Took Leng How.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "On 16 October 1972, 21-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan, alias Tampines Rajah, attacked and stabbed another man Arumugam Jayamani (aged 21), alias Beatles Rajah, outside a sarabat stall in Enggor Street, Tanjong Pagar, and as a result of the stabbing, Arumugam died and Chelliah was charged with murder. It was revealed that Chelliah had stabbed Arumugam over a supposed gambling affair; both Chelliah and Arumugam belonged to the same gang society known as Hai Lok San (or 108 gang). Chelliah was found guilty of murdering Arumugam and sentenced to hang on 21 September 1973. After losing his appeals against the sentence and conviction, Chelliah was hanged on 11 April 1975.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "On the night of 16 October 1972, in front of a backlane sabarat stall at Enggor Road, Tanjong Pagar, man was stabbed by another person and died. Identified as 21-year-old Arumugam Jayamani (alias Beatles Rajah), the victim was found to have suffered a stab wounds to the chest, and the detectives could not find the murder weapon from nearby the scene of crime; while the motive of the murder was yet to be established, the police interviewed several people around the area for witnesses. An autopsy report revealed that Arumugam was stabbed twice, once on the chest and another on the back, and the knife wound to the chest had penetrated his heart and this resulted in Arumugam's death.",
"title": "Stabbing at Enggor Street"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "On 14 November 1972, a 21-year-old suspect was arrested for killing Arumugam a month before. The suspect, identified as Chelliah Silvanathan (alias Tampines Rajah), was charged with murder the next day. Both Chelliah and Arumugam belonged to the same gang society known as Hai Lok San (or 108 gang).",
"title": "Stabbing at Enggor Street"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In September 1973, Chelliah Silvanathan stood trial at the High Court for the murder of Arumugam Jayamani. During the trial, which was presided by Justice T Kulasekaram and Justice A V Winslow, Chelliah was represented by criminal lawyer Subhas Anandan, while the trial prosecutor was Lawrence Ang, who was coincidentally Anandan’s former law school classmate and friend.",
"title": "Trial of Chelliah Silvanathan"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "The trial court heard that prior to the stabbing, Arumugam and Chelliah had an argument over a gambling affair, and this led to Chelliah going after Arumugam with a knife and stabbed him to death in front of the sabarat stall, where Arumugam was having a meal at the time he was attacked. Though there were no direct witnesses to the stabbing, the sabarat stallholder Yusof Maideen testified that he heard no commotion happening in front of his stall and only heard Arumugam crying for help as he was preparing some drinks, and witnessed Arumugam clutching his injury and staggered before he collapsed. Haridass Kutan Pillai, a friend of Chelliah, also testified in court that Chelliah had confessed to stabbing Arumugam to death when he met him the night after the stabbing. In court, Chelliah gave a defence that he never meant to kill Arumugam. He testified that after he heard Arumugam saying he would go after him over the past quarrel, Chelliah decided to go to the stall at Enggor Street to apologize to Arumugam, and only brought the knife just in case for the sake of self-defence, if Arumugam still did not accept his apology and assault him. Chelliah also said he wanted to use the knife to cause only minor hurt but nothing else. Chelliah added that when Arumugam caught sight of Chelliah, he wanted to raise a bottle to hit Chelliah and thus, Chelliah stabbed him to stop him from wielding the bottle, and he stabbed Arumugam after the victim tried to use a wooden stool to attack him, and he fled after the victim was stabbed a second time.",
"title": "Trial of Chelliah Silvanathan"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "On 21 September 1973, the verdict was delivered by Justice Kulasekaram and Justice Winslow, the latter who pronounced the decision in court. In the verdict, the judges found that Chelliah had the intent to murder Arumugam when he stabbed him, and they also rejected his defence that he only went there to apologize with Arumugam and brought the knife along for the purpose of causing minor harm, and the two judges felt that Chelliah's decision to bring the knife was corroborative of the fact that he had intended to cause Arumugam's death, and it was not for self-defence like Chelliah claimed. Therefore, 21-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death. Chelliah was reportedly calm when the sentence was passed, but his father was devastated after hearing the verdict and reportedly knelt down in front of his son's lawyer in court and pleaded to see his son.",
