diff --git "a/wiki_subset_1M_001.00percent_seed51.txt" "b/wiki_subset_1M_001.00percent_seed51.txt" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/wiki_subset_1M_001.00percent_seed51.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,10000 @@ +Global Dignity is an independent, non-political organization that promotes the universal right of every human being to lead a dignified life. +Frances Marie Corner, ( Agnew; born 25 February 1959) is a British art and design historian and academic, specialising in fashion. +Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1980. +The land districts of New Zealand are the cadastral divisions of New Zealand, which are used on property titles. +LifeHe was born in Edinburgh, the son of James Burnett, a lithographic printer and Japanner living at 34 Toddrick's Wynd on the Royal Mile. +Enantiomorphic protons of the analyte enantiomers, which without Pirkle's alcohol are indistinguishable by NMR, become diastereomorphic when the analyte interacts with Pirkle's alcohol, and appear as different signals in an NMR spectrum. +ProductionBaldwin Locomotive Works and Lima-Hamilton (which would later merge to become Baldwin-Lima-Hamilton) produced the majority of these units, with the former producing 70 Baldwin DT-6-6-2000/Baldwin RT-624 locomotives, and the latter producing 22 Lima LT-2500 locomotives between 1946 and 1954. +In 2011, prior to releasing an EP, their single "Hellward Bound" gained airplay on several international radio programs. +CareerBorn in Burton-on-Trent, Cockayne decided to become a nurse due to her own experiences with ill health, such as smallpox and scarlatina. +Bode's ideal control loop frequency response has the fractional integrator shape and provides the iso-damping property around the gain crossover frequency. +ReferencesExternal links http://www.myspace.com/zeroinon Category:Swiss musical groups +In addition to his contribution to Functional Analysis particularly Banach Space theory and the Theory of Vector Measures, Diestel was known for a number of highly influential textbooks: in 1975 he published "Lecture Notes Geometry of Banach Spaces—Selected Topics" ; in 1977 he published "Vector Measures" with J. Jerry Uhl; in 1984 published "Sequences and series in Banach spaces" and in 1995 he published "Absolutely summing operators" with H. Jarchow and A. Tonge; as well as a number of other booksDiestel received his Ph.D. degree in 1969 from Catholic University of America under Victor Michael Bogdan, according he had 29 graduate students and over 46 mathematical descendantsReferences Category:1943 birthsCategory:2017 deathsCategory:American mathematicians +Weather permitting, the peak is visible from highways southwest of Calgary as it is recognizable by its signature band of snow that forms above the broad southeast cliffs. +In 2006–2007 teams won Centennial Conference titles in Baseball, Men's and Women's Soccer, Men's and Women's Tennis and Men's Basketball. +In the records of a tournament held in 1494 to celebrate the creation of the Prince Henry as Knight of the Bath and Duke of York, Brandon is mentioned as having distinguished himself. +LegacyAn adult Faceache appears in the 2005 comic Albion, as one of a number of comic book characters who have been imprisoned by the British government. +KS and variants may refer to:Businesses and organizations Kampfschwimmer, a German postwar commando frogman force Kommandittselskap, a Norwegian type of company Norwegian Association of Local and Regional Authorities PenAir, Peninsula Airways, Anchorage, Alaska, US (IATA airline code)Language Kashmiri language, a Dardic language of Kashmir (ISO 639 alpha-2 language code "ks") Kernowek Standard, an orthography for Revived Cornish Kiasu, Hokkien (a Chinese spoken variant) word for 'extreme fear of losing' (怕输)Places Kansas (US postal abbreviation KS) Krems an der Donau, Austria (vehicle plate code) Kassel, Germany (vehicle plate code) Khatumo State, an unrecognised proto-state in northern Somalia Northampton, Great Britain (vehicle plate code) Košice-okolie District, Slovakia (vehicle plate code)Science, technology, and mathematics Kaposi's sarcoma, a tumor caused by Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV8) Kartagener syndrome, a genetic disorder Keratan sulfate, any of several sulfated glycosaminoglycans Kernel streaming, a method of processing streamed data Ketoacyl synthase, a domain of polyketide synthases with a thiol group on a cysteine side-chain kilosample (kS), 1000 samples of a digitized signal Kilosecond (ks), 1000 seconds (16 minutes, 40 seconds) Klinefelter's Syndrome, caused by a chromosome aneuploidy Kolmogorov–Smirnov test, a goodness-of-fit test for probability distributionsOther uses Kammersänger, a German honorary title for a distinguished opera singer Kaplan–Sheinwold, a contract bridge bidding system Key Stage, a term used in the British education system Kill stealing, a practice in online games King's Scholar, at a UK public school King's Serjeant, an obsolete UK legal post Kirk/Spock or K/S, slash fiction Strikeouts, in baseball Contracts, in legal shorthand Slovak koruna, the currency of Slovakia 1993–2008 and of the 1939–1945 Slovak State +He was one of leading wicket takers in the Indian Premier League and also performed well with the bat, scoring crucial runs in the last overs. +The company was established in 2002 by Geoff Hatton, and won a contract with the US government in 2007 to design an unmanned aerial vehicle. +Orekhovaya Gora () is a rural locality (a selo) in Chernushinsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. +It began on 22 August 2015 and concluded on 15 May 2016. +As a result of his actions, the elections were attended by 84% of population and the former prime minister who supported the idea of building the dam in Tichy Potok was defeated. +It is located in the Berasia tehsil. +Shadwell fancied himself heir to Ben Jonson and to the variety of comedy which the latter had commonly written. +Murder Creek may refer to:Murder Creek (Alabama)Murder Creek (Georgia) +EndosymbiosisThe species is an endosymbiont that is present in all species of phloem sap-feeding insects known as psyllids. +List of Irish cheese producersList of Irish cheesesSee also List of British cheeses List of Republic of Ireland food and drink products with protected status List of cheeses List of cheesemakersReferencesFurther readingFreeman, Sarah (1998) The Real Cheese Companion: a guide to the best handmade cheeses of Britain and Ireland. +It is endemic to Mexico, known from the states of Hidalgo, Mexico, and Veracruz. +Sidorenko lost to Ivan and Matej Sabanov in the first round. +Lord Wynford's daughter, Grace Anne Best, married Philip Lake Godsal, the grandfather of Philip Thomas Godsal. +The seventh annual festival, held May 2–4, 2014, included 1960s legends The Zombies, as well as Panda Bear, The Horrors, Loop, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, of Montreal, The Dandy Warhols, The Black Angels and many more. +He is currently a director of AMCF and an officer of the INFORMS Roundtable. +Rather, its squadrons were attached on a rotating basis to a variety of modular infantry battalions. +It was located near the commune of Goussancourt, in the Aisne department in Picardy in northern France. +See alsoList of South Africa national rugby union players – Springbok no. +He starred in the acclaimed Silver Condor-winning 1943 film Juvenilia. +The comune borders the following municipalities: Agliano Terme, Canelli, Castiglione Tinella, Costigliole d'Asti, Moasca, and Santo Stefano Belbo. +Bonavista—Trinity—Conception was a federal electoral district in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1968 to 2003. +St. John's departed Halifax on 16 January 2018 for deployment to the Mediterranean Sea as part of Operation Reassurance. +The distance to this system, as determined using an annual parallax shift of 10.54 mas as seen from the Earth, is around 309 light years. +The "selection of a commercial Roll-on, Roll-off (Ro-Ro) design" has "been at the root of differences of opinion between Tenix, the Ministry of Defence and New Zealand Defence Force and the shortfalls in performance". +He intended to escape to the north and join the armies of Nieto and Goyeneche, but Ocampo managed to capture him and the other leaders. +Harmer began his Commonwealth Public Service career in 1978 at the Department of Environment, Housing and Community Development, starting on an 18-month contract. +Authors Laurent Gagnebin Rémi Gounelle Bernard Reymond Friedrich Schleiermacher Ernst TroeltschExternal links Van Dieren websiteCategory:Publishing companies of FranceCategory:Companies established in 1995 +DrawFinalsTop HalfSection 1Section 2Bottom HalfSection 3Section 4External links 1980 ITF US Open Women's Doubles DrawWomen's DoublesCategory:US Open (tennis) by year – Women's DoublesCategory:1980 in women's tennisCategory:1980 in American women's sport +Kirby's Adventure is a 1993 platforming video game published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System. +Conduct Zero (also known as No Manners) is a 2002 South Korean film directed by Joh Keun-shik. +The southern neighbours of Duga are Peki Dzake and as well as the Asuogyaman District towns of Anum and Boso. +Bakal may refer to:PlacesBakal, Bangladesh, a village in the Barisal Division of BangladeshBakal, Mali, a village in Gao Region, MaliBakal, Russia, a town in Satkinsky District of Chelyabinsk Oblast, RussiaBākal, alternative spelling of Pakal, a village in Markazi Province, IranBakal mine, an iron mine in Chelyabinsk Oblast, RussiaGreek general stores in EgyptPeopleDavid Bakal (b. +Corner transferred it to Clavulina in 1950. +RGP3 may refer to: UDP-arabinopyranose mutase, an enzyme RGS3, a regulator of G-protein signaling 3 +A movement began to unify various state and regional associations of missionary Baptists into a national association – a scope which the General Association apparently never enjoyed. +Since 2010 At the technion he also heads the Enterprise Systems Modeling Laboratory. +A year later, they have expanded its route Alabang-SM Fairview route since the company acquired one of former Renan Transit's Daewoo ordinary bus and used it for the latter route before it has been replaced by new air-conditioned buses. +ReferencesCategory:1844 birthsCategory:1878 deathsCategory:19th-century British musiciansCategory:19th-century English peopleCategory:English musiciansCategory:19th-century violinistsCategory:British male violinistsCategory:English violinistsCategory:19th-century English musiciansCategory:19th-century male musicians +These include: engagement with the national research agenda, which includes liaison with government, support for institutional repositories, research skills training and involvement with the management of research data; facilitating the role of members in supporting and maximising learning and teaching outcomes and contributing positively to the student experience; providing a vehicle for relationships with vendors and publishers and providing services and advice to members on collaborative purchasing of electronic information resources, licensing conditions and access issues; support for university publishing and digitisation activities; collection sharing; information literacy; continuous performance improvement; the production of annual statistics. +Besides three heroes (Miloš od Pocerja, Milan Toplica and Kosančić Ivan) Marko also releases father of Milan Toplica who was also captured by General Vuča. +Since 1831, Delaware elections have been held the first week of November of the year noted. +Musgrave, Jon. +EconomyIndustryThe biggest and most important company is Gjøco A/S. +The song was written for the original soundtrack to the 2018 video game Red Dead Redemption 2. +Stanchev () is a Bulgarian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Stancheva. +The forewings are pale grey covered with dark flecks. +The CD was released on The Saw Doctors' own record label, Shamtown Records and has the catalogue number of SAWDOC004CD. +The city of Horstmar was built to the south of this castle. +References Category:Villages in Kurnool district +Lamson was ultimately released after being tried four times. +National Infrastructure Developer Ltd.Category:Main roads in HungaryCategory:Veszprém County +Major highways Illinois Route 3 Illinois Route 100 Illinois Route 109DemographicsSchool districts Alton Community Unit School District 11 Jersey Community Unit School District 100Political districts Illinois's 19th congressional district State House District 97 State House District 111 State Senate District 49 State Senate District 56References United States Census Bureau 2007 TIGER/Line Shapefiles United States National AtlasExternal links City-Data.com Illinois State ArchivesCategory:Townships in Jersey County, IllinoisCategory:Townships in Illinois +Baguio: Cordillera Studies Center, University of the Philippines, Baguio. +He left Konami in 2013, and was working for Capcom. +Five people were reported killed in Washington County during the tornado outbreak of March 2–3, 2012. +The last ACT poetry prize appears to have been awarded in 2013. +Holly and Jensen leave the wounded J.P. as they explore the bunker. +HonoursTotal titles: (15)Domestic competitions Italian League Winners (5): 1991–92, 1996–97, 2001–02, 2002–03, 2005–06 Runners-up (4): 1992–93, 1994–95, 1998–99, 1999–00 Italian Cup Winners (8): 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95, 1999–00, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2006–07 Runners-up (2): 1991–92, 1997–98 Italian Supercup Winners (4): 1997, 2001, 2002, 2006 Runners-up (5): 1995, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007European competitions EuroLeague Runners-up (2): 1992–93, 2002–03 3rd place (2): 1997–98, 2001–02 Final Four (4): 1993, 1998, 2002, 2003 FIBA Saporta Cup (defunct) Winners (2): 1994–95, 1998–99 FIBA Korać Cup (defunct) Semifinalists (1): 1996–97 EuroCup Basketball 4th place (1): 2010–11Other competitions FIBA International Christmas Tournament (defunct) 4th place (1): 1991Top performances in European & Worldwide competitionsPlayersFIBA Hall of FamersNotable players2010's Brian Scalabrine 1/2 season: '11 E'Twaun Moore 1/2 season: '11 Jeff Adrien 1/2 season: '11 Gal Mekel2000's Donatas Motiejūnas 2 seasons: '09-'11 Bobby Dixon 1&1/2 seasons: '08-'09, '10 Pops Mensah-Bonsu 1 season: '07-'08 Engin Atsür 1 season:'07-'08 Nikos Zisis 2 seasons: '05-'07 Drew Nicholas 1 season: '05-'06 Marco Mordente 4 seasons:'04-'08 Marcus Goree 3 seasons: '04-'07 Ramūnas Šiškauskas 2 seasons: '04-06 Andrea Bargnani 3 seasons: '03-'06 Uroš Slokar 3 seasons: '03-'06 Maurice Evans 1 season: '03-'04 Jermaine Jackson 1 season: '03-'04 Trajan Langdon 1 season: '02-'03 Sergei Chikalkin 1 season: '01-'02 Charlie Bell 1 season: '01-'02 Nikoloz Tskitishvili 1 season: '01-'02 Jorge Garbajosa 4 seasons: '00-'04 Boštjan Nachbar 2 seasons: '00-'02 Alan Tomidy 2 seasons: '00-'02 Marcus Brown 1 season: '00-'011990's Tyus Edney 4 seasons: '99-'00, '01-'04 Jeff Sheppard 1 season: '99-'00 Marcelo Nicola 6 seasons: '98-'04 Henry Williams 4 seasons: '95-'99 Željko Rebrača 4 seasons: '95-'99 Davide Bonora 4 seasons: '95-'99 Petar Naumoski 2 seasons: '94-'95, '00-'01 Orlando Woolridge 1 season: '94-'95 Riccardo Pittis 11 seasons: '93-'04 Winston Garland 1 season: '93-'94 Rafael Addison 1 season: '93-'94 Denis Marconato 12 seasons: '92-'95, '96-'05 Terry Teagle 1 season: '92-'93 Stefano Rusconi 7 seasons: '91-'98 Toni Kukoč 2 seasons: '91-'93 Vinny Del Negro 2 seasons: '90-'921980's Dan Gay 3 seasons: '88-'90 Kyle Macy 2 seasons: '88-'89 Mike Davis 1 season: '87-'88 Mark Olberding 1 season: '87-'88 Massimo Iacopini 10 seasons: '85-'95 Massimo Minto 8 seasons: '82-'84, '85-'90Head coaches Mario De Sisti (2 seasons: 1979-81) Piero Pasini (1 season: 1981-82) Gianmaria Conte (incomplete 1 season: 1982-83) Gianfranco Lombardi (incomplete 1 season: 1982-83) Mauro Di Vincenzo (1 season: 1983-84) Massimo Mangano (incomplete 2 seasons: 1984-86) Lajos Toth (incomplete 1 season: 1985-86) Riccardo Sales (incomplete 4 seasons: 1986-90) Emanuele Molin (incomplete 1 season: 1989-90) Petar Skansi (3 seasons: 1990-93) Fabrizio Frates (1 season: 1993-94) Mike D'Antoni (4 seasons: 1994-97, 2001–02) Željko Obradović (2 seasons: 1997-99) Piero Bucchi (2 seasons: 1999-01) Ettore Messina (3 seasons: 2002-05) David Blatt (2 seasons: 2005-07) Alessandro Ramagli (Sep.-Nov. 2007) Oktay Mahmuti (seasons: 2007-09) Jasmin Repeša (seasons: 2010-11) Aleksandar Đorđević (1 season: 2011-12)Sponsorship namesThroughout the years, due to sponsorship, the club has been known as:Faram Treviso (1977–1979)Liberti Treviso (1979–1981)Benetton Basket (1981–2012)ReferencesExternal links 2011–12 Eurocup profile Category:1954 establishments in ItalyCategory:Basketball teams established in 1954Category:Basketball teams in VenetoCategory:Benetton GroupCategory:Sport in TrevisoCategory:Youth basketball +Empress Mentewab wielded significant authority throughout the reign of her son, and well into the reign of her grandson as well. +References Divisional Secretariats PortalCategory:Divisional Secretariats of Matara District +The length of the forewings is about 18 mm. +She married in 1980 prior to attending the Olympic Games and used her married name in Moscow. +Notable people with the name include:, Japanese soldier and amputee, Japanese businessman and politician, Japanese writer and cartoonistCategory:Japanese masculine given names +However, after the withdrawal, the road serves only for secure military traffic. +Agri Tayo DitoRebroadcastersDigital televisionDigital channelsUHF Channel 40 (629.143 MHz)ReferencesSee alsoList of ABS-CBN Corporation channels and stationsCategory:ABS-CBN stationsCategory:Television stations in BatangasCategory:Television stations in the PhilippinesCategory:Television channels and stations established in 1993Category:Digital television stations in the Philippines +Velvet is an unincorporated community in Stevens County, in the U.S. state of Washington. +As a senior, Bernard was named as co-captain for the 2007 season. +Scanitto Pro is Windows-based software application for image scanning, direct printing and copying, basic editing and text recognition (OCR). +Rooted in magical realism, the film depicts an underground trade in luck, where fortune flows from those who have less to those who have more; the premise purports that luck can be amassed and transferred as any other commodity. +Ángel Oswaldo Fernández Vernaza (born 2 August 1971) is an Ecuadorian footballer. +Hang Up Your Brightest Colours is a 1973 film by Welsh actor and filmmaker Kenneth Griffith, about the life and death of Irish Republican leader Michael Collins. +The 1890–91 Rugby Union County Championship was the third edition of England's premier rugby union club competition at the time. +In January 2010 Bally Total Fitness selected Lady Sovereign and her song "I Got You Dancing" for the featured artist section on their website, the song is also being used in their television commercials. +The capital city is Trento, although the two provincial capitals alternate biennially (the other being Bolzano) as the site of the regional assembly. +It has been associated with Ninlil and Astarte and has been found inscribed on portraits of a woman blessing a suckling child with her right hand. +See also Xanthoma tendinosum List of cutaneous conditions List of xanthoma variants associated with hyperlipoproteinemia subtypesReferences Category:Skin conditions resulting from errors in metabolism +Partnerships AlcoSense has working partnerships with a number of automotive institutions, including: The Automobile Association (AA) RAC Ltd Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) the leading road safety charity Brake Transport Research Laboratory (TRL) Direct Line. +Brian Naber (born February 7, 1949) is a former American football coach. +1763)183719 February - Thomas Burgess, Bishop of St David's, 80183814 March - Wyndham Lewis, MP, 5719 July - Christmas Evans, preacher (b. +"The Fallen" (acoustic version) – 2:44"Do You Want To" (Erol Alkan remix) – 7:41Errors in the liner notes stating that all tracks were written by Franz Ferdinand and omitting that track number three is an acoustic version. +It is located within Central Province. +According to the Telegraph, the theatre re-opened in 2009 with reinforced blast walls to protect against terrorist attacks. +PopulationPersonalities Probable birthplace of Theobald of Bec, archbishop of CanterburySee alsoCommunes of the Eure departmentThankful VillagesReferences INSEE for population figuresCategory:Communes of Eure +Galax is a flowering plant—also known as the wandplant or beetleweed. +From his experiments he observed that animals experienced epileptiform convulsions when exposed to concentrated levels of wormwood. +The blanking level (300 mV) yields 73% (in an ideally linear transmitter). +Abandonment The formal terms and contractual agreements have been abandoned as no states or districts are still contracted to the NCEE, and legislation in states such as Washington have discarded the term "Certificate of Initial Mastery" or its minor variations. +Murray's main interests include watching sport, collecting and producing wine. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1941Category:DepressariaCategory:Moths of the United States +IFC social fraternitiesAcacia (1911/2006)Alpha Chi Rho (1905/2017)Alpha Epsilon Pi (1947/2002)Alpha Tau Omega (1950)Delta Chi (1899/1967/2001)Delta Kappa Epsilon (1871)Delta Tau Delta (1910)Delta Upsilon (1891/2016)Lambda Chi Alpha (1918/2014)Phi Delta Theta (1887/2011)Phi Gamma Delta(1901)Phi Kappa Psi (1884)Phi Kappa Theta (1925/2001)Pi Kappa Alpha (1913)Psi Upsilon (1875)Sigma Alpha Mu (1913)Sigma Chi (1904)Sigma Phi Epsilon (1905)Theta Chi (1928)Zeta Beta Tau (1911)Panhellenic social sororitiesAlpha Chi OmegaAlpha Epsilon Phi Alpha Gamma Delta (Alpha chapter)Alpha Phi (Alpha chapter)Alpha Xi DeltaDelta Delta DeltaDelta GammaDelta Phi EpsilonGamma Phi Beta (Alpha chapter)Kappa Alpha ThetaKappa Kappa GammaPhi Sigma SigmaSigma Delta TauProfessional Fraternity CouncilAlpha Kappa PsiAlpha Phi OmegaAlpha Chi SigmaAlpha Omega EpsilonKappa Kappa PsiPhi Sigma PiDelta Sigma PiTau Beta SigmaTheta Tau (1925 - permanently expelled in 2018)Delta Kappa AlphaPhi Alpha DeltaNational Pan-Hellenic Council fraternities and sororitiesAlpha Phi AlphaAlpha Kappa AlphaKappa Alpha PsiOmega Psi PhiDelta Sigma ThetaPhi Beta SigmaSigma Gamma RhoZeta Phi BetaIota Phi ThetaThe Latino Greek Council fraternities and sororitiesSigma Iota AlphaOmega Phi BetaSigma Lambda UpsilonLambda Pi ChiPhi Iota AlphaLambda Upsilon LambdaLambda Sigma UpsilonLambda Theta AlphaLambda Alpha UpsilonThe Multicultural Greek Council fraternities and sororitiesKappa Phi Lambda (1997)Nu Alpha Phi (2007-2015; currently on suspension)Sigma Beta Rho (2011)Lambda Phi Epsilon (2015)Music fraternitiesPhi Mu Alpha SinfoniaSigma Alpha IotaReferences Syracuse University Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs (FASA)Fraternity and sorority systemCategory:Lists of chapters of United States student societies by collegeFraternities +Intended for a business career, he was led to devote himself entirely to music, and with that end in view he left California in 1890 and went to New York City. +They also participated in the "With A Vengeance" tour, in support of Otep, alongside New Years Day and Lydia Can't Breathe. +Robert Spencer Long (June 1927 in Chicago – December 25, 2015 in San Francisco), was a professor of physical science and the tenth president of Shimer College. +ReferencesCategory:Parishes of Alenquer, Portugal +Eley was awarded the Lilly-Molecular Psychiatry Award for the best original research submitted by a young investigator (2004) for her work on the role of gene-environment interactions and the development of anxiety and depression. +Fashion Show may also refer to: The Fashion Show (UK TV series), a 2008 British television show The Fashion Show (U.S. TV series), a 2009 American television show on Bravo "The Fashion Show" (The Inbetweeners), the series 3 premiere episode of The Inbetweeners Fashion Show Mall +ReferencesCategory:Townships in MissouriCategory:Townships in Franklin County, Missouri +IndividualTeams OpenModified The Modified division had 49 competitors (5.5 %). +Rake maintenance & sharingThe train is maintained by the Bhopal Coaching Depot. +RosterEuro League BaseballDraci Brno is one of the four teams to start in the inaugural season of the Euro League Baseball. +His next and last match was in the 1876 season. +The Walter Scolar was a Czechoslovakian nine-cylinder, air-cooled radial engine for powering light aircraft that first ran in 1936. +ReferencesCategory:1958 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1984 Summer OlympicsCategory:Nigerien male middle-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of NigerCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory, London, 1985 (2nd ed.). +Myonebrides is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae, containing the following species: Myonebrides crassepunctata Breuning, 1957 Myonebrides flavomaculata Breuning, 1969 Myonebrides sexpunctata Breuning, 1957ReferencesCategory:Desmiphorini +XVII, nos. +Following the 2017 AVC Board of Administration’s unanimous decision, the new format will see teams being drawn into three or four pools up to the total amount of the participating teams. +MINIET-EL-HEID – SHAWASHNA Miniet-el-Heit (see 130)NawaraAbou-GuandirEl-WanaissaMokhtalataAbou-Hamach Nezlet-Balad Kasr-el-GuibaliGebel SaadShawashna132. +Semper fidelis may also refer to: Semper Fidelis (march), John Philip Sousa march Semper Fidelis (album), album by German black metal band Nargaroth Semper Fidelis, first mission in the first-person shooter video game Battlefield 3 Semper Fidelis Marine Corps, rename of computer game Söldner: Secret WarsTelevision Semper Fidelis (NCIS), 2008 season 6 television episode Semper Fidelis (Jericho episode), 2007 season 1 television episode "Semper Fidelis", 1989 season 4 Growing Pains episode "Semper Fidelis", 1979 season 4 Quincy, M.E. +Jacques Bellenger (born 25 December 1927) is a former French cyclist. +Antoni Vila Casas (born November 27, 1930, Barcelona) studied Batchillerato in Jesuites school in 1948. +A remix of "Bombs" by Le Castle Vania was used for a Brazilian Renault car advert. +His seat was filled by George H. Moore, MHK. +Airlines and destinationsSee also Alliford Bay Water AerodromeList of accidents and incidents involving the Douglas DC-4ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Certified airports in British ColumbiaCategory:Airports in Haida GwaiiCategory:North Coast Regional District +The SM-1420 (CM-1420) was a 16 bit DEC PDP-11/45 minicomputer clone, and the successor to SM-4 in Soviet Bloc countries. +Yeah!" +Angulostiria is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. +This group represents 41% of the online education population, while 35.5% of students ages 24–29 and 24.5% of students ages 15–23 participate in virtual education. +Although the package nominally ran as a highly privileged CMS session and utilized CMS services, it deployed an internal multitasking mechanism called a subvisor, which queued and prioritized tasks to be done. +The mission statement is "To bring awareness to the ocean’s plasthic pollution problem and influence consumer habits by creating community built aesthetically powerful art. +Preliminary RoundGroup AGroup BReferencesExternal links The Championship at FIBA.comCategory:FIBA European Championship for Small CountriesFIBA European Championship for Small Countries FIBA European Championship for Small CountriesCategory:2020 in Irish sportCategory:Basketball in IrelandCategory:International sports competitions hosted by IrelandFIBAFIBAFIBA European Championship for Small Countries +This is a unique attraction to Walt Disney Studios Park. +He played ten first-class matches for Auckland between 1977 and 1980. +Before exporting by sea, a player needs to have acquired sufficient money (sterling) to pay for the transport rental during the sea journey. +Zlechov is a village and municipality (obec) in Uherské Hradiště District in the Zlín Region of the Czech Republic. +It lies about from Rudenz. +Over the decade, the company expanded its business to importing other flight control systems to China, such as those produced by Russia. +He played college football at the University of Arkansas. +Photo Mechanic uses the Metadata (IPTC) Template to label its photos. +The ZEUS PLUS is an upgraded ZEUS version including a heating bed and an air filter. +Patterdale may also refer to: Patterdale Terrier, a breed of dogPatterdale Hall, a building of the Bolton SchoolSee also +Cast Marcello Mastroianni as Marquis Luca Maria Lino Toffolo as Agostino Claudia Mori as Luca Maria's wife Adriano Celentano as Sprint Boss Flora Carabella as Aunt Luisa Anna Miserocchi as Helga Olga Bisera as Ivana, the Barman Andrea Aureli as The Deputy Silvano Bernabei as Vincenzo Alvaro Mancori as NanèSee also List of Italian films of 1976ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1976 filmsCategory:Italian filmsCategory:Italian comedy filmsCategory:Italian-language filmsCategory:1970s comedy filmsCategory:Films directed by Flavio Mogherini +Transport modules with drills are used to travel between the Technodrome and the Earth's surface. +2004 : King Arthur was filmed at Llanddeusant near Carmarthen starring Clive owen and kiera Knightley it was directed by Antoine Fuqua. +She is known for her work in films that highlight the inequality with women. +The Council Presidents are not included in the count of mayors. +Phylogeny Recent genetic analysis placed Famatinanthus as sister to all other species of Asteraceae except those in the subfamily Barnadesioideae. +(In 1899, after North Carolina Democrats passed a new state constitution to disenfranchise blacks, White chose not to seek a third term in Congress. +In 1871, he married Emma Harriet Mundy. +ReferencesCategory:2010 singlesCategory:Mystery Jets songsCategory:2010 songsCategory:Domino Recording Company singles +May and June are the hottest months. +Kuty () is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pozezdrze, within Węgorzewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. +Elections to the consultative Regional Council (Landesrat) were held in the territory of the Saar Basin on 25 June 1922. +(eds), European Register of Marine Species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification. +In 2009 d'Aquino was described by Globe and Mail's John Lorinc as Canada's "behind-the-scenes prime minister" and the "most influential corporate tout" for almost 30 years. +The hindwings are grey. +Club careerBorn in Kumasi, Abubakar had a successful trial with Willem II in the summer of 2015, but he had to wait to the following year to sign a contract due to work permit problems. +"Enjoy how sweet, how thoughtful, how kind I'm being on your birthday. +ReferencesCategory:American animated sitcomsCategory:American adult animated comedy television seriesCategory:English-language television programsCategory:Upcoming comedy television seriesCategory:Upcoming animated television seriesCategory:Fox Broadcasting Company original programmingCategory:Television series by Fox Entertainment +It was during his tenure at the Leipzig Conservatory that he had the idea for a progressively ordered compilation of etudes by various cellists. +calledOut of Nowhere, which includes six tracks written, performed and recorded by Gavin and Charlotte. +As a junior minister charged with a review of policy on National Parks, he formulated what became known as the "Sandford principle": if there is a conflict between leisure use of the National Park, and protecting its natural state, the state of the park must be preserved. +He starred as Terrance Dean on the short-lived CBS series, Better Days which only lasted 5 weeks before being canceled. +It is operated by the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and it serves elementary school through senior high school. +To give such a number for non-members would misrepresent the amount of time some international golfers spend on the European Tour; as the Tour co-sanctions the major championships and World Golf Championships events, some top players accumulate a significant number of wins in European Tour sanctioned events without really playing on it. +“You couldn’t have been more right.”Cast Om Puri as Parvez: an alcoholic Pakistani taxi driver who after living in the UK for many years is still working hard to make a living in his taxi whilst others who migrated with him have become wealthy. +The bibliography of William Faulkner, an American writer, includes 19 novels, 125 short stories (not including stories that appear exclusively in novels), 20 screenplays (including uncredited rewrites), one play, six collections of poetry as well as assorted letters and essays. +Points of interestThe following points of interest lie within the town or close to its borders: headquarters of Kiryandongo District administration offices of Kiryandongo Town Council Kiryandongo central market Kiryandongo General Hospital, a 109-bed public hospital administered by the Uganda Ministry of HealthSee also Karuma Power Station List of cities and towns in UgandaReferencesCategory:Kiryandongo DistrictCategory:Populated places in UgandaCategory:Cities in the Great Rift ValleyCategory:Western Region, UgandaCategory:Bunyoro +School district membersAsh Fork Joint Unified School DistrictBagdad Unified School DistrictChino Valley Unified School DistrictHumboldt Unified School DistrictMayer Unified School DistrictPrescott Unified School DistrictSeligman Unified School DistrictExternal links Category:School districts in Yavapai County, Arizona +Hoppus and Barker formed a new project +44, which released one album in 2006. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1975 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:South Korean male taekwondo practitionersCategory:Olympic taekwondo practitioners of South KoreaCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic gold medalists for South KoreaCategory:Asian Games medalists in taekwondoCategory:Olympic medalists in taekwondoCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2002 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Asian Games gold medalists for South KoreaCategory:Medalists at the 2002 Asian Games +Euthyone purpurea is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by E. Dukinfield Jones in 1914. +Ričardas Berankis, 3–6, 6–3, 7–6(7–3)Doubles Devin Britton / Jeff Dadamo def. +Notable people with the surname include:Alejo Corral (born 1981), Argentine rugby union playerÁlvaro Corral (born 1983), Spanish footballerCharlyn Corral (born 1991), Mexican footballerDaniel Corral (born 1990), Mexican gymnastDaniel Corral (composer) (born 1981), American composer and musicianEduardo C. Corral, American poetFrank Corral (born 1955), Mexican player of American footballGeorge Corral (born 1990), Mexican footballerImanol Corral (born 1994), Spanish footballerJosé Andrés Corral Arredondo (1946–2011), Mexican Roman Catholic bishopLeticia Corral (born 1959), Mexican mathematicianManuel Corral (1934–2011), Spanish antipopeMatías Corral (born 1968), Argentine rugby union playerOscar J. Corral (born 1974), American journalistPablo Corral (born 1992), Chilean footballerPablo Corral Embade (born 1972), Spanish Paralympic swimmerRamón Corral (1854–1912), Vice President of MexicoRamón Corral Ávila (born 1946), Mexican lawyer and politicianRaquel Corral, Spanish synchronized swimmerRodrigo Corral, American graphic artistSimón Corral (born 1946), Ecuadorian poet and dramatistValerie Corral, American cannabis activist +Santa Cruz scored his second league goal for Nacional in a 4–0 away victory against Club Guaraní 26 April 2014. +Stats Years pro: 14 Top 10 finishes: 59 First place finishes: 6Second place finishes: 10Career earnings: $2,545,553.64Current World rank: 14 Current Bassmaster standing: 2 (295 points)Total Weight: 5,846 lbs 10oz2007 B.A.S.S. +Duffryn is home to two of Newport's largest secondary schools – John Frost School and St. Joseph's RC High School. +ARA Narwal was an Argentinian fishing trawler, equipped for ELINT purposes during the Falklands War and captained by Asterio Wagata. +Character-oriented terminal emulatorsUnix-likeCommand-line interface Linux console – implements a large subset of the VT102 and ECMA-48/ISO 6429/ANSI X3.64 escape sequences. +DistributionThis species is found in the Indo-West Pacific, in New Zealand and southern Australia. +South Jetty was immediately adjacent and included a fish market, which was removed in 1929. +Dromogomphus armatus – Southeastern Spinyleg Dromogomphus spinosus – Black-shouldered SpinylegDromogomphus spoliatus – Flag-tailed SpinylegReferencesCategory:GomphidaeCategory:Anisoptera generaCategory:Taxa named by Edmond de Sélys Longchamps +On 21 August it was announced that defensive midfielder Isaac Osbourne had signed a one-year deal with the club. +It may refer toLev Leviev (disambiguation)Margarita Levieva (born 1980), Russian-American actressMilcho Leviev (born 1937), Bulgarian composer, arranger and jazz performerYoan Leviev (1934–1994), Bulgarian artist Category:Bulgarian-language surnames +Billroth may refer to: Theodor Billroth (1829–1894), Prussian-born Austrian surgeon and amateur musician Either of the gastrectomy procedures Billroth I Billroth II +The hoax has also been featured on the "Threat-Down" segment of the satirical television show The Colbert Report on March 6, 2006, where Stephen Colbert suggested a selective breeding program to save blonds. +Krisch holds a Ph.D. in law from the University of Heidelberg and a Diploma of European Law of the Academy of European Law at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy. +HistoryThe Moule family of Snead's Green House were among the most prominent local landowners from the 1620s until the late nineteenth century, when the family died out in the male line. +PGA Tour wins (1)PGA Tour playoff record (0–2)PGA Tour Champions playoff record (0–1)Results in major championshipsCUT = missed the half-way cut"T" = tiedSummaryMost consecutive cuts made – 4 (1997 PGA – 2002 U.S. Open)Longest streak of top-10s – 1 (twice)See also1991 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates1992 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates1995 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates1996 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates2005 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduatesReferencesExternal linksCategory:American male golfersCategory:New Mexico Lobos men's golfersCategory:New Mexico State Aggies men's golfersCategory:PGA Tour golfersCategory:PGA Tour Champions golfersCategory:Golfers from South DakotaCategory:People from Sully County, South DakotaCategory:People from Richmond, TexasCategory:1960 birthsCategory:Living people +Kahshur () may refer to: Kahshur-e Ali Nazer Kahshur-e Davud Ali Kahshur-e Olya Kahshur-e Sofla +The song peaked at #17 on the Billboard Social 50 and R&B/Hip-Hop Digital Songs chart. +ReferencesCategory:Canadian columnistsCategory:Living peopleCategory:National Post peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +ReferencesExternal links Nagoya College Category:Educational institutions established in 1923Category:Private universities and colleges in JapanCategory:Universities and colleges in Aichi PrefectureCategory:Japanese junior collegesCategory:Toyoake, Aichi +The school is named after Saint John Wall, a 17th-century Franciscan friar who is honored as a martyr. +Solo Whist, sometimes known as simply Solo, is a trick-taking card game whose direct ancestor is the 17th-century Spanish game Ombre, based on the English Whist. +United Nations Security Council Resolution 367, adopted on 12 March 1975, after receiving a complaint from the Government of the Republic of Cyprus, the Council again called upon all States to respect the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and non-alignment of the Republic of Cyprus. +PlotThe plot concerns Michael, a professional violinist, who never forgot his love for Julia, a pianist he met as a student in Vienna. +Average attendances Past averages (note that the capacity fluctuates):2013–14: 14,217 (82%)2012–13: 13,916 (80%)2011–12: 12,764 (79%)2010–11: 15,782 (97%)2009–10: 8,611 (91%)2008–09: 7,842 (81%)2007–08: 8,861 (92%)2006–07: 6,877 (73%)2005–06: 5,820 (61%)2004–05: 6,031 (59%)2003–04: 6,326 (62%)2002–03: 6,991 (69%)2001–02: 5,701 (56%)2000–01: 4,459 (44%)1999–00: 4,841 (43%)1998–99: 5,116 (45%)1997–98: 5,212 (46%)1996–97: 4,987 (46%)1995–96: 5,818 (60%)1994–95: 4,744 (46%)1993–94: 4,761 (49%)1992–93: 5,501 (53%)Note: The capacity at Bloomfield Road has fluctuated throughout this period. +In the October issue of Famitsu, the developers revealed several characters and mecha from several Macross series including Superdimensional Fortress Macross, Macross 7, Macross Plus, Macross Zero and Macross Frontier. +The primary scientific goal is the observation of gravitational waves from the time shortly after the Big Bang, but it would also be able to detect younger sources of gravitational radiation, like binary inspirals. +Its existence has been denied by other scholars. +Back in France, she joined the class of cellist Roland Pidoux and further perfected her chamber music skills. +There are dance sequences throughout the remainder of the video and a scene with Ciara performing on top of a car as Ludacris raps. +Paul Winslow may refer to: Paul Winslow (cricketer) (1929–2011), South African cricketer Paul Winslow (American football) (born 1938), former defensive back in the National Football League +The children of all region write letters to the Kuzbass Father Frost. +Since 1999 four apartments in the castle are inhabited. +See also Nangarhar ProvinceReferencesExternal links Photographs of Ghazi Amanullah TownCategory:Populated places in Nangarhar ProvinceCategory:Planned cities +Among Dutch bestsellers are titles such as the 17th century "Lusthof des Gemoets" by Jan Philipsz Schabaelje. +The British Ship Adoption Society, a Maritime Charity, was formed in the early part of the Second World War, with a large number of schools taking part in the scheme, amassing comforts for a particular ship and in return the children would receive letters of thanks and news from various ports around the world to which it would sail. +He received his first commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Garrison Artillery in 1903. +G. 39212. +Their relatively small size makes them much less dangerous than the larger titan triggerfish of the same family. +NameThe town and the lake were formerly called Eğridir, a Turkish pronunciation of the town's old Greek name Akrotiri.Eğridir means "it is crooked" in Turkish, so to remove the negative connotations, in the mid-1980s the "i" and the "r" were transposed in a new official name, thus creating Eğirdir, a name that evokes spinning and flowers, although many people in Turkey still call both the town and the lake by its former name. +The 2016 QBE Insurance Australian FIM Speedway Grand Prix was the eleventh and final race of the 2016 Speedway Grand Prix season. +This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction sporulenol tetraprenyl-beta-curcumene + H2OThe reaction occurs in the reverse direction. +Instead, artists signed by Hankerson promote positive ways for youth to succeed and become productive adults in society. +Morasa may refer to:Morasa State, a princely state of India merged with Idar State in 1821Morasa, a synonym for Lymantria, a genus of moths +OxyporinaeCategory:Beetles described in 1839Category:Beetles of North AmericaCategory:Beetle subfamilies +The relationship of this taxon to other taxa within the class is unknown (incertae sedis), and it has not yet been placed with certainty into any order or family. +He graduated in 1974,and completed his PhD in 1980 under the supervision of Peter Nash. +See also List of township-level divisions of ShandongReferences Category:Township-level divisions of Shandong +In their digitally composited photographs, the artists use only themselves as subjects, as Islam forbids the depiction of the human figure. +Dr. Raul Geller was a Peruvian-Israeli footballer and the third all time leading scorer of Beitar JerusalemPlaying careerAfter securing promotion for club team, Porvenir Miraflores, and representing Peru at the 1964 Copa América, Geller joined Beitar and helped the club gain promotion to the Israeli top division. +Van der Gucht played in the 1999 38-County Cup for Hampshire Cricket Board, and later in the season, in the first three rounds of the NatWest Trophy. +This layer blocks heat transfer from the warmer, deeper levels into the sea ice, which has considerable effect on its thickness. +During this period, he suffered recurring bouts of illness, which ultimately led to his death at the age of 28 in 1928. +The schoolroom area is mostly in original condition (with the exception of the additions of the bathroom and privacy wall extension) and is furnished with chairs, tables, books and a large television, which is used to view educational and instructional videos. +Thus, in the infinite-dimensional, separable, metric case, up to homeomorphism, the “only” Fréchet manifolds are the open subsets of Hilbert space. +As of 29 March 2020, when the event was suspended due to the COVID-19 epidemic, there had been 298 runs with an average of 133.5 runners per week. +It offers a wide range of banking services including savings and checking accounts, mortgages and business and personal loans. +The most significant is the Maotianshan shale, a lagerstätte which preserves soft tissues very well. +{{DISPLAYTITLE:C22H31NO3}}The molecular formula C22H31NO3 may refer to: Epostane Oxybutynin +ReferencesCategory:Former settlements in Kern County, CaliforniaCategory:Mojave, CaliforniaCategory:Populated places in the Mojave Desert +ReferencesCategory:1947 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1968 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1972 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1974 British Commonwealth GamesCategory:British female middle-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of Great BritainCategory:Sportspeople from LondonCategory:Commonwealth Games medallists in athleticsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1970 British Commonwealth GamesCategory:Commonwealth Games silver medallists for England +Lennox Joseph Cush (born 12 December 1974) in Georgetown, Guyana is a West Indies cricketer who played for Guyana in Stanford 2020. +She is a 1992 recipient of a Society for the Encouragement of Contemporary - SECA Art Award. +Career In 2017 she won one of the bronze medals in the 48 kg event at the Golden Grand Prix Ivan Yarygin 2017 held in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. +The series is not to be confused with the Griffin Pirate Stories by the same author. +Tom Carapic (born 1939), full name Tomislav Sava Čarapić, is an artist who specialises in found object artwork. +It has a preference for moss-covered rocks and tree trunks densely clad with vines. +The Paramount at Buckhead is a 478 ft (146 m) tall residential skyscraper in Atlanta, Georgia, and the tallest building in The Alliance Center complex. +Infosphere or InfoSphere may refer to the following: Infosphere, a term used to speculate about the common evolution of the Internet, society and culture IBM InfoSphere DataStage, an ETL software tool and part of the IBM Information Platforms Solutions suite that uses a graphical notation to construct data integration solutions The Infosphere, a massive biological memory bank in the animated series Futurama +He was charged with DUI in May 1992. +Tanny may refer to: Armand Tanny (1919-2009), a Muscle Beach bodybuilder Vic Tanny (c. 1912-1985), American entrepreneur, pioneer in the creation of the modern health club Tanny B. Crane (living), the President and CEO of Crane Group, Chair of the Board of Directors for the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland +It was released on April 24, 2002, by Tent House. +Palmares20003rd Szlakiem Grodów Piastowskich20021st Coupe des Carpathes2003 National Time Trial Champion20043rd Malopolski Wyscig Gorski3rd Memoriał Henryka Łasaka20061st Szlakiem Walk Majora Hubala3rd Neuseen Classics-Rund um die Braunkohle20071st Memoriał Andrzeja Trochanowskiego20093rd Puchar Ministra Obrony NarodowejReferencesCategory:1977 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Polish male cyclistsCategory:Sportspeople from Kalisz +The Sonic Seducer magazine called it a "highlight" after the band's EP Evolution Principle and compared the track "Sweet Revenge" to the style of Meat Loaf. +see also MiglosStages and vegetation zones of France, Gaussen, 1938. +The data consist of voluntary reports since June 1993, user facility reports since 1991, distributor reports since 1993, and manufacturer reports since August 1996, and is open for public view. +Aves, with him featuring scarcely for the latter. +He first started playing guitar as a teenager in the late 1970s. +The Delta Devils were led by second-year head coach Rick Comegy and played their home games at Rice–Totten Field. +Lacta is a Brazilian chocolate and confectionery maker, founded in São Paulo in 1912 as Société Anonyme des Chocolats Suisses. +José Fernando Ferrer Selma (born 28 October 1950 in Castellón de la Plana, Valencian Community) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a defender. +Sherwin Campbell Badger (August 29, 1901 – April 8, 1972) was an American figure skater who competed in singles and pairs. +Dejan Kurbus (born 16 January 1993) is a Slovenian footballer who plays as a central defender for USV Gabersdorf. +It is known from Taiwan. +The branching pattern is distinctive, with opposite side branches forming right angles to the main stem. +He has served as the president of the University of the District of Columbia since 2015. +Albert Ramos, 7–5, 4–6, 7–5Doubles Dino Marcan / Antonio Šančić def. +Physical characteristics Four rotational lightcurves gave a well-defined rotation period of 4.233 hours with a brightness variation of 0.62–0.69 magnitude () and an albedo of 0.055 and 0.16, as measured by the IRAS and Akari surveys, respectively. +Surrounding areaJoetsu International Ski ResortOsawayama OnsenSee also List of railway stations in JapanExternal links Ōsawa Station information (JR East) Category:Railway stations in Niigata PrefectureCategory:Railway stations opened in 1949Category:1949 establishments in JapanCategory:Stations of East Japan Railway CompanyCategory:Jōetsu LineCategory:Minamiuonuma +CastReferencesBibliographyExternal links Category:1972 filmsCategory:West German filmsCategory:1970s romantic comedy filmsCategory:German romantic comedy filmsCategory:German-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Rolf Thiele +Contents"Foreword" (John Carnell)"The Wall to End the World" (Vincent King)"Catharsis" (John Rackham)"Shock Treatment" (Lee Harding)"Bright Are the Stars That Shine, Dark Is the Sky" (Dennis Etchison)"There Was This Fella..." (Douglas R. Mason)"For What Purpose?" +References Category:National Basketball Association draftCategory:Indiana Pacers lists +Along with programming from the Tom Kent Radio Network, WRDO hosts many different shows and programs from Ben Hill County and surrounding areas including high school football, church services, and community/commerce services. +He died in Amsterdam virtually unknown, according to his biographers. +In Robert Fulghum's book All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten one of short stories is set in San Saba. +The first release of Forté 4GL was published in August 1994. +Based in Cleveland, Ohio, NAMS has more than 2,000 members from 51 countries, with 88% of its members from North America.Its membership includes experts from many disciplines such as medicine, nursing, sociology, psychology, nutrition, anthropology, epidemiology, pharmacy, and education. +California is also showing movement from this common law doctrine in transfer of property. +It aired on JTBC on Sundays at 20:50 (KST); the first episode aired on June 25, 2017. +The station is commonly referred to as "Kyodae" or "Gyodae". +ReferencesExternal links Category:American filmsCategory:American drama filmsCategory:Films directed by Jeremy KaganCategory:Films scored by Bruce Broughton +Bolęcin is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sochocin, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. +No reputable historian or journalist supports these claims. +The advertisement was inserted under instructions from the receivers and managers of Dean-Wilson Aviation P/L and Queensland Aviation Manufacturing P/L. +The following year, both Mildmay-Carrick and Teeswater-Culross amalgamated again to form South Bruce, choosing Teeswater as the seat of the municipality. +As the Fringe team prepares to escort Canaan to headquarters, the sniper attempts to kill him. +In June 2019, he defeated Allegany County Legislator Curt Crandall in the Republican Primary. +Trézelles is a commune in the Allier department in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in central France. +DemographicsReferencesExternal linksCity-data.comIllinois State ArchivesCategory:Townships in McLean County, IllinoisCategory:Townships in Illinois +Prior to joining Facebook in 2014, Mikolov worked as a visiting researcher at Johns Hopkins University, Université de Montréal, Microsoft and Google. +Essex has a year-round population of less than 50; most passengers are visitors to the historic Izaak Walton Inn located nearby. +Virginia's 14th Cavalry Regiment was organized in September, 1862, with nine companies, some of which had previously served in Jackson's Squadron Virginia Cavalry. +Joaquín Sobrino Martinez (born 22 June 1982 in Posada de Llanes) is a Spanish cyclist. +He finished 4th in the championship standings with four podium finishes and grabbed the Rookie of the Year title. +This is based on the difference between dates; if counted by number of calendar days all the figures would be one greater. +ReferencesExternal linksSCHEDA BOTANICA / PLANT PROFILE: Malus florentina (Zuccagni) C. K. Schneid. +It matched the Duke Blue Devils of the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Nebraska Cornhuskers of the Big Seven Conference. +Road distance to North Cape from different towns:Honningsvåg; Lakselv; Hammerfest; Alta; Kirkenes; Tromsø;WinterIt is possible to visit North Cape during winter, but when there is heavy snow and wind, the last stretch of road is only open for convoy driving at certain times. +Maximum interrupt latency is largely determined by the methods an OS uses for interrupt handling. +It uses the plot of the Alexandre Dumas, père, version of E.T.A. +After his graduation in 1939 Tabbert supported himself as he studied music by performing small parts with the Chicago Civic Opera Company and singing at local area night spots. +The Finnish-German forces launched Operation Silver Fox (Silberfuchs), attacking Murmansk from two directions. +The Institute cooperates in Antarctic logistics and research projects with the Antarctic Programs of Spain, United Kingdom, Russia, Germany, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, South Korea etc. +Personal lifeHenke was married to actress Katelin Chesna from 2001 to 2008. +Universidad Nacional Experimental Simón Rodríguez is a university in Caracas founded in 1974. +Dry-season broodThe male has the upperside similar to the wet-season form but on the forewing the irroration of black scales at base and the black on apical area much restricted, the latter in most specimens has a more or less rubbed appearance; the white preapical spots very ill-defined. +The antibacterial spectrum of ceftazidime/avibactam includes nearly all Enterobacteriaceae, including ceftazidime-resistant strains. +This seems to be the focal point of Julien Labrousse, he defends a musical architecture, for this reason, he can’t find a better subject than concert halls. +Leslie Welch (29 December 1907 – 8 February 1980) was a British radio and television entertainer known as the Memory Man. +Notable people with the surname include:Delara Darabi (1986–2009), Iranian executed for murderIman Darabi (born 1992), Kurdish MMA fighter in Sweden Homa Darabi (1940–1994), Iranian suicideMoslem Darabi (born 1981), Iranian strongmanParvin Darabi (born 1941), American activist +At least 92 were manufactured. +AchievementsMidland Countries100 yards winner 1911-14 and 1919220 yards winner 1913 and 1914AAA Championships100 yards second to Willie Applegarth 1913Meeting in Berlin 1913100 metres winner, beating Victor d'Arcy and ApplegarthPersonal bests100 yards - 10.2 (1913)100 metres - 10.9 (1913)220 yards - 23.4 (1913)ReferencesBuchanan, Ian: Who's Who of UK & GB International Athletes 1896-1939British Olympic Association, Athletes: James Barker. +CastAdolf Dymsza... Wincenty PoziomkaMaria Bogda ... HelenkaKazimierz Krukowski ... Krupkowski, aktor rewiowyBasia Wywerkówna ... BasienkaKonrad Tom ... LowelasLudwik Lawinski ... dyrektor Kosmos-FilmuJózef Orwid ... Dyrektor rewiiEugeniusz Koszutski ... DentystaHelena Zarembina ... Florcia SłowikównaMonika Carlo ... Aktorka rewiowaEwa ErwiczLeon RechenskiAniela MiszczykównaJan BieliczJan Dobosz-BieliczKarol HubertZygmunt Regro-RegirerExternal links Category:1935 filmsCategory:Polish filmsCategory:Polish-language filmsCategory:Polish black-and-white filmsCategory:Films directed by Michał WaszyńskiCategory:Polish comedy filmsCategory:1930s comedy films +REDIRECT Tinsel +ReferencesSources Category:1576 birthsCategory:1629 deathsCategory:Banu Qatadah +I-III, Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1970-1971. +In December 1826, the atheistic phrenologist William A.F. +Career2006–2010: Beginnings and rising popularityJung made his acting debut in 2006 with a minor role in the thriller The World of Silence, but he first rose to fame playing a rebellious teen and motorcycle fanatic with a crush on his teacher in daytime family sitcom Unstoppable High Kick. +All-Big Ten selectionsQuarterbacks Dean Look, Michigan State (AP-1; UPI-2) Dale Hackbart, Wisconsin (AP-2; UPI-1) Olen Treadway, Iowa (AP-3; UPI-3)Halfbacks Bob Jeter, Iowa (AP-1; UPI-1) Ron Burton, Northwestern (AP-1; UPI-1) Ray Jauch, Iowa (AP-2; UPI-2) Ray Purdin, Northwestern (AP-2; UPI-2) Herb Adderly, Michigan State (AP-3; UPI-3) Bob Jarus, Purdue (UPI-3) Vic Jones, Indiana (AP-3)Fullbacks Mike Stock, Northwestern (AP-1; UPI-1) Bill Brown, Illinois (AP-2; UPI-2) Bob White, Ohio State (AP-3; UPI-3)Ends Jim Houston, Ohio State (AP-1; UPI-1) Don Norton, Iowa (AP-1; UPI-1) Elbert Kimbrough, Northwestern (AP-2; UPI-2) Earl Faison, Indiana (AP-3; UPI-2) Ted Aucreman, Indiana (AP-2; UPI-3) Dick Brooks, Purdue (AP-3; UPI-3)Tackles Dan Lanphear, Wisconsin (AP-1; UPI-1) Joe Rutgens, Illinois (AP-1; UPI-2) Gene Gossage, Northwestern (AP-2; UPI-1) Jerry Beabout, Purdue (UPI-2) Jim Heineke, Wisconsin (AP-2; UPI-3) Mike Wright, Minnesota (UPI-3) Palmer Pyle, Michigan State (AP-3) Jim Tyrer, Ohio State (AP-3)Guards Jerry Stalcup, Wisconsin (AP-1; UPI-1) Bill Burrell, Illinois (AP-1; UPI-1) Tom Brown, Minnesota (AP-3; UPI-2) Ron Maltony, Purdue (AP-2; UPI-2) Ron Perkins, Wisconsin (AP-2) Pete Arena, Northwestern (AP-3; UPI-3) Ernie Wright, Ohio State (UPI-3)Centers Jim Andreotti, Northwestern (AP-1; UPI-1) Bill Lapham, Iowa (AP-2; UPI-2) Dave Manders, Michigan State (UPI-3) Jerry Smith, Michigan (AP-3)KeyAP = Associated PressUPI = United Press International, selected by the conference coachesBold = Consensus first-team selections by the AP and UPISee also1959 College Football All-America TeamReferencesAll-Big Ten ConferenceCategory:All-Big Ten Conference football teams +See also Communes of the Moselle departmentCategory:Communes of Moselle (department) +Jesús Rodríguez may refer to:Jesús Ancer Rodríguez (born 1952), Mexican researcher and physicianJesús Eugenio Rodríguez (born 1967), Cuban sport wrestlerJesús Iván Rodríguez (born 1993), Mexican footballerJesús Kumate Rodríguez (1924–2018), Mexican physician and politicianEl Koala (Jesus Manuel Rodriguez, born 1970), Spanish musicianJesús Márquez Rodríguez, Puerto Rican politicianJesús Rodríguez (athlete), Venezuelan javelin thrower and winner in athletics at the 1962 Central American and Caribbean GamesJesús Rodríguez (footballer) (born 1983), Spanish footballerJesús Rodríguez (weightlifter) (born 1933), Spanish Olympic weightlifterJesús Rodríguez Hernández (born 1955), Mexican politicianJesús Rodríguez Magro (1960–2018), Spanish cyclistJesús Rodríguez Picó (born 1953), composer and clarinet playerJesús Santa Rodríguez (born 1964), Puerto Rican politicianRicardo Rodriguez (wrestler) (Jesús Rodríguez, born 1986), Mexican American professional wrestler and ring announcerSixto Rodriguez (born 1942), also known as Jesús Rodríguez, American folk musician +ReferencesCategory:LamiinaeCategory:Beetles described in 1925 +Knopfler agreed, unaware of the religious nature of the material that awaited him. +It was replaced by a gondola lift at the end of 2014. +1895 – Dresden Funicular Railway begins operating. +She graduated from SHSU with a BS in Criminal Justice, and from the University of Houston - Clear Lake with a Masters Degree in Criminology. +ReferencesCategory:FacelinidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1970 +GeographyAccording to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of , of which (or 99.29%) is land and (or 0.71%) is water. +Graham-Smith teaches mathematics at Elizabeth College in Hobart. +This makes it easy to reach by public transportation, even if many of the visitors use car. +References United States Census Bureau cartographic boundary files U.S. Board on Geographic NamesExternal links Indiana Township Association United Township Association of IndianaCategory:Townships in Delaware County, IndianaCategory:Townships in Indiana +It consists of a white cylindrical concrete tower in diameter and tall with a red stripe and two balconies in diameter. +Ovacık (literally "little plains" or "little lowlands" in Turkish) may refer to the following places in Turkey:Districts Ovacık, Karabük, a town and district of Karabük Province Ovacık, Tunceli, a small city and district of Tunceli ProvinceVillages Ovacık, Ardanuç, a village in the district of Ardanuç, Artvin Province Ovacık, Başmakçı, a village in the district of Başmakçı, Afyonkarahisar Province Ovacık, Çine, a village in the district of Çine, Aydın Province Ovacık, Çubuk, a village in the district of Çubuk, Ankara Province Ovacık, Elmalı, a village in the district of Elmalı, Antalya Province Ovacık, Fethiye, a village in the district of Fethiye, Muğla Province Ovacık, Kahta, a village in the district of Kahta, Adıyaman Province Ovacık, Kemer, a village in the district of Kemer, Antalya Province Ovacık, Kuyucak, a village in the district of Kuyucak, Aydın Province Ovacık, Lüleburgaz, a village in the district of Lüleburgaz, Kırklareli Province Ovacık, Nazilli, a village in the district of Nazilli, Aydın Province Ovacık, Samsat, a village in the district of Samsat, Adıyaman Province Ovacık, Silifke, a village in the district of Silifke, Mersin Province Ovacık, Vezirköprü, a village in the district of Vezirköprü, Samsun ProvinceSee also Yeşilovacık, a town in the district of Silifke, Mersin Province, Turkey +Nuits de la Fondation Maeght is a live album by American composer, bandleader and keyboardist Sun Ra recorded in 1970 France and released in two volumes on the Shandar label. +Gelis species Gelis abortivus (Spinola, 1851) c g Gelis acarorum (Linnaeus, 1758) c g Gelis aciculatus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis adili Bogacev, 1946 c g Gelis agilis (Fabricius, 1775) c g Gelis alator Aubert, 1989 c g Gelis albanicus (Fahringer, 1923) c g Gelis albicinctoides Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis albicinctus (Ruthe, 1859) c g Gelis albipalpus (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis albopilosus Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis alegininus Carlson, 1979 c g Gelis algericus (Habermehl, 1920) c Gelis alogus (Viereck, 1905) c g Gelis alopecosae Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis alpinus (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis alpivagus (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis alternatus (Cresson, 1872) c Gelis anataelianus Ceballos, 1925 c g Gelis anatolicus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis aneichi Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis annulatus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis anthracinus (Forster, 1850) c Gelis apantelicidus (Viereck, 1913) c g Gelis apantelis Cushman, 1927 c g Gelis aponius Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis apterus (Pontoppidan, 1763) c g Gelis araneator Seyrig, 1926 c g Gelis areator (Panzer, 1804) c g Gelis areolatus Ceballos, 1927 c g Gelis ariamus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis asozanus (Uchida, 1930) c g Gelis asperatus (Fonscolombe, 1852) c g Gelis athracinus (Förster, 1850) g Gelis atratus (de Stefani, 1884) c g Gelis austriacus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis avarus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis balcanicus Horstmann, 1993 c g Gelis balteatus (Cameron, 1905) c g Gelis belfragei (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis bellicus Bogacev, 1963 c g Gelis bicolor (Villers, 1789) c Gelis bicoloratus (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis birkmani (Brues, 1903) c Gelis brassicae Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis brevicauda (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis brevis (Bridgman, 1883) c g Gelis brevistylus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis brevithorax Roman, 1936 c g Gelis bruesii (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis brunneellus Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis californicus (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis campbellensis Townes, 1964 c g Gelis canadensis (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis canariensis Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis carbonarius (de Stefani, 1884) c g Gelis caudator Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis caudatulus Horstmann, 1997 c g Gelis caudatus (Rudow, 1917) c g Gelis cayennator (Thunberg, 1822) c g Gelis cinctus (Linnaeus, 1758) c Gelis circumdatus (Schiodte, 1839) c g Gelis claviventris (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis cockerelli (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis coloradensis (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis columbianus (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis compactus (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis constantineanui Ciochia, 1974 c Gelis crassulus (Brues, 1903) c g Gelis cursitans (Fabricius, 1775) c g Gelis curvicauda Horstmann, 1993 c g Gelis cushmani Carlson, 1979 c g Gelis cyanurus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis davidsonii (Ashmead, 1896) c g Gelis debilis (Provancher, 1886) c g Gelis declivis (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis delicatus (Cresson, 1872) c Gelis delumbis (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis dendrolimi (Matsumura, 1926) c Gelis difficilis (Hedwig, 1950) c g Gelis dimidiativentris (Rudow, 1917) c g Gelis discedens (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis dispar (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis divaricatus Horstmann, 1993 c g Gelis drassi (Riley, 1892) c g Gelis edentatus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis elongatus (Rudow, 1917) c g Gelis elymi (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis escalerai Ceballos, 1925 c g Gelis exareolatus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis excellens (Hedwig, 1961) c g Gelis fabularis Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis falcatus Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis fallax (Forster, 1850) c Gelis fasciitinctus (Dalla Torre, 1901) c g Gelis fenestralis (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis ferruginosus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis festinans (Fabricius, 1798) c g Gelis formicarius (Linnaeus, 1758) c g Gelis forticornis (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis fortificator Aubert, 1980 c g Gelis fortunatus Schwarz, 1993 c g Gelis fossae Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis foveatus (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis fumipennis Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis fuscicorniformis Ciochia, 1973 c g Gelis fuscicornis (Retzius, 1783) c g Gelis gallicator (Aubert, 1971) c g Gelis gelechiae (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis gibbifrons (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis glacialis (Holmgren, 1869) c g Gelis gracillimus (Dalla Torre, 1902) c Gelis habilis (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis hammari (Viereck, 1912) c g Gelis hebraicator Aubert, 1971 c g Gelis heidenreichi Habermehl, 1930 c g Gelis helleni Kolarov, 1993 c g Gelis hispanicus Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis hortensis (Christ, 1791) c g Gelis hypsibatus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis inermis (Viereck, 1903) c g Gelis infumatus (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis insolitus (Howard, 1897) c g Gelis intermedius (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis inustus (Gravenhorst, 1829) c g Gelis inutilis Cushman, 1927 c g Gelis karakurti (Rossikov, 1904) c g Gelis keenii (Harrington, 1894) c g Gelis kiesenwetteri (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis kukakensis (Ashmead, 1902) c Gelis kumamotensis (Uchida, 1930) c g Gelis latrodectiphagus (Hesse, 1942) c g Gelis leiradoi Ceballos, 1925 c g Gelis lemae (Sonan, 1930) c Gelis leptogaster (Forster, 1850) c Gelis limbatus (Gravenhorst, 1829) c Gelis liparae (Giraud, 1863) c g Gelis longicauda (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis longipes (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis longistylus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis lucidulus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis lymensis (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis macer (Cresson, 1872) c Gelis macroptera (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis maculatus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis maderi (Fahringer, 1923) c g Gelis maesticolor (Roman, 1933) c g Gelis mangeri (Gravenhorst, 1815) c g Gelis manni (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis margaritae Bogacev, 1946 c g Gelis marikovskii Kuzin, 1948 c g Gelis maruyamensis (Uchida, 1932) c Gelis meabilis (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis meigenii (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis melampus (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis melanocephalus (Schrank, 1781) c g Gelis melanogaster (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis melanogonus (Gravenhorst, 1829) c g Gelis melanophorus (Forster, 1851) c g Gelis merceti Ceballos, 1925 c g Gelis merops Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis meuseli (Lange, 1911) c g Gelis micariae (Howard, 1892) c g Gelis micrurus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis minimus (Walsh, 1861) c g Gelis mitis Schwarz, 1994 c g Gelis monozonius (Gravenhorst, 1829) c g Gelis mutillatus (Gmelin, 1790) c g Gelis nahanojus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis napocai Ciochia, 1974 c g Gelis nigerrimus (Dalla Torre, 1902) c g Gelis nigritulus (Zetterstedt, 1838) c g Gelis nigriventris (Brues, 1903) c g Gelis nigrofuscus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis nitidus Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis nivariensis Schwarz, 1993 c g Gelis nocuus Cushman, 1927 c g Gelis notabilis (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis obesus (Ashmead, 1902) c g Gelis obscuratus (Strobl, 1901) c g Gelis obscuripes Horstmann, 1986 c g Gelis obscurus (Cresson, 1872) c Gelis operosus Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis ornatulus (Thomson, 1884) c Gelis ostarrichi Schwarz, 1996 c g Gelis ottawaensis (Harrington, 1896) c g Gelis pallipes (Forster, 1851) c Gelis pamirensis Bogacev, 1963 c g Gelis papaveris (Förster, 1856) c g Gelis parens Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis parfentjevi (Meyer, 1926) c g Gelis pauxillus (Kokujev, 1909) c g Gelis pavlovskii Jonaitis, 1981 c g Gelis pennsylvanicus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis perniciosus (Viereck, 1913) c Gelis petraeus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis pettitii (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis pezomachorum (Ratzeburg, 1852) c g Gelis philpottii (Brues, 1922) c g Gelis picipes (Gravenhorst, 1829) c g Gelis piger (Kokujev, 1909) c g Gelis pilosulus (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis popofensis (Ashmead, 1902) c g Gelis potteri Barron, 1987 c g Gelis povolnyi Sedivy, 1968 c g Gelis problematicus (Seyrig, 1952) c g Gelis problemator Aubert, 1989 c g Gelis prospectus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis prosthesimae (Riley, 1892) c g Gelis proximus (Forster, 1850) c Gelis pulicarius (Fabricius, 1793) c g Gelis pusillus (de Stefani, 1884) c g Gelis rabidae Barron, 1987 c g Gelis ragusae (de Stefani, 1884) c Gelis recens Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis robustus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis rotundiceps (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis rotundiventris (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis rubricollis (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis ruficeps (Rudow, 1914) c g Gelis rufipes (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis rufogaster Thunberg, 1827 c g Gelis rufoniger Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis rufotinctus (Bridgman, 1883) c g Gelis rugifer (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis sanguinipectus (Schmiedeknecht, 1932) c g Gelis sapporoensis (Ashmead, 1906) c g Gelis schizocosae Barron & Bisdee, 1977 c g Gelis scvarskii (Rossikov, 1904) c g Gelis semirufus (de Stefani, 1884) c g Gelis sessilis (Provancher, 1874) c g Gelis seyrigi Ceballos, 1925 c g Gelis shafae Jonaitis & Alijev, 1988 c g Gelis shawidaani Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis shushae Jonaitis & Alijev, 1988 c g Gelis sibiricus (Szépligeti, 1901) c Gelis solus Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis speciosus (Hellen, 1949) c g Gelis spinula (Thomson, 1884) c g Gelis spiraculus (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis spurius (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis stanfordensis (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis stevenii (Gravenhorst, 1829) c g Gelis stigmaterus (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis stigmaticus (Zetterstedt, 1838) c g Gelis stigmatus (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis stilatus (Rudow, 1914) c g Gelis striativentris Schwarz, 2003 c g Gelis stricklandi Townes, 1944 c g Gelis takadai Momoi, 1970 c g Gelis tantillus (Cresson, 1872) c g Gelis taschenbergii (Schmiedeknecht, 1897) c g Gelis tauriscus Schwarz, 1998 c g Gelis tenellus (Say, 1835) c g b Gelis tenerifensis Schwarz, 1993 c g Gelis terribilis Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis texanus (Cresson, 1872) c Gelis thersites (Schmiedeknecht, 1933) c g Gelis thomsoni (Schmiedeknecht, 1933) c g Gelis thripites (Taylor, 1860) c g Gelis tibiator Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis trux (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis tubulosus (Fahringer, 1923) c g Gelis turbator Schwarz, 2002 c g Gelis uniformis (Dalla Torre, 1902) c g Gelis urbanus (Brues, 1910) c g Gelis utahensis (Strickland, 1912) c g Gelis vagabundus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis vasiljevi (Kokujev, 1912) c g Gelis venatorius (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis viduus (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis virginiensis (Ashmead, 1890) c g Gelis vulnerans (Forster, 1850) c g Gelis westerhauseri Gistel, 1857 c g Gelis wheeleri (Brues, 1903) c g Gelis yakutatensis (Ashmead, 1902) c g Gelis zeirapherator (Aubert, 1966) c gData sources: i = ITIS, c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.netReferences*Gelis +Born in Chelmsford, Massachusetts, the daughter of Grace Bridgeford and Wendell Luke, Bauer received her B.A. +ReferencesExternal links ArtNet: Designs by Ballin. +Since retiring as a player, Joel has remained active in professional football. +He rose up the ranks, working with Jacqueline Susann, Gore Vidal, and Tom Wolfe, and when he left Bantam, at 22, he was one of book publishing's youngest directors. +After the 2010 federal election, the portfolio was subsumed by the Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities portfolio. +ReferencesExternal links Official site Interview with Publisher Richard Nash at 3:AM MagazineIt's Got to Have Balls: Denise Oswald on Soft Skull's FutureInterview with Yuka Igarashi at Authors GuideCategory:Small press publishing companiesCategory:Book publishing companies based in Berkeley, CaliforniaCategory:Publishing companies established in 1992 +In the run-up to the November 2011 parliamentary elections, the USFP sought to present a united front with the Party of Progress and Socialism (PPS) and Democratic Forces Front (FFD) to reverse the loss of support for the Moroccan left in the preceding years. +Track listing All compositions by Jimmy McGriff except where noted "Discotheque U.S.A." – 3:21 "Cash Box" – 3:39 "Blues for Joe" – 3:00 "Blues for Mr. Jimmy" – 4:52 "The Dog (You Dog)" – 3:25 "Bump de Bump" – 3:37 "The Party's Over" (Jule Styne, Adolph Green, Betty Comden) – 4:05 "Turn Blue" – 4:36 "Sho' Nuff" – 3:51Personnel Jimmy McGriff – organLarry Frazier – guitarJimmie Smith – drumsReferences Category:1965 albumsCategory:Jimmy McGriff albumsCategory:Sue Records albums +In 1985, Crete and Bewley sold the company to liquor giant Brown-Forman Inc. in a deal valued up to $146 million. +The Explosive Little Richard is the first album by Little Richard under the Okeh label, produced by Little Richard's long-time friend Larry Williams and Johnny "Guitar" Watson and reflecting the then current sound of Soul and Motown. +Known as the Father of Golf in Atlanta, he helped mentor Bobby Jones. +!Result!Record!Opponent!Method!Round, time!Date!Location!Notes|-|36|Loss|27–7–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Kris Andrews|TKO|1 (6), 1:59|June 20, 2008|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|35|Win|27–6–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Claudio Ortiz|DQ|5 (6), 2:05|May 16, 2008|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|34|Win|26–6–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Justin Berger|TKO|2 (6), 1:15|Mar 28, 2008|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|33|Loss|25–6–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Verno Phillips|TKO|4 (10), 3:00|July 19, 2002|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|32|Loss|25–5–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Darrell Woods|TKO|7 (10), 2:29|May 31, 2002|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|31|Win|25–4–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Wayne Harris|UD|8|Sep 20, 2001|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|30|Loss|24–4–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Richard Williams|TKO|3 (12), 0:47|Jan 23, 2001|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|29|Win|24–3–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Gilberto Flores|UD|10|Nov 17, 2000|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|28|Loss|23–3–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Juan Carlos Candelo|UD|10|June 9, 2000|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|27|Win|23–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Paulo Alejandro Sanchez|SD|10|April 6, 2000|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|26|Win|22–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Gavin Topp|UD|12|Nov 19, 1999|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|25|Win|21–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Mario L'Esperance|TKO|6 (8)|Aug 12, 1999|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|24|Win|20–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Manny Sobral|KO|6 (12)|June 24, 1999|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|23|Win|19–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Greg Johnson|RTD|5 (12), 3:00|Feb 23, 1999|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|22|Win|18–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Aaron McLaurine|UD|10|April 21, 1998|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|21|Win|17–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Greg Johnson|TKO|3|Feb 13, 1998|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|20|Loss|16–2–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Manny Sobral|TD|11 (12)|June 12, 1997|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|19|Win|16–1–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Anthony Ivory|UD|12|Mar 27, 1997|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|18|Win|15–1–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| James Stokes|TKO|2 (8), 1:48|Feb 13, 1997|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|17|Win|14–1–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Jeff Johnson|UD|8|Dec 15, 1996|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|16|Win|13–1–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Derrick Coleman|TKO|10|Oct 7, 1996|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|15|Draw|12–1–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Derrick