"title": "Trial of Chelliah Silvanathan"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "As of 4 February 1974, Chelliah was one of the 17 prisoners on death row awaiting their executions, and by 5 October 1974, the number was reduced to 15, with Chelliah included in the list of death row prisoners released that month.",
"title": "Trial of Chelliah Silvanathan"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "On 25 March 1974, Chelliah's appeal was heard in the Court of Appeal before three judges - Chief Justice Wee Chong Jin, Justice Tan Ah Tah and Justice F A Chua (Frederick Arthur Chua). Without calling for the prosecution's reply, the three judges dismissed Chelliah's appeal and rejected Anandan's arguments. Like the trial judges, the appellate court agreed that Chelliah possessed the clear intention to cause death, or at least any bodily injury(s) that was sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death when he fatally stabbed Arumugam.",
"title": "Appeal processes"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 8,
"text": "On 16 January 1975, Chelliah applied for special leave to appeal to the Privy Council in London for a review of his case. However, the Privy Council refused to grant Chelliah's motion and hence Chelliah lost his final court bid to escape the gallows.",
"title": "Appeal processes"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 9,
"text": "Subsequently, Anandan filed for clemency on behalf of Chelliah, seeking to have Chelliah's death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. However, then President Benjamin Sheares declined to pardon Chelliah, and hence turned down Chelliah's clemency appeal, which thus finalized Chelliah's death sentence and he was set to hang in a week's time.",
"title": "Appeal processes"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 10,
"text": "On 11 April 1975, 23-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan was hanged in Changi Prison at dawn. Chelliah was cremated at the Hindu Crematorium on the same date of his execution.",
"title": "Execution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 11,
"text": "More than three decades after Chelliah was put to death, his former lawyer Subhas Anandan recorded his case inside his 2009 book The Best I Could. Addressing Chelliah by his nickname “Tampines Rajah” (which Anandan spelt as Tampines Raja), Anandan wrote about his experiences of defending Chelliah (who was Anandan's acquaintance), stating that he was saddened at the verdict of death and had gotten drunk that same night after the trial, and he also wrote that during his incarceration on death row, Chelliah converted himself to Christianity and expressed remorse for killing Arumugam (whom Anandan also addressed by his nickname as well), and he was grateful Anandan for defending him. He encouraged Anandan to continue defending other people and be a dedicated and good lawyer during Anandan’s final visit to prison before Chelliah was executed.",
"title": "Execution"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 12,
"text": "Chelliah’s case was Anandan’s first murder case during his early years as a lawyer, and although he lost the case and it ended with Chelliah hanged for the murder, it made an impact on his legal career as Anandan would manage over 1,500 criminal cases (including murder, rape and drug trafficking) through his 45-year-long legal career, until he died from a heart attack in January 2015, and Anandan became renowned for his representation of suspects charged in high-profile murder cases, including infamous wife-killer Anthony Ler, Kallang body-parts murderer Leong Siew Chor, schizophrenic child-killer Constance Chee Cheong Hin, Oriental Hotel killer Abdul Nasir Amer Hamsah, notorious gunman Tan Chor Jin, and child-killer Took Leng How.",
"title": "Execution"
}
] |
On 16 October 1972, 21-year-old Chelliah Silvanathan, alias Tampines Rajah, attacked and stabbed another man Arumugam Jayamani, alias Beatles Rajah, outside a sarabat stall in Enggor Street, Tanjong Pagar, and as a result of the stabbing, Arumugam died and Chelliah was charged with murder. It was revealed that Chelliah had stabbed Arumugam over a supposed gambling affair; both Chelliah and Arumugam belonged to the same gang society known as Hai Lok San. Chelliah was found guilty of murdering Arumugam and sentenced to hang on 21 September 1973. After losing his appeals against the sentence and conviction, Chelliah was hanged on 11 April 1975.
|
2023-12-03T06:45:29Z
|
2023-12-03T16:14:27Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Arumugam_Jayamani
|
75,470,621 |
Goripalayam, Madurai
|
Goripalayam is a locality situated in Madurai city of Madurai district in the state of Tamil Nadu in the peninsular India.