Coleman|PTS|8|Aug 29, 1996|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|14|Loss|12–1 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Fitz Vanderpool|TKO|6 (12)|April 19, 1996|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|13|Win|12–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Bryon Mackie|UD|10|Jan 25, 1996|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|12|Win|11–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Phil Clarson|TKO|3|Dec 7, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|11|Win|10–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Dezi Ford|UD|10|Oct 25, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|10|Win|9–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Alan Harper|TKO|9 (10), 1:22|Aug 14, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|9|Win|8–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Darrell Cottrell|TKO|6 (10), 1:36|June 27, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|8|Win|7–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Ron Pasek|UD|6|April 28, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|7|style="background:#DDD"||6–0 (1)|style="text-align:left;"| Tracy Anderson|ND|2|Mar 31, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|6|Win|6–0|style="text-align:left;"| Brian Ramsden|TKO|2 (6)|Feb 24, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|5|Win|5–0|style="text-align:left;"| Chris Coleman|TKO|5 (6)|Jan 26, 1995|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|4|Win|4–0|style="text-align:left;"| Rob Stowell|TKO|3 (6)|Dec 9, 1994|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|3|Win|3–0|style="text-align:left;"| Terry Fowler|TKO|4 (6), 1:19|Oct 21, 1994|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|2|Win|2–0|style="text-align:left;"| Darren Kenny|KO|3 (6)|Sep 15, 1994|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"||-|1|Win|1–0|style="text-align:left;"| Mike Kennedy|TKO|4 (6)|Mar 22, 1994|style="text-align:left;"| |style="text-align:left;"|ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1974 birthsCategory:Canadian male boxersCategory:Light-middleweight boxersCategory:Middleweight boxersCategory:Commonwealth Boxing Council championsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Sportspeople from EdmontonCategory:Romanian emigrants to CanadaCategory:Super-middleweight boxersCategory:Welterweight boxersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Romanian male boxers +The Battle of Pydna was fought in 148 BC between Rome and the forces of the Macedonian leader Andriscus. +He made his first impression on the inter-county scene when he joined the Limerick senior team during a golden age between 1918 and 1923. +Preseason All–Southland TeamsThe Colonels placed eleven players on the preseason all–Southland teams. +A 2010 report into space tourism anticipated that it could become a billion-dollar market by 2030. +See also National Advisory Council National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA)ReferencesExternal links Jean Drèze on TheHindu.com Interview on India Together Future of Mid-Day Meals. +Trilogy (1975) by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson The Dead Father (1975) by Donald Barthelme Dhalgren (1975) by Samuel R. Delany Options (1975) by Robert Sheckley The Alteration (1976) by Kingsley Amis American Splendor (1976-2008) by Harvey Pekar Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (1976) by Tom Robbins Almost Transparent Blue (1976) by Ryu Murakami Ratner's Star (1976) by Don DeLillo Ceremony (1977) by Leslie Marmon Silko Monkey Grip (1977) by Helen Garner A Scanner Darkly (1977) by Philip K. Dick The Public Burning (1977), by Robert Coover Life: A User's Manual (1978) by Georges Perec It's Me, Eddie (1979) by Eduard Limonov The Twyborn Affair (1979) by Patrick White If on a winter's night a traveler (1979) by Italo Calvino Mulligan Stew (1979) by Gilbert Sorrentino How German Is It (1980) by Walter Abish Coin Locker Babies (1980) by Ryu Murakami Nikopol Trilogy (1980–1993) by Enki Bilal Kindred (1979) by Octavia Butler1980s Housekeeping (1980) by Marilynne Robinson Still Life with Woodpecker (1980) by Tom Robbins Between Dog and Wolf (1980) by Sasha Sokolov VALIS (1981) by Philip K. Dick Sixty Stories (1981) by Donald Barthelme Lanark: A Life in Four Books (1981) by Alasdair Gray The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982) by Philip K. Dick Mantissa (1982) by John Fowles Waterland (1983) by Graham Swift The Norm (1983) by Vladimir Sorokin The Name of the Rose (1983) by Umberto Eco Nights at the Circus (1984) by Angela Carter Jitterbug Perfume (1984) by Tom Robbins Blood and Guts in High School (1984) by Kathy Acker Dictionary of the Khazars (1984) by Milorad Pavić Democracy (1984) by Joan Didion Perfume (1985) by Patrick Süskind Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1985) by Jeanette Winterson Less Than Zero (1985) by Bret Easton Ellis The New York Trilogy (1985–86) by Paul Auster White Noise (1985) by Don DeLillo A Maggot (1985) by John Fowles Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World (1985) by Haruki Murakami The Infinite Deadlock (1985–1988) by Dmitry Galkovsky Maus (1986) by Art Spiegelman Watchmen (1986–87) by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons The Well (1986) by Elizabeth Jolley Memoirs of Many in One (1986) by Patrick White Moon Tiger (1987) by Penelope Lively Women and Men (1987) by Joseph McElroy Beloved (1987) by Toni Morrison The Mezzanine (1988) by Nicholson Baker Foucault's Pendulum (1988) by Umberto Eco Braschi's Empire of Dreams (1988) by Giannina Braschi Wittgenstein's Mistress (1988) by David Markson Tracks (1988) by Louise Erdrich London Fields (1989) by Martin Amis1990s The Black Book (1990) by Orhan Pamuk Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990) by Salman Rushdie My Cousin, My Gastroenterologist (1990) by Mark Leyner Almanac of the Dead (1991) by Leslie Marmon Silko Omon Ra (1991) by Victor Pelevin The Gold Bug Variations (1991) by Richard Powers American Psycho (1991) by Bret Easton Ellis What a Carve Up! +"It is a business, not a social service. +ReferencesCategory:1961 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Politicians from TorreónCategory:Mexican lawyersCategory:Members of the Senate of the Republic (Mexico)Category:Members of the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico)Category:National Action Party (Mexico) politiciansCategory:21st-century Mexican politiciansCategory:Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education alumni +See also Neuróticos on line (Neurotics Online)Category:Books by Luis PescettiCategory:2000 novelsReferences +The race started in Ghent and finished in Wevelgem. +ReferencesCategory:Sordariomycetes generaCategory:Microascales +It was installed in 1983 on the outskirts of the Theater District in downtown Houston next to the Lyric Centre building. +MenEliteU23See alsoIranian National Road Race ChampionshipsNational Road Cycling ChampionshipsCategory:National road cycling championshipsCategory:Cycle races in Iran +It was originally settled by Captain J. +The Whispering Rocks The rocks makes whistling sounds when hit by another stone during the Harmattan season in November and December. +The St. Julian Winery and Warner's Winery started in Paw Paw. +She is a miraculous "cow of plenty" who provides her owner whatever he desires and is often portrayed as the mother of other cattle. +A typical DNRC newsletter contains the following core features: Strange Thought Of The Day "Induhvidual" Quotes True Tales of "Induhviduals" Ask DogbertAdams also uses it as vehicle to promote his other publications, often done so blatantly as to be part of the humor. +Witch Hunt is a role-playing game published by StatCom Simulations Inc. in 1983. +The history of Maureillas as a settlement goes back to antiquity. +Winners and nomineesMajor award nomineesOther award nomineesHonorary Goya José María ForquéExternal linksOfficial website (Spanish) 09Goya AwardsGoya Awards +Hodonín District () is one of seven districts (okres) within South Moravian Region of the Czech Republic. +EventsThe XL Center has held many notable events including:The ECAC New England Region Tournament, a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's college basketball tournament organized by the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), took place at the Hartford Civic Center on March 3 and 5, 1977. +Jasmine lies to Ginger, claiming that she is going to marry Dwight, and tells her she is moving out that day. +AchievementsReferencesCategory:1985 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Belarusian male triple jumpers +He succeeded Ooni Wunmonije and was succeeded by Ooni Degbinsokun. +FinalReferencesCategory:Shot put at the European Athletics Indoor ChampionshipsCategory:2011 European Athletics Indoor Championships +A member of the Authentic Radical Liberal Party, he has been Representative and Senator. +Galomecalpa meridana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. +Tillie the Toiler may refer to:Tillie the Toiler (1927 film), American silent comedy film directed by Hobart HenleyTillie the Toiler (1941 film), American comedy directed by Sidney Salkow +It is located within Central Province at 7° 37' 0" North, 80° 38' 0" East. +Dr. Sigmar Wittig (born 25 February 1940 in Nimptsch, former Silesia region of Germany) has been the Chairman of the Executive Board of the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt) since March 2002. +Frier is a surname of Germanic origin. +The organization was headed by an Armenian militant named Monte Melkonian, who received training from several Palestinian resistance organizations that were active in Lebanon. +REDIRECT 1904 United States House of Representatives elections#Special electionsSouth Carolina 1904 02South Carolina 1904 021904 02 SpecialSouth Carolina 02 SpecialUnited States House of Representatives 02 SpecialUnited States House of Representatives 1904 02 +Civia is the name for a class of electric multiple unit trains built by CAF and Siemens for the RENFE Cercanías commuter railway networks in Spain. +In October 2017 the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Turkey chose Fırat as a Goodwill Ambassador in Turkey. +Logistics officers are responsible for purchasing, receiving, storing and issuing of all materials for the ship and any other offshore military establishment. +Griffin continued the practice under his own name until shortly before his death. +BackgroundSaritamer was a "strong, compact" grey horse bred in Kentucky by Mrs Bruce M. Donaldson. +Some critiques have compared his sound to Univers Zero, Art Zoyd, John Zorn, Patrick O'Hearn, Mike OldfieldDjam Karet and Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, David Bedford, Richard Pinhas, ZNR, Mecano, Present, Aranis, the entire Belgian chamber rock scene, Dick Dale, Anne Dudley and Jaz Coleman and X-Legged Sally. +Winthrop Public Schools may refer to: Winthrop Public Schools (Maine) Winthrop Public Schools (Massachusetts) +From 2010 to 2012 she served as Deputy of the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing the State of Mexico. +The song is the title track of their 1971 album L.A. Woman, the final album to feature Jim Morrison before his death on July 3, 1971. +After leading it though its organization and training, Sturgis led the division in France beginning in August 1918, when it was used to provide replacement troops for front line units. +Instead Charles-Alphonse Guméry's gilded bronze sculptural groups Harmony and Poetry were installed in 1869. +Today the group continues to be an active environmental community. +Cloetens remained attached to his master until 1897, when he installed his first workshops at 14, rue du Belvédère, in Ixelles, which he moved in 1901 to 37, rue de Lausanne, in Saint-Gilles. +The name in Cambodia and Thailand likely has a different origin. +CastDorothy Gish ... RoseMae Marsh ... MaryWalter Miller ... Rose's SuitorHarry Hyde ... Mary's SuitorLionel Barrymore ... Mary's FatherKate Bruce ... Mary's MotherHenry B. Walthall ... +Critic Evan Connell notes that the mountain's shape resembles Gibraltar, a refuge for Spanish liberals during the aftermath of the Peninsular War. +In 2003 she graduated from Yekaterinburg Theatre Institute and joined infamous Nikolay Kolyada`s Kolyada-theatre, where she is an actress at the moment. +Ian Hamer is the name of: Ian Hamer (musician) (1932–2006), British jazz trumpeter Ian Hamer (athlete) (born 1965), British long distance runnerSee alsoHamer (surname) +Santali can refer to: Santal people of India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan Santali language, spoken by Santal Ol Chiki script, also known as Santali scriptCategory:Language and nationality disambiguation pages +BiographyReichert was born in 1930 in West Allis, Wisconsin and was the youngest child of Arthur and Emily Reichert. +(1967) Day of Anger (1967) - Owen White - Killer Gunman Sent by God (1968) A Sky Full of Stars for a Roof (1968) - Rick (uncredited) Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) - Frank's Lieutenant (uncredited) Cemetery Without Crosses (1969) - Ben Caine (uncredited) The Price of Power (1969) - Sheriff Jefferson La notte dei serpenti (1969) - Pancho Er Più – storia d'amore e di coltello (1971) - Alfredo Di Lorenzo W Django! +In 2017-2018 it went through another crisis because of proposed cuts in federal grants to public broadcasting entities, particularly its main grant source from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. +Neohomaloptera johorensis is a species of hillstream loach found in Malaysia and Indonesia. +See alsoList of museums in South KoreaExternal linksArticle about the museumOfficial siteCategory:Art museums and galleries in Seoul +Meriwether may refer to:People Meriwether (name), includes a list of people with the name Meriwether Lewis (1774–1809), American explorer, soldier, and public administratorPlaces Meriwether, Louisville, a neighborhood in Kentucky, United States Meriwether, Georgia, an unincorporated community, United States Meriwether County, Georgia, United StatesOther SS Meriwether Lewis, a Liberty ship built in the US during World War II Meriwether (band), American rock bandMeriwether (album), 2004 EP Meriwether National Golf Club, located near Hillsboro, Oregon The Meriwether, a pair of condominium towers in Portland, OregonSee also Camp Meriwether (disambiguation) Merryweather (disambiguation) Merriweather +IdentificationDistinguishing between species involves how much they are attached to the substrate, whether or not isidia are present, lower surface color, and chemical spot tests. +The deadline for the digital television transition for low-powered stations was supposed to be in September 2015, However, the cutoff date for standard LPTVs and translators still broadcasting in analog was suspended until further notice. +Pot of Gold (album), a 2002 compilation album by rock band RainbowPot of Gold, 2008 album by British neo-soul singer Alice RussellSongs"Pot of Gold" (Akon song), 2005"Pot of Gold" (Game song), 2011 "Pot of Gold", a song by Juliet Richardson from Random Order (2005) "Pot of Gold, a song by Asher Roth from RetroHash (2014)See alsoCrock of Gold (disambiguation)See Rainbows in culture for the belief about a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow +On the death of his brother-in-law, Gervase, he received the county of Rethel. +The descriptive name also refers to a series of roads connecting the provincial capitals. +As head coach for the 1902 and 1903 seasons, Scannell compiled a 4–9–2 record. +The object of the singer's desire may be a woman of color. +It is known from Tanzania. +The Elizabethtown and Paducah Railroad was a 19th-century railway company in western Kentucky in the United States. +Turbidites of low metamorphic grade make up the northern outcrop at Morro Mejillones. +HistoryCoat-of-armsThe emblem represents an argent tower on a gules hill with three fruit trees. +The Swiss National Museum ()—part of the Musée Suisse Group, itself affiliated with the Federal Office of Culture is located in the city of Zurich, Switzerland's largest city, next to the Hauptbahnhof. +Scraptia sericea is a species of false flower beetle in the family Scraptiidae. +Naret was also the Managing Director of the Sandy Lane in Barbados, the Residence on Mauritius, the Trianon Palace in Versailles and Sun International's Saint Géran on Mauritius. +In the Syrian city of Homs, Thursday of the Dead is still commemorated in the same way. +SpeciesEuryeulia biocellata (Walsingham, 1914)EtymologyThe genus name is derived from Greek eurys (meaning broad) and Eulia, the type genus of the tribe. +The Mets promoted Donnelly to Manager of the Kingsport Mets for 2019. +It joined both the John Ross Tower and 3720 Tower as the seventh-tallest building in Portland when it was completed in 2010. +The diverse range of topics included northern Canadian freight trains, the Alaska Highway, NORAD's operations, and HMS Bounty in Tahiti. +BET-NGBET-NG is a sectoral index that reflects the evolution of companies listed on BVB regulated market that operate primarily in energy and utilities field. +It has an area of 45.12 km². +Lopham may refer to:North LophamSouth Lopham +At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported. +Ernest Willmott Norton, registered at birth as Ernest Willmott (19 June 1889 – 14 March 1972) was an English first-class cricketer who played eight matches in the early 1920s: two for Warwickshire and then six for Worcestershire. +BarangaysBalagtas is politically subdivided into 9 barangays, all classified as urban:DemographicsIn the , the population of Balagtas, Bulacan, was people, with a density of . +The twelfth season of the Australian police-drama Blue Heelers premiered on the Seven Network on 2 February 2005 and aired on Wednesday nights at 8:30 PM. +It is found primarily in Java, as well as southern Sumatra and possibly the western Sunda Islands. +In 1924 he also competed in two freestyle swimming events (400 m and 4×200 m relay), but failed to reach the finals. +After refitting through the State Department's Foreign Military Sales program, she was recommissioned General José María Cañas Escamilla (GC110-2). +See also Prehistoric fish List of prehistoric bony fishReferencesExternal links Bony fish in the online Sepkoski DatabaseExternal links Category:PachycormiformesCategory:Prehistoric ray-finned fish genera +Augustae Taurinorum: Seb. +ArchitectureAt the end of the platform, there is a memorial plaque dedicated to Vladimir Lenin when he passed here when escaping Finland. +New York: New York University Press. +Frank Welch may refer to: Frank Welch (American politician) (1835–1878), Nebraska Republican politician Frank A. Welch (born 1959), Master Chief Petty Officer of the U.S. Coast Guard Frank Welch (baseball) (1897–1957), baseball player Frank Corbett Welch (1900–1986), Canadian exporter, farmer, horticulturist, and SenatorSee also Fran Welch (1895–1970), athletics coach +--------, 2007, "Compendium of the Foundations of Classical Statistical Physics" in Butterfield, J., and John Earman, eds., Philosophy of Physics, Part B. +The Mua mine is a large iron mine located in central Portugal in the Bragança District. +He was promoted to Major General in July 2009, and he has participated in United Nations peacekeeping missions in El Salvador, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Lebanon and in the multi-national force deployed in the Iraq War. +It was described by Harrison Gray Dyar Jr. in 1911. +References Category:Populated places in Sirjan County +The spiral would culminate in the complex's tallest building, the One World Trade Center, a spire. +Ruskin Mill Trust 2016-18: Principal Ruskin Mill College, Stroud. +|style="background: bgcolor="#C2B280" | 1981.|style="background: bgcolor="#C2B280" | 1971. +Optical engineering metrology uses optical methods to measure micro-vibrations with instruments like the laser speckle interferometer or to measure the properties of the various masses with instruments measuring refraction. +ReferencesCategory:Monotypic Buprestidae generaCategory:Fauna of BrazilCategory:Insects of South America +LineupGeno Washington And The Ram Jam BandZoot Money And His Big Roll BandCream (Setlist: NSU, Sunshine of Your Love, We're Going Wrong, Stepping Out, Rollin' and Tumblin', Toad, I'm So Glad)Jimi Hendrix ExperienceMovePink FloydSounds Force 5 (between all bands)The ShowThe Monday Bank Holiday was sunny and hot which would have been very uncomfortable in a large crowd inside a metal shed. +Olson and the making of the album were the subject of a half-hour documentary, The Salvation Blues, released by Grain Pictures. +Arts and literatureSport November – Malua wins the Melbourne CupBirths8 February – Reginald "Snowy" Baker (died 1953), sportsman and actor16 December – John Gunn (died 1959), Premier of South AustraliaDeaths25 January – James Francis (born 1819), Premier of Victoria22 February – Sir Charles Sladen (born 1816), Premier of VictoriaNotesAustralia Category:Years of the 19th century in Australia +ReferencesCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Living peopleCategory:National Football League officials +ReferencesExternal linksKHLS official websiteJanuary 1979 aircheckCategory:Country radio stations in the United StatesHLS +is a railway station located in Chiebun (智恵文), Nayoro, Hokkaidō, and is operated by the Hokkaido Railway Company. +He resigned and left his office on 15 July 1986 for a lack of majority. +Fiordichthys is a genus of viviparous brotula native to the southwest Pacific Ocean. +redirect Ontario Highway 417 +It is endemic to Ecuador. +The psychologist diagnoses him with anxiety. +Sebastián Miguel (7 February 1931 – 15 July 2006) was a Spanish professional golfer. +It was financed by the alms paid to compensate the right to use dairy products during the Lent. +Back for More is the second album by Natalia, a Belgian singer. +Loek Boermans is researching the technology for use in gliders at the Technical University of Delft. +Chlorhoda rufolivacea is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by Seitz in 1919. +Michigan scored a touchdown to reduce Northwestern's lead to 21-12, though accounts differ as to whether the second Michigan touchdown was scored by Froemke or Wieman. +Stallworthy died on 10 November 1923 at Te Kōpuru. +ReferencesFurther reading Edwin Möhn, 1999, Butterflies of the World 5: 7, plate 10, figures 7-8, plate 19, figures 5-6.Edwin Möhn, 2002 Schmetterlinge der Erde, Butterflies of the world Part V (5), Papilionidae II:Battus. +liquid and solid state. +They live in Bantry Bay, Cape Town. +He wrote: "I therefore ascribe this cemetery chapel as one of the outstanding buildings that I have found in my entire years of study of these older structures. +Allaston was mentioned in the Domesday Book, when it was part of Bledisloe Hundred. +External linksRAF Squadron Codes during World War IIAustralian War Memorial, n.d., The Royal Australian Air Force Squadron Codes. +At the 2006 census, its population was 456, in 110 families. +The 3 ft-high original stood in her garden in Jubilee Place, Chelsea, London. +Pinxten is a Flemish surname. +Hoffmann was published in German in 1966. +Consider the Bernstein polynomialIt can be shown thatuniformly on the interval [0, 1]. +Kustaa Kylänpää (24 October 1881 – 6 July 1961) was a Finnish Lutheran clergyman and politician, born in Rauma. +The Chinese Muslims were loyal to the Republic of China government and wanted to crush the Turkic Muslim Uighurs and Kirghiz in revenge for the Kizil massacre, in which Nur Ahmad Jan Bughra had taken part. +With a maximum EMS-98 intensity of VII (Damaging), it was the first in a sequence of three shocks that affected the Bouïra Province over a ten-day period. +ReferencesCategory:Kunama languagesCategory:Languages of Eritrea +The muzzle is usually very fine, and from the side the upper lip is usually longer than the lower, although the teeth meet evenly. +See alsoCommunes of the Nièvre departmentReferences INSEE commune fileCategory:Communes of Nièvre +Thazi Township () is a township of Meiktila District in the Mandalay Region of Burma. +He joined the board in 2008. +It has been selected as one of the most beautiful villages of France. +The 2014 Quneitra offensive, code-named “The Real Promise” or "Chargers of Dawn", was a military operation launched by Syrian rebels during the Syrian civil war in Quneitra Governorate, in an attempt to take control of several sections in the central part of the province and around Quneitra city "with the aim of opening the way to Damascus." +Der is referred to as Bīt-Derāya at the time of Tiglath-pileser III, and as Bīt-Derāyā in later Syriac sources. +HistoryIn 1962, a group of architecture students of the University of America (Universidad de América), showed their nonconformity before the mechanisms of education and academic formation established in the educational system of the University. +References Category:New South Wales Premier League teamsCategory:1972 establishments in AustraliaCategory:Association football clubs established in 1972 +FleetThe FlyMex fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of August 2019):The airline's fleet included the following aircraft () :Agusta A109Cessna Caravan 2082 Embraer ERJ-135Learjet 60Learjet 45M7-420 AmphibianGalleryReferencesExternal linksFlyMex FleetCategory:Charter airlines of MexicoCategory:Airlines of Mexico +Because of the large inflow of fresh water the salinity of the sound is lower than the adjacent ocean. +ReferencesCategory:1969 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Sundergarh districtCategory:Bharatiya Janata Party politicians from OdishaCategory:Odisha MLAs 2019– +Reportedly, the band refused to sign the contract unless it was to be done in a strip club or somewhere similar. +The French Institute also work with national broadcast (ETV) in order to promote French cinema in Estonia. +He worked as a structural engineer and by the age of 28 was made a partner in the firm of Guy Maunsell. +Archaeologist Michael J. O'Kelly believed that the Giant's Ring, like hundreds of other passage tombs built in Ireland during the Neolithic period, such as Newgrange, showed evidence for a religion which venerated the dead as one of its core principles. +She had planned to study medicine and become the first doctor in her tribe, already an unusual path for girls, when an event changed everything. +The film's sets were designed by Gustav A. Knauer and Willy Schiller. +Annales Societatis Geologorum Poloniae 59:43-125Category:Geologic formations of CubaCategory:Jurassic CubaCategory:Cretaceous CubaCategory:Shale formationsCategory:Limestone formationsCategory:Dolomite formationsCategory:Shallow marine depositsCategory:Open marine depositsFormations +1737) was a British topographer, for many years a writing-master at Westminster School. +Category:Vintage vehiclesCategory:Defunct motor vehicle manufacturers of Belgium +Writing for Albany's Metroland newspaper, journalist Josh Potter called the album "a pan-global roots-musical mélange that appeals to the struggle of tradition to envision a world of social justice." +Managerial changesFirst phaseLeague tableResultsSecond phaseChampionship groupTableResultsRelegation groupTableResultsSeason statisticsTop scorersIncluding matches played on 31 May 2014; Source: Cyprus Football AssociationHat-tricks 4 Player scored 4 goals. +He also painted a Carlo Borromeo and Luigi Gonzaga and a Vision of Saint Antony for the Oratory of Saint Anthony of Padua, located in Siena. +The strength of national ills, already without limits, leaves me no choice (...)”In place of the long-established national rights which they promised you would recover on August 24, 1820, they gave you ruin and the King has been reduced to a mere ghost; (...) that to which you owe your glory in the lands of Africa and the seas of Asia, has been reduced to baseness and stripped of the brilliance that had once possessed from royal recognition; religion and its ministers, mocked and scorned (...).I find myself in the midst of valiant and brave Portuguese, determined as I am to die or to restore to His Majesty hus freedom and authority. +Former Chiefs of the Hollow Water First Nation include Rod Bushie, who was later elected Grand Chief of Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs in August 1997. +This section applies to any facility that is required by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) under its Hazard Communication Standard to prepare or have available a Safety Data Sheet (SDS) for a hazardous chemical (See II above for definition) or that has on-site, for any one day in a calendar year, an amount of a hazardous chemical equal to or greater than the following threshold limits established by the EPA: for hazardous chemicals; or lesser of or the threshold planning quantity (TPQ) for extremely hazardous substances. +ReferencesCategory:Anti-government factions of the Syrian Civil War +The film was also at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, and between August 24, 2012 and August 31, 2012 in the Canadian Bloor Hot Docs Cinema. +Counties Mobile BaldwinMobile County CommunitiesPlaces with more than 150,000 inhabitants Mobile (Principal city)Places with 10,000 to 35,000 inhabitants Prichard Saraland Tillmans CornerPlaces with 1,000 to 10,000 inhabitants Bayou La Batre Chickasaw Citronelle Creola Dauphin Island Grand Bay Satsuma Semmes TheodorePlaces with less than 1,000 inhabitants Mount VernonUnincorporated places Alabama Port Axis Bucks Chunchula Coden Eight Mile Fernland Heron Bay Irvington Kushla Le Moyne Mauvilla Mon Louis St. Elmo WhistlerBaldwin County CommunitiesPlaces with 15,000 to 35,000 inhabitants Daphne Fairhope FoleyCities with 1,500 to 15,000 inhabitants Spanish Fort Gulf Shores Bay Minette Orange Beach RobertsdaleUnincorporated places Barnwell Bayside Belforest Blackwater Blakeley Bon Secour Bromley Clay City Crossroads Elsanor Fort Morgan Houstonville Josephine Lillian Magnolia Beach Malbis Marlow Miflin Montrose Oak Oyster Bay Park City Perdido Perdido Key Pine Grove Pine Haven Point Clear Rabun River Park Romar Beach Rosinton Seacliff Seminole Stapleton Stockton Swift Tensaw Turkey Branch Weeks Bay Whitehouse Fork YuponTransportation Interstate 10 (Which connects with Los Angeles and Jacksonville) Interstate 65 (Which connects to Chicago) Interstate 165 U.S. Highway 31 U.S. Highway 43 U.S. Highway 45 U.S. Highway 90 U.S. Highway 98References +The game was published by Infogrames for MS-DOS, Amiga, and NEC PC-9801. +The length of the forewings is about 7.2 mm. +Living in the City may refer to:Living in the City (album) Northern Lights, 1996"Living In The City", a song composed by Richard Jacques and sung by TJ Davis for the video game Sonic R, 1997Livin' in the City, album by the Fun Lovin' Criminals 2005 "Living in the City", song by Grinspoon from Alibis & Other Lies 2007"Living in the City", song by Cuban Link Man On Fire Mixtape (2005)"Living in the City", song by Hurray for the Riff Raff from The Navigator (Hurray for the Riff Raff album) +Ponnaniyathi is a 1988 Indian Malayalam film, directed by R Krishnamoorthy and produced by R Krishnamoorthy. +The Union for Ethical Biotrade (UEBT) has developed a standard and a verification framework against which the sustainability of the Allanblackia supply chain can be audited and approved. +He must at all times be able to maintain an iron wall between his private life and public role. +Val-d'Or (Huard) Water Aerodrome is located on the Thompson River, west of Val-d'Or, Quebec, Canada. +However, he resigned from parliament after just over two months in office, allowing Septimus Burt (who had recently been defeated in a by-election) to take his place. +At daylight on 31 August she was about 50 miles from Martinique when she sighted a brig, a schooner, and in time, a sloop. +World War IThe United States Shipping Board requisitioned Manchuria and Mongolia from the Atlantic Transport Line, a subsidiary of International Mercantile Marine, and turned the ships over to the Army in January and February, 1918. +They compete in the Coca Cola GM. +This was the first time she broke the 14-metre barrier, with a 14.01 jump. +Gorenji Mokronog (; ) is a dispersed settlement in the Municipality of Mokronog-Trebelno in southeastern Slovenia. +NAE may refer to: National Academy of Engineering, US National Association of Evangelicals, a U.S. religious fellowship Net acid excretion, the net amount of acid excreted in the urine per unit time NEDD8 activating enzymeSee alsoNae +In 2000, while the first cabinet Bondevik held office, she was appointed political advisor in the Ministry of Fisheries. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:British black-and-white filmsCategory:British filmsCategory:British crime drama filmsCategory:British silent short filmsCategory:1890s crime filmsCategory:1890s drama films +But the fact that Skyler knew and just watched Marie worry about Hank's safety and not tell her? +Vitry-aux-Loges is a commune in the Loiret department in north-central France. +He is in the line of succession after the vice-chairman of the Government, Viktor Gozhy, who follows Governor Nikolay Mikhaylovich VolkovJewish heritageGurevich is the son of Jewish settlers who arrived in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast in the 1930s. +The lyrics speak of each artist's rise to fame, as well as the trials and tribulations that it carries; it references the death of Minaj's cousin, Nicholas Telemaque, who was murdered near his Brooklyn home on July 3, 2011. +Initially proposed in 1988, and first presented by the Motor City Music Foundation, the multi-genre awards ceremony was established to bring recognition to Detroit area musicians. +The light can be seen up to out at sea and flashes three times every 20 seconds. +The album was released on October 28, 2010 by Smile in Bed Records. +Degree courses are available in environmental health, medical laboratory sciences, health information management, and other health technology fields. +Makali P. Aizue (born 30 December 1977) is a Papua New Guinean former professional rugby league footballer who last played as a for Doncaster in Kingstone Press League 1. +Karl Alexander also received as the family head of the House of Thurn and Taxis, Prussian possessions in the Grand Duchy of Poland. +Peter Donohoe may refer to: Peter Donohoe (bobsleigh) (born 1964), Irish Olympic bobsledder Peter Donohoe (Gaelic footballer) (died 2004), former Gaelic football player for Cavan Peter Donohoe (pianist) (born 1953), English pianistSee also Peter Donahue (disambiguation) +Males had a median income of $31,250 versus $16,607 for females. +Naval career Burlton was commissioned as a Lieutenant on 15 September 1777 and in 1783 was in command of HMS Camel, 24. +Spy Corps is a spy film for Christian families that was written and directed by J David Baker. +They obtain a approximation to the metric k medians problem. +Also, archived version. +In April, 1816, John McLean (DR) of resigned. +Career and writingHe is honoured with the title of Adikavi for the contributions he made in the field of poetry and Nepali literature. +External links Member page at Parliament websiteReferencesCategory:1964 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Members of the National Parliament of the Solomon IslandsCategory:People from Guadalcanal ProvinceCategory:Government ministers of the Solomon Islands +The Romans were victorious. +In March 2013, she graduated from Rikkyo University. +Actis may refer to:Actis (mythology), a Heliadae in Greek mythologyActis, California, an unincorporated community in Kern County, California, United StatesActis, a synonym of the butterfly genus PilodeudorixActis Capital, a British private equity firmPeople with the surnameCarlo Actis Dato (born 1952), Italian jazz saxophonist and composerSee alsoACTI +Zheng Saisai was the defending champion, but chose to participate in Madrid instead. +On March 5, 1550, he was appointed Bishop of Perugia by his Uncle Julius. +In all, he served in Congress from March 4, 1875 to March 3, 1879. +In music, the Blarney Brass and Reed Band was formed in 1981 by a group of locals who wished to form a community musical group spanning multiple age groups. +There are several outbuildings, including two large barns, a small cattle barn, and several sheds. +In an interview with Dan Casey at Nerdist, Notaro said, "I’ve been doing this for the past decade, and it was just kind of like this idea that my friend Martha and I had to bypass the – yeah, I guess the grind of the comedy club scene, and just see if we could freshen things up a bit, and make things a little awkward." +Calvo's affinity to the water and the outdoor environment. +We will never accept gays." +Free Presbyterian Church may refer to: Free Presbyterian Church (Australia) Free Presbyterian Church of Victoria, formerly Free Presbyterian Church of Australia Felix Presbyterian Church of Eastern Australia or the Free Presbyterian Church Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, formed in 1893 Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, founded in 1951 Free Presbyterian Church of North America, became self-sufficient in 2005 +Xiaodong Wang (, born 1963) is a Chinese-American biochemist best known for his work with cytochrome c. His laboratory developed an in-vitro assay for the activation of the apoptosis related proteinase Caspase-3. +The popularity of the VW Beetle had plummeted in the mid-1970s and production was discontinued in Germany in 1978. +Gomibora is one of the woredas in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region of Ethiopia. +Sati or SATI may refer to:EntertainmentSati (film), a 1989 Bengali film by Aparna Sen and starring Shabana AzmiSati (novel), a 1990 novel by Christopher PikeSati (singer) (born 1976), Lithuanian singerSati, a character in The Matrix RevolutionsInstitutesSamrat Ashok Technological Institute, a college in Vidisha, Madhya Pradesh, IndiaSouth African Translators' Institute, an association in South Africa representing translators and other language practitionersPlacesSati (castle), a medieval fortified town near Shkodër, AlbaniaHesar-e Sati, a village in Shahriar County, Tehran Province, IranSati-ye Olya, a village in Ardabil Province, IranSati-ye Sofla, a village in Ardabil Province, IranSati-ye Vosta, a village in Ardabil Province, IranReligion Sati (Egyptian goddess) or Satis Sati (Hindu goddess), Shiva's first wife Sati (Buddhism), awareness or skillful attentiveness in Buddhism Sati (practice), an old Hindu tradition of a widow immolating herself after her husband's death, usually on her husband's funeral pyreSee also Sade Sati, the -year-long period of Saturn (Shani) Sarti, an Italian language surname Sat (Sanskrit), a Sanskrit word meaning the true essence of an entity, species or existence Satis (disambiguation) Satti, a tribe found in Muree, Kotli sattian, Kahuta and adjoining areas of Rawalpindi Punjab, Pakistan Satti (food), a common food in Southeast Asia, particularly in Malaysia and the Philippines +Ideology MER's position was that the European Union should exist; however, it should be a looser supranational organisation than the current structure. +Worldes Blysse is the second album by British vocal group Mediæval Bæbes, released 19 October 1998. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1967 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:20th-century American male actorsCategory:21st-century American male actorsCategory:American male film actorsCategory:American male television actorsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +To alleviate these problems, the Cerro de Oro Dam was constructed on the river just above the junction with the Valle Nacional, completed in 1989. +Auguste Julien Marie Lorieux, (14 December 1796 – 27 July 1842) was a 19th-century French writer and jurisdiction consultant. +See also FISA–FOCA war Formula One Teams Association FIA–FOTA disputeReferences Category:Formula One +See alsoVolcanism of Western CanadaMount Edziza volcanic complexReferencesCategory:Lava plateausCategory:Volcanism of British ColumbiaCategory:Tahltan Highland +Petar Penchev spent 6 seasons in Spartak Plovdiv. +By population, it is the third largest city in Catalonia and the twenty-third in Spain. +Here Romano painted the covers for pharmaceutical brochures and managed the finished artwork for Fortune magazine, Container Corporation illustrations, and advertisements. +There are 28 streets. +Short sponsons under the wing gave stability on water. +ReferencesCategory:ArachnidsCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Animals described in 1961 +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Goleniów County +References Category:Populated places in Qeshm County +On January 8, 2014, Ganim wrote a story for CNN claiming that some student-athletes at NCAA Division I member colleges and universities read at a third-grade level or below. +He plays hurling with his local club Dunamaggin and has been a member of the Kilkenny senior inter-county team since 2007. +Al Scaduto won the Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for 1991 and 1997 for his work on the strip. +ReferencesCategory:Butterflies described in 1895Category:AllotinusCategory:Butterflies of Indonesia +The garden was established in 1933 at an altitude of 865 meters near the peak of Mount Rokkō. +Due to its popularity, several U.S. arms manufacturers produce the round under license from NAMMO Raufoss AS. +This treaty, designed to ensure an "unbroken curtain of water" is flowing over the falls, states that during daylight time during the tourist season (1 April to 31 October) there must be of water flowing over the falls, and during the night and off-tourist season there must be of water flowing over the falls. +The tournament's executives confirmed that efforts to secure additional sponsors had been unsuccessful and that the tournament would not continue after 2009. +Artistic RecognitionHe was painted by Sir John Watson Gordon in 1838. +ArtworkEarly UK releases of this album, and some non-UK issues, have a yellow background to the picture of the two children and cover text. +Born in Prague (at that time Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia), she grew up in Jena and went on to study philosophy at Humboldt University. +ReferencesCategory:1925 birthsCategory:1998 deathsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1952 Summer OlympicsCategory:Japanese male triple jumpersCategory:Olympic athletes of JapanCategory:Place of birth missingCategory:20th-century Japanese architects +It was discovered by John Herschel on January 9, 1836, who described it as "very bright, and evidently a globular cluster". +The Yoneda family made annual trips to Manzanar and were active with the Japanese American Citizens League in campaigning for redress and reparations for Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II. +The team was coached by second year coach Dan Leibovitz. +He did not play for the Hibernian first team and moved to Third Lanark in 1949, featuring in 9 league games. +International goalsU16U19U23HonoursInternationalThailand U-23 Sea Games Gold Medal (1); 2017 Dubai Cup (1) : 2017ClubBuriram United Thai League 1 (1): 2015 Thai FA Cup (1): 2015 Thai League Cup (1): 2015 Toyota Premier Cup (1): 2016 Kor Royal Cup (1): 2015 Mekong Club Championship (1): 2015InternationalThailand U-16 AFF U-16 Youth Championship (1): 2011Thailand U-23 Dubai Cup (1) : 2017ReferencesExternal links Category:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from BangkokCategory:Thai footballersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Buriram United F.C. +According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 118Reference list Category:Municipalities in the Province of Segovia +Novozvanivka (; ) is a village in Popasna Raion (district) in Luhansk Oblast of eastern Ukraine. +American Princess may refer to: American Princess (2005 TV series), an American reality competition American Princess (2019 TV series), an American drama television series American Princess Cruises, an American ferry company in New Jersey and New YorkSee also List of American heiresses +ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Kosciusko County, IndianaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Indiana +Isherwood became the mother superior of the order and was styled Mother Cecile CR. +Bugnon may refer to:Surname Alex Bugnon (1958-), jazz pianist André Bugnon (1947-), Swiss politicianPlaces Bugnon, the site where the campus of the University Hospital of Lausanne and several buildings of the Faculty of Biology and Medicine of the University of Lausanne are located Gymnase cantonal du Bugnon, a high school in Lausanne +He served as the first President of Morayur Gram panchayat from year 1969 to 1995, as he was elected continuously, sometimes without opposition. +Modern localitiesAmur OblastAs of 2010, two rural localities in Amur Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Mikhaylovsky District, Amur Oblast, a selo in Novochesnokovsky Rural Settlement of Mikhaylovsky DistrictVysokoye, Romnensky District, Amur Oblast, a selo in Rogozovsky Rural Settlement of Romnensky DistrictArkhangelsk OblastAs of 2010, two rural localities in Arkhangelsk Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Yemetsky Selsoviet of Kholmogorsky DistrictVysokaya, Arkhangelsk Oblast, a village in Trufanogorsky Selsoviet of Pinezhsky DistrictRepublic of BashkortostanAs of 2010, one rural locality in the Republic of Bashkortostan bears this name:Vysokaya, Republic of Bashkortostan, a village in Ulu-Telyaksky Selsoviet of Iglinsky DistrictBelgorod OblastAs of 2010, seven rural localities in Belgorod Oblast bear this name:Vysoky, Gubkinsky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Gubkinsky DistrictVysoky (Utyanskoye Rural Settlement), Krasnogvardeysky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Krasnogvardeysky District; municipally, a part of Utyanskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysoky (Kalinovskoye Rural Settlement), Krasnogvardeysky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Krasnogvardeysky District; municipally, a part of Kalinovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysoky, Krasnoyaruzhsky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Krasnoyaruzhsky DistrictVysoky, Prokhorovsky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Prokhorovsky DistrictVysoky, Starooskolsky District, Belgorod Oblast, a khutor in Starooskolsky DistrictVysokoye, Belgorod Oblast, a selo in Yakovlevsky DistrictBryansk OblastAs of 2010, eight rural localities in Bryansk Oblast bear this name:Vysoky, Surazhsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a settlement in Dushatinsky Selsoviet of Surazhsky DistrictVysoky, Trubchevsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a settlement in Ryabchovsky Selsoviet of Trubchevsky DistrictVysokoye, Mglinsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a selo in Vysoksky Selsoviet of Mglinsky DistrictVysokoye, Rognedinsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a village in Fedorovsky Selsoviet of Rognedinsky DistrictVysokoye (selo), Vysoksky Selsoviet, Unechsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a selo in Vysoksky Selsoviet of Unechsky DistrictVysokoye (settlement), Vysoksky Selsoviet, Unechsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a settlement in Vysoksky Selsoviet of Unechsky DistrictVysokoye, Norinsky Selsoviet, Zhiryatinsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a village in Norinsky Selsoviet of Zhiryatinsky DistrictVysokoye, Vysoksky Selsoviet, Zhiryatinsky District, Bryansk Oblast, a selo in Vysoksky Selsoviet of Zhiryatinsky DistrictChelyabinsk OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Chelyabinsk Oblast bears this name:Vysoky, Chelyabinsk Oblast, a settlement in Poletayevsky Selsoviet of Sosnovsky DistrictKaliningrad OblastAs of 2010, five rural localities in Kaliningrad Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Bagrationovsky District, Kaliningrad Oblast, a settlement in Dolgorukovsky Rural Okrug of Bagrationovsky DistrictVysokoye, Guryevsky District, Kaliningrad Oblast, a settlement in Nizovsky Rural Okrug of Guryevsky DistrictVysokoye, Krasnoznamensky District, Kaliningrad Oblast, a settlement in Dobrovolsky Rural Okrug of Krasnoznamensky DistrictVysokoye, Nesterovsky District, Kaliningrad Oblast, a settlement in Ilyushinsky Rural Okrug of Nesterovsky DistrictVysokoye, Slavsky District, Kaliningrad Oblast, a settlement in Bolshakovsky Rural Okrug of Slavsky DistrictKaluga OblastAs of 2010, seven rural localities in Kaluga Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Babyninsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Babyninsky DistrictVysokoye, Duminichsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Duminichsky DistrictVysokoye, Khvastovichsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Khvastovichsky DistrictVysokoye (Mokroye Rural Settlement), Kuybyshevsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Kuybyshevsky District; municipally, a part of Mokroye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Vysokoye Rural Settlement), Kuybyshevsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Kuybyshevsky District; municipally, a part of Vysokoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye, Meshchovsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Meshchovsky DistrictVysokoye, Mosalsky District, Kaluga Oblast, a village in Mosalsky DistrictKhanty-Mansi Autonomous OkrugAs of 2010, one urban locality in Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug bears this name:Vysoky, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, an urban-type settlement under the administrative jurisdiction of the town of okrug significance of MegionKirov OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Kirov Oblast bears this name:Vysokaya, Kirov Oblast, a village in Vysokoramensky Rural Okrug of Shabalinsky DistrictKostroma OblastAs of 2010, two rural localities in Kostroma Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Vlasovskoye Settlement of Oktyabrsky DistrictVysokaya, Kostroma Oblast, a village in Medveditskoye Settlement of Pavinsky DistrictKrasnodar KraiAs of 2010, three rural localities in Krasnodar Krai bear this name:Vysoky, Kurganinsky District, Krasnodar Krai, a settlement in Novoalekseyevsky Rural Okrug of Kurganinsky DistrictVysoky, Mostovsky District, Krasnodar Krai, a khutor under the administrative jurisdiction of Mostovskoy Settlement Okrug of Mostovsky DistrictVysokoye, Krasnodar Krai, a selo in Moldovsky Rural Okrug under the administrative jurisdiction of the City of SochiKursk OblastAs of 2010, two rural localities in Kursk Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Glushkovsky District, Kursk Oblast, a selo in Nizhnemordoksky Selsoviet of Glushkovsky DistrictVysokoye, Medvensky District, Kursk Oblast, a selo in Vysoksky Selsoviet of Medvensky DistrictRepublic of MordoviaAs of 2010, three rural localities in the Republic of Mordovia bear this name:Vysokoye, Kovylkinsky District, Republic of Mordovia, a selo in Pokrovsky Selsoviet of Kovylkinsky DistrictVysokoye, Temnikovsky District, Republic of Mordovia, a village in Babeyevsky Selsoviet of Temnikovsky DistrictVysokaya, Republic of Mordovia, a village under the administrative jurisdiction of the work settlement of Kadoshkino in Kadoshkinsky DistrictMoscow OblastAs of 2010, two rural localities in Moscow Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Mozhaysky District, Moscow Oblast, a village in Zamoshinskoye Rural Settlement of Mozhaysky DistrictVysokoye, Shakhovskoy District, Moscow Oblast, a village in Seredinskoye Rural Settlement of Shakhovskoy DistrictMurmansk OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Murmansk Oblast bears this name:Vysoky, Murmansk Oblast, an inhabited locality under the administrative jurisdiction of Olenegorsk Town with Jurisdictional TerritoryNizhny Novgorod OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast bears this name:Vysokaya, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, a village in Kuznetsovsky Selsoviet of Chkalovsky DistrictNovgorod OblastAs of 2012, six rural localities in Novgorod Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Chudovsky District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Tregubovskoye Settlement of Chudovsky DistrictVysokoye, Krasnoborskoye Settlement, Kholmsky District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Krasnoborskoye Settlement of Kholmsky DistrictVysokoye, Togodskoye Settlement, Kholmsky District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Togodskoye Settlement of Kholmsky DistrictVysokoye, Moshenskoy District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Orekhovskoye Settlement of Moshenskoy DistrictVysokoye, Nagovskoye Settlement, Starorussky District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Nagovskoye Settlement of Starorussky DistrictVysokoye, Velikoselskoye Settlement, Starorussky District, Novgorod Oblast, a village in Velikoselskoye Settlement of Starorussky DistrictOryol OblastAs of 2010, nine rural localities in Oryol Oblast bear this name:Vysoky, Berezovsky Selsoviet, Dmitrovsky District, Oryol Oblast, a settlement in Berezovsky Selsoviet of Dmitrovsky DistrictVysoky, Dolbenkinsky Selsoviet, Dmitrovsky District, Oryol Oblast, a settlement in Dolbenkinsky Selsoviet of Dmitrovsky DistrictVysoky, Kromskoy District, Oryol Oblast, a settlement in Apalkovsky Selsoviet of Kromskoy DistrictVysokoye, Mtsensky District, Oryol Oblast, a village in Vysokinsky Selsoviet of Mtsensky DistrictVysokoye, Orlovsky District, Oryol Oblast, a village in Stanovskoy Selsoviet of Orlovsky DistrictVysokoye, Pokrovsky District, Oryol Oblast, a village in Verkhnezhernovsky Selsoviet of Pokrovsky DistrictVysokoye, Shablykinsky District, Oryol Oblast, a selo in Kosulichesky Selsoviet of Shablykinsky DistrictVysokoye, Trosnyansky District, Oryol Oblast, a selo in Pennovsky Selsoviet of Trosnyansky DistrictVysokoye, Znamensky District, Oryol Oblast, a village in Uzkinsky Selsoviet of Znamensky DistrictPenza OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Penza Oblast bears this name:Vysokoye, Penza Oblast, a selo in Vysokinsky Selsoviet of Bashmakovsky DistrictPrimorsky KraiAs of 2010, one rural locality in Primorsky Krai bears this name:Vysokoye, Primorsky Krai, a selo in Chernigovsky DistrictPskov OblastAs of 2010, five rural localities in Pskov Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Dedovichsky District, Pskov Oblast, a village in Dedovichsky DistrictVysokoye, Nevelsky District, Pskov Oblast, a village in Nevelsky DistrictVysokoye, Novorzhevsky District, Pskov Oblast, a village in Novorzhevsky DistrictVysokoye, Opochetsky District, Pskov Oblast, a village in Opochetsky DistrictVysokoye, Strugo-Krasnensky District, Pskov Oblast, a village in Strugo-Krasnensky DistrictRostov OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Rostov Oblast bears this name:Vysoky, Rostov Oblast, a settlement in Tyulpanovskoye Rural Settlement of Zavetinsky DistrictRyazan OblastAs of 2010, seven rural localities in Ryazan Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Pitelinsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Novounkorsky Rural Okrug of Pitelinsky DistrictVysokoye, Ryazansky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Vysokovsky Rural Okrug of Ryazansky DistrictVysokoye, Rybnovsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a village in Baturinsky Rural Okrug of Rybnovsky DistrictVysokoye, Sarayevsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Vysokovsky Rural Okrug of Sarayevsky DistrictVysokoye, Shatsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Pechinsky Rural Okrug of Shatsky DistrictVysokoye, Skopinsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a selo in Ilyinsky Rural Okrug of Skopinsky DistrictVysokoye, Yermishinsky District, Ryazan Oblast, a village in Kafteysky Rural Okrug of Yermishinsky DistrictSakhalin OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Sakhalin Oblast bears this name:Vysokoye, Sakhalin Oblast, a selo in Anivsky DistrictSamara OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Samara Oblast bears this name:Vysokoye, Samara Oblast, a selo in Pestravsky DistrictSaratov OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Saratov Oblast bears this name:Vysokoye, Saratov Oblast, a selo in Krasnoarmeysky DistrictSmolensk OblastAs of 2010, ten rural localities in Smolensk Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Gagarinsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Prechistenskoye Rural Settlement of Gagarinsky DistrictVysokoye, Kholm-Zhirkovsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Bogdanovskoye Rural Settlement of Kholm-Zhirkovsky DistrictVysokoye, Monastyrshchinsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Tatarskoye Rural Settlement of Monastyrshchinsky DistrictVysokoye, Izvekovskoye Rural Settlement, Novoduginsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Izvekovskoye Rural Settlement of Novoduginsky DistrictVysokoye, Vysokovskoye Rural Settlement, Novoduginsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a selo in Vysokovskoye Rural Settlement of Novoduginsky DistrictVysokoye, Safonovsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Baranovskoye Rural Settlement of Safonovsky DistrictVysokoye, Smolensky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Kozinskoye Rural Settlement of Smolensky DistrictVysokoye, Zakharyevskoye Rural Settlement, Ugransky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Zakharyevskoye Rural Settlement of Ugransky DistrictVysokoye, Znamenskoye Rural Settlement, Ugransky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Znamenskoye Rural Settlement of Ugransky DistrictVysokoye, Yelninsky District, Smolensk Oblast, a village in Mutishchenskoye Rural Settlement of Yelninsky DistrictSverdlovsk OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Sverdlovsk Oblast bears this name:Vysoky, Sverdlovsk Oblast, a settlement under the administrative jurisdiction of the Town of KrasnouralskTomsk OblastAs of 2010, one rural locality in Tomsk Oblast bears this name:Vysokoye, Tomsk Oblast, a selo in Zyryansky DistrictTula OblastAs of 2010, six rural localities in Tula Oblast bear this name:Vysoky, Tula Oblast, a settlement in Novopokrovskaya Rural Administration of Chernsky DistrictVysokoye, Dubensky District, Tula Oblast, a village in Nadezhdinsky Rural Okrug of Dubensky DistrictVysokoye, Leninsky District, Tula Oblast, a selo in Bezhkovsky Rural Okrug of Leninsky DistrictVysokoye, Odoyevsky District, Tula Oblast, a village in Okorokovskaya Rural Administration of Odoyevsky DistrictVysokoye, Venyovsky District, Tula Oblast, a village in Kozlovsky Rural Okrug of Venyovsky DistrictVysokoye, Volovsky District, Tula Oblast, a village in Krasnodubrovsky Rural Okrug of Volovsky DistrictTver OblastAs of 2010, twenty rural localities in Tver Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Kalyazinsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Kalyazinsky DistrictVysokoye, Kesovogorsky District, Tver Oblast, a selo in Kesovogorsky DistrictVysokoye (Borkovskoye Rural Settlement), Kuvshinovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Kuvshinovsky District; municipally, a part of Borkovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Vasilkovskoye Rural Settlement), Kuvshinovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Kuvshinovsky District; municipally, a part of Vasilkovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye, Likhoslavlsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Likhoslavlsky DistrictVysokoye (Nelidovskoye Rural Settlement), Nelidovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Nelidovsky District; municipally, a part of Nelidovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Vysokinskoye Rural Settlement), Nelidovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Nelidovsky District; municipally, a part of Vysokinskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Grishinskoye Rural Settlement), Oleninsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Oleninsky District; municipally, a part of Grishinskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Mostovskoye Rural Settlement), Oleninsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Oleninsky District; municipally, a part of Mostovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Gusevskoye Rural Settlement), Oleninsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Oleninsky District; municipally, a part of Gusevskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye, Ostashkovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Ostashkovsky DistrictVysokoye, Selizharovsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Selizharovsky DistrictVysokoye, Staritsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Staritsky DistrictVysokoye, Toropetsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Toropetsky DistrictVysokoye (settlement), Torzhoksky District, Tver Oblast, a settlement in Torzhoksky DistrictVysokoye (village) (Vysokovskoye Rural Settlement), Torzhoksky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Torzhoksky District; municipally, a part of Vysokovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (village) (Strashevichskoye Rural Settlement), Torzhoksky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Torzhoksky District; municipally, a part of Strashevichskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (village) (Strashevichskoye Rural Settlement), Torzhoksky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Torzhoksky District; municipally, a part of Strashevichskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Proninskoye Rural Settlement), Vesyegonsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Vesyegonsky District; municipally, a part of Proninskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVysokoye (Chamerovskoye Rural Settlement), Vesyegonsky District, Tver Oblast, a village in Vesyegonsky District; municipally, a part of Chamerovskoye Rural Settlement of that districtVologda OblastAs of 2010, eleven rural localities in Vologda Oblast bear this name:Vysokoye, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Dmitriyevsky Selsoviet of Cherepovetsky DistrictVysokoye, Ust-Kubinsky District, Vologda Oblast, a settlement in Ustyansky Selsoviet of Ust-Kubinsky DistrictVysokoye, Verkhovazhsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Naumovsky Selsoviet of Verkhovazhsky DistrictVysokaya, Babushkinsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Roslyatinsky Selsoviet of Babushkinsky DistrictVysokaya, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Ivanovsky Selsoviet of Cherepovetsky DistrictVysokaya, Kichmengsko-Gorodetsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Kurilovsky Selsoviet of Kichmengsko-Gorodetsky DistrictVysokaya, Zavrazhsky Selsoviet, Nikolsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Zavrazhsky Selsoviet of Nikolsky DistrictVysokaya, Zelentsovsky Selsoviet, Nikolsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Zelentsovsky Selsoviet of Nikolsky DistrictVysokaya, Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Chuchkovsky Selsoviet of Sokolsky DistrictVysokaya, Velikoustyugsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Pokrovsky Selsoviet of Velikoustyugsky DistrictVysokaya, Vozhegodsky District, Vologda Oblast, a village in Mityukovsky Selsoviet of Vozhegodsky DistrictVoronezh OblastAs of 2010, four rural localities in Voronezh Oblast bear this name:Vysoky, Olkhovatsky District, Voronezh Oblast, a khutor in Karayashnikovskoye Rural Settlement of Olkhovatsky DistrictVysoky, Talovsky District, Voronezh Oblast, a settlement in Kamenno-Stepnoye Rural Settlement of Talovsky DistrictVysokoye, Liskinsky District, Voronezh Oblast, a selo in Vysokinskoye Rural Settlement of Liskinsky DistrictVysokoye, Vorobyovsky District, Voronezh Oblast, a settlement in Muzhichanskoye Rural Settlement of Vorobyovsky DistrictRenamed localitiesVysokoye, until June 2012, name of the village of Vysokoye 1-ye in Krasnoborskoye Settlement of Kholmsky District of Novgorod OblastAbolished localitiesVysokoye, Soletsky District, Novgorod Oblast, a former village in Dubrovskoye Settlement of Soletsky District of Novgorod Oblast; abolished in June 2011 +In their previous finals, Galatasaray won in 1996, 2012 and 2013 editions, while Fenerbahçe in 1973 and 1985. +Personnel Art Alexakis: vocals, guitar Josh Crawley: keyboards, vocals Davey French: guitar, vocals Sam Hudson: bass, vocals Brett Snyder: drums, percussion, vocalsReferencesExternal linksCategory:Everclear (band) albumsCategory:2006 albumsCategory:Eleven Seven Label Group albums +Apotomops sololana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. +National animosityScottish aristocrats and other place seekers made their way to London, to compete for high positions in government. +Sergey Petrovich Shukalov () (1883, Yaroslavl - ?) +207/208 Bangkok- Nakhon Sawan- Bangkok Ordinary No. +It is found in Central America, North America, and Africa. +The district's futureWith West Middle School nearing 100 years old, a new middle school was built in 2012 on Old Dubuque road in Anamosa thus closing the West Middle School and beginning the start of Anamosa Middle School. +The Royal Guards still exist down to the present and many more units from all branches of the armed forces were given this distinction. +Microibidion fluminense is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. +Maud Island, also called Te Hoiere in the Māori language, is one of the larger islands in the Marlborough Sounds on the northern tip of the South Island of New Zealand, with a total area of . +in Lebanon in Lebanon in Lebanon in Crossville in Crossville south-southwest of Rockwood. +She was also a member of the Russian team for the IAAF World Cross Country Championships in 1994 and 1995. +Adults are fruit piercers and are considered a pest on Citrus species. +Whether or not this is their own personal incantation or the activation incantation for the Ring of Immoral is left to conjecture. +The 2007–08 Russian Superleague season was the 12th and last season of the Russian Superleague, the top level of ice hockey in Russia. +Since 1998, Norje has been the location of the Sweden Rock Festival. +2009-2013: Imaginario Luisao Fernández left band in 2009 and was replaced by Geronimo Pastore. +Kim Sun-young, Kim Seon-young or Kim Seon-yeong () is a Korean name consisting of the family name Kim and the given name Sun-young, and may also refer to: Kim Sun-young (actress born 1976) (born 1976), South Korean actress Kim Seon-young (judoka) (born 1979), South Korean judoka Kim Sun-young (actress born 1980) (born 1980), South Korean actress Kim Seon-yeong (curler) (born 1993), South Korean curler +At the 2006 census, its population was 1,136, in 280 families. +ReferencesExternal linksKYBE's official websiteYBECategory:Country radio stations in the United States +It is situated at the junction of the Amazon biome to the north and the grassland and stunted woodland biome to the south; the river is subject to large fluctuations in level and the park is subject to periodic flooding. +John Wayne MurdochBundles and Boards Death Match: Casanova Valentine def. +Among its more famous members are August Annist, Oskar Loorits, Harri Moora, Julius Mägiste, Ants Oras et Albert Kivikas. +playersCategory:English Football League playersCategory:Association football midfielders +In 1999, Teichert entered The George Washington University Law School to pursue a Master of Laws (LLM) emphasizing English and early American legal history and environmental law, eventually graduating "with highest honors." +PersonalBlunden was born on April 5, 1989, in Gloucester, Ontario, Canada. +The settlement was founded as the Moravian mission of Lichtenfels (variously translated from the German as "Light Rock", "Light of the Rock", or "Rock of Light") by Matthias Stach, the brothers Jens and Peter Haven, and four Inuit families in 1748, 1754, 1757, or 1758. +It took place on the weekend of 24–26 September 1982 at the Hockenheimring. +ReferencesCategory:BombyliidaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1970 +In 1892, he moved to Seattle, Washington, where he was appointed postmaster by President Grover Cleveland. +It was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival. +At the 2006 census, its population was 52, in 16 families. +It is served by Sydney Trains T1 North Shore line services. +St. George the Great Martyr Orthodox Church is a historic Russian Orthodox church on St. George Island, Alaska. +ReferencesExternal links Nemaha County Maps: Current, Historic, KDOTCategory:Unincorporated communities in Nemaha County, KansasCategory:Unincorporated communities in KansasCategory:1857 establishments in Kansas Territory +ReferencesAndrzejewo +Features of the femur suggests that the gait of Aardonyx was slower than that of more basal sauropodomorphs. +Bachia talpa, Ruthven's bachia, is a species of lizard in the family Gymnophthalmidae. +Rudolf "Rudi" Dobermann (14 December 1902 – 1 November 1979) was a German athlete. +For example, he issued warnings about the so-called Zamboni treatment for multiple sclerosis, "detoxification" treatments and denounced news sites that contribute to spreading false news about health. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1879 birthsCategory:1949 deathsCategory:Albion Britons football coachesCategory:Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball coaches +Punch’ong, or otherwise known as buncheong ware could be either inlaid or stamped to create well defined patterns, or incised for a more freehand, inventive style. +Unification or unification theory may refer to:Computer science Unification (logic), the act of identifying two terms with a suitable substitution Unification (graph theory), the computation of the most general graph that subsumes one or more argument graphs (if such a graph exists) Han unification, an orthographic issue dealt with by UnicodePhysics Grand Unified Theory, a model in particle physics Unified field theory, a type of field theoryPolitics Unification or re-unification of sovereign states, see political unionPopular culture Unification (album), a 1998 album by the band Iron Savior "Unification" (Star Trek: The Next Generation), a two-part episode of Star Trek: The Next GenerationSport The act of producing an undisputed champion in boxing The act of producing an undisputed championship in professional wrestlingOther uses Semantic unification, in philosophy, linguistics, and computer science Unification Church or Movement, a spiritual movement founded in KoreaSee also Unification Church Reunification Unified (disambiguation) Intellectual synthesis +Cinebooks, 1988. +37 compounds were characterized from the underground and aerial parts of the plant. +In May 1941 she was sent to occupied France and returned through Spain in late June 1941, and was the first female SOE agent to enter occupied France. +A khanate is a state under the rule of a khan ("ruler" in Mongolic and Turkic languages). +An extra note indicates that the androphagoi are cannibals, as reflected in their name:Pliny the Elder later wrote in his Naturalis Historia that the same cannibals near Scythia wore the scalps of men on their chest. +Busse + Seewald, 1998, . +See alsoCommunes of the Haute-Marne departmentReferencesCategory:Communes of Haute-Marne +middleweight. +In golfing where time is most important, a laser rangefinder comes useful in locating distance to the flag. +He was survived by his wife of 54 years, Irene Hansen, and their son and two daughters. +ReferencesStation article at kolej.one.plExternal linksCategory:Railway stations in Warsaw +Valério Luiz de Oliveira was known for being outspoken and critical and for his strong opinions on the local soccer team, which may have led to his death. +White Rabbit sweets have been advertised with the slogan, "Seven White Rabbit candies is equivalent to one cup of milk" and positioned as a nutritional product in addition to being a sweet. +Decades later, the veterans Zeiger talks to still seem completely astonished, shell-shocked as it were, by both the confusing scope of the war itself and by their ability to resist it. +Measures included a north breakwater to protect the port from windstorms and high waves, paired with a sand groin to the south to enclose the port, together with land reclamation and the construction of moorings. +In 1339, he moved his base from the present-day city of Toki to Nagamori Castle. +The album cover pictures West with her new husband, Byron Metcalf. +Subspecies Glenea beatrix beatrix Thomson, 1879 Glenea beatrix obiensis Breuning, 1956ReferencesCategory:GleneaCategory:Beetles described in 1879 +CareerHe began his journalism career with the Brandon Sun at the age of 15 covering minor hockey and moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba three years later to accept a job with the Canadian Press and the Winnipeg Tribune in 1938. +It stands above the river Garonne, between Marmande to the west and Agen to the east, and is the first major town below the confluence of the Lot and Garonne Rivers after which the department is named. +Kaplan won again on Poker After Dark during "Cowboys" week that first aired in February 2008 against Chris Ferguson, Andy Bloch, Chau Giang, Hoyt Corkins and Doyle Brunson. +FRD may refer to: Cuban Democratic Revolutionary Front (Spanish ), an anti-Castro organization Federal Research Division of the United States Library of Congress Federal Rules Decisions, a United States reporter of legal opinions Fordata language, spoken in Indonesia Formula Racing Development Limited, a motorsport promoter Free Radical Design, a British game developer Free Rapid Downloader software Friday Harbor Airport in Washington, United States Frodsham railway station in England Fumarate reductase (menaquinone) Fund for Reconciliation and Development, an American philanthropic organization New Democratic Spirit (Albanian: ), an Albanian political party Focus receptor distance in projectional radiography Functional Requirement Document; see functional requirement +The Ballad Hits is the second greatest hits compilation album by Swedish pop duo Roxette, released on 4 November 2002 by Roxette Recordings and Capitol Records. +Luis Alfonso Rodríguez Mata (born October 14, 1994) is a professional Mexican footballer who currently plays for Tepatitlán de Morelos. +Šatare is a village in the municipality of Donji Vakuf, Bosnia and Herzegovina. +But with the Paramount threat, they went further. +Januszówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Zbuczyn, within Siedlce County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. +Sorani Ephesii liber de muliebribus affectionibus. +The musicians who played on this song were Barry Gibb and Nick Moroch on guitar, Maurice Gibb and Robbie Kondor on keyboards, drums programmed by Rhett Lawrence and Marcus Miller on bass. +ReferencesOfficial site Category:Sports teams in NorwayCategory:Sports clubs established in 1885Category:Sport in TrøndelagCategory:SteinkjerCategory:Ski jumping clubs in Norway +Outside the main mansion were outbuildings such as greenhouses, barns, stables, a dairy, gatehouse, garage, workshops, and bathhouses on the river, with a new bridge built across the Ramapo River. +Winogradsky is a surname. +Broten has also proposed caps on classrooms sizes and an increase in the number of educational assistants and pushed for economic reforms including a new procurement policy, and moving away from P3 deals, which he says costs more and ships benefits to other jurisdictions. +Qeqe also campaigned for better living conditions. +The Northern Cherokee led by John Ross were represented by Thomas Pegg, Lewis Downing, H.D. +Robert Q. became a fixture on television quiz shows in the 1950s and 1960s. +Contests in most years were multi cornered but only winners and runners are being mentioned. +Denzer may refer to: Denzer, Wisconsin, United States Roger Denzer (1871–1949), American baseball playerSee also Danzer, a surname +Spurius Postumius can refer to a number of different people from Roman history:Spurius Postumius Albus Regillensis (consul 466 BC)Spurius Postumius Albus Regillensis (consul 432 BC)Spurius Postumius Albinus Regillensis, consular tribune in 394 BCSpurius Postumius Albinus, consul in 334 and 321 BC, general in the Second Samnite WarSpurius Postumius Albinus Paullulus, consul in 174 BCSpurius Postumius Albinus Magnus, consul 148 BCSpurius Postumius Albinus (consul 110 BC) +University of California, Davis. +On April 27, 2009, Persaud co-launched Black Belt Poker with fellow poker pro and 2008 Irish Open champion Neil Channing. +ProgrammingKMGA broadcasts an adult contemporary music format to the greater Albuquerque/Santa Fe, New Mexico, area for about 11 months of the year. +She has also worked on a series of short films with photographer Michael McWeeney. +Pełczyce is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kobierzyce, within Wrocław County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. +This energy is being emitted from an outer envelope at an effective temperature of 5,922 K, giving it the golden hue of a G-type star. +In 1924, it became the 1st Georgian Mountain Division. +The 2000–01 NLA season was the 63rd regular season of the Nationalliga A, the main professional ice hockey league in Switzerland. +On 26 October 1814, he became division judge advocate of the army. +Gold Seal may refer to: RCA Red Seal Records#Gold Seal, record label Harold Schafer#Gold Seal Company Gold Seal Novel Gold Seal Winery King of Na gold seal Tam's Gold Seal Drugs Gold Seal Ltd. v. Alberta (Attorney-General), a judgement by the Supreme Court of Canada regarding Section 121 of the Constitution Act, 1867 +Shurab-e Saghir (, also Romanized as Shūrāb-e Şaghīr and Shoorab Saghir; also known as Shūr Āb) is a village in Saman Rural District, Saman County, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province, Iran. +Detlef Mikolajczak (born 15 April 1964) is a retired German football midfielder. +Laidley or Laidlay may refer to the following people:Given nameLaidley Burge (1897–1990), Australian rugby league playerSurnameDean Laidley (born 1967), Australian rules footballer and coachJames Laidley (1823–1877), Australian politician James Laidley (administrator) (1786–1835), Australian administratorJohn Laidley (1791–1863), American lawyer and politicianJohn Watson Laidlay (1808–1885), Scottish merchant, numismatist and orientalistJohnny Laidlay (1860–1940), Scottish golferWilliam Laidley (1828–1897), Australian politicianCategory:English-language surnames +In 1738, the Maymi had a "fort" on the coast south of Cape Canaveral. +21 January - Lutz Bachmann resigns as chairman of the anti-Islamic Pegida movement. +His win was the first time a world best for the men's marathon was set at the Boston Marathon. +Since 1985, he is professor at the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. +Gales can refer to:PlacesGales Township, Redwood County, MinnesotaGales Addition, WashingtonGales Creek (disambiguation)Gales FerryGales Point, BelizeGaleş, a village in Săliște town, Sibiu County, RomaniaThe Spanish language and Portuguese language word for WalesOtherGales BreweryGale's, a brand of honey and lemon curd in the United KingdomGales, a meteorological eventGALES, the Global Alliance of Leading-Edge Schools, an association of 20 top secondary and college preparatory schools from around the world +(Forsthaus may be translated as forester's lodge, Hof (in that case) as homestead). +Blu-ray Disc players). +Aydın Toscalı (born 14 August 1980) is a Turkish international footballer who currently plays as a center back for Mersin İdmanyurdu in the Süper Lig. +In 1813 he transferred to become Commander-in-Chief of the Madras Army and temporary acting Governor of Madras, with promotion to lieutenant-general. +Licensed to Pensacola, Florida, United States, the station is currently owned by, and is a ministry of, Pensacola Christian College. +Giulio Fasolo (born 14 October 1998) is an Italian football player. +His personal times were both achieved in 1986: 10.22 seconds over 100 metres and in 1987: 20.38 seconds over 200 metres. +Chłaniów-Kolonia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Żółkiewka, within Krasnystaw County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. +Sixteen other downtown buildings, all newer, were added to the Register at the same time as part of the "Lima Multiple Resource Area," a collection of architecturally-significant buildings. +ReferencesJesienicha +George Clifton may refer to: George Clifton (plant collector) (1823–1913), English collector of seaweed specimens, active in Australia George Clifton (footballer) (1865–1947), English footballer George Herbert Clifton (1898–1970), officer in the New Zealand Military Forces +William Joseph Haboush is an American mathematician at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who is best known for his 1975 proof of one of David Mumford's conjectures, known as the Haboush's theorem. +In 2009, as a defender of healthy and natural food, he became famous for appearing on poster campaigns for the hard discount store brand Leader Price. +In 1999, the dam was the subject of an April Fool's hoax from radio station KSJJ, a hoax that the magazine Time listed among its '"Top 10 Shocking Hoaxes"', along with the balloon boy hoax, 1938 The War of the Worlds radio hoax, and the 2010 Georgian news report hoax. +The village has a population of 100. +The champions were Barcelona, who won the title by a 10-point margin over second-placed Atlético Madrid in their first season under the management of English coach Terry Venables. +John Carson (born 8 July 1945) is a New Zealand former cricketer. +REDIRECT Absalom and Achitophel +He competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the 50k walk, coming 29th, and the 2013 World