It is located with the geographic coordinates of 19°55′58.8″N 78°07′44.4″E / 19.933000°N 78.129000°E / 19.933000; 78.129000 in Madurai. There is an important junction of roads such as Albert Victor bridge road, Allhagar Kovil road, Panagal road and Kalpalam road, in Goripalayam. At the intersection of thes roads, there is a memorable statue for Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar, late freedom fighter cum twentieth century political leader. Mattuthavani Bus Stand, Madurai which is 4 km from Goripalayam, serves the people who travel to and fro Madurai from various places of Tamil Nadu by road transport. There is a road flyover project parallel to the existing Albert Victor bridge to connect Tallakulam (Tamukkam junction) and Nelpettai via. Goripalayam. This flyover with a length of about 2 km will be constructed with an estimated amount of ₹190.4 crore.
Goripalayam is located at about 4 km from Madurai Junction railway station and at about 16 km from Madurai Airport which is at Avaniapuram.
There are two educational institutions in Goripalayam viz., Sri Meenakshi Government Arts College for Women and American College.
There is a State Government medical facility namely, Government Rajaji Hospital in Goripalayam, with a lot of medical services.
Located at about 2 km from Goripalayam, there is a historical Hindu temple viz., Meenakshi Temple.
At the heart of Goripalayam is built a worshipping place for Muslims named Goripalayam Mosque.
Goripalayam area falls under the Madurai North Assembly constituency. Also, this area belongs to Madurai Lok Sabha constituency.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Goripalayam is a locality situated in Madurai city of Madurai district in the state of Tamil Nadu in the peninsular India.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "It is located with the geographic coordinates of 19°55′58.8″N 78°07′44.4″E / 19.933000°N 78.129000°E / 19.933000; 78.129000 in Madurai. There is an important junction of roads such as Albert Victor bridge road, Allhagar Kovil road, Panagal road and Kalpalam road, in Goripalayam. At the intersection of thes roads, there is a memorable statue for Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar, late freedom fighter cum twentieth century political leader. Mattuthavani Bus Stand, Madurai which is 4 km from Goripalayam, serves the people who travel to and fro Madurai from various places of Tamil Nadu by road transport. There is a road flyover project parallel to the existing Albert Victor bridge to connect Tallakulam (Tamukkam junction) and Nelpettai via. Goripalayam. This flyover with a length of about 2 km will be constructed with an estimated amount of ₹190.4 crore.",
"title": "Details"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Goripalayam is located at about 4 km from Madurai Junction railway station and at about 16 km from Madurai Airport which is at Avaniapuram.",
"title": "Details"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "There are two educational institutions in Goripalayam viz., Sri Meenakshi Government Arts College for Women and American College.",
"title": "Details"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "There is a State Government medical facility namely, Government Rajaji Hospital in Goripalayam, with a lot of medical services.",
"title": "Details"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 5,
"text": "Located at about 2 km from Goripalayam, there is a historical Hindu temple viz., Meenakshi Temple.",
"title": "Religion"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 6,
"text": "At the heart of Goripalayam is built a worshipping place for Muslims named Goripalayam Mosque.",
"title": "Religion"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 7,
"text": "Goripalayam area falls under the Madurai North Assembly constituency. Also, this area belongs to Madurai Lok Sabha constituency.",
"title": "Politics"
}
] |
Goripalayam is a locality situated in Madurai city of Madurai district in the state of Tamil Nadu in the peninsular India.
|
2023-12-03T06:59:16Z
|
2023-12-05T03:25:19Z
|
[
"Template:Coord",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite book",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Infobox settlement"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goripalayam,_Madurai
|
75,470,698 |
2003 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team
|
The 2003 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2003 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by first-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 5–7. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2003 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2003 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by first-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 5–7. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Schedule"
}
] |
The 2003 Southeastern Louisiana Lions football team represented Southeastern Louisiana University during the 2003 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by first-year head coach Hal Mumme, the Lions compiled an overall record of 5–7. Southeastern Louisiana played home games at Strawberry Stadium in Hammond, Louisiana.
|
2023-12-03T07:10:27Z
|
2023-12-19T04:13:57Z
|
[
"Template:2003 NCAA Division I-AA independents football standings",
"Template:CFB schedule",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Southeastern Louisiana Lions football navbox",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox college sports team season"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003_Southeastern_Louisiana_Lions_football_team
|
75,470,727 |
ARO-HSD
|
ARO-HSD, also known as GSK4532990, is a small interfering RNA developed for the treatment of fatty liver disease. Based on the observation that "loss-of-function HSD17β13 mutations protect against the development of chronic liver disease," the therapeutic attempts to induce this loss of function and thus improve liver disease. The therapy is developed by a partnership of GlaxoSmithKline and Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals that might be worth more than $1 billion.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "ARO-HSD, also known as GSK4532990, is a small interfering RNA developed for the treatment of fatty liver disease. Based on the observation that \"loss-of-function HSD17β13 mutations protect against the development of chronic liver disease,\" the therapeutic attempts to induce this loss of function and thus improve liver disease. The therapy is developed by a partnership of GlaxoSmithKline and Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals that might be worth more than $1 billion.",
"title": ""
}
] |
ARO-HSD, also known as GSK4532990, is a small interfering RNA developed for the treatment of fatty liver disease. Based on the observation that "loss-of-function HSD17β13 mutations protect against the development of chronic liver disease," the therapeutic attempts to induce this loss of function and thus improve liver disease. The therapy is developed by a partnership of GlaxoSmithKline and Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals that might be worth more than $1 billion.
|
2023-12-03T07:13:11Z
|
2023-12-04T18:40:36Z
|
[
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite journal",
"Template:Cite news"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARO-HSD
|
75,470,732 |
Richard Welch (Australian politician)
|
Richard Welch is an incoming member of the Victorian Legislative Council for the North-Eastern Metropolitan Region. He will enter parliament after winning the Liberal Party's preselection on 3 December 2023 to replace the retiring Matthew Bach.
Welch previously stood as a candidate for the state electoral district of Yan Yean in the 2022 Victorian state election and for the federal Division of McEwen in the 2022 Australian federal election and 2019 Australian federal election.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Richard Welch is an incoming member of the Victorian Legislative Council for the North-Eastern Metropolitan Region. He will enter parliament after winning the Liberal Party's preselection on 3 December 2023 to replace the retiring Matthew Bach.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Welch previously stood as a candidate for the state electoral district of Yan Yean in the 2022 Victorian state election and for the federal Division of McEwen in the 2022 Australian federal election and 2019 Australian federal election.",
"title": ""
}
] |
Richard Welch is an incoming member of the Victorian Legislative Council for the North-Eastern Metropolitan Region. He will enter parliament after winning the Liberal Party's preselection on 3 December 2023 to replace the retiring Matthew Bach. Welch previously stood as a candidate for the state electoral district of Yan Yean in the 2022 Victorian state election and for the federal Division of McEwen in the 2022 Australian federal election and 2019 Australian federal election.
|
2023-12-03T07:14:40Z
|
2023-12-29T14:15:07Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox officeholder",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:VicCurrentMLCs",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Australia-Liberal-politician-stub",
"Template:Use Australian English",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Welch_(Australian_politician)
|
75,470,742 |
Makiling (TV series)
|
Makiling is an upcoming Philippine television drama thriller series to be broadcast by GMA Network. Directed by Zig Dulay, it stars Derrick Monasterio and Elle Villanueva. It is set to premiere on January 8, 2024, on the network's Afternoon Prime line up.
Principal photography commenced in October 2023.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Makiling is an upcoming Philippine television drama thriller series to be broadcast by GMA Network. Directed by Zig Dulay, it stars Derrick Monasterio and Elle Villanueva. It is set to premiere on January 8, 2024, on the network's Afternoon Prime line up.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Principal photography commenced in October 2023.",
"title": "Production"
}
] |
Makiling is an upcoming Philippine television drama thriller series to be broadcast by GMA Network. Directed by Zig Dulay, it stars Derrick Monasterio and Elle Villanueva. It is set to premiere on January 8, 2024, on the network's Afternoon Prime line up.
|
2023-12-03T07:16:00Z
|
2023-12-31T01:42:30Z
|
[
"Template:Use Philippine English",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Infobox television",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Official site",
"Template:Philippines-tv-prog-stub",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makiling_(TV_series)
|
75,470,831 |
Braden Fiske
|
Braden Fiske is an American football defensive tackle for the Florida State Seminoles. He previously played for the Western Michigan Broncos.
Fiske attended Michigan City High School in Michigan City, Indiana. He committed to Western Michigan University to play college football.
Fiske played at Western Michigan from 2019 to 2022. While there he started 30 of 45 games and had 148 tackles and 13.5 sacks. After the 2022 season, he entered the transfer portal and transferred to Florida State University.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Braden Fiske is an American football defensive tackle for the Florida State Seminoles. He previously played for the Western Michigan Broncos.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Fiske attended Michigan City High School in Michigan City, Indiana. He committed to Western Michigan University to play college football.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Fiske played at Western Michigan from 2019 to 2022. While there he started 30 of 45 games and had 148 tackles and 13.5 sacks. After the 2022 season, he entered the transfer portal and transferred to Florida State University.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Braden Fiske is an American football defensive tackle for the Florida State Seminoles. He previously played for the Western Michigan Broncos.
|
2023-12-03T07:22:11Z
|
2023-12-23T08:20:19Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Infobox college football player",
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braden_Fiske
|
75,470,890 |
2024 in China
|
Events in the year 2024 in China.
Source:
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Events in the year 2024 in China.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Source:",
"title": "Holidays"
}
] |
Events in the year 2024 in China.
|
2023-12-03T07:29:19Z
|
2023-12-31T18:12:45Z
|
[
"Template:Years in China",
"Template:PRC year nav",
"Template:Year in China",
"Template:Horizontal TOC",
"Template:Further",
"Template:Small",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Portal",
"Template:Commons category-inline",
"Template:Wikinews",
"Template:Year in Asia"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_in_China
|
75,470,891 |
Siân Hughes
|
Sian Hughes is a Welsh poet and novelist.
Hughes grew up in a small village in Cheshire, which served as the setting of her first novel Pearl. Hughes stated that the suicide of a friend and her own mother's death served as inspiration for her first novel. Her 2022 collection of short stories, Pain Sluts, was shortlisted for the 2022 Wales Book of the Year. Hughes works as a creative practitioner for the Arts Council of Wales and as a creative writing instructor.
Her debut collection of poetry, 2009's The Missing, was longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award among other honors. Her debut novel Pearl was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. Pearl is a retelling of the Pearl Poet's 14th century poem Pearl about grief and loss as a father struggles with the death of his daughter. The novel Pearl tells the grief experienced as the young mother Marianne looses her own mother, with the reader soon learning that the lost pearl in Marianne's recollection of grief, and her anguish, reaches yet further back to an earlier loss. Writing for The Guardian, Barney Norris commended Hughes for being able to portray the permanence of grief, stating: "Marianne is a woman whose body has kept ageing, but whose heart and mind are trapped in the moment she lost her mother. The way trauma cuts one off from the world and isolates the sufferer in the moment that hurt them is brilliantly rendered here."
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Sian Hughes is a Welsh poet and novelist.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Hughes grew up in a small village in Cheshire, which served as the setting of her first novel Pearl. Hughes stated that the suicide of a friend and her own mother's death served as inspiration for her first novel. Her 2022 collection of short stories, Pain Sluts, was shortlisted for the 2022 Wales Book of the Year. Hughes works as a creative practitioner for the Arts Council of Wales and as a creative writing instructor.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Her debut collection of poetry, 2009's The Missing, was longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award among other honors. Her debut novel Pearl was longlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize. Pearl is a retelling of the Pearl Poet's 14th century poem Pearl about grief and loss as a father struggles with the death of his daughter. The novel Pearl tells the grief experienced as the young mother Marianne looses her own mother, with the reader soon learning that the lost pearl in Marianne's recollection of grief, and her anguish, reaches yet further back to an earlier loss. Writing for The Guardian, Barney Norris commended Hughes for being able to portray the permanence of grief, stating: \"Marianne is a woman whose body has kept ageing, but whose heart and mind are trapped in the moment she lost her mother. The way trauma cuts one off from the world and isolates the sufferer in the moment that hurt them is brilliantly rendered here.\"",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Sian Hughes is a Welsh poet and novelist.
|
2023-12-03T07:29:28Z
|
2023-12-08T09:18:50Z
|
[
"Template:ISBN",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Si%C3%A2n_Hughes
|
75,470,893 |
Tshegofatso Seoka
|
Tshegofatso Seoka (born 1989) is an artist, art historian, and independent curator from South Africa.
Seoka founded her company, "Ms Simone" after suffering and being inspired by her illness of Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Miss Simone is a company aiming of contributing to the contemporary African and South African art archive in order to open the art market to new buyers, develop the saturated African art market, broaden the audience and consumption of African art. Tshegofatso Seoka is an art theory lecturer at Tshwane University of Technology ; and the education and events officer for Unisa Art Gallery, where she deals with publicity and events. Her research and dissertation Hair Politics: An Examination of the Aesthetics of Black Female Hair in the Work of Select African Artists, which she curated was exhibited at North West University Art Gallery in August 2021.
2023 she was counted amongst the Top 200 Young South Africans by the Mail and Guardian.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Tshegofatso Seoka (born 1989) is an artist, art historian, and independent curator from South Africa.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Seoka founded her company, \"Ms Simone\" after suffering and being inspired by her illness of Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Miss Simone is a company aiming of contributing to the contemporary African and South African art archive in order to open the art market to new buyers, develop the saturated African art market, broaden the audience and consumption of African art. Tshegofatso Seoka is an art theory lecturer at Tshwane University of Technology ; and the education and events officer for Unisa Art Gallery, where she deals with publicity and events. Her research and dissertation Hair Politics: An Examination of the Aesthetics of Black Female Hair in the Work of Select African Artists, which she curated was exhibited at North West University Art Gallery in August 2021.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "2023 she was counted amongst the Top 200 Young South Africans by the Mail and Guardian.",
"title": "Awards and accomplishments"
}
] |
Tshegofatso Seoka is an artist, art historian, and independent curator from South Africa.
|
2023-12-03T07:30:08Z
|
2024-01-01T01:14:07Z
|
[
"Template:Orphan",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tshegofatso_Seoka
|
75,470,948 |
2018 Dixie State Trailblazers football team
|
The 2018 Dixie State Trailblazers football team represented Dixie State University (now Utah Tech University) in the 2018 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by third-year head coach Shay McClure and played their home games at Greater Zion Stadium in St. George, Utah as a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "The 2018 Dixie State Trailblazers football team represented Dixie State University (now Utah Tech University) in the 2018 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by third-year head coach Shay McClure and played their home games at Greater Zion Stadium in St. George, Utah as a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "",
"title": "Schedule"
}
] |
The 2018 Dixie State Trailblazers football team represented Dixie State University in the 2018 NCAA Division II football season. They were led by third-year head coach Shay McClure and played their home games at Greater Zion Stadium in St. George, Utah as a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.
|
2023-12-03T07:35:21Z
|
2023-12-24T01:06:39Z
|
[
"Template:Infobox college sports team season",
"Template:One source",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:2018 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference football standings",
"Template:CFB schedule",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Dixie State Trailblazers football navbox",
"Template:Short description"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Dixie_State_Trailblazers_football_team
|
75,470,974 |
B&H Dairy
|
B&H Dairy is a kosher restaurant or luncheonette in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City. The original owners, Abie Bergson and Jack Heller, later Sol Hausman, opened it in 1938 when the area was known for the Yiddish Theatre District. Bergson was an aspiring actor, and Molly Picon and Maurice Schwartz were patrons. Bergson sold the luncheonette in the 1970s and it went bankrupt in 1978. Bob Sherman, a partner in a construction firm, bought it. A 1940s style lunch counter B&H serves cheese blintzes with sour cream, borscht, matzo brei, and other kosher dairy Jewish cuisine. It is owned and operated by an Egyptian Muslim and Catholic Polish couple, Fawzy and Alexandra Abdelwahed. It was closed for a time due to a gas explosion and a fire but reopened. It was noted in an interview by Lily Tomlin. Chloe Sevigny is also a patron of the establishment.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "B&H Dairy is a kosher restaurant or luncheonette in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City. The original owners, Abie Bergson and Jack Heller, later Sol Hausman, opened it in 1938 when the area was known for the Yiddish Theatre District. Bergson was an aspiring actor, and Molly Picon and Maurice Schwartz were patrons. Bergson sold the luncheonette in the 1970s and it went bankrupt in 1978. Bob Sherman, a partner in a construction firm, bought it. A 1940s style lunch counter B&H serves cheese blintzes with sour cream, borscht, matzo brei, and other kosher dairy Jewish cuisine. It is owned and operated by an Egyptian Muslim and Catholic Polish couple, Fawzy and Alexandra Abdelwahed. It was closed for a time due to a gas explosion and a fire but reopened. It was noted in an interview by Lily Tomlin. Chloe Sevigny is also a patron of the establishment.",
"title": ""
}
] |
B&H Dairy is a kosher restaurant or luncheonette in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City. The original owners, Abie Bergson and Jack Heller, later Sol Hausman, opened it in 1938 when the area was known for the Yiddish Theatre District. Bergson was an aspiring actor, and Molly Picon and Maurice Schwartz were patrons. Bergson sold the luncheonette in the 1970s and it went bankrupt in 1978. Bob Sherman, a partner in a construction firm, bought it. A 1940s style lunch counter B&H serves cheese blintzes with sour cream, borscht, matzo brei, and other kosher dairy Jewish cuisine. It is owned and operated by an Egyptian Muslim and Catholic Polish couple, Fawzy and Alexandra Abdelwahed. It was closed for a time due to a gas explosion and a fire but reopened. It was noted in an interview by Lily Tomlin. Chloe Sevigny is also a patron of the establishment.
|
2023-12-03T07:38:47Z
|
2023-12-10T07:45:15Z
|
[
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use mdy dates",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite magazine",
"Template:East Village, Manhattan",
"Template:Restaurants in Manhattan",
"Template:Infobox Restaurant",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Cite book"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%26H_Dairy
|
75,470,986 |
Poornima Ravi
|
Poornima Ravi (born 5 October 1995), also known by her Youtube channel name Araathi is an Indian actress and youtuber, who has primarily appeared in Tamil films. She has played supporting roles in films such as Plan Panni Pannanum (2021) and Annapoorani (2023). She is currently a contestant on the seventh season of the Indian Tamil reality TV show on Vijay TV, Bigg Boss, which started in October 2023.
Poornima was born on 5 October 1995 in Vellore, Tamil Nadu. As she grew up, she studied at Shrishti Matriculation secondary high school, Vellore. She later pursued a degree in engineering at Vellore Institute of Technology from 2012 till 2017 and eventually pursued her career on acting.
Poornima started her career as an YouTuber and opened up a Youtube channel called "Araathi" on 2 July 2019. She posted videos about Indian Premier League, women's rights and many social yet humorous content on her channel. Her channel has grown to more than 2 million subscribers and more than 550 million times re watched videos on her statistics.
In 2021, director Badri Venkatesh approached her in search of an supporting female character in his romantic-comedy film Plan Panni Pannanum featuring Rio Raj and Remya Nambeesan in the lead. He offered the supporting role to Poornima. The following year she appeared in the film Chotta. In 2023, she was offered a supporting role in the film Annapoorani.
In 2023, she participated in the reality show Bigg Boss 7 Tamil Edition on Vijay TV as a contestant.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Poornima Ravi (born 5 October 1995), also known by her Youtube channel name Araathi is an Indian actress and youtuber, who has primarily appeared in Tamil films. She has played supporting roles in films such as Plan Panni Pannanum (2021) and Annapoorani (2023). She is currently a contestant on the seventh season of the Indian Tamil reality TV show on Vijay TV, Bigg Boss, which started in October 2023.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Poornima was born on 5 October 1995 in Vellore, Tamil Nadu. As she grew up, she studied at Shrishti Matriculation secondary high school, Vellore. She later pursued a degree in engineering at Vellore Institute of Technology from 2012 till 2017 and eventually pursued her career on acting.",
"title": "Early life"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "Poornima started her career as an YouTuber and opened up a Youtube channel called \"Araathi\" on 2 July 2019. She posted videos about Indian Premier League, women's rights and many social yet humorous content on her channel. Her channel has grown to more than 2 million subscribers and more than 550 million times re watched videos on her statistics.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "In 2021, director Badri Venkatesh approached her in search of an supporting female character in his romantic-comedy film Plan Panni Pannanum featuring Rio Raj and Remya Nambeesan in the lead. He offered the supporting role to Poornima. The following year she appeared in the film Chotta. In 2023, she was offered a supporting role in the film Annapoorani.",
"title": "Career"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2023, she participated in the reality show Bigg Boss 7 Tamil Edition on Vijay TV as a contestant.",
"title": "Career"
}
] |
Poornima Ravi, also known by her Youtube channel name Araathi is an Indian actress and youtuber, who has primarily appeared in Tamil films. She has played supporting roles in films such as Plan Panni Pannanum (2021) and Annapoorani (2023). She is currently a contestant on the seventh season of the Indian Tamil reality TV show on Vijay TV, Bigg Boss, which started in October 2023.
|
2023-12-03T07:40:20Z
|
2023-12-31T07:57:51Z
|
[
"Template:Use Indian English",
"Template:Reflist",
"Template:Cite news",
"Template:Cite web",
"Template:Instagram",
"Template:Authority control",
"Template:Short description",
"Template:Use dmy dates",
"Template:Indian name",
"Template:Infobox person",
"Template:BLP unsourced section",
"Template:Won",
"Template:IMDb name"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poornima_Ravi
|
75,471,015 |
Rosie (musician)
|
Rosie Scher, commonly known by her stage name ROSIE, is an American singer-songwriter.
Scher was born in 2000 in Nyack, New York. Her early interest in music was supported by her parents, who encouraged her to pursue songwriting during her teenage years. She attended Berklee College of Music but dropped out in 2020.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Scher shifted her focus to online platforms, primarily Instagram, where she posted cover songs and performed live. She also experimented with TikTok, early in the pandemic but initially found limited success.
Scher's career experienced a turning point in the summer of 2020 when one of her original songs became viral on TikTok. "Never the 1," a pop breakup song, went viral in September 2020, leading to a contract with Arista Records in the same year.
In 2023, Scher released an EP titled "5 Songs for Healing." Her music, often reflecting personal experiences of pain from a young age, is noted for its straightforward presentation, devoid of extensive editing or reliance on current trends. She has co-written a song for Celine Dion, which was subsequently used in a film. The song, "Love Again," was influential enough to prompt a change in the title of the movie.
|
[
{
"paragraph_id": 0,
"text": "Rosie Scher, commonly known by her stage name ROSIE, is an American singer-songwriter.",
"title": ""
},
{
"paragraph_id": 1,
"text": "Scher was born in 2000 in Nyack, New York. Her early interest in music was supported by her parents, who encouraged her to pursue songwriting during her teenage years. She attended Berklee College of Music but dropped out in 2020.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 2,
"text": "During the COVID-19 pandemic, Scher shifted her focus to online platforms, primarily Instagram, where she posted cover songs and performed live. She also experimented with TikTok, early in the pandemic but initially found limited success.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 3,
"text": "Scher's career experienced a turning point in the summer of 2020 when one of her original songs became viral on TikTok. \"Never the 1,\" a pop breakup song, went viral in September 2020, leading to a contract with Arista Records in the same year.",
"title": "Biography"
},
{
"paragraph_id": 4,
"text": "In 2023, Scher released an EP titled \"5 Songs for Healing.\" Her music, often reflecting personal experiences of pain from a young age, is noted for its straightforward presentation, devoid of extensive editing or reliance on current trends. She has co-written a song for Celine Dion, which was subsequently used in a film. The song, \"Love Again,\" was influential enough to prompt a change in the title of the movie.",
"title": "Biography"
}
] |
Rosie Scher, commonly known by her stage name ROSIE, is an American singer-songwriter.
|
2023-12-03T07:44:43Z
|
2023-12-03T07:59:30Z
|
[
"Template:Reflist"
] |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosie_(musician)
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Subsets and Splits
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