Championships in Athletics where he came 25th. +It pertains to the realm of Generative art. +It was the most popular given name for baby girls born in Lithuania in 2005. +Tacoma General is physically attached to Mary Bridge Children's Hospital, which is also run by MultiCare. +53–60; Oscar Nalesini, "A short history of the Tibetan explorations of Giuseppe Tucci", in Visibilia invisibilium. +All-Pacific Coast selectionsQuarterback Charles F. Erb, California (AS-1) Bill Steers, Oregon (ODJ-1)Halfbacks Pesky Sprott, California (AS-1, ODJ-1) Crip Toomey, California (AS-1) Dink Templeton, Stanford (ODJ-1)Fullback Jesse B. Morrison, California (AS-1) Lloyd Gillis, Washington State (ODJ-1)Ends Robert A. Berkey, California (AS-1) Harold Muller, California (AS-1, ODJ-1) Martin Howard, Oregon (ODJ-1)Tackles Stanley Barnes, California (AS-1) Dan McMillan, California (AS-1) E. Leslie, Oregon (ODJ-1) Fred Hamilton, Washington State (ODJ-1)Guards Olin C. Majors, California (AS-1, ODJ-1) Lee D. Cranmer, California (AS-1) Carl Mautz, Oregon (ODJ-1)Centers George H. Latham, California (AS-1) Earl Dunlap, Washington State (ODJ-1)KeyAS = Andy Smith, head coach of California, picking all 11 first-team players from his own squadODJ = Oregon Daily JournalSee also1920 College Football All-America TeamReferencesAll-Pacific Coast Football TeamCategory:All-Pacific Coast football teamsCategory:All-Pac-12 Conference football teams +Community Safety Accreditation Scheme Chattanooga School for the Arts & Sciences Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Command Stability Augmentation System, a fly-by-wire feature of the Panavia Tornado. +Moved location on June 10, 1952. +She became a team captain of FEU Lady Tamaraws during the UAAP Season 80 and she led the team in first finals appearance since UAAP Season 71. +John Hawxhurst helped Union forces as a guide, lived in Alexandria, Virginia and was active in the Restored Government of Virginia. +Hajji Moharam Khan Nasiri is a member of the Meshrano Jirga, the upper house of Afghanistan's National Assembly, for Laghman Province. +SeedsDrawDrawReferences Main DrawChallenger of Dallas - Doubles2013 Doubles +Career Jane Placide and her siblings where all schooled into the acting profession from an early age in their parents theater company, who performed both in the Charleston Theatre as well as toured around Virginia and the Carolina states. +The output of the sensor is measured twice: once in a known condition and once in an unknown condition. +Trypeta lineata is a species of tephritid or fruit flies in the genus Trypeta of the family Tephritidae. +However, the National Executive of the Labour Party endorsed him, so he stood as an official Labour Party candidate. +Melbourne: Bas Publishing. +He plays for J2 League club Montedio Yamagata. +There he met a man known as Prince Albert. +He currently plays as a winger for Ittihad Kalba on loan from Shabab Al-Ahli. +With the division on that country into Slovakia and the Czech Republic on 1 January 1993, Coppa became nuncio to each of them, based in Prague. +Originally scheduled for theatrical release in the fall of 1987, Warner Bros. pushed it back to Memorial Day Weekend 1988, as a result of the poor test screenings, before ultimately opening it on August 26, 1988, over a year after filming was completed. +While working in the studio, Buena invited her best friend Keisha Buchanan to watch them. +The 2010 SDSR delayed the project which became a competition between Thales and Lockheed to supply Crowsnest, a bolt-on sensor package that can be carried by any Merlin HM2. +In the midst of The Red Bullet Tour, BTS also held its first concert tour of Japan, Wake Up: Open Your Eyes Japan Tour. +Leshem () is one of the Hoshen jewels. +Its general colour is some shade of brown and it has a dark stripe running down either side extending about half way along the body. +Corinto is a town and municipality in the Cauca Department, Colombia. +See alsoNational Register of Historic Places listings in Bergen County, New JerseyReferencesCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in New JerseyCategory:Houses completed in 1780Category:Houses in Bergen County, New JerseyCategory:Montvale, New JerseyCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Bergen County, New JerseyCategory:New Jersey Register of Historic Places +Nothing is known about the breeding behavior of most members of this genus, but in two species, G. carapo and G. mamiraua, males make a "nest" (a depression in the bottom in the former species and within vegetation in floating meadows in the latter) and guard the young. +DistributionAndorra, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, U.K..ReferencesCategory:DexiinaeCategory:Diptera of EuropeCategory:Insects described in 1820 +Johnstown is a village in the county borough of Wrexham, Wales, and forms part of the old coal mining community of Rhosllannerchrugog. +As of 2012, Dengler has invested about one million dollars into Double Fine, which Schafer said has "paid off for both sides". +Goldoni, in his memoirs, named Pantalone as one of the four primary Commedia dell'Arte characters. +Zulia Canton was a canton in Maracaibo Province, Zulia Department, Gran Colombia. +Eunychiodes is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae. +Geography The distance to Georgiyevskaya is 19 km. +FormulaeThe following formulae for volume and surface area can be used if all faces are regular, with edge length a:ReferencesExternal links Category:Johnson solids +South Bend Township may refer to the following townships in the United States: South Bend Township, Barton County, Kansas South Bend Township, Blue Earth County, Minnesota South Bend Township, Armstrong County, Pennsylvania +ReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Bahia +1 (Mar. +PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Eure departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Eure +MPPC can refer to: The Motion Picture Prop Company Motion Picture Patents Company Microsoft Point-to-Point Compression Menlo Park Presbyterian Church Milk Sphingomyelin (1-Myristoyl,2-Palmitoyl-sn-Glycero 3-PhosphoCholine) Multi-pixel photon counter or silicon photomultiplier +He discovered it on 24 March 1894 in Paris. +), Latvian footballerSee alsoZin (disambiguation) +Before she enters her sophomore year in high school, she spends the summer moping around her family farm house. +About 5.4% of families and 6.5% of the population were below the poverty line, including 10.7% of those under age 18 and 7.1% of those age 65 or over. +ShutdownRadio Metrowave was closed down by the government on 27 June 2005 because of its persistent failure to pay off arrears to state-owned Bangladesh Betar, from which it rented a time slot and transmitter. +In the following two decades, Ippolito's paintings diverged further from their roots in the landscape to explore atmospheric visions. +2014 was the most successful year of her career thus far, winning three ITF doubles titles and her first singles title since 2010. +After graduating, Majolie studied figure painting and design at the Grand Central School of Art, clay sculpturing at Art Students League, and "drawing for line continuity" at Leonardo da Vinci Art School in New York. +Simão Verza Bertelli (born 2 July 1993) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for the club Paços de Ferreira, on loan from Operário. +It elects four Councillors. +History In the mid-1980s, several employees of UCC (University Computing Company subsequently renamed to Uccel Corporation) left to form "The System Center, Inc." in Dallas, Texas. +Little is known of the fate of the farmstead until the 15th century, when it is known to have been in possession of one Erengisle Nilsson (died 1469); his widow sold the land to Nils Bosson Sture who most probably began construction of the castle. +Even though without a music video, the song peaked at #32 on that chart. +Austin won a free breeding session to the stallion Tale of Ekati, a grandson of both Storm Cat and Sunday Silence, by throwing a dart in a party game hosted by Darby Dan Farm. +Hypselodoris maritima is a species of colourful sea slug or dorid nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Chromodorididae. +Einzug ins Paradies was a six-part East German television series, which dealt with the lives of five families who moved into a newly constructed apartment building. +32, May 1932 (May 1932), pp. +HistoryIn 1987, a large portion of mangroves were cut down and the remaining have slowly died due to land subsidence. +It lies approximately north-west of Miłakowo, north of Ostróda, and north-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. +Many media around the world also refused to feature the clip. +He later attended the University of Louisville and Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary. +The Irish Parliamentary Party was split at this time, the majority of its MPs (the "Anti-Parnellites") following John Dillon, while a rump (the "Parnellites") followed John Redmond. +Saint Maximilian of Tebessa, also known as Maximilian of Numidia, (; AD 274–295) was a Christian saint and martyr, whose feast day is observed on 12 March. +The sky is not a perceivable content and therefore, it is never presented as a and is not capable of being the viśayah of any perceptual judgment. +9 in The Times Top Twenty Plays of the Decade. +12/2/15 – Astros traded C Hank Conger to the Tampa Bay Rays for cash considerations. +There are four blocks in WCS: A Block (2305–2310 and 2350–2355 MHz) B Block (2310–2315 and 2355–2360 MHz) C Block (2315–2320 MHz) D Block (2345–2350 MHz)ReferencesCategory:Bandplans +By 1983, Manor Care became the United States' second-largest nursing home company. +Douglass is an American family originating from Cordova, Maryland, United States, by primogenitor Frederick Douglass (né Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey, 1818–1895). +The perfect fifth is often, but not always, played below the root, transposed down an octave creating a fourth interval. +A few moments after learning of Galloran's true identity, Jason is introduced to Rachel, a girl his age from earth, who arrived in Lyrian by walking through a stone arch. +Goodbye Dear Moon () is a 2004 Argentine sci-fi comedy film directed by Fernando Spiner and written by Spiner, Sergio Bizzio, Valentín Javier Diment, Alejandra Flechner, Alejandro Urdapilleta, and Sergio Bizzio. +The Old Maid is a 1935 play adapted by American playwright Zoë Akins from Edith Wharton's 1924 novella of the same name, included in the collection Old New York. +Described by Bent as "hick hop", the album was best known for the single "Suicidewinder". +It reached #14 in the UK Singles Chart upon re-issue in September 1991. +BiographyKumari attended Modern School (New Delhi), G.D Somani Memorial School, Mumbai and Maharani Gayatri Devi Girls' Public School Jaipur. +Some examples include peaches, apples, crab apple, pears, plums, grapes, currant, tomato and olives. +Started by two musicians, nineteen other musicians donated a piece of music that together became a CD called The Relief Project, Vol 1. +Where Rockwell specialized in the humorous aspects of small town life, Wittmack dealt mainly with male-oriented interests. +Anar Mammadkhanov (1970–2011), politician and social activist Ziya Mammadov (born 1952), politician Elmar Mammadyarov (born 1960), politician Rasim Musabayov (born 1951), politician, political scientist and specialist in conflict resolution Gazanfar Musabekov (1888–1938), politician Imam Mustafayev (1910–1997), First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan SSR Ayaz Mutalibov (born 1938), First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan SSR and the first President of Azerbaijan Eldar Namazov (born 1956), politician Sabit Orujov (1912–1981), politician Ganira Pashayeva (born 1975), politician, public activist, journalist and poet Mammed Amin Rasulzade (1884–1955), statesman, scholar, public figure and one of the founding leaders of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Khosrov bey Sultanov (1879–1947), politician Ramil Usubov (born 1948), politician Abdurrahman Vazirov (born 1930), First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan SSR Mir Teymur Yaqubov (1904–1970), First Secretary of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan SSR Nasib Yusifbeyli (1881–1920), publicist, statesman and one of the founding leaders of Azerbaijan Democratic RepublicPolitical activists and leaders of rebellions Meshadi Azizbekov (1876–1918), revolutionary, of the 26 Baku Commissars and one of the first Azeri–Marxists Khanlar Safaraliyev (1878–1907), oil field worker, trade unionist and revolutionary social democrat Mir Hasan Vazirov (1889–1918), socialist–revolutionary, of the 26 Baku CommissarsScientists Hasan Abdullayev (1918–1993), physicist, scientist and public official, President of the National Academy of Sciences of the Azerbaijan SSR. +He also thought that the right to national self-determination should and could only be realised in Western Europe as part of a socialist revolution. +The modified chassis largely retains the protection and amphibious capability of the original chassis. +She was a lady-in-waiting to the queen, Maria de Medici. +Overall placed 7th in the coxless four event. +Tombu () may refer to: Tombu-e Bala ("Upper Tombu"), Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran Tombu-e Pain ("Lower Tombu"), Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran Tombu Jonubi ("South Tombu"), Parsian County, Hormozgan Province, Iran Tombu Shomali ("North Tombu"), Parsian County, Hormozgan Province, IranSee also Tomb, Iran (disambiguation) +The existence of the metal–metal bond in Hg(I) compounds was established using X-ray studies in 1927 and Raman spectroscopy in 1934 making it one of the earliest, if not the first, metal–metal covalent bonds to be characterised. +Jimmy Seddon (20 May 1895 – October 1971) was an English footballer who played most famously in the centre of defence for Bolton Wanderers during the 1920s. +José Maria da Silva (born 27 August 1942) is a Brazilian former footballer. +She represents Switzerland in international competitions. +NotesReferencesExternal linksCategory:1858 birthsCategory:1915 deathsCategory:People from KensingtonCategory:People educated at Winchester CollegeCategory:Alumni of St John's College, OxfordCategory:English cricketersCategory:Oxford University cricketersCategory:Marylebone Cricket Club cricketersCategory:Orleans Club cricketersCategory:Devonshire Regiment officers +It has old style signs painted over and covered up with new style signs, and features new fare control railings as a crossunder. +"Nightingale" peaked at number nine on March 1, 1975, on the Billboard Hot 100 and spent the week before at number one on the Easy Listening chart. +Ratings Australia – MA15+ UK – 18 Germany – 16ReferencesExternal linksCategory:2003 horror filmsCategory:Fictional scarecrowsCategory:Films directed by David Michael LattCategory:American sequel filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American slasher filmsCategory:The Asylum films +The per capita income for the CDP was $11,066. +The population was 222 as of 2010. +The Doctor realises that the gas trap was meant to keep all humans out of the ship, even those who are supposedly guarding it—which suggests that somebody on the outside is working for the Vvormak. +Born in the Gad's Hill area of Higham, Kent, Cheesman began working for the Post Office. +He died in Tbilisi. +Operating principleSPADs are semiconductor devices based on a p–n junction reverse-biased at a voltage Va that exceeds breakdown voltage VB of the junction (Figure 1). +As of 2007, the village had a population of 11 people. +In Greek mythology, Rhacius () was the son of Lebes, and the leader of the first Greeks to settle in Caria, and became King of Caria. +It has a population of 883. +Center for Science and CultureCenter for Science and Culture (CSC), formerly known as the Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture (CRSC), is part of the Discovery Institute. +Sainsbury, The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments, Royal Artillery, Part 2: The Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment 1938–1945 and the Searchlight Battery 1937–1945; Part 3: The Post-war Units 1947–2002, Welwyn: Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust/Hart Books, 2003, . +The building was refenestrated and re-roofed in the 19th century. +The Aggies were members of the Athletic League of New England State Colleges. +In response to the 21-litre Blitzen Benz, Fiat built the enormous S76, with a 28.4-litre engine generating 290 bhp. +Mountain Falls Park is located on the eastern slope of the Great North Mountain to the east of the West Virginia border. +The girls' shot put competition at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics was held on 12 and 15 October, at the Parque Polideportivo Roca. +Similar to the Algarve Cup, the teams in Group A and Group B consist of higher-ranked teams and are the only teams actually in contention for the championship; Group C consists of lower-ranked teams. +Evanthia Makrygianni (born 30 August 1986) is a Greek former synchronized swimmer who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics. +He succeeded his father in the peerage upon his death in 1925. +However, the identification of Jacopo as the subject of the painting in the latter source was made by a hand later than the manuscript copyist's, throwing some doubt on its reliability . +This species reaches a length of TL. +On 16 October 1908, Rubeo, Ricardo and her parents migrated to Adelaide, South Australia; her two other older brothers had done so before them. +See alsoRail transport in QueenslandReferencesExternal links YarrabeeCategory:Coal mining in Queensland +Wrottesley Hall is a 1923-built Grade II listed house in the civil parish of Perton, and historically part of Tettenhall in Staffordshire, England. +transfer guests were such famous explorers as Thor Heyerdahl, Fyodor Konyukhov, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Bernhard Grzimek, Haroun Tazieff, Carlo Mauri, Bruno Vailati, Jacques Mayol, Jacek Pałkiewicz, Vladimir Chukov and others. +Gorazi () may refer to: Gorazi, Fars Gorazi, Kerman Gorazi, Bakharz, Razavi Khorasan Province Gorazi, Khvaf, Razavi Khorasan Province +Prior to and throughout much of the campaign, the Liberals held a small lead over the Conservatives; as of early January 2006, the Conservatives had taken the lead. +The Harangi joins the Kaveri near Kudige in Somwarpet taluk. +Notable people with the name include:Given nameGwyn Jay Allen, British musicianGwyn Ashton (born 1961), Welsh musicianGwyn Cready (born 1962), American authorGwyn Davies (rugby) (1908–1992), Welsh rugby playerGwyn Davies (1919–1995), Welsh cricketerGwynne Dyer (born 1943), Canadian journalistGwyn Evans (footballer) (1935–2000), Welsh footballerGwyn Evans (born 1957), Welsh rugby playerGwynn Evans (1915–2001), Welsh cricketerGwynne Evans (1880–1965), American swimmerGwynne Owen Evans (1940–1964), English murderer (real name: John Robson Walby), one of the last two men to be executed in the United Kingdom. +It flows into the Dhünn in Leverkusen. +It is part of the Poteet Independent School District located in central Atascosa County. +Polar aprotic solvents are generally incompatible with strong bases, such as Grignard reagents or t-butyllithium. +Several families were relocated and given compensation or have been offered houses in the nearby Ligota Turawska. +As of 2005, it is more expensive than petroleum-diesel, though it is still commonly produced in relatively small quantities (in comparison to petroleum products and ethanol fuel). +Many know it as "the heart of Santa Fe". +According to Jess Nevins' Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes, "He assaults Nazis who have catapult planes concealed in a skyscraper and planes disguised as American planes, as well as man-eating locusts and Yellow Peril superhumans like the costumed Captain Nippo, a recurring character." +"Good Friday" shared exactly the same cover as Party Tonight; it was released in two formats: a 7-inch single and 12-inch single by WEA. +She attended The College of New Jersey as an undergraduate majoring in math and minoring in creative writing. +However, members of the genus Neoarius, also known as "shark cats", can grow . +It is found on Borneo. +Arbuckle Place is a historic home located at Assawoman, Accomack County, Virginia. +Dr. Susan Huang and colleagues have found that taking certain hygiene steps reduces the risk of a dangerous MRSA infection of about a third. +He has played for Gimnasia y Esgrima (ER), San Martín de Mendoza. +Doudleby () is a village and municipality (obec) in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. +During October, Robinson camped at Hobbs Lagoon and passed over the head of Bluff River. +The parish church of St Gregory is a grade II* listed building with surviving ancient parts but was largely rebuilt in 1881. +The Marshallese ambassador in Washington, D. C. is the official representative of the Government in Majuro to the Government of the United States. +He represented Brackley in 1558. +Badran competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics in synchronised swimming. +The event took place in Nanjing Olympic Sports Center, Nanjing, China. +The village has a population of 30. +It lies approximately south-east of Osiek Mały, north of Koło, and east of the regional capital Poznań. +Izudin Bajrović (born 9 February 1963) is a Bosnian theater, film and television actor. +He competed in the men's middleweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. +The inlier is bounded by the Wilkie Brook Fault Zone on the east and the Red River Fault Zone on the southwest near Lone Shieling. +In addition to viceroys, the following lists the highest Spanish governors of the Viceroyalty of New Spain, before the appointment of the first viceroy or when the office of viceroy was vacant. +It is still used icol Commuter. +Establishments Construction of the Basilica of the Eternal Father, Trindade was completed. +Two pieces, a portrait of a gentleman and a copy of a self-portrait by Rembrandt, were recorded in the Uffizi inventory of 1890. +Hauser wrote his dissertation on the prevention of ski injuries, and went on to develop a ski binding that was certified by international quality organisations - his ski binding remains an ISO standard. +The aortic hiatus is a hole in the diaphragm. +LifeShubin was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and graduated from South Philadelphia High School in 1943. +William Beale (1784–1854) was an English composer and baritone. +The Caceribu River is a river of Rio de Janeiro state in southeastern Brazil. +The territory in Tomball ISD joined the community college district in 1982. +PDL was originally developed by the company Caine, Farber & Gordon and has been modified substantially since they published their initial paper on it in 1975. +Jean Lacoste (born 1950 in Paris) is a French-German philosopher, scholar and essayist. +Hamilton Palace may also refer to: Hamilton Palace (Hoogstraten), a private stately home and mausoleum built by property developer Nicholas van Hoogstraten near Uckfield, East Essex Hamilton Palace, a nightclub in Hamilton, Scotland, named for the palaceHamilton Palace (film), a 2011 Bollywood film. +In place of Psalm 94(95), Psalm 99(100), Psalm 66(67), or Psalm 23(24) may be used as circumstances may suggest. +The World Championships featured both men's and women's events in the Moguls, Aerials, Acro Skiing and the Combined. +References Category:1908 birthsCategory:1982 deathsCategory:Military personnel from Mobile, AlabamaCategory:United States Navy admirals +Category:Rodney DistrictCategory:Rivers of the Auckland RegionCategory:Rivers of New Zealand +It is native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia. +Thomas and Priscilla's grandson was author Herman Melville. +It is most often seen in the western parts of the city. +The cantonment has been named in line with the name of Padma Bridge. +The population as of the 2010 Census was 381. +ReferencesHistory of Parliament SLINGSBY, William (1563-1634) of Kippax, YorksCategory:1563 birthsCategory:1634 deathsCategory:People from KnaresboroughCategory:English army officersCategory:English landownersCategory:Knights BachelorCategory:English MPs 1601Category:English MPs 1604–1611Category:Deputy Lieutenants of MiddlesexCategory:16th-century English soldiersCategory:English MPs 1626 +Category:4th-century BC SpartansCategory:Ancient Greek admirals +This protein was identified as an endogenous ligand for the sulfonylurea receptor, ABCC8/SUR1. +"Miami 2 Ibiza" was the second single to be released from the album and featured vocals from Tinie Tempah. +He is a writer for La Règle du Jeu, Nuovi Argomenti, "A" and Shalom magazines. +Leonov (masculine, ) or Leonova (feminine, ) is a Russian surname. +Intermarriage between Hutu women and Tutsi men was strictly forbidden, although Hutu men often married Tutsi women. +ReferencesCategory:Tributaries of the Ganges +He was director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute and secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee from 1946 to 1973. +External linksStadium Database ArticleFootball stadiums profileReferencesCategory:Football venues in SlovakiaCategory:Multi-purpose stadiums in SlovakiaCategory:FK SenicaCategory:SenicaCategory:Buildings and structures in Trnava RegionCategory:Sports venues completed in 1962Category:1962 establishments in Slovakia +1805. +ReferencesExternal links Province of Dinagat Islands - Official webpage Maatas Elementary SchoolCategory:Philippines geography stubsCategory:Barangays of Dinagat Islands +Researchers with ProjectVOGUE also reached out to the ball community for assistance with vaccine trials and testing because minority participation is generally very low. +Partner countries include the United States, Jordan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, West Bank/Gaza, Egypt and Morocco. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1892Category:Choristoneura +Geographic range The Pangasius sanitwongsei is native to basins in Southeast Asia, and has been found in Central Anatolia, which is not native and was implemented there illegally. +Handmade or hand made may refer to:Handicraft, where useful and decorative objects are made by handHandmade (Jimmy Rankin album), 2003Handmade (Hindi Zahra album), 2010Handmade (The Ongoing Concept album), 2015Handmade, a 1970 album by Mason WilliamsHand Made, a 1993 album by Mitchel FormanHandMade Films, a British film production and distribution companyHandmade, a former division of the Rhino Entertainment record labelSee also Handmaid, a personal maid or female servant The Handmaid (disambiguation) Made hand, a poker hand that does not need improvement to win +It was referenced in Congo Shadows by John B. Franz. +The Canadian Army made the march the authorised march-past in quick time in 2013, replacing "" ("Quick, Clever and Ready"). +The role of her husband, Stephen Dallas, was portrayed during the course of the show's run by Arthur Hughes, Neil Malley, Leo McCabe and Frederick Tazere. +In 2016, Kris Kemist produced and released a various artists reggae album featuring new artists he had not previously released before; introducing newcomer Rudie Rich who had his song "Teach Dem" from the album premiered exclusively by BBC Radio Berkshire. +ReferencesNotesExternal links District of Hafizabad - Official Site Local Govt. +It came into effect on January 1, 2000, and was considered a massive and groundbreaking project. +Life Rabbi Henoch Leibowitz was born in 1918 in Šalčininkai, Lithuania, and was the only son of Rabbi Dovid Leibowitz. +Men's sabre Percival AlgerJudoMen's Extra Lightweight Jerry DinoMen's Half Middleweight Benjie BaylonMen's Heavyweight Benjamin McMurrayRowingMen's Single Sculls Edgardo MaerinaSailing Nestor Soriano Richard PazSwimmingMen's 50m Freestyle Joseph Eric Buhain Heat – 24.26 (→ did not advance, 33rd place)Men's 100m Freestyle Rene Concepcion Heat – 53.84 (→ did not advance, 51st place)Men's 200m Freestyle Rene Concepcion Heat – 1:55.58 (→ did not advance, 40th place) Joseph Eric Buhain Heat – 1:56.84 (→ did not advance, 44th place)Men's 100m Breaststroke Lee Patrick Concepcion Heat – 1:07.93 (→ did not advance, 50th place)Men's 200m Breaststroke Lee Patrick Concepcion Heat – 2:29.62 (→ did not advance, 46th place)Men's 100m Butterfly Joseph Eric Buhain Heat – 57.17 (→ did not advance, 31st place)Men's 200m Butterfly Joseph Eric Buhain Heat – 2:05.32 (→ did not advance, 32nd place)Men's 200m Individual Medley Rene Concepcion Heat – 2:10.37 (→ did not advance, 30th place)Men's 400m Individual Medley Rene Concepcion Heat – 4:48.00 (→ did not advance, 30th place)Women's 50m Freestyle Gillian Akiko Thomson Heat – 27.43 (→ did not advance, 30th place)Women's 100m Freestyle Gillian Akiko Thomson Heat – 59.41 (→ did not advance, 39th place)Women's 100m Backstroke Gillian Akiko Thomson Heat – 1:06.51 (→ did not advance, 28th place)WeightliftingMen's 54 kilograms Gregorio ColoniaMen's 56 kilograms Samuel AligadaMen's 90 kilograms Ramon SolisWrestlingMen's Greco Roman (– 52 kg) Florante TiranteMen's Freestyle (– 52 kg) Florante TiranteMen's Freestyle (– 60 kg) Dean ManibogDemonstration SportsBowlingArianne Cerdeña won the gold medal. +Alatas served as chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council (Dewan Pertimbangan Presiden) in the Yudhoyono Administration. +See also List of Macroteleia speciesReferencesFurther readingExternal links Category:Parasitic waspsCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Scelioninae +He has an eager personality and a frequently used "top form" catchphrase. +Winner of the First Moscow Competition entertainers. +Obhausen is a municipality in the Saalekreis district, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. +Karol Piątek (born 4 July 1982 in Luzino) is a former Polish footballer who played as a midfielder. +Gol Mirak (, also Romanized as Gol Mīrak) is a village in Birk Rural District, in the Central District of Mehrestan County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. +Lyon won 4–2 on aggregate. +William E. Cooper (born 19 June 1929) is a retired major general in the United States Army who served as Deputy Director for Foreign Intelligence at the Defense Intelligence Agency. +Haplomitrium hookeri, the Hooker's flapwort, is a species of liverwort from the United Kingdom. +Awards 2014 Martín Fierro Awards: Best cultural program. +Vĩnh Hậu may refer to several rural communes in Vietnam, including:Vĩnh Hậu, An Giang, a commune of An Phú DistrictVĩnh Hậu, Bạc Liêu, a commune of Hòa Bình DistrictSee alsoVĩnh Hậu A, a commune of Hòa Bình District in Bạc Liêu Province +JDS and INC approached supreme court with the allegation on Governor who misused his powers to form the Karnataka state cabinet & showed partiality. +The opening acts were Young Guns, Issues, and Sleepwave. +It was released on 5 November 2010 in China. +He did not play in any international matches on the 1966 tour but did play in all four internationals against in 1968. +GeographyBagdah is located at . +Filmography1950s Scandal in Sorrento (1955) Christ Stopped at Eboli (1955) Tosca (1956) The Monte Carlo Story (1956) White Nights (1957) Anna of Brooklyn (1958) The Love Specialist (1958) The Naked Maja (1958) Policarpo (1959) The Great War (1959) On the Beach (1959)1960s Five Branded Women (1960)The Angel Wore Red (1960)Rocco and His Brothers (1960)Phantom Lovers (1961)The Best of Enemies (1961)Boccaccio '70 (1962)Family Diary (1962)The Leopard (1963)The Organizer (1963)Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1963)The Bible: In the Beginning... (1966)The Witches (1967)The Stranger (1967)Spirits of the Dead (1968)Caprice Italian Style (1968)Anzio (1968)Candy (1968)Fellini Satyricon (1969)The Secret of Santa Vittoria (1969)1970s Sunflower (1970)Splendori e miserie di Madame Royale (1970)Carnal Knowledge (1971)Roma (1972)Man of La Mancha (1972)Love and Anarchy (1973)Amarcord (1973)All Screwed Up (1974)Erotomania (1974)The Beast (1974)The Divine Nymph (1975)Fellini's Casanova (1976)Origins of the Mafia (1976)Stormtroopers (1976)Ecco noi per esempio (1977)A Night Full of Rain (1978)China 9, Liberty 37 (1978)Orchestra Rehearsal (1978)All That Jazz (1979)1980s City of Women (1980)Popeye (1980)Rollover (1981)My Darling, My Dearest (1982)Five Days One Summer (1982)The Scarlet and the Black (1983)And the Ship Sails On (1983)American Dreamer (1984)Nothing Left to Do But Cry (1984)The Assisi Underground (1985)Red Sonja (1985)Hotel Colonial (1987)Julia and Julia (1987)Rent-a-Cop (1988)Haunted Summer (1988)The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988)1990s The Bachelor (1990)Regarding Henry (1991)Once Upon a Crime (1992)Wolf (1994)The Night and the Moment (1995)Sabrina (1995)The Stendhal Syndrome (1996)Marcello Mastroianni: I Remember (1997)ReferencesExternal links Category:1923 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from RomeCategory:Italian cinematographersCategory:David di Donatello winnersCategory:David di Donatello Career Award winnersCategory:American Society of Cinematographers members +Former communeThe former commune consisted of the villages: Boevange Deiffelt Doennange Hamiville Crendal Lullange Troine Wincrange Lentzweiler - partly shared with the former commune of Asselborn Hinterhasselt (lieu-dit) Antoniushof (lieu-dit) Troine-Route (lieu-dit)FootnotesCategory:Villages in LuxembourgCategory:WincrangeCategory:Former communes of Luxembourg +He four times served as member of Delhi Legislative Assembly. +1830s Egypt: In Egypt Christian missionaries were allowed to open elementary schools for girls. +Early lifeTaitano was born in Hagåtña, Guåhan Guam. +At the 2006 census, its population was 358, in 110 families. +References ITIS Standard Report Page: Lipotriches pulchriventris ADW: Lipotriches pulchriventris: CLASSIFICATION Lipotriches pulchriventris (Cameron, 1897) Lipotriches pulchriventris | halictidaeCategory:HalictidaeCategory:Insects described in 1897 +Fun on a Weekend is a 1947 American comedy film written and directed by Andrew L. Stone. +On 1 June 1996, It was moved to officially released a new Chinese album under a different label names Pony Canyon Taiwan, which ceased operations in Taiwan in late 1997 due to the Asian financial crisis. +She was born in London and named Alice Leonora, the eleventh and last child of Therese ( Schacerl) and Maximillian Loewe, who moved to Britain following Loewe's part in the failed 1848 uprising in Hungary. +Škalske Cirkovce () is a settlement in the Municipality of Velenje in northern Slovenia. +The following lists events that happened during 1953 in Cambodia. +DAVID 6.8 was released in October 2016. +E. R. Festing joined the South Kensington Museum in 1864. +The main surname is "Pannu" and others include "Sandhu","Sidhu","Dhillon" and "Grewal". +The album features guest appearances from Quavo, Travis Scott, Lil Uzi Vert, and Gunna. +Goodheart is an English surname. +On 27 April 2016, Takakura was appointed as the manager of the Japan senior national team becoming the first female to hold the post. +"Where Did I Go Wrong" and "I Got Dreams" were both Number One country hits for him, and "When I Could Come Home to You" peaked at #5. +The Taxonomy of the Genus Lymantria Hübner, [1819] (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae). +ReferencesCategory:Government of NormandyCategory:Regional councils of France +His range of work encompasses hundreds of collections and thousands of individual product designs. +He calls Lainey from the police station and confesses he is in love with her. +He was appointed Dean of Llandaff in 1931, retiring as Dean Emeritus in 1948. +See also Italy national relay teamReferencesExternal links Olimpionici BolognesiCategory:1936 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Italian male sprintersCategory:People from BolognaCategory:Universiade medalists in athletics (track and field)Category:Universiade gold medalists for Italy +He was elected MP for Grampound in 1628. +The major religion in Khalifan is Islam. +The theater was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. +He was also Captain of Under-16, Under-19, Under-22 for Maharashtra. +After getting well known in the New York theatrical circuit, Foster moved to Chicago, where he found Robert Mott's Pekin Theater. +Cobb is in typically fine form. +The championship has been the leading tag team championship in the promotion since 1997. +Like the Duos and the PowerBook 100 before it, the 150 only had a single serial printer port, however, a third-party adapter was available for use in the optional modem slot. +Using Chrysler's three-speed Torqueflite automatic gearbox, the 6.3-litre Facel II could reach over 135 mph (225 km/h). +Shortly after his death in 2004, Nordisk Film (the company that made the Olsen Gang movies) established a scholarship for actors in his name. +EtymologyMonzonite was originally named after the Monzoni range in Val di Fassa (Trento Province, Italy) where it is abundant. +Palmitoylated membrane protein 1 contains a conserved sequence, called the SH3 (src homology 3) motif, found in several other proteins that associate with the cytoskeleton and are suspected to play important roles in signal transduction. +He is also 2007 and 2008 Asian gold medalist. +The Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND) is a global health non-profit based in Geneva, Switzerland. +Students from a wide range of disciplines are connected through a series of interactive workshops, professional networking sessions, and nightly social events. +Ludlow Massacre On April 20, 1914, while Tikas was meeting with Major Patrick J. Hamrock, the militia commander in charge of Company B, troopers––as instructed by superiors––located themselves atop Water Tank Hill, just south of Ludlow in response to spotting armed Greek miners milling about. +While I was in the hospital, I dreamed, made the first blueprints of weapons in a notebook and did not stop reproaching myself for staying behind. +The Angel Film Festival is an annual independent film festival that takes places in Islington, London. +State Affair holds the record for the most wins, with fifteen, followed by Adelaide Tonight, The Mike Walsh Show and Neighbours with nine wins each. +The ads featured a chef battling a lobster, a troup of gorillas and monkeys drawn in the style of the Gorillaz artwork. +Catrine : Stenlake. +Select Credits The Naked Bunyip (1970) - writer, producer, director, distributor Libido (1973) - director Lonely Hearts (1982) - producer We of the Never Never (1982) - original producerReferencesExternal links Credits at personal website Category:Australian filmmakersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +Two Cogito-related texts may be found there. +The upper reaches of the scheme are over above sea level in the Plynlimon mountains. +It is found in the US states of Texas and Colorado. +The climate of Tulamba is variable. +Henry Rose may refer to:Henry R. Rose (1856–1923), mayor of Los AngelesHenry Rose (cricketer) (1853–1895), New Zealand cricketerHenry Rose (priest) (1800–1873), English churchman, theologian and scholarHenry Rose (MP), Member of Parliament for Guildford, EnglandSee alsoHarry Rose (disambiguation) +Cast Phillip Sayer as Dr. Thomas 'Tommy' Ramsey John Benfield as Detective Inspector Brook Sybil Maas as Dany Lombárd Georges Trillat as Pascal Lambért Gaby Dellal as Tessa Waite Connie Booth as Isabel Palmer Oliver Pages as Marcel Joubert Linda Marlowe as Beryl Waite Alfred Lynch as P.F. +The second brother is subsequently murdered, shot in the back, using a gun from the Marshal's office during a nighttime jail break organized by Sanders (Robert Phillips), who is an associate of the freight company owner (Barry Sullivan), in an effort to get the third King brother, cattleman (Morgan Woodward) to kill the Marshal. +Olli "Ollie" Tukiainen is a Finnish musician and the guitarist of the rock band Poets of the Fall. +As governor, he attempted to avoid bloodshed by bringing justice and civilization to the natives. +Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (82.04%) learnt to speak in childhood, 17.79% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census). +When the boards are laminated together to form the benchtop, the dadoes form the square holes that are required. +External linksCategory:Major League Baseball outfieldersCategory:Brooklyn Dodgers playersCategory:Baseball players from ArkansasCategory:1911 birthsCategory:1989 deathsCategory:Sioux City Cowboys playersCategory:Oklahoma City Indians playersCategory:Nashville Vols playersCategory:Jackson Mississippians playersCategory:Allentown Brooks playersCategory:Jackson Senators playersCategory:Elmira Colonels playersCategory:Montreal Royals playersCategory:Louisville Colonels (minor league) playersCategory:Indianapolis Indians playersCategory:Little Rock Travelers players +From 2004 until 2006 he trained Arema Malang in Liga Indonesia Premier Division. +Adolphe Tonduz (1862-1921) was a Swiss botanist who collected plants in both Guatemala and Costa Rica. +Solar panels Solar panels absorb sunlight as a source of energy to generate direct current electricity. +References Category:Monasteries in HerefordshireCategory:Scheduled Ancient Monuments in Herefordshire +footballersCategory:L.D.U. +Jury Stanislav Rostotsky (USSR – President of the Jury) Maya-Gozel Aimedova (USSR) Vladimir Baskakov USSR) Blanca Guerra (Mexico) Cesare Zavattini (Italy) Jacques Duqeau-Rupp (France) Stanisław Mikulski (Poland) Ulyses Petit de Murat (Argentina) Ion Popescu-Gopo (Romania) Dusan Roll (Czechoslovakia) Alimata Salambere (Upper Volta) Mrinal Sen (India) Georgi Stoyanov (Bulgaria) Pham Nguoc Truong (Vietnam) Theo Hinz (West Germany)Films in competitionThe following films were selected for the main competition:Awards Golden Prizes: Amok by Souheil Ben-Barka Alsino and the Condor by Miguel Littín Vassa by Gleb Panfilov Special Prizes - For the contribution to cinema: Alberto Sordi for I Know That You Know That I Know Robert Hossein for Les Misérables Silver Prizes: Balance by Lyudmil Kirkov Doctor Faustus by Franz Seitz Concrete Pastures by Štefan Uher Prizes: Best Actor: Wirgiliusz Gryń for Pastorale heroica Best Actor: Yoshi Katō for Hometown Best Actress: Judy Davis for Winter of Our Dreams Best Actress: Jessica Lange for Frances Shadow of the Earth by Taieb Louhichi Special Diplomas: The Deal by Fernando Ayala Five Fingers of One Hand by I. Hyamgavaa, B. Baljinniam Return from Hell by Nicolae Mărgineanu Prix FIPRESCI: Demons in the Garden by Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón Without Witness by Nikita MikhalkovReferencesExternal linksMoscow International Film Festival: 1983 at Internet Movie Database1983Category:1983 film festivalsCategory:1983 in the Soviet UnionCategory:1983 in Moscow +In 1990–1994 he took part in the Karabakh War. +The total area is . +At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported. +The Optare Solo's shorter size allows it to maneuver easily in residential and dense city areas. +MatchDetailsReferencesCategory:FA Trophy FinalsFa Trophy FinalFa Trophy FinalFa Trophy Final 2009Fa Trophy Final 2009Category:Events at Wembley Stadium +Symbiotic novae are slow irregular eruptive variable stars with very slow nova-like outbursts with an amplitude of between 9 and 11 magnitudes. +The French-Cambodian Prehistoric Mission - a team of Cambodian and French archaeologists and students - has resumed archaeological work since 2009 in room no. +As a result, Ruttner, who already ran as a non-partisan candidate, decided to left the party. +According to tradition, a lost child near the creek accounts for the name. +The Rays had fallen behind the New York Yankees for the division lead by 11½ games, but were still within reach of the wild card, trailing the Boston Red Sox by only 5 games. +ReferencesFurther readingExternal links Sumner County Map, KDOTCategory:Unincorporated communities in Sumner County, KansasCategory:Unincorporated communities in Kansas +It was recorded at Shea Stadium in New York City on 13 October 1982, the band's second night opening for The Who; the concert was produced by Kosmo Vinyl. +Tikolo is a Kenyan surname. +Charles Tottenham Loftus, 1st Marquess of Ely, KP, PC (23 January 1738 – 22 March 1806) was an Anglo-Irish peer and politician. +Biography Grand Ayatollah Hassan Raza Ghadeeri was born in Pakistan and studied in various locations including Lahore, Multan, and Ali-Pur. +According to an inscription of Ramachandra, he and his followers entered the Devagiri fort, disguising themselves as actors, and arranged a performance before Ammana. +ReferencesCategory:LithosiinaCategory:Moths described in 1859 +In the same year, she was cast in the primetime television series Habang Kapiling Ka starring Angelika dela Cruz. +Depending on Chinese variety, Zou can be transliterated as Chow, Chau, Tsau, Trau, Tsou or Chew. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Albanian male actorsCategory:Greek male soap opera actorsCategory:British male soap opera actorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Alumni of the Liverpool Institute for Performing ArtsCategory:Albanian emigrants to GreeceCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +In the early 1930s, social issues afflicting the Arab population in the colony, such as the disease of typhus, harassment and imprisonment by the colonial police, and poverty were prominent themes of raï lyrics. +Murphy named Brunonia Glacier for his alma mater, Brown University, using a Latinized version of the name. +ReferencesCategory:1995 deathsCategory:RadiobiologistsCategory:20th-century American physicistsCategory:Nuclear Regulatory Commission officialsCategory:Washington University in St. Louis peopleCategory:Washington University in St. Louis alumniCategory:Washington University physicistsCategory:Physicists from MissouriCategory:Scientists from St. LouisCategory:Scientists from MissouriCategory:Nuclear physicistsClaus, Walter DunhamCategory:1903 birthsCategory:Medical physicistsCategory:Health Physics Society +He also had a few young cartoonists living with him in his studio in Waterloo, thus creating the so-called "School of Marcinelle": this included André Franquin, Morris, and Will. +Gabriel Köerner (born June 14, 1982 in Waterbury, Connecticut) is a visual effects artist and well-known Star Trek fan ("Trekkie"). +Trams communication was opened in the 1890s. +2010: South America Tour with Sissita's Soul Tangos (Argentina, Uruguay) 2013: Classic World Hits Tour in ChinaAwards 2011: Short list for Grammy Awards with "Sissita's Soul Tangos" 2012: Recommendation for Grammy Awards with "Soulistics"External links official website MisSiss Soulistics website Gospel & More websiteReferences Category:Austrian female singersCategory:English-language singers from AustriaCategory:Living peopleCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Austrian singer-songwritersCategory:21st-century Austrian singersCategory:21st-century women singers +It is lived for Seoul Samsung Thunders, Daejeon Samsung Bluefangs, Yongin Samsung Blueminx, Samsung Life Table Tennis Club, Samsung Life Wrestling Club, Samsung S1 Taekwondo Club. +The report concluded that dam removal is feasible. +William Bryan (22 September 1856 – 22 May 1933) was an English first-class cricketer. +ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Punjab MPAs 1997–1999Moazzam Jahanzeb +Upland or Uplands may refer to:Geography Hill, an area of higher land, generallyHighland, an area of higher land divided into low and high pointsUpland and lowland, conditional descriptions of a plain based on elevation above sea levelPlacesAustralia Upland, Queensland, a locality in the Barcaldine RegionDesert Uplands, a bio-region in QueenslandCanadaCFB Uplands, a former Canadian Forces Base located in Ottawa, Ontario, most land was given to Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport Uplands, Greater Victoria, a Vancouver Island neighbourhood in the northeast Oak Bay, which is adjacent to Victoria, British ColumbiaUplands Park, an undeveloped natural reserve in the Uplands neighbourhoodUplands Ski Centre, a tiny, one-lift ski area in Thornhill, Ontario, just north of Toronto The Uplands, Edmonton Uplands, OntarioGermanyUpland (mountain range), lies mostly in the northwestern Rothaar Mountains, with parts in the East Sauerland foothillsNorwayUplands, Norway, an ancient name for the agricultural lands and forests to the north of Oslo in NorwaySouth Africa, an Anglican, independent high school near Mpumalanga, South AfricaSwedenUppland, a historical province on the eastern coast of Sweden, just north of Stockholm, SwedenUplands nation, a student society at Uppsala University, SwedenUnited KingdomUplands, Swansea, a suburb and community of Swansea, Wales, United KingdomUplands (electoral ward), an electoral ward in Swansea, Wales, United KingdomUplands Community College, a secondary school in Wadhurst, East Sussex, England, pupils are 11 to 18 Upland BritainUnited StatesUpland South, the northern part of the Southern United States, in contrast to the Deep SouthUpland, California, in San Bernardino CountyUpland, Monterey County, California, a former settlement located on the Southern Pacific Railroad between San Lucas and San ArdoUpland, Indiana, a town in Jefferson Township, Grant County, Indiana, United States, population 3,845 (2010)Indiana Uplands, a geographical region in south-central IndianaUpland, Kansas, a rural unincorporated community in Dickinson County, Kansas, United StatesUpland, Nebraska, a village in Franklin County, Nebraska, United States, population 143 (2010)Upland, Pennsylvania, a borough in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States, population 3,239 (2010)Upland, West Virginia (disambiguation)Other usesUpland (UPL), a wetland indicator status for plantsUpland Brewing Company, a brewery in Bloomington, Indiana, second largest brewery in IndianaUpland, final track on Edgar Froese's Aqua albumUpland (restaurant), a restaurant in New York CitySee alsoUplands School (disambiguation)Highland (disambiguation) +The winners were announced on January 6, 2016. +ReferencesExternal links To Encyclopedia of Life To World Register of Marine SpeciesfranziskaeCategory:Gastropods described in 2009 +She also won both those events at the WAAA Championships that same year. +The oldest inscription comes from Beroea (ca. +The album consists of two discs, one containing Nash's greatest hits including his work with CSNY, CSN and as a duo with Crosby & Nash. +This is a list of Missouri Tigers men's basketball head coaches. +playersCategory:Crewe Alexandra F.C. +It is found in Taiwan, Japan and the Kuriles. +At the time the island was a part of the Republic of Venice, though now it is in modern-day Croatia. +The wide, roughly heart-shaped leaf blade is up to 40 by 28 centimeters and has 4 main veins running from the center to the edge on each side. +Petrov Art Palace: resembles the Petrov Art Palace in Moscow. +Though financially in a desperate state, the Nawab refuses to sell his property and clings on to his old-fashioned ideals of nobility. +Princess Amelia was a Dutch merchant ship of 600 tons (bm) built in 1634 and wrecked off Swansea, Bristol Channel, in 1647. +See alsoCommunes of the Yvelines departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Yvelines +WHKO has also been nominated for several Academy of Country Music and Country Music Association awards. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1998 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Kosovan women's footballersCategory:Kosovo women's international footballersCategory:Women's association football goalkeepers +PoliticsAdministrative divisions Guizhou is divided into nine prefecture-level divisions: six prefecture-level cities and three autonomous prefectures:The nine Prefecture of Guizhou are subdivided into 88 county-level divisions (14 districts, 7 county-level cities, 55 counties, and 11 autonomous counties,1 special district). +68"Karma Killer" (feat. +ReferencesCategory:Assembly constituencies of Punjab, IndiaCategory:Faridkot district +Open the Door is the fourth album by Roger Hodgson, released in May 2000 by Epic Records and his third and most recent studio one (and his first studio release since 1987). +in 1960. +The central region's rate of star formation seems to have been relatively constant across time (Martínez-Delgado et al. +Category:Multi-purpose stadiums in ParaguayCategory:Football venues in AsunciónCategory:Sports venues in Asunción +Track listingReferencesExternal links Category:2011 singlesCategory:James Blake (musician) songsCategory:Bon Iver songsCategory:Polydor Records singlesCategory:Songs written by Justin VernonCategory:2011 songsCategory:Songs written by James Blake (musician) +Niklas Lindgren (born 18 May 1988 in Helsinki) is a Finnish sailor, who specializes in two-person dinghy (470) class. +Family and careerDyke came from a cricketing family: his uncle was Herbert Jenner who captained Cambridge in the first official University match, and the long-lived Herbert Jenner-Fust was a cousin, as was Charles Nepean. +Edward L. Todd revised the genus whose distribution extends from Mexico to Amazonian Brazil in 1976. +He completed his studies at Stanford and Bucknell Universities where he obtained B.S., M.S., and eventually Ph.D. in electrical engineering. +It was aired on the Seven Network during the summer of 1977-78. +A version made in Dubai by Dubai TV was syndicated across the Arabic-speaking world and each episode featured contestants from different countries in that region. +The abdomen has two pale yellow rings with two blue ones between and distal to them. +It is south of Rochon Sands Provincial Park. +It was the 52nd edition of the tournament and was held from August 20 through August 26, 1979. +Liberazione (newspaper), a newspaper maintained by the Partito della Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation Party), a splinter faction of the Italian Communist Party. +References Category:Populated places in Zarrin Dasht County +He formerly played for SC Heerenveen and FC Emmen. +Current artistsAncestorsAssemble Head in Sunburst SoundThe Atomic BitchwaxBurning LoveCarouselColiseumEarthlessGraveyardHopewellImaad WasifJason Simon of Dead MeadowJoyKarma to BurnNaamNebulaNight HorsePriestessQuest for FireRuby the HatchetThe SkullSpindriftThe WarlocksWhirrWitchPast artistsAll NightAnnihilation TimeBad WizardBlack NASABoulderThe Brian Jonestown MassacreBuzzkillChrome LocustCloudland CanyonCoreMark DDrunk HorseEldopaEntranceThe EveryonesGongaHermanoHigh on FireThe High StrungImmortal Lee County KillersThe J.J. Paradise Players ClubKadavarKalasKreisorLeechmilkLogical NonsenseLost GoatThe LovetonesMaplewoodThe Mystick Krewe of ClearlightOn TrialPay NeuterRaging SlabSixty Watt ShamanSleepSofa King KillerSpirit CaravanTeeth of the HydraThrottleTitanTricky WooYa Ho Wa 13ReferencesExternal links Official site MyspaceCategory:Record labels established in 1993Category:1993 establishments in New York (state)Category:Companies based in New York CityCategory:American independent record labelsCategory:Rock record labelsCategory:Heavy metal record labelsCategory:Psychedelic rock record labels +On January 13, 2016, he recorded 14 points and a season-high 18 rebounds in a 103–94 win over the Indiana Pacers. +Henry Lawson may also refer to:Henry Lawson (astronomer) (1774–1855), English astronomerGeoff Lawson (cricketer) (born 1957), Australian cricketer nicknamed "Henry" after the writerHenry Lawson (cricketer) (1862–1923), New Zealand cricketerHenry Merrick Lawson (1859–1933), British Army generalHenry Lawson of the Lawson baronetsSee alsoHarry Lawson (disambiguation) +The Indotyphlidae are a family of common caecilians found in Africa, Seychelles and India. +FinalReferencesMen's Parallel Bars Final ResultsCategory:Gymnastics at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics +Its functions were assumed by the East Midlands Development Agency and a newly constituted East Midlands Leaders' Board, the executive arm of East Midlands Councils. +JudgmentEmployment TribunalsBoth the Employment Tribunal and Employment Appeal Tribunal found in favour of Mrs Nolan and granted an order for remuneration for a one-month period. +References Category:Populated places in Lamerd County +ReferencesCategory:1536 in scienceCategory:16th century in scienceCategory:1530s in science +It holds that the divide between a statement of opinion and fact becomes more factual if one holds himself out as having expert knowledge. +However it is degraded in the body over several hours. +It is native to areas of the Savannah River drainage system of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina such as Steven's Creek Heritage Preserve and Lake Keowee. +ReferencesCategory:1969 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Nicaraguan male sport shootersCategory:Olympic shooters of NicaraguaCategory:Shooters at the 1992 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +Robert Fiske may refer to: Robert Fiske (actor) (1889–1944), American film actor Robert B. Fiske (born 1930), American lawyer and Whitewater special prosecutor Robert Hartwell Fiske (1948–2016), writer, editor, and publisher of The Vocabula ReviewSee also Robert Fiske Bradford (1902–1983), American politician Robert Fiske Griggs (1881–1962), American botanist and ecologist Robert Fisk (born 1946), British journalist Robert Farris Fisk (1819–1863), American lawyer and librarian +His mother had to raise him and his two other siblings alone. +Its name apparently aimed to show the relation and counterpart to Kokin Wakashū, the first imperial poetry anthology. +Efrem Morelli (born 25 November 1979) is an Italian Paralympic swimmer. +References patrimoniocultural.gov.ptCategory:Churches in Santarém DistrictCategory:National monuments in Portugal +The Ultimate Treasure is a BBC Books original novel written by Christopher Bulis and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. +His second fight, July 19 at King of the Cage Canada's Excalibur event at Rexall Place in Edmonton, Alta., was against Vancouver, B.C. +Dorchester Town He was loaned out to Conference South side Dorchester Town in July 2012. +The tomb by agreement between Turkey and Syria then was moved to a new location at some northward but also on the Euphrates riverside and also in Syria, northwest of the town of Sarrin, in Aleppo Governorate, and some from the Turkish border. +Neev may also refer to:Neev, Portuguese singer, (notable for "Breathe")DJ Neev, UK-based Sikh radio DJNeev Kennedy (born 1989), Irish singer-songwriterNeycho Neev (born 1948), Bulgarian politician, vice-Prime Minister and ministerNeev, an Indian TV show aired in 1990s +CountriesReferencesCategory:Lists of countries by mineral productionCategory:Magnesium +The family can confer but only the captain can buzz in and give the answer. +“Islamic Architecture.” In: Encyclopedia of Islam in the United States. +He began at Coca-Cola's Atlanta, Georgia headquarters as manager of market planning; and after five years serving in various management positions, he was appointed vice president - 7-Eleven Account Team Worldwide in 1993; and vice president - Wal-Mart Global Account in 1995. +Tour de FranceDespite its short history and lack of funds, the team was very successful in the Tour de France. +NotesCategory:Former communes of Ivory CoastCategory:Populated places in Bas-Sassandra DistrictCategory:Populated places in San-Pédro Region +Tony's wife Maria Cronstam became a main part in the development of the comic, as the strip more and more got based on their life together with their daughter. +Yehud-Monosson () is a city formed by the joint municipality of the town of Yehud and the neighboring communal settlement of Neve Monosson in central Israel. +SERC opened on 25 May 2015 at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL) in Berkeley, California. +The competition was held from 26 to 27 September 1988. +The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 28, 2013 and designated a National Historic Landmark on October 31, 2016. +On 3 May 1919, Zirkel was decommissioned and was returned to the custody of the United States Shipping Board, once again becoming SS Zirkel. +See also Berlin Congress (1878) 13 July Uprising (1941)ReferencesCategory:Montenegrin societyCategory:July observancesCategory:National days +Areas of lower hills in the Midlands include Cannock Chase in Staffordshire, Charnwood Forest in Leicestershire and the Lincolnshire Wolds. +It was released via Spinnin' Records. +Among the newly ongoing regular troops of the Philippine Commonwealth Army units were need to added of the resistance fighters and irregular force to operate against the Japanese Occupation. +Many of these have become synonyms. +He was transferred to Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, in December 1952, and was promoted to captain in March 1954. +Designs Chevrolet La Jolla (1951), based on the Bel Air, owned and driven by Bradley Hot Wheels model cars (1968) Oscar Mayer Wienermobile (1995 version) Dodge Deora (1967)ReferencesCategory:General Motors designersCategory:1939 birthsCategory:American automobile designersCategory:Living people +On December 20, 1889 the C.W.&B. +The river's drainage lies in the area between the former empires of Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great, although they occurred at very different times. +On 4 February 1999, he was wounded by a bullet to the head by an Armenian sniper, while on a combat mission. +At the 2006 census, its population was 26, in 5 families. +He was included on the 1998 Detroit Red Wings Stanley Cup winning picture, but left off cup (did not qualify). +While the basic concept of a picnic basket is quite simple, some picnic baskets sold by gourmet stores are quite large and elaborate, with insulated compartments to hold hot and cold foods, and dishware including wine glasses and porcelain plates which are secured in pockets along with items of cutlery, condiments, corkscrew etc. +Chart singles (Indicates highest position on German Singles Chart) 1977: "Himbeereis zum Frühstück" (#14) 1979: "Alles, was ich brauche, bist Du" (#22) 1980: "Wenn ich Dich verlier" (#35) 1980: "Warten" (#61) 1981: "Ein Engel unterm Dach" (#71) 1983: "Rücksicht" (#8)References Category:German musical duosCategory:Eurovision Song Contest entrants for GermanyCategory:Eurovision Song Contest entrants of 1983 +Coaching careerMen's basketball In 1991, Antonić began his coaching career in Mladost Zemun. +On 20 October 2016, Kinoshita was selected as the 1st round development draft pick for the Chunichi Dragons at the 2016 NPB Draft and on 9 November signed a provisional contract with a ¥2,000,000 sign-on bonus and a ¥3,000,000 yearly salary. +BlueAnt Wireless, an Australian vendor of Bluetooth-enabled products and wireless accessories (founded in 2003) Blue Ant Media, a Canadian media company (founded in 2011) Chinese workers and farmers in the 1950s and 1960s (so called because, due to China's then-limited textile industry, most of them wore blue) Blue Ant, a fictional marketing company appearing in several of William Gibson's novels (since 2003) +She was named after Patrick S. Mahony, who was lost at sea while he was master of , after she was torpedoed by , on 8 July 1942, off Florida. +His awards include the Mads Wiel Nygaards Endowment in 1969, the Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1989, for Roman 1987 and the Brage Prize in 2006 for Armand V. Solstad is among Norway's top-ranked authors of his generation. +For this work, Crocker was awarded the 2002 IEEE Internet Award. +The riding consists of the communities of Hall Beach and part of Igloolik. +NHR may refer to: National Helium Reserve, the strategic helium gas reserve of the United States Neuro Hypnotic Repatterning, a technique developed by Richard Bandler, co-inventor of neuro-linguistic programming Newman/Haas Racing, a motor racing team competing in the IndyCar Series Nuclear receptor or nuclear hormone receptor, a class of proteins found within certain cells Northumberland Hospital Radio, a UK Registered Charity providing a radio broadcasting service to NHS hospitals in Northumberland and North Tyneside +AC power outlets are provided for each seat. +TextThe original text was written in Koine Greek. +Soon after, in 1925, he joined the faculty there. +🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩जय श्री महाकाल🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏जय श्री राम🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉जय श्री कृष्णा🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉🕉 🇮🇳🇮🇳बिरवाही में आपका स्वागत है।🇮🇳🇮🇳BIRWAHI Village Birwahi Block Panna District Panna State Madhya Pradesh Country India Continent Asia Time Zone IST(UTC+05:30) Currency INR Dialing Code +91 Date format dd/mm/yyyy Driving side left Internet cTLD in Language Hindi Time difference 9 minutes Latitude 24.5909766 Longitude 80.3519443बिरवाही की स्थिति बिरवाही, भारत🇮🇳 के मध्य प्रदेश राज्य के पन्ना (Diamond city🔺) जिले में स्थित एक ग्राम पंचायत है। अक्षांश 24.5909766 और देशांतर 80.3519443 बिरवाही के भू-गर्भ हैं। बिरवाही गाँव के लिए भोपाल राज्य की राजधानी है। बिरवाही से अन्य राजधानियों की दूरी भोपाल बिरवाही से लगभग 335.5 KM है। लखनऊ बिरवाही से लगभग 219.1 KM है। पटना बिरवाही से लगभग 494.5 KM है। रांची बिरवाही से लगभग 523.9 KM हैं।आसपास के गाँव और बिरवाही से इसकी दूरी डड़वरिया 3.5 KM, खप्टहा 3.2 KM, फुलवारी 8.9 KM, सकरिया 10 KM, सुंदरा 10.8 KM, गिरवारा 11.3 KM, मोहनपुरवा 11.6 KM, समाना 14 KM, सिल्गी 13.2 KM, रनवा 14.7 KM मकरिकुठर 15.0 KM, जनवार 15.3 KM, बाराछ 17.9 KM, लक्ष्मीपुर 18.1 KM, कृष्णकल्याणपुर 18.7 KM, बिलखुरा 18.8 KM, जनकपुर 20.3 KM, पन्ना 25 KM, पुरुषोत्तमपुर 26 KM, कोहनी 22.1 KM, बग्गड़ी खुर्द 22.2 KM, पुराना पन्ना 26 KM, जामुनहाई 18 KM, बारबसपुरा 23.8 KM, जर्धोबा 24.6 KM, बृजपुर 26.1 KM, गुनौर 20 KM, तारा 27.3 KM, रामखिरिया 30 KM, कुदर 27.9 KM, गहरा 29.5 KM, राहुणिया 29.5 KM, सिमरिया 29.5 KM,बिरवाही की आधिकारिक भाषा बिरवाही की मूल भाषा हिंदी है और गाँव के अधिकांश लोग हिंदी बोलते हैं। बिरवाही लोग संचार के लिए हिंदी भाषा का उपयोग करते हैं।बिरवाही कि मुद्रा बिरवाही गाँव मानक समय (आईएसटी) का अनुसरण करता है। बिरवाही सूरज उगने का समय IST से 9 मिनट भिन्न होता है। बीरवाही में वाहन चलाने वाले पक्ष को छोड़ दिया गया है, सभी वाहनों को ड्राइविंग के दौरान बाईं ओर ले जाना चाहिए। बिरवाही लोग अपनी राष्ट्रीय मुद्रा का उपयोग कर रहे हैं जो भारतीय रुपया है और इसका इंटर्नशिपल मुद्रा कोड INR है। विदेशों से भारतीय देश डायलिंग कोड +91 जोड़कर बिरवाही फोन और मोबाइल फोन का उपयोग किया जा सकता है। बिरवाही लोग दिन-प्रतिदिन के जीवन में dd / mm / yyyy तिथि प्रारूप का अनुसरण कर रहे हैं। बिरवाही डोमेन नाम एक्सटेंशन (cTLD) .in है।बिरवाही से निकटतम रेलवे स्टेशन सतना बिरवाही के लिए निकटतम रेलवे स्टेशन सतना है जो लगभग 47.4 किलोमीटर की दूरी पर स्थित है। +Viktorija is a feminine given name. +See also Kalimotxo SangríaReferencesFiesta de la Vendimia // Harvest Day - Several countries at kidlink.orgSangria: Fruit punch with a kick at therundown.co.ukZurrakapote in BasauriCategory:Spanish cuisineCategory:Cocktails with wine +When he saw the Pyramids for the first time, he couldn't wait to leave. +Wendy Rae Fowler)"Miracle" - 1:58"Pill Hill Serenade" - 3:27"Don't Forget Me" - 3:13"Kimiko's Dream House" - 5:26 (Jeffrey Lee Pierce, Mark Lanegan)"Resurrection Song" - 3:33"Field Song" - 2:19"Low" - 3:13"Blues for D" - 3:36 (Lanegan, Ben Shepherd)"She Done Too Much" - 1:28"Fix" - 5:47 (feat. +He is memorialized on the Screen Wall, Panel 1, Hull Crematorium. +It was adapted as a film in 1973. +The family-owned company is headquartered in Glenview, Illinois, and has approximately 550 stores in North America with the heaviest concentration in the Midwest. +It was founded in 1985. +International careerHe made his debut for Albania in an August 1995 friendly match away against Malta and earned a total of 25 caps, scoring 1 goal. +His position of choice is centre. +The museum is sponsored and administered by the Port Arthur Historical Society, and is the descendant of the original Port Arthur Museum chartered by the state in 1964. +The Polar Park is located in Salangsdalen—it is known as the northernmost zoo in the world. +more than Persisam. +The men's side of the world cup also consisted of a big air competition. +Knema globularia is a species of plant in the family Myristicaceae. +The same night, McCarthy defeated Kennedy in the New Jersey primary. +Empire of Silver may refer to:Empire of Silver (film), a 2009 Chinese film directed by Christina YaoEmpire of Silver (novel), a 2010 novel by Conn Iggulden +Variable charge X-linked protein 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the VCX gene. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Çanakkale ProvinceCategory:Towns in TurkeyCategory:Yenice District +Power was elected to the Southern Province of the new Legislative Council in November 1856, a seat he held until 1 September 1864. +M. fenestrata may refer to: Miomantis fenestrata, a praying mantis species Moraea fenestrata, (Goldblatt) Goldblatt, a plant species in the genus Moraea Myopa fenestrata, Coquillett, 1902, a fly species in the genus MyopaSee also Fenestrata (disambiguation) +References Category:Synthetic opioidsCategory:AzepanesCategory:Ethyl estersCategory:Mu-opioid agonists +See also List of accidents and incidents on commercial aircraftReferencesFurther readingChristina Ward, "Charter Plane Crash Kills 18 Near Aspen", RedCross.org, March 30, 2001Gordon Gilbert, "Fuel and weather suspect in Aspen GIII accident", AIN Online, November 2001Gordon Gilbert, "Editors' Choice: Gulfstream III crew in Aspen crash" AIN Online, January 2002External links Avjet CorporationCNN Rush Transcript on accidentGoogleMaps aerial photo of KASE airportAirNav record for KASE – note 'Additional Remarks'Airliners.net Photo of accident aircraft N303GA, on June 2, 2000 in Budapest, HungaryCategory:Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 2001Category:Aviation accidents and incidents in ColoradoCategory:Pitkin County, ColoradoCategory:2001 in ColoradoCategory:Airliner accidents and incidents involving controlled flight into terrainCategory:Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot errorCategory:March 2001 events in the United States +It contains only one species, Tetraconta clepsimorpha, which is found in Australia (Queensland). +Kuban may also refer to:PlacesRussiaKuban River, a river in RussiaKuban steppe, a geographic regionKuban Oblast (1860–1917), an oblast of the Russian EmpireKuban People's Republic (January 1918–November 1919), anti-Bolshevik stateKuban Soviet Republic (April 13 – May 30, 1918), an administrative division of the Soviet Russian RepublicKuban-Black Sea Soviet Republic (May 30 – July 6, 1918), an administrative division of the Soviet Russian RepublicKuban-Black Sea Oblast (1920–1924), an oblast of the early Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR)OtherKuban, Iran, a village in Gilan Province, IranSportsFC Kuban Krasnodar, an association football club based in Krasnodar, RussiaHC Kuban Krasnodar, a women's handball team based in KrasnodarHC Kuban, an ice hockey team based in KrasnodarRC Kuban, a rugby union team based in KrasnodarKuban Stadium, a multi-purpose stadium in KrasnodarOther usesSS Augusta Victoria (1888), a German passenger ship which served as the auxiliary cruiser Kuban in the Imperial Russian Navy from 1904 to 1907Kuban (surname)Kuban Airlines, based in Krasnodar, active from 1992 to 2012See alsoCuban (disambiguation)Kuba (disambiguation) +She currently serves as Deputy of the LXII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing the Federal District. +It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. +23 in F major, K. 590, was written in June 1790 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. +Regional awards2009 – Best Bank in Middle East Award – Global Finance2012 – Euromoney Awards for Excellence2014 – Best Regional Bank in the GCC – Capital Finance International2016 – Middle east bank of the year – The Banker2016 – Best Regional Bank in the GCC – Capital Finance InternationalSee alsoList of banks in BahrainReferencesCategory:Banks of BahrainCategory:Bank stubs +Broughty Ferry was incorporated into the City of Dundee in 1913. +He was selected by Sydney with pick 33 in the 1996 National Draft. +Seconda ParteSinfoniaRecitative (Evangelist, Pilatus, Jesus): Und Bald am Morgen hielten die Hohenpriester einen RatAria (alto, violins, continuo): Klaget nur, ihr Kläger hierRecitative (Evangelist, Pilatus): Jesus aber antwortete nichts mehrChorus: Kreuzige Ihn! +References Category:Populated places in Qazvin County +The Head is elected by citizens of Russia residing in the republic. +PEN (Permanent Entry Number): 0000040630. +Moulin gets inside, and the priest puts on a show to simulate a trip to Heaven, exploiting Moulin's poor eyesight. +simulated a 20 nm lithography resolution at 193 nm wavelength with an aluminum superlens. +The cost of organizing of the ceremony was about 100 million U.S. dollars. +External links Team history at KLISF Category:Association football clubs established in 1936Category:Association football clubs disestablished in 2006Category:Defunct football clubs in Saint PetersburgCategory:Railway association football teamsCategory:1936 establishments in RussiaCategory:2006 disestablishments in Russia +After disappearing for a couple of weeks, Sylvan finally returned to cost Yang a match versus Gregory Helms. +Train number 18235 departs from Bhopal Junction daily at 08:00 hrs, while on return, Train number 18236 arrives to Bhopal Nishatpura railway station in Bhopal at 17:30 hrs. +The nearest railway station is Dunbar, which is on the main East Coast line from London Kings Cross to Edinburgh. +On Blaauwberg Hill, several buildings were constructed during World War II, including a radar station, a lookout and a mess room. +He held the Leibniz Professorship at the University of Leipzig during the winter semester 2014–15 and in 2017 became an honorary professor of the University of Leipzig. +Beatrice Ayuru Byaruhanga (born 1970s) is an Ugandan entrepreneur and school founder. +Diakourouna or Diakourouna Nerisso is a small town and commune in the Cercle of San in the Ségou Region of Mali. +Meljine is a small town in Montenegro. +National League Division one and Division two 2009; Ashbourne Cup with WIT 2009, 2010, 2011; Ashbourne All Star and Player of the Tournament 2009; four All-Ireland Féile na nGael 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002; Leinster Under-14 2002 (captain); Leinster Under-16 2002; Leinster and winner of All-Ireland Senior medals in Colleges with {http://www.colaistebride.ie/|Coláiste Bríde] 2003, 2004, 2005; All-Ireland Junior Colleges with Coláiste Bríde 2004; Club Senior 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009; Leinster Club Senior 2009; All Ireland club sevens 2006; Leinster Senior 2007. +Royal New Zealand Navy Official web siteExternal links Hydrography in New Zealand Hydrography in New Zealand2 Hydrographic surveyingCategory:Survey ships of the Royal New Zealand NavyCategory:Military history of New ZealandCategory:Royal New Zealand Navy +Melvin Tumin (1919 – 1994), American sociologistSee alsoNesta Toumine (1912 – 1996), Canadian dancer, choreographer, artistic director and teacherStephen Tumim, British judgeAloizs Tumiņš (1938 – 2009), Latvian boxer from the Soviet UnionTumins, alternate name for Tamins +It was built by Nathaniel Dominy V, a well-known East Hampton craftsman. +He shared a booth with his grandmother Cora Durand at the Micaceous Pottery Artists Convocation at the School of American Research in 1995. +Nicoll retired from the Colonial Service and returned to Britain. +He first umpired in first-class cricket in 2005, and in 2010 was involved in international cricket for the first time, umpiring a One Day International between Zimbabwe and Ireland. +SurnamesPeople of different surnames live there; the main surnames are Dhillon Sekhon, Gill, Hari, Brar, Sandhu and PuniaSidhu. +'Hurray for that little difference!' +In 2007 the magazine moved to the University of South Carolina. +With the help of eight wolves, the shaman catches the soul of the reindeer for his drum. +After its release party and a series of live shows, the band was taking pause and Lukáš Kraut started working on his solo material. +Tulay (; stylized as TULAy) is a five-track EP by Filipino rapper Gloc-9. +Early life Li Si was originally from Shang Cai (上蔡) in the State of Chu. +They played in the Class C Pioneer League in 1952 and 1953 as an affiliate of the New York Yankees, and their home venue was Joe Devine Airway Park, named for the late Yankee scout Joe Devine in 1952. +Uncovered and Unplugged. +Near the end of the war, the living planet Zonama Sekot agrees to help the Republic; Katarn is one of several Jedi Knights who bonds to seed-partners and is provided with Sekotan starships to use in Sekot's defence. +The Beckman Institute at Caltech was chartered by Caltech in 1987. +ReferencesCategory:1940 birthsCategory:2017 deathsCategory:Polish male weightliftersCategory:Olympic weightlifters of PolandCategory:Weightlifters at the 1968 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic bronze medalists for PolandCategory:Olympic medalists in weightliftingCategory:People from Tarnów CountyCategory:Sportspeople from Lesser Poland VoivodeshipCategory:Medalists at the 1968 Summer Olympics +At the 2006 census, its population was 476, in 126 families. +The City of Halifax is a former municipality in Nova Scotia which was amalgamated with the City of Dartmouth Town of Bedford and Halifax County to form the Halifax Regional Municipality in 1996. +Population Data for District 44 from the Pennsylvania Redistricting Commission. +(I'm Fed Up) +A second promotional video for "Especially Me", directed by Phil Harder was released on August 18, 2011. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Neurocutaneous conditionsCategory:Syndromes +This was later included in deleted scenes for the season's DVD release. +The Walla Walla Valley AVA is an American Viticultural Area located within Washington State and extending partly into the northeastern corner of Oregon. +ReferencesCategory:Bohemian male lugersCategory:Year of birth missingCategory:Year of death missingCategory:German Bohemian people +Professional career The Jacksonville Jaguars selected Doering in the sixth round (185th pick overall) of the 1996 NFL Draft, but the Jaguars traded him to the Indianapolis Colts before the start of the season. +BiographyStong was born in Pittsburg, Iowa, near Keosauqua. +Masonville Township is a civil township of Delta County in the U.S. state of Michigan. +The 2002 Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts women's provincial curling championship, was held January 23–27 at the Melfort Northern Lights Palace in Melfort, Saskatchewan. +Disembarking in France on 10 February 1917, it fought as part of the 12th Infantry Brigade, 4th Canadian Division in France and Flanders until the end of the war. +Gerd Miran-e Olya (, also Romanized as Gerd Mīrān-e ‘Olyā and Gerdmīrān-e ‘Olyā; also known as Gerd Mīrān-e Bālā and Gird Mirān) is a village in Yeylan-e Jonubi Rural District, Bolbanabad District, Dehgolan County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. +As of 2002, the oblast ranks 13th by population in Ukraine. +References Category:Towns and villages in Qorveh County +BibliographyMy Husband BettyMy Husband Betty (2003, Seal Press) is a non-fiction book by author Helen Boyd about crossdressers and their partners. +Naji began writing in his early twenties, and published his first novel The Road to Balharith in 1981–82. +ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Madison County, Virginia +CitationsReferences Category:Bishops of SalisburyCategory:15th-century Roman Catholic bishopsCategory:15th-century English peopleCategory:1450 deathsCategory:Year of birth unknownCategory:Year of birth uncertain +The Bell Sidewinder is an American ultralight aircraft, supplied as a kit for amateur construction. +Post JaxaAfter returning to Earth, Yamazaki continued her studies and research University of Tokyo since December 2010. +The 2004 Leeds City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of City of Leeds Metropolitan Borough Council in England. +The Burlington County Scholastic League (BCSL) is a New Jersey high school sports conference under the jurisdiction of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA). +He was portrayed by Aidan Devine in the 2011 CBC Television film John A.: Birth of a Country. +Cities with a relatively significant Latvian proportion:Palanga – 0.97%Naujoji Akmenė – 0.55%Famous Lithuanians of Latvian descentRomualdas Ozolas, a nationalist thinkerBaiba Skurstene, a Lithuanian-Latvian singerSee also Kursenieki Ethnic minorities in Lithuania Latvia–Lithuania relationsReferencesExternal links Category:Ethnic groups in LithuaniaLithuania +The Préfet maritime is a servant of the French State who exercises authority over the sea in one particular region (a Préfecture maritime). +ReferencesExternal links https://www.hopeandhomes.org/blog-article/orphanage-voluntourism/https://www.theguardian.com/world/orphanage-tourismCategory:Types of tourismCategory:OrphanagesCategory:Philanthropy +MuseumSince 2015, the building has been used as the Museum of the Resistance and Liberty. +- 2:32"They Only Take The Backroads" - 3:33"Time For You To Go Do Your Own Thing" - 2:58"Just Like Old Times" - 6:51Category:2010 albumsCategory:Look Mexico albums +As of 2005 it had a population of 666. +The University Hospital of Northern British Columbia (UHNBC) is the largest Level III trauma centre in Northern BC. +The community was named after W. P. Hartman, a railroad official. +Lisbon Lions site in Norwegian. +It is equipped with two electric motors each with for a total of , as well as of torque and a top speed of . +The verses of the song has many themes. +TET/PRAO (Työelämään tutustuminen in Finnish, Praktisk arbetslivsorientering in Swedish, lit. +He was selected as a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. +ReferencesCategory:Spiders described in 2011Category:Spiders of AfricaCategory:Fauna of NigeriaCategory:SalticidaeCategory:Taxa named by Wanda Wesołowska +ReferencesSourcesCategory:Chinese sculptureCategory:Stone sculptures in ChinaCategory:Horses in artCategory:Tang dynasty artCategory:Individual warhorsesCategory:Tang Taizong +Interpretations Armidoro in Piccinni's La buona figliuola, at the Teatro di Cittadella of Bergamo, for the carnaval 1773-1774 Graf Schönblüh (Il Conte di Belfiore) in Unter zwey Streitenden zieht der dritte den Nutzen (Fra i due litiganti il terzo gode) by Giuseppe Sarti, at the Teatro di Corte of Salisburgo, in 1787. +It includes: shark attacks that were immediately fatal and the body was later recovered, and shark attacks that the victim died later due to the injuries of the attack. +Houtman played on the 25-3, #2 in the nation Team at UMD that made it to the Sweet 16 which made him a rare player to play in both Division 2 & 3 NCAA Sweet 16. +She would assist him later in collecting local folktales and published a compilation of folktales herself. +Lyambiko was given the opportunity to perform at the renowned Berlin jazz club A-Trane in April 2000 . +Mars was settled by RAM as the first colonization of another planet by humans. +Cash was honored further on October 11, 2015, when she was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. +ReferencesCategory:1964 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Filipino male long-distance runnersCategory:Filipino male steeplechase runnersCategory:Olympic track and field athletes of the PhilippinesCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1984 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1992 Summer OlympicsCategory:Asian Games medalists in athletics (track and field)Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1982 Asian GamesCategory:World Athletics Championships athletes for the PhilippinesCategory:Asian Games bronze medalists for the PhilippinesCategory:Southeast Asian Games medalists in athleticsCategory:Southeast Asian Games gold medalists for the PhilippinesCategory:Southeast Asian Games silver medalists for the PhilippinesCategory:Medalists at the 1982 Asian GamesCategory:Competitors at the 1985 Southeast Asian Games +It replaced the Piper Alpha platform which exploded in July 1988 killing 167 men. +2013 Established fitting factory and realized matching products of pipes and fittings. +The album features the classic rock song "Stone Cold Fever" written by band members Marriott, Ridley, Frampton and Shirley. +Lampadephora is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. +Working as a director in National Theater in Sarajevo (1948–1950), and in National Theatre in Belgrade (1950–1959). +The others are Cross Country, Fallstaff, and Glen. +One Zero [Remix] (2007) is an album from Derek Webb containing tracks of ten previously released Derek Webb songs remixed by engineer Will Hunt. +From 1968 to 1979, Eyo was director of the Federal Department of Antiquities, and subsequently, until 1986, director general of the newly created National Commission for Museums and Monuments. +ReferencesExternal links The nominees for Best Athlete of the Month, May 2012 8 medals from the Hari Ram Indian Wrestling Grand Prix Tournament (2012)Category:Mongolian female sport wrestlersCategory:Living peopleCategory:1990 birthsCategory:World Wrestling Championships medalistsCategory:Wrestlers at the 2016 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic wrestlers of MongoliaCategory:Universiade medalists in wrestlingCategory:Wrestlers at the 2018 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 2018 Asian GamesCategory:Asian Games bronze medalists for MongoliaCategory:Asian Games medalists in wrestlingCategory:Universiade silver medalists for Mongolia +At the 2006 census, its population was 189, in 39 families. +In 2012 it was awarded a double gold certification from the Independent Music Companies Association which indicated sales of at least 150,000 copies throughout Europe. +Visiting the stationOn the last Monday of every month at 10 a.m., 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., the station is open to the general public. +Cricket in madras till buchi babu changed the scenario was an Englishman’s game .A few indian tried to imitate what they got a glimpse of,watching from the outfield of the Madras Cricket Club’s hallowed ground at chepauk ,but the real players were the British colonialists-till Buchi babu came along and offered them an INDIAN challenge.Not only did MUC-MCC cricket matches then become regular features and the annual Pongal week .Indians vs Europeans presidency Match become the presedency’s biggest fixture until the Ranji Trophy competition came along in the 1930s,But Buchi Babu tackled British custom head on and led his team in to the MCC’s ‘Whites Only’ pavilion. +During the construction, William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody was employed to shoot buffalo to provide meat for the track laying crews. +Throughout his career, he won four national championships. +In August 2014 Berkshire announced its intention to sell Vi-Jon; as of March 2020 the company had not been sold. +Whittet died from pneumonia at his home in Edgerton, Wisconsin. +Brian Francis (born September 28, 1957) is a Mi'kmaq leader, Chief of the Abegweit First Nation from 2007 to 2018. +They also provide analysis of the industry, offering insights into the drivers of gold demand. +They have also played in the Slovenian Third League in 2004–05 and 2005–06 before relegating back to the lower tiers. +The development of Batavi started in 2007 inspired by a preliminary osCommerce 3.0 version, a version that seemed to be never finished by the osCommerce team. +The system of dams is also known as Dnieper Cascade of HES. +Cast Alfonso Dosal as Pancho Christian Vázquez as Felipe Germán Valdés III as Beto Martha Higareda as Mariana Vadhir Derbez as Isidoro Sebastián Zurita as Emiliano Paulina Dávila as Diana Enrique Singer as Don Diego Rodrigo Murray as EscalonaRelease3 Idiotas was released on March 31, 2017 by Lionsgate and its Pantelion Films banner. +It is found on shallow-water reefs and rocky foreshores at depths from about . +Burgen is a municipality in the district of Mayen-Koblenz in Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany. +Mark Riddick is an American illustrator and graphic artist, specializing in posters and other graphics for death metal and black metal music. +__NOTOC__The Rhysling Awards are an annual award given for the best science fiction, fantasy, or horror poem of the year. +Not long after the events of Abe's Exoddus, Abe helps Munch (the last living remnant of an amphibious race called the Gabbits) to save the last eggs of Munch's species from being eaten by the Glukkons. +Sergeyevskaya () is a rural locality (a village) in Rochegodskoye Rural Settlement of Vinogradovsky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia. +Canadian actress Rachel McAdams (born November 17, 1978) graduated from the theatre program at York University in 2001. +Wye may refer to:Place namesWye, Kent, a village in Kent, EnglandWye School, serving the above villageWye railway station, serving the above villageWye, Montana, a town in Missoula County, Montana, USWye, South Australia, a town in South Australia, AustraliaWye River (plantation), was the home of William Paca, on the Eastern Shore of MarylandWye River, Victoria, a coastal town in Victoria, AustraliaWye Marsh, a wetland area on the south shores of Georgian Bay in Ontario, CanadaWye Road, Strathcona County, AlbertaWye House, a large Southern frame plantation house in Talbot County, MarylandWye, a fictional province in Isaac Asimov's Foundation seriesRivers River Wye, the major river, flowing through both Wales and England, rising on Plynlimon to the River SevernWye Valley, the scenic area around the lower part of the riverWye Valley Walk, a footpath or hiking trail in Wales and EnglandWye Valley Brewery, in Herefordshire, England River Wye, Derbyshire, a river flowing from Axe Edge Moor, Buxton to the River Derwent River Wye, Buckinghamshire, a river flowing from the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire to Bourne End where it meets the River Thames Wye River, New Zealand, a minor river in the South Island of New Zealand Wye River (Maryland), in Maryland, US Wye River (Tasmania), a river of Tasmania, Australia Wye River (Victoria), AustraliaOther uses The letter Y Wye (rail), a term used in North American railroading equivalent to an English railway triangle Wye ("Y"), a fitting for piping and plumbing Wye River Memorandum, a series of accords between Israel and the Palestinian Authority agreed at Wye River in Maryland Also Wye River Agreements section in the History of Israel page, on the same subjectA "wye" connection (from "Y") in electrical engineering, a type of three-phase power connection A directional T interchange (or "wye interchange" or "Y interchange") between two or more roads or highwaysSee also Wye station (disambiguation) Why (disambiguation) +Jeffrey has a post office with ZIP code 25114. +Chebiemit is a settlement in Kenya's Rift Valley Province. +(1968-1970) (TV series) - Sharon Eversleigh UFO - JanisThe Best House in London (1969) - Evelyn (uncredited)Public Eye (1972) – PaulineThe Best Pair of Legs in the Business (1973) - EuniceUnder the Doctor (1976) - Marion ParsonThe Playbirds (1978) - W.P.C. +is a railway station on the Enoshima Electric Railway (Enoden) in Kamakura, Kanagawa, Japan. +This digraphic representation of was so basic for speakers of Greek that the simple letter upsilon (υ) representing the same sound came to be called υ ψιλόν (y psilon) "simple" υ in contrast to "complex" οι. +The following is a list of the television networks and announcers who broadcast college football's Poinsettia Bowl throughout the years. +2nd Ave., Miami, Florida. +In the 1990s he established and wrote for the "Asia Desk" Supplement of The West Australian, travelling and reporting extensively on South East Asian affairs. +On club level she played with Stanford University. +Hardy is perhaps most famous for throwing an NFL-record eight interceptions in a single game, as well as for the worst touchdown pass-interception differential in a single game (-8), in a 45-7 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles on September 24, 1950. +Life and careerShe made her acting debut in 1951. +Category:Novels by Gary PaulsenCategory:1992 American novels +It is located in the communeSee alsoCommunes of the Corse-du-Sud departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Corse-du-SudCategory:Corse-du-Sud communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia +Godwin wrote the song "My Memphis Baby". +He was appointed Deputy Director of Staff Duties (Army) at the War Office in 1957 and General Officer Commanding Singapore Base District in 1960 before becoming Chief of Staff for Contingencies Planning at the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in Brussels in 1963. +REDIRECT Virginia State Route 214 +thesis) (Archive), University of British Columbia, Vancouver. +History The vehicle was unveiled at Auto Shanghai in April 2017 and is being sold exclusively in China since April 2018. +Following the surrender, he entered the reserves on 1 November. +On February 27, 2016, Burrill was elected as leader of the Party, winning on the second counting of ballots in the instant-runoff voting system used for this election. +John Pickering may refer to: John Pickering (dramatist), author of the play Horestes first published in 1567 John Pickering (MP) (1585–1628), MP for Northamptonshire, 1626 John Pickering (soldier) (died 1645), colonel of a regiment in the New Model Army John Pickering (judge) (1737–1805), American politician and judge John Pickering (Massachusetts politician), List of Speakers of the Massachusetts House of Representatives John Pickering (linguist) (1777–1846), American linguist John Pickering (Australian politician), South Australian politician John Pickering (musician), lead singer with The Picks, US vocal trio of the 1950s John E. Pickering (1918–1997) pioneer in the field of radiobiology, aviation medicine and space medicine and a Colonel in the United States Air Force John Frederick Pickering (1939–2018), professor and economic and business consultant, former member of the Monopolies and Mergers Commission and church commissioner John H. Pickering (1916–2005), founding partner of Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, which became one of Washington D.C.'s most prominent law firms John Pickering (footballer) (1944–2001), professional footballer, coach and managerAlso Jack Pickering (1908–1977), English footballer John Pickering Putnam (1847–1917), architect of numerous buildings in Boston, MA +The 1921 Washington State Cougars football team was an American football team that represented Washington State College during the 1921 college football season. +(1796). +Eliot. +His successor Chi Shangbin would not wield the same respect and significant infighting occurred from senior influential players which included Li Weifeng, Yang Chen and Li Leilei, which coupled with the club's financial difficulties saw a mass exit. +Spurred on by her mercenary and socially ambitious mother however, Genevieve consents to marry Daniel's wealthy brother Albert (Langhorn Burton). +It occupies the historic building of the former Prospect Congregational Church, located at 99 Prospect Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts near Central Square. +Males had a median income of $75,369 versus $45,978 for females. +Their children included:James Allen "Jim" Crawford (1922–1999) married Josephine Margaret Bond (1925– ) of Clare on 30 November 1946. +Another major use of 4-nitrochlorobenzene is its condensation with aniline to produce 4-nitrodiphenylamine. +It has been explored as a method to combat work-related health problems such as stress and burnout. +The MosqueThe Haji Özbek Mosque (1333) in Iznik, which was the first important centre of Ottoman art, is a prime example of Ottoman single-domed mosque, which illustrates a combination of Byzantine building techniques and Muslim needs. +In 2006, the northern end was redone, followed by the southern end in 2007. +World War IIMargenau worked on the theory of microwaves and the development of duplexing systems that enabled a single radar antenna both to transmit and receive signals. +All Saints High School is a Roman Catholic school in Hyderabad, India. +The two wounded firefighters were Joseph Hofstetter, who was shot in the pelvis (with the bullet then lodged in his spine), and Theodore Scardino, who was shot in the chest and knee. +She also became the first woman ever to win three Olympic taekwondo medals. +Results summaryWard resultsBroxbourne & Hoddesdon SouthCheshunt NorthCheshunt South & TheobaldsFlamstead EndGoffs OakHoddesdon NorthHoddesdon Town & Rye ParkRosedale & Bury GreenWaltham CrossWormley & TurnfordReferencesCategory:2019 English local electionsCategory:May 2019 events in the United Kingdom2019Category:2010s in Hertfordshire +He played with HC Kladno in the Czech Extraliga during the 2010–11 Czech Extraliga season. +Authority in Shi`ism and Constitutional Developments in the Islamic Republic of Iran, in W. Ende & R. Brunner, eds., The Twelver Shia in Modern Times: Religious Culture & Political History, Leiden: Brill, 2000, pp. +On February 13, 2008, a federal trial court delivered a criminal conviction on Graham Taylor, a tax attorney associated with myCFO; Taylor had pleaded guilty on January 24, 2008, to conspiracy and aiding in the filing of a false tax return. +The Landmarks Foundation directs funding and technical expertise to local groups that cannot protect their sacred cultural heritage without assistance. +Poul Andersen says,The forms of bugang used in present-day liturgy mostly derive from the ritual compilations of the Song dynasty. +Dhoom 4 false rumors There have been large number of false rumors spread of a upcoming sequel to Dhoom 3, some rumors stating that Akshay Kumar would be in Dhoom 4. +Mes trésors is a 2017 French comedy film directed by Pascal Bourdiaux. +Sorbus lancastriensis, the Lancastrian whitebeam, is a species of plant in the family Rosaceae. +QuiXProc is an open source Java version of XProc which is streaming and doing parallel processing QuiXPath is an open source Java version of XPath which is streaming QuiXSchematron is a java version of Schematron which is streaming, developed by INRIA/InnovimaxXSLT 3.0 XSLT 3.0 is adding streaming as one of its capabilitiesReferences Category:XML +ReferencesFurther reading +Books are often worshipped in lieu of the clay image of the Goddess. +The one- and two-hour shifts are hosted by volunteers who are on the air only on certain days, while some DJs broadcast Monday through Friday. +FactsNATSOPA wished to pressure on DC Thomson & Co Ltd to accept the union for collective bargaining. +The British, American and French primal cuts all differ in some respects. +His former executive assistant, Jamie Schmale, became the Conservative candidate for Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock, and was subsequently elected as a Member of Parliament in October 2015. +WPTG-CD, channel 49, is a low-power television station licensed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. +He is best known for his writing for the television series The Donna Reed Show during the 1950s. +A dealership management system (DMS) or auto dealership management system is a bundled management information system created specifically for automotive industry car dealerships or large equipment manufacturers, such as General Motors, Ford, Fiat Chrysler dealerships, and also adapted for cars, boats, bikes, RV, and power sports dealers. +The first patient was admitted to the new hospital on 6 June 1960. +Track listingCertificationsReferencesCategory:2001 compilation albumsCategory:Neil Diamond compilation albumsDiamond, NeilCategory:Columbia Records compilation albumsCategory:Albums produced by Jeff BarryCategory:Albums produced by Ellie GreenwichCategory:Albums produced by Tom CatalanoCategory:Albums produced by Bob Gaudio +The facility is used for general aviation and air taxi purposes and is operated by SKY Helicopters. +The campus is on U.S. Highway 18. +Kim Sơn may refer to several places in Vietnam, including:Kim Sơn District, a rural district of Ninh Bình ProvinceKim Sơn, Quảng Ninh, a ward of Đông TriềuKim Sơn, Nghệ An, a township and capital of Quế Phong DistrictKim Sơn, Sơn Tây, a commune of Sơn Tây, HanoiKim Sơn, Gia Lâm, a commune of Gia Lâm District in HanoiKim Sơn, Bắc Giang, a commune of Lục Ngạn DistrictKim Sơn, Hòa Bình, a commune of Kim Bôi DistrictKim Sơn, Lào Cai, a commune of Bảo Yên DistrictKim Sơn, Thái Nguyên, a commune of Định Hóa DistrictKim Sơn, Tiền Giang, a commune of Châu Thành District, Tiền GiangKim Sơn, Trà Vinh, a commune of Trà Cú DistrictSee alsoKim Sơn (restaurant), a restaurant chain in Texas, United StatesKim Sŏn, alternative romanisation of Kim Seon, minor lord of Korea's Goryeo Dynasty +In 1411, an Hungarian army led by Pippo Spano attacked Ceneda and destroyed the episcopal archives. +Haukland is a Norwegian surname. +ReferencesExternal links Klei Entertainment's Sugar Rush siteCategory:Cancelled Windows gamesCategory:Massively multiplayer online gamesCategory:Nexon gamesCategory:Video games developed in CanadaCategory:Klei Entertainment gamesCategory:Inactive massively multiplayer online gamesCategory:Windows games +CoruxoOn August 8, 2014 Fisk signed a one-year deal with Spanish Segunda División B side Coruxo FC. +The old church now houses the Cathedral museum. +The expansion consists of four notable quests that take place within the same game world as Baldur's Gate, and sees players taking their character (referred to as the Ward) and their party of companions across the Sword Coast, from travelling to a distant island, to exploring the fortress dungeon of a late dwarf. +Royal Park only played five matches (two forfeits) in 1882 before folding, with their remaining five matches forfeited, and the majority of their best players joining South Park thereafter. +Other performers, Rio Asahina (Miho Nakanishi) and Jun Suzuki (Hideaki Itō), lust after Miyuki. +The following year, they went two better by beating the Los Angeles Rams and the Cleveland Browns to claim the NFL Championship, before losing out to the Kansas City Chiefs 23–7 in Super Bowl IV. +In 1882, the north-eastern part of the Township of Armagh in the County of Bellechasse, and the north-east part of the township of Mailloux were detached from Bellechasse and annexed to Montmagny. +The locals, still upset over the initial accident and trying to rebuild on their own, began resisting RNA's efforts. +Tasmabrochus is a genus of Australian tangled nest spiders first described by V. T. Davies in 2002. it contains only three species. +At the 2006 census, its population was 144, in 37 families. +On 17 July 2013 he signed with RSD Alcalá, also in the fourth division. +Only four upper labials, second and third entering the eye, fourth largest and in contact with the parietal. +The protocol is based on three rules regarding the key. +Edited by Dieter Nohlen. +Classes commenced on August 1, 1950A number of faculty members from the College comprised the first set of critic teachers for the different subject areas in the EHS. +Basse-Pointe is a town and commune in the French overseas department of Martinique. +Michael Towne Sarin (born September 20, 1965, Stockton, California) is an American jazz drummer. +Smoltz counts Doc Rivers as a personal friend dating back to Rivers' playing days in Atlanta. +In 2013, she received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Bristol, acclaimed as an "exemplar of the qualities and values the institution promotes". +Users and their contacts stored their information in the cloud on Plaxo's servers. +She returned to Tehran and attended the University of Tehran, earning her Master's Degree in piano, opera and musicology. +"Magdi Mostafa: Sound Element", Project Space, Mathaf, 2013. +ReferencesExternal linksOlympic 4 x 10 km relay results: 1936-2002 Category:1962 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Biathletes at the 1988 Winter OlympicsCategory:Cross-country skiers at the 1988 Winter OlympicsCategory:German male biathletesCategory:German male cross-country skiersCategory:Biathlon World Championships medalistsCategory:People from Traunstein (district) +Switzerland 12-0 FinlandSwitzerland 6-3 PolandNorway 2-7 SwitzerlandUSA 8-2 SwitzerlandCanada 11-2 SwitzerlandCzechoslovakia 8-3 SwitzerlandSweden 5-2 SwitzerlandSwitzerland 6-3 Germany FRNordic combined Events: 18 km cross-country skiing normal hill ski jumpingThe cross-country skiing part of this event was combined with the main medal event, meaning that athletes competing here were skiing for two disciplines at the same time. +Robinson first visited India in 1975, and has been involved with the country's culture ever since. +ReferencesCategory:Early Cretaceous dinosaurs of AsiaCategory:Fossil taxa described in 2005Category:IguanodontsCategory:Paleontology in Gansu +He initially worked as a toy industry executive before going into the tour business following the occasion of the firm that he was working for having been subsumed by a larger entity in a merger. +Notable people with the surname include:Joshua Fattal, one of three Americans that were taken into custody by Iranian border guards for allegedly crossing into Iran while hiking near the Iranian border in Iraqi Kurdistan. +It was featured by the Health Service Journal in its list of Best Places to Work 2014. +The river empties in the Akagera River forming a tri-point border between Rwanda, Uganda and Tanzania close to the towns of Kagitumba in Rwanda and Mirama Hills in Uganda. +Pennsylvania Route 625 (PA 625) is a state route in east central Pennsylvania, United States. +He is considered a "prolific master of line" with a specialisation in murals and bas-relief composed of metallic, wooden and glass structures and his works form part of private and museum collections worldwide. +Guarana comes from the Amazon Basin in Brazil through an autonomous organization of 7000 indigenous, who live in Andira Marau, the only ecosystem in the world of native guarana. +Tour datesCancelled showsNotesReferencesCategory:2017 concert tours +Inductee! +ResultsKey:ReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Marathons in JapanCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 2010Category:Sport in Nara Prefecture +Early life McNair was born and was raised in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and attended Columbia College, a private women's liberal arts college. +See alsoEuropean Union lawNotesExternal linksCategory:European Union company case lawCategory:Federal Constitutional Court of Germany casesCategory:1970 in case lawCategory:1970 in West Germany +Track listing Swan Song (3:25) Lookin' to the West (2:49) Hang Tough (3:01) Michael Jordan (2:30) Low Boy (Butterflies Are Free) (2:47) Key to Life... Tonight (3:02) Walk on Water (2:15) Anymore (3:14) Saturday Afternoon (2:17) Zelda (1:10) Pop Star (2:47) Tree 'n' Sven Orbit the Planet (4:22)Personnel Bob Forrest — vocals Dix Denney — guitar Chris Handsone — guitar John Huck — bass Pete Weiss — drumsReferencesCategory:1987 albums +Nedor ComicsPyroman is the secret identity of research student, Dick Martin. +In 1894 the house was purchased by Willard Noble Munroe, founder and first president of the Auburn Shoe Manufacturer's Association. +He competed in the men's 1500 metres at the 1996 Summer Olympics. +It is divided into two sections, a chronicle modeled after Eusebius's Ecclesiastical History and a treatment of calendars and calendrical calculations. +It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building. +In his swimming career, he has represented Branik, Maribor and Ilirija, Ljubljana Swimming Clubs and achieved highest achievements while training in Ljubljana with coach Dimitrij Mancevič and team mate Peter Mankoč. +He has a helpful attitude toward his friends and family and keeps the smiles on everybody's faces. +(German)External linksStructural data 1998 Category:Aschaffenburg (district) +Pulman has also been involved in the Making Tracks series for students. +Their daughter Besiana Kadare is the Albanian Ambassador to the United Nations. +The Skip-It apparatus was designed to be affixed to the child's ankle via a small plastic hoop and spun around in a 360 degree rotation while continuously skipped by the user. +Take It to the Streets is an album from The Angels released on 31 August 2012. +It is a Gamma Doradus variable, ranging from 4.5 to 4.47 magnitude with a period of 0.96 days. +130 equals both 27 + 2 and 53 + 5 and is therefore a doubly strictly number. +It was released and distributed by the label Echo-Vista. +Danny is taken out of school due to the ignorance and uncertainty that is shared by the parents of many of the other children at Wesley's school. +It is found in Brazil. +Side one "Tall Blondes" – 3:02 "The Queen of Hollywood High" – 4:03 "Girl Down the River" – 4:35 "The Eyes of Sweet Virginia" – 3:52 "Judy in G Major" – 3:57 Side two "You Won't Be Going Home" – 3:52 "Jenny was a Dream Girl" – 3:45 "Blonde Star" – 4:02 "Golden Gate" – 3:46 "Angeles (City of The Angels)"* – 5:23Running time: 40:17(* denotes track not released on the Swedish release)Track listing (Swedish release) All compositions by John Stewart. +Music journalist David Menconi calls Forever Valentine "an interesting yet unfocused record consisting of eleven quite good but quite different songs", citing it as "one of the leading entries in Ryan's catalog of 'lost' albums"; while Steven Hyden of Grantland says that it "ranks with Adams’s best Whiskeytown work". +The Wondergirls recorded two songs, "Let's Go All the Way" and "Drop That Baby" featuring Ashley Hamilton. +joined the qualification stage of the tournament. +Track listing All tracks by John Cale; except where indicatedPersonnel John Cale − lead vocal, electric and acoustic guitars, keyboards, electric viola Dustin Boyer (2006 tracks) − lead guitar, toys, backing vocals Joseph Karnes (2006 tracks) − bass, Nord 3, samples, backing vocals Michael Jerome (2006 tracks) − drums, samples, backing vocals Mark Deffenbaugh (2004 tracks) − acoustic guitar, banjo, harmonica Deantoni Parks (2004 tracks) − drums, samples Charlie Campagne (2004 tracks) − drone samplesReferences Category:Albums produced by John CaleCategory:John Cale live albumsCategory:2007 live albumsCategory:EMI Records live albums +StorylineAn Italian high school student named Andrea becomes infatuated with Giulia, an older woman he sees outside his classroom window. +Nevertheless, the pass has great historical importance, being traversed by the original main line of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (now the Southern Transcon of the BNSF Railway), later by the famous U.S. Route 66, and now by its successor, Interstate 40. +The commission specifically files and audits campaign finance disclosure statements, handles campaign consultant registration and regulation. +It was described by Andras Kun in 2007. +Ağzıpek is a village in the District of Ardahan, Ardahan Province, Turkey. +ReferencesCategory:Uninhabited islands of SaskatchewanCategory:Lake islands of Saskatchewan +It was held from 19–21 February at the Olympic sports complex in Mogilev. +County Road F44 crosses the river just south of the community, and Interstate 80 at Exit 265 is to the south. +At the 2006 census, its population was 78, in 17 families. +Wilhelm Dittenberger, Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum (Collection of Greek Inscriptions, abbreviated SIG), Leipzig (1883); Orientis Graeci Inscriptiones Selectae (Select Inscriptions from the Greek East, abbreviated OGIS), Leipzig (1905). +Refereeing careerAfter retiring as a player, he worked as an assistant referee in the Russian Professional Football League from 2005 to 2009. +ReferencesCategory:LamiinaeCategory:Beetles described in 1957 +DiscographyAlbumsCome and Gone (August 5, 2010)Saskatchewan (March 6, 2012)The Ballad of Losing You (September 17, 2013)Everywhere a Man Can Be (October 7, 2016)EPsCommon Dialogue (March 2, 2008)Maps and Towns (April 14, 2009)In the Fields, in the Hills (October 2, 2009)Referenceshttp://www.saskatoonjazzsociety.com/2014/08/zachary-lucky-with-mandy-ringdal/External linksCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Musicians from SaskatoonCategory:Canadian folk singer-songwritersCategory:Canadian male singer-songwritersCategory:21st-century Canadian singersCategory:21st-century male singers +539–552, 1977Category:ParaphiliasCategory:Disability and sexualityCategory:Sexual attraction +ReferencesCategory:1915 birthsCategory:1983 deathsCategory:Ministers of Agriculture and Food of Norway +Kaliningrad-Passazhirsky (), also called Kaliningrad South (), is the largest railway station on the Russian Kaliningrad Railway. +In 1930, Fairchild was appointed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court and served as chief justice from 1954 until his retirement in 1957. +After the German reunification, the focus of the festival had to change. +ReferencesCategory:Volcanoes of Chile +1584 El Escorial palace at San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Spain (begun 1563), designed by Juan de Herrera, is completed. +seasonsCarCard +Centro de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico en Electroquímica (CIDETEQ, and in English: Center of Research and Technologic Development in Electrochemistry) is one of 27 Public Research Centers in Mexico, funded by CONACyT. +He was buried at Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas in Burgos. +He was elected to the Senate in 1970 and served as general secretary of the PRI in 1972–74. +Career statisticsReferencesExternal linksCategory:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:São José Esporte Clube playersCategory:Grêmio Catanduvense de Futebol playersCategory:Clube Atlético Sorocaba playersCategory:América Futebol Clube (SP) playersCategory:São Bernardo Futebol Clube playersCategory:União Agrícola Barbarense Futebol Clube playersCategory:Associação Atlética Francana players +Art Kassel (c. 1904 - February 3, 1965) was an American singer-songwriter and saxophonist. +The population figures provided here reflect modern state boundaries. +Schwifting is a municipality in the district of Landsberg in Bavaria in Germany. +Lucas Emanuel López Dessypris (born 3 January 1994) is an Argentine footballer. +She later served as the Brazilian Minister of Tourism between March 14, 2007, and June 4, 2008, when she resigned to run again for the mayoralty of São Paulo. +There are also a number of off-licensed shops. +See also List of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic islandsReferences Category:Islands of Kemp Land +FilmographyExternal linksCategory:1972 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Actresses from New York CityCategory:American film actressesCategory:People from BrooklynCategory:African-American actressesCategory:American television actresses +The manuscripts also record many of Maitland's own compositions. +When bowling, Shadab took early breakthroughs in the low scoring game taking three wickets. +Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). +After the world premiere at Cannes on 13 May 2016, The Orchard and Wild Bunch acquired U.S and French distribution rights, respectively. +Floyd formally retired and became a professor emerita at Hamburg in 2008. +The senior prize is recognized as one of the most prestigious prizes in the area of software engineering, though it is a relatively new prize. +The nearest town is Arkalgud at a distance of 30 km. +Ascari is an Italian surname, with a high number of occurrences in Emilia-Romagna and Lombardia. +ReferencesCategory:Uyezds of Taurida GovernorateCategory:Taurida GovernorateCategory:Perekopsky Uyezd +Eventually Sansay made her way to Jamaica and back to Philadelphia. +He is the owner of Charles Business Center (CBC), a popular retail outlet on Randall Street, downtown Monrovia. +It is eligible for classification as a census metropolitan area once it reaches a population of 100,000. +Estradiol derivatives17α-Substituted estradiol derivativesNitrogen mustard-coupled alkylating antineoplastic estradiol derivatives17β-AminoestrogensEstrone derivativesNitrogen mustard-coupled alkylating antineoplastic estrone derivativesEstriol derivatives17α-Substituted estriol derivativesOther estrogen derivativesEpimersEquine estrogensSee also List of steroidsNotes? +ReferencesExternal links JetPhotos.Net – I-DIKQ Gli Atti Parlamentari dell'I-DIKQ CVR transcriptCategory:Aviation accidents and incidents in ItalyCategory:Airliner accidents and incidents caused by pilot errorCategory:Disasters in SicilyCategory:Aviation accidents and incidents in 1978Category:1978 in Italy4128Category:Accidents and incidents involving the McDonnell Douglas DC-9Category:December 1978 events in EuropeCategory:Man-made disasters in Italy +ReferencesCategory:Date of birth missingCategory:2018 deathsCategory:Ukrainian politicians +Brachytegma is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. +Germans are about to destroy an Allied radio station but it manages to alert beforehand and the ship attacks German sailors. +During a 2010 game between the Oakland Athletics and New York Yankees, Rodriguez ran from first to third base on a foul ball, and crossed the pitcher's mound while returning to first base. +Franz Brunner (10 July 1931 – 14 December 2014) was an Austrian wrestler. +Action at Piedmont, Mount Crawford, June 5. +Joseph Long or Joe Long may refer to: Joseph Long (actor), Italian-British screen actor Joseph Long (bishop) (1800–1869), American evangelical bishop Joseph Long (mayor), mayor of Riverside, California, United States Joe Long (born 1941), American bass guitarist Joe Long (American football) (born 1989), American football player +Additional actor: Sascha RotermundJedermann (2005)Director: Werner TraudSpecial features: Frank Butterweck sings the invitation, composed by Linke/Traud. +As Feldmen mulled his options, the room began to grow restless, and actress Rosanna Arquette, seated alongside Ron Jeremy, Patricia Richardson, Dave Navarro, Chris Kattan and Jamie Kennedy, urged him to move forward with the screening. +ChartReferencesAmerican music-related lists +He won a silver medal in the K-4 10000 m event at the 1958 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Prague. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1882 establishments in the United StatesCategory:2002 disestablishments in the United StatesCategory:American business magazinesCategory:American online magazinesCategory:Defunct magazines of the United StatesCategory:Magazines established in 1882Category:Magazines disestablished in 2002Category:Online magazines with defunct print editionsCategory:Professional and trade magazinesCategory:Metal industry +ReferencesFurther readingpetitiCategory:Gastropods described in 2016 +The wingspan is about 12 mm. +ReferencesExternal links Website of the SIACategory:Trade associations based in SwitzerlandCategory:Insurance industry organizations +Early lifeButkevych was born on 3 January 1986 in Zaporizhia, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union. +His Mosquito, TA 122, is being restored and will be displayed at the de Havilland Museum at London Colney. +ArtistryBane has cited Michael Jackson, Drake, Future, PartyNextDoor, 50 Cent, Tinie Tempah and Wizkid as his influences. +References 27Category:Cassia County, IdahoCategory:Minidoka County, Idaho +July 11, 1956: Tommy Lasorda was traded by the Athletics to the New York Yankees for Wally Burnette. +Adults have been recorded on wing in February. +Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda said that no by-election will be held as per the 1985 Elections Act; due to the short time left before the next election. +A Peshotanu was also designated margarzan or "worthy of death". +Symphonia Domestica, Op. +Huns are said to have established a polity in Daghestan in the 6th century CE. +During a set, the game shows the note highway, the on-screen fretboard which represents the notes the player should play in time to the music, and other gameplay elements. +She debuted on the racing track at the Mahindra Racing's all new M4Electro at the circuit de Calafat in Catalonia, Spain. +References Category:Electronic circuits +Failures in the integration of the transferred DNA in the genetic material of the recipient cells may be due to:Failure of the incoming DNA to form a circular molecule;Post-circularisation, the circular molecule is wrong for maintenance, making this transfer occurs as plasmids. +Hubbard. +As of 2017, the zone does not have any constituent regions, although the locality around the regional city of Port Lincoln, while not officially recognised, is informally known as the ‘Southern Eyre Peninsula region’. +Funding for the tunnel came from special assessment districts established at the eastern and western ends; the undeveloped western area, approximately , was responsible for 85% of tunnel costs. +Lisa M. Buttenheim (born 1954), a national of the United States, is the United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for the Department of Field Support. +EcologyThe species prefers the banks of ponds. +She served in the Black Sea during the Crimean War, 1854-55 under the command of Captain George Goldsmith. +Yervand Kochar (Sasuntsi David monument)Olga GulazianEdgar Hovhannisyan, Vilen Galstyan ("Haverjakan kurk" ballet),Frunze Dovlatyan, Albert Yavuryan ("Barev, yes em" film)Stepan Kevorkov, Erazm Melik-Karamyan, Ivan Dildaryan, Artashes Jalalyan (films about Kamo)1971Gegham SarianVakhtang AnanyanGrigor YeghiazaryanHovhannes ChekijianVardan AjemianAra SargsyanGurgen Borian, Khoren Abrahamyan, Frunze Dovlatian, Arkady Hayrapetian, Sergey Gevorkyan, Karen Masian, Rafayel Babayan ("Saroyan yeghbayrner" film)Alexander Tamanian, Sergey Merkurov, Gevork Tamanian, Samvel Safaryan, Varazdat Arevshatyan, Mark Grigoryan, Eduard Sarapyan, Levon Vardanov, Natalia Paremuzova (Lenin Square of Yerevan)Razmik Alaverdian, Ruben Badalyan, Suren Burkhajian, Gurgen Mnatsakanyan (building of Yerevan Sundukian theater)Category:Soviet awardsState Prize Winners*List +It is located on the Shahrood river in the Alborz (Elburz) mountain range. +FFD may refer to: Fairfield railway station, Melbourne, in Australia Fall for Dance Festival in New York City FF Developments, a British transmission engineering company Final Frontier Design, an American spacesuit developer Flame failure device Flange focal distance Focus film distance Forum for Democracy and Development, a Zambian political party Forward flank downdraft, or front flank downdraft Free-form deformation Freshford railway station, in England Fresno Fire Department, in California, United States Front focal distance RAF Fairford, a Royal Air Force station in England First fit decreasing, an approximate solution of the bin packing problem Finnish Agri-agency for Food and Forest Development FinlandFat Freddy's Drop New Zealand band +Night of the Wolverine had been written and recorded without a conscious plan of attack. +Gandipet is a village in Ranga Reddy district of the Indian state of Telangana. +On 1 March 1947, Sōtarō was upgraded to a full station. +Marie-Christine Blandin (born 22 September 1952, Roubaix) is a member of the Senate of France, representing the Nord department. +External links Discworld & Pratchett Wiki Category:Encyclopedias of fictional worldsCategory:Discworld books +The total number of Americans whose origins lie in former Yugoslavia, the majority of whom indicated some specific origin was 1,260,917; in descending order these were:ReferencesExternal links Category:European-American society +It occurs in wet, sandy habitats. +As a junior, he won the 2017 Penang Open. +MODDER RIVER (28 November 1899). +PlotAn aging actor, John Mannering, is surprised when his estranged daughter, Kay Martin, shows up. +The rooster and Freddy arrive independently in the woods. +The announcer was Donald Rickles. +BackgroundDella was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of George W. Della, the President of the Maryland Senate. +It moved again, this time to 132 Great Charles Street in 1905 and then re-located to purpose-built facilities, designed by S. N. Cooke & Partners, in St Mary's Row (later known as St Chad's Queensway) in 1966. +Delgado proceeded to obtain his PhD in Health Science from Loma Linda University. +It is the national headquarters of the Australian National Audit Office (usually known as the ANAO, a Commonwealth Government entity). +In 1981 he received the AIA Gold Medal. +From Sastre, Santa Fe, he was also a lawyer and journalist of long standing, and a keen observer of Argentine affairs. +He himself lived for a while in the city, and, like Radovici, sat on the Ploiești Workers' Club Executive Committee. +The company was founded in 1998 as a merger between seven smaller bus companies in Steinkjer. +He's the brother of Swedish cross-country skier Ola Hassis. +Merriman taught writing for ten years at the University of South Wales, the erstwhile University of Glamorgan. +The Bede Monastery Museum became part of Bede's World which operated from 1993 to 2016, and is now part of Jarrow Hall - Anglo-Saxon Farm, Village and Bede Museum. +From 1995 to 2005, he was the Archbishop of York in the Church of England. +Southern Adventures was an amusement park in Huntsville, Alabama. +Ford E.B. +After a successful junior college career Trezvant went on to Texas A&M University under the late Shelby Metcalf. +Dallas entrepreneur Nick Kennedy, who founded RISE, will serve as president of the Texas and southeast region for Surf Air. +It was played on 25 May 2019 at the Estádio Nacional in Oeiras, between Sporting CP and Porto. +He was elected to the Lok Sabha, lower house of the Parliament of India from West Dinajpur, West Bengal. +Christ Bearing the Cross is a 1590-1595 painting by El Greco. +In 2003, under circumstances perhaps closer to the traditional context, after USS Cheyenne launched her Tomahawk missiles during Operation Iraqi Freedom, her commanding officer decided that placing all missiles on target, with no duds or failures, was a modern "clean sweep." +Each senator may choose to designate a geographic area within Manitoba as his or her division. +Drug addiction in Mauritius has led to the proliferation of prostitution, thefts and armed attack. +JuneThe 60th International Whaling Commission meeting was held in Santiago, Chile. +Two of these are part restored trailer 60527 and unrestored motor coach 60001, which formed the motive power for the original unit 1001. +Tardan may refer to:Chlorprothixene, a pharmaceuticalTardan, Iran, a village in Markazi Province, Iran +DRCOs and GCOs connect to an FIC or FSS over a phone line, and pilots initiate the connection by keying their microphones in a prescribed pattern. +They consist of two structures standing apart, known as Camster Round and Camster Long. +Callosiope banghaasi is a moth in the family Cossidae, and the only species in the genus Callosiope. +Achievements 9× Pro Bowl (1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011) 5× First-team All-Pro (2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2009) Second-team All-Pro (1999) 20/20 Club The first player in NFL history to record a sack, an interception, forced fumble, and touchdown reception in a single game The first player in NFL history to record at least 30 interceptions and 30 forced fumbles in a career. +The officers then formed the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC) and made JJ Rawlings their leader. +He was 64. +He won the election held on the 28th of April 2006 with 70% of the votes, beating Guilherme Lemos and Abrantes Mendes. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Sindhupalchowk District +It was specifically written for the Swedish trombone virtuoso Christian Lindberg. +Both studies have generally concluded that precipitation in the high mountains of the area are the source of the far away but anomalously large springs at Fish Springs National Wildlife Refuge. +In addition to the senior competitions, there were also under-23 events for younger athletes. +In 2011, Palmer and Bawden were Australia's number one ranked team, and the duo finished ninth at the 2011 World Championships. +The specific number of wonders may have varied over the years: the antiquary Daines Barrington, in a letter written in 1770, refers to Llangollen Bridge as one of the "five wonders of Wales, though like the seven wonders of Dauphiny, they turn out to be no wonders at all out of the Principality". +The club also competed in the FA Vase for the first time getting knocked out in the first qualifying round by Shirebrook Town. +According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Lahaya had a population of 486 in the 2004 census. +Her sister was Margaret Minifie. +JMC went out of business in July 1985.Cyclecraft: Early 1986-December 27, 1987. +After winning the Lancashire FA Amateur Shield in 1981–82 and another Guildhall Cup win in 1984–85, they won back-to-back Premier Division titles in the next two seasons, before winning a league and cup double in 1989–90. +Veenstra finished eighth in the two-woman event at the FIBT World Championships 2009 in Lake Placid, New York. +A daughter, Magdalena Elisabeth, was born in New York on 15 October 1871 and baptized on 15 June 1873. +The head and thorax then pass through the pelvic cavity at the same time, and the fetus, which is doubled upon itself (Conduplicato Corpore), is expelled. +Mom of AshishSound trackThe music is composed by Sanjoy Chowdhury. +There have been 48 individuals that have served as mayor of Columbus, serving 53 distinct mayoralties or consecutive terms in office. +FestivalsBaltic song festivals ()ArvamusfestivalÕllesummerHanseatic Days of Tartu ()SELL Student GamesFilm festivals in EstoniaTallinn Black Nights Film Festival ()Matsalu Nature Film Festival ()Pärnu International Documentary and Science Film FestivalMusic festivals in EstoniaReferencesExternal links EstoniaEstoniaFestivals in EstoniaFestivals +The 2000 Bausch & Lomb Championships was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Amelia Island Plantation on Amelia Island, Florida in the United States that was part of Tier II of the 2000 WTA Tour. +"Walk the dog", a common yo-yo trick "Walk the dog", a basic freestyle skateboarding trick Walkin' the Dog, a novel by Walter MosleySee also Wag the Dog (disambiguation) +The video features The Prancing Elites. +BiographyGeorge Kapitan broke into comics in 1940, creating with artist Harry Sahle the early superhero Green Giant (no relation to the advertising icon) in Pelican Publications' Green Giant Comics #1 (1940), produced by Funnies, Inc., a comic book "packager" that produced outsourced comics for publishers testing the waters of the fledgling medium. +Tensions arise between the count, his wife Melanie (Maria Holst), and their two chamberlains (Hans Moser and Theo Lingen), and when the four of them attend a court ball, Melanie leaves Georg, assumes the identity of a famous actress, and attracts the affections of Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria (Fred Liewehr). +He is best known for his news illustrations, beginning with his work for the Pittsburgh Press when he covered the 1889 Johnstown flood. +Characteristics of Brändö are the numerous assembly of islands and islets, most important of which are linked by bridges and causeways. +Kаzаkhgаtе in fictionAccording to the Financial Times, James Giffen is referenced by former CIA agent Robert Baer in his book See No Evil as "Mr. Kazakhstan" for his ability to influence oil policy in that country. +playersCategory:Israeli Premier League playersCategory:Expatriate footballers in IsraelCategory:Expatriate footballers in FinlandCategory:Gambian expatriate sportspeople in Israel +He was the eldest son of Juliana Grenier, Lady of Caesarea, and Guy de Brisebarre. +playersCategory:Association football defenders +Young-adult fiction In The Arms of Stone Angels - A Young Adult Novel (April 1, 2011) A 16-year-old girl is forced to return to a small Oklahoma town where she was the only witness to a murder. +It was written for the Domaine musical concerts in Paris and first performed in March 1959, conducted by Pierre Boulez. +Wadsworth City School District is a public school district in Wadsworth, Ohio. +In October 2010, Cecilia Ibru, the former head of Oceanic Bank, was sentenced to eighteen months and ordered to forfeit over US$1 billion for fraud. +ReferencesCategory:1901 birthsCategory:1964 deathsCategory:Members of the South Australian House of AssemblyCategory:Australian Labor Party members of the Parliament of South AustraliaCategory:20th-century Australian politicians +Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne "often said Weibel was one of the principal factors in the success of the 'Horseman.'" +References Category:Towns and villages in Marivan County +Interactions CTNND1 has been shown to interact with: Beta-catenin, CDH1, CDH2, Collagen, type XVII, alpha 1, Cortactin, FYN, MUC1, Nephrin, PSEN1, PTPN6, PTPRJ, PTPRM, VE-cadherin, YES1, and ZBTB33See also Delta catenin Catenin CTNND2ReferencesFurther readingExternal links Category:CateninsCategory:Armadillo-repeat-containing proteins +First weekGirls' round took place on October 7, 2012. +Mohammad Solaiman, a board member of the Qatar Amateur Athletics Federation, stated Bakhet was "ready" to compete and added the bronze medal in his event was an incentive to motivate him to perform better. +The Communicative Disorders Assistant Association of Canada (CDAAC) recognizes for membership only students or graduates of approved Communicative Disorders Assistant programs within Canada (those that include coursework in all areas of communication and prepare students to work with clients of any age). +Current statusA new addition has been constructed at Dakota College at Bottineau (then called Minot State University–Bottineau) and Old Main will be left vacant. +ReferencesCategory:Episcopal church buildings in CaliforniaCategory:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaCategory:Gothic Revival church buildings in CaliforniaCategory:Churches completed in 1893Category:Churches in Oakland, CaliforniaCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Oakland, CaliforniaCategory:19th-century Episcopal church buildings +Other similar Botticelli paintings are to be found in the National Gallery, London, the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, and in the Marubeni Collection, Tokyo. +He had participated in the work of the Economic Committee since May 2002. +He also suggested that the chanter replace the recorder in primary schools. +ReferencesCategory:1992 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Brazilian footballersCategory:Austin Aztex playersCategory:Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in the United StatesCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:Expatriate soccer players in the United StatesCategory:USL Championship players +A very long chain fatty acid (VLCFA) is a fatty acid with 22 or more carbons. +DescriptionMammillaria magnimamma is a perennial globose plant reaching a height of 15–30 cm and a diameter of about 13 cm. +Woo, who followed Bond, is executed. +The first group had to bungee jump off a helicopter in Falling Stars while the other group were involved in a second tucker trial, where Erin was confined in a coffin and the other four celebrities had to answer trivia questions & retrieve bags of treasure from "hell holes" to free Erin. +The function to be transformed is first multiplied by a Gaussian function, which can be regarded as a window function, and the resulting function is then transformed with a Fourier transform to derive the time-frequency analysis. +Alan William Greenwood' CBE FRSE (29 June 1897 – 4 May 1981) was a Scottish zoologist and geneticist, who helped pave the way to creating Dolly the Sheep. +Boucotte Mancagne is a settlement in Ziguinchor Department in Ziguinchor Region of the Basse Casamance area of south-west Senegal. +Lynn Bari, Patricia Farr and Anne Nagel were among 14 young women "launched on the trail of film stardom" on August 6, 1935, when they each received a six-month contract with 20th Century-Fox after spending 18 months in the school. +Robert Oliver may refer to: Robert Oliver (1593–1679), Irish MP for County Limerick Robert Oliver (1674–1739), Irish MP for Kilmallock and County Limerick Robert Oliver (1709–1745), Irish MP for Kilmallock Robert Oliver (cyclist) (born 1950), former road and track cyclist from New Zealand Robert B. Oliver (1895–1964), mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut, 1943–1945 Robert Don Oliver (1895–1980), British Royal Navy officer Robert Dudley Oliver (1766–1850), British Royal Navy officer Robert Shaw Oliver (1847–1935), United States Assistant Secretary of War Robert T. Oliver (1909–2000), American author, lecturer, and authority on public speaking Robert W. Oliver (1815–1899), first Chancellor of the University of Kansas Robert Oliver (chef), New Zealand chef who was raised in Fiji and Samoa Robert Oliver (priest) (1710–1784), Archdeacon of the East Riding Robert Oliver, founding director of Baltimore and Ohio RailroadSee also Bob Oliver (1943-2020), American baseball player Bob Oliver (American football) (1947–2013), American football player +It was released September 9, 1996 to mixed reviews. +The ground floor is surrounded by vertically grooved, matte brown ceramic tiles. +Pícara Sonhadora (The Mischievous Dreamer) is a Brazilian telenovela that was produced and aired by SBT from August 27 to December 27, 2001. +Rarely, consumption of probiotics may cause bacteremia, and sepsis, potentially fatal infections in children with lowered immune systems or who are already critically ill.ReferencesExternal links whatisbifidusregularis.org/ – A deconstruction of the terms Bifidus Actiregularis, Bifidus Regularis, Bifidus Digestivum, L. Casei Immunitas and their variants, as well as the marketing strategy, and information about the potential health benefits of live yoghurts. +1940), French politician Orazio Andreoni (b. c. 1840 – Rome, 1895), Italian sculptor and art dealer, active mainly in RomeCategory:Italian-language surnames +Chiesina Uzzanese is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Pistoia in the Italian region Tuscany, located about west of Florence and about southwest of Pistoia. +Genetic research also indicates that a later migration wave of H. sapiens (from .07-.05 Ma) from Africa is responsible for all to most of the ancestry of current non-African populations. +Cothurus is a genus of beetles in the family Mordellidae, containing the following species: Cothurus bordoni Franciscolo, 1987 Cothurus iridescens Champion, 1891ReferencesCategory:MordellinaeCategory:Mordellidae genera +Trevor Mwamba, Bishop of the Botswana, officiated while the sermon was preached by Raphael Hess, Bishop of Saldanha Bay, South Africa. +In addition to showing the ship, the coin displays a version of the Hudson city seal, with Neptune riding a whale, a design that has drawn commentary over the years. +It is believed to be the original home of the Salkeld family of landowners. +See alsoNew York – New Jersey Line WarReferencesExternal linksCouncil of Proprietors of West Jersey – Origin and HistoryNew jersey Pinelands on article on the division of East and West JerseyWhere was the West Jersey/East Jersey line? +Hu, then Legislative Councillor, and Dr Chung Chi-Yung, a prominent educationist. +Ritt may refer to:Joseph Ritt (1893–1951), American mathematician at Columbia UniversityMartin Ritt (1914–1990), American director, actor, and playwright in both film and theaterRitt Bjerregaard (born 1941), former Danish politicianSee alsoDer letzte Ritt nach Santa Cruz, (The Last Ride to Santa Cruz), 1964 German Western filmDer Ritt auf dem Schmetterling, controversial song by German punk band Die ÄrzteRIT (disambiguation)Writ +Its population in 2010 was 1,857. +Cutler attended classes until age 14 at a seminary in Charlottesville, Virginia. +According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Qurtuman had a population of 1,467 in the 2004 census. +This early work is considered by the artist to be the backbone of his entire oeuvre and throughout his career he has consistently mined this trove in his re-examination of the art-making practice. +The Amelia Earhart Birthplace is a historic building and museum that was the birthplace of aviator Amelia Earhart. +Goldcorp had "provided early development funding" and had partnered with the First Nation communities from 2010 to 2015. +The District has one city: Tang-e Eram. +Agbado may refer to some places in Africa:BeninAgbado, Benin, a village in Collines DepartmentNigeriaAgbado, Ekiti, a village in Ekiti StateAgbado, Kogi (or Agbedde), a village in Kogi State Agbado-Oke Odo, a Local Council of Ifako-Ijaiye, a suburban city-district of LagosAgbadi, a village in Benue State +Nestor (sternwheeler), a steamboat that operated in Oregon and Washington StateOther uses Palace of Nestor, the best preserved Mycenaean Greek palace discovered Nestor the priest, earliest surviving anti-Christian Jewish polemic (c. 900 AD) Nestoras, a municipality in Messenia, Greece Nestor, San Diego, a neighborhood within southern San Diego, California Nestor (solitaire), a card game Tropical Storm Nestor Typhoon Nestor (1997) A West Cornwall Railway steam locomotive Nestorianism, a doctrine that Jesus exists as two persons, one divine and the other humanSee also Dniester, a river in Eastern Europe Nester (disambiguation) +USA Today exclaimed the rapper's biggest career achievement to be convincing Jackson to feature on the song: "His biggest coup is landing Janet Jackson to coo the hook on the ballad Don't Worry. +Broadcasting on 96.5 FM, XHMSN is owned by Jorge Álvaro Gámez González and carries a news/talk format known as Dominio Radio. +On the other hand, American officials had concerns about security, since only one of the six senior scientists in the Cambridge group was British, and about French patent claims. +This is a list of songs that have peaked in the top 10 of the Mainstream Top 40 chart during 2006. +Canopy roof, windshield, and sides are one unit that moves upward, forward, or sideways to provide access. +Station numbering was introduced on all Seibu Railway lines during fiscal 2012, with Hitotsubashi-Gauken Station becoming "ST02". +The Hutt Valley Firehawks were a New Zealand rugby league club that represented Hutt Valley in the Lion Red Cup from 1994 to 1996. +Major results2013 Canada Summer Games2nd Road race3rd Time trial2015 3rd Mount Washington Auto Road Bicycle Hillclimb2016 1st Tobago Cycling Classic2017 1st Overall Tour of Southland1st Stage 4 2nd Overall Valley of the Sun Stage Race 9th Overall Tour of Alberta 10th Overall Tour of Utah2018 1st Overall Tour de Beauce1st Stage 4 6th Overall Tour of the Gila 7th Overall Colorado Classic2019 2nd Overall Tour of Utah1st Prologue 2nd Overall Tour de Beauce1st Stage 2 2nd Overall Tour de Taiwan1st Stage 4 5th Road race, National Road ChampionshipsReferencesExternal linksCategory:1991 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Canadian male cyclists +It is an interdisciplinary journal that focuses exclusively on the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari. +Parris died in Cuckfield, Sussex. +Distribution This species occurs in: Czech Republic UkraineReferencesCategory:ClausiliidaeCategory:Gastropods described in 1828 +History of worksSutin's debut book was Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K. Dick. +Other people with this name include: Satish Kumar (boxer), Indian boxer Satish Kumar Jr, Indian footballer +One example of this is the e-mail worm Gurong.A, written to exploit the Microsoft Windows operating system, which uses \Device\PhysicalMemory to install a call gate. +Tatischevo may refer to:Tatishchevo (inhabited locality), several inhabited localities in RussiaTatishchevo (airbase), a military airbase in Saratov Oblast, Russia +Dates1989 – became a soloist of the National Opera of Ukraine. +The list is arranged by drainage basin from north to south, with respective tributaries indented under each larger stream's name and ordered from downstream to upstream. +Selected published works Onkraj Kremlja (The Other Side of the Kremlin), 1968 Češkoslovaška nevarnost, Praška pomlad in Praška zima (The Czechoslovak Danger, Prague Spring and Prague Winter), 1969 Znana in neznana Sovjetska Zveza (The Known and Unknown Soviet Union), 1978 Razpotja komunizma (Communismns Crossroads), 1980 Bele lise socializma (White Patches of Socialism), 1986 Kronike preloma (Chronicles of the Turning Point), collection of articles from 1985 to 1995), 1997ReferencesCategory:1937 birthsCategory:1996 deathsCategory:Slovenian journalistsCategory:Slovenian translatorsCategory:People from LjubljanaCategory:Levstik Award laureatesCategory:University of Ljubljana alumniCategory:20th-century translators +If , then converges if and only if the sequence converges , which is certainly true if but false if : in the latter case the sequence is dense , due to the fact that diverges and converges to zero). +The YWCA building at 215 Market Street was the first home for the University. +It was the 12th ranking event of the 2019–20 snooker season, and the final event of the season's Home Nations Series. +HistoryThe paper was founded by Edward W. Scripps as the Penny Press in 1878. +He was found dead at his home in Coral Gables on June 8, 2017. +External linksIndex FungorumCategory:PyronemataceaeCategory:Pezizales genera +The dam has had problems with silt build-up since its construction, due to the high rate of erosion caused by typhoon storms and earthquakes in the upper Dahan River drainage. +In addition, the Board has 12 standing committees on which the Board members sit. +Tvishi Hydro Power Plant will be a large power plant in Georgia two has two turbines with a nominal capacity of 55 MW each having a total capacity of 110 MW. +She lies in of water at approximately . +It extends about 125 miles from near Jellico, Tennessee, to a location near Elkhorn City, Kentucky. +ReferencesExternal links ArchitectureCategory:Architecture schools in TexasCategory:Philip Johnson buildings +The stigmata are grey, the first discal at one-third, the plical beneath it, the second discal before two-thirds. +Rossby is an impact crater in the Eridania quadrangle on Mars at 47.5°S and 167.9°E, and it is 80 kilometers in diameter. +This is the first Ross Macdonald novel to feature the character of Lew Archer, who would define the author's career. +ReferencesCategory:Fijian footballersCategory:Labasa F.C. +It was led by the Premier of Victoria, Rupert Hamer, of the Liberal Party. +Written by band members Dan Avidan and Brian Wecht, "6969" tells the story of Danny Sexbang and Ninja Brian travelling to the year 6969 assuming that it will be the ultimate peak in sexual activity throughout human history, only to find out that a totalitarian group known as the "Council of Dick Elders" has made sexual intercourse illegal. +The band also became a mainstay at the Cornerstone Festival in Bushnell, Illinois where they became the only band to play every single year following their first appearance. +Skaling served on the city council for Saint John from 1940 to 1944 and was also a school trustee. +When their tunnelling machine breaks down just underneath a residential street, they befriend a trio of insects—Cicí, Rocco and Dris—who have formed a rock band. +The seat was contested between the Liberal and National Parties until Houghton's mid-term retirement in 1979, followed by a by-election won by Liberal Terry White. +The 2007 remaster restored 'My Baby Loves Me', but still finished with a different running order to the original vinyl release. +Jairo Neira (born 1987) is a Chilean footballer and his position is midfielder. +Its aim is to produce, promote and perpetuate the work of Alex Buzo both in Australia and internationally. +The name is from rubus for "bramble" and ursinus for "bear." +France and Scotland placed second and third with three and two wins respectively, while Ireland and Wales placed fourth and fifth without achieving any victories; the fixture between the two teams resulted in a 21–21 draw. +After graduating, he performed on radio and in recitals before moving to Japan in 1940. +Melco is led by Lawrence Ho, Packer’s former joint venture partner in Melco Crown Entertainment. +A Loughborough Echo investigation showed Reed lived "in a small one bedroom flat" and the difference was due to utility bills, council tax and a quarterly service charge, a total cost of £807 per month and already well within the £1,450 a month limit introduced a year later in the wake of the scandal. +Marcilly-sur-Tille is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France. +The game received generally negative reviews and has a GameRankings score of 41.17%. +Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett (11 February 1881 – 4 May 1931) was an English war correspondent during the First World War. +Spiridon Brusina (11 December 1845 – 21 May 1909) was a Croatian malacologist. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Unincorporated communities in Hardin County, TexasCategory:Unincorporated communities in TexasCategory:Beaumont–Port Arthur metropolitan area +The road enters the state (passing the Oregon County line) at Thayer. +References Category:Populated places in Sirvan CountyCategory:Sirvan County geography stubs +The band has made at least two of its albums available for free download on its website. +Programming Notable Programmes include Breakfast Variety - (Sunrise) and Afternoon Drive - (Traffic Jam). +Features of interest include the vaulted granite south porch and a relief in bronze of the Deposition of Christ which is the work of an Italian 16th-century Mannerist. +2012. +A notable reference point is the Otis Redding-ballad "I've Been Loving You Too Long", a song that the Stones themselves had recorded in 1965 and very similar in style and buildup. +NotesReferencesCategory:Nature reserves in the London Borough of HillingdonCategory:Local nature reserves in Greater LondonCategory:London Wildlife TrustCategory:Meadows in Greater London +He appeared in more than 70 films and television shows between 1943 and 1969. +The next day Wolverine captured Marianne, of one gun and 46 men. +In exchange, one of Louis' daughters (Catherine, Mary or Jadwiga) was to ascend the throne of Poland after his death. +Its architecture shows influence of both Gothic Revival and Craftsman styles. +She holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University and has held Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellowships. +Oreodytes congruus is a species of predaceous diving beetle in the family Dytiscidae. +ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Defence ministers of ParaguayCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +Even though IL 5 was fully up to Interstate Highway standards, it still had to carry a limit because of this wording in NMSL. +Selected filmographyReferencesExternal links Category:1915 birthsCategory:2014 deathsCategory:Italian film actresses +College careerCook was a running back for the Murray State University Racers. +He is particularly known as the transmitter of aggadot of his teacher, Isaac Nappaha. +In 9 seasons he played in 956 Games and had 3,707 At Bats, 516 Runs, 990 Hits, 173 Doubles, 43 Triples, 29 Home Runs, 423 RBI, 113 Stolen Bases, 212 Walks, and a .267 Batting Average. +Spectrum News reported in August 2017 that Flanagan and his wife had divorced. +They were inspired by bands such as Bon Jovi, Iron Maiden and Def Leppard. +Wilson divorced Bob Wilson in 1960. +Colchester UnitedOn 27 November 2008 Tierney joined Colchester United on an initial five-week loan. +ReferencesFurther reading Hill, Susanne; & Hill, John. +Uplift and faulting in combination with glaciation have been the dominant processes which have created the tall peaks and deep valleys of the North Cascades area. +ReferencesCategory:Diptera of AfricaCategory:Insects described in 1923Category:Exoristinae +After attending school in Husum and at the Christianeum Hamburg, and studying law at the University of Jena (1757-1759), he entered 1760 the Danish military service and took later part in the Russian campaign of 1762. +Annibale Pelaschiar (born 25 February 1912, date of death unknown) was an Italian sailor who competed in the 1956 Summer Olympics and in the 1964 Summer Olympics. +Hadid walked in the Zadig & Voltaire New York Fashion Week in February 2017. +RecordsPrior to this competition, the existing world and CISM record were as follows:ScheduleMedalistsResultsFinalReferences4 x 400 metres relayCategory:2015 in women's athletics +From March 2009 he was the new head coach of Lega Pro Prima Divisione side Pescara; this adventure ended in January 2010, when he was replaced by Eusebio Di Francesco, former coach of Lanciano. +History After shakedown, Parsons reported to her home port, San Diego, California, and commenced operations with the First Fleet in February 1960. +The Colonial Office retained ultimate power over African affairs and the African ownership of land. +Discography Abone "Dansçı" - Subscriber "Dancer" (1991-Ozer Plak) Kendine Gel - Get a Hold of Yourself (1993-Ozer Plak) 8:15 Vapuru - 8:15 Ferry (Single, 1994-Ozer Plak, using the music cover of ルージュ ("Rouge") by Miyuki Nakajima) Yonca Evcimik '94 - (1994-Ozer Plak) I'm Hot For You (1995-Istanbul Plak) Yaşasın Kötülük - Long Live Evilness (Single, 1997-Sahin Ozer) Günaha Davet - Call for Sin (1998-Raks Muzik) Herkes Baksın Dalgasına - Leave Well Alone (2001-Universal Muzik) The Best of Yoncimix Remixes (2002-Sahin Ozer) Aşka Hazır - Ready to Love (2004-DMC) Oldu Gözlerim Doldu - I Don't Believe You (Single, 2005-Sony BMG) Şöhret (İbret Öyküsü) - Fame (Parable) (2008) Yallah Sevgili - Get Out Darling (Single, 2012) 5'i 1 Yerde - 5 in 1 (Archive, 2012) 15. +They featured 10" or 12" woofers and often twin mid-range drivers in a ported enclosure. +The village has an approximate population of 100. +On October 28, 1997, the Grizzlies traded Roy Rogers to the Boston Celtics for Tony Massenburg and a 2nd round draft. +A belt course runs on the facade between the ground and second floors. +In addition to a famous story of Margaret Catchpole, he published in 1860 The Biography Of A Victorian Village - Wortham, which contains a series of drawings and character details of various members of the community during the mid-Victorian period. +He sold Footner and Company in 1972, and his shipping company to the Evergreen Line of Taiwan in 1979. +Track listingRelease historyChartsReferencesExternal links Official Site AmazonCategory:2008 albumsCategory:Hayley Westenra albums +He competed at the 1948 Summer Olympics and the 1952 Summer Olympics. +He played college football at the University of Notre Dame. +The greatest immediate risk from TMS is fainting, though this is uncommon. +Its first meaning is "little orchard or garden"; hence the meaning "field surrounded by a wall". +Over those ten years, he has appeared in forty games, for a total of 3600 minutes. +ASNC may refer to: American Society of Nuclear Cardiology Australasian Steam Navigation Company Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge +NotesReferencesCategory:1836 birthsCategory:1904 deathsCategory:OratoriansCategory:19th-century English Roman Catholic priestsCategory:English historiansCategory:Alumni of University College London +Early lifeJenkins was born on 20 July 1949 in Gorseinon, Wales, and was brought up on a farm on the former Kilvrough estate on the Gower Peninsula, near Swansea. +The characters and landscapes of the Gothic rest almost entirely within the sublime, with the heroine serving as the great exception. +TranslationsHe translated Montesquieu's Lettres Persanes (1892), François Coppée's Pour la Couronne in 1896 and Victor Hugo's Ruy Blas in 1904, the former being produced as, For the Crown, at the Lyceum Theatre in 1896, the latter as A Queen's Romance at the Imperial Theatre. +References Category:DD Metro television seriesCategory:DD National television seriesCategory:1990s Indian television seriesCategory:1992 Indian television series debutsCategory:1994 Indian television series endings +PersonalBorn in Bangui, Central African Republic. +Igor Aleksandrovich Byrlov (; born 10 July 1986) is a Russian professional footballer. +For his actions he was awarded Hero of the Soviet Union. +Bowershall is a village in Fife, Scotland, UK, situated near Craigluscar Hill, two miles north of Dunfermline, one mile north of Townhill, and to the west of Loch Fitty, south of the B915. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1986 filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:1980s Malayalam-language films +The topography is generally pastures on undulating hillsides. +She was pictured wearing a pair of leather pants along with a red-black corset and a silver chain hanging from her waist. +Early life and educationHe was born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in 1973, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. +He remained with the club until 1987, making 87 league appearances and scoring six goals. +Club careerA speedy and stocky forward, Holverda started his professional football career at Sparta and played seven seasons for them, ending up as their top goalscorer in the 1983–84 season. +LifeJohn's exact background is unclear. +External links Street map Category:Populated places in Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County +Rundu Secondary School is a government school in Rundu in the Kavango East Region of north-eastern Namibia. +HistoryIn September 1957, Cathedral School For Boys was opened in the Cathedral's bell towers. +Most Protestant denominations use the New International Version of the Bible, since English is an official language of the Philippines. +NotesExternal links Category:1916 birthsCategory:1980 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Hawthorn Football Club players +Sangita (Devanagari: , IAST: ), also spelled Samgita or Sangeeta, refers to "music and associated performance arts" in the Indian traditions. +PBB consisted of Cilk Plus, Threading Building Blocks (TBB) and Intel Array Building Blocks (ArBB). +Category:Markup languagesCategory:Computer-related introductions in 1996Category:Mobile Web +A young cult fiction author, heavily influenced by Flannery O' Conner. +It emerged from various underground opposition groups. +Once completed it will have been shown that the mathematical foundation of λ-calculus is a well defined and suitable candidate functional paradigm for the Scott topology. +Results2013 electionReferencesCategory:Federal electoral districts in Baden-Württemberg +CastToshirō Yanagiba as Kazuyuki AsakawaTomoya Nagase as Ryûji TakayamaKotomi Kyono as Akiko YoshinoAkiko Yada as Mai TakanoTae Kimura as Sadako YamamuraYūta Fukagawa as Yôichi AsakawaHitomi Kuroki as Rieko MiyashitaList of episodes"The Seal is Now Solved""Killed by a Videotape""Someone is Watching...""A Virus of Silence""The Dead Person Who Was Reborn""A New Person with Supernatural Power""Sadako Will Appear Tonight""Someone Will Die When the Curse is Solved""Planned Memory""Sadako's Revival""Ryuji Takayama Dies""The Curse Was Not Lifted. +It was released through PledgeMusic only. +Communes Baré Bonaléa Dibombari Ebone Loum Manjo Mbanga Melong Mombo Nkongsamba 1 Nkongsamba 2 Nkongsamba 3 PenjaReferencesCategory:Departments of CameroonCategory:Littoral Region (Cameroon) +References The Bulbophyllum-Checklist The Internet Orchid Species Photo EncyclopediaExternal links subumbellatum +External linksCategory:1978 birthsCategory:People from MtskhetaCategory:Living peopleCategory:Footballers from Georgia (country)Category:Georgia (country) international footballersCategory:Association football central defendersCategory:FC WIT Georgia playersCategory:FC Rustavi playersCategory:FC Torpedo Kutaisi playersCategory:FC Dila Gori playersCategory:Erovnuli Liga players +References Category:Free market +Although shoes may appear to carry sexual connotations in mainstream culture (for example, women's shoes are commonly sold as being "sexy"), this opinion refers to an ethnographic or cultural context, and is likely not intended to be taken literally. +The body should not lean to any direction, and the spine should be lifted. +Kyrkheddinge is a locality situated in Staffanstorp Municipality, Skåne County, Sweden with 276 inhabitants in 2010. +In May 2007, Murdoch made a $5 billion offer to purchase Dow Jones & Company. +Today, the treasure is exhibited at the Stockholm City Museum and in the Royal Coin Cabinet. +Kinzers is located on U.S. Route 30 (Lincoln Highway East) and was a part of the original Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike. +Former minister and minelord G. Janardhana Reddy worked out a method to circumvent the Anti-Defection Law and secured the support of legislators needed to take BJP past the majority mark. +FamilySomerset married Ethel Parker of Cheshire and had two children, a son and daughter. +At the 2006 census, its population was 80, in 19 families. +References Category:Populated places in Ahar County +Pierre de Bénouville (8 August 1914 – 4 December 2001) was a French general. +Nicholas Jack Adams (born 1 March 1967) is a former English first-class cricketer. +Community Gardens, Forestry and Green SpacesWPC's community gardens and greenspace program plants and maintains 132 community gardens every spring in 20 Western Pennsylvania counties, with the help of 12,000 volunteers. +As Nate readily admits, she is more intelligent than he is, and puts her family before all else. +The Annals of Ireland give the following obits- Annals of the Four Masters 757- “Cele-Peadair, Abbot of Ard-Macha, died. +Amroha Lok Sabha constituency is one of the 80 Lok Sabha (parliamentary) constituencies in Uttar Pradesh. +Chart positionsExternal links Category:2004 singlesCategory:Hard rock songsCategory:Godsmack songsCategory:2004 songsCategory:Songs written by Sully ErnaCategory:Republic Records singles +ConstructionGriswold (DE-7) was launched 9 January 1943, by Boston Naval Shipyard, Charlestown, Massachusetts; sponsored by Mrs. Don T. Griswold, mother of Ensign Don T. Griswold. +Kendriya Vidyalaya Ganeshkhind is a school located in Pune, India. +Jumping +The mosque was demolished by explosives on May 7, 1993, by the Serb militia. +64 in April 2007. +ReferencesCategory:1911 birthsCategory:Possibly living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1932 Summer OlympicsCategory:Brazilian male sprintersCategory:Brazilian male middle-distance runnersCategory:Olympic athletes of BrazilCategory:Place of birth missing +The Tiger Club was also based at the airfield after moving from Redhill Aerodrome in 1990 before moving onto Damyns Hall AerodromeThere is a small museum of aviation relics was established on the site, the Lashenden Air Warfare Museum. +Such a father had an overwhelming impact and tutoring family life on his two young precocious bright girls and with the unique unusual opportunities in their future lives, views/opinions and activities. +See also1968 in musicReferencesSourcesPrint editions of the Billboard magazine. +In his UFC debut, Noons faced Donald Cerrone on May 25, 2013 at UFC 160. +Colegio Simón Bolívar may refer to:Colegio Simón Bolívar (Acapulco)Colegio Simón Bolívar de la Salle PedregalColegio La Salle Simón BolívarColegio Simón Bolívar (Chile)Colegio Simón Bolívar (Col. Insurgentes, Mixcoac, Mexico City)Colegio Simón Bolívar (Venezuela) +The Henry Girls are an Irish folk and roots music group. +Ribeira Seca may refer to the following places in the Azores, Portugal: Ribeira Seca (Calheta), a civil parish in the municipality of Calheta, São Jorge Ribeira Seca (Ribeira Grande), a civil parish in the municipality of Ribeira Grande, São Miguel Ribeira Seca (Vila Franca do Campo), a civil parish in the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo, São Miguel +In 1978, it reached its highest enrollment, of 2,850 students. +El Hincha may refer to: The Fan (1951 film), a 1951 Argentine sports comedy film The Fan (1958 film), a 1958 Spanish comedy sports film +He reached the 1998 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final with Kildare, and won Leinster medals in 1998 and again in 2000 after the replay against neighbours Dublin. +This species has a wingspan of . +Ray Cox may refer to: Ray Cox (performer) (1881–1957), American actress and vaudeville performer Ray Cox (video game player) (born 1983), gamer known for setting Xbox Gamerscore records Kenny Ray Cox (born 1957), retired United States Army lieutenant colonel and Democratic member of the Louisiana House of Representatives +Oliver rejoined the cabinet under new Premier Harry Nixon as Deputy Premier, but Nixon's government was short-lived, going down to defeat in the October 1943 election placing third behind the victorious Progressive Conservatives and the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation which became the Official Opposition. +Commercially available biochemical tests fail to properly identify A. sanguinicola and correct identification can be achieved through genetic or mass spectroscopic methods, such as matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight (MALDI-TOF). +They were likely to have lived near bodies of water, such as many antelope species today. +(In 2014 Craven, Edwards and Cowley proposed that the species be renamed Melaleuca rosea.) +(1913). +There are 5 streets. +The brigs Deveron and Prince Leopold went to salvage as much cargo as possible and pick up the remaining crew. +The population was 305 as of 2010. +Ivan Komar (; born 18 March 1970) is a retired Belarusian middle-distance runner who competed primarily in the 800 metres. +Among the notable members of the family were:Karl Clodt von Jürgensburg (Karl-Gustav) (1765–1822) - colonel since 1806, participant in Patriotic War of 1812;Baron Gustaf Adolf Clodt (1692–1738), son of Johan Adolph ClodtBaron Johan Adolph Clodt von JurgensburgVladimir Clodt (1803–1882), professor of mathematics and general, chief of drawing department of the General Staff of Russian Army; son of Karl;Peter Clodt von Jürgensburg (1805–1867), prominent Russian sculptor, son of Karl;Konstantin Clodt (1807–1879), the first Russian wood engraver, son of Karl;Mikhail Petrovich Clodt (1835–1914), Russian painter, member of Peredvizhniki; son of Peter;Mikhail Konstantinovich Clodt (1832–1902); prominent realist painter; son of Konstantin;Elisabeth Järnefelt (née Clodt von Jürgensburg, 1839–1929); daughter of Konstantin; mother of Arvid, Eero and Armas Järnefelt, and Aino Sibelius;Nikolay Clodt (1865–1918) painter, grandson of Peter;Yevgeny Clodt (1866–1934), painter and jeweler, grandson of Konstantin;Pyotr Mikhailovich Clodt (1903–1942) painter, son of Mikhail Petrovich;References article Klodt von Jürgensburg (artists) on rulex encyclopedia All-Russia genealogical treeExternal links Genealogisches Handbuch der baltischen Ritterschaften Estland - Genealogy handbook of Baltic nobilityCategory:Russian noble familiesCategory:Baltic nobility +In Venice, he formed a notable partnership with Valentino Mazzola, and won the Coppa Italia in 1941. +Pygolampis pectoralis is a species of assassin bug in the family Reduviidae. +Females are duller than the males, and have black restricted to a poorly demarcated "shadow" of a mask. +He was born in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia on 17 July 1891. +Writes operas for the Houston Opera; born in Lumberton. +Southern Front is a geographical area where armies are engaged in conflict, and may refer to: Southern Front (Soviet Union), one of the Soviet fronts in the World War II Southern Front (RSFSR), a front of the Red Army during the Russian Civil War (1918-1920) Polish Southern Front, one of the Polish fronts during the Invasion of Poland of 1939 Italian Campaign (World War II) Southern Front (Southern Sudan) Southern Front of the Free Syrian Army Franco-Turkish War +Sharkey was down in the fifth round, after which Lynch had little trouble penetrating his defenses. +From 1504 the former Principality was recognized as a voivodeship. +Surveyor of the NavyIn his capacity as Surveyor of the Navy, Walker specified the requirements that led to the design of the large wooden screw frigates HMS Diadem, HMS Doris, HMS Ariadne, HMS Galatea, HMS Mersey, and HMS Orlando which were known simply as "Walker's Big Frigates". +It was responsible for policing the administrative county of Somerset and the county borough of Bath. +By 1812, Jenyns began to study natural history encouraged by his great uncle. +It was depopulated by the Israel Defense Forces during the 1948 War on May 16, 1948. +McEveety also directed portions of The Watcher in the Woods. +Many believers fled to a nearby island to get away from the enraged governor, but as he chased them his boat sank. +Slap or slapping may refer to: Slapping (strike), a method of striking with the palm of the hand Slapping (music), a musical technique used with stringed instruments Slap tonguing, a musical technique used on wind instrumentsSlap (magazine), American skateboard magazine 1992-2008 Slap (professional wrestling), an attack in professional wrestling Slap, Tržič, a municipality in Slovenia Slap!, a 1990 album by English band Chumbawamba "Slap" (song), a 2006 song by American musician Ludacris Saboted light armor penetrator, a family of ammunition designed to penetrate armor more efficiently than standard armor-piercing ammunition SLAP tear, a tear of the superior glenoid labrum from anterior to posterior Secret large-scale atmospheric program, a set of conspiracy theories. +Culturale del Mezzogiorno, Naples 2007 Il memoriale di Seneca. +His service as a railroad executive is noted on the 1839 Newkirk Viaduct Monument. +REDIRECT Virginia State Route 216 +Hillsea Point Rock is an area of the English Channel located 0.5 nm south-east of Hillsea Point, Devon. +In addition to the obvious artifact remains, an inter-disciplinary group of scientists including archaeologists, botanists, geochronologists, geologists, paleontologists, palynologists, and zoologists have studied and interpreted a wide range of data from the site. +He appears on all three of their studio albums, Thriller (October 1993), Woxo Principle (November 1995), and Be What You Is (January 1999). +The line operated Automatic Block Signals; the presence of a train in the block section automatically setting the preceding semaphore signals; the first to caution, the next to danger. +Karate Raja is an Indian film actor who has appeared in Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam language films. +In contrast to his current Byzantine-priority stance, Robinson stated at the time that "it is more likely that the original text itself was what we today would term 'mixed,'" that "[a]ll known texttypes proceeded from this original 'mixed' [form], coming into existence as types primarily from local-text situations," and even that "the uncontrolled, popular text of the second century . +It is on the island of Basse-Terre. +External links Category:Tanzanian emigrants to the United KingdomCategory:1938 birthsCategory:Living people +He was born in Andimeshk. +Hesperanoplium is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Hesperanoplium antennatum (Linsley, 1932) Hesperanoplium notabile (Knull, 1947)ReferencesCategory:Hesperophanini +A program for Harlem Air Shaft, published by Richard O. Boyer in The New Yorker in l944, was apparently provided by Ellington while the band was traveling. +is published. +The Roman Catholic Diocese of Santo André () is a diocese located in the city of Santo André, in the Ecclesiastical province of São Paulo in Brazil. +Geography The village is located on Khopyorsko-Buzulukskaya plain, on the Karman River, 300 km from Volgograd and 27 km from Preobrazhenskaya. +Both stations were branded as Joco Radio. +Wyoming Renegades is a 1954 Western film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Phil Carey, Gene Evans and Martha Hyer. +Özge Nur Yurtdagülen, (born August 6, 1993) is a Turkish female volleyball player. +Yuriko Yamaguchi is the name of:Yuriko Yamaguchi (voice actress) (born 1965), Japanese voice actorYuriko Yamaguchi (sculptor) (born 1948), Japanese artist +It resulted in the deaths of six climbers in an avalanche on the way to the summit. +The airport is operated by the Tasmanian Ports Corporation (Tasports), which previously operated the larger Hobart International Airport. +Gooney bird may refer to: Albatross or gooney bird Douglas C-47 Skytrain or Gooney Bird, a military transport aircraft developed from the civilian Douglas DC-3 airliner Gooney Bird character in The "Hard Luck Bears" animatronic show: see Aaron FechterSee also Gooney Bird Greene, the first of a series of children's novels Gooney Bird and the Room Mother, a children's novel +PresidencyDuring her presidency in 1992 the All-Ireland Intermediate Camogie Championship was inaugurated and won by Dublin. +Although other professors also signed the letter, Klein’s return address left on one of the letters by a careless student opponent of fascism identified Klein as the ringleader. +In chemistry, an N-methylamide (NME) is a blocking group for the C-terminus end of peptides. +It is found in Panama and Costa Rica. +and Rat Attack. +Robert Mailhouse Mailhouse was Dogstar's drummer / percussionist and the other of the two founding members. +In 1875, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects and moved from Bristol to set up in practice in London the following year, taking offices on the upper floors of 447 Oxford Street, next door to the premises of Morris & Co.. +It is known from a skeleton found in Upper Miocene rocks of Penghu Island, off Taiwan. +Votes! +Primarily specialising in track cycling, Rasmussen was also proficient in road racing, winning the Danish National Road Race Championships in 2007. +However, he was forced to pull out of the fight due to visa issues and was replaced by former foe Jason Wilnis. +As of 2008, there were 917 inhabitants living in Březiněves. +Group 1Group 2Group 3Group 4Group 5Group 6N.B. +The lane is frequently visited not just by people living to its close proximity, but also by people from all over the city as well as tourists. +Playing careerOchoa Uribe started his playing career at the age of 17 in 1946, his first club was América de Cali. +Another example of their work is the development of soybeans from a small forage/rotation crop to the second largest and most valuable row crop in the U.S.OperationNCAUR's 35 current research (CRIS) projects are mission-driven, reflecting the USDA Agricultural Research Service's National Research Programs. +This village is predominately Sikh, there are a number of Gurdwaras in the village.Burj Littan has a 9 gurudwara sahib and have a good coperative people. +Local politics have long been dominated by a single political party, the MPN or Movimiento Popular Neuquino founded by Elias Sapag, a prosperous businessman born in Lebanon. +After retiring from competition has worked as a shooting instructor and served as a member of the Romanian Federation of Sport Shooting (Federatiei Romane de Tir Sportiv). +A dam had been built on the Barker Creek about the time Copeland moved there, but a planned mill was never built. +The song was written and produced by Kang Ji-won and Kim Ki-bum, the same composer of Song Ji-eun's "Going Crazy" and Bang&Zelo's "Never Give Up". +Grand Prix Rudy Dhaenens was a professional road bicycle race held annually in Nevele (Belgium) to honor the former World Racing Champion Rudy Dhaenens. +The 40S ribosomal subunits keep combining with RNA, and bypass the strong stem-loop structural element, land at the shunt acceptor site, resume scanning and reinitiate at the first long ORF. +SeedsChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated. +CareerDale Donovan began working in the hobby-gaming industry in 1989. +Football careerAfter graduating from RCD Espanyol's youth academy, López made his first-team debut during 2006–07, playing seven La Liga matches mostly always as a late substitute (he was initially summoned for the season's UEFA Cup final against Sevilla FC, but eventually did not make the final list of 18). +It may refer to: Darko Damjanović (born 1977), Serb-Swiss footballer Dario Damjanović (born 1981), Bosnian footballer Dejan Damjanović (born 1981), Montenegrin footballer Jovan Damjanović (born 1982), Serbian footballer Mato Damjanović (1927–2011), Yugoslav chess player Milan Damjanović (1943–2006), Yugoslav-Serb footballer Sanja Damjanović (born 1972), physicist and Minister of Science in the government of Montenegro Stjepan Damjanović (born 1946), Croatian SlavistSee alsoDamnjanovićDamjanićDamijanićCategory:Croatian-language surnamesCategory:Serbian-language surnamesCategory:Patronymic surnames +Also, the leading term of a product of polynomials is the product of the leading terms of the factors. +He established Vishnu idol in the Hapamuni temple in Gumla district in Vikram Samvat 1458 according to inscription. +He's never felt this way about a girl before." +He has previously played for Linköpings HC of the Elitserien and Nottingham Panthers. +Go Tell It on the Mountain may refer to:"Go Tell It on the Mountain" (song), a Christian spiritual songGo Tell It on the Mountain (novel), a novel by James BaldwinGo Tell It on the Mountain (album), an album by The Blind Boys of AlabamaGo Tell It on the Mountain (film), a television film based on Baldwin's novel, starring Rosalind Cash +The community most likely was named after the Lamar family. +It was produced by Radioclit and has brought renewed interest in the original. +Cabbage" which was recorded in 1986 at Mad Mike Miller's. +While many unknown persons help Dujoya run to safety with Neha in his arms, he is soon surrounded by the goons. +Around 15 of the assault force were killed, but the guns of Blake's ships guns had a longer range than those of the blockhouse and Old Grimsby fell. +After the war, it was repaired and converted into a women's prison. +It is found in the Western Indian Ocean; the Red Sea. +The rolling hills of transitional grasslands are a tremendous training area for open-area combat arms maneuvers necessary for our mechanized engineer and air defense artillery units. +ReferencesCategory:ImmidaeCategory:Moths described in 1930Category:Moths of IndonesiaCategory:Taxa named by Edward Meyrick +ReferencesExternal linksPanAfriL10n page on Teso & TurkanaCategory:Agglutinative languagesCategory:Eastern Nilotic languagesCategory:Languages of KenyaCategory:Verb–subject–object languages +Some time ago, at São Francisco River Valley (between States of Bahia and Pernambuco), fruits for export started being produced, too. +Dubbed as Malaysia's Water Baron, he also sits on the Board of several private limited companies including Ranhill Corporation Sdn Bhd and Lambang Optima Sdn Bhd where he is also a major shareholder. +Katerina Lehou or Katerina Lexou (Κατερίν�� Λέχου) is a Greek actress who has been in many theatrical plays, films, and Greek television series. +Pitcher perfect - but carnivorous plants are at risk. +In his first season in charge New York captured the Eastern Conference regular season title and the MLS Supporters' Shield. +Notker of St. Gall is said to have invented this process, and in his collection Liber Hymnorum there are sequences that seem to relate this way to known jubili. +It is surrounded on three sides by the town of Edinboro and the State Route 99 runs along the shore for a short stretch. +CastBebe Daniels as Consuelo GarciaRicardo Cortez as Juan MartinJames Rennie as Philip SearsMario Majeroni as Senator CornejoRuss Whytal as Emanuel GarciaAlice Chapin as Madame GarciaJulia Hurley as La MoscaMark Gonzales as Rafael CornejoAurelio Coccia as PedroReferencesExternal linksCategory:1924 filmsCategory:American silent feature filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:Lost American filmsCategory:Films based on works by Vicente Blasco IbáñezCategory:Films directed by Allan DwanCategory:Paramount Pictures filmsCategory:1920s romantic drama filmsCategory:American romantic drama filmsCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:Films with screenplays by Gerald Duffy +IsraelThe position of chief rabbi () of the Land of Israel has existed for hundreds of years. +Luke and Bo own a 1969 Dodge Charger, nicknamed The General Lee, which is painted orange, with the Confederate Flag on top, and 01 painted on the sides. +Chaouilley is a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department in north-eastern France. +Zhuo said he had seen the six seal-like, finned creatures swimming and frolicking in the lake for an hour and a half, before they disappeared around 7:00 a.m. "They could swim as fast as yachts and at times they would all disappear in the water. +There were proposals to use some of the tunnels in a new rapid transit system. +97) - the Millennium Bureau of Canada Manitoba Historical Society - Manitoba Municipalities: Rural Municipality of Grahamdale Map of Grahamdale R.M. +Bulbophyllum canlaonense is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum. +Career statisticsGrand Prix motorcycle racingBy seasonRaces by yearReferencesExternal linksProfile on MotoGP.comCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese motorcycle racersCategory:Moto2 World Championship ridersCategory:1994 births +Hazel Vaughn Leigh (July 27, 1897 – April 27, 1995) was a philanthropist and civic leader in Fort Worth, Texas. +In enzymology, a raucaffricine beta-glucosidase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reactionraucaffricine + H2O D-glucose + vomilenineThus, the two substrates of this enzyme are raucaffricine and H2O, whereas its two products are D-glucose and vomilenine. +Front Page Sports Football Pro is a DOS video game developed and published by Dynamix and released in 1993, and is part of the Front Page Sports Football video game series. +The House Committee on People Participation has general jurisdiction on all matters directly and principally relating to the role, rights and responsibilities of people's organizations, non-government and civic organizations, and other similar groups, and the establishment of mechanisms for consultation with and participation of the people in governance and in legislation including the establishment and maintenance of a data bank on all such organization. +The plants grows well in sandy clay soils and sometimes sandy loams with clay. +This album marked their transition from a band that primarily played in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States to a nationwide touring act. +is a song by American rock band Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats. +Bylowo-Leśnictwo (Cashubian Bëlowò),() is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Kartuzy, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. +Arden is a village on the southwest shore of Loch Lomond in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. +In late 2008 the BBC produced a pilot at Ginglik, London, before launching Series 1 on BBC4 early 2009. +Each team had a maximum of six riders:RouteStagesStage 1Stage 2Stage 3Stage 4Stage 5Final general classificationReferencesExternal linksCategory:2018 UCI Europe TourCategory:2018 in Norwegian sport2018 +(2006). +12: Gråt Fader Berg 4:17 Epistle no. +He was ordained after a period of study at the Church of Ireland Theological College in 2000. +He served as Minister Resident and Consul General to Persia from 1886–1891. +Phạm Văn Tiến (born 30 April 1993) is a Vietnamese footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for V.League 1 club Becamex Bình Dương. +It is a surname and a generic name for breweries. +Semminipatti village women getting jobs in MITP. +With the Class-A Key West Sun Caps that year, he batted .249 with 25 runs scored, 82 hits, 15 doubles, two triples, one home run, and 31 runs batted in (RBIs) in 97 games played. +GeographyThe commune is located in the parc naturel régional de la Brenne. +ReferencesCategory:1902 birthsCategory:1940 deathsCategory:Nationalist Party of Australia members of the Parliament of TasmaniaCategory:Members of the Tasmanian House of AssemblyCategory:20th-century Australian politicians +Morales was rushed downstairs to the apartment of novelist Doc Hume and then in a taxi cab to University Hospital for surgery. +Upland is west-northwest of Winfield. +He was a full-time pitching instructor in the minor league organizations of the Yankees and Montréal Expos from 1982–85 before joining AUM and launching its baseball program. +Susan tells the butler, "Let's bring him home." +Cosne-d'Allier is a commune in the Allier department in central France. +The Casuarina Island skink (Trachylepis casuarinae) is a species of skink found on Casuarina Island in Mozambique. +So the next day he snuck off without permission and joined his older brothers surfing and wrestling on the beach with the stronger master. +As is recounted in Paul Gough's book, Journey to Burghclere Spencer had a difficult time in the hospital, leavened by moments of quiet reverie, as the painter wrote of his second day:"I had to scrub out the Asylum Church. +She rode in the women's time trial event at the 2018 UCI Road World Championships. +If this were to happen such that no one scored, and the pitcher recorded all outs by strikeout, a pitcher could theoretically record six strikeouts per inning, and thus 54 for the game, netting him 54 points in addition to the 87 he would have received as described above, for a total of 141. +In later editions, the publisher also used “Sam Durell” in the blurb immediately after the front cover - For example, Assignment Ceylon has “This is number thirty-six of the famed Sam Durell novels—one of the bestselling suspense series in the history of publishing.” One consistent element is that all of the story titles started with the word “Assignment.”The stories were written over a span of 28 years, from 1955 to 1983. +Fascismo - Architettura - Arte / Arte fascista web siteCategory:1893 birthsCategory:1982 deathsCategory:20th-century Italian architectsCategory:Italian fascist architectureCategory:Architects from MilanCategory:Polytechnic University of Milan alumni +The cast is divided into the Barhka Purabi or "upper," and the Chhutka Purabi or "lower" eastern. +Arouva mirificana is a species of snout moth in the genus Arouva. +It was a suburban riding in Edmonton. +International careerSkank had some success with "Garota Nacional", that lead the Spanish charts, and "É Uma Partida de Futebol" was shown before some games of the 1998 World Cup due to being in the championship's soundtrack. +References1904-04Category:1904 elections in EuropeCategory:1904 in MaltaCategory:Single-candidate electionsCategory:Uncontested electionsCategory:April 1904 events +Congressional Czech Caucus was inaugurated on February 27, 2008 in Washington, D.C.Members of the Czech Congressional CaucusUS Senate (List in progress, March 4, 2008)Chairmen Senator E. Benjamin Nelson (Nebraska) Democrat Senator George V. Voinovich (Ohio) RepublicanMembers Senator Robert P. Casey, Jr. (Pennsylvania) Democrat Senator Byron Dorgan (North Dakota) Democrat Senator Dianne Feinstein (California) Democrat Senator Chuck Grassley (Iowa) Republican Senator Joseph Lieberman (Connecticut) Independent Senator Mel Martinez (Florida) Republican Senator Ted Stevens (Alaska) RepublicanUS House of Representatives(List in progress, April 10, 2008)Chairmen Congressman Joe Barton (Texas 6th) Republican Congressman Daniel Lipinski (Illinois) Democrat Congressman Thaddeus G. McCotter (Michigan) Republican Congresswoman Ellen Tauscher (California) DemocratMembers Rod Blum (Iowa 1st) Joe Bonner (Alabama 1st) Michael Conaway (Texas 11th) Danny K. Davis (Illinois 7th) Lincoln Díaz-Balart (Florida 21st) Mario Díaz-Balart (Florida 25th) Lloyd Doggett (Texas 25th) Phil English (Pennsylvania 3rd) Jeff Fortenberry (Nebraska 1st) Sheila Jackson Lee (Texas 18th) Dave Loebsack (Iowa 2nd) Don Manzullo (Illinois 16th) Harry Mitchell (Arizona 5th) Solomon Ortiz (Texas 27th) Jan Schakowsky (Illinois 9th) Joe Sestak (Pennsylvania 7th) John Shimkus (Illinois 19th) Mike Turner (Ohio 3rd)See also Caucuses of the United States CongressExternal links Inauguration of the Czech Caucus, US Czech Embassy's web US House – Congressional Czech Caucus, Capitol Impact ciclt.net The Committee on House Administration – 110th Congress Congressional Member Organizations (CMOs), The Committee on House Administration's web cha.house.govCzechCategory:Czech-American historyCategory:Czech-American culture in Washington, D.C. +The following lists events that happened in 1996 in Libya. +At the 2006 census, its population was 446, in 87 families. +Abahaṭṭha (Prakrit: abasaṭṭa, ultimately from Sanskrit apaśabda; "meaningless sound") is a stage in the evolution of the Eastern group of Indo-Aryan languages. +It is found in French Guiana. +Smith was a Newtown alderman from 1871 to 1908, serving four separate terms as mayor. +Apacible's last television appearance was on ABS-CBN's "Minsan Lang Kita Iibigin" where he played a commandant of lead star Coco Martin. +It is in the subgenus Kraniopsis. +The Tree is a French-Australian 2010 film co-produced between Australia and France. +1987–88 – Rejoined Conference (ex-Alliance Premier League). +It may also refer to:Love on the Dole (film), a 1941 film adaptation starring Deborah Kerr and Clifford Evans"Love on the Dole", a song by The Libertines"Love on the Dole", a Day One song +Track listingAll tracks composed by Jonathan Edwards; except where indicated "Stop and Start It All Again" "Everything" "Longest Ride" "Give Us a Song" "Dues Days Bar" "Morning Train" (Traditional) "Ballad of Upsy Daisy" (Joe Dolce) "It's a Beautiful Day" "Sugar Babe" (Jesse Colin Young) "Dream Song" "Paper Doll" (Johnny S. Black) "Honky-Tonk Stardust Cowboy" (Darrell Statler) "That's What Our Life Is"Personnel Jonathan Edwards – vocals, guitar, harmonica, mandolin; bass on "That's What Our Life Is" Eric Lilljequist – lead guitar, harmony vocals Bill Keith – steel guitar, banjo Stuart Schulman – bass guitar, piano, string arrangements Richard Adelman – drums Dean Adrien – congasChandler Travis – maracas Elena Mezzetti – arrangement on "Morning Train"Category:1972 albumsCategory:Atco Records albumsCategory:Jonathan Edwards (musician) albums +See alsoCommunes of the Loire-Atlantique departmentJuignedemoutiers +Tarik El Janaby is a Moroccan professional footballer, who currently plays for Kuantan FA. +The second Folkestone F.C. +Two films aired each week, the first one being Anselmo Duarte's O Pagador de Promessas (1962) and the last being Cláudio Assis' Mango Yellow (2002). +She also played Bergliot in Episode Six of Saving the Human Race on CW Seed. +Kunówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Tarnawatka, within Tomaszów Lubelski County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. +The ecumenical jury awarded this film because it tells the story of a street sweeper who dreams of becoming a poet. +References Category:Cryptographic protocols +In 2009 the band went on to constantly tour for one year before the release of the debut album playing larger shows supporting Blood Red Shoes, Future of the Left, The Bronx, Rolo Tomassi, Glassjaw and Anti Flag. +He made his Twenty20 debut for Karachi Whites in the 2018–19 National T20 Cup on 13 December 2018. +The song features actor/model Yasmin Ponnappa. +His titles include those of a vizier, but also titles connecting him with the temple of Ptah, with Sakhmet and with Apis. +In January 2011, the PFLP declared that the Camp David Accords stood for "subservience, submission, dictatorship and silence", and called for social and political revolution in Egypt. +If there are eight or fewer swimmers in an event, no heats are held and all swimmers qualify for the final. +The vessel placed last, sailing alongside such other notable schooners of her era such as the John Alden-designed "Malabar X". +ReferencesCategory:PseudonocardineaeCategory:Bacteria described in 1987 +In 2002, the museum was finally opened. +Showbiz Darts is a British televised celebrity darts tournament which first aired in 2006 on the digital television channel Challenge. +World War IIBy December 14, 1944, Nett was a lieutenant in Company E of the 305th Infantry Regiment, 77th Infantry Division. +Fifteen of the tracks are previously unreleased. +On March 9, 2016, the PGA Tour, Valspar Corporation, and Copperhead Charities – the Valspar Championship host organization – announced a three-year title sponsorship extension, thus carrying Valspar’s commitment to the tournament through 2020. +He was the third on the Don Duguid rink that won two World Curling Championships and two Brier Championships. +The village was mentioned in the writings of several noted travellers including Edward Lhuyd and George Borrow. +Partnership with Gubanova Sintsov teamed up with Anastasia A. Gubanova in 2011. +Related linksOfficial WebsiteNational Dairy Council WebsiteCategory:American dairy organizations +Figure 2 is an example of a generalized compressibility factor graph derived from hundreds of experimental PVT data points of 10 pure gases, namely methane, ethane, ethylene, propane, n-butane, i-pentane, n-hexane, nitrogen, carbon dioxide and steam. +The software looks up the location of the cell site using a database of known wireless networks and sites. +After several months of discussion, the Queensland Government announced on 24 December 1970 that Bray would head a committee charged with establishing Griffith University. +References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Yanaulsky District +ReferencesExternal links Bloomsbury area guide Category:Districts of the London Borough of CamdenCategory:Areas of LondonCategory:James Burton (property developer) buildingsCategory:Former civil parishes in LondonCategory:Bills of mortality parishesCategory:Bloomsbury Group locations +Ecliptoides is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Ecliptoides azadi (Tavakilian & Peñaherrera-Leiva, 2003) Ecliptoides hovorei (Tavakilian & Peñaherrera-Leiva, 2003) Ecliptoides julietae Clarke, 2009 Ecliptoides rouperti (Tavakilian & Peñaherrera-Leiva, 2005) Ecliptoides titoi Clarke, 2009 Ecliptoides vargasi Clarke, 2009ReferencesCategory:Rhinotragini +This marked the first time he played with the band since his departure in 2007. +Multiple reports have described evidence for climatic changes in Antarctica prior to the mass extinction, but the extent to which these affected marine biodiversity is debated. +The first Baron was the father of the bride and the second, her brother, aged 12 at the time. +Clematis coactilis, common name Virginia white-hair leather flower, is a plant species endemic to the western part of the US State of Virginia. +Regular seasonConference standingsGame logReference:PlayoffsGame logReference:Player statsRunners (Top 10)Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty MinutesGoaltendersNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against AverageAwardsRosterSee also2002 NLL seasonReferencesExternal links TorontoCategory:National Lacrosse League Champion's Cup-winning seasonsCategory:2002 in Toronto +See also DVD6CReferencesExternal links MPEG LA corporate website New MPEG LA MPEG-2 License Agreement Offers Extended Coverage at Reduced Royalty Rates (Press Release on businesswire.com)Category:Companies based in DenverCategory:MPEGCategory:Patent poolsCategory:Open standards covered by patents +Karthik Srinivasan of Milliblog!, in his 200 words review, stated "The Amar-Akbar-Antony of Indian music open their 2013 account in style!" +In 1775 she founded the "Patriotic Society" one of the oldest rural credit institutions in Germany. +It peaked at number 22 of the German charts. +It was founded in 1951 by Jacob Chandy, Balasubramaniam Ramamurthi, S. T. Narasimhan, and Baldev Singh, who together have been credited to be pioneers in development of epilepsy surgery in India. +Friedrich August Albert Holste, known as August Fred Holste, (September 8, 1874 – ?) +Career statisticsReferencesExternal links Category:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Rillieux-la-PapeCategory:French footballersCategory:France youth international footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:2. +He and his wife Jessica (a chalet maid he met in Verbier) have three children, including a daughter named Talitha. +ReferencesCategory:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Kazakhstani female handball playersCategory:Handball players at the 2018 Asian Games +Teams qualified by winning their respective District Championships. +It is made up of a nave, chancel, north chapel and north-west tower. +Corticibacterium is a genus of bacteria from the family of Phyllobacteriaceae with one known species (Corticibacterium populi). +Today, the most predominant reminder of the towns former glory is the railway platform. +On 15 September 2010, Braga were heavily defeated 6–0 by Arsenal in its first group stage match. +Programs Kiss Morning - a news and music program during the morning hours in Taiwan. +However, the high price would also have discouraged government prosecution for a book that contained radical political views. +Sch., etc., Utah K19HB-D in Oljeto, Utah K19HC-D in Hoehne, Colorado K19HE-D in Bluff, Utah K19HG-D in Redstone, Colorado K19HH-D in Midland, etc., Oregon K19HJ-D in Pinedale, etc., Wyoming K19HQ-D in Virgin, Utah K19HR-D in Toquerville, Utah K19HS-D in Grants Pass, Oregon K19HU-D in Montezuma Creek & Aneth, Utah K19HV in Deming, New Mexico K19HZ-D in Jackson, Minnesota K19IC-D in Eureka, California K19ID-D in Green River, Utah K19IG-D in Mexican Hat, etc., Utah K19IH-D in Willmar, Minnesota K19II-D in Ardmore, Oklahoma K19IM-D in Duckwater, Nevada K19IP-D in Flagstaff, Arizona K19IR-D in Enid, Oklahoma K19IS-D in Inyokern, California K19IU-D in Battle Mountain, Nevada K19IX-D in Romeo, Colorado K19JA-D in Cortez, Colorado K19JC-D in Mazama, Washington K19JJ-D in Vale, Oregon K19JM-D in Emigrant, Montana K19JO-D in Harlowton, etc., Montana K19JQ-D in Big Sandy, Montana K19JR-D in Wolf Point, Montana K19JW-D in Mauna Loa, Hawaii K19JX-D in Yakima, Washington K19JZ-D in Carlsbad, New Mexico K19KN-D in Eads, etc., Colorado K19KP-D in Hermiston, Oregon K19KU-D in Walla Walla, Washington K19KW-D in Greybull, Wyoming K19LC-D in Pagosa Springs, Colorado K19LD-D in Bayfield, Colorado K19LG-D in Rural Garfield County, Utah K19LH-D in Teasdale, etc., Utah K19LI-D in St. James, Minnesota K19LK-D in Panguitch, Utah K19LL-D in Henrieville, Utah K19LN-D in Mayfield, Utah K19LR-D in Huntsville, etc., Utah K19LT-D in Prineville, etc., Oregon K19LZ-D in Las Cruces & Organ, New Mexico K19MB-D in Mountain Home, Idaho K19MI-D in Salem, Oregon K21LF-D in Granite Falls, Minnesota K32FQ-D in St. George, Utah K38EH-D in Walker Lake, Nevada K43MB-D in Orderville, Utah K44AB-D in Keokuk, Iowa K45IL-D in Hobbs, New Mexico K47DJ-D in Prescott, Arizona K49AI in Cody/Powell, Wyoming K49JG-D in Frost, Minnesota KAJN-CD in Lafayette, Louisiana KBBV-CD in Bakersfield, California KEGG-LD in Tulsa, Oklahoma KFBI-LD in Medford, Oregon KFJK-LD in Santa Fe, New Mexico KGBS-CD in Austin, Texas KGRF-LD in Gila River Indian Co, Arizona KHDF-CD in Las Vegas, Nevada KIPB-LD in Pine Bluff, Arkansas KJII-LD in Lincoln, Nebraska KKTW-LD in Minneapolis, Minnesota KMBY-LD in Templeton, California KMPH-CD in Merced-Mariposa, California KNTS-LP in Natchitoches, Louisiana KOBS-LD in San Antonio, Texas KOTV-DT in Mcalester, Oklahoma KPDR-LD in Salt Lake City, Utah KPTN-LD in St. Louis, Missouri KSBS-CD in Denver, Colorado KTEV-LP in Texarkana, Arkansas KTGF-LD in Great Falls, Montana KUFS-LD in Fort Smith, Arkansas KUMN-LD in Moses Lake, etc., Washington KVBA-LP in Alamogordo, New Mexico KWWE-LD in Lake Charles, Louisiana KXTS-LD in Victoria, Texas W19CA in Lumberton, North Carolina W19CO-D in Pensacola, Florida W19CR-D in Tryon, North Carolina W19CX in Sterling-Dixon, Illinois W19DB-D in Franklin, North Carolina W19DD-D in Brevard, North Carolina W19DV-D in Luquillo, Puerto Rico W19EB-D in Lumberton, Mississippi WANX-LP in Columbus, Georgia WBPI-CD in Augusta, Georgia WCLL-CD in Columbus, Ohio WDNI-CD in Indianapolis, Indiana WDSF-LD in Montgomery, Alabama WDXA-LD in Florence, South Carolina WEYW-LP in Key West, Florida WFKB-LD in Midland, Michigan WFND-LD in Findlay, Ohio WGSR-LD in Reidsville, North Carolina WKPZ-CD in Kingsport, Tennessee WLOW-LP in Beaufort, South Carolina WLWK-CD in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin WMMF-LP in Vero Beach, Florida WODR-LD in Wausau, Wisconsin WOTM-LP in Montevallo, Alabama WPED-LD in Jackson, Tennessee WRDM-CD in Hartford, Connecticut WRGB in Pittsfield, Massachusetts WSBS-CD in Miami, Etc., Florida WTKJ-LP in Watertown, New York WVGN-LD in Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands WWKQ-LD in Quebradillas, Puerto Rico WYFX-LD in Youngstown, Ohio WYSJ-CA in Yorktown, VirginiaThe following low-power stations, which are no longer licensed, formerly broadcast on analog channel 19: K19CE in Montrose, Colorado K19CL in Inyokern, California KDSL-CA in Ukiah, California KLPS-LP in Indio, California KMBA-LP in Ontario, Oregon KQRE-LP in Bend, Oregon W19BR in Monkton, Vermont W19CI in Berwick, Pennsylvania WEMW-CD in Greensburg, PennsylvaniaReferences19 low-power +Jeglin v. San Jacinto Unified School District, 827 F.Supp. +The first British edition was issued by Mayflower-Dell in 1964 and reprinted in 1965. +The larvae have been recorded feeding on Piper auritum and Piper umbricola. +ReferencesExternal links Profile at sports-reference.comCategory:1928 birthsCategory:1980 deathsCategory:People from TehranCategory:Olympic wrestlers of IranCategory:Wrestlers at the 1948 Summer OlympicsCategory:Iranian male sport wrestlers +OperationsThe Rosseti's property portfolio comprises interests in 44 joint-stock subsidiaries and affiliates, including interests in 11 IDGCs and 5 RDGCs. +ReferencesExternal linksProfile at Voetbal InternationalCategory:1978 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from VelsenCategory:Association football fullbacksCategory:Dutch footballersCategory:AGOVV Apeldoorn playersCategory:De Graafschap playersCategory:Feyenoord playersCategory:Eredivisie playersCategory:Eerste Divisie playersCategory:Dutch MuslimsCategory:Converts to Islam +Trigena is a genus of moths in the family Cossidae. +First episode was aired on 13 January 2016. +First RoundSecond RoundQuarter FinalsSemi FinalsFinalReferencesExternal linksChallenge Cup official websiteChallenge Cup 1923/24 results at Rugby League ProjectCategory:Challenge CupChallenge Cup +It is named after Dr. William Davis Melton and built in 1928. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Dębica County +He moved to Richmond, Virginia and amassed the most complete collection of photographs of that city. +Barr flourished during the 1950s in nightclubs, television, and radio. +Shortly afterwards, the same group petitioned to remove "God" from the Canadian national anthem, "O Canada", but to no avail. +Aglaia subsessilis is a species of plant in the family Meliaceae. +Castle Road separates West Ridge from the northern neighborhood of North Ridge. +There is an extensible proboscis above the mouth. +He is the brother of Tony Rüegg and the uncle of Reto Rüegg, Ivo Rüegg and Ralph Rüegg, all of whom have also competed in bobsleigh. +It is classified under . +ClimateThe climate of 82 R.B. +It is based on The Truman Show. +Paradise, California is an incorporated town in Butte County, CaliforniaParadise, California also refers to:Paradise, Mono County, CaliforniaThe former name of Shively, CaliforniaThe former name of Paradise Flat, California +One such author, Daniel Gilbert, states, in his entry:Biology Several key ideas in biology were written about in the book, such as genetics, other life in the universe, and the origin of life. +More than 150 sites were nominated from 34 countries. +He wants to be a lawyer just like his uncle. +Publication history UK first hardback edition: July 1992 Hodder & Stoughton U.S. first hardback edition: June 1992 Putnam UK first paperback edition: July 1993 Coronet Books U.S. first paperback edition: August 1993 Berkley BooksSee also Outline of James BondReferencesCategory:1992 British novelsCategory:James Bond booksCategory:Novels by John Gardner (British writer)Category:Hodder & Stoughton books +Club careerHe made his debut in the Soviet Top League in 1987 for FC Dynamo Moscow. +Promotion and relegation following 2015-16 seasonFrom the Premier League Relegated to the Championship Newcastle United Norwich City Aston VillaFrom the Championship Promoted to the Premier League Burnley Middlesbrough Hull City Relegated to League One Charlton Athletic Milton Keynes Dons Bolton WanderersFrom League One Promoted to the Championship Wigan Athletic Burton Albion Barnsley Relegated to League Two Doncaster Rovers Blackpool Colchester United Crewe AlexandraFrom League Two Promoted to League One Northampton Town Oxford United Bristol Rovers AFC Wimbledon Relegated to the National League Dagenham & Redbridge York CityFrom the National League Promoted to League Two Cheltenham Town Grimsby TownChampionshipTablePlay-offsResultsLeague OneTablePlay-offsResultsLeague TwoTablePlay-offsResultsManagerial changesReferences 2016-17 +MembersFinal lineupJohn Nelson – Vocals, GuitarsDave Melkonian – DrumsMonday Busque – BassPast membersNicole Allie - Bass, VocalsShawn Knight - Guitars, Keyboards, VocalsAndy Roy - DrumsScott Behnan - DrumsMike Chavarria - GuitarsNick Pallos - DrumsDiscographyLPsThe Open Heart (2002, Plumline)Parting Shots (2005, Asaurus)Modern Problems (2006, Contraphonic)Energy Shortage (2009, Jack Holmes Recording Co.)EPsHot War (2003, Plumline)Iron Triangle (2003, Boyarm/Plumline)More Nature (2005, Melodic Virtue)Model Citizen (2008, Asaurus)7"sOberlin/ Shooting Blanks split with The Trembling (2001, Plumline)The Day After/ Airwolf (2003, Wax Detroit)ReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteNew Grenada on MyspaceCategory:Indie rock musical groups from MichiganCategory:Musical groups established in 2001 +ReferencesAuthority Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at :fr:Famille Pipenpoy; see its history for attribution. +Castle Comfort is a community in Saint George Parish, Dominica. +Exercise Mavi Balina (Exercise Blue Whale) is an international anti submarine warfare exercise led by Turkish Naval Forces. +In 1959, the Goa Football Association was established as the official administrative body of football and from that season onwards the league was conducted by GFA. +(1969.03.06 – 1973.11.26) Bishop Nestorius Timanywa (1973.11.26 - 2013.01.15) Bishop Desiderius M. Rwoma (2013.01.15 - present)Auxiliary BishopsMethod Kilaini (2009-)Placidus Gervasius Nkalanga, O.S.B. +Twilight yearsWedgwood was a homosexual with what he described as an "almost unbelievably strong" sexual urge (he once visited 18 public toilets in two hours, explaining to police that he had been "searching for a friend"). +Düsedau is a village and a former municipality in the district of Stendal, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. +Also on a Saturday the station had the latest team news ahead of the afternoon football matches from 12pm - 2pm with Gavin Pearson and from 2pm Fraser Thomson has score updates and news. +He was known for using precise terminology in his plant descriptions. +Muse trophyThe trophy was created by the recognized Mexican plastic artist Jorge Marín, who previewed the award as a silhouette of a woman. +Lieutenant Perez's military awards include the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Army Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon, and the Combat Action Badge. +USS Wasp may refer to: was a merchant schooner purchased by the Continental Navy in late 1775 and destroyed in 1777 was a sloop constructed in 1806 and captured during the War of 1812 was a schooner built in 1810 and sold after 1814 was a sloop chartered in 1813 and returned to her owners in 1814 was a ship-rigged sloop-of-war constructed in 1813 and lost in a storm at sea in 1814., originally the captured Confederate Emma Henry, renamed Wasp in June 1865 and found unfit for further service in 1876, was the first steam yacht Columbia launched 1893 by William Cramp, acquired and commissioned in 1898 by the Navy and used as a training ship until sold in 1919, a steel-hulled motorboat, was leased by the U.S. Navy and performed patrol duties in 1917, laid down in 1936, was an aircraft carrier that saw action in World War II until sunk by in September 1942 an aircraft carrier launched in 1943 and served until 1972 is lead ship of the s and was launched in 1989 and in active serviceCategory:United States Navy ship names +In 1873 Mahmud Shah was ousted from power by the governor of Afghan Turkestan, Naib Muhammad Alam Khan. +OperasThe Oracle, (1894)Narcissa, or The Cost of Empire, (1911)The Leper, (written 1912)Memories (1914)Harmony, (1917)The Flaming Arrow, or, The Shaft of Ku' Pish-ta-ya, (1922)David Rizzio, (1928)Los Rubios, (1931)Flutes of Jade Happiness, (1933)Légende Provençale, unperformed, orchestral score lostReferencesFurther reading Moore, Johnny. +The single became a number #1 dance hit on the US Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play, and charted at number sixty-eight on the US R&B as well as in the UK Top 75. +René Strehler (born April 13, 1934 in Affoltern am Albis) is a Swiss former professional racing cyclist. +At the time of his death, he was working on All the Sincerity In Hollywood, a one-character play based on the life of radio comedian Fred Allen. +In 1962 Khimik changed its name to Dnieprovets and in 1967 - to Prometei. +See also Demographics of Niger Seasonal migration in NigerReferences James Decalo. +Charla, who had volunteered to swim and then had to be replaced by Melissa at the last minute, agrees to leave; Duncan Nutter also volunteers to leave. +Her sketches are held by the University of California, Berkeley. +The Swan estate was purchased by Siegel and Kretchmer and the Siegels went on to build the Commodore and Stevensville the latter developing into a large sprawling hotel run by the Dinnerstein family. +The amusement park was accessible primarily by ferry service and a wooden swing bridge built in 1927 to carry automobiles and pedestrians. +It is located in Gogne District in the Gash-Barka region. +HistoryAfter the German reunification the two districts of Hagenow and Ludwigslust were established. +ReferencesExternal links unaf official website Category:UNAF competitions +In 1852 he became a full professor of German language and literature at Erlangen. +HistorySterling School was founded as a boys' college preparatory school by Norman Rioux in 1958. +TISUS (Test i svenska för universitets- och högskolestudier, or Test in Swedish for University Studies) is an official exam of proficiency in the Swedish language required for students applying to study at Swedish universities. +A few weeks earlier at MacLaren's Bar, Marshall tells Barney that he wants the next slap from the slap bet to be as painful as humanly possible. +Mai Narva is two times Estonian Women's Chess Championship winner (2014, 2016) and European U16 Girls Champion (2014). +Another spectacular feature of the cenotaph is an inscription of the names of eminent military personnel who served in the two world wars. +Between 1926 and 1935 they were called SC Rot Weiß Frankfurt and played mostly in the Bezirksliga Main-Hessen. +In 1944 he requested that Tannu Tuva should be annexed by the Soviet Union. +CareerWoods was born in Glasgow and played for local side Morton before he moved south to England with Stoke. +References Category:Populated places in Oman +"We Don't Play Guitars" is the first single from Chicks on Speed's album 99 Cents and features Peaches. +The surname Turov (feminine: Turova) may refer to: Maxim Turov (born 1979), Russian chess GrandmasterIrina TurovaAnna Turova Turau (surname), Belarusian-language form; may be used interchangeably with the Russian form for Belarusian personscategory:Russian-language surnames +In 1856, the Russian Steam Navigation and Trading Company (Russkoe Obschchestvo Parokhodstva i Torgovli or РОПиТ, ROPiT) took over postal operations. +Ghostin may refer to: "Ghostin'", a song from the album The One and Only by Lil Wyte "Ghostin" (Ariana Grande song), a song from the album thank u, next by Ariana Grande Ghostin Lar, a village in Qazvin Province, Iran Ghost-riding, an activity similar to car surfing +Aldo Tonti (2 March 1910 – 2 July 1988) was an Italian cinematographer. +Schools in the district include Joaquin Moraga Intermediate School, Camino Pablo Elementary School, Donald Rheem Elementary School, and Los Perales Elementary School. +In The Complete Book of the Olympics: 1896-1980. +It is a perennial herb with a thin, reddish stem reaching about 30 centimeters in maximum height surrounded by many grasslike leaves. +Muktijoddha SangsadIn December 2014, he moved to Bangladesh where on 28 December 2014, he was appointed as the head coach of Bangladesh Premier League club, Muktijoddha Sangsad KC. +Assigned to the Naval Overseas Transportation Service, Sudbury loaded a cargo of United States Army supplies and departed Philadelphia on 20 March 1918 for New York City, where she joined a convoy that got underway for France on 24 March 1918. +Musical style Khold play their music in a raw and primitive manner, using only guitar, bass guitar and drums. +Kole may refer to:Kole, a superhero from the DC UniverseKole (name)Kolë, an Albanian masculine given nameKole, Democratic Republic of the CongoKole District, a district in Northern UgandaKole, Uganda, the principal municipality in Kole DistrictBakole language of CameroonBakole people of CameroonFr Eugene Kole OFM Conv served as Quincy University's 20th presidentKOLE, a radio stationKole, an early ring name of American professional wrestler Booker Huffman, better known as Booker T +See alsoNotesReferencesExternal linksCategory:United Kingdom labour case lawCategory:Court of Appeal of England and Wales casesCategory:1993 in British lawCategory:1993 in case law +Incumbents Monarch – George II Prime Minister – Robert Walpole (Whig) (until 11 February); Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington (Whig) (starting 16 February) Parliament – 9thEvents January – the House of Commons votes on the alleged rigging of the Chippenham by-election. +88, No. +ReferencesCategory:Swedish female cyclistsCategory:Cyclists at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic cyclists of SwedenCategory:Living peopleCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:1975 births +Other houses in the village include Hefferson Grange, Dalefords Manor, Gorstage Hall, Sandiway Lodge, Overdale, Nunsmere Hall, Sandiway Manor, Littlefold, Pettypool House and Oakmere Hall (1867). +Science Methods and Process Skills: Meet Tierney Thys, National Geographic Emerging Explorer, by Kathy Cabe Trundle, was published by National Geographic School Publishing in 2011. +Duncan Creek may refer to:Duncan Creek (Crooked Creek), a stream in MissouriDuncan Creek (Little Osage River), a stream in MissouriDuncan Creek (California), a tributary of Pinole CreekDuncan Creek (Idaho), a National Wild and Scenic RiverDuncan Creek (South Carolina), traversed by South Carolina Highway 391 +Parameter selection: typically choose or , and depends greatly on the application. +It has been found to act as a weak TrkB receptor agonist. +Any EU citizens with residence in Hungary have the right to vote for a party-list. +393–397. +It is endemic to Australia. +66th New York Film Critics Circle AwardsJanuary 14, 2001Best Picture: Traffic The 66th New York Film Critics Circle Awards, honoring the best in film for 2000, were announced on 13 December 2000 and presented on 14 January 2001 by the New York Film Critics Circle. +Jason Boland may refer to:Jason Boland, member and lead vocalist and guitarist for the Texas-based US band Jason Boland & The StragglersJason Boland, member and bass guitarist of the Irish rock band Kodaline +Julie Nauche born June 4, 1988 in La Réunion (France) is the Regional Director of Miss Earth Reunion and Miss Earth Mauritius. +ReferencesExternal links JNF Blueprint Negev site SavetheNegev.org Category:Environment of IsraelCategory:Israeli societyCategory:Land managementCategory:Land management in IsraelCategory:Negev +ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Jessamine County, KentuckyCategory:Unincorporated communities in Kentucky +Babauta and his running mate, Diego Benavente, won the election with 44.9 of the vote, Fitial came in second with 25.5%, Borja placed third with 18.0% and Tenorio finished last with 11.5% of the total vote. +Vincent Vittoz (born 17 July 1975 in Annecy, Haute-Savoie) is a French former cross-country skier, non-commissioned officer and coach. +Afropsipyla similis is a species of snout moth in the genus Afropsipyla. +Natoltiga Okalah is a Chadian professional football manager. +In 2008, she won her first gold medal in Bouldering World Cup in Montauban, France. +It was agreed that Mahathir would take Wolf as its mascots, Hussein takes Phoenix, Rahman takes Scorpion and Razak takes Serpent. +Twin towns – sister citiesGmina Brenna is twinned with: Baiersdorf, Germany Fleurbaix, France Główczyce, PolandReferencesExternal links BrennaCategory:Cieszyn CountyCategory:Cieszyn Silesia +Example $ nl tf 1 echo press cr 2 read cr 3 doneThe following example numbers only the lines that begin with a capital letter A (matching on the regular expression /^A/). +The film was recorded as a Blockbuster at the box office. +Paragovo is connected to Sremska Kamenica and Novi Sad by bus line No.72. +The Miroslav Holding Co. (original title: Holding) is a Croatian film directed by Tomislav Radić. +At the time, in the Roman Empire it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Terentius and Bassus (or, less frequently, year 964 Ab urbe condita). +Together they all return to the hangar, losing the businessman to aliens along the way. +Chook or Chooks may also refer to: Chook Sibtain (born 1969), English actor Charles "Chook" Fraser (1893–1981), Australian rugby league footballer Chooks Fresh & Tasty, a Western Australian fast food chain +References Category:Township-level divisions of HeilongjiangCategory:Keshan County +Pools compositionFirst roundPool A|}|}Pool B|}|}Pool C|}|}Final round7th–10th places|}|}Final six|}|}Final standingExternal linksResults at FIVB.orgWFIVB Men's World ChampionshipVCategory:FIVB Volleyball Men's World ChampionshipCategory:Sports competitions in PragueCategory:September 1949 sports eventsCategory:1940s in Prague +Notable people with the name include:Surname:Bill L. Harbert (1923–2010), American businessmanChick Harbert (1915–1992), American golferElizabeth Boynton Harbert (1843-1925), American author, lecturer, reformer, philanthropistJohn M. Harbert (1921–1995), American businessmanMarguerite Harbert (born 1924), American billionaireRaymond J. Harbert, American businessman and philanthropist. +High and Low () is a 1933 French drama film directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst. +OffseasonCFL DraftPreseasonRegular seasonSeason standingsSeason scheduleAwards and records2005 CFL All-Stars Adriano Belli - DTEastern Division All-Star Selections Adriano Belli - DTReferencesCategory:Hamilton Tiger-Cats seasonsHamilton +TreatmentMuscle atrophy can be delayed, prevented and sometimes reversed with treatment. +This helped the club win automatic promotion to Scottish League One. +He made his Continental Cup debut with a fourth place in December 2014 in Engelberg, and has won two events on the summer circuit; in August 2015 in Wisla and September 2016 in Lillehammer. +Hideyoshi planned to invade Korea and China, and demanded that the Kingdom supply 10 months' rations for 7,000 troops to aid in his invasions through agents of Satsuma. +Nevertheless, visionaries such as Vaughn and Oliver recognized that the network would eventually become digital, requiring digital switching technologies. +Early life and familyBorn at Broughty Ferry, Scotland, on 17 March 1885, Gilray was the fourth child of Annie Gilray (née Macdonald) and her husband, Thomas Gilray, at the time professor of English language and literature at University College, Dundee. +Hoplocorypha foliata is a species of praying mantis found in Tanzania. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1974 filmsCategory:1970s comedy filmsCategory:Czechoslovak filmsCategory:Czechoslovak comedy filmsCategory:Czech-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Karel SteklýCategory:Czech filmsCategory:Czech comedy films +Murex forskoehlii is a species of large predatory sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the rock snails or murex snails. +Banda SoatáEllen Oléria participates as well in the Banda Soatá, a bond of alternative rock e carimbo founded in 2007, with members from Federal District and Pará from band Epadu. +in 1940. +Central Medford High School (formerly Medford Opportunity High School) is a public alternative high school in Medford, Oregon, United States. +The first glimpse of this album could be caught when the band released the single "Endlich ein Grund zur Panik", which had a video clip featuring the band in superhero costumes. +Ramsau may refer to:Ramsau, Lower AustriaRamsau am Dachstein, AustriaRamsau bei Berchtesgaden, Germany the German name of , Czech Republic +League tableSee also2006 Russian Premier LeagueReferences PFL2Category:Russian Football National League seasonsRussiaRussia +Addicted To Love is a Singaporean and Malaysian co-production Chinese drama which is being telecast on Malaysia's free-to-air channel, ntv7. +References Category:Bishops of LinzCategory:People from CeljeCategory:1745 birthsCategory:1825 deaths +With Iraq's increasing difficulties keeping up payments for Portuguese arms, on 29 September 1983 the Portuguese government of Mário Soares secretly authorised sales to Iran. +After a brief military service, he made his perpetual profession at Sarrìa on 11 December 1928. +The next year, he moved onto the United States' U20 team at the 2002 World Juniors. +The northern terminus of Quincy Shore Drive is at Hancock Street (Massachusetts Route 3A), just south of the Neponset River. +They are: Mulgan (red) Named after William Edward Mulgan Stewart (blue) Named after George Vesey Stewart Macmillan (green) Named after Donald Theodore Macmillan Gledstanes (purple) Named after Edward GledstanesReferencesExternal links Katikati CollegeCategory:Secondary schools in the Bay of Plenty RegionCategory:Western Bay of Plenty District +ZF products include driveline technology (automatic, manual, servo, sequential manual, special transmission, driveline components, rubber-metal technology, transfer case, hybrid system) chassis technology (chassis components and modules, steering technology, suspension systems) additional technologies (electronic/software, diagnostic systems, precision plastic technology, lubricants) Axle systems and dropsApplicationsCars, trucks, buses & coaches, light commercial vehicles, off-road equipment, rail vehicles, helicopters, motorcycles, lift trucks, machine and system construction, test systems, civil mobile, cranes, and special marine, military and agricultural vehicles and machines. +Rover SD1A Rover SD1 was substantially modified by Charlie Broomfield using a Rover Meteor tank derivative of the Merlin. +Justice Lansden's order broke a parliamentary logjam created by a lack of a legislative quorum (on a motion for reconsideration of the previous vote approving the amendment) and removed the final legal obstacle to Tennessee becoming the 36th and final state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment. +A plan was mooted in 2010 to extend the existing Byculla Zoo in South Mumbai by building a zoo with no enclosures on land that would be acquired from both the colony as well as the adjacent Sanjay Gandhi National Park. +Many drop-in centers provide free services, and some offer services for a nominal fee. +|| (s)he reads|-|colspan=3|"the boy reads the book"|-|colspan=3|Litrary: "the boy is involved in reading the book"|}An example with an transitive verb реты "gives" and indirect object пшъашъэм "girl". +External links Category:1987 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Togolese footballersCategory:Togo international footballersCategory:Association football goalkeepers +Atrichopleura is a genus of flies in the family Empididae. +ReferencesCategory:1997 establishments in AustraliaCategory:2006 disestablishments in AustraliaCategory:Australian computer magazinesCategory:Defunct computer magazinesCategory:Defunct magazines of AustraliaCategory:Free magazinesCategory:Magazines established in 1997Category:Magazines disestablished in 2006Category:Magazines published in SydneyCategory:Online computer magazinesCategory:Online magazines with defunct print editions +The Masses Are Asses is a quote attributed to Alexander Hamilton, and can refer to:A 1974 play by Pedro PietriA 1997 song by the female punk rock group L7 appearing on the album The Beauty Process: Triple PlatinumA phrase used by Karl Rove (in the negative) during his July 29, 2006 address to the graduating class of the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington UniversityThe title of a 2010 book by Jennifer Syme (not the actress); "a behind the scenes look into the restaurant business" by a former server. +Pisary may refer to the following places in Poland:Pisary, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland)Pisary, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south Poland)Pisary, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship (south-central Poland) +The technique is of ancient origin, and has long been used to propagate bulbs such as garlic and saffron. +The next day, 10 August 1945,the Kaibokan CD-82 departs Orang Bay. +A major event in April 1888 was the funeral of Joseph Fletcher (1824–1888) a saddler of Royal Parade, who had many friends and business acquaintances. +Notable works Cette Afrique là ! +There are also murals and paintings of the classical novel Romance of Three Kingdoms, including dolls decorated on the wall decorations for visiting and worshipping. +Unusually for modern comedy specials, the film was shot in black and white. +In order to increase the utilization of the Wriezener Bahn, the Reichsbahn and from 1994 the Deutsche Bahn extended the offer further. +A coin hoard found here suggested that it was a minting centre of the Yaudheya kingdom. +Diocese of Turku may refer to the following ecclesiastical jurisdictions with episcopal see in Turku (Åbo), in Finland : the former Roman Catholic Diocese of Turku (Åbo) Bishopric of Turku, originally Roman Catholic, later Lutheran the present Lutheran Archdiocese of Turku +The novel was republished in audiobook form in 2013, and a new illustrated edition was published in 2015. +Veljko Batrović (born 1994)Zoran Batrović (born 1958) Montenegrin former footballerDejan Batrović (born 1971) Montenegrin former footballerSee alsoBatrić, given nameReferencesCategory:Serbian-language surnames +Other positions include being deputy president for policy at the International Crisis Group, a Randolph Jennings senior fellow at the US Institute of Peace, and advisor to the Women's Refugee Commission, the UN Development Fund for Women, the UN Civil Society Advisory Group for Women, Peace and Security, and the Institute for Inclusive Security. +By the end of the 1860s, however, an influx of German immigrants had altered the ethnic composition of Stockton. +The median income for a household in the city was $49,079, and the median income for a family was $56,543. +The 2014 IPP Open and the Orto-Lääkärit Open were professional tennis tournaments played on indoor hard courts. +References Official Web PageCategory:1997 establishments in RomaniaCategory:2014 disestablishments in RomaniaCategory:Bauer Media GroupCategory:Bi-monthly magazinesCategory:Magazines established in 1997Category:Magazines disestablished in 2014Category:Romanian magazinesCategory:Romanian-language magazinesCategory:Youth magazinesCategory:Celebrity magazinesCategory:Defunct magazines of Romania +Game 5Alaska took an early 24-12 lead in the first quarter. +The building has since been demolished. +After Gert took Hansen to a party hosted by Wilhelmina Cooper, former model and owner of the Wilhelmina Models, Cooper signed the teen to her agency. +A 1834 bronze sculpture of Thomas Jefferson by Pierre-Jean David d'Angers is installed in the United States Capitol's rotunda, in Washington, D.C.ReferencesCategory:1830s sculpturesCategory:Bronze sculptures in Washington, D.C.Category:Monuments and memorials in Washington, D.C.Category:Sculptures of men in Washington, D.C.Category:Statues of Thomas JeffersonCategory:United States Capitol statues +ReferencesExternal links Category:OrtenaukreisCategory:Spa towns in Germany +Joy Nash is an American actress best known for her role as Alicia "Plum" Kettle on the AMC television series Dietland. +Renukamma was a winner of Gubbi veeranna award. +ReferencesExternal links. +Most routes also operate in loops with one-way segments. +The road widens into a divided highway and runs between the Nemours Mansion and Gardens to the east and the DuPont Country Club to the northwest. +His son is Terry McBride, who fronted the 1990s country band McBride & the Ride and has written singles for Brooks & Dunn. +Paoli's memoirs were recorded by Boswell in his book, An Account of Corsica. +In October 2010, Robinson was a guest star on a celebrity edition episode of the game show Don't Forget the Lyrics. +"Week Ending March 13, 2011: Spears' Second Act". +IFPA was granted provisional 501(c)(3) status by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service in early 2001, and was granted permanent charitable status under 501(c)(3) as a sports organization in early 2006. +He was waived two days later after failing his physical. +OSCAR 5 (a.k.a. +His family emigrated to Towanda, Pennsylvania in his youth. +ChartsReferencesExternal linksWatch "It Hurts" short film on YouTubeWatch "It Hurts" Live 7th Avenue Drop on YouTube Category:Angels & Airwaves songsCategory:2006 singlesCategory:Songs written by Tom DeLongeCategory:2006 songsCategory:Geffen Records singles +Jordanoleiopus subunicolor is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. +Netkachevo () is a rural locality (a selo) in Mokroolkhovskoye Rural Settlement, Kotovsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. +(concert film, 2010)Notable side projects After Hours (1985) Both Cheech and Chong appear. +Therefore, the regulations on fireworks were relaxed in 2006 and 2017 due to the influence of traditional cultural concepts. +Rafael Gutiérrez and Rodrigo Cachero serve as the directors. +Species Scatoglyphus polytrematus Berlese, 1913ReferencesCategory:Acaridae +He lived in Littleton, Massachusetts. +Kalevala (; ) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) and the administrative center of Kalevalsky District in the Republic of Karelia, Russia. +Pūanu Glacier () is a glacier that occupies the upper portion of Papitashvili Valley in the Apocalypse Peaks of Victoria Land. +With these two issues addressed, the Anthracite League was formed. +Syed Muhammad Moshin is a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and the former Member of Parliament of Dhaka-11. +Since that time, she’s written over thirty Christian titles, in addition to the thirty-two she had in the secular market. +And these pentacles do consist either of Characters of the good spirits of the superiour order, or of sacred pictures of holy letters or revelations, with apt and fit versicles, which are composed either of Geometrical figures and holy names of God, according to the course and maner of many of them; or they are compounded of all of them, or very many of them mixt. +The Hampton Union Delivered by carrier to 4,810 subscribers each Friday and Tuesday morning in Hampton, Hampton Falls, North Hampton and Seabrook, New Hampshire. +Mayen Adetiba who was a civil engineer and the President of the Association of Consulting Engineers of Nigeria was the first woman to be elected to the Executive Committee - and she was vice-President. +Doby was a star for the hometown Cleveland Indians the year of Johnson's birth. +The large moth family Crambidae contains the following genera beginning with "W":References WCrambid +External linksMission Hospitals websiteCategory:Sports in North Carolina +ReferencesCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup playersCategory:AB Castelló playersCategory:Basket Zaragoza playersCategory:Bàsquet Manresa playersCategory:Dominican Republic men's basketball players +Mernier is a member of the Académie Royale de Belgique. +Eviction normally takes the form of a lawsuit, requiring an initial notice to a tenant, followed by court proceedings in which the tenant may contest the eviction and potentially file a counter-claim. +It is found in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and Paraguay; its habitat includes the Gran Chaco. +The editor-in-chief is Gerardo Marti (Davidson College). +He graduated from Toms River High School East in 1993 and then studied acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of Theatre before beginning his professional career in New York City; he later moved to Los Angeles. +Mosada at Internet Archive. +Kobeigane Divisional Secretariat is a Divisional Secretariat of Kurunegala District, of North Western Province, Sri Lanka. +One of his eleven children, his son William George later also served as Aylmer mayor. +Belliquese was a French Navy 12-gun brig launched in 1793 as the name-vessel of her class, and sold in 1797 to serve as a privateer. +This game is also called your-choice tic-tac-toe or . +Vera Alexeevna Shebeko (; born 10 July 1938) is a former Russian anchorwoman for Soviet Central Television and host of the channel's main editorial program Novosti. +Strabo's Geography, Book XV, Chapter 1, § 26 incorrectly states that the Choaspes empties directly into the Cophes. +In 1981 Colonial Williamsburg added a program to explain slavery and its role in Colonial America, but this "Other Half Tour," which is composed by the Foundation's African American and Interpretation Programs Department (AAIP), provides a different form of historical interpretation than does its counterpart tour, "The Patriots' Tour," thus creating a marked dichotomy between how visitors are expected to interpret history at the museum. +Shades of Green may refer to: Shades of green, an article about shades of the colour green Shades of Green (resort), a United States Department of Defense-owned resort at Walt Disney WorldShades of Green (album), by jazz guitarist Grant Green 50 Shades of Green, an album by Tracy TReed Green, American football coachSee also:Category:Shades of green Shades of Greene, a 1975 British television series based on short stories by Graham Greene +BiographyBorn in Rome as Giovanna Giardina, she made her film debut in a French film, Georges Lautner's En plein cirage and later starred both in Italian and in French productions, working with Sergio Sollima, Bernard Borderie, Marco Ferreri, and Lucio Fulci. +Jurnalul Național is a Romanian newspaper, part of the INTACT Media Group led by Dan Voiculescu, which also includes the popular television station Antena 1. +ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Australian rules footballers from TasmaniaCategory:Hobart Football Club playersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +The air echelon assembled at Hamilton Field, then ferried its Liberators to England via the southern ferry route. +Given name Glória Pires Glória Perez Glória Menezes Family name Otto GlóriaGlória can also refer to:Glória (Rio de Janeiro), a neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, BrazilGlória, Bahia, a municipality in the state of Bahia, BrazilGlória, Porto AlegreGlória (Bratislava), a high-rise residential building in Bratislava, SlovakiaGlória (1999 Portuguese film) (1999), a Portuguese film directed by Manuela ViegasGrêmio Esportivo Glória, a Brazilian football club based in Vacaria, Rio Grande do SulSee also Hotel Glória, grand hotel in the Glória neighbourhood of Rio de Janeiro Glória d'Oeste, a town in Central-West Region of BrazilSee also Gloria (disambiguation)Category:Portuguese feminine given namesde:Glória +ReferencesExternal linksState Institute for Nature Protection Category:Conservation in CroatiaCategory:Conservation organizationsCategory:Government agencies established in 2002Category:Government agencies of CroatiaCategory:2002 establishments in Croatia +There were 117 households out of which 29.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 51.3% were married couples living together, 7.7% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.9% were non-families. +Each power had its allies in the region. +Philpstoun railway station closed in 1951 and Philpstoun and District Bowling Club closed in February 2012. +At the 2006 census, its population was 67, in 12 families. +Washam performed with a temporarily reunited Scratch Acid in the Touch and Go Records 25th anniversary concert, which took place on September 9, 2006, in Chicago, Illinois. +While no further demographic details are available from the 2011 census, 84% of residents in 2006 identified themselves as being of Indigenous descent. +Kul Chap (, also Romanized as Kūl Chap) is a village in Jelogir Rural District, in the Central District of Pol-e Dokhtar County, Lorestan Province, Iran. +Riverview Landing is an unincorporated community in King William County, Virginia, United States. +In his second year, he successfully performed the Tarantallegra curse against Harry, a curse used by Death Eater Antonin Dolohov in book 5, and also successfully cast the Serpensortia spell in the same scene, conjuring a serpent from his wand just as Voldemort would later do against Dumbledore in book 5, and Snape against McGonagall in the final book. +CareerShah started her film career in 2009, her debut film Ninnu Kalisaka. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sri Lankan cricketersCategory:Antonians Sports Club cricketersCategory:Kandy Youth Cricket Club cricketersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +Nihonryori RyuGinHe opened his Tokyo based restaurant, Nihonryori RyuGin, in 2003. +The two are then shown sitting on a couch, reading magazines, when Clarkson grabs her boyfriend's magazine. +The defending champion was Carol Huynh from Canada. +The monuments were later quietly removed without public discussion, in ways similar to what took place in Berlin. +Premierships (1/50)The Sharks have only won one Grand Final. +History of the ParishSaint Catharine of Siena Parish was founded October 8, 1919, when Archbishop Dennis Cardinal Dougherty, Archdiocese of Philadelphia appointed the Reverend John C. Phelan as pastor of a new church in the west end of Allentown. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Jablanica District +It is served by lines 11, 12 and 13 of the Oslo Tramway. +ReferencesCategory:1964 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Italian softball playersCategory:Olympic softball players of ItalyCategory:Softball players at the 2000 Summer Olympics +Each code consists of two parts, separated by a hyphen. +Orlowsky was also a textile designer and served her community as a teacher and curator. +Manual audits can be very time-consuming and costly. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Villages in County DurhamCategory:Stanhope, County Durham +Track listing"Music to Hold Hands To" – 3:47"Synchronised Sinking" – 3:56"The Great Dividing Range" – 3:17"Beach Boys Medley" – 1:16"Broken Bones" – 3:36"First Cousin" – 4:04"Don't Bring Your Work to Bed" – 2:44"Fear of Rollercoasters" – 3:33"Harmonicas and Trams" – 4:45"The Forgetting of Wisdom" – 2:01"Self-Preservation" – 2:02"How to Tie a Tie" – 3:24"All the Recipes I've Ever Ruined" – 5:46"The Year of Driving Langourously" – 4:00ReferencesCategory:The Lucksmiths albumsCategory:2001 albums +Lastly, a cold temperature cycle uses the same parameters as the current city loop, except that ambient temperature is set to . +It is also defined as the theory of first principles of knowledge. +St Mary's, Staines, is a Church of England parish church in the town and parish of Staines-upon-Thames, in the Spelthorne borough of Surrey and the Greater London Urban Area. +CareerHe represented the Peddapalli constituency of Telangana and was a member of the Indian National Congress (INC) political party. +eastern North America Alisma triviale Pursh - North America Alisma wahlenbergii (Holmb.) +The company provided bookkeeping and tax preparation services in Kansas City, then expanded tax preparation services after a successful advertising campaign in the Kansas City Star and the Internal Revenue Service decision to phase out free preparation services. +However, it is in post production now and we will hopefully be done with it by March and then hand it over to ARY to release it whenever they deem fit. +He scored a total of 103 runs in his three first-class matches, at an average of 25.75 and a high score of 59 not out. +KET5 and KET6KET5 and KET6 featured live coverage of the Kentucky House of Representatives and Senate respectively on the services, while the state General Assembly was in session. +See alsoList of non-marine molluscs of GreeceReferences Category:OrculidaeCategory:Molluscs of EuropeCategory:Endemic fauna of CreteCategory:Gastropods described in 2004 +Itilima was established in 2012, when it was split off from Bariadi District and became part of the newly established Simiyu Region. +Her essays have been widely anthologized. +In mathematics, Matsumotos's theorem, named for Hideya Matsumoto, may refer to:Matsumoto's theorem (group theory)Matsumoto's theorem (K-theory) +The four families of consonants are attached to the same corner of the vowel, which is reflected or rotated to match the consonant, so that the consonant resides in a different corner of the syllabic block depending on its orientation. +British Wildlife Publishing. +References Category:Rural localities in BashkortostanCategory:Rural localities in Belokataysky District +EducationThe Sergeant Bluff-Luton School District and its four schools — primary, elementary, middle, and high — serve the children of Sergeant Bluff. +Vijay also played a comic role in the hit TV series Dekh Bhai Dekh. +SpeciesNgirhaphium caeruleum Grootaert & Puniamoorthy, 2014Ngirhaphium chutamasae Samoh, Boonrotpong & Grootaert, 2015Ngirhaphium meieri Samoh & Grootaert in Samoh, Satasook & Grootaert, 2019Ngirhaphium murphyi Evenhuis & Grootaert, 2002Ngirhaphium sivasothii Grootaert & Puniamoorthy, 2014Ngirhaphium thaicum Samoh & Grootaert in Samoh, Satasook & Grootaert, 2019ReferencesCategory:RhaphiinaeCategory:Dolichopodidae generaCategory:Diptera of Asia +With her family hierarchy and bloodline, she is expected to be the successor of the soorakgans highest sanggung rank. +In the early 1990s, along with Dwayne McDuffie and John Paul Leon, he co-created Static, an African American teenage superhero, part of the Milestone imprint published by DC Comics. +ReceptionThe Allmusic review awarded the album 4 stars stating "Kenny Drew's 1981 solo piano session for Soul Note is a notch better than his 1973 Steeplechase CD, Everything I Love. +LiteratureIn his 1850 short story, A Poor Man's Tale of a Patent, Charles Dickens satirises the cost and complexity of the English patent system, as it then was, by having his narrator comment that in order to get a patent in England "I went through thirty-five stages. +His only criticism was that the majority of songs performed were her most recent work, stating that he would have preferred more of "the masterpieces Tyler created with Jim Steinman." +It apparently grew to being a large village by the beginning of the 20th-century according to the 1909 Catholic Encyclopedia." +Fröding never married Ida. +He later decided to retire due to a back injury. +Unitwins are a unicycling entertainment duo from Sweden, consisting of twins Martin Sjönneby and Josef Sjönneby. +ClimateReferencesSources – World-Gazetteer.comCategory:Populated places in Dajabón ProvinceCategory:Municipalities of the Dominican Republic +Atop Sex Peak stands the Sex Peak Lookout Station, a decommissioned fire lookout tower which is now available for rental for overnight recreational visits from the United States Forest Service. +He sometimes signed JA Storck, which since 1963 has been interpreted as a work by both Jacobus and Abraham together. +Tekardih is a village in Jaunpur, Uttar Pradesh, India. +Isabelle has two sister ships in the Viking Line fleet, Amorella and Gabriella, and a third one, Crown Seaways, operated by DFDS Seaways. +Rostovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Chushevitskoye Rural Settlement, Verkhovazhsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. +In the lower levels of the Gorin River, the forests are mostly cedar-broadleaf, while spruce and larch dominate more to the north. +According to Zdzisław Najder, "Amy Foster" was inspired partly by an anecdote in Ford Madox Ford's The Cinque Ports (1900), wherein a shipwrecked sailor from a German merchant ship, unable to communicate in English, and driven away by the local country people, finally found shelter in a pigsty. +The keyboard also supports both MIDI and USB ports, allowing connection to computers, as well as other instruments. +References Category:2017 in Indonesian footballCategory:Sport in Aceh +The genus was therefore split and a number of species including Reichard's seedeater were moved to the resurrected genus Crithagra''. +playersCategory:Falkirk F.C. +The remaining PSA became known as 'PSA (Casa del Pueblo)'. +ReferencesCategory:SalticidaeCategory:Spiders described in 2020Category:Spiders of Africa +Once inside the immature ant gut the eggs migrate to the gaster where they will fully mature. +After Emmerdale, Beedles produced the ITV drama Heartbeat and was a story consultant on "River City" for the BBC. +The spotted drum is widespread throughout the tropical waters of the occidental Atlantic Ocean from South Florida to Brazil including by the way the Bermuda, the Bahamas, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. +In a later paper, he analyzed the activity of the gene neurelgin in a large collection of brain samples from schizophrenic patients and found that the regulation of the gene contributes to schizophrenia. +Along with "(Archer)." +In early February, Fannin sailed from Velasco and landed at Copano with four companies of the Georgia Battalion, moving to join a small band of Texians at Refugio. +Euxesta eluta is a species of ulidiid or picture-winged fly in the genus Euxesta of the family Ulidiidae. +ReferencesExternal links Category:2001 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Kosovan women's footballersCategory:Kosovo women's international footballersCategory:Women's association football forwards +See also Korean clan names of foreign originReferencesExternal links Category:Korean clan names of Chinese origin*Category:Yi clans +ScheduleReferencesVanderbilt CommodoresCategory:Vanderbilt Commodores football seasonsVanderbilt Commodores +SpeciesL. angusticornis (Loew, 1847)L. latigena Wood, 1985L. rostrata Herting, 1971ReferencesCategory:Diptera of EuropeCategory:Diptera of North AmericaCategory:ExoristinaeCategory:Tachinidae generaCategory:Taxa named by Jean-Baptiste Robineau-Desvoidy +The Wisconsin Central still uses the track for freight. +Baptiste Amar (born November 11, 1979) is a French former professional ice hockey defenceman who participated at the 2010 IIHF World Championship as a member of the France National men's ice hockey team. +Vasileios Tsiatouras () is a Greek police officer who served as Chief of the Hellenic Police in 2008–2009. +The term "saliva" may refer to:Saliva, spittleSaliva (band), an American alternative hard rock bandSaliva (album), the band's debut albumSəliva, a village in AzerbaijanSaliba language (also referred to as Sáliva), an indigenous Colombian language +ReferencesCategory:1944 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Alumni of the University of BirminghamCategory:English judges +The film was dubbed in Malayalam and was titled as Kuruthikalam. +CMI connected the motor to the arm with a metal-band pulley, the same mechanism they used on their stepper-motor drives. +Lancaster may refer to:Lands and titles The County Palatine of Lancaster, a synonym for LancashireDuchy of Lancaster, one of only two British royal duchiesDuke of LancasterEarl of LancasterHouse of Lancaster, a British royal dynastyPlacesAustraliaLancaster, VictoriaCanadaLancaster, New BrunswickLancaster, Newfoundland and LabradorLancaster, OntarioLancaster, St. Catharines, OntarioLancaster Sound, NunavutUnited Kingdom Lancaster, Lancashire, the original Lancaster from which other place names are derivedLancaster UniversityLancaster (UK Parliament constituency), a historical political districtLancaster and Wyre (UK Parliament constituency), the modern political districtCity of Lancaster, a non-metropolitan local government district based in Lancaster, formed in 1974Lancaster House, LondonUnited StatesLancaster, Arkansas, a ghost town Lancaster, ArizonaLancaster, California, the largest "Lancaster" in the world by population Lancaster, IllinoisLancaster, Huntington County, IndianaLancaster, Jefferson County, IndianaPatricksburg, Indiana, a community also called LancasterLancaster, KansasLancaster, KentuckyLancaster, MassachusettsLancaster, MinnesotaLancaster, MissouriLincoln, Nebraska (once known as Lancaster)Lancaster, New Hampshire Lancaster (CDP), New HampshireLancaster, New YorkLancaster (village), New York, within the town of LancasterLancaster, OhioLancaster, OregonLancaster, Pennsylvania, the oldest inland city and one-time capital of the United StatesLancaster, South Carolina Lancaster, TennesseeLancaster, TexasLancaster, VirginiaLancaster, Wisconsin, a cityLancaster Junction, Wisconsin, an unincorporated communityLancaster County, NebraskaLancaster County, PennsylvaniaLancaster Valley AVA, Pennsylvanian wine regionLancaster County, South CarolinaLancaster County, VirginiaLancaster Township, Pennsylvania (disambiguation), multiple locationsMilitaryAvro Lancaster, the World War II-era bomber aircraftDuke of Lancaster's Regiment, British Army unitHMS Lancaster, six ships of the Royal Navy, 1694 to the presentUSS Lancaster, four ships of the United States Navy, 1858 to 1945Lancaster pistol, a multi-barreled handgunSportsLancaster Barnstormers, a minor league baseball team of the Atlantic LeagueLancaster City F.C., an English football club based in Lancaster, LancashireLancaster Cricket Club, English cricket clubLancaster Football Club, Australian Rules Football team based in Lancaster, AustraliaLancaster JetHawks, a minor league baseball team of the California LeagueLancaster Park, a cricket and rugby ground in Christchurch, New ZealandLancaster Rattlers, American soccer teamLancaster Red Roses, former minor league baseball teamOther Lancaster (surname), people with the surname Lancaster Lancaster station (disambiguation), stations of the name Lancaster Group, a cosmetics company founded in Monaco in 1946, now part of Coty, Inc. J. Lancaster & Son, Birmingham, one of the world's major camera makers in 1898, held several shutter patents Armstrong Siddeley Lancaster, a British car produced between 1945 and 1952 Subaru Legacy Lancaster, the Japanese name for the Subaru Outback sold from 1998–2004 Lancaster, the codename for AMD Turion 64 processor for notebook computersSee also House of LancasterLanchester (disambiguation) +After Alberto Contador was stripped from his victory in the 2011 Giro d'Italia, Michele Scarponi became the new winner. +The Third may also refer to:Her Third, a 1971 GDR film, aka The ThirdThe Third, manga character, see list of Naruto charactersIII, a generational title given to a third family member of the same nameShrek the ThirdSee alsoThird (disambiguation)The Third Age (disambiguation) +Media gallerySee alsoListed buildings in ChatburnChatburn (surname)ReferencesExternal links Chatburn Village e-Chatburn Chatburn conservation areas Apprasial Chatburn search results at Historic England's Pastscape site pp372-73 of The Victoria History of the County of Lancaster Vol 6Category:Villages in LancashireCategory:Civil parishes in LancashireCategory:Geography of Ribble ValleyCategory:Wards of LancashireCategory:Politics of Ribble Valley +that he took the magazine for his son, because of its good pictures. +It lies approximately east of Złoczew, south of Sieradz, and south-west of the regional capital Łódź. +References Category:Populated places in Bahmai County +In the 1960s Walsh was a member of the mathematics faculty at UCLA. +The power station is operated by Eraring Energy and generated of net energy production during 2009, used primarily for peak-load generation. +Saunders was named to the Bowerman Award watch list in 2017. +It provided a good view coverage of the surrounding areas. +Bank BPS Basket Kwidzyn is a Polish basketball team, based in Kwidzyn, playing in Dominet Bank Ekstraliga. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Cornwall +He worked for Disney where he was cast as a Mousketeer before being pulled from the project to appear in Disney's Spin and Marty series. +It isn't an administrative area but is usually considered to comprise four municipalities: Skurup, Svedala, Trelleborg and Vellinge (of which the latter includes the Falsterbo peninsula). +Close to the gate, on the inner side, remains of a grave incorporated into the wall are visible: this is consistent with the project of Emperor Aurelian, who - in order to lessen the costs and speed up the building of the wall circle - integrated former structures within the wall itself. +DemographicsThe population of Sungai Guntung according to Statistics Indonesia estimates were 14,088 in 2016. +Selected filmography The Blue and White Lion (1952) Young Heart Full of Love (1953) Marriage Strike (1953) 52 Weeks Make A Year (1955) The Czar and the Carpenter (1956) My Wife Makes Music (1958) The Dress (1961)External links Category:1925 birthsCategory:1962 deathsCategory:People from Mühldorf (district)Category:German film actressesCategory:20th-century German actresses +Overload is Japanese heavy metal band Anthem's third studio album since their reformation in the year 2000. +People bearing the name Loreta include:Loreta (1911–1998), Iranian actressLoreta Anilionytė (born 19?? +The city was founded by the Paduspanid ruler Eskandar II. +Tuatapere has a logging museum and is located on the Southern Scenic Route from Invercargill to Te Anau making it a well-travelled tourist stop. +It has been documented at elevations of above sea level. +Like several other minority languages in Europe that recently faced decline, Aranese is experiencing a renaissance. +It was released in 1992. +Charts and certificationsWeekly chartYear-end chartsCertificationsReferencesExternal links Maddie & Tae performance videoCategory:2014 singlesCategory:2014 songsCategory:Dot Records singlesCategory:Maddie & Tae songsCategory:Billboard Country Airplay number-one singlesCategory:2014 debut singlesCategory:Music videos directed by TK McKamyCategory:Song recordings produced by Dann HuffCategory:Songs about musicCategory:Songs with feminist themes +It may refer to:Hans Heinrich Thyssen-BornemiszaHeinrich, Baron Thyssen-Bornemisza de KászonPéter BornemiszaAnna BornemiszaGeorge BornemisszaFrancesca Anne Dolores Freiin Thyssen-Bornemisza de Kászon et ImpérfalvaGergely BornemisszaSee alsoList of titled noble families in the Kingdom of HungaryCategory:Hungarian-language surnames +Early life and careerGiovanni Tria was born in Rome in 1948. +1981), American-French comics artist Sophie Dahl (born 1977), English fashion model and author Sophie Delila (born 1983), Singer-songwriter Sophie Ellis-Bextor (born 1979), British singer Sophie Evans (born 1993), British actress and singer Sophie Gradon (1985–2018), English model and marketing manager Sophie Grégoire Trudeau (born 1975), Canadian model and television host, wife of Justin Trudeau Sophie Grigson (born 1959), British cookery writer Sophie Hannah (born 1971), British writer Sophie B. Hawkins (born 1964), American singer-songwriter Sophie Hopkins (born 1990), British actress Sophie Huet (1953–2017), French journalist Sophie Kinsella (born 1969), British writer Sophie Lancaster (1986–2007), British murder victim Sophie Lawrence (born 1972), British actress Sophie Lee (born 1968), Australian actressSophie Ley (1849-1918), German painter Sophie Marceau (born 1966), French actress Sophie McShera (born 1985), English actress Sophie Moleta (born 1969), New Zealand singer-songwriter Sophie Molineux (born 1998), Australian cricketer Sophie Monk (born 1979), Australian singer Sophie Muller (born 1962), British music video director Sophie Nélisse (born 2000), Canadian actress Sophie Okonedo (born 1968), British actress Sophie Price (born 1989), British glamour model Sophie Porley (born 1987), British actress Sophie Raworth (born 1968), British television presenter Sophie Scholl (1921-1943), member of the WWII White Rose resistance Sophie Thompson (born 1962), British actress Sophie Turner, (born 1996) British actress Sophie Vavasseur (born 1992), Irish actress Sophie Ward (born 1964), British actress Sophie Willan (born 1987/88), British comedian Sophie Wilson (born 1957), British computer scientist Sophie Winkleman (born 1980), British actress Sophie Xeon (born 1986), known mononymously as SOPHIE, electronic music producer Sophie Zelmani (born 1972), Swedish singer-songwriterFictional characters Sofie Fatale, from the film Kill Bill Sophie, from the book The BFG and the films The BFG (1989) and The BFG (2016) Sophie, a Belgian comics series by Jidéhem Sophie Bergmann, from the video game Fullmetal Alchemist 3: Kami o Tsugu Shōjo Sophie Burton, from the TV series Hollyoaks Sophie Devereaux, grifter in TNT's Leverage Sophie von Faninal, from the opera Der Rosenkavalier Sophie Hatter, main character of Howl's Moving Castle Sophie Kowalsky, main character in the movie Love Me If You Dare, played by Marion Cotillard Sophie Martinez in the TV series Cory in the House Sophie Neveu, heroine of The Da Vinci Code Sophie Newman, main character of The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel Sophie Sanders, a character from Bunsen Is a Beast Sophie Simpson in the TV series Home and Away Sophie Webster in the soap opera Coronation Street Sophie Zawistowska, character in the novel and film Sophie's Choice Sophie King, a character in the film Cyberbully Sophie Neuenmuller, a character from Atelier Sophie: The Alchemist of the Mysterious Book and its sequel Sophie, a character from Tales of Graces Sophie of Woods Beyond, a main character in the series The School For Good And Evil Sophie, a character from In Treatment Sophie, a minor character from the Doctor Who episode "The Lodger" Sophie, a character of Mamma Mia! +Post-Civil War activityCohasset arrived at Boston Navy Yard on 1 June 1865. +It was officially opened on 4 May by the then Minister of State at the Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, Noel Ahern TD who said, “”As a resident of Inchicore, as the first chairperson of the Inchicore Community Drug Team and as a city councillor, Linda worked tirelessly on behalf of the disadvantaged and particularly drug misusers. +SAE2 is a gene of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, encoding for the a protein involved in the repair of DNA double strand breaks. +He made his Rosenborg debut 7 March 2010 in the Norwegian Superfinalen against Aalesund. +It was re-released the following year as Hora Enamorada. +Pet buoyancy aid In recent years pet buoyancy aids have become quite popular. +The total length of the trail is . +16th London Film Critics Circle AwardsMarch 8, 1996Film of the Year: Babe British Film of the Year: The Madness of King George The 16th London Film Critics Circle Awards, honouring the best in film for 1995, were announced by the London Film Critics Circle in 1996. +2 #7–8 Thor Vol. +Only part of the base survives. +The long fjord lies inside the municipality of Åfjord. +During World War II it was repurposed into one of the German Nazi concentration camps. +The nearby is the last remaining building of the abandoned village Fröttmaning, and the oldest extant church building in the city area of Munich. +Perec is a surname of several French people, including:Georges Perec, (1936–1982), French novelist of Polish-Jewish origin (the surname is the Polish spelling of the Biblical Hebrew name Peretz)Marie-José Pérec, (born 1968), French athleteSee alsoPeretz +In May 2011, TCBY launched Super Fro-Yo, a reformulated version of its yogurt with a more nutrient-rich profile. +Charles Ian Finch-Knightley, 11th Earl of Aylesford 1 April 1974 – 1993 Sir Robert Richard Taylor 16 December 1993 – 2007 Paul Sabapathy, CBE 2007–2015 John Crabtree OBE, 3 January 2017 – presentReferencesWest Midlands Category:1974 establishments in England +It was described by Wileman in 1911. +References Category:Political parties in Haiti +It was released in Brazil on 10 April 2014. +Notable people with the surname include: Herménégilde Duchaussoy (1854–1934), French meteorologist Jacques Duchaussoy, French author Michel Duchaussoy (1938–2012), French film actor +Woodtick or wood tick is the common name for several ticks, including:Dermacentor variabilis, also known as the American dog tickDermacentor andersoni, also known as the Rocky Mountain wood tickCategory:Animal common name disambiguation pages +Members meet at least once per month to pray and discuss spiritual reading done in the course of the month. +King served two years on the Premier List. +The sheaths lining these compartments extends from above the dorsal carpal ligament. +The university's commercial company, Anutech Pty Ltd, sold the concept to Rofin Australia Pty Ltd, who developed it into the Polilight. +He had previously held research positions at the University of Edinburgh and at Inria. +Kolkau was a subcamp of the German concentration camp Stutthof near Danzig during the Third Reich. +She was a 1981 Guggenheim Fellow. +The newspaper wrote, “While every new judge has a learning curve, Plumlee, 49, has not distinguished herself in the eyes of attorneys.”Less than 40 percent of family law attorneys who were polled about her believed that she was impartial or even demonstrated an “adequate” knowledge of the law. +With his monks he dedicated himself to prayer, reading of the sacred books and to teaching agriculture. +He is contemplating returning to New York to see Ramona, but instead flees to Martha's Vineyard to visit some friends. +Cast Daimi - Vibeke / Viggo Lisbet Lundquist Lise-Lotte Norup Klaus Pagh Dirch Passer - Dr. Grå Ulf PilgaardReferencesExternal linksCategory:1973 filmsCategory:1970s comedy filmsCategory:Danish filmsCategory:Danish comedy filmsCategory:Danish-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Klaus Pagh +Music videoThe music video for "Cowboys & Kisses" was filmed on January 8–9, 2001, at the Camarillo Airport in Camarillo, California. +Legends and superstitionsHeliotrope was called "stone of Babylon" by Albertus Magnus and he referred to several magical properties, which were attributed to it from Late Antiquity. +Gloria Trevi (; born Gloria de los Ángeles Treviño Ruiz on February 15, 1968) is a Mexican singer-songwriter, dancer, actress, television hostess, music video director and businesswoman. +Three hundred men, including Sergeant Cluggan, are killed and another two hundred wounded. +Alteration assemblages vary with depth and with degree of fluid interaction. +She was selected as Miss Earth Ecuador 2013 but she was dethroned a few days before to compete at Miss Earth 2013. +"Day Dream" is a jazz standard composed by Billy Strayhorn with lyrics by John Latouche and written in 1939. +In the early 1990s, the band's popularity continued to grow, and the membership expanded with the addition of singer Tony Chasseur. +Since then, he is involved only in literature-related employment. +departments Computer ScienceChemistryZoologyCommerceEnglishAccreditationThe college is recognized by the University Grants Commission. +FilmographyExternal linksTakeshi Yagi's Blog / Electric GardenCategory:Japanese film directorsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +CareerBorn in Aizkraukle, he has played club football for Skonto FC, FS METTA/Latvijas Universitāte and FK Spartaks Jūrmala. +It follows the story of a sailor betrothed to be married, but wary that home-life may echo that of her parents: a hen-pecked husband and battle-axe mother. +Huang graduated from Montgomery Blair High School and the California Institute of Technology and was an employee at Google until July 2008. +Kematen am Innbach is a municipality in the district of Grieskirchen in the Austrian state of Upper Austria. +Tormod Haugen (12 May 1945 – 18 October 2008) was a Norwegian writer of children's books and translator. +Geographical distributionAs of 2014, 78.1% of all known bearers of the surname Lehmus were residents of Finland (frequency 1:9,746), 6.4% of Estonia (1:28,732), 5.8% of Sweden (1:234,447), 3.7% of Germany (1:2,971,431), 2.2% of Switzerland (1:513,249), 1.8% of the United States (1:27,788,560) and 1.2% of France (1:7,389,729). +Dari, Uzbeki and Pashto are the main languages spoken in and around the province. +Main awardsWinners are listed first, highlighted in boldface. +That July, however, an EPA administrator told Congress that "we have not identified a systemic problem". +He hit the winning basket in the Final Four against Illinois to propel Michigan into the championship game versus Seton Hall. +The standard beers Natte, Zatte, Columbus, and Struis are certified organic. +After the king and queen are called back in, he goes on to prescribe 'midnight air' for her fainting spells. +Date and timeRelated TopicVillain hittingCultural ReferencesLim Giong has an 2005 album titled Insects Awaken. +Each stem contained vascular tissue with one or two strands of protoxylem. +She competed at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships. +Linking to the Ohio River at Pittsburgh, the Western Division Canal also linked, through a tunnel of under Grant's Hill in Pittsburgh, with the Monongahela River. +Raya was then split into two parts once ethnic federalism was established in Ethiopia (on 1995). +Porter was elected as an Opposition Party candidate to the Thirty-fourth Congress (March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1857). +Despite not playing a game in the 1931 home and away season, he came into the side for the semi final, replacing Maurie Sheahan at centre half-back. +He also competed in the 30 metre rapid fire pistol event finishing 28th and in the 50 metre pistol finishing 46th. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Jabrayil District +Kent East was an electoral riding in Ontario, Canada. +Turner was a member of the squad that won the Dubai and São Paulo legs in the 2013–14 IRB Women's Sevens World Series. +The Film of the Fourth Olympic Winter Games in Garmisch-Partenkirchen") is the official film of the 1936 Winter Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany. +The school utilizes not only teachers who are trained to work with special needs students, but also social workers who work with the families of the students. +Through his association with Barron, Otis joined the board of Dow Jones & Company and was elected its president in 1905. +Palmer had opposed Stephen and he opposed Walter, too. +Chalisgaon Vidhan Sabha constituency is one of the 286 Vidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly) constituencies of Maharashtra state in western India. +Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Paris 22: 292-299. +ReferencesExternal linksScientific referencesScientific databases AlgaeBase AlgaTerra database Index Nominum GenericorumCategory:Chlorophyceae genera +Club career Varol began his career with Pendikspor in 2000. +Dushku featured on the masthead from the first issue and for many years she ran the Sisters Speak column, where readers could write in about personal issues. +In the morning after the first coup attempt, while Mosaddegh still remained a strong proponent of constitutional monarchy, Fatemi advised Mosaddegh to declare a republic in light of the failed coup attempt. +It is composed of three villages: Brădeanu, Mitropolia and Smârdan. +It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1983. +He enlisted in 1918, but was not called for service, and in 1917 he had joined the Labor Party. +Filipinos in Japan ( Zainichi Firipinjin, ) formed a population of 260,553 individuals at year-end 2017, making them Japan's fourth-largest foreign community along with Vietnamese, according to the statistics of the Ministry of Justice. +Testing showed that because of the extreme power to weight ratio it only took a few degrees of nozzle movement to get the aircraft moving forward quickly enough to produce lift from the wing, and that even at a 15 degree angle the aircraft accelerated very well. +AfricaAshanti Confederacy – Kofi Karikari, Asantehene (1867–1874) Kingdom of Buganda – Muteesa I (1856–1884) Bunyoro – Kitahimbwa, Omukama of Bunyoro (1869–1902) Kingdom of Burundi – Mwezi IV Gisabo (1852–1908) Kingdom of Dahomey – Glele (1856–1889) Ethiopian Empire – Tekle Giyorgis II (1868–1871) Kingdom of Jimma - Abba Gomol (1862-1878) Kingdom of Kaffa - Kasanje Kingdom - Mbumba a Kinguri (1857-1873) Kingdom of Kongo - Pedro V of Kongo (1859-1891) Liberia President - James Spriggs Payne (1868–1870) Edward James Roye (1870–1871) Opobo - Jaja (1869-1887) Kingdom of Rwanda – Kigeli IV (1853–1895) Sokoto CaliphateCaliph – Ahmad Rufa'i (1867–1873)Grand Vizier - Ibrahim Khalilu (1859-c.1874)Urambo - Mirambo (1860-1884) Yeke Kingdom - Msiri (1856-1891) Sultanate of Zanzibar – Majid bin Said (1856–1870) Barghash bin Said (1870–1888)Zulu – Mpande kaSenzangakhona, King of the Zulu (1840–1872)Asia Emirate of Afghanistan – Sher Ali Khan (1868–1879) Sultanate of Brunei – Abdul Momin (1852–1885) China (Qing dynasty) - Tongzhi Emperor (1861–1875) Empire of JapanMonarch – Emperor Meiji (1867–1912)Ryukyu Domain - Shō Tai, King of Ryukyu (1848–11 March 1879)Joseon (Korea) – Gojong (1864–1907, Emperor after 1897) Nepal - Surendra Bikram Shah (1847-1881) Sultanate of Oman – Azzan bin Qais (1868–1871) Siam – Chulalongkorn (1868–1910) Đại Nam (Nguyễn dynasty) - Tự Đức, Emperor] (1847–1883)EuropeAustria-Hungary – Franz Joseph I, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary (1848–1916)Foreign Minister of Austria-Hungary - Count Friedrich Ferdinand von Beust (1867–1871)Minister-President of AustriaCount Eduard von Taaffe (1868–1870)Ignaz von Plener (1870)Leopold Hasner von Artha (1870)Count Alfred von Potocki-Pilawa (1870–1871)Minister-President of Hungary - Count Gyula Andrássy (1867–1871)Kingdom of Bavaria – Ludwig II (1864–1886) BelgiumMonarch – Léopold II, King of the Belgians (1865–1909)Cabinet Chief -H.-J.-W. Frère-Orban (1868–1870, 1878–1884)Jules Joseph d'Anethan (1870–1871) Kingdom of Denmark Monarch – Christian IX (1863–1906) Prime Minister - Christian Emil (1865–1870) Ludvig Henrik Carl Herman (1870–1874) Second French Empire –Head of State - Napoleon III (1852–1870) Jules Trochu, President of the Government of National Defense (1870–1871)Prime Minister –Émile Ollivier (1870)Charles Guillaume Cousin-Montauban, comte de Palikao (1870) Jules Trochu, President of the Council (1870–1871)Kingdom of Greece –Monarch – George I (1863–1913)Prime Minister -Thrasyvoulos Zaimis (1869–1870)Epameinondas Deligiorgis (1870)Alexandros Koumoundouros (1870–1871) Hamburg – Ferdinand Haller, First Burgomaster of Hamburg (1863–1864; 1866–1868; 1870; and again 1872–1873) Holy See – Pope Pius IX (1846–1878, Papal States until 1870) Kingdom of Italy –Monarch – Vittorio Emanuele II (1861–1878)Prime Minister - Giovanni Lanza (1869–1873) Grand Duchy of LuxembourgMonarch – William III of the Netherlands (1849–1890)Prime Minister - Emmanuel Servais (1867–1874) NetherlandsMonarch – William III, King of the Netherlands (1849–1890)Chairman of the Dutch Council of Ministers - Pieter Philip van Bosse (1868–1871) United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway - Carl IV (1859–1872) Ottoman (Turkish) EmpireSultan – Abdülaziz (1861–1876)Grand Vizier – Mehmed Emin Aali Pasha (1867–1871) Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves Monarch – Luís I (1861–1889) President of the Council of Ministers - Duke of Loulé (1869–1870) Duke of Saldanha (1870) Marquess of Sá da Bandeira (1870) Marquess of Ávila (1870–1871) Kingdom of Prussia –Monarch – Wilhelm I (1861–1888)Minister President - Otto von Bismarck (1862–1873) United Principalities (Romania) – Carol I (1866–1881) Russian Empire – Alexander II (1855–1881) Kingdom of Saxony – Johann (1854–1873)Kingdom of Spain –Monarch -Francisco Serrano y Domínguez, Duke de la Torre, Regent (1869–1870)Amadeus (1870–1873)Prime Minister -Juan Prim (1869–1870)Juan Bautista Topete Carballo, Acting Prime Minister (1870–1871) Kingdom of Sweden – United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway - Charles XV (1859–1872) United Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandMonarch – Victoria (1837–1901)Prime Minister - William Ewart Gladstone (1868–1874, 1880–1885, 1886, 1892–1894) Kingdom of Württemberg – Karl (1864–1891)Middle East and North Africa Abu Dhabi – Zayed bin Khalifa Al Nahyan, Shaikh of Abu Dhabi (1855–1909) Khedivate of Egypt (Under Ottoman Empire suzerainty)- Isma'il (1867–1879) Sultanate of Morocco – Muhammad IV (1859–1873)North America and CaribbeanCanada -Monarch – Victoria, Queen of Canada (1837–1901)Governor General - Lord Lisgar (1869–1872)Prime Minister - John A. Macdonald (1867–1873)Costa Rica –Jesús Jiménez Zamora, President of Costa Rica (1868–1870)Bruno Carranza Ramírez, President of Costa Rica (1870)Tomás Guardia Gutiérrez, President of Costa Rica (1870–1876)Dominican Republic - Buenaventura Báez, President of the Dominican Republic (1868–1874)El Salvador - Francisco Dueñas, President of El Salvador (1863–1871)Guatemala - Vicente Cerna Sandoval, President of Guatemala (1865–1871)Haiti – Nissage Saget, President of Haiti (1869–1874)Honduras - José María Medina, President of Honduras (1864–1872)Mexico - Benito Juárez, President of Mexico(1858–1872)Nicaragua - Fernando Guzmán Solórzano, President of Nicaragua (1867–1871)United States - Ulysses S. Grant, President of the United States (1869–1877)Oceania Fiji – Seru Epenisa Cakobau, King of Fiji (1852–1874) Kingdom of Hawaii – Kamehameha V (1863–1872) Mangareva – Arone Teikatoara, Regent of Mangareva (1869–1873) Samoa – Malietoa Talavou Tonumaipe’a, Malietoa (1860–1880) Tahiti – Pōmare IV, Queen of Tahiti (1827–1877) Tonga – Tāufaʻāhau, Tu'i Kanokupolu (1845–1893)South America Argentina – Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, President of Argentina (1868–1874) Bolivia – Mariano Melgarejo, President of Bolivia (1864–1871) Empire of Brazil –Monarch – Pedro II (1831–1889)Prime Minister – Joaquim Rodrigues Torres, Viscount of Itaboraí, President of the cabinet of ministers (1868–1870) José Antônio Pimenta Bueno, Marquis of São Vicente, President of the cabinet of ministers (1870–1871) Chile – José Joaquín Pérez, President of Chile (1866–1871) United States of Colombia – Santos Gutiérrez Prieto, President of Colombia (1868–1870)Eustorgio Salgar Moreno, President of Colombia (1870–1872) Ecuador – Gabriel García Moreno, President of Ecuador (1869–1875) Paraguay –Cirilo Antonio Rivarola, President of Paraguay (1869–1870)Facundo Machaín, President of Paraguay (1870)Cirilo Antonio Rivarola, President of Paraguay (1870–1871) Peru – José Balta, President of Peru (1868–1872) Uruguay – Lorenzo Batlle y Grau, President of Uruguay (1868–1872) Venezuela – José Ruperto Monagas, President of Venezuela (1869–1870)Guillermo Tell Villegas, President of Venezuela (1870)Antonio Guzmán Blanco, President of Venezuela (1870–1877)References +The only issue which the Qur'an mentions is the one of washing one's hands especially after using the toilet which is mentioned in verse 5:6. +On 11 June 1932 he married Mary Ferry, with whom he had two daughters. +|}See also Principles for the Conservation of Heritage Sites in ChinaReferences Ningxia +Track listingCredits Spike Cassidy – Guitar, Bass Kurt Brecht – Vocals Felix Griffin – Drums Mikey Offender – BassReferencesCategory:D.R.I. +Xscape soon caught the attention of Jermaine Dupri, who later signed the group to his So So Def Recordings. +SVX may refer to:VehiclesSubaru Alcyone SVX, two-door grand tourer coupé automobileDefender SVX, model of special edition Land Rover DefenderOthersKoltsovo Airport, IATA code SVX, airport in Yekaterinburg, RussiaSVX (potexvirus), potexvirus affecting Chinese scallionSVX, ISO 639-3 code for Skalvians, a Baltic tribe, the people and their languageSvx protein, see ErwiniaSee also8SVX, audio file format standard developed by Electronic Arts for the Commodore-Amiga computer series +The first issue was almost never printed as the office and newspaper plant had been in flames a few hours before it was due to be printed. +ReferencesCategory:PsapharochrusCategory:Beetles described in 2012 +John Phillip Brantley, Jr. (born October 23, 1965) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League for the Houston Oilers and the Washington Redskins. +In the spring of 2009, units 611 and 614 were placed back into revenue service on both of Metra's ex-Milwaukee Road commuter lines. +Secretaries of State for Prices and Consumer ProtectionColour key (for political parties):Prices and Consumer ProtectionCategory:Ministries established in 1974Category:1974 establishments in the United KingdomCategory:1979 disestablishments in the United KingdomCategory:Consumer protection in the United Kingdom ++ Plates I-XX. +He also said it would feature some of his mentor's Tupac Shakur's old affiliates, including Thug Life which was 2Pac's group before he created The Outlawz, Money B (who was a member of Shakur's old group Digital Underground) and B-Legit who featured on Shakur's 1996 album on Death Row Records,All Eyez on Me, on the track "Aint Hard 2 Find". +See also Al BalushiReferencesOman Category:Ethnic groups in Oman +His personal best jump is 2.34 metres, achieved in 2014 in El Paso. +It is located in the northern central part of the island and has a land area of 134.672 km², covering about 28.2% of the island's surface. +Plaquemine is a city in and the parish seat of Iberville Parish, Louisiana, United States. +Gumanga is an administrative ward in the Mkalama District of the Singida Region of Tanzania. +The album is composed of remixes from the band's 2007 album The Last Sucker. +1 spot in garageband.com's pop charts in 2002. +She resigned her government position and from the University of the Philippines faculty upon joining the Carmelites. +He coached at Elon for ten seasons, earning a 44–41–4 record and winning four North State Conference championships. +ReferencesSee alsoCategory:Organization of American States +In March 2018, he joined the Karnataka faction of the BJP. +Legend: AKP: Justice and Development Party ANAP: Motherland Party AP: Justice Party CHP: Republican People's Party CKMP: Republican Villagers Nation Party DP: Democrat Party DSP: Democratic Left Party DYP: True Path Party IP: Independent politician M: Military after coup d'état NP: Non-parisan (Civil servant) RP: Welfare Party SHP: Social Democratic Populist PartyReferencesJusticeTurkey +FilmographyTheatreTheatre directingReferencesExternal linksCategory:1985 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Belgian people of Tunisian descentCategory:Belgian male film actorsCategory:Belgian male television actorsCategory:21st-century Belgian male actorsCategory:Belgian male stage actorsCategory:People from Liège +Seating was added to the south end zone, along with press and sky boxes. +Opistholebes is a genus of trematodes in the family Opecoelidae. +He was re-elected in 1981, but lost his seat in the 1984 elections, and left the Mapam central committee the following year. +SpeciesThere are currently two recognized species in this genus: Microphotolepis multipunctata Sazonov & Parin, 1977 Microphotolepis schmidti (Angel & Verrier, 1931)ReferencesCategory:Alepocephalidae +It belongs to the district of Mahabo, which is a part of Menabe Region. +At the 2006 census, its population was 243, in 82 families. +Bhuvanaikabahu II was King of Dambadeniya in the 14th century, who ruled 1310 from to 1325/6. +On one of his grandfathers religious sojourns to Dar es Salaam he learned about the wood carving trade from the Makonde carvers and brought this artistic trade to Malawi. +He began practicing law at the firm Bass, Berry & Sims in Nashville. +It lies on the Great Andaman Trunk Road. +The building was completed in 1922. +is the eastern European form; smaller, paler, with somewhat thinner lilac markings; darker beneath, the median band of the hindwing more uniformly yellow, not being variegated with red; from Saratow. +Kłodzino (German: Klötzin) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Golczewo, within Kamień County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. +With his hair dyed in the colours of the American flag, Hollenbeck entered the fight as a massive underdog. +Some Socket 478 models supports loadline B (FMB1.0) with reduced TDP to 89 Watts (100.39 Watts peak) Some LGA775 models supports Prescott FMB1 (775_VR_CONFIG_04A) with reduced TDP to 85 Watts (100.78 Watts peak) Transistors: 125 million Die size: 112 mm² Steppings:Prescott 2M (90 nm) Intel Family 15 Model 4 All models support: MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, Hyper-Threading, Intel 64, XD bit (an NX bit implementation) Intel VT-x supported by: 6x2 e.g. +At the turn of the century, property managing firm Ozzy Properties purchased a significant portion of the area, and helped allure start-ups and other businesses to it. +Eivind Henriksen (born 14 September 1990) is a Norwegian athlete. +Jack Fairweather (writer) born (1978) and raised in Abermule. +The 1849 Louisiana gubernatorial election, was the last of two elections to take place under the Louisiana Constitution of 1845. +Conjunto Nacional may refer to:Conjunto Nacional (Brasília), a shopping mall in Brasília, BrazilConjunto Nacional (São Paulo), a shopping mall in São Paulo, BrazilCategory:Buildings and structures disambiguation pages +Musculus may refer to:Andreas Musculus (1514–1581), German Lutheran theologianHeinrich Musculus (b. +Furthermore, the compositions on the album are based upon single themes for the most part". +Super Star PerformancesTop 81: يابني (Yabni) byTop 17: ما بيسألش عليا ( fujdeldhbdewhwvvrv Ma Bisalshi Aleya)Top 13: الله معك (Allah Ma'ak)Top 15: على بابي واقف قمرين (Ala Babi Wakef Amarein)Top 11: خطرنا على بالك (Khatarna Ala Balak)Top 10: بعيد عنك (Ba'id Anak)Top 9: عاللي جرى (Alli Jara)Top 9: ليلة (Leila)Top 7: جيت بوقتك (Jeet Ba'waqtak) by Melhem BarakatTop 7: بحبك وبغار (Bahibak W Bghar) by Assi El HelaniTop 6: دوّبني الهوى (Dawabni El Hawa) by Ghassan SalibaTop 6: دارت الأيام (Darat Alayam)Top 5: يا مارق عالطواحين (Ya Mareq Al Tawaheen) by Nasri ChamssedineTop 5: زهرة المدائن (Zahret El Mada'en)Top 4: الطربوش (El Tarboush)Top 4: عز الحبايب (Az El Habaib) by Saber El RebaiTop 4: طلوا حبابنا (Taloua Hababna)Top 3: اللي نساك (Elli Nesak) by Abdallah El RowaishedTop 3: (Wenka Aleya)Top 3: ياللي تعبنا (Yalli Ta'abna)Grand Final: أي دمعة حزن (Aya Dam'et Hozen)Grand Final: جفنه (Jafnoho)Grand Final: هوى يا هوى (Hawa Ya Hawa)DiscographySuper Stars '05 – Wibtada El MishwarAmmar Hassan – Helm KbirReferencesExternal linksSuper Star Biography – Interview/Biography on the official Super Star 2 siteCategory:1976 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Palestinian musiciansCategory:Idols (franchise) participantsCategory:SuperStar (Arabic TV series)Category:Contestants from Arabic singing competitionsCategory:People from Salfit +Notable name changes of Kurdish geographical locations:See also List of renamed cities, towns and regions in TurkeyAnimal name changes in TurkeyReplacement of loanwords in TurkishGeographical renamingGeographical regions of TurkeyReferencesExternal links Index Anatolicus: Map of Geographical locations of Anatolia with descriptions, etymology, and cultural origins (Turkish)List of Istanbul street name changes (Turkish)Category:Turkish nationalismCategory:Turkish cultureCategory:Place name etymologiesCategory:Names of places in TurkeyCategory:Turkish societyCategory:Discrimination in TurkeyTurkey +With an annual production of approximately 3800 GWh, it is the largest power station in Norway with respect to annual production (in 2006). +The schools also hosts charity events, such as movie-screening fundraisers. +They are not intended for acquisition "related to the development of a specific system or hardware procurement." +Nickelodeon Estonia was a block on the Estonian channel TV1. +American forces suffered no damage or casualties. +In 1979, Trajan's Bridge was added to the Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance, and in 1983 on Archaeological Sites of Exceptional Importance list, and by that it is protected by the Republic of Serbia. +Green denotes finalistsReferencesCategory:2013 European Diving Championships +Yukarıışıklar is a village in the District of Manavgat, Antalya Province, Turkey. +The women's 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 1973 Summer Universiade was held at the Central Lenin Stadium in Moscow with the final on 20 August. +The club is participating in the A-League for the eighth time, and the FFA Cup for the sixth time. +Q Entertainment also collaborated with Angel Love Online to promote the game. +Robertdale Rulon "Rob" Crow, Jr. (born February 21, 1971) is an American singer and multi-instrumentalist from San Diego, California, known for his involvement with the bands Pinback, Heavy Vegetable, Physics, Optiganally Yours and Thingy. +Many clocks keep time by mechanical resonance in a balance wheel, pendulum, or quartz crystal. +For a collection of other versions see BibleHub John 20:21AnalysisThe account of Jesus' first appearance in the Gospel of John (20:19-23; ) shows similarity to the account in the Gospel of Luke (), that it happened in Jerusalem in the evening of his resurrection from the dead. +Included with the normal Golden Raspberry categories to mark the dawn of the year 2000 were four special awards: Worst Picture of the Decade, Worst New Star of the Decade, Worst Actor of the Century, and Worst Actress of the Century. +CurlingIn 2017, the arena, then known as Xfinity Arena, was host to the USA Men's and Women's Curling National Championships. +HistoryThe petty tribute-paying Takuka under Songadh station thana in Gohelwar prant was ruled by Gohil Rajput Chieftains, Bhayad of Lathi State. +According to bomb disposal experts, the blast range of the device planned could have injured people up to 50 meters away. +The school district consists of seven schools, six of which are elementary schools and one being a junior high school. +He was instrumental in developing the UK's first undergraduate single honours BSc degree in History and Philosophy of Science, at UCL, launched in 1993. +This would have meant that the investment made a few years ago for the reopening and the enlargement of the Petershagen-Lahde station would have gone to waste, but the abolition of local services was averted. +The team finished 2nd in league play and won the UWS National title defeating Calgary Foothills WFC 1-0 in the final on July 21, 2019 at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. +On August 30, 2008, he was released by the Seahawks. +ReferencesCategory:1980 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Venezuelan male artistic gymnastsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Gymnasts at the 2003 Pan American GamesCategory:Gymnasts at the 2007 Pan American GamesCategory:Gymnasts at the 2011 Pan American GamesCategory:Pan American Games gold medalists for VenezuelaCategory:Pan American Games silver medalists for VenezuelaCategory:Pan American Games medalists in gymnasticsCategory:Central American and Caribbean Games gold medalists for VenezuelaCategory:South American Games gold medalists for VenezuelaCategory:South American Games silver medalists for VenezuelaCategory:South American Games medalists in gymnasticsCategory:Competitors at the 2006 South American GamesCategory:Competitors at the 2006 Central American and Caribbean GamesCategory:Competitors at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games +The lack of PGLYRP1 was found to have increased susceptibility to corneal infections, reduced corneal wound healing, and increased scarification of the cornea when infected by P. aeruginosa. +It was followed by a 4 match losing streak right after which the Portuguese manager was sacked. +Legal careerWinslow passed the bar in June 1908 in Salem and joined John H. and Charles L. McNary in legal practice in Salem. +The population was 58 as of 2010. +In 2018, she won the second season of the Tamil reality television show Bigg Boss. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Limanowa County +Southwest – "Indiana's Great Southwest" Plan (selected by the Strategic Review Committee). +References Category:Populated places in Karaj County +Overview Is Everybody Listening? +Very soon after the vote, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega announced that he would visit the Soviet Union. +The album debuted at number 15 on the Billboard 200. +In 1987, he succeeded Timothy Bevan as chairman of Barclays Bank, until 1992, when he was succeeded by Andrew Buxton. +Pitching styleMoore throws four pitches: a four-seam fastball at 92–95 mph, a changeup at 83–86, a knuckle curveball at 79–83 mph, and an occasional two-seam fastball. +Cherrybrook Technology High School was officially opened on 15 May 1992 by the Hon Nick Greiner (who was the Premier of New South Wales at the time). +Notable people with the surname include:Jennifer Mundel (born 1962), South African tennis player Luella Mundel, American art professorMunna Lal Mundel, Indian naik +Sergey Tarasevich (born 18 February 1973) is a Belarusian rower. +References Category:Straits of Papua New Guinea +Indotrigonodon is an extinct genus of prehistoric bony fish that lived during the Paleocene epoch. +The name Rainier ( or ; , a French form of Rainer) may refer toGiven name:Reginar II, Count of Hainaut (890–932), also written Rainier IIRainier, Margrave of Tuscany, Margrave of Tuscany from 1014 to 1027Rainier, Marquess of Montferrat (c. 1084 – 1135)Saint Rainier (c. 1117 – c. 1160), Pisan saintRenier of Montferrat (1162–1183), son-in-law of Byzantine Emperor Manuel I KomnenosSeveral princes of Monaco, all of the House of Grimaldi:Rainier I of Monaco, Lord of Cagnes (1267–1314)Rainier II, Lord of Monaco (14th century)Rainier III, Prince of Monaco (1923–2005)Surname:Peter Rainier (1741–1808), a British naval leaderPriaulx Rainier (1903–1986), South African-British composerFiction:Charles Rainier, main character in Random Harvest by James HiltonRainier Wolfcastle, an action hero star in the SimpsonsSee alsoRainer (given name)Category:French masculine given names +SpeciesC. aequalis (Walker, 1848)C. aequicellulatus (Frey, 1954)C. alaskaensis Hardy, 1949C. albobasalis Brunetti, 1920C. albopictus Brunetti, 1909C. aldrichi James, 1936C. alpicola (Pokorny, 1886)C. alternatus Brunetti, 1920C. amamiensis Nagatomi, 1968C. americanus (Schiner, 1868)C. amurensis Soboleva, 1986C. andersoni Leonard, 1930C. andicola Lindner, 1924C. andringitrensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. androgynus Paramonov, 1962C. angustifacies Hardy, 1949C. angustifrons Frey, 1954C. ankaratrae Stuckenberg, 1965C. anthracinus Bigot, 1887C. antipoda Bigot, 1887C. antongilensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. apicalis Wulp, 1882C. apicimaculatus Yang & Yang, 1991C. apyros Séguy, 1948C. arctica (Frey, 1918)C. arctiventris James, 1936C. argenteofasciatus (Bromley, 1931)C. argenteus Paramonov, 1962C. argyrophorus (Schiner, 1868)C. asiaticus Lindner, 1923C. asiliformis Preyssler, 1791C. ater (Williston, 1896)C. aterrimus (Williston, 1901)C. atricornis Stuckenberg, 1965C. auratus (Fabricius, 1805)C. aymara Lindner, 1924C. azurinus Frey, 1954C. basalis Walker, 1860C. basifasciatus Paramonov, 1962C. basiflavus Yang & Yang, 1992C. basilaris (Say, 1823)C. beameri Hardy, 1949C. bequaerti Curran, 1931C. betsileorum Stuckenberg, 1965C. binoculatus Edwards, 1915C. binotatus Loew, 1871C. birmanensis Brunetti, 1920C. bisectus Oldroyd, 1939C. bistriatipennis Brunetti, 1927C. boettcheri Frey, 1954C. brunneifrons Kertész, 1902C. caducus (Wiedemann, 1828)C. calchaqui Coscaron & Coscaron, 1995C. calopterus (Schiner, 1868)C. choui Yang & Yang, 1989C. chrysopiliformis (Lindner, 1924)C. clarapex Frey, 1954C. claricinctus Lindner, 1923C. clarus (Walker, 1852)C. clemendoti Stuckenberg, 1965C. cochinensis Brunetti, 1920C. coeruleothorax Lindner, 1925C. cognatus Stuckenberg, 1965C. collesi Paramonov, 1962C. commoni Paramonov, 1962C. connexus Johnson, 1912C. consanguineus Schiner, 1868C. correctus Osten Sacken, 1882C. cricosphaerota Speiser, 1914C. cubensis Curran, 1931C. dauricus Frey, 1954C. davisi Johnson, 1912C. decisus (Walker, 1857)C. decoratus de Meijere, 1911C. depressiconus Frey, 1954C. dilatus Cresson, 1919C. diplostigma Bezzi, 1917C. ditissimis Bezzi, 1912C. dives Loew, 1871C. divisus Hardy, 1949C. donato Curran, 1931C. edgari Paramonov, 1962C. egregius de Meijere, 1919C. elegans Schiner, 1868C. erythrophthalmus Loew, 1840C. facetticus Paramonov, 1962C. fasciatus (Say, 1823)C. fascipennis (Brunetti, 1920)C. fasciventris Curran, 1931C. ferruginosus (Wiedemann, 1819)C. fimbriatus Stuckenberg, 1997C. flaveolus (Meigen, 1820)C. flavibarbus Adams, 1904C. flaviscutellus Yang & Yang, 1989C. flavopilosus Brunetti, 1920C. flavopunctatus Brunetti, 1909C. foedus Loew, 1861C. fulvidus Bigot, 1891C. fuscicinctus Brunetti, 1927C. fuscipes Bigot, 1887C. gansuensis Yang & Yang, 1991C. gemmiferus Frey, 1954C. georgianus Hardy, 1949C. gilvipennis Edwards, 1919C. golbachi Coscaron & Coscaron, 1995C. grandis Yang & Yang, 1993C. gratiosus Paramonov, 1962C. gravelyi Brunetti, 1920C. griffithi Johnson, 1897C. griseipennis Bezzi, 1912C. griveaudi Stuckenberg, 1965C. guangxiensis Yang & Yang, 1992C. guianicus Curran, 1931C. guttipennis Walker, 1861C. guttulatus de Meijere, 1914C. hakusanus Nagatomi, 1978C. hardyi Nagatomi & Evenhuis, 1989C. helvolus (Meigen, 1820)C. heroicus Paramonov, 1962C. howei Paramonov, 1962C. huashanus Yang & Yang, 1989C. hubeiensis Yang & Yang, 1991C. humeralis Brunetti, 1912C. humilis Loew, 1874C. hybridus Lindner, 1924C. iani Paramonov, 1962C. illustris Frey, 1954C. imitator Paramonov, 1962C. impar Walker, 1861C. incidens Curran, 1927C. indris Stuckenberg, 1965C. inka Lindner, 1924C. insularis Schiner, 1868C. intermedius Bezzi, 1895C. invalidus Williston, 1901C. irroratus Schiner, 1868C. itoi Nagatomi, 1958C. ivontakae Stuckenberg, 1965C. jamaicensis (Johnson, 1894)C. keiseri Stuckenberg, 1965C. kimoroensis Stuckenberg, 1965C. kincaidi Hardy, 1949C. komurae Matsumura, 1911C. kyotoensis Frey, 1954C. laetus Zetterstedt, 1842C. lateralis Oldroyd, 1939C. latifrons Bezzi, 1898C. latipennis Stuckenberg, 1965C. latistigma Curran, 1931C. latus Brunetti, 1920C. lemur Stuckenberg, 1965C. leonardi Curran, 1931C. leptiformis Kertész, 1902C. lii Yang. +ReferencesCategory:1965 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Hungarian male water polo playersCategory:Olympic water polo players of HungaryCategory:Water polo players at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Water polo players at the 1992 Summer OlympicsCategory:Water polo players at the 1996 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Budapest +Skilled use of these handles allows a quad-line kite to perform in ways that are difficult or impossible with a dual-line kite. +Brian Douglas Austin (born 22 March 1943) was a Queensland politician and Minister of Health (1980–1983) who represented the state seat of Wavell for the Liberal Party (1977–1983) and then for the National Party (1983–1986). +She now retains royalties on books sold outside the ministry through retail outlets such as Walmart, Amazon.com, and bookstores, while continuing to donate to her ministry royalties from books sold through her conferences, catalogues, website, and television program. +It is the second #1 versus #2 bowl game, after the 1963 Rose Bowl, and featured 1963 Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Roger Staubach (Navy). +Cosmonaut () is a 2009 Italian coming-of-age film written and directed by Susanna Nicchiarelli. +Nicole (c. 1424after 3 January 1480) was Countess of Penthièvre from 1454 until her death. +Before the First World War, majority of the village population was composed of Greeks. +White House Diary is a book written by President Jimmy Carter, published in 2010. +Much of the hierarchical structure for this order was used in Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia (SRIA) and from there, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. +It was formed in 2013 from the southern districts of Manokwari Regency. +He was re-elected on three occasions, before losing to Marcus Lipton of the Labour Party, when that party won a landslide victory at the 1945 general election. +The term tôle, derived from the French tôle peinte, "painted sheet metal", is synonymous in English usage with japanning on tin, such as the tôle shades for bouilotte lamps and other candle shades, and trays and lidded canisters, in which stenciling and gilding often features, almost always on a black ground. +HistoryJefferson County was created in 1827. +The current edition, which is also freely accessible online, contains the biographies of some 8,000 Danish artists and architects. +NCSC/ABAD/G/20/APCROrganizations National Children's Science Congress National Commission for Scheduled Castes, India National cyber Security Centre (Ireland) National Cyber Security Centre (United Kingdom)United States National Catholic Student Coalition National Center for State Courts National Computer Security Center, part of the National Security Agency National Council for Senior Citizens National Counterintelligence and Security Center National Cybersecurity Center North Carolina Solar Center +Algés may refer to: Algés (Oeiras), a parish in Oeiras, Portugal Algés River, a river in Algés Parish, Portugal U.D.R. +FHPP may refer to: Familial hypokalemic periodic paralysis, a rare, autosomal dominant channelopathy characterized by periodic muscle weakness or paralysis Friction hydro pillar processing, a solid-state joining technology +Santiago Fernández (born 28 November 1985 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine rugby footballer currently playing for Bayonne after previously playing for another French club Montpellier and amateur side Hindu Club, although he was paid by the Argentine Rugby Union as one of their better home-based players. +U.S. Games Corporation was a video game company founded by Donald Yu, which originally produced handheld electronic sports games. +It lies approximately north-east of Suraż and south-west of the regional capital Białystok. +Mehdi Mohammadpour () is an Iranian footballer who plays for Nassaji Mazandaran in the Azadegan League. +Siripuram, Srikakulam District is a village and grampanchayat located in Santhakaviti Mandal in Andhra Pradesh, India. +This is a complete list of bridges and dams that span the Kiskiminetas River from its confluence at the Conemaugh River and Loyalhanna Creek to its mouth at the Allegheny River. +2nd and 3rd telescopes will be installed in 2013 and 2014 An update was published indicating that the first telescope operated for only a few weeks in 2012 before a power failure, and was repaired in 2013, but the CCD controller proceeded to fail after further data collection. +3rd Street is a streetcar station located near the intersection of H Street NE and 3rd Street NE. +Top goalscorersUpdated to games played on 30 April 2016Source: fifa.comSee also 2015–16 Pirveli Liga 2015–16 Georgian CupReferencesExternal links Category:Erovnuli Liga seasons1Georgia +Brandon McClelland's death has been covered by award-winning journalist Howard Witt of The Chicago Tribune, Newsweek, The New York Times, and numerous other national media agencies. +He has also produced "Making a Killing: Canada and the Arms Trade". +See also List of Stiphidiidae speciesReferencesCategory:StiphidiidaeCategory:Spiders of AustraliaCategory:Spiders of New ZealandCategory:Spiders described in 1902 +According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 387 inhabitants. +Club careerHe made his Russian Football National League debut for FC Gazovik-Gazprom Izhevsk on 1 July 2000 in a game against PFC Spartak Nalchik. +In the early part of the war, Bates still managed regular appearances for Saints in the wartime cups and leagues. +He won a gold medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, and a silver medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne. +REDIRECT Virginia State Route 115 +P. Thornton Marye's partnerships include: with A. +Notes Category:1415 birthsCategory:Italian Renaissance humanistsCategory:Year of death unknownCategory:People from Milan +Roger Groome is a Trinidadian former footballer who played in the USL A-League, Canadian Professional Soccer League, and served as a head coach at the college level. +Křenovice is a village and municipality (obec) in Písek District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. +The box-office number one is established in terms of tickets sold during the week. +A homemade railroad sign is posted on the property at the location of the tunnel's outlet. +Aglossosia deceptans is a moth of the subfamily Arctiinae first described by George Hampson in 1914. +Concurrent powers can therefore be divided into two kinds: those not generally subject to federal preemption (like the power to tax private citizens); and, other concurrent powers. +In 1979, the Super-2 was upgraded to freeway standards. +Final standingReferencesExternal linksCBHb official websiteGoiás handball federation official websiteCategory:Pan American Women's Junior Handball ChampionshipPan American Women's Junior Handball ChampionshipPan American Women's Junior Handball ChampionshipJuniorCategory:March 2018 sports events in South AmericaCategory:2018 in Brazilian women's sport +During the Qing dynasty, the Chinese claimed suzerainty over the area but permitted the Mir of Hunza to administer the region in return for a tribute. +The mansion can be rented for conferences and weddings and the grounds serve as a cultural center, hosting special exhibitions and performances. +Books Hager WD, Hager LC. +The couple has one son and a daughter. +Nuzzo is an Italian surname. +Warren Robert Hawke (born 20 September 1970) is an English former footballer who played for Sunderland, Berwick Rangers, Greenock Morton and Queen of the South. +Ireland's father, Garnet Ireland, as well as his three brothers and a sister, also attended BCHS. +He writes fiction at night. +Cultural institutions studies (a translation of the German term Kulturbetriebslehre) is an academic approach "which investigates activities in the cultural sector, conceived as historically evolved societal forms of organising the conception, production, distribution, propagation, interpretation, reception, conservation and maintenance of specific cultural goods". +The tour supported the band's eighth studio album, St. Anger. +References Category:Populated places in Kalat County +Cantonale elections to renew canton general councillors were held in France on 20 and 24 March 1994. +He has a son, also named Santiago Ostolaza, who currently plays for Montevideo Wanderers. +The Manchester Pipe Band is a grade two pipe band from Manchester, Connecticut. +The village has a population of 148. +Representation historyElection resultsReferencesCategory:Defunct Kelantan federal constituencies +FilmographyFilmsTelevisionReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Indian male television actors +Haplidus is a genus of beetles in the family Cerambycidae, containing the following species: Haplidus glabricollis Chemsak & Linsley, 1964 Haplidus laticeps Knull, 1941 Haplidus mandibularis Chemsak & Linsley, 1963 Haplidus nitidus Chemsak & Linsley, 1963 Haplidus parvulus Chemsak & Linsley, 1963 Haplidus pubescens Chemsak & Linsley, 1964 Haplidus testaceus LeConte, 1873ReferencesCategory:Hesperophanini +The family name may refer to: Ivan Tolj (born 1982), Croatian scientist Marija Tolj (1999), Croatian athlete Maya Tolj (born 1977), American scholar Samantha Tolj (born 1982), Australian actress Slaven Tolj (born 1964), Croatian multimedia artist Tonko Tony Tolj (born 1980), boxing icon, manager, promoter, agent, and matchmaker +Cyber-, from "cybernetic", from the Greek for "skilled in steering or governing", may refer to:Computing and the InternetCrime and security Cyber crime, crime that involves computers and networks Convention on Cybercrime, the first international treaty seeking to address Internet and computer crime, signed in 2001 Cybercrime countermeasures Cyber-attack, an offensive manoeuvre that targets computing devices, information systems, infrastructures and Cyberinfrastructures, or networks Cybersecurity, computer security Cyberwarfare, the targeting of computers and networks in warOther uses in computing and the Internet CDC Cyber, a range of mainframe computers Cyber Party, a political party created by John McAfee for the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election Cybercafé or Internet café, a business which provides internet access Cyberculture, emergent cultures based on the use of computer networks Cybergoth sub-culture Cybersex (colloquially) Cyberspace, the global technology environmentArts, entertainment, and media CY8ER, a five-person EDM idol group Cyber (Marvel Comics), a Marvel comics supervillain Cyber (Russian: Кибер), a Soviet sci-fi character (see Strugatsky's works) Doctor Cyber, a DC comics supervillain Cyberpunk, a science fiction genreSee also Centre for Integrative Bee Research (CIBER) Cybernetics (disambiguation) Cybernetic organism, or cyborg, a being with both organic and biomechatronic body parts Cyberneticist, one who studies cybernetics Cyber City (disambiguation) Cyberspace (disambiguation) Cyborg (disambiguation) +Roosville is a locality on the Canada-US border between Montana and British Columbia. +Reassigned to: Eighth Air Force. +South Hobart plays home games at South Hobart Ground and also fields teams in all junior divisions, as well as women's teams. +It was directed by Terry Ingram with the story by Peter Sullivan and Jeffrey Schenck. +He moved into amateur football to play for IFC Ambacht and joined Nieuwerkerk in summer 2012. +Adolf Hitler is believed to have committed suicide with his personal .32 ACP Walther PPK, by aiming it at his right temple and pulling the trigger while simultaneously biting down on a cyanide capsule. +Baby, New South Wales is a bounded rural locality and a civil parish of Gowen County, in New South Wales. +Pavee Lackeen: The Traveller Girl is a documentary-style film released in 2005. +Instead, in 1902, the C&SLR took over the company with the intention of modifying the plans but the powers remained unused and eventually lapsed. +He was appointed United States Magistrate Judge on June 1, 1995. +degree in 1968 from Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. +The Wells Visitor Center and Ice Cream Parlor is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Iowa. +There are also static exhibits: archival documents and photos, cards, breadboard models of horsecars and trams, examples of tram worker uniforms, and original cash registers. +He mainly played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the New York Islanders, Pittsburgh Penguins, Colorado Avalanche, and New York Rangers. +Previous winnersA list of previous School Champions:ReferencesSee alsoScottish Men's Curling Championship Scottish Women's Curling ChampionshipScottish Mixed Curling ChampionshipScottish Mixed Doubles Curling ChampionshipScottish Junior Curling ChampionshipsCategory:Curling competitions in ScotlandCategory:Youth sport in ScotlandCategory:1967 establishments in ScotlandCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 1967Category:National curling championships +References Category:Towns and villages in Delfan County +Ian Cohen of Pitchfork gave the album an 8.0 out of 10, saying, "even if these tracks aren't familiar to you from previous mixtapes, each asserts itself largely with same qualities that have defined 4AD's roster since the beginning: mesmerizing use of reverb and negative space, hooks derived from the phonetic and rhythmic qualities of words rather than their meaning, constructions of alternate realities." +Filkins has won two National Magazine Awards; in 2009, for his story, "Right At the Edge," and in 2011 for "Bedrooms of the Fallen," an essay with the photographer Ashley Gilbertson. +False protagonist A false protagonist is a character presented at the start of the story as the main character, but then disposed of, usually killing them. +Sukumaran is an Indian surname. +Personal lifeMukherjee is dating Saloni Luthra. +Category:Regional Routes in Limpopo +San Jerónimo District may refer to: Peru: San Jerónimo District, Andahuaylas, in Andahuaylas province, Apurímac region San Jerónimo District, Cusco, in Cusco province, Cusco region San Jerónimo District, Luya, in Luya province, Amazonas region Costa Rica: San Jerónimo District, Esparza, in Esparza (canton), Puntarenas province San Jerónimo District, Moravia, in Moravia (canton), San José province San Jerónimo District, Naranjo, in Naranjo (canton), Alajuela provinceSee also San Jerónimo (disambiguation) +CondemnedThe jails encountered problems almost immediately with inmates' limbs being crushed or interfering with the cellblock's rotation. +This article is a catalog of actresses and models who have appeared on V magazine, starting with the magazine's first issue in September 1999. +Both pairs lost to Marcelo Demoliner and Franko Škugor in the first and second round, respectively. +He was 86. +The program premiered on October 15, 2017. +Category:Paramilitary organisations based in ColombiaCategory:Illegal drug trade in ColombiaCategory:Organized crime groups in Colombia +In 1834, he helped organise the "Salotto Maffei," the liberal and patriotic literary salon in Milan hosted by Clara Maffei; there Verdi made his acquaintance. +She is a two-time bronze medalist on the ISU Junior Grand Prix series, the 2016 U.S Junior silver medalist, and the 2014 U.S Novice champion. +The condition arises from a fault in the bone marrow cells that overproduce the platelets. +CabinetReferencesSee also Politics of Quebec Executive Council of Quebec*Category:1867 establishments in Canada +Entry into politicsIn 1994, Lopez gained his first experience in politics, working in Washington, D.C. as a congressional page for U.S. Rep. Ed Pastor, D-Phoenix. +It was briefly pressed into service during World War II but was not used after 1941 and was withdrawn in February 1946. +Of the light rail systems in the United States, Los Angeles has the fourth-highest annual ridership in North America, followed by Boston with the fifth-highest. +Her father, David T. Reilly, is a writer and composer, and her mother works in production. +In 2016 the company entered the Non Bank lending market, where they offer residential mortgage loans as the lender through its 100% owned subsidiary Mortgageport Home Loans Pty Limited. +References Category:Populated places in Robat Karim County +Triadic may refer to: Triad (music) Triadic patent, a series of corresponding patents Triadic reciprocal causation, a concept in social psychology Triadic relation, a mathematical concept p-adic number, where p=3, a mathematical conceptTriadic System in PsychiatrySee also Tertian +New Perspectives, Friends of the William Morris Gallery, 2017 . +Sean Walsh (born 2 December 1985), known professionally as Seann Walsh, is an English comedian and actor. +It is a steep, pointed, and complex peak; it easily rivals the slightly higher Distaghil Sar to the North, which has a more rounded profile. +ReleaseThe film's trailer premiered at the 10th annual Gathering of the Juggalos, where it was screened twice. +He penned a bunch of major hits including Romans and Vikadakumaran. +Alhaji Alusine Largbo, 2014 - Trade. +ReferencesCategory:Municipalities of OaxacaCategory:Populated places in Oaxaca +Mastered by Chris Bellman at Allen Zentz Mastering (San Clemente, CA). +External linksPolitical GraveyardCategory:1889 birthsCategory:1939 deathsCategory:People from Laurium, MichiganCategory:Politicians from DetroitCategory:Michigan DemocratsCategory:Michigan state senatorsCategory:Road incident deaths in the United StatesCategory:20th-century American politicians +Tappeh Bashi () may refer to: Tappeh Bashi, Ardabil Tappeh Bashi, West Azerbaijan Tappeh Bashi, Poldasht, West Azerbaijan Province Tappeh Bashi, Showt, West Azerbaijan Province +The fully electronic method has the advantage of speed, often completing orders in less than one second, but comparable manual transactions take an average of nine seconds. +He studied for his PhD at the University of Groningen. +Its seat is in Coulounieix-Chamiers. +Tucker sold it to the Government of Bermuda in 1959 so that it would remain on the island, and for some time it was kept in a museum that Tucker and his wife ran on behalf of the Government. +Events Unknown date Frank Meidell Falch was assigned as the first director of the Bergen International Festival (1951–1956). +Entertainment on October 28, 2015, more than 6 years after f(x)'s official debut in September 2009. +Fana Håndball Elite is the women's handball team of the Norwegian multi-sports club Fana IL based in Bergen. +Some customers are alleged to have become addicted to Harley's submarines. +ReferencesCategory:1910 birthsCategory:1973 deathsCategory:Sportspeople from South YorkshireCategory:English footballersCategory:Shirebrook Miners Welfare F.C. +References Category:Villages in Krishna district +Past ResultsReferences Category:Student quiz competitionsCategory:Education in Colorado +in Berlin and Vienna. +ReferencesCategory:Bob Bennett (singer-songwriter) compilation albumsCategory:1989 greatest hits albums +The 1996–97 Segunda Divisão season was the 63rd season of the competition and the 47th season of recognised third-tier football in Portugal. +It also has object-oriented capabilities. +Anchitherium was a browsing (leaf eating) horse that originated in the early Miocene of North America and subsequently dispersed to Europe and Asia, where it gave rise to the larger bodied genus Sinohippus. +KWIQ may refer to: KWIQ-FM, a radio station (100.5 FM) licensed to Moses Lake, Washington, United States KWIQ (AM), a radio station (1020 AM) licensed to Moses Lake North, Washington, United States +It was attended by approximately 1,700 people. +Category:Villages in Jalgaon district +East Germany won their second title after they finished top of the final group ahead of the Soviet Union and Hungary. +He also produced the majority of the vocals on Mary J. Blige's Platinum album Growing Pains, which recently won a Grammy for "Best Contemporary R&B Album", 2008. +His family then moved to Ann Arbor, where he spent his formative years and most of his life. +in French Literature from Ohio University and is an active member of the Society for French Historical Studies. +Sie kommen aus Agarthi is a German television series. +The wingspan is about 30 mm. +Members of this committee are Jan C. Behrends, Carl Bildt, Vasu Gounden, Margaret MacMillan, Erkki Tuomioja, Christina Twomey and Sergei Zhuravlev. +Breitenau is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Alsace in north-eastern France. +She was replaced by Representative Eddie L. Jackson, also of East St. Louis. +Kroll became at Columbia an assistant professor in 1949 and was promoted to associate professor and then full professor before leaving for UCSD. +Embūte () is a village in the Embūte Parish, Vaiņode Municipality of Latvia. +More than 50 clocks with the trademarked Atomichron name were produced. +Ocean City has bridge connections to the Marmora section of Upper Township by the 34th Street (Roosevelt Boulevard) Bridge, Egg Harbor Township by the Ocean City-Longport Bridge, Somers Point by the 9th Street Bridge (Route 52), and the Strathmere section of Upper Township by the Corson's Inlet Bridge. +In Round 2, Richmond recorded its first VFL win over Carlton after 23 consecutive losses, a losing streak dating back to Richmond's entry into the VFL in 1908. +He was born October 8, 1942 in Peterborough, New Hampshire. +The collection was a success, and many of its poems became the basis for popular songs, but it remained her only book of verse. +It is based on the 1996 book Bad As I Wanna Be by Dennis Rodman and Tim Keown. +Facilities and aircraft Elwood Airport covers an area of at an elevation of 866 feet (264 m) above mean sea level. +A local apiarist later found this slab and, believing it to contain fossils, contacted the Australian Museum about it. +The local church is dedicated to the Exaltation of the Holy Cross and belongs to the Parish of Klanec. +The red flashes are visible 085°-180° for . +See also Mason–Dixon lineReferencesExternal linksMason-Dixon Trail System - official home pageMason-Dixon Trail on Facebook - official Facebook PageCategory:Protected areas of Cecil County, MarylandCategory:Protected areas of Harford County, MarylandCategory:Hiking trails in DelawareCategory:Hiking trails in MarylandCategory:Hiking trails in PennsylvaniaCategory:Long-distance trails in the United StatesCategory:Protected areas of New Castle County, DelawareCategory:Protected areas of Chester County, PennsylvaniaCategory:Protected areas of Delaware County, PennsylvaniaCategory:Protected areas of York County, PennsylvaniaCategory:National Recreation Trails in DelawareCategory:National Recreation Trails in MarylandCategory:National Recreation Trails in Pennsylvania +It lies approximately north-west of Ostrzeszów and south-east of the regional capital Poznań. +At the time, Vancouver-Point Grey was a multiple-member district, and Perry served alongside Darlene Marzari. +Amr El Solia (; born 2 April 1989) is an Egyptian professional footballer who plays as a Midfielder for Egyptian League club Al Ahly and Egyptian national team. +The first district match, the Glasgow District versus Edinburgh District was held in 1872. +Radio Club Uruguayo represents the interests of their associated amateur radio operators in Uruguay before national and international regulatory authorities. +ResultsThe preliminary round was started on 19 July at 11:00. +Portugués is a barrio in the municipality of Adjuntas, Puerto Rico. +On the same day Prosecutor-General Yen Da-ho filed an extraordinary appeal to the Supreme Court, asserting that the original judgment in the case was itself illegal. +Selected worksReferencesCategory:1883 birthsCategory:1958 deathsCategory:Artists from PhiladelphiaCategory:Artists from New York CityCategory:People from Murray Hill, ManhattanCategory:Georgetown University alumniCategory:Drexel University alumniCategory:Art Students League of New York alumniCategory:Animal paintersCategory:American male paintersCategory:20th-century American paintersCategory:American illustrators +Red Hot Chili Peppers released By the Way in 2002, with Frusciante taking a central role in the songwriting. +Fremdenführer (2nd tour guide) Fritz Schlenk as Purser Reinhold Bernt as Zeitungsverkäufer (newspaper man)ReferencesBibliography Bergfelder, Tim & Cargnelli, Christian. +The Defence Stores Department was a department of the New Zealand Defence Department responsible for the purchase, receipt, issue and repair of stores, initially for the Armed Constabulary and then the Permanent and Volunteer Forces of New Zealand from 1862 to 1917. +Since commands can be issued to many different devices before that STOP, this lets the PMBus master synchronize their actions. +Composition 1st Army 4th Army Turkestan Army Astrakhan Group of troops (until October 14, 1919, when it became part of the 11th Army)Commanders Commander : Ivan Belov (April 1919-August 1919), Mikhail Frunze (August 15, 1919-September 10, 1920), Grigori Sokolnikov (September 10, 1920-March 8, 1921), Vladimir Lazarevich (March 8, 1921 – February 11, 1922), Vasily Shorin (February 11-October 18, 1922), August Kork (October 18, 1922 – August 12, 1923), Semyon Pugachov (August 12, 1923 – April 30, 1924), Mikhail Levandovsky (April 30, 1924 – December 2, 1925), Konstantin Avksentevsky (December 2, 1925 – June 4, 1926). +The stream passes through the Blean Woods National Nature Reserve and the villages of Blean and Tyler Hill. +Between 1982 and 1984 he acted as Special Commonwealth Prosecutor into Bottom of the harbour tax avoidance, and between 1990 and 1992 he was Royal Commissioner into the Building Industry in New South Wales. +Four boats, each from a different nation, competed. +SynonymsFevillea hederacea Poir. +External links Category:1946 filmsCategory:French filmsCategory:French comedy filmsCategory:1940s comedy filmsCategory:French-language filmsCategory:Films directed by Maurice ClocheCategory:Gaumont Film Company filmsCategory:French black-and-white films +ReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Food and drink companies established in 1975Category:Sports drinksCategory:Companies based in MississippiCategory:Columbus, MississippiCategory:Lowndes County, MississippiCategory:1975 establishments in Mississippi +San Francisco Chronicle, 1 February 2001 Gallery Watch. +The name Heriot-Watt was taken from Scottish inventor James Watt and Scottish philanthropist and goldsmith George Heriot. +He was just 16 at the time and attended Endeavour Sports High in Sydney. +Oh Olsun is a 1973 Turkish comedy film directed by Ertem Eğilmez. +Dastgird or Dastgerd or Dastjerd or Dastjird (), also rendered as Dast-i-Jird or Dasteh Jerd or Dashtgerd or Dashtgird, may refer to:Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari ProvinceDastgerd, Borujen, a village in Borujen CountyDastgerd, Kiar, a village in Kiar CountyDastgerd Rural District (Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari Province), in Kiar CountyDastgerd, Lordegan, a village in Lordegan CountyEast Azerbaijan ProvinceDastjerd, Azarshahr, a village in Azarshahr CountyDastjerd, Meyaneh, a village in Meyaneh CountyDastjerd, Varzaqan, a village in Varzaqan CountyDastjerd Rural District (East Azerbaijan Province), in Azarshahr CountyFars ProvinceDastjerd, Estahban, a village in Estahban CountyDastjerd, Khorrambid, a village in Khorrambid CountyHamadan ProvinceDastjerd, Bahar, a village in Bahar CountyDastjerd, Kabudarahang, a village in Kabudarahang CountyHormozgan ProvinceDastgerd-e Dargaz, a village in Bashagard CountyDastgerd-e Nagerd, a village in Bashagard CountyIsfahan ProvinceDastjerd, Ardestan, a village in Ardestan CountyDastgerd, a city in Borkhar CountyDastgerd, Fereydunshahr, a village in Fereydunshahr CountyDastjerd, Isfahan, a village in Isfahan CountyDastgerd, Isfahan, a village in Isfahan CountyDastgerd, alternate name of Dastgerdu, a village in Isfahan CountyDastgerd-e Mar, a village in Isfahan CountyDastgerd, Mobarakeh, a village in Mobarakeh CountyDastjerd, Natanz, a village in Natanz CountyKerman ProvinceDastjerd, Bardsir, a village in Bardsir CountyDastjerd, Kerman, a village in Kerman CountyDastjerd, Ravar, a village in Ravar CountyKermanshah ProvinceDastjerd-e Olya, Kermanshah, a village in Sahneh CountyDastjerd-e Sofla, Kermanshah, a village in Sahneh CountyKohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad ProvinceDastgerd, Kohgiluyeh, a village in Kohgiluyeh CountyDastgerd, Charusa, a village in Kohgiluyeh CountyLorestan ProvinceDastgerd, Besharat, a village in Besharat District, Aligudarz CountyDastgerd, Zaz va Mahru, a village in Zaz va Mahru District, Aligudarz CountyMarkazi ProvinceDastjerd, Ashtian, a village in Ashtian CountyDastjerd, Shazand, a village in Shazand CountyDastjerd, Markazi, a village in Zarandieh CountyNorth Khorasan ProvinceDastjerd, North Khorasan, a village in North Khorasan Province, IranQazvin ProvinceDastjerd, Qazvin, a village in Qazvin Province, IranDastjerd-e Olya, a village in Qazvin Province, IranDastjerd-e Sofla, Qazvin, a village in Qazvin Province, IranDastjerd Rural District (Qazvin Province), in Qazvin County, Qazvin Province, IranQom ProvinceDastjerd, a city in Qom County, Qom Province, IranDastgerd, Qom, a village in Qom County, Qom Province, IranDastjerd Rural District (Qom Province), in Qom County, Qom Province, IranRazavi Khorasan ProvinceDastgerd, Razavi Khorasan, a village in Chenaran CountyDastjerd, Firuzeh, a village in Firuzeh CountyDastjerd-e Aqa Bozorg, a village in Mashhad CountyDastjerd, Rashtkhvar, a village in Rashtkhvar CountySemnan ProvinceDastjerd, Semnan, a village in Shahrud CountySouth Khorasan ProvinceDastgerd, Birjand, a village in Birjand CountyDastgerd, Darmian, a village in Darmian CountyDastgerd, Khusf, a village in Khusf CountyDastjerd, Qaen, a village in Qaen CountyDastgerd, Sarbisheh, a village in Sarbisheh CountyDastgerd, Mud, a village in Sarbisheh CountyWest Azerbaijan ProvinceDastjerd, West Azerbaijan, a village in Urmia CountyDastjerd-e Abbasabad, a village in Urmia CountyYazd ProvinceDastjerd, Yazd, a village in Taft CountySee alsoDastgerdan (disambiguation)Dastagird, Sassanian city near Ctesiphon +In 2007, he received the "Clarity Award" from the Pennsylvania Bar Association's Plain English Committee for "the use of clear writing by legal professionals," awarded in part for his authorship of a book on legal writing. +As a student he belonged to patriotic political organization Confederation of Polish Nation (Konfederacja Narodu Polskiego). +He spent the rest of his life under house arrest and died in 1970. +HSBC lionsMaintaining a tradition begun with the historic HSBC Building across the Huangpu River on the Bund, the front of the north tower features a pair of bronze lions, the fourth pair of copies of the original which once graced the bank's old Shanghai headquarters. +The two men arrive at an expensive hotel where they rescue Virginia Rollins (Claire) and Babs Green (Lee), who have just been involved in a car accident. +Flowing in the general south-western and southern direction, it flows into Clear Creek south of Bloomington. +Personal lifeMoncrief and his wife, Brandy, have four sons. +The Mazda Xedos is a range of executive cars that were launched by Japanese manufacturer Mazda in 1992. +During her senior season, Pancake led the Crimson Tide to their first overall national championship in 2012. +CSEC may refer to: Calgary Sports and Entertainment Corporation, owner and operator of several Calgary-based sports teams Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate Communications Security Establishment Canada, later known as the Communications Security Establishment, the Canadian government's national cryptologic agency Commercial sexual exploitation of children Commission on State Emergency Communications, an agency of the State of Texas; see Steve Mitchell Citadel Security Services, in the computer game Mass Effect +C. Krishnan may refer to: C. Krishnan (MDMK politician) (born 1936), member of the 14th Lok Sabha of India C. Krishnan (AIADMK politician), Indian politician and member of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly C. Krishnan (Kanyakumari MLA), Indian politician and former Member of the Legislative Assembly C. Krishnan (CPI-M), Indian politician +External links Official page of NordsternparkReferencesCategory:Parks in GermanyCategory:Culture of North Rhine-WestphaliaCategory:Gelsenkirchen +Taftileh (, also Romanized as Taftīleh and Teftīleh; also known as Tiftila and Tiftileh) is a village in Hoseynabad-e Shomali Rural District, Saral District, Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. +ReferencesExternal links Category:AphelenchoididaeCategory:Protostome subfamilies +In 2015, Dalton Maag designed the Bookerly typeface and was released to be the default, exclusive font for reading on Amazon's Kindle devices. +The village has a population of 808. +Blocks as large as in size were flung as far as from the crater. +ReferencesExternal linksBrett Docherty at Rugby League projectCategory:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Australian rugby league playersCategory:Western Suburbs Magpies playersCategory:Illawarra Steelers playersCategory:Sydney Roosters playersCategory:Rugby league fullbacksCategory:Rugby league wingersCategory:Rugby league players from New South WalesCategory:People from the Riverina +About east of Flagstaff it passes through Walnut Canyon National Monument, known for its cliff dwellings constructed by the Sinagua people between 1100-1250 A.D. Near the end of the canyon the creek approaches Winona and crosses under Interstate 40, before flowing north to its confluence with the Rio de Flag, forming San Francisco Wash. San Francisco Wash continues east, eventually discharging into Padre Canyon Wash, in turn flowing into Diablo Wash which joins the Little Colorado River near Leupp, Arizona. +Several members of the genus are endangered or extinct due to loss of habitat causing by diversion or overuse of water resources, particularly in the western United States. +The family youth destroyed the airstrip which was built by the British military as the second line of defence for the world war. +ProductionFirst Contact was filmed and set in New South Wales, home to the largest Indigenous Australian population of any state/territory, the Northern Territory, where Indigenous Australians make up a higher percentage of the population than in any other state or territory and Western Australia. +He wrote another book while in England entitled An Incorruptible Key composed of the CX. +The Runna will be offered with at least three four-cylinder engines, including a 108-horsepower 1.6-liter gasoline unit, a 95-horsepower 1.4-liter and a 1.7-liter powerplant that runs on CNG, both of which are reported to meet Euro IV and V emission standards and the "Pedestrian Impact" safety requirement. +LifeFamily backgroundImperial Noble Consort Dunsu's personal name was not recorded in history. +Centrilobular necrosis refers to the necrosis of the centrilobular tissue of the hepatic lobule. +With the Office as a government entity, this would be a violation of First Amendment rights, and thus decided that this portion of the Lanham Act was unconstitutional. +ReferencesExternal links Profile at sport-results.org www.x-streambalanceco.za www.bicycling.co.za www.fatbmx.com www.cyclingdirect.co.za www.cyclingsa.com www.cyclingsa.com gsport.co.zaCategory:1992 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:BMX ridersCategory:South African female cyclistsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Cyclists at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics +The Ottomans occupied the region in 1914–1915 and 1918–1919 periods. +John Halsey may refer to:John Halsey (privateer), colonial American privateer and later pirateJohn Halsey (musician), rock drummerSir John Walter Brooke Halsey, 4th Baronet of the Halsey baronetsSee alsoHalsey (disambiguation) +The highway boards continued to have responsibility for highways other than main roads. +Cast Hermann Thimig as Peter Pellmann / Paul Polter Hans Junkermann as Arthur Bergmann Hilde Krüger as Nanette, seine Tochter Olga Limburg as Ida, seine Schwester Paul Heidemann as Martin Götz Hilde Hildebrand as Mary Paul Henckels as Professor Leblanc Jakob Tiedtke as Sebastian Wolfgang von Schwindt as Max Hans Richter as Fritz Paula Denk as Adele Jupp Hussels as VerlegerReferencesBibliography Waldman, Harry. +Both Williams and Hunter deny the charges. +Village of Twilight is a 1984 role-playing game adventure for Chill published by Pacesetter. +Following his Congressional stint, McVey worked as a management consultant in Washington, D.C. from 1963 until 1964 and as executive director of the Fulton County, Georgia, Republican Party from June 1964 until September 1965. +The current chief editor is Neeta Verma, deputy director general of NIC. +They were put in Group B of the first qualifying round, against Iran (qualifiers in 1998) and Tajikistan. +The village is the location of Sela Church. +Scott Vincent (born 20 May 1992) is a Zimbabwean professional golfer who plays on the European Tour and the Asian Tour. +Charles Frederick Wolcott (September 29, 1906 in Flint, United States – January 26, 1987 in Haifa, Israel) was a music composer who served as a member of the Universal House of Justice, the supreme governing body of the Baháʼí Faith, between 1963 and 1987. +The bill gave the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland the power to organise the island into districts and bring police forces into them at the districts' expense. +Since the early 1980s she has been primarily associated with large-scale, minimalist drawings on un-stretched canvas - usually pinned directly to the gallery walls for display. +Revilla Vallejera is a municipality and town located in the province of Burgos, Castile and León, Spain. +1984), Ukrainian football striker Oleksandr Sytnyk (b. +Derrima is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. +The Jamia has the following depts of education: Dept of Primary Education Dept of Secondary Education Dept Higher Secondary Education Dept of Tafsir Dept of Hadith Dept of Fiqh Dept of Mantiq Dept of Tajweed Dept of Arabic and Bengali LiteraturePublication'Al-Jamiatul Arabia Lil Baneena Wal Banaat Haildhar' publishes a magazine called Deeni Biplon (Revolution). +At the 1998 African Cup of Nations he gave the date of birth as 30 June 1970. +Located near the intersections of I-79 and US 422, the village is situated west of Lake Arthur, a reservoir on Muddy Creek. +Its forewings have a broad iridescent-blue band with a similar blue patch on the hindwing. +Annemie Fontana died on 25 October 2002 in Zürich. +It was released on January 1, 2007 on Cobra Music Records. +The main floor has administrative offices, a library, studio, auditorium, cafeteria, and 65 classrooms. +Several anthems are included in the British coronation service. +The Principality officially declared its independence on January 1, 2015. +Graue is a surname. +ReferencesExternal links http://www.ganime.ca/ G-Anime official website G-Anime on Facebook G-Anime on Twitter G-Anime on deviantARTCategory:Anime conventions in CanadaCategory:GatineauCategory:Tourist attractions in Outaouais +After the 2015 elections, she opened a consultancy office Mourani-Criminologie on criminology with a concentration on issues of organized crime and gangs, juvenile delinquency, human trafficking, prostitution and international terrorism. +During World War I, she was a Red Cross Instructor and Examiner in Elementary Hygiene and Home Care of the Sick, and was involved in the formation of a military base hospital in Denver. +See also Abel-cheramim Biblical judges Binding of IsaacNotesBibliographyExternal links Jephthah in Jewish EncyclopediaCategory:12th-century BCE Hebrew peopleCategory:Christian saints from the Old TestamentCategory:Judges of ancient IsraelCategory:Human sacrificeCategory:Book of Judges +It has been restored and is listed as a Place of State Significance by the Heritage Council Victoria. +Administrative divisionsThe state consists of 2 counties:NyirolUrorReferencesCategory:Greater Upper NileCategory:States of South SudanCategory:BiehCategory:2015 establishments in South Sudan +She has been married to Carlos Franzetti since 1994 and they have one daughter, Mariana. +The Journal of Developing Societies is a quarterly refereed journal that is a forum for discussion on full range of diverse theoretical and ideological viewpoints on development that exist in the contemporary international community. +Cathkin High School, a state secondary school in Cambuslang Cathkin Park, a municipal park in Glasgow, formerly a major Scottish football ground (Third Lanark A.C.) Cathkin Park (1872–1903), an earlier ground of the above football club a short distance from the other Cathkin Peak, a South African mountain peak Cathkin, Victoria, a town in Australia Cathkin railway station, now closed +12,000 capacity Juba Stadium is their home. +Feeling that Gilbert has been largely forgotten by modern wrestling fans, Rotten was motivated to hold the Ted Petty Invitational and Chris Candido Cup Tag Team Tournament during the 2000s for the same reasons. +The municipality covers an area of , and has a population of 48 (as at 28 August 2006). +It is found in southern Sudan and north-western Tanzania. +Bailleul-sur-Thérain is a commune in the Oise department in northern France. +On 25 May 1945, following the German surrender, XGRS was seized by Japan who operated it using the call letters XGOO. +Coprolith may mean: Coprolite, fossilised dung Fecaloma, a hardened piece of fæces, symptomatic of certain illnesses. +Since 2011 is World Heritage listed as Unesco as part of the historic center of Bridgetown. +The Bride Can't Wait (, also known as The Bride Couldn't Wait and Anselmo ha fretta) is a 1949 Italian comedy film directed by Gianni Franciolini. +Graphium may refer to: Graphium (butterfly), a genus of mostly tropical swallowtail butterflies Graphium (fungus), a genus of fungi in the family Microascaceae +On March 15, 2017 Voa São Paulo was granted by the government of the State of São Paulo the concession to operate this facility, previously operated by DAESP. +The area described in the map is today approximately bounded by Tingoora Road in the north, Transmitter Road to the east, Eckarts Road to the west with the Bunya Highway passing through. +The 6th and 7th Battalions were amalgamated as the 6th/7th Battalion, Welch Regiment and the 4th Battalion, King's Shropshire Light Infantry joined in the same year. +See also List of Aare bridges in BernSwitzerland*Bridges +Renovation of Kallara - Vechoor road added further connectivity. +2014: In the months before the Swedish national election there are several articles in the press. +He has been awarded with the Public Service Award and Nigerian Centenary Award Committee: One of the Most Influential Nigerians in the Diaspora (2015). +All of the robot's paintings were abstract takes on a polluted cityscape, the most well-known titled City No. +This Summer Feeling () is a 2015 French-German drama film directed by Mikhaël Hers and starring Anders Danielsen Lie and Judith Chemla. +Alphonse Anger (20 October 1915 – 22 October 1999) was a French gymnast. +The original church of this monastery is now the parish church for the city. +He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Seahawks in 1982 from Boston College and went on to play in a Seahawks-record 218 career games over 15 seasons. +Led by the defense the Packers were number one in turnovers forced and number 9th overall. +The 2010–11 PBA Philippine Cup Finals was the best-of-7 championship series of the 2010–11 PBA Philippine Cup, and the conclusion of the conference's playoffs. +San Antonio is the seventh-most populous city in the United States and the second-most populous in the state of Texas. +The school is located within the North Metropolitan Education Region school district, a district of the WA Department of Education. +15 songs took part with the winner being chosen by a 16-member jury who each awarded between 1 and 9 points per song. +The 2015–16 National League B season was the 69th ice hockey season of Switzerland's second tier hockey league, the National League B.HC Ajoie went on to win the championship by defeating SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers in the finals. +An 80-foot self-supporting tower replaced the guyed mast. +See alsoCommunes of the Haute-Saône departmentReferencesINSEE Category:Communes of Haute-Saône +In the Portuguese series Rua Sésamo, his name is Conde de Contar (translated as "Count of Counting"). +External links Profile at BDFA Category:1990 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:French footballersCategory:French expatriate footballersCategory:FC Sète 34 playersCategory:Silvio Pettirossi footballersCategory:3 de Febrero playersCategory:Magallanes footballersCategory:Primera B de Chile playersCategory:Expatriate footballers in ChileCategory:French expatriate sportspeople in ChileCategory:Association football midfielders +ChartsWeekly chartsYear-end chartsReferencesCategory:2018 songsCategory:2018 singlesCategory:Tim McGraw songsCategory:Columbia Nashville Records singlesCategory:Songs written by Ben StennisCategory:Song recordings produced by Byron GallimoreCategory:Song recordings produced by Tim McGraw +Bulzi () is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Sassari in the Italian region Sardinia, located about north of Cagliari and about northeast of Sassari. +Karwice may refer to the following places:Karwice, Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland)Karwice, Drawsko County in West Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-west Poland)Karwice, Sławno County in West Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-west Poland) +Myung's favorite bands include the Beatles, Black Sabbath, the Who, Iron Maiden, Rush, Yes, Jethro Tull and Genesis. +He was involved in exporting fish and the trade in the West Indies. +In January 2012, the group was praised by the Head of Office of the UN High Commission for Refugees in Ireland for its work with LGBT refugees and was described as a "global model for best practice". +References TageoCategory:Towns and villages in Meshgin Shahr County +As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 20,477, with the population of Bolshaya Chernigovka accounting for 33.2% of that number. +A contemporary of Uday Shankar, in the 1930s she staged a number of ballets in Kolkata, including Bhookh on Bengal famine which was a pioneering work in presenting contemporary themes on stage and Omar Khayyam. +Trace had pledged its stock in the two companies as collateral for certain loans. +The 2001 Bahraini Crown Prince Cup was the 1st edition of the cup tournament in men's football (soccer). +As in the previous two seasons, Brentford's suffered a slump in the second half of the campaign, losing 9 of 14 matches between mid-February and late April to drop to as low as 9th, though two wins from the final two matches of the season elevated the side to a 5th-place finish. +Father Clancy was a member of the Railway League which was instrumental in having the main northern rail route re-drawn to include Innisfail in 1914. +playersCategory:Expatriate footballers in MexicoCategory:NK Maribor playersCategory:Expatriate footballers in SloveniaCategory:SK Rapid Wien playersCategory:Austrian Football Bundesliga playersCategory:Expatriate footballers in AustriaCategory:FK Leotar playersCategory:FK Mladost Gacko playersCategory:Association football forwardsCategory:Atlético Mexiquense footballers +Engineer Manuel Moreno Torres National Airport is a general aviation airport located in Matehuala, San Luis de Potosí, Mexico. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1970Category:Midilinae +The American Chemistry Council estimated that global chemical sales in 2014 rose by 3.7% to . +Two weeks after the final match the club entered administration. +After the election of 2002 Korthals returned as a Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 23 May 2002. +Gardner finished second in the race he had won in 1971, 18 seconds behind Frank Matich driving his self-designed and built Matich A50 Repco-Holden. +The Campo Novo do Sul River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil. +ReferencesCategory:AnguillidaeCategory:Fish described in 2009Category:Near threatened animalsCategory:Endemic fauna of the PhilippinesCategory:Fauna of Luzon +AP CoursesMany Advanced Placement classes are offered, including Biology, Calculus AB, Chemistry, English Language and Composition, English Literature and Composition, Physics, Spanish Language and Culture, Studio Art, US History, Psychology, Government, and World History. +This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Carroll County, Kentucky, United States. +Wilson trailed with 435,355 votes (30 percent). +This rainforest belt had a range of 1200 meters in elevation in Kyushu, at 1,000 – 1800 meters in Shikoku, 800 – 1650 meters in Chubum and the lowlands of south Hokkaido. +Its natural habitats are tropical moist lowland forests, moist montane forests, and rivers. +Other early tenants included McCrory Stores, Walgreens, and a two-screen movie theater. +Passenger statisticsIn fiscal 2017, the station was used by an average of 22,864 passengers daily (boarding passengers only). +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Vaud +The Sindh River joins the Yamuna River further downstream at Pachnada. +The EYC worked to promote a pro-European attitude amongst European youth, and conducted "a massive propaganda campaign of conferences and exhibitions, cinema shows, radio broadcasts and a large array of publications". +The Philippines Free Press is a weekly English language news magazine which was founded in 1908, which makes it the Philippines' oldest weekly English language periodical currently still in print. +Hughes is often discussed only in relation to his contribution to the Chicago school. +He is currently director of the Ancient DNA Centre at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. +He has also won Norsk artistsforbunds ærespris, an annual honorary title given out to stand out musicians. +Beiträge zur schwäbischen Literatur- und Geistesgeschichte, hrsg. +Paul Seabrook Graham (born July 7, 1892) was an American college football player and coach. +K. E. Abbott was appointed Consul of Tabriz in April 1854, and remained there till the rupture between England and Persia in 1856, and returned to the same place, as Consul-General, on the renewal of relations with Persia, in July 1857. +It refers to acute inflammation of mind and body, not in a theoretical but in a descriptive sense. +Parabacteroides chartae is a Gram-negative, obligately anaerobic and non-motile bacterium from the genus of Parabacteroides which has been isolated from wastewater from a paper mill in Lingqiao in China. +The racial makeup of the CDP was 59.27% White, 14.53% African American, 0.26% Native American, 9.15% Asian, 0.06% Pacific Islander, 11.55% from other races, and 5.18% from two or more races. +Alexander Goldenweiser may refer to: Alexander Goldenweiser (anthropologist) (1880–1940), American anthropologist Alexander Goldenweiser (composer) (1875–1961), Russian composer, pianist and teacher +A sports writer is even closer to the fun than an ordinary spectator. +Moretta is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Cuneo in the Italian region Piedmont, located about southwest of Turin and about north of Cuneo. +References Category:Populated places in Takestan County +Until 2007, Sirris was known as CRIF-WTCM. +Notable clubs in the Castelo Branco FA Sporting Covilhã — only Castelo Branco club to compete in Primeira Liga Benfica de Castelo Branco SertanenseCurrent Division - 2013–14 SeasonThe AF Castelo Branco runs the following division covering the fourth tier of the Portuguese football league system. +The Cabannina is a cattle breed from the Liguria region of Italy. +. +Early diplomatic career Henderson’s initial diplomatic assignments saw him appointed to various consular posts in Latin America: Nogales, Mexico (1942–1943) Arica, Chile (1943) and Cochabamba, Bolivia (1943–1947). +The song was featured during the closing of the third season Orange is the New Black episode "Fake it Till You Fake it Some More." +External links Ute Lemper performs "The Saga of Jenny" (public domain) The song, revisioned by Sondheim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRB-HP9rPGQCategory:Songs with lyrics by Ira GershwinCategory:Songs with music by Kurt WeillCategory:Mildred Bailey songsCategory:1941 songs +Track listingWater's Edge (2:33)Sway Your Head (3:16)LTFP (4:08)Faces (3:09)Perfect Time (4:00)Tunnel Vision (3:35)Julie (3:12)On Your Way (3:51)Hope (4:13)Upon Waking She Found Herself a Cougar (3:45)In the Blue (4:02)Please Shine (4:22)References Category:2008 albumsCategory:We Shot the Moon albums +The austral canastero (Asthenes anthoides) is a species of bird in the family Furnariidae, the ovenbirds. +The team was recognised by many to be the first professional football giant in Hong Kong. +It lies approximately east of Muszyna, south-east of Nowy Sącz, and south-east of the regional capital Kraków. +The men's 4×100 metre medley relay event at the 1988 Summer Olympics took place on 25 September at the Jamsil Indoor Swimming Pool in Seoul, South Korea. +The magazine has featured cover interviews with Anthony Jackson, Ron Carter, Larry Graham, Victor Wooten, Marcus Miller, Nathan East, Hutch Hutchinson, Les Claypool, Nathan Watts, Eddie Gómez, and Jeff Berlin while showcasing newer talents like Grammy Award winner Esperanza Spalding. +See also Crushed red pepper Food powder PaprikaReferencesExternal links Category:Chili pepper dishesCategory:Korean cuisineCategory:Spices +The story prompted a large-scale investigation into the possible source inside the Australian Public Service including Australian Federal Police probing 3,000 telephone extensions and hundreds of mobile phones. +Manish Kaushik may refer to: Manish Kaushik (voice actor) (born 1980), Indian voice-dubbing artist Manish Kaushik (boxer) (born 1996), Indian boxer +From 1965 to 1972, she worked at Mumbai University as a research assistant in the Linguistics department. +Carondelet Street is a major street in New Orleans. +FK Trgovački is a Serbian football club based in Požarevac, Serbia. +Phlox also finds that Nadet, Jamin's mother, has lung cancer, and she is taken back to be cured. +Irony, narrative subversion and collage were trademarks of his film aesthetics. +The lake filled again in 1996, but then received no further water from the Wimmera River, and had dried up by 2000. +Some of the paintings are now part of a collection of Lam Qua's work held by the Yale University in the Peter Parker Collection at the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library; others are in the Gordon Museum, Guy's Hospital, London. +In 2018, the National College Access Network named McCann their 2018 Champion of College Access. +Several of the managing stock holders were full-time Rhode Island residents while others were summer residents. +Early lifeJames Henry Forman was born in Kirkfield, Ontario, Canada on 1 February 1896. +He married Princess Elena of Romania (born 1950) at a civil ceremony on 20 July 1983 in Durham, England, which was followed by a religious ceremony on 24 September 1983 in Lausanne, Switzerland. +External linksOlympic profileCategory:Year of birth missingCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Olympic tug of war competitors of the United StatesCategory:Tug of war competitors at the 1904 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic bronze medalists for the United States in tug of war +In 2009, Buhari obtained a PhD in Public Policy from the University of Abuja. +Of the rest of the land, 16.1% is settled (buildings or roads) and the remainder (0.9%) is non-productive (rivers, glaciers or mountains). +The story of Manjugarta, who preferred sweets to learning, Garteswor, the image of Manjushree at the field of Phampi. +His nephews, George Fillingham and William Blake, both played first-class cricket. +The act produced a UK Singles Chart Top 20 hit with the breakthrough record "Prime Mover", a song that was inspired musically by Hawkwind's 1977 track "Quark, Strangeness and Charm", itself heavily inspired by the German group NEU! +EducationMasood received his initial education from Cadet College at Larkana, and later he did master's degree in strategic studies. +However, when his principal Frank Hockenberry (Kurt Fuller) is involved in an accident in a prank that he planned, he finds a homeless man named Franklin Fitz (Kevin Nealon), to act as the acting principal to keep his parents and every one else none the wiser. +In 1967 the ship was sold to Greece and renamed Aghios Nectarios. +Ruchenköpfe is a mountain of Bavaria, Germany. +Jason Gerhardt (born April 21, 1974) is an American actor. +Ossipee Lake is in the northeastern part of the town. +It crosses over Lick Branch and passes Wyan–Pine Grove Elementary School. +They are rarely used out of professional liturgical typing, also the Rial grapheme is normally written fully, not by the ligature. +Indeed, it is not until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that the percentage begins to increase annually. +ReferencesExternal linksKošaki on GeopediaCategory:Geography of MariborCategory:Former settlements in SloveniaCategory:2008 disestablishments in Slovenia +They perform as a live band as well as avant-garde and modern classical projects. +It is a social species, which is found in South Africa and Madagascar. +ReferencesExternal links To World Register of Marine SpeciesgallegosianaCategory:Gastropods described in 1951 +In 2017, Noble Street students were highlighted by the Lawndale News for their community service at an urban farm in East Garfield Park. +The Belgian Bowl victory was the Tribes 3rd in a row. +Richard Phillips may refer to:Richard Phillips (American painter) (born 1962), artist from the United StatesRichard Phillips (athlete) (born 1983), sprinter from JamaicaRichard Phillips (chemist) (1778–1851), British chemistRichard Phillips (English painter) (1681–1741), London portrait painterRichard Phillips (merchant mariner) (born 1955), captain of the MV Maersk Alabama taken hostage by Somali pirates in April 2009Richard Phillips (MP) (c. 1640–1720), British Member of Parliament for IpswichSir Richard Phillips (publisher) (1767–1840), British author and publisher, founder of the Monthly MagazineRichard D. Phillips, American economistRich Phillips, American radio personalityRichie Phillips (1940–2013), American executive directorRicky Phillips (born 1951), American musicianSee also Richard Philipps (disambiguation)Richard Phillipps, pen name of Philip K. Dick (1928–1982) +Boman continued to investigate the immune response of insects, focussing on the proteins induced by immune challenge. +In the South, more depots exploded. +footballersCategory:Club Puebla playersCategory:C.S. +Match detailsSee also1984 Emperor's CupReferencesCategory:Emperor's CupCategory:1984 in Japanese footballCategory:Tokyo Verdy matchesCategory:JEF United Chiba matches +In 1980 he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of East Anglia, and remained in the post until 1987 when he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, retiring in 1996. +External linksCategory:Musical groups established in 1947Category:Austrian choirsCategory:Chamber choirs +The spherical flower-heads with a diameter of contain 40 to 60 yellow to bright yellow flowers. +HistoryGoogle features logos on their homepage, usually for public holidays. +Cape Vincent, New York may refer to: Cape Vincent (town), New York Cape Vincent (village), New YorkSee also Cape St. Vincent +He married Margaret Mary, daughter of Bruce Petrie of Singapore, in 1935. +The season-ending loss at Auburn also featured a questionable last-minute call regarding a pass. +ANARE applied the name Challenger Glacier to the easternmost of these glaciers to commemorate the work of the British Challenger Expedition, 1873–76. +Frank Wilson Kenyon (6 July 1912 – 6 February 1989) was a New Zealand novelist. +Various construction techniques are employed in pursuit of the latter goal. +Williams, Liberal (elected councillor at Aberystwyth)David Jenkins, Maesteg, Glandovey, Liberal (from outside the Council)Roderick Lloyd, Liberal (elected councillor at Tregaron)Levi James, Liberal (elected councillor at Cardigan)William Davies, Liberal (elected councillor at New Quay)J.T. +in 1920, and whose treatment of rural themes Godley compared to Virgil. +Chris later plants trees along the fence between their properties, which leads to a near-violent exchange, as Abel objects to having trees hanging over his property. +Essen is a municipality in the district of Cloppenburg, in Lower Saxony, Germany. +Mats Wilander won the title, defeating Broderick Dyke 6–2, 6–3 in the final. +The objectives of the scheme were to provide good quality modern education to the talented children predominantly from the rural areas, without regard to their family's socio-economic condition. +Exhibitions The Starry NightSee also List of tourist attractions in TaiwanReferencesExternal links Category:Arts centres in TaiwanCategory:Cultural centers in Keelung +The group met while they were students at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts and released several EPs before their 2006 album Girls, Boys and Marsupials, which was released only in Japan. +SFT is an initialism that could refer to:Science and medicine Sabrina Frederick-Traub (born 1996), Australian rules footballer nicknamed SFT Schema therapy or schema focused therapy Skellefteå Airport (IATA: SFT), Sweden Solitary fibrous tumor, a rare mesenchymal tumor Statens forurensningstilsyn or Norwegian Climate and Pollution Agency String field theory Striving For Togetherness Records, an independent hardcore music label Structural Family Therapy, a type of psychotherapy Students for a Free Tibet, a non-profit organization advocating Tibetan independence Submerged floating tunnel, a proposed design for a tunnel that floats in water Super fine TFT Symplectic Field Theory, part of Floer homology Systems Factorial Technology; see James Townsend (psychologist) System Fault Tolerance, built into NetWare operating systemsSee also Secure file transfer protocol (disambiguation) +As the Viper robot, the player must explore five abandoned hi-tech and heavily guarded buildings in order to find and install floppy disks. +A firm attack leads to a medium bodied palate with a drying woody character. +Agonidium itremense is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Platyninae. +See also 2014 Lesotho political crisis List of female speakers of national and territorial lower housesReferencesCategory:Speakers of the National Assembly (Lesotho)Category:1963 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Democratic Congress politiciansCategory:Lesotho Congress for Democracy politiciansCategory:Lesotho schoolteachersCategory:Lesotho women in politicsCategory:Members of the National Assembly (Lesotho)Category:National University of Lesotho alumniCategory:People from Mohale's Hoek DistrictCategory:21st-century women politicians +Grace Rock is a rock in Bransfield Strait, Antarctica lying off the southeast coast of Nelson Island in the South Shetland Islands. +The story revolves around a shy teenager, Elenor, who creates a fantasy world involving science fiction characters in her comic book collection. +Talca has an ongoing affair with Luisa, a Chilean-born Swiss-passport opera diva. +ScheduleThe schedule was as follows:All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)ResultsWith fewer than seven entries in this event, a direct final was held to determine the rankings. +Struggling in a job he's totally unqualified for, Kang Ho gets by with his enthusiasm and street smarts. +Nuestra Señora Reina de los Angeles, as the name of a mission, may refer to: Nuestra Señora Reina de los Ángeles Asistencia in Los Angeles Mission Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles de Porciúncula de los Pecos in Pecos, New Mexico La Iglesia de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles, La Placita church in Los Angeles El Rio de Nuestra Señora La Reina de Los Angeles de Porciúncula, the Los Angeles River +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom concerning healthcareCategory:CloningCategory:Genetics in the United KingdomCategory:Medical regulation in the United KingdomCategory:Repealed United Kingdom Acts of ParliamentCategory:United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 2001 +Dramatic Category at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. +References Category:Syndromes affecting the nervous systemCategory:Hematologic neoplasms +He defected from his native country to live in England after competing in the 2014 Commonwealth Games. +ReferencesCategory:Incidental motions +Just as it is impossible to define 'normal' breast size, there is no objective definition of micromastia. +Property Management Systems (PMS) or Hotel Operating System (HOS), under business terms may be used in real estate, manufacturing, logistics, intellectual property, government or hospitality accommodation management. +Astley was formerly the president of Sun Life Financial Canada, president and CEO of Clarica Life Insurance Company, chair of Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association. +In the 2004 general election, Abdullah Badawi's first as Prime Minister of Malaysia, he delivered a landslide victory for his party's coalition Barisan Nasional (of which UMNO is the dominant party) by winning 198 out of 220 seats in parliament and wresting control of the Terengganu state government from the Islamist opposition Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), as well as coming close to capturing the traditional PAS stronghold of Kelantan. +Presently, they have a daughter Lorelei Jade, who was born on August 3, 2010. +Previously, he was associate professor of Japanese and Chinese art history at Vassar College. +Hunlock Creek is an unincorporated community in Hunlock Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, United States. +He did not stay in prison long, though, as he escaped and committed illegal acts alongside the Zodiac once more. +Genealogical resourcesThe records for genealogical research are available at the state archive "Statny Archiv in Bytca, Slovakia" Roman Catholic church records (births/marriages/deaths): 1788-1948 (parish B)See also List of municipalities and towns in SlovakiaExternal links http://www.statistics.sk/mosmis/eng/run.htmlof living people in DurdoveCategory:Villages and municipalities in Považská Bystrica District +It is on the large side for a trailer yacht, with room for 4–6 people. +Nitrogen and Phosphorus can be acquired from sediment pore water or from the water column, and sea grasses can uptake N in both ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3−) form. +It was used as a venue for the 2013 Summer Universiade. +His worksGame BoyPopeye 2Volley FireZen-Nippon Pro Wrestling JetZettai Muteki Raijin-OhMega Drive / GenesisCutie Suzuki no Ringside AngelPC EnginePower DriftSuper Famicom / Super NESAcrobat MissionBassin's Black Bass with Hank Parker (Super Black Bass 2)Galaxy RoboGokinjo BoukentaiKeiba Yosou Baken RenkinjutsouKidou Senshi Z-Gundam: Away to the NewTypeKoutetsu no KishiKoutetsu no Kishi 2: Sabaku no Rommel ShougunKoutetsu no Kishi 3: Gekitotsu Europe SensenLennus II: Fuuin no Shito (Sound Design-Performer)Mystic ArkOtoboke Ninja ColosseumPaladin's Quest (Sound FXs)Seifuku Densetsu: Pretty FighterShien - The Blade Chaser (Shien's Revenge)Shounen Ninja Sasuke (Sound Design)Super Air Diver (Lock On)Wonder Project JSega SaturnSeifuku Densetsu: Pretty Fighter XNintendo 64Wonder Project J2PlayStationDoraemon 2: SOS! +Distribution and habitat Andaman teals are endemic to the Andaman Islands (India) and Great Coco Island (Burma). +Michelle Laine is also the daughter of extreme water-sports athlete Randy Laine. +However, they accidentally attack Chandran, who succeeds in escaping from them. +Pieter Myburgh (born 10 January 1986) is a South African rugby union footballer. +Cains can refer to:Places Cains Creek, a stream in Pike County in the U.S. state of Missouri Cains River, a Canadian riverPeopleSurname Bev Cains (born 1938), Australian politician Carole Cains (born 1943), Australian politician Harriet Cains (born 1993), British actressOther uses Cains (law firm), a law firm in the Isle of Man Cains Brewery CAINS – Clinical Assessment Interview for Negative Symptoms (in schizophrenia)See alsoCain (disambiguation)Caine (disambiguation)Caines +Deeds, a 2002 remake of Mr Deeds Goes to Town starring Adam Sandler. +Lewis Hill may refer to:Lewis Hill (radio company founder) (1919–1957), co-founder of Pacifica RadioLewis Hill (cricketer, born 1990), English cricketerLewis Hill (cricketer, born 1860) (1860–1940), English cricketerLew Hill (basketball), basketball coachSee alsoLouis Hill (disambiguation) +Strupina (Maglaj) is a village in the municipality of Maglaj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. +playersCategory:English people of Ivorian descentCategory:Ivorian emigrants to the United KingdomCategory:Association footballers not categorized by positionCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2016 Summer OlympicsCategory:European Games competitors for Great BritainCategory:Taekwondo practitioners at the 2015 European Games +HistoryBiogen's anaerobic digestion business was established in 2005 with investment from Bedfordia Group. +Sai Dham: Sai dham is shridi sai baba temple located at NH 6 Kumhari. +Diane Pratte (born 18 June 1953) is a Canadian former alpine skier who competed in the 1972 Winter Olympics. +There are 7 streets. +FilmographyAwards and nominationsReferencesExternal linksCategory:Living peopleCategory:Alumni of the University of the West of ScotlandCategory:Scottish male film actorsCategory:Scottish male stage actorsCategory:Scottish male television actorsCategory:21st-century Scottish male actorsCategory:Male actors from GlasgowCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +Louka has made 21 appearances for the Cyprus national football team. +History Scrivener dated the manuscript to the 13th century, Gregory dated it to the 14th century. +The story complicates when Elsa's mother cannot find her and hysterically reports her daughter as being missing, and possibly kidnapped. +Thiruvananthapuram was built during his tenure. +It is also connected through railway and from Srinagar to Gulmarg. +The Terrapins played their home games at Shipley Field, in their final season as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. +In 1999, Tamblyn composed the background music for the first season of the Canadian animated TV series Toad Patrol. +The same year he made a live appearance in Berlin's Tresor Club promoting The Picture. +In 2016, he played on loan at Kolubara. +Clark and Pye ended their partnership in early May 1886. +This is a list of academic journals on health care. +FormsSupervisory control often takes one of two forms. +BugGuide. +In 1870, Victor Guérin saw Budrus from a distance, situated on a high hill. +He represented his country at the 2017 World Championships without qualifying for the final. +StaffCreator: Yasunori KawauchiPlanning: Masahiro Sato, Ohga YoshifumiScreenplay: Yasunori Kawauchi, Saburo Yuki & Yoshinari MatsubaraMusic: Hiroshikyo OgawaCategory:Toei tokusatsuCategory:Tokusatsu television seriesCategory:1959 Japanese television series debutsCategory:1960 Japanese television series endingsCategory:TV Asahi shows +ReferencesCategory:1978 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Dutch journalistsCategory:Writers from Amsterdam +C. stigmaeus may refer to:Chaunax stigmaeus, the redeye gaper, an anglerfish speciesCitharichthys stigmaeus, the speckled sanddab, a flatfish species +The song was performed fifth on the night, following Norway's Secret Garden with "Nocturne" and preceding Iceland's Bo Halldórsson with "Núna". +All songs were written by Mey. +It was described by Martins and Napp in 1986. +His best productions are delicate, spirited and finished in handling, and correct in the drawing of the vessels and their rigging. +Gee's mother, Ethel L. Gardner Gee, was a seamstress who retired from American Motors Corporation. +{{DISPLAYTITLE:C7H7Cl}}The molecular formula C7H7Cl may refer to: Benzyl chloride Chlorotoluenes +References Category:Unincorporated communities in West VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Pleasants County, West Virginia +Cyriacus I (? +The author of this midrash borrowed nearly the whole of chapter 10 from PdRE, and borrowed also from Yerushalmi and Babli. +He was born in Wexford and later came to Newfoundland. +Rifle House Cemetery is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission burial ground for the dead of the First World War located near Ypres on the Western Front. +The Los Tuxtlas Biosphere Reserve or Biósfera Los Tuxtlas, is a biosphere reserve located in the coastal and higher elevations of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas, in Los Tuxtlas of Veracruz state, in Eastern Mexico. +But his fans expected him to provide soul-jazz/hard bop that was solid and consistent; Feelin' It definitely fits that description". +Porters Sideling is located about a mile southeast off Pennsylvania Route 116 and is about 8 miles away from Codorus State Park. +It is located west of Oak Hill on Ohio State Route 279, at . +A member of Union of Islamic Iran People Party's central committee, he held office as the party's political deputy secretary-general from 2017 to 2019. +He was also a deputy in the first Ottoman Parliament (1916), and played an important role as a politician during the foundation years of the Republic of Turkey. +Hundreds of such convictions have occurred in the past, some of which have been overturned. +Edward Willes may refer to: Edward Willes (bishop) (1693–1773), Anglican Bishop of St David's, Bishop of Bath and Wells, prominent cryptanalyst Sir Edward Willes (1702–1768), English-born judge who became Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer Sir Edward Willes (1723–1787), MP for Old Sarum, Aylesbury and Leominster, Solicitor-General 1766, judge of the Court of King's BenchSee also Willes (surname) +Individual items were moved in and out of the Private Case as attitudes towards obscenity shifted over time. +Updated to games played on 25 August 2013. +ScheduleBracketJesse Owens Memorial Stadium – Columbus, OhioReferencesCategory:2017 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse seasonBig Ten Conference Men's LacrosseCategory:Big Ten Men's Lacrosse Tournament +Individual awards Team of the Tournament Left Wing of the Bucharest Trophy: 2015ReferencesCategory:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian female handball playersCategory:Expatriate handball players Category:Russian expatriate sportspeople in Romania Category:Russian expatriates in Hungary +In August at the 2007 Summer Universiade, she brought her country its first ever athletics gold medal at the competition with a personal best of 6.85 m in the long jump. +RoutesConnectionsThe terminus is about away from Kumbakonam Town Bus stand and about away from Kumbakonam railway station. +2 people (6.7% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 28 people (93.3%) lived in rental housing units. +Meera is an Indian Bengali-language television soap opera that premiered on October 12, 2015 and aired on Colors Bangla. +In 1903 he became one of the founding players of East Fife. +Each episode, 7 contestants who felt they were a triple threat when it comes to singing, acting and dancing, competed against each other until 2 were chosen to go head to head in the "Triple Threat" round. +CourseMatanzas Creek springs from the northern slope of Sonoma Mountain and flows northward into Bennett Valley to join the South Fork Matanzas Creek. +The challenges were considered by Florian Cajori to have influenced the work of John Radford Young; William Rutherford noted an analysis by Young of an equation proposed by Lockhart, in a book of 1849. +Category:Populated places in Pichincha ProvinceCategory:Rumiñahui Canton +In this attack the malicious payload will load the stack not with shellcode, but with a proper call stack so that execution is vectored to a chain of standard library calls, usually with the effect of disabling memory execute protections and allowing shellcode to run as normal. +He founded New York City's oldest tattoo shop, Fun City Tattoo, in 1976, before tattooing was legal in the city. +See alsoCommunes of the Essonne departmentReferencesINSEEMayors of Essonne AssociationExternal linksMérimée database - Cultural heritage Land use (IAURIF) Category:Communes of Essonne +GallerySee also List of cultural property of national significance in Switzerland: VaudNotes and referencesExternal links Page on the website of the City of LausanneCategory:Parks in Lausanne +The Himontagon Hills are a group of hills located in Loay, Bohol, Philippines, about 20 kilometers from the Tagbilaran City. +Prior to this, graduate students at Cambridge, long a tiny minority of the student body, had for the most part lived among undergraduates in colleges' main sites. +Prsi or PRSI may refer to: Prší, a card game Independent Socialist Republican Party (French: ) Pay Related Social Insurance, in Ireland Public Relations Society of India, in India, Jaipur Chapter Pasadena Refining System +He currently plays for FK Lovćen. +Glasgow Maryhill may refer to: Maryhill, Glasgow, Scotland Glasgow Maryhill (UK Parliament constituency) Glasgow Maryhill (Scottish Parliament constituency) +Villasanta railway station is a railway station in Italy. +Theorem (continuous time version). +ReferencesExternal links Electoral Commission Queensland: State Referendumterm lengthCategory:1991 elections in AustraliaCategory:1991 referendumsCategory:2010s in Queensland +The community was named after a local lumber company, the Shanghai Manufacturing Association. +He was also an Honorable Member of many other Russian and foreign scientific establishments, and a corresponding member of the French Academy of Science in Paris. +Television rolesReferencesExternal linksCategory:1949 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from Stockton-on-TeesCategory:English television actressesCategory:English soap opera actressesCategory:English people of Norwegian descent +The France women's national football team () represents the nation of France in international women's association football. +"Cold and Empty" was the second single from Kid Rock's self-titled album Kid Rock. +In 2007 Swarte, a former scout, designed the Dutch 2007 Europa stamp with the subject one hundred years of scouting. +Steven Rooks (born 7 August 1960 in Oterleek, North Holland) is a former Dutch professional road racing cyclist known for his climbing ability. +Bitter at this development and feeling unappreciated, the Table 19 denizens move to Jo's room to smoke pot and discuss their reasons for attending the wedding. +Fred Rogers worked as a stage manager on the show, which he later described as "terrible" for forcing children to perform. +External links Street map Category:Populated places in Zala County +Pretty Mess is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Erika Jayne. +ReferencesCategory:Former National Register of Historic Places in IndianaCategory:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in IndianaCategory:Queen Anne architecture in IndianaCategory:Houses completed in 1891Category:Buildings and structures in Wells County, IndianaCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Wells County, Indiana +Overall RecordSee alsoRugby union in BeninReferencesExternal links[http://feberugby.com/[http://www.facebook.com/F%C3%A9d%C3%A9ration-B%C3%A9ninoise-de-Rugby-fe-be-rugby-Officiel-342212342593915/?fref=tsCategory:African national rugby union teamsCategory:Rugby union in BeninCategory:National sports teams of Benin +ReferencesCategory:CrambiniCategory:Moths described in 1908Category:Moths of India +In addition to his books on property law and federal Native American law, he has written more than 70 law review articles. +See alsoVT-lineKarelian Fortified RegionSalpa LineCategory:Continuation WarCategory:World War II defensive lines +William Johnston McGowan, second son of Harry McGowan, 1st Baron McGowan, on 18 April 1968. +StructureThe Board is structured so there are a number of sub committees, created to ensure input to the Board Chairman. +He also served short term as regent in the County of Rieneck. +He advocates for nuclear disarmament and holds that the use of nuclear weapons is never justified. +PlotWhen Chin Fu shows up at a nightclub one night, no one realizes he is the son of a kung-fu master out for revenge for his father's murder. +FootnotesReferences A. D. H. Bivar (2009). +After a season at the club, he joined Prato in 2008. +The inner and outer faces of the original wall were of stacked stone, with gravel, coral rubble, and soil as fillers between them. +ReferencesCategory:Members of the Michigan House of RepresentativesCategory:Michigan DemocratsCategory:1948 birthsCategory:2013 deathsCategory:People from Iron River, MichiganCategory:Michigan State University alumniCategory:Northern Michigan University alumniCategory:Michigan politicians convicted of crimes +He was the oldest of nine children. +Addenda 3. +Sweden first won a medal at the Paralympics in 1964, at the Summer Games in Tokyo, Japan. +Egbert of Liège, in Latin Ecbertus Leodiensis, was an 11th-century educator and author, working at the cathedral school in Liège (in what is now Belgium). +Rhodococcus phenolicus is a bacterium species in the genus Rhodococcus. +ReferencesCitationsBibliographyCategory:700 series Fleet Air Arm squadronsCategory:Military units and formations established in 1940Category:Military units and formations of the Royal Navy in World War II +In 1989, TVR1 broadcast live the events of the revolt which triggered the fall of the Communist regime, covering almost all the main events live, starting from the last speech of Nicolae Ceauşescu (on December 21, 1989) until the new power representatives arrived. +Pangu became a member of his coalition government, and continued to support the Somare government after the 2007 elections, in which Pangu won 5 seats. +That was the initial role that Julian Schnabel had on Basquiat, before Majewski abandoned the project and Schnabel took it over. +They recorded their self-titled debut album in 1966 for Transatlantic. +It is the highest peak of the mountain of Tomorr at . +Iron Springs geyser emanates from the creek and is one of the Manitou Mineral Springs. +His research focuses on computer networks as well as data science. +movement in the lat 1990s +The film features background score and soundtrack composed by Gurukiran and lyrics by Kaviraj and V. Nagendra Prasad. +References Category:Populated places in Tarom County +BiographyBorderslee started singing on when she was five. +Age limits apply for films rated R21, M18 and NC16. +The Seidelin family is a Danish family descending from bailiff and councilman in Helsingør Michel Seidel (died 1616). +These four bright stars create an almost perfect diamond shape, hence the name "Diamond Cross". +The first person to publicly write about atomic spy Perseus was Russian intelligence Colonel Vladimir Chikov. +The reserve covers . +Cross-country skiing resultsAll results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). +Pinafore (1878), he understudied both Grossmith (as Sir Joseph Porter) and Temple (as Dick Deadeye). +Saint-Germain-sur-Ille () is a commune in the Ille-et-Vilaine department of Brittany in northwestern France. +Akkari scored a hat-trick in the match that secured the title for his team, a 4–1 win against Al-Jehad. +Early years and education Stang was born and grew up in Brooklyn, New York. +She attended Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and the State University of New York, Buffalo. +Laurie Moraschi (;) (1942-2018) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1960s and 1970s. +The Rice fire began when a dead tree limb fell across power lines. +He seems to be constantly outwitted by the shark and his friends. +Ai Sugiyama partnered with Daniela Hantuchová, but lost in the first round to Petra Martić and Coco Vandeweghe. +In the aftermath of the revolution Jetha Lila's primary clients left the island and in 1968 the bank ceased operations, despite the Revolutionary government urging it to stay. +Many oligarchs took out generous loans from Russian banks, bought shares, and then took out more loans from western banks against the value of these shares. +colspan="9" style="background:#b0d3fb; text-align:left;"||- style="background:#dfedfd;"|-! +It was important to begin excavation work as soon as possible because the local inhabitants of Bergama (the modern name of the ancient city of Pergamon) were using the altar and other above-ground ruins as a quarry, were looting the remnants of antique constructions in order to erect new buildings, and were burning some of the marble for lime. +This particular formation occurs often in Great Britain and China. +At the 2006 census, its population was 51, in 9 families. +15 km cross-country skiingSki jumpingSpeed skatingMenReferencesOfficial Olympic ReportsInternational Olympic Committee results database Olympic Winter Games 1956, full results by sports-reference.comCategory:Nations at the 1956 Winter Olympics1956Winter Olympics +HistoryBang Phli New Town (Thai Mueang Mai Bang Phli) was established between 1992 and 1993 as a residential area for high-income families. +– 2:42"Beautiful Sundae" – 1:07"Handsome" – 1:43"Panda-III" – 3:01"Pillow Pillow" – 2:41"Learn Japanese" – 1:43"Duct Tape" – 1:14"Give Me Your Smile" – 6:07"Super Health" – 2:31"Autograph" – 3:11"Pho!" +They both joined the socialist French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO: Section française de l'internationale ouvrière) in 1915. +See also Fetus Neonate Pre- and perinatal psychologyCategory:Neonatology +Selected significant elements in the district include:Capt. +Although the song was released as a single, it never entered the charts, just like their previous single, "Restless". +On May 5, the team announced that he would require surgery to trim bone spurs in the elbow. +Heave may refer to: Heave, to move up and down as one of the six degrees of freedom (mechanics) Heave, to lift or haul with great effortHeave, to produce a sigh of relief +Parliamentary elections were held in Estonia between 15 and 17 May 1926. +It is located within Central Province. +A non-binding status referendum was held in Bonaire on 18 December 2015. +He played for Castres Olympique, Bayonne and US Montauban. +At the first MPP Congress, held secretly from March 1 to 3, 1921 in Troitskosavsk, Losol was elected one of the three members of the Central Committee and was later appointed a member of the MPP Central Committee's Presidium and Minister of Finance in the provisional government. +As per the religious census of 2011, Kurichi had 68.97% Hindus, 19.63% Muslims, 10.89% Christians, 0.04% Sikhs, 0.01% Buddhists, 0.01% Jains, 0.44% following other religions and 0.01% following no religion or did not indicate any religious preference. +See also Hybridisation in gullsReferencesCategory:TernsCategory:Hybridisation in birds +References Category:Coal in ChinaCategory:Geology of XinjiangCategory:Mining companies based in Xinjiang +The peak is crossed by the borders of the provinces of Florence, Arezzo and Forlì-Cesena. +Neotrópica, 2 (8): 54-58. +After making his professional debut with modest clubs (Ontinyent CF and UB Conquense) he joined Andalusia's Recreativo de Huelva for the 2005–06 season, being instrumental in the team's La Liga promotion. +In 2003, Virginia Tech launched the original incarnation of Radio IQ on the rechristened WWVT. +PostseasonAtlantic 10 TournamentAll the games were held at the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City. +The public worship was made in Russian and in Greek. +Vrsjenice is a village in the municipality of Sjenica, Serbia. +Beltrán pursued his studies in Barcelona, which included a four-year humanities course at Pompeu Fabra University. +See alsoCharticlePhotojournalismPhotographyArtReferencesExternal linksPhoto Essay at TimeCategory:Photography +The name "Lubee" was derived from the name of "Luis Bacardi." +Founded in 1938 by Léonide Lussier, the restaurant was the setting of Yves Beauchemin's novel and film The Alley Cat (Le Matou), which was filmed on location. +Meritastis is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Tortricinae of the family Tortricidae. +It is monotypic within the genus Eugralla. +Kabir is known for being critical of both Hinduism and Islam, stating followers of both were misguided by the Vedas and Quran, and questioning their meaningless rites of initiation such as the sacred thread and circumcision respectively. +CommemorationThe village of Vasilyevo where Chkalov was born is now the town of Chkalovsk (Nizhny Novgorod Oblast). +Knights TemplarIn 1136, a local lord, Hugh of Bourbouton, gave the Knights Templar land at Richerenches. +The King of Dali Duan Gong was married to the Mongol Borjigin princess Agai, daughter of the Yuan dynasty Mongol Prince of Liang, Basalawarmi. +George is described as being the leading proponent of the health care, welfare, and workers' rights of all County citizens, an early activist in the struggle for civil rights and affirmative action and a long-time leader in the local Anti-Apartheid Movement. +Early lifeGebauer grew up in Reston, Virginia and began playing soccer at age six. +References Category:Populated places in Bagh-e Malek County +Vacancies in the fiscal officership or on the board of trustees are filled by the remaining trustees. +Ltd in the Indian subcontinent. +This tally of conceding only two goals over three Olympic games remains an Olympic record to this day. +In 1835, he executed his Death of Max Piccolomini, now in the Karlsruhe Gallery, which brought him considerable fame. +In 1965, the Zeta Gamma chapter was installed at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, making Theta Chi an international fraternity. +Patrick Forbes (c.1611–1680) was a Scottish bishop of Caithness. +Edmonton may also refer to:PlacesCanada Edmonton Metropolitan Region Snelgrove, Ontario, previously known as EdmontonElectoral districts Edmonton (electoral district), Canadian federal riding between 1903 and 1914 Edmonton (N.W.T. +Recreation The city is located right on Falcon International Reservoir which is at the center of multiple, fishing events throughout the yearThe city also served by a number of parks, most notably, Romeo Flores Park. +On the reverse are cuneiform symbols which can be roughly translated as “land bringing forth life”, with the stylised depiction of two rivers, based on a relief carving from Mesopotamia in the British Museum. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Sinaloa +As of 2006 the Foundation's mission is devoted to the conservation, research, acquisition, evaluation, cultivation, public display, and distribution of rhododendron species. +She was one of the 18 star hopefuls and after few weeks of training, made it to the top 4 or "Final 4". +Within its monuments, it highlights the churches of San Salvador and Santa María. +Ellis Ferreira and Patrick Galbraith won in the final 6–3, 6–4 against Marc-Kevin Goellner and David Prinosil. +The station is owned by Dandy Broadcasting, Inc. +no. +It was renamed World Bank Institute in 2000. +Ferreira was named the Senior Assistant Men's and Women's Tennis Head Coach at Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland, in July 2007. +Location and historyBerkovitsa is situated on the northern slope of Kom Peak of the Berkovska Stara Planina Mountain along the valley of the Berkovitsa River, which is a tributary to the Barziya River, at an altitude above sea level 405 m. The town was mentioned for the first time in Ottoman documents of 1488. +The study demonstrated that diaboleite is a low-temperature phase, that is stable under hydrothermal conditions at temperatures less than . +Paxson is an unincorporated area in Alberta. +Chief Minister & Cabinet MinistersFormer MembersReferences Category:Government of Andhra PradeshCategory:Lists of current Indian state and territorial ministriesCategory:Andhra Pradesh ministriesCategory:YSR Congress Party +References Category:Populated places in Qaem Shahr County +Uwe Vagelpohl, ed. +The cemetery grounds were assigned to the United Kingdom in perpetuity by King Albert I of Belgium in recognition of the sacrifices made by the British Empire in the defence and liberation of Belgium during the war. +The national monument in memory of those massacred by the Derg regime in the "Red Terror" of the 1970s has been built at the eastern entrance to the square, and the remains of many victims from that period have been buried there : the Red Terror Martyrs Memorial Museum has been inaugurated in February 2010. +Administration Jeff Rankin - PrincipalByron Mac Alpine - Vice PrincipalExternal linksShelburne Regional High School home pageTri-County Regional School BoardCategory:High schools in Nova ScotiaCategory:Schools in Shelburne County, Nova Scotia +Agen may also refer to:PlacesAgen (meteorite), an H chondrite meteorite that fell to earth on September 5, 1814, in Aquitaine, France. +Season standingsRecord vs. opponentsNotable transactions August 8, 1945: George Caster was selected off waivers from the Browns by the Detroit Tigers. +673 is the sole survivor of its class. +Indian Lake is a reservoir in Marion County in central Indiana in the United States. +Origin Larazotide acetate is a synthetic peptide based on a Vibrio cholerae enterotoxin called zonula occludens toxin that decreases intestinal permeability. +FHFS may refer to: FHFS (file server) Dihydrofolate synthase, an enzymeSee also FHF (disambiguation) +ReferencesCategory:14th-century birthsCategory:15th-century deathsCategory:English MPs September 1388Category:English MPs 1395Category:Members of the Parliament of England (pre-1707) for LincolnCategory:Mayors of Lincoln, EnglandCategory:English MPs 1401 +Paues became PhD at the Uppsala University in 1902, one of the first women in Sweden to obtain this degree in Germanic languages. +Education García earned an A.A.S. +She attended Kingswood-Oxford School and Sarah Lawrence College, where she majored in philosophy and art. +Live 1990 may refer to: Live 1990 (Hatfield and the North album) Live 1990 (Hawkwind album) +Louise Ernestine Christiane Juliane von Göchhausen (13 February 1752 – 7 September 1807) was Chief Lady-in-Waiting to Duchess Anna Amalia of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach. +G. africanus may refer to: Gigantosaurus africanus, a dinosaur species Gyps africanus, the white-backed vulture, an Old World vulture speciesSee also Africanus (disambiguation) +It is under the production of M-Zet Productions, to be part by APT Entertainment and was released in cinemas in the Philippines on November 22, 2017. +There is a primary school, a church, a village hall and a church centre. +SeriesFrance and Wales are to tour Argentina and New Zealand respectively as they did in 2016. +This compilation is Criterion's first, and currently only, music video compilation. +TMPad (the TransMembrane Protein Helix-Packing Database) is a repository of helix-helix interactions in membrane proteinsSee also Alpha helix membrane proteinReferencesExternal links http://bio-cluster.iis.sinica.edu.tw/TMPadCategory:Biological databasesCategory:Membrane proteinsCategory:Protein structural motifsCategory:Helices +In 2011 she appeared in Q&A: a showcase for new material & improvisation with Steve Furst and Lewis MacLeod at the Leicester Square Theatre. +ClosedNewtownabbey Community High School closed in August 2015 to merge with Monkstown Community School. +Soon after, the network stopped showing content from Sky News Australia, replaced with bulletins produced by the ABC's own news and current affairs division from its Southbank studios in Melbourne. +James Hawkes may refer to: James B. Hawkes (1857-1936), Canadian politician Jim Hawkes (born 1934), Canadian politician James Hawkes (congressman) (1776–1865), American politician from New York James S. Hawkes (1856–1918), Australian accountant and civil engineer James Hawkes (missionary) (1853–1932), missionary in Persia +An early slip up against New Caledonian club AS Magenta saw the club slip to third in the group, however a strong performance in the return leg saw Waitakere win 4–1 at home and a 5–1 thrashing of Tahiti's AS Manu-Ura saw them draw level once more with Auckland City. +During the 1980s, then Peruvian president Alan García proposed what was supposed to be a radical restructuring of the political and economical divisions of the country: regionalization. +It is found in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, and Thailand. +ReferencesExternal links Gerold Späth on the website of the Swiss television SRF Category:Swiss male poetsCategory:People from Rapperswil-JonaCategory:Swiss male novelistsCategory:20th-century Swiss poetsCategory:20th-century male writersCategory:20th-century Swiss novelistsCategory:1939 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Swiss poets in GermanCategory:21st-century Swiss poetsCategory:21st-century Swiss novelistsCategory:21st-century male writers +Its support peaked in the March 1977 general elections, when it received 5.3% of the vote. +Bedrock TreatmentERH has been used for over 15 years for treatment of unconsolidated soils in both the vadose and saturated zones. +Linked below are similar lists of U.S. +However, the High Speed Rail and MRT Circle Line projects are cancelled until further notice. +Softbed Ridges () is a series of parallel rock ridges interspaced by small snow-covered valleys, the whole trending north-south for about 15 nautical miles (28 km) and forming a portion of the divide between Lowery and Robb Glaciers. +Coundon TT Football Club was an English amateur association football club based in the village of Coundon, County Durham. +Rakthasaakshikal Sindabad (English: Long Live the Martyrs) is a Malayalam historical political thriller movie, released in 1998, directed by Venu Nagavalli, featuring Mohanlal, Suresh Gopi and Sukanya in the lead roles. +Houédomey is an arrondissement in the Ouémé department of Benin. +ReferencesCategory:Castle Point Borough Council electionsCategory:2007 English local electionsCategory:2000s in Essex +As of the 2013–14 school year, the school had an enrollment of 44 students and 4.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 11.0:1. +Cast Virginia Gilmore as Karen Hauen Dana Andrews as Bill Roberts Mona Maris as Carla Martin Kosleck as Captain von Rau Sig Ruman as Dr. Dietrich Kurt Katch as Weiner Erwin Kalser as Mr. Rudolph Hauen Torben Meyer as Manager William Edmunds as Hans Gruber Hans Schumm as Gunther Leonard Mudie as George, English Prisoner Hans von Morhart as The Actor Curt Furburg as Doctor Henry Rowland as Pilot Christian Rub as PrisonerExternal links Category:1942 filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:American World War II propaganda filmsCategory:Films set in BerlinCategory:20th Century Fox filmsCategory:Films directed by Eugene FordeCategory:American black-and-white filmsCategory:Films about journalists +Indoor Volleyball at the 2009 Southeast Asian Games were held in Gymnasium 2, National Sport Complex, Vientiane, Laos Beach Volleyball at the 2009 Southeast Asian Games were held in Beach Volleyball Stadium, National Sport Complex, Vientiane, LaosMedal summaryMedalistIndoor VolleyballBeach VolleyballIndoor VolleyballMenPreliminary RoundGroup A|-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="salmon" |} - Withdraw|}Group B|-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="salmon" |}|}Knockout StageSemifinals5th placeBronze Medal matchGold Medal matchFinal standingWomenRound Robin|-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="salmon" |-bgcolor="salmon" |}|}Bronze Medal matchGold Medal matchFinal standingBeach VolleyballMenKnockout StageOverviewWomenPreliminary RoundGroup A|-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="salmon" |}Group B|-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="#98fb98" |-bgcolor="salmon" |-bgcolor="salmon" |}Knockout StageOverviewQuarterfinalsSemifinalsBronze Medal MatchGold Medal MatchGold Medal Match forfeit by injury in first set 9:6 for Phokongploy / KulnaCategory:2009 Southeast Asian Games eventsCategory:Volleyball at the Southeast Asian GamesCategory:2009 in volleyball +He was traded along with Danny Ainge to the Sacramento Kings for Joe Kleine and Ed Pinckney on February 23, 1989. +Interactions Structure specific recognition protein 1 has been shown to interact with NEK9. +Davis has since recollaborated with Maura in the ambient indie rock side-project Glös, formed by him and former Engine Down drummer Cornbread Compton. +Don MacPherson of The Fourth Rail felt that The Man Who Laughs "rob[s] the Joker of some of his mystery" but said that Brubaker and Mahnke "capture the chilling nature of the Joker's insanity and bloodlust, not to mention the intensity of the Batman." +They finished the season with a record of two wins and eight losses (2–8, 1–4 CCAA). +It is the first Royals no-hitter, and the first in Tiger Stadium since Virgil Trucks' in . +MenTrack & road eventsField eventsCombined events – DecathlonWomenTrack & road eventsField eventsCombined events – HeptathlonBadmintonCanoeingSprintQualification Legend: Q = Qualify to final; q = Qualify to semifinalDiving Finnish divers qualified for two individual spots at the 2004 Olympic Games. +This avenue was named after the first queen of modern Greece, Amalia, consort to King Othon. +The video showed Tunes singing and sitting on a piano. +U.S. Open Cup As a USL Championship club, Birmingham will enter the competition in the Second Round, to be played April 7–9. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Tuchola County +A plan had been obtained from an English architect, Edward O'Brien, but this was amended by George Strickland Kingston, who had come to South Australia as an assistant to the Surveyor General, William Light, and who had had some experience in architecture and building. +The Kinzelyuk Waterfall (Кинзелюкский водопад) is probably the highest waterfall in Russia, after the elusive Talnikovy Waterfall (which may not exist any more). +Because Isambard Kingdom Brunel was at that time the Inspecting Engineer in Britain for the Victorian Government, some people have claimed that he was responsible for the railway's design. +Telenor tried to remove Denis O'Brien as chairman of Esat Digifone and remove the Esat name from the company. +ReferencesCategory:British comics magazinesCategory:Comics before 1900Category:Fleetway and IPC Comics titlesCategory:Magazines established in 1890Category:Magazines disestablished in 1953Category:Defunct British comicsCategory:British humour comicsCategory:1890s comicsCategory:1953 comics endings +Shortly after the 1859 publication of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species, British biologist and evolution-defender Thomas Henry Huxley proposed that birds were descendants of dinosaurs. +Kanu Bhalala is a Member of Legislative assembly from Visavadar constituency in Gujarat for its 12th legislative assemblyReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Gujarat MLAs 2007–2012Category:Bharatiya Janata Party politicians from GujaratCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +Choudhury also directed the music video like Daniken, Mukhosh, Stobdho Jibon, Janla, Sanghoti Jaanai and a few more, in which Daniken, Janla and Saghoti Jaanai featured the singer Rupam Islam. +The festival featured 460 feature films, the highest number of films in festival. +References Category:Copper mines in Laos +Cyclophora ampligutta is a moth in the family Geometridae. +Holand is a village located on the northern shore of the lake Sandsjøen in the Nordli area of the municipality of Lierne in Trøndelag county, Norway. +In 1900, aged 22, he won his first national title when he knocked out Jack Fitzpatrick in the Antient Concert Rooms (later the Academy Cinema on Pearse Street, Dublin) to become Irish middleweight champion. +He was the father of Liliane Bierry, Florence Génin, Marion Bierry, theatre director and Stéphane Bierry, comedianFilmographyCinema 1961 : La Peau et les Os by Jean-Paul Sassy - (Gagnaire) 1961 : The Nina B. +Quince's Scenicruisers is a bus and coach charter operator in Melbourne, Australia. +Smith Township is a township in Dade County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. +Medina announced his retirement on June 11, 2018.International careerMexico U-20Medina was a squad member at the 2003 FIFA U-20 World Cup held in the United Arab Emirates. +A fellowship hall is a large room in a church building where certain activities in the church building are done, such as certain dinners, breakfasts, meetings, workshops, etc. +Plot summaryMux's main motivation is an intense desire to bring justice to rapists, thieves, and vandals in his own way, documenting all his actions through a camcorder held by his colleague Gerd, a somewhat simple-minded former long-term unemployed man in his fifties. +Live performancesThe Killers performed the song live for the first time at the Life Is Beautiful Festival in Las Vegas, Nevada. +Carignan is a Spanish variety of grape. +All nominations are listed, with winners in bold and series' networks are in parentheses. +Zootaxa 682:1–1295. +It was designed by noted Williamsport architect Amos S. Wagner. +The Robert was awarded for the first time in 1984 and is named after the statuette's creator, the Danish sculptor Robert Jacobsen. +The current iteration resulted from the 2011 redistricting by the California Citizens Redistricting Commission. +The following selected statistics about ethnic groups living in Norway have been extracted from the results of the Norwegian census. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:English cricketersCategory:Yorkshire cricketersCategory:Cricketers from BarnsleyCategory:English cricketers of the 21st century +Continued the success of the Vampyr at the 1923, 1924 and 1925 Rhön competitions, until it was destroyed early in the 1925 competition after spinning in when being flown by Karl Bedall. +The primary goal of this political movement was to attract all those voters who were unsatisfied by the Italian political system, based on the often harsh contraposition between the centre-left Union and the centre-right House of Freedoms, and to change, or, better, to produce the end of bi-polarism. +. +NotesReferences http://www.oldandsold.com/articles11/medicine-13.shtmlCategory:14th-century deathsCategory:Medieval Italian physiciansCategory:Medieval women physiciansCategory:Women of medieval ItalyCategory:Year of birth unknownCategory:15th-century Italian physiciansCategory:Medieval surgeons +Used primarily in a backup role throughout his career, he exceeded 100 games played as a rookie with the 1948 Pirates (102 games), and again with the 1954 Senators (115). +Jesus' Son is a 1999 drama film that was adapted from the eponymous short story collection by Denis Johnson. +On his death in 1213 Alice married Robert de Beauchamp. +Nick Schger of Slant Magazine gave the film 1 out of 4 stars, calling it "a preeminent example of what happens when filmmaking tools become accessible to people with nothing to say." +"God Only Knows" is a 1966 song by the Beach Boys. +ReferencesCategory:Towns and villages in Khorramabad County +Near what is now the Southern Pacific Railroad, the town was named for G.J. +In 1743 1,400 French prisoners of war were detained in the castle. +The following is a list of Idaho state forests. +From 1965 to 1974, he was the Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Edinburgh University. +They created Mosaic in response to the desegregation of Boston public schools in the 1970s, and in particular, to the negative media attention South Boston High School and its students received during that time. +A previous case, before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, had held that novel and non-obvious typefaces designs could be subject to a design patent. +Family maintenance allowances were introduced (1968). +ReferencesCategory:College sports trophies and awards in the United StatesCategory:Sports in IndianaCategory:Purdue Boilermakers footballCategory:Rose–Hulman Fightin' Engineers footballCategory:Butler Bulldogs footballCategory:Hanover Panthers footballCategory:DePauw Tigers football +Mátyás Plachy (born 24 May 1930) is a Hungarian boxer. +Port of Meeruse (port code EE MRS, ) is a seaport situated on the southwestern coast of Kopli, Tallinn, Estonia, located in eastern area of Kopli Bay. +As of 2020, there are 4 of them: one female (Flocke) and her 3 babies. +It is under the administration of Ordos City. +With 130 goals under his belt, Mehmet is still, the second most-scoring player of Beşiktaş's history after Feyyaz Uçar. +82, no.2, pp. +ReferencesCategory:1969 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Chinese female speed skatersCategory:Olympic speed skaters of ChinaCategory:Speed skaters at the 1988 Winter OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Speed skaters at the 1986 Asian Winter GamesCategory:Speed skaters at the 1990 Asian Winter Games +U-153 may refer to one of the following German submarines: , a Type U 151 submarine launched in 1917 and that served in World War I until surrendered on 24 November 1918; scuttled off the Isle of Wight on 30 June 1921 During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name: , a Type UB III submarine laid down but unfinished at the end of the war; broken up incomplete in 1919 , a Type IXC submarine that served in World War II until sunk on 13 July 1942Category:Submarines of Germany +References Category:Animals described in 1910 +Roundtrip () is a 2004 Italian comedy film written and directed by Marco Ponti and starring Libero De Rienzo and Vanessa Incontrada. +Track listingPersonnelKilldozerMichael Gerald – vocals, bass guitarBill Hobson – guitarDan Hobson – drums, percussionProduction and additional personnelRick Canzano – engineeringCorey Rusk – productionButch Vig – production, pianoThe Wisconsin Boys Choir – backing vocals on "I'm Not Lisa"References Category:1986 EPsCategory:Albums produced by Butch VigCategory:Killdozer (band) albumsCategory:Touch and Go Records EPs +She saw service in the Atlantic during World War II. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in East Godavari district +Pascoli may refer to: Giovanni Pascoli (1855-1912), Italian poet, freemason and classical scholar Lione Pascoli (1674–1744), Italian abbot, art historian, collector, and economist Luigia Pascoli (1805–1882), Italian painter +It was the first—and with the abolition of ties two years later, the only—time that two goalies in the same game both earned their first career shutouts. +Sara West is an Australian actress. +In Stephen King's novel Rose Madder, Rose, in preparation for retrieving the title character's child from a labyrinth, is warned not to drink from the water from a river she must cross. +ReferencesExternal links Official footeo site Category:Football clubs in CorsicaCategory:Association football clubs established in 1908USC CorteCategory:USC Corte +ReferencesExternal linksShanti Shanti Shanti at JointsceneCategory:Kannada-language filmsCategory:Indian filmsCategory:Films scored by Sandeep ChowtaCategory:1998 directorial debut filmsCategory:Indian thriller filmsCategory:Indian films based on actual eventsCategory:Films set in BangaloreCategory:Films shot in BangaloreCategory:1990s Kannada-language films +Category:Pistol and rifle cartridgesCategory:Winchester Repeating Arms Company cartridges +Instant Apps, a code path that downloads a part of an app instead of accessing a web app, which allows links to load apps on-demand without installation. +Visitant is the sixth studio album by American extreme metal band Arsis, released on November 2, 2018 via Nuclear Blast (in Americas) and Agonia (in Europe and the rest of the world). +National Solidarity may refer to:National Solidarity (Greece), World War II-era Resistance welfare service in GreeceNational Solidarity Alliance, a Peruvian political allianceNational Solidarity Party (Guatemala), a political party in GuatemalaNational Solidarity Party (Peru), a Peruvian political partyUnion for Democracy and National Solidarity, an oppositional political party in Benin, part of the Star Alliance +Norwegian Wood is an annual music festival in Oslo, Norway held in Frognerbadet. +Giorgi Tsutskiridze (; born 26 November 1996) is a Georgian Rugby Union player. +Spatial Concept: Nature is a bronze sculpture by Lucio Fontana, installed at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., United States. +Bundesliga playersCategory:Dynamo Dresden playersCategory:FC Energie Cottbus playersCategory:FC Energie Cottbus II playersCategory:RB Leipzig players +. +The writer recalled it as "Michael/Gob magic", referring to Bateman and Arnett's characters on Hurwitz's previous series, Arrested Development. +L.L. +Gershman made his directorial debut in the series with the episode "Passion". +Sprouted breads may contain slightly more trace minerals and nutrients than non-sprouted breads. +Parasorbic acid is the cyclic lactone of sorbic acid. +im hessischen Odenwaldkreis. +The party was founded by former Cabinet Minister Teina Bishop after his resignation from Cabinet and expulsion from the Cook Islands Party. +However, unlike similar programs, it did not make the transition directly to network television; Kraft's early ventures into that field entailed the sponsorship of a famed series of dramas, initially broadcast live, under the title Kraft Television Theatre. +He studied Law, Music, Literature and History. +Geagea is a surname, and may refer to: Samir Geagea Sitrida Geagea +20192018201720142013201220112010References*AuCategory:Airports in Europe +Processing In standard cis-splicing, the donor splice site in upstream position is required together with an acceptor site located on downstream position on the same pre-RNA molecule. +playersCategory:English Football League playersCategory:Association football forwards +Gordon-Walker regained the seat for Labour at 1966 general election. +Dresden is the name of some places in the U.S. state of New York:Dresden, Washington County, New York, a townDresden, Yates County, New York, a village +Route descriptionThe western portion of SR 932 in Hialeah Gardens and Hialeah from US 27 to SR 823 is almost completely lined with commercial establishments (next to its interchange with the Palmetto Expressway (SR 826) is Westland Mall, one of the oldest enclosed shopping centers in Florida; across the street is Miami Dade College – Hialeah Campus). +The industrial noises at the beginning were samples sequenced on a Fairlight, one of which was the sound of the Swindon Works hooter, which was used as a signal for its workers. +Leucographus is a genus of longhorn beetles of the subfamily Lamiinae. +The Egyptian word wꜣḏ signifies blue and green. +The forewings are grey-whitish very sparsely irrorated with large single black scales and sometimes with a black discal dot at two-thirds. +A new Oldham live album featuring Neilson was also released. +The objective is to assess and prepare for possible future situations (in the case of a newly created information system), and identify and respond to deficiencies (when the system is operating) in order to refine the security arrangements. +Life cycleEggsThe female lays a group of eggs on the undersurface of a leaf of the larval food plant. +Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1917–1986), Bernhard Friedrich Viktor, son of William Ernest, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach +The footage of the famine was shot by Mohamed Amin. +Latchezar Stantchev () is a Bulgarian poet who first became well-known in the 1930s. +BReferencesCategory:Lists of words +Additionally sea surface temperature anomalies have some winter to winter persistence due to the reemergence mechanism. +This is a list of WBC Muaythai female international champions, showing every female international champion certificated by the World Boxing Council Muaythai (WBC Muaythai). +The Camp had a Club for the residents in the area with an outdoor swimming pool, three tennis clubs, a football field, and a cinema house. +ResultsReferencesSaint Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla general election19401940General electionSaint Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla general election +Trojan.WinLNK.Runner is the definition of a (backdoor) Trojan. +Based in Jyväskylä, the Association's Director is Ari Matinlassi. +The company's first major activities began with the exploration and development of the Cluff Lake project. +The goods yard was to the west of the down platform and had one siding which ran to a cattle dock. +of Turkey. +William Norris Clarke (1 June 1915 - 10 June 2008) was an American philosopher. +References Category:Rural localities in Vladimir Oblast +Néstor E. Carballo (3 February 1929 - 22 September 1981) is a Uruguayan football defender who played for Uruguay in the 1954 FIFA World Cup. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1937 birthsCategory:2016 deathsCategory:Ministers of the Church of ScotlandCategory:Moderators of the General Assembly of the Church of ScotlandCategory:People from BishopbriggsCategory:20th-century Royal Air Force personnelCategory:Alumni of the University of GlasgowCategory:20th-century Protestant religious leaders +Professional careerNgassaki made his professional debut for Montpellier in a 1–0 Ligue 1 win over AS Nancy Lorraine on 21 February 2017. +In 1896 the Coburger Straße pedestrian bridge was built over the railway tracks; it was demolished in 1934. +Final Fantasy Chronicles is a compilation of Square's role-playing video games Final Fantasy IV and Chrono Trigger, released for the North American Sony PlayStation on June 29, 2001. +Gifford Dalley was a United States House of Representatives officer from 1789 to 1795. +Surrounded by major roads, landmarks, offices and hotels, this area is commercially very active now. +In Wallachia, the raia were located on the northern bank of the Danube, around the fortresses of Turnu Măgurele, Giurgiu and Brăila, while in Moldavia they were situated on the eastern border, around the fortresses of Kiliya, Akkerman, Bender and Khotin. +The station is currently owned by Roger Williams University and plays a variety of music genres which include alternative, metal, country, disco, classic rock, and many more. +No crystallographic and little spectroscopic support exists for these materials. +Series overviewEpisodesSeason 1 (1996)Season 2 (1997)Season 3 (1998)Season 4 (1999)Season 5 (2000)Season 6 (2001)Season 7 (2002)ReferencesCategory:Lists of American sitcom television series episodes +The song "House of Mercy" received the Grammy for Best American Roots Performance at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards. +She worked with director Jean Negulesco on several films, and later worked extensively on soap operas, forming a writing team with her husband, Robert Soderberg. +Port Chester Harbor is the name of a bay located in the village of Port Chester on Long Island Sound, in Westchester County, New York. +Baroness Prashar became a governor of De Montfort University in 1996, and became its chancellor in 2001. +Sources Coloma, L.A., Ron, S., Cisneros-Heredia, D., Almandáriz, A. +The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. +Final central scouting rankingsSkatersGoaltendersSelections by roundTeams are in North America unless otherwise noted. +A second church building was erected in 1879. +Bucakşeyhler is a village in the District of Manavgat, Antalya Province, Turkey. +"Ivan" is the seventeenth episode of the first season of the American crime drama The Blacklist. +France also named him a Commander of the Legion of Honor. +He attempted to grow vegetables and coconuts on the swampy, bug-infested stretch of land between Miami and the ocean, a barrier island which became Miami Beach. +It runs largely parallel to the Bundesstraße 5; its main purpose is to connect the hinterland of Hamburg. +Selected Single WorksAppuru Jamu-kun (アップルジャム君)Bōken Ben-chan (冒険ベンちゃん)Doron Chibimaru (ドロンちび丸)Enban Z (円盤Z)Gojira (ゴジラ)Misutā Robotto (ミスターロボット) 1959Sarutobi Sasuke (猿飛佐助)Shōnen Jiraiya (少年児雷也)Shōnen saiyūki (少年西遊記)Sugiura Shigeru: Jiden to kaisō (杉浦茂ー自伝と回想). +On 13 May 2011, Rafinha moved abroad and joined Liechtensteiner club Vaduz on a one-year contract. +He remained there as a private lecturer until 1975, when, after a professorship at the Hochschule für Musik Detmold, he was appointed full professor at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität in Kiel in 1976. +They are evergreen trees reaching 5–40 m tall, with bipinnate or tripinnate leaves, and panicles of large bell-shaped, white, pink, pale purple or yellow flowers 5–7 cm diameter. +The advantage is that no chemical deicing fluids such as glycol, which is harmful to the environment and very expensive, need to be used. +Noh Joo-hyun (born Noh Un-young on August 19, 1946) is a South Korean actor. +DescriptionDudleya nesiotica bears a few pointed or rounded leaves during the winter months when moisture is available, and it goes dormant during the summer, leaving behind only its tough caudex. +In 1999 XHTIM adopted the name "Galaxy" and a classic hits format, as well as the call sign XHGLX-FM. +His early years were spent in rural Zimbabwe where he attended primary and secondary school. +His debut in that competition came against Devon in 1985. +ReferencesCategory:Townships in Murray County, MinnesotaCategory:Townships in Minnesota +SquadsTest series1st Test2nd TestMedia coverageTelevision NEO Cricket (live) - India, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh Zee Sports (live) - United States of America Commonwealth Broadcasting Network (live) - Canada Fox Sports (live) - Australia Sky Sports (live) - United Kingdom Supersport (live) – South Africa, Kenya and Zimbabwe Eurosport (live) - Europe StarHub (pay per view) - Malaysia and SingaporeReferencesCategory:International cricket competitions in 2009–10Category:2010 in Indian cricketCategory:2010 in Bangladeshi cricket2009-10Category:Bangladeshi cricket seasons from 2000–01 +On March 10, 1925 Rothstock entered Bettauer's office and shot him five times at point-blank range. +The following radio stations broadcast on FM frequency 95.5 MHz:Argentina Alfa y omega in Campana, Buenos Aires Amistad in Villa Huidobro, Córdoba Corazón in Rosario, Santa Fe Cyber in Villa Carlos Paz, Córdoba Concepto in Buenos Aires del molino in Trevelin, Chubut El Grito in Los Hornillos, Córdoba LRI803 Las Parejas in Las Parejas, Santa Fe la Zero in Rio Cuarto, Córdoba Libertad in Olavarria, Buenos Aires Live in Capilla del Monte, Córdoba LRI 736 Universal in Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires LRP 782 Máxima in Ceres, Santa Fe Activa in Valle de Uco, Mendoza LRF321 Tiempo in Rio Turbio, Santa Cruz Más LRH 927 in Campo Grande, Misiones Metro Mendoza in Mendoza Mediterránea in Concepcion, Tucuman Popular in Chilecito, La Rioja Radio María in Adrogué, Buenos Aires Radio María in Maipú, Buenos Aires Radio Maria in Tres Isletas, Chaco Radio Maria in Camilo Aldao, Córdoba Radio Maria in Victoria, Entre Ríos Radio María in Abra Pampa, Jujuy Radio María in Eduardo Castex, La Pampa Uno in Dolores, Buenos Aires Vos in Brandsen, Buenos AiresAustralia ABC Mid North Coast in Port Macquarie, New South Wales ABC South East NSW in Jindabyne, New South Wales ROK FM in Parkes, New South Wales Radio TAB in Bundaberg, Queensland Radio TAB in Emerald, Queensland Radio TAB in Roxby Downs, South Australia Radio TAB in Renmark, South Australia 95.5 K-Rock in Geelong, Victoria ABC Classic FM in Kalgoorlie, Western AustraliaMerto FM, Love Relay 94Canada (Channel 238) CBA-FM in Moncton, New Brunswick CBF-FM-14 in St-Jovite, Quebec CBKE-FM in La Loche, Saskatchewan CBKI-FM in Stanley Mission, Saskatchewan CBMU-FM in Harrington Harbour, Quebec CBN-FM-6 in Baie Verte, Newfoundland and Labrador CBNR-FM in Ramea, Newfoundland and Labrador CBOC-FM in Cornwall, Ontario CBUF-FM-4 in Prince George, British Columbia CBUH-FM in Chase, British Columbia CBUY-FM in Port Hardy, British Columbia CBWE-FM in Easterville, Manitoba CBWL-FM in Snow Lake, Manitoba CBWM-FM in Oxford House, Manitoba CBWQ-FM in South Indian Lake, Manitoba CFLX-FM in Sherbrooke, Quebec CFVD-FM in Degelis, Quebec CFXP-FM in Jasper, Alberta CHLB-FM in Lethbridge, Alberta CIAM-FM-2 in Buffalo Head, Alberta CIAM-FM-14 in Wabasca, Alberta CIAM-FM-15 in Fort Chipewyan, Alberta CIAM-FM-18 in Manning, Alberta CIYN-FM in Kincardine, Ontario CJLR-FM-6 in North Battleford, Saskatchewan CJLS-FM in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia CJOJ-FM in Belleville, Ontario CJTK-FM in Sudbury, Ontario CKGY-FM in Red Deer, Alberta VF2123 in Valemount, British Columbia VF2204 in Kemano, British Columbia VF2290 in Carol Lake Mining, Newfoundland and LabradorColombia HJU54-FM in Bogotá, Bogotá D.C.Mexico XHCD-FM in Hermosillo, Sonora XHCMM-FM in Coalcomán, Michoacán XHELG-FM in León, Guanajuato XHGYC-FM in Guadalupe y Calvo, Chihuahua XHHIT-FM in Puebla, Puebla XHKIN-FM in Magdalena de Kino, Sonora XHKN-FM in Huetamo, Michoacán XHMP-FM in Torreón, Coahuila XHNAS-FM in Navajoa, Sonora XHOE-FM in Querétaro, Querétaro XHPCAR-FM in Ciudad del Carmen, Campeche XHPEDN-FM in Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca XHPTCS-FM in Tapachula, Chiapas XHRG-FM in Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila XHRO-FM in Zapopan, Jalisco XHTP-FM in Banderilla, Veracruz XHUAC-FM in Ensenada, Baja California XHZTZ-FM in Zacatecas, ZacatecasPhilippinesDWDM-FM in ManilaDWEL-FM in Laoag City, Ilocos NorteUnited States (Channel 238) in Bethany, Missouri in Diboll, Texas in Dodge City, Kansas in Honolulu, Hawaii in Wolfforth, Texas in Mora, Minnesota KBFF in Portland, Oregon KCBP in Westley, California KCHH in Worden, Montana KCHK-FM in New Prague, Minnesota KDHS-LP in Delta Junction, Alaska KFCE-LP in Wills Point, Texas KGKR-LP in Galena, Alaska in Sioux City, Iowa in Santa Fe, New Mexico KITX in Hugo, Oklahoma in Saint Ansgar, Iowa in Poplar Bluff, Missouri KKHK in Carmel, California in Austin, Texas in Bemidji, Minnesota KLAQ in El Paso, Texas KLDI-LP in Lodi, California KLOS in Los Angeles, California KMBR in Butte, Montana KMLS in Miles, Texas in Marysville, Kansas in Reno, Nevada KNLT in Palmer, Alaska KOME-FM in Meridian, Texas KOYH in Elaine, Arkansas in Rocky Ford, Colorado KQWJ-LP in Jonesboro, Louisiana KRQP-LP in Arlington, Texas KRRQ in Lafayette, Louisiana in Glenwood Springs, Colorado in Gordon, Nebraska KSGV-LP in Seagoville, Texas KSTO in Agana, Guam in Pleasant Hope, Missouri KUJJ in McCall, Idaho KVAP-LP in Port Arthur, Texas in Lindsborg, Kansas KVWR-LP in Dallas, Texas KWAH-LP in Ennis, Texas in Tulsa, Oklahoma KWEY-FM in Clinton, Oklahoma KWNR in Henderson, Nevada in Midwest, Wyoming KXEU in Ballard, Utah KXPN-FM in Scotland, Texas in Ogden, Utah in Jamestown, North Dakota KYOT in Phoenix, Arizona KYWY in Pine Bluffs, Wyoming KZAT-FM in Belle Plaine, Iowa KZFM in Corpus Christi, Texas KZLC-LP in Pineville, Louisiana WART-LP in Marshall, North Carolina in Buffalo Gap, Virginia in Salladasburg, Pennsylvania WCPL-LP in Merritt Island, Florida WCXE-LP in Erlanger, Kentucky WEBG in Chicago, Illinois in Johnstown, Pennsylvania in Cleveland, Ohio in Odessa, New York in Hackleburg, Alabama in Indianapolis, Indiana in Bethalto, Illinois WGFE in Glen Arbor, Michigan in Pekin, Illinois in Jackson, Mississippi in High Point, North Carolina in Wedgefield, South Carolina in Wausau, Wisconsin WIXV in Savannah, Georgia in Thomasville, Alabama WJOR-LP in Whitesville, Kentucky WKQI in Detroit, Michigan WKYD-LP in Jamestown, Kentucky WLDI in Juno Beach, Florida in Providence, Rhode Island WMFH-LP in Columbus, Mississippi WMXP-LP in Greenville, South Carolina WNGR-LP in Tigerville, South Carolina WNIR-LP in Newberry, South Carolina WOOO-LP in Defiance, Ohio in Oxford, Mississippi in Morningside, Maryland WPLJ in New York, New York WPPI in Topsham, Maine in Pinetops, North Carolina in Prestonsburg, Kentucky WRJM-LP in Cullman, Alabama WSBB-FM in Doraville, Georgia WSKR-LP in Jacksonville, Florida in Nashville, Tennessee in Dothan, Alabama WUTT-LP in Erie, Pennsylvania WVXE-LP in Orange Park, Florida WWMD-LP in Ashland, Wisconsin WWMV-LP in Madison, Wisconsin WXMG in Lancaster, Ohio WXXX in South Burlington, Vermont WYJB in Albany, New York WYJR-LP in Middlesboro, Kentucky WYND-FM in Silver Springs, FloridaCategory:Lists of radio stations by frequency +Vikram had won the best screenplay award (2009 Nandi award) for Konchem Ishtam Konchem Kashtam (2009) movie on his debut as screenwriter. +Views on efficient psychotherapyStrupp, much like Carl Rogers, focused much of his attention on the therapeutic relationship between the therapist and patient and not on the techniques used. +At this time, the Group consisted of squadrons HMR-361, HMR-362, HMR-363, all flying HRS-1 helicopters. +Leggende delle Alpi (1889) by Maria Savi-Lopez with 60 illustrations by Carlo Chessa (see full version, Alpensagen (1893) in German). +He is a frequent collaborator both with Ron Anderson and Jesse Krakow. +Serixia fulvida is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. +He was fluent in Berber, Arabic, French, English and Italian. +After Probus had left Syria for the Rhine in 280, unruly soldiers and the people of Alexandria forced a reluctant Saturninus to accept imperial office. +In 1558, a school in Portugal was the first European school to distribute prizes to the best students, and by the end of the century other schools were following suit. +The garden also contains a handsome departmental building in neoclassical style. +Lucien is a male given name of French origin, It is the French form of Luciano or Latin Lucianus, patronymic of Lucius. +His book The Hundred Cuts: Sitting Bull and the Major is a poetic documentary about the exile in Canada of Lakota chief Sitting Bull, and his relationship with Major James Walsh of the NWMP. +References Category:Populated places in Semirom County +ReferencesCategory:Buildings and structures in Lincoln County, MinnesotaCategory:Buildings and structures completed in 1921Category:National Register of Historic Places in Lincoln County, Minnesota +See alsoCommunes of the Orne departmentReferences INSEE commune fileCategory:Former communes of Orne +League managers. +Notable people with the surname include: Gerard Deulofeu (born 1994), Spanish footballer Alexandre Deulofeu (1903–1978), Spanish politician +The species was described in 2008. +In the U.S., monition refers to a summons. +The forewings are pale ochreous, variably streaked dark brown suffusion between the veins, more strongly in the disc and forming oblique wedge-shaped streaks in the cell. +Institutes Epidemiology and Pathogen Diagnostics (Quedlinburg and Braunschweig) Ecological Chemistry, Plant Analysis and Stored Product Protection (Quedlinburg, Berlin and Kleinmachnow) Resistance Research and Stress Tolerance (Quedlinburg) Biosafety in Plant Biotechnology (Quedlinburg) Breeding Research on Horticultural and Fruit Crops (Quedlinburg and Dresden) Breeding Research on Agricultural Crops (Quedlinburg) Application Techniques in Plant Protection (Braunschweig) Crop and Soil Science (Braunschweig) National and International Plant Health (Braunschweig) Plant Protection in Field Crops and Grassland (Braunschweig) Plant Protection in Horticulture and Forests (Braunschweig and Münster) Strategies and Technology Assessment (Berlin and Kleinmachnow) Biological Control (Darmstadt) Plant Protection in Fruit Crops and Viticulture (Dossenheim, Siebeldingen, Bernkastel-Kues) Grapevine Breeding (Siebeldingen) Experimental station for potato breeding (Groß Lüsewitz)Notable scientists Georg F. Backhaus Falko Feldmann Johannes Hallmann Johannes A. Jehle Kornelia SmallaExternal links Website Julius Kühn Institute – Federal Research Institute for Cultivated Plants, Key to Nature wikiCategory:Agricultural research institutes in GermanyCategory:German federal agenciesCategory:Government agencies established in 2008Category:Organisations based in Saxony-AnhaltCategory:2008 establishments in Germany +Later missions used a pair of telepathic twins, Gill and Gail Patrick, for communication. +Route descriptionState Road 241 begins at U.S. Route 41 near Decker. +Category:Populated places in the Kankan Region +The female is slightly browner than the male. +She contributed to the large inventory of 17th-century Dutch paintings by Cornelis Hofstede de Groot, and became a specialist on Dutch Kraak ware. +In 1986, Bridge played in nearly every game for Balmain as they reached the preliminary final against Canterbury-Bankstown. +ReferencesCategory:Regional roads in the Republic of IrelandCategory:Roads in County Louth +The biggest part exists of residential cultivation. +), Swiss field hockey player Xaver Kurmann (born 1948), Swiss cyclist Category:German-language surnames +Six-time champion Harry Vardon, age 58, made his last cut in the Open Championship and tied for 47th. +Terling was named as Essex Village of the Year in 2017. +Season! +Cornelia Rost: Freundlich in finstren Zeiten. +It was surveyed by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1958, and was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee after Edmund Gunter, an English mathematician whose "line of numbers" (1617) was the first step toward a slide rule; in 1620 he published tables of logarithms, sines and tangents, which revolutionized navigation. +Honduras and United States qualified to the 2000 Summer Olympics as result of their performances at the 2000 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament held in Hershey, Pennsylvania. +He is one of two Singaporeans to have played first-class matches for an English university in recent years, the other being Durham University's Anish Paraam. +ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in Medina County, OhioCategory:Unincorporated communities in Summit County, OhioCategory:Unincorporated communities in Ohio +The adults and babies meet Coco's overworked assistant Kira Watanabe and her daughter, Kimi, who hail from Japan, but are now living in France. +About one mile upstream from its confluence the stream has been blocked with a dam and filled by mine tailings from the Adair Creek Mine (Sweetwater Mine). +The Covington News also publishes The News and Advertiser, and "The Rockdale News". +She has also appeared in When in Rome, a Touchstone Pictures film directed by Mark Steven Johnson. +1420) June 6 – Hosokawa Katsumoto, Japanese nobleman (b. +Some claim, too, that he "invented" the close-up shot for filming. +Conservation statusThis species is classified as "not threatened" by the Government of Western Australia Department of Parks and Wildlife. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Business organisations based in AustraliaCategory:Business organisations based in New ZealandCategory:2004 establishments in AustraliaCategory:2004 establishments in New ZealandCategory:Organizations established in 2004 +Richmond Kickers2014 seasonOn February 28 Davis signed with United Soccer League side Richmond Kickers and made his season debut on March 29 against Charleston where he scored a brace. +CanadaMontreal - Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport (Terminated)United StatesAtlanta - Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International AirportAkron/Canton - Akron-Canton AirportBoston - Logan International AirportCharlotte - Charlotte/Douglas International AirportChicago - Chicago Midway International AirportColumbus - Port Columbus International AirportDallas/Fort Worth - Dallas-Fort Worth International AirportDetroit - Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County AirportFlint - Bishop International AirportFort Lauderdale - Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International AirportFort Myers - Southwest Florida International AirportFort Walton Beach - Northwest Florida Regional AirportHartford - Bradley International AirportHouston - William P. Hobby AirportIndianapolis - Indianapolis International AirportJacksonville - Jacksonville International AirportKansas City - Kansas City International AirportLouisville - Louisville International AirportMemphis - Memphis International AirportMiami - Miami International AirportMobile - Mobile Regional AirportNashville - Nashville International AirportNew Orleans - Louis Armstrong New Orleans International AirportNewport News - Newport News/Williamsburg International AirportOrlando - Orlando International AirportPhiladelphia - Philadelphia International AirportPittsburgh - Pittsburgh International AirportRaleigh/Durham - Raleigh-Durham International AirportSavannah - Savannah/Hilton Head International AirportTampa - Tampa International AirportWashington D.C. - Dulles International AirportWest Palm Beach - Palm Beach International AirportReferences Valuejet +He also hopes to cultivate outstanding ambulance elites, rescuing more precious lives in challenging situations... +- (grand statice)ReferencesCategory:PlumbaginaceaeCategory:Caryophyllales genera +This becomes apparent when Binh discovers a notebook written by Gertrude Stein (entitled the Book of Salt) about him. +Childhood and education Klaus Agthe grew up in Apolda in the province of Thuringia, Germany, went to school in Weimar and studied business administration at the Humboldt University in Berlin under Professor Konrad Mellerowicz. +This is in pursuit of "the service of faith and promotion of justice" that was emphasized by Jesuit Father General Pedro Arrupe and by the Catholic bishops after Vatican II. +(1181–1220?) +Species include: Hydrotarsus compunctus Hydrotarsus pilosusReferences Category:Dytiscidae generaCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot +Bornabad (, also Romanized as Bornābād; also known as Parnavāz) is a village in Torqabeh Rural District, Torqabeh District, Torqabeh and Shandiz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. +SeedsDrawFinalsTop HalfBottom HalfReferencesDrawCategory:U.S. +Station LayoutReferencesCategory:Beijing Subway stations in Shunyi District +Distribution This species occurs in: TurkeyReferencesExternal links http://www.animalbase.uni-goettingen.de/zooweb/servlet/AnimalBase/home/species?id=2334Category:AlbinariaCategory:Gastropods described in 2000Category:Endemic fauna of Turkey +Medal summaryRoad cyclingTrack cyclingParticipating nations66 cyclists from 13 nations competed. +In contrast to the way his predecessors' ruled, Abas' reign was marked by years of peace, stability, and prosperity that Armenia had not enjoyed for decades. +Leigh Creek may refer to:Places Leigh Creek, South Australia, an outback townLeigh Creek Coalfield discovered in 1888 and the site of a small underground mine Telford Cut, the open-cut coal mine operating from 1943 to 2015 Leigh Creek Airport Leigh Creek, Victoria, a town in Central Victoria east of BallaratOther uses Leigh Creek Energy, listed on the Australian Securities Exchange as LCK +KEN mode Jesse Matthewson – guitar, vocals Shane Matthewson – drums Chad Tremblay – bass, vocalsAdditional musicians Kurt Ballou – slide guitar on "Terrify the Animals" Jahmeel Russell – composing on "Flight of the Echo Hawk"Production Kurt Ballou – engineer, mixing Alan Douches – masteringArtwork and design Julie Anne Mann – artwork Josh Graham – design, layout Aaron Turner – KEN mode logoReferences Category:2011 albumsCategory:Profound Lore Records albumsCategory:KEN mode albumsCategory:Albums produced by Kurt Ballou +They are also common in countries like Austria, Belgium, Canary Islands, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Norway, Poland, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. +On 24 June 1794 he received a letter of patent commission as a National Veteran, qualifying for public assistance, which documented 30 years of effective service. +Statistics of the Mongolia Premier League for the 2008 season. +Baillif Airport is an airport serving Basse Terre, a coastal city in Guadeloupe. +The Maid of Warsaw: Every member of the regiment wears the Maid of Warsaw, the crest of the City of Warsaw, on the left sleeve of his No. +Although the empire itself was declining, Cádiz now experienced another golden age from its new importance. +References Category:Populated places in Sonqor County +ScheduleAll times are Central Standard Time (UTC−6). +List of railway stations in the United Kingdom, split alphabetically. +Maho (2009) lists the following as distinct languages in the Ovambo cluster:KwanyamaKafimaEvaleMbandjaMbalanhuNdongwenaKwankwaDombondolaEsingaNdongaKwambiNgandjeraKwaluudhiKolonkadhi-EundaReferencesExternal links PanAfrican L10n page on Oshiwambo +It occurs in the Mekong and Chao Praya in Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. +South DivisionBig Sky ConferenceNorth DivisionSouth DivisionSunshine ConferenceMidwest ConferenceEast ConferencePlayoffsEastern ConferenceBig Sky ConferenceMidwest/Sunshine ConferencesPacific ConferenceWPSL ChampionshipReferencesExternal links WPSL StandingsCategory:Women's Premier Soccer League seasons2 +A Buddha, on a pedestal, high and wide was erected at the temple in 1900. +Gene Stone, whom Dr. Fulford asked to collaborate with him on his book Touch of Life, included Dr. Fulford's five-step exercise plan as the basis for the chapter on Stretching, in his book The Secrets of People Who Never Get SickAlso an electric percussive device is referred to as the Fulford hammer or Fulford percussor, following his introduction of its use in Osteopathic treatment. +HonoursCountry honorsIndonesia U-18Asian Schools Championship (1): 1996ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:1985 birthsCategory:Sportspeople from Bangka-Belitung IslandsCategory:People from Pangkal PinangCategory:Indonesian footballersCategory:Pelita Bandung Raya playersCategory:Sriwijaya FC playersCategory:Persikota Tangerang playersCategory:Persibom Bolmong playersCategory:Persija Jakarta playersCategory:Persebaya Surabaya playersCategory:Liga 1 (Indonesia) playersCategory:Association football defendersCategory:Association football midfielders +Lepisma nicolettii) – four-lined silverfish (Europe, North Africa)Ctenolepisma nigerica Mendes, 1982 (Nigeria)Ctenolepisma nigra (Oudemans in Weber, 1890) (syn. +All Progressive Youth Association (, TÜM-İGD) is a socialist youth organisation in Turkey. +In 2012 he served as Deputy of the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Morelos. +HistoryThe town was named after Edward Wilmot Pechey (Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for the Electoral district of Aubigny 1873-1877). +FilmographyFilmTelevisionReferencesExternal links Category:1973 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Actresses from New JerseyCategory:Female models from New JerseyCategory:American film actressesCategory:American television actressesCategory:People from Essex County, New JerseyCategory:20th-century American actressesCategory:21st-century American actresses +The population was 258 as of 2002. +He was a student of the French Indo-Europeanist Antoine Meillet (Faral 1947:277). +He played John, Duke of Berry in Kenneth Branagh's film of Henry V.FilmographyExternal links Category:Living peopleCategory:British male child actorsCategory:British male television actorsCategory:Year of birth missing (living people)Category:British male film actors +In 1982 he was elected a member of Russia's Academy of Natural Sciences. +OverviewThe first video game in the series, Ogre Battle: The March of the Black Queen, was released in 1993 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in Japan, and two years later in North America. +Life and careerJake Hoffman was born in Los Angeles County, California, the son of actor Dustin Hoffman and Lisa Hoffman (née Gottsegen). +In the computer game The Sims, plastic flamingos are the cheapest garden decoration. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1996 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian women's footballersCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Women's association football forwardsCategory:Russia women's international footballersCategory:Universiade silver medalists for RussiaCategory:Universiade medalists in footballCategory:Competitors at the 2017 Summer Universiade +Their remains were moved several times and reburied in several places, finally being placed in lead boxes and reburied again in the southern transept in 1956. +It was the summer residence of the counts of Provence. +Constructed by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and the Waterdale Youth Group, the trail is blazed in orange and is known for its many vistas overlooking Pine Creek Gorge. +With about the largest one of these is the Dornburger Alte Elbe, a river of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. +HistoryGlasgow District beat Edinburgh District in the Inter-City match. +Alyx is a generally friendly person, usually making optimistic remarks in dire situations. +He pitted the next lap and the lead cycled to Keselowski. +Features MuLab has most of the features of a standard full DAW: audio/MIDI recording, MIDI sequencing, mixing, automation, control surface interaction, multi-core, stock synths, samplers and effects, multi-projects and templates, etc. +ReferencesCategory:Educational institutions established in 1964Gymnasium, 15Category:Education in ZagrebCategory:1964 establishments in CroatiaCategory:Gymnasiums in CroatiaCategory:Buildings and structures in Zagreb +Before that, Sales replaced the former small S-stores that were not part of any chain. +Notable places nearby Corcoran, Howe, Longfellow and Standish neighborhoodsHiawatha LRT Trail Roosevelt High School (Minneapolis School District) Roosevelt Community LibraryExternal links Metro Transit: 38th Street StationCategory:Metro Blue Line (Minnesota) stations in MinneapolisCategory:Railway stations in the United States opened in 2004Category:2004 establishments in Minnesota +SocietyLinguistic distributionAccording to the 2011 census, 98.46% of the population speak German and 1.54% Italian as first language. +21st century During the first decade of the 21st century, proposals were made by the South West Regional Assembly to build 800 new homes on green belt land on the edge of the village. +The expedition was able to set off in June 1742. +ReferencesCategory:1894 birthsCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Argentine male fencersCategory:Argentine sabre fencersCategory:Olympic fencers of ArgentinaCategory:Fencers at the 1936 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Buenos Aires +Huguang Guild Hall in Beijing, is built. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1997 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American rugby union playersCategory:United States international rugby union playersCategory:Rugby union flankersCategory:San Diego Legion playersCategory:Glendale Raptors playersCategory:Sportspeople from Tulsa, Oklahoma +ReferencesCategory:Members of the Queensland Legislative AssemblyCategory:1890 birthsCategory:1966 deathsCategory:Australian Labor Party members of the Parliament of QueenslandCategory:Queensland Labor Party members of the Parliament of QueenslandCategory:20th-century Australian politicians +Uttamanusorn Bridge is the longest wooden bridge in Thailand and is the second longest in the world after the Mandalay's U Bein Bridge in Myanmar. +Kalagh Jiru (, also Romanized as Kalāgh Jīrū; also known as Jerū and Kalāgh) is a village in Shurab Rural District, in the Central District of Arsanjan County, Fars Province, Iran. +Stage magicCausing spoons, keys, and other items to appear to bend without any physical force is a common stage magic trick that has many variants. +There, he studied under the Jesuits at Stonyhurst College, later at St Bede's College, and then at Merton College, Oxford, from where he graduated in 1890, aged 21. +It was one of the new army or Kitchener's Army brigades, and assigned to the 14th (Light) Division and served on the Western Front during the First World War. +Pythian Temple may refer to:Pythian Temple (Birmingham, Alabama), also known as Alabama Penny Savings Bank Pythian Temple (New York City) Pythian Temple and James Pythian Theater Columbus, Ohio Pythian Temple (Tacoma, Washington)See alsoList of Knights of Pythias buildings +Rail Raxaul Junction railway station is situated on the Delhi – Gorakhpur - Raxaul - Chakia - Muzaffarpur - Kolkata lines. +After being wounded, he arrives at the 4077th for treatment. +While Beem was expected to only miss six weeks, rehabilitation issues caused the layoff to encompass the remainder of the 2010 season. +It fought at the Battles of Saratoga on the extreme right of the American right flank, close to the river fortifications next to the hudson river. +1010 is in Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, in the U.S. state of Washington. +Manukyan was the top taxpayer in Istanbul for five consecutive years during the 1990s and received an award for that by the revenue authority. +EtymologyThe Tinto was also called the Cuyamel, as of 1850. +105 in the doubles rankings. +The canton of Saint-Affrique is an administrative division of the Aveyron department, southern France. +There are at least two curling clubs known as Midland Curling Club. +It lies approximately north of Nysa and south-west of the regional capital Opole. +David Francis Duncan (1923 – 2007) was a British diplomat. +Winchester, Jim, ed. +External links Category:1982 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:New Caledonian footballersCategory:New Caledonia international footballersCategory:AS Magenta playersCategory:Association football midfielders +Non-fiction literary works Men of the Ice-breaker Sedov, Hutchinsons, London Verschollen in Grumant, Kultur und Fortschritt, Berlin 1960 812 Tage im Eis der Arktis – Die Drift des Eismeerdampfers Georgi Sedow. +ActivismCliff was involved with the Colored Conventions Movement, a movement composed of free and fugitive African Americans that sought to advance African American rights in law, labor, and education. +It was founded in 2007 by Azu Nwagbogu to promote Nigerian and other African art and artists. +Site is gone, Dec 2019, archived version:ReferencesExternal links Official site (archive)Category:1984 video gamesCategory:Apple II gamesCategory:Commodore 64 gamesCategory:Mac OS gamesCategory:Programming gamesCategory:Video games developed in the United States +The modern day microchip made using large crowds for mechanical computation less attractive in the second half of the twentieth century. +As such he was responsible for the disciplinary supervision of the clergy within the Cloyne Diocese. +Charles Sullivan (April 24, 1899 – June 25, 1972), also known as Charlie Sullivan, was an American character actor who was born just before the turn of the 20th century on April 24, 1899. +In 1942 Bottum was unsuccessful in seeking the Republican nomination for Governor and in 1950 he was unsuccessful in his attempt to gain the Republican nomination for Representative. +All the leading players were in the early pairings. +Track listingPersonnel Adapted from the Charged liner notes. +Ontrack or ONTRACK may refer to: ONTRACK, former trading name for New Zealand Railways Corporation (NZRC), now KiwiRail Network OnTrack, a commuter railway in New York state, U.S. Ontrack, a computer data recovery company acquired by Kroll Inc. to form Kroll Ontrack Ontrack software, author of the 1980s–1990s computer utility suite Disk Manager for DOS OnTrac, a regional parcel carrier in the Western United States +He then went on to play for the Arena Football League's Carolina Cobras. +It is notable for being one of fourteen lakes on Mistik Creek named in numeric order in Cree. +Cloud, Minnesota, that played from 1946 to 1971 St. +The book is a compilation of essays on Spanish history over the long-term, with contributions by Sebastian Balfour, Roger Collins, A. T. Fear, Felipe Fernández-Armesto, Richard Fletcher, Richard Herr, Henry Kamen, and Angus Mackay (as well as Carr himself). +PopulationPopulation per years is the following. +Over the centuries the convent grew until it ultimately numbered eighteen sisters. +The bridge has a main arch of and 4 land spans. +Hamzallı, Nazilli is a village in the District of Nazilli, Aydın Province, Turkey. +The reservoir is still in use today In 1902, the electric tram was extended up Gladstone Road, stimulating suburban growth. +Inside of the temple, three cellae – one for each of the worshipped gods – were built. +Though he had never stepped one foot in a boat before and didn't even know how to swim, he became one of the first African-Americans to race with the World Outboard Racing Association (WORA) in Ann Arbor, MI. +Xanthorhoe molata is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Felder in 1875. +North America won its third title, defeating Team Europe 290-110. +Other bearers of the name:Dave Tyack, German musicianDavid Tyack, American academic, Professor of EducationMajor General David Tyacke, British Army officerJim Tyack, baseball player Les Tyack, Australian politicianRyan Tyack, Australian archer Sarah Tyacke, British historian of cartographyFootnotes +Results1st RoundFujimi FC Angels 1-2 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High SchoolOhara Gakuen JaSRA 2-1 Tokyo Women's College of Physical EducationSaibi High School 0-6 Kyoto Shiko SCFukuoka Jogakuin FC Anclas 1-3 Seiwa Gakuen High School2nd RoundNippon TV Beleza 12-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High SchoolJEF United Ichihara 1-2 Takarazuka BunnysUrawa Reinas FC 5-0 Hiroshima Minami High SchoolOhara Gakuen JaSRA 0-6 Iga FC KunoichiYKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 3-0 Kyoto Shiko SCAS Elfen FC 0-3 Shimizudaihachi SCSperanza FC Takatsuki 4-0 Renaissance Kumamoto FCSeiwa Gakuen High School 0-10 Tasaki Perule FCQuarterfinalsNippon TV Beleza 4-0 Takarazuka BunnysUrawa Reinas FC 0-1 Iga FC KunoichiYKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 4-1 Shimizudaihachi SCSperanza FC Takatsuki 0-3 Tasaki Perule FCSemifinalsNippon TV Beleza 1-2 Iga FC KunoichiYKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 1-3 Tasaki Perule FCFinalIga FC Kunoichi 2-1 Tasaki Perule FCIga FC Kunoichi won the championship. +Political careerOjaamong to the Orange Democratic Movement and was elected to represent the Amagoro Constituency in the National Assembly of Kenya since the 2007 Kenyan parliamentary election. +(New York, W.W. Norton & Co.). +Renamed Church of the Savior United Methodist in 1968. +Carman/Friendship Field Airport, , is located adjacent to Carman, Manitoba, Canada. +Chart performanceYear-end chartsReferencesCategory:1994 singlesCategory:Prairie Oyster songsCategory:RPM Country Tracks number-one singlesCategory:1994 songsCategory:Arista Records singles +13 Queensland Cup teams field a side in the competition, with each team affiliated with an NRL club. +See also Foreign relations of Finland Military strategyReferencesExternal links Finnish Defence Forces official website Ministry of Defence official websiteCategory:Military of FinlandCategory:Military headquartersCategory:Government of FinlandCategory:Government agencies established in 1918Category:1918 establishments in Finland +Session length is seen as a more accurate alternative to measuring page views. +He may have been a native of Bokeham, now Bookham, in Surrey, or of Buckenham in Norfolk and derived his name from either place. +Pearce Paul Creasman (born 1981) is an archaeologist in the fields of Egyptology, maritime archaeology, and dendrochronology. +She coedited A Guide to Smart Growth with Ronald Utt. +Song The club song is known as "Cheer, Cheer The Red and The White" and is to the tune of the Victory March, the fight song of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in South Bend, Indiana, USA. +The term has thus become an inclusive word for any Chrysler-built vehicle—most any Dodge, Chrysler, Plymouth, Imperial, DeSoto or Dodge Trucks/Ram. +The 2017 Four Nations Tournament (Torneio Quatro Nações) in Portuguese, was the fourth edition of the Four Nations Tournament held in São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil between 27–29 October as a Men's friendly handball tournament organised by the Brazilian Handball Confederation. +(2010–12)Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (2010–15)Ed (2016)Everybody Hates Chris (2014–17)Family Feud (2019)Family Ties (2012–16)The Flip Wilson Show (2016)Fresh Off the Boat (2018-19; 2019)Growing Pains (2015–17)Highway to Heaven (2013–14)Judging Amy (2011–16)The Librarians (2019)Lincoln Heights (2016)The Locator (2017)Moesha (2012–16)My Two Dads (2017)One Born Every Minute (2018)Parenthood (2016-19; 2019)The Parkers (2014–17)Sister, Sister (2009–16)Smart Guy (2013–14)Soul Train (aired one episode twice on August 1, 2010)Steve Harvey (2014–15)Supernanny (2014-19)Sue Thomas: F.B.Eye (2012–14)Touched by an Angel (2011–16)VeggieTales (2009)The Waltons (2010–14)Whose Line is it Anyway? +playersCategory:Macedonian First Football League playersCategory:Persian Gulf Pro League playersCategory:Albanian Superliga playersCategory:Myanmar National League playersCategory:Macedonian expatriate footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in IranCategory:Macedonian expatriate sportspeople in IranCategory:Expatriate footballers in AlbaniaCategory:Macedonian expatriate sportspeople in AlbaniaCategory:Expatriate footballers in MyanmarCategory:Macedonian expatriate sportspeople in Myanmar +These and other Asian territories claimed by the Spanish crown were to be governed from the Viceroyalty of New Spain in Mexico City. +Cvek () is a Croatian and Slovenian occupational surname for a shoemaker ( from with the meaning "nail", "tack", "thumbtack", "shoe tack") and may refer to: George Joseph Cvek (1918–1942), American murderer and serial rapist Lovro Cvek (born 1995), Croatian footballer Robert Cvek (born 1979), Czech chess player Rudolf Cvek (1946–2005), Croatian footballerCategory:Croatian-language surnamesCategory:Slovene-language surnames +Zob AhanBengtson signed with Persian Gulf Pro League side Zob Ahan in July 2016.International careerHe made his debut for Honduras in an April 2010 friendly match against Venezuela and has, as of November 2012, earned a total of 24 caps, scoring 14 goals. +But despite the importance of practical decision making, in the final analysis the original Aristotelian and Socratic answer to the question of how best to live, at least for the best types of human, was to live the life of philosophy. +ReferencesExternal links 24:16 - Le Mans 24 Hours : 16 Wins With Porsche : An Autobiography with Michael Cotton The Norbert Singer Fan Club late 1990s Porsche LMPCategory:1939 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from ChebCategory:People from SudetenlandCategory:German automotive engineersCategory:Porsche peopleCategory:24 Hours of Le MansCategory:Technical University of Munich alumni +Mehmed IV presided over the Köprülü era, an exceptionally stable period of Ottoman history. +Harrex was awarded a French Government Scholarship, which enabled him to spend a year in Paris after graduating from York in 1968; here he attended Olivier Messiaen’s composition class at the Conservatoire and studied privately with Gilbert Amy. +Matka-ye Rudbar (, also Romanized as Matkā-ye Rūdbār) is a village in Kuhestan Rural District, Kelardasht District, Chalus County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. +Medal summaryResultsStandingsMatchesReferencesExternal linksMen Field Hockey Olympic Games 1932 Los Angeles (USA)Field Hockey Men: Olympic Games 1932 at Los Angeles (usa) Category:Field hockey at the Summer OlympicsCategory:1932 Summer Olympics events1932Category:1932 in field hockey +I mean, we could have just called it Latterman but since we're not fucking poseurs we came up with a new band and some kick ass new jams. +In 2006, in recognition of his work in ecumenical and interfaith dialogue, Brunett received an honorary doctorate from Gonzaga University. +Thief Hollow is a valley in McDonald County in the U.S. state of Missouri. +It contains part of Gyeongju National Park: the Daebon section which covers the shoreline near Daewangnueng, the watery grave of King Munmu of the Silla kingdom. +On March 15, 2018 308th RQS Pararescuemen, Master Sgt. +Men's SourceExternal linksReferencesCategory:Women's road bicycle racesCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 1985Category:1985 establishments in the NetherlandsCategory:Men's road bicycle races +The 1987 Bandy World Championship was the 15th Bandy World Championship and was contested between five men's bandy playing nations. +595 BC—Psamtik II succeeds Necho II as king of Egypt. +The concert aired on PBS stations nationwide. +TheaterFilmographyReferencesExternal links Category:1963 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Conservatoire de Paris alumniCategory:20th-century French male actorsCategory:21st-century French male actorsCategory:French male film actorsCategory:French male television actorsCategory:French male stage actorsCategory:French theatre directorsCategory:National Rally (France) politicians +The Tobacco Bowl was always played in Richmond City Stadium and was, on occasion, the host of the annual Virginia–Virginia Tech rivalry game. +In some cases, intermediate certifications may be required in the country in which the document originates before it is eligible for an apostille. +148–153. +Newry is an unincorporated community, in the town of Christiana, Vernon County, Wisconsin, United States. +Susaek-dong is a dong, neighbourhood of Eunpyeong-gu in Seoul, South Korea. +He was an Assistant Curate at St Andrew's, Sekondi then Chaplain at his Adisadel College. +Macaíba is a municipality in the state of Rio Grande do Norte in the Northeast region of Brazil. +In the CDP, the population was spread out with 25.3% under the age of 18, 9.9% from 18 to 24, 35.3% from 25 to 44, 21.6% from 45 to 64, and 7.9% who were 65 years of age or older. +Then in 1855, the southeastern part of Holtaalen (population: 1,487) was separated to become the new municipality of Aalen. +George Keathley may refer to:George D. Keathley (1917–1944), staff sergeant in the United States ArmyGeorge Keathley (theater director) +See also List of Alpine Line ouvragesReferencesBibliography Allcorn, William. +He encouraged President Jackson to appoint a commission to arbitrate the dispute. +It serves as the Central Business District for the Redcliffe Peninsula and its surrounding suburbs. +In April 1936, the strip was taken over by King Features (by that point the corporate parent of the Central Press Association) and re-titled Muggs and Skeeter. +Novel A novel was released on November 4, 1999 called by ASCII. +It's a great song. +The B-side to the single was an Emotional Rescue outtake, "I Think I'm Going Mad." +On 27 July, 2019, Jack published a statement on her social media profiles, confirming doping allegations over testing positive for a banned substance. +Since 2000, systematic upgrades, renovation, and renewal to MURR facilities and instrumentation in preparation for the next 20 years of licensed operation have taken place. +Epimorius maylinae is a species of snout moth in the genus Epimorius. +At the 2006 census, its population was 261, in 58 families. +Faqer Khadariyan (, also Romanized as Faqīr Khadarīyān; also known as Faqīyeh Khadarīyān and Faqīr Khadar) is a village in Baryaji Rural District, in the Central District of Sardasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. +It lies approximately north-west of Głowaczów, west of Kozienice, and south of Warsaw. +The town was featured in the movie Jour de fête (1949) by Jacques Tati, which tells of a small amusement fair in a town and of the adventures of a rural postman. +The album leans more heavily into blackened sludge metal, similar to acts like Anciients and Tombs. +Commissions Cover art for 2011 novel The Tiger's Wife Animal designs for the Royal Mint's Lunar coin seriesReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteCategory:1973 birthsCategory:21st-century women artistsCategory:People from OxfordCategory:Alumni of the University of CambridgeCategory:English people of Chinese descentCategory:English people of Malaysian descentCategory:English people of Singaporean descentCategory:British currency designersCategory:Living peopleCategory:Women graphic designers +Lieutenant Robert Shankland was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at Passchendaele on 26 October 1917. +Swarbrick made his debut for Dorset in the 1995 Minor Counties Championship against Herefordshire. +Same-sex couples and households headed by same-sex couples are not eligible for the same legal protections available to opposite-sex couples and LGBT persons face stigmatization among the broader population. +In 1945, Smith left Edith Kohlsaat's home in Lake Geneva and moved in with Mrs. Emery in Elmhurst. +After litigation from Collingdale, Pennsylvania opposing the creation of an African-American cemetery in the township, a charter for the creation of Eden Cemetery was granted by Pennsylvania on June 20, 1902. +Pukkarambai is a village in the Pattukkottai taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India. +The first-class match was part of the 2015–17 ICC Intercontinental Cup, with Ireland winning by 70 runs. +Cast Jayaram as Devan and Pazhani (Dual Role) Jagathy Sreekumar as Dasan Devan's friend Rambha as Mythili Indraja as Meenakshi Riyaz Khan as Ripper Bindu Panicker as Bindu Oduvil Unnikrishnan as Kannan Mash Maniyanpilla Raju as Swaminathan Augustine as Murukan Ponnamma Babu as Ponnamma Dasan's wife Saikumar Vijayaraghavan as Police Officer Zeenath Poornima Anand Bindu Ramakrishnan Sadiq Ambika Mohan as Meenakshi Kalabhavan ManiSoundtrackMusic: M. Jayachandran. +Laboso is the surname of the following people:Joyce Laboso (1960 —2019), Kenyan politician Lorna Laboso (1961–2008), Kenyan politician, sister of Joyce Laboso. +He was also the lead singer in a band called Salt Water Thief. +playersCategory:Sukhothai F.C. +Starting in publishing, she now specializes in novels based on television shows or movies. +Track listingCategory:Hot Water Music albums +ReceptionBoardGameGeek has Julius Caesar noted as #35 on its best wargames of all time. +Diego Arbelo Garcia (born 19 August 1994) is an Uruguay rugby union player who generally plays as a prop represents Uruguay internationally. +ReferencesCategory:1948 birthsCategory:Association football fullbacksCategory:Clyde F.C. +ReferencesCategory:Endemic flora of FijivitiensisCategory:Near threatened plantsCategory:Taxonomy articles created by Polbot +Jagadish Mohanty (17 February 1951 – 29 December 2013) was a renowned Odia writer, considered as a trendsetter in modern Odia fiction, has received the prestigious Sarala Award in 2003, Odisha Sahitya Akademi Award in 1990 for his novel Kanishka Kanishka, Dharitri Award in 1985, Jhankar Award, Prajatantra Award. +Upon opening, the station hosted a 170-space park and ride lot immediately southwest of the station, leased from Anishinabe Academy elementary school. +Hoffmann is divorced, has four children (twice twins) and lives with his girlfriend Sandra Henke in Hamburg. +He produced various maps of such locations as London and Australia. +HistoryThe earliest known RPF was written by Shakespeare as Shakespearean history, published in his First folio in 1623. +The 2nd constituency of Eure-et-Loir is a French legislative constituency in the Eure-et-Loir département. +SubdivisionsAgios Konstantinos (pop. +SalfordHe joined Salford for 2010 and has since seen his career flourish at the Greater Manchester club establishing himself in the Reds' first team and being drafted into the England training squad. +He was Vicar of Kippax from 1937 to 1946; Rural Dean of Whitkirk from 1944 to 1946; Vicar of Wetherby from 1946 to 1955; and Vicar of Briggate from 1955 to 1965. +She debuted on 7 February 1995 in a Test match, and on 12 February 1995 in a One Day International. +In 2007 he began the BMC Racing Team, which first competed on the international professional cycling circuit in 2010. +The Mulchatna River is a tributary of the Nushagak River in the U.S. state of Alaska. +Ralph Clive (c.1520 Walford, Shropshire - 1582) was a former MP in Cornwall, representing West Looe constituency. +HistoryOn 1 October 2010 Danish financial institution Jyske Bank purchased naming rights to the arena. +B. Denison and crew spotted an oil slick and directed destroyer escorts to the location. +Konstantinos Papadakis may refer to:Konstantinos Papadakis (pianist) (born 1972), Greek pianistKonstantinos Papadakis (politician) (born 1975), Greek politicianKonstantinos Papadakis (basketball) (born 1998), Greek basketball player or Panathinaikos +All three books have been translated into several languages including: Japanese, Norwegian, Czech, Portuguese, Bulgarian, Slovak and Estonian. +Both types of column are made from non-adsorbent and chemically inert materials. +However, neither cars were put into production, and the firm went into bankruptcy in 1999. +The 1956 Nebraska gubernatorial election was held on November 6, 1956, and featured incumbent Governor Victor E. Anderson, a Republican, defeating Democratic nominee, former state Senator Frank Sorrell, as well as independent George Morris, to win a second two-year term in office. +Track listingAll tracks composed by Laurie Anderson, except where indicated "One White Whale" – 1:58 "The Island Where I Come From" – 4:08 "Pieces and Parts" – 3:36 "Here with You" – 2:22 "Slip Away" – 5:50 "My Compensation" – 2:28 (Anderson, Skúli Sverrisson) "Dark Angel" – 3:22 "Broken" – 3:19 "Washington Street" – 4:41 "Statue of Liberty" – 4:24 "One Beautiful Evening" – 5:05 "Life on a String" – 2:57Personnel Laurie Anderson – vocals, violin, keyboards, percussionSkúli Sverrisson – musical direction, bass, guitar, keyboards, sounds, percussion programmingJoey Baron – percussion (1), drums (5, 8, 9)Martin Brumbach – percussion arrangement (11)Vinicius Cantuária – percussion (12)Mino Cinelu – percussion (2)Greg Cohen – arco bass (2)Danny Frankel – percussion, handclapping (2), box-o-toys (11)Erik Friedlander – cello (3, 4, 5, 10) Bill Frisell – guitar (9)Mitchell Froom – mellotron (3, 8, 11), claviola (3), wurlitzer (8)Eyvind Kang – violin (3)John Kelly – backing vocals (1)Liheng – baritone banhu (5)Tom Nelis – vocals (1)Van Dyke Parks – keyboards, conductor, string arranger (10)Lou Reed – guitar (11)Ben Rubin – bells (9)Peter Scherer – keyboards (5, 8, 12)Jamshied Sharifi – strings, additional keyboards (5)Chris Speed – saxophone (2)David Torn – loops (2)Cuong Vu – trumpet (2)Hal Willner – turntables (6), sampling (6, 7)Mocean Worker – beats, keyboards (11)TechnicalProduced by Laurie Anderson and Hal WillnerRecorded by Martin Brumbach at The Lobby, New York CityAdditional engineers – Bob Brockmann, Dante DeSole, Josiah Gluck, Laurie AndersonMixed by Bob Brockman at NuMedia, New York City, except 2 and 10 by Martin Brumbach Mastered by Robert C. Ludwig at Gateway Mastering Studios (Portland, ME, USA)Executive producer – David BitherArtwork – Barbara De WildePhotography by Victor SchragerCover photography – Noah GreenbergCategory:2001 albumsCategory:Laurie Anderson albumsCategory:Albums produced by Hal WillnerCategory:Nonesuch Records albums +BGX is the IATA code of the Comandante Gustavo Kraemer Airport of Bagé, Brazil. +Garbalia is 30 km from the state's capital, Kolkata. +Skate punk is a subgenre of punk rock. +on a free transfer, signing an 18-month contract. +Music critics have complained about excessive compression. +John XI may refer to: Pope John XI, ruled in 931–935 John XI Yeshu, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch in 1208–1220 John XI of Constantinople, Ecumenical Patriarch in 1275–1282 Pope John XI of Alexandria, ruled in 1427–1452 John XI Helou, Maronite Patriarch of Antioch in 1809–1823 +This article contains the list of police departments and officers featured on the American television show, Live PD. +Belletti's third season was marked by injuries, and competition from new rival Gianluca Zambrotta proved too much for him. +A large, fertile territory, its predominant crops are olives, wheat, and sunflowers. +He is the founding director of the Reportes Financieros Burkenroad program with the Tec de Monterrey, which was developed jointly with the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Tulane University, the Universidad de los Andes in Colombia and Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administración in Venezuela. +Those activities are conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Health Resources and Services Administration, and the National Institutes of Health. +Public tours The Visitor Center at the Mesa Laboratory is open to the public daily at no charge. +One other such reference to the show comes in the form of the recurring 'foghorn' that appears on The Microphones' album The Glow Pt. +It is situated near the southwest tip of Bras d'Or Lake. +He is the first Western casualty of the conflict. +ReceptionA MORI opinion poll of 1911 people published 16 February 1999 suggested that a new pro-EU conservative party could possibly win 11% of the vote. +The tournament was held in Ninh Bình and Nam Định, Vietnam from 28 June to 6 July 2017. +It will grow from sea level to and does well in hot dry climates, differing in its tolerance of lowland tropics from many of the other fruit bearers in the Annona family. +Teams Sport Colombia 2004 12 de Octubre 2004 Olimpia Asunción 2005–2007 Silvio Pettirossi 2008 Sol de América 2008 2 de Mayo 2009 Nacional Asunción 2010–2012 Deportivo Capiatá 2013 Crucero del Norte 2014–presentTitles Nacional 2011 (Torneo Apertura Paraguayan Primera División Championship)References Profile at BDFA Category:1983 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Paraguayan footballersCategory:Club Olimpia footballersCategory:Club Nacional footballersCategory:Sport Colombia footballersCategory:Silvio Pettirossi footballersCategory:Sol de América footballersCategory:12 de Octubre footballersCategory:Crucero del Norte footballersCategory:Expatriate footballers in ArgentinaCategory:Association footballers not categorized by position +PLAP may refer to:Private landowner assistance program, in the United StatesPlacental alkaline phosphatase, an enzyme and tumor markerPedro Luís e a Parede, a Brazilian musical group +On 12 June 2013, IRMA secured an Order of the High Court to block access to The Pirate Bay to all Irish internet users in the Republic of Ireland. +Owner of around two million acres (8,000 km²) of land in South America, primarily dedicated to conservation Addison O'Dea -- Documentary filmmakerReferencesExternal links Indian Mountain School website The Association of Boarding Schools profile Indian Mountain School profile provided by schooltree.orgSee alsopreparatory schoolCategory:Educational institutions established in 1922Category:Private elementary schools in ConnecticutCategory:Salisbury, ConnecticutCategory:Schools in Litchfield County, Connecticut +ReferencesCategory:1956 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Tanzanian male field hockey playersCategory:Olympic field hockey players of TanzaniaCategory:Field hockey players at the 1980 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +This allows the database to understand 99% of bacteria which cannot be cultured, the relationship between environmental antibiotic resistance sequences and antibiotic genes derived from cultured isolates. +The Vishera River, one of the Volkhov's principal tributaries, is a tributary of the Maly Volkhovets. +Prior to the opening of "New" Bolton Center in 1952, the old Bolton Mansion in Levittown was the site of the farm for the School of Veterinary Medicine. +He represented Kerala in Rajya Sabha, The Council of States of India parilament during 1967 to 1973. +The people of Omuma were very actively involved in this political party called GDM. +He is constantly unhappy, complaining and unbalanced, muttering, shouting or kicking things. +The per capita income for the village was $21,181. +Ozel CA, Khawar KM, Mirici S, Ozcan S, Arslan O. +During the trip she passed through the Panama Canal and became the first foreign warship to do so. +Green Mountain Lake is a lake in Wright County, in the U.S. state of Minnesota. +Founded in response to mass-manufactured jewelry, Pyrrha produces jewelry based on antique wax seals and heraldic talismans. +He is known for writing the Kurdish Shahnameh which until then had been passed down orally. +143, Issue 15. +He was released by the Avengers on November 2, 2001. +When members of the Uiyoldan bombed the Daegu branch of the Choseon Bank, Yi was among the arrested and spent 18 months in prison. +CastPatrick Fugit as DwightOwen Campbell as ThomasProductionPrincipal photography began on May 2019 in Salt Lake City. +Editions A British English edition was issued in London by Voyager/Harpercollins in 2002 with . +It is a secondary route of National Highway 34. +The Arab covers religious issues in the region from a secular angle. +It covered range 550–2 700 kW. +In 2016, Center staff published a study in the peer-reviewed JAMA Internal Medicine about recently approved cancer drugs that had been criticized by other researchers as having no evidence that they decreased mortality or helped patients live longer. +The Boy Scouts of America awarded him with the Silver Beaver and the Silver Antelope Awards for his dedication and service to youth. +ChampionshipsDivision ISingle ChampionshipReferencesNcaaNcaa +General classificationReferencesCategory:Gent–WevelgemCategory:1957 in road cyclingCategory:1957 in Belgian sport +The first failed to reach the top 40 while the latter peaked at number 20 on the charts. +His eldest son Grenville succeeded to his claim to the baronetcy. +Each flower has 6 white tepals heavily shaded with brownish-purple streaks or marks and pink tinting. +External links at Filmodrom Category:2013 3D filmsCategory:Slovak films +When Sid suggests that Eli might have killed Otto, Eli slugs him. +Supplément à la partie historique et flore des états barbaresques..., 1887 Illustrationes florae Atlanticae [...] Volumen I..., 1882-1890 Illustrationes florae Atlanticae [...] Volumen II..., 1892-1897 Instructions sur les observations et les collections botaniques à faire dans les voyages..., 1872 Note sur la flore del la Kroumirie centrale..., 1885 Notes sur quelques plantes critiques, rares ou nouvelles..., 1849-1852 Cosson, Ernest Saint-Charles & Germain de Saint-Pierre, Jacques-Nicolas-Ernest Atlas de la flore des environs de Paris [...] Deuxième édition..., 1882 Flore descriptive et analytique des environs de Paris..., 1845 Flore [descriptive et analytique] des environs de Paris [...] Deuxième édition..., 1861 Observations sur quelques plantes critiques des environs de Paris..., 1840 Supplément au Catalogue raisonné des plantes vasculaires des environs Paris..., 1843 Synopsis analytique de la flore des environs de Paris [...] Deuxième édition..., 1859 Synopsis analytique de la flore des environs de Paris [...] Troisième édition..., 1876 Cosson, Ernest Saint-Charles ; Germain de Saint-Pierre, Jacques-Nicolas-Ernest & Weddell, Hugh Algernon Introduction à une flore analytique et descriptive des environs de Paris..., 1842ReferencesSources Category:French botanistsCategory:1819 birthsCategory:1889 deathsCategory:Botanists active in AfricaCategory:Members of the French Academy of SciencesCategory:Scientists from ParisCategory:19th-century botanistsCategory:19th-century French scientistsCategory:Taxon authorities of Hypericum species +Guns. +Locanda Verde, a James Beard Award nominee for Best New Restaurant in 2010, is located inside Robert De Niro's The Greenwich Hotel and serves simple Italian food in a relaxed, casual atmosphere. +Mollberg is a surname. +SCHOOLSHREE BHAGWATI Ma. +NotesExternal links Category:1919 birthsCategory:2003 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Fitzroy Football Club playersCategory:Geelong Football Club players +Category:Populated places in the Province of Albacete +Rennweg is the name of: Rennweg (Zürich) Rennweg am Katschberg Rennweg (Nuremberg U-Bahn) Neuhaus am RennwegWien Rennweg railway station, a railway station in Vienna, Austria +ReferencesExternal linksGuard Disbands Brigade – The Victoria Advocate April 12, 198036th Infantry Division – The Institute of Heraldry36Category:Military units and formations established in 1973 +In other words, Reingold and Merikle argued that it is impossible for indirect measures to provide a more comprehensive understanding of relevant perceptual information than for direct measures such as indirect discriminations are always less than or equally sensitive to relevant perceptual information to direct discriminations. +She competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics and the 1976 Winter Olympics. +His first weekend demonstrated yet again what a talent he was as he got Ireland's biggest points haul in the history of A1GP by netting a podium in his first race and despite starting 18th on the grid due to being blocked in qualifying, 6th in the feature race. +It has 16 towns, five townships and seven subdistricts under jurisdiction. +Nag (, also Romanized as Nāg) is a village in Rameshk Rural District, Chah Dadkhoda District, Qaleh Ganj County, Kerman Province, Iran. +This officially unairworthy unit powered the Gloster E.28/39 on a short 'hop' during taxiing trials in April 1941, with flight trials taking place a month later with a definitive W.1 engine, the W.1A. +He was selected on the bench for the side to face during a tour match during a 2014 incoming tour. +Habitat Sphaeridiinae is a subfamily of Hydrophilidae that is considered mostly terrestrial compared to the other aquatic subfamilies in the larger overarching family of Hydrophilidae. +The 2020 FC Kaisar season is the club's fourth season back in the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Kazakhstan, and 23rd in total. +It currently produces five main shows each season, including one fundraiser, and also hosts member-produced performances under the 7A Series banner, named after the club’s address at 7A Eliot Street. +Union and issue In 1212, Catherine married Andrew III, Baron of Vitré, whose father Andrew II had been Constance's ally. +Abu Dhabi Airports Company (ADAC) was created on the 4 March 2006 and offers aviation-related services at Abu Dhabi's airports. +Mukherjee awarded the New America Media prize for photojournalism in 2009. +Senan Jones (born 16 October 2000) is an Irish cricketer. +Aleksandrs Prokopčuks (born 2 May 1967) is a Latvian long-distance runner. +4. +Zabol is connected by road to Zaranj across the border in Afghanistan. +CBI resultsThe Dukes have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) once. +Pin Points and Gin Joints was produced by Ted Hutt, notable for working with other bands such as The Bouncing Souls, Flogging Molly, and The Gaslight Anthem. +Big race wins 1948 Auckland CupSee also Thoroughbred racing in New ZealandCategory:1942 racehorse birthsCategory:Thoroughbred family 27Category:Racehorses bred in New ZealandCategory:Racehorses trained in New ZealandCategory:Auckland Cup winners +Music Law refers to legal aspects of the music industry, and certain legal aspects in other sectors of the entertainment industry. +Act 2The shores of the Kama RiverElisabetta is befriended by Tartar hordes, who had initially threatened her but were won over by her innocence and virtue. +In basketball, a steal is a "defensive action" that causes the opponent to turn the ball over. +Sederrik Cunningham (born July 14, 1989) is an American football wide receiver who is a free agent. +These include Arabic (3.2%), Chinese (3.0%), Spanish (1.2%), Italian (1.1%), and many others. +Familiar species include the black Portuguese millipede (Ommatoiulus moreletii). +The chain was acquired by now-defunct King's Department Stores in 1978. +The Men's Program, also known as the One in Four program, by John Foubert focuses on empathy toward rape survivors and intervention of sexual assault situations. +There are developments with regards to the status of the above regional instruments since 2007: Guatemala 2013: (The then) President Otto Pérez Molina expressed interest in signing the Declaration of Chapultepec, he later suspended the signing. +The 2018–19 Jordan FA Cup is the 39th season of the national football competition of Jordan. +After his death, she assumed the vacant post left by her husband as Member of the Provincial Board of Northern Samar. +HyTelnet's final database update was in 1997. +Escape from New York is the first live album by the Sheffield, UK, instrumental post-rock band 65daysofstatic, released on 20 April 2009 by Monotreme Records. +On some guns the .32 Short Colt will actually fit and cycle properly. +Barbour's father was a Circuit Judge who had an inmate, Leon Turner, assist him after Judge Barbour became ill. As governor, Haley later gave Turner, who had helped raise him, a posthumous pardon in the closing days of his administration. +In Spring 2008, American Ironhorse ceased production on all motorcycles and most company assets were liquidated at auction. +In 2008, she ran for Henry County Commissioner in the November election against Republican incumbent Bob Hastedt. +His style recalls Fra Bartolommeo. +In this time, more than 1400 houses were built here, transforming Pipera in one of the most expensive residential areas. +ReferencesCategory:1561 birthsCategory:1624 deathsCategory:English sailorsCategory:English merchantsCategory:16th-century English businesspeopleCategory:17th-century English businesspeopleCategory:People of the Tudor period +To get down this fall there should be a steep path to your right (if you’re facing and on top of the falls) make your way and see a gravely steep like cliff. +Girouard calls it "Salvin's most ambitious classical house". +Another commonly used name for the same area is Bullaren. +After graduating high school, he played one season for Prairie View A&M, starting 23 games for the Panthers. +Clayton to Offham Escarpment is a linear biological Site of Special Scientific Interest which runs from Clayton in West Sussex to Lewes in East Sussex. +It was released on March 31, 2017 in Taiwan. +{{DISPLAYTITLE:C27H30O14}}The molecular formula C27H30O14 (molar mass: 578.52 g/mol, exact mass: 578.163556) may refer to: Kaempferitrin, a flavonol Rhoifolin, a flavone +Inzaghi may refer to: Filippo Inzaghi, Italian and former A.C. Milan footballer, currently is a manager Simone Inzaghi, Italian former footballer; brother of Filippo Inzaghi Inzaghi Donígio, Bissau-Guinean footballerCategory:Italian-language surnames +Liga managers +Caloil returned to the court for a declaratory action for avoidance, with the Attorney General of Canada as defendant and the National Energy Board as mis-en-cause. +USA-231, or ORS-1 (Operationally Responsive Space-1) is an American reconnaissance satellite which was launched in 2011 from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia by a Minotaur I launch vehicle. +HistoryThe European Wine Regions Conference (CERV) was created on 20 June 1988 under Alsatian law. +During 2014 Ownership of Bush Ranger passed to a partnership of John Hill and David Marshall with the operation moving to Queensland under the new company name of Bush Ranger ATV, and development started to enable Bush Ranger shells to be fitted to the Nissan Patrol and Toyota Hilux chassis. +Josh sits on the center of the Pyramid of the Sun and begins to read the Codex, discovering that Sophie, Joan, Scathach, Dare, and Aten lead the survivors onto the new Earth and assist them for several hundred years before returning to the present time. +It stars Mohanlal and Shobana, alongside a large supporting cast. +Wołogoszcz may refer to:Polish name for Wolgast, GermanyWołogoszcz, Lubusz Voivodeship, a village in western Poland +After Hercules recovers from his fight with Kyknos, he and Griffin managed to seek out Basilisk and Man-Bull and convince them to help fight Kyknos and Hecate. +ReceptionReviewing the album for AllMusic, Scott Yanow wrote that "McRae is heard in prime form performing a variety of top standards...Although recorded in the studio, this excellent outing gives listeners a good idea of how Carmen McRae sounded live. +Track listingChart positionsThis compilation received a limited release, and made a performance at charts, only in the UK, Switzerland and Ireland. +It stood at 317 Florida Avenue, now 317 A. Phillip Randolph Boulevard. +, Public Seminar at The New School for Social Research: http://www.publicseminar.org/2017/02/totalitarianism/#.WS6YFBMT6u5;Philosophy and Nazism, conference at the London School of Economics: https://urlsand.esvalabs.com/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.lse.ac.uk%2Fwebsite-archive%2FnewsAndMedia%2FvideoAndAudio%2Fchannels%2FpublicLecturesAndEvents%2Fplayer.aspx%3Fid%3D3793&e=5f74b327&h=95604fda&f=n;The Soul as Site of Dissidence, in F. Tava and D. Meacham (eds), Thinking After Europe. +U Kala () is a Burmese historian and chronicler best known for compiling the Maha Yazawin (lit. +Kuskowo Kmiece is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Strzegowo, within Mława County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. +His photographs appeared in Life, Look, Time, National Geographic, Paris Match and Playboy, among many others, and he photographed many of the iconic musical, cultural, and political events of the 1960s, including the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, the Beatles first US concert, and Woodstock. +absorbed dose Electromagnetic radiation equivalent dose hormesis Ionizing radiation Louis Harold Gray (British physicist) rad (unit) radar radar astronomy radar cross section radar detector radar gun radar jamming (radar reflector) corner reflector radar warning receiver (Radarange) microwave oven radiance (radiant: see) meteor shower radiation Radiation absorption Radiation acne Radiation angle radiant barrier (radiation belt: see) Van Allen radiation belt Radiation belt electron Radiation belt model Radiation Belt Storm Probes radiation budget Radiation burn Radiation cancer (radiation contamination) radioactive contamination Radiation contingency Radiation damage Radiation damping Radiation-dominated era Radiation dose reconstruction Radiation dosimeter Radiation effect radiant energy Radiation enteropathy (radiation exposure) radioactive contamination Radiation flux (radiation gauge: see) gauge fixing radiation hardening (radiant heat) thermal radiation radiant heating radiant intensity radiation hormesis radiation impedance radiation implosion Radiation-induced lung injury Radiation Laboratory radiation length radiation mode radiation oncologist radiation pattern radiation poisoning (radiation sickness) radiation pressure radiation protection (radiation shield) (radiation shielding) radiation resistance Radiation Safety Officer radiation scattering radiation therapist radiation therapy (radiotherapy) (radiation treatment) radiation therapy (radiation units: see) :Category:Units of radiation dose (radiation weight factor: see) equivalent dose radiation zone radiative cooling radiative forcing radiator radio (radio amateur: see) amateur radio (radio antenna) antenna (radio) radio astronomy radio beacon (radio broadcasting: see) broadcasting radio clock (radio communications) radio radio control radio controlled airplane radio controlled car radio-controlled helicopter radio controlled model (radio controlled plane) model aircraft (see under Powered models) (radio crystal oscillator) crystal oscillator (radio detection and ranging) radar radio direction finder (RDF) radio electronics Radio Emergency Associated Communication Teams radio equipment radio fingerprinting radio fix radio frequency (RF) radio frequency engineering radio frequency interference (RFI) (radio galaxy: see) active galaxy (radio ham: see) amateur radio (radio history) history of radio radio horizon radio identification tag radio jamming radio masts and towers (radio mesh network) wireless mesh network radio navigation radio noise source radio propagation (radio pulsar: see) rotation-powered pulsar (radio receiver) receiver (radio) (radio relay link: see) microwave radio relay (radio scanner) scanner (radio) radio source radio source SHGb02 plus 14a (radio spectrum: see) radio frequency radio spectrum pollution radio star radio station Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics (RTCA) (radio telegraphy) wireless telegraphy (radio telephone) radiotelephone radio telescope radioteletype (RTTY) (radio tower: see) radio masts and towers (radio translator) broadcast translator (radio transmission) transmission (telecommunications) (radio transmitter: see) transmitter (radio tube triode: see) vacuum tube (thermionic valve) (radio tuner) tuner (radio) (radio wave: see) radio frequency (RF) radio window radio-frequency induction (radio-jet X-ray binary: see) microquasar (radio-to-radio: see) repeater (radioactive boy scout) David Hahn (radioactive cloud: see) nuclear fallout radioactive contamination (radioactive exposure) (radioactive dating) radiometric dating radioactive decay radioactive decay path (radioactive dust: see) nuclear fallout (radioactive exposure) radioactive contamination Radioactive Incident Monitoring Network (RIMNET) (in the UK) (radioactive isotope) radionuclide radioactive quackery (radioactive radiation: see) radiation radioactive tracer radioactive waste (radioactivity) radioactive decay (radioastronomy) radio astronomy radiobiology (radiocarbon) carbon-14 radiocarbon dating (radiocarbon test) radiocarbon revolution radiocarbon year radiochemistry (radiocommunication: see) radio Radiocommunications Agency radiocontrast radiodensity radiodetermination radiofax (HF Fax) (radiofluorescence) radioluminescence (radiofrequency) radio frequency radiogenic radiographer radiohalo radioimmunoassay (radioiodine) iodine-131 (radioisotope) radionuclide radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG) radioisotope heater units radioisotope rocket radioisotopic labelling radioligand radiolocation Radiological and Environmental Sciences Laboratory (radiological bomb) radiological weapon (radiological dispersal device) dirty bomb (Radiological Dispersion Device) radiological weapon Radiological Protection Institute of Ireland (RPII) Radiological Society of North America radiological warfare radiological weapon (radiological dispersion device [RDD]) radiology Radiology Information System (RIS) (radiolucent: see) radiodensity radioluminescence (radiofluorescence) radiolyse radiometer (radiometric: see) radiometry radiometric dating radiometry (radionavigation) radio navigation radionuclide (radionuclide computed tomography) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (radionuclide test: see) nuclear medicine radiodensity radiopharmaceutical radioresistant radiosensitivity radiosity radiosonde (radiostation) radio station radiosurgery (radiotelegraphy) telegraphy radiotelephone (radiotelescope) radio telescope radioteletype (RTTY) (radiotherapy) radiation therapy (radiothermal generator) radioisotope thermal generator (radiotoxic: see) ionizing radiation radium Radium, Colorado radium chloride Radium Girls Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia radon radon difluoride (see same for "radon fluoride") relative biological effectiveness (RBE) Röntgen (unit) (roentgen) (symbol R) röntgen equivalent man (rem) sievert (symbol: Sv) (unit of dose equivalent)See also list of environment topics List of radio propagation topicsCategory:Physics-related listsCategory:Technology-related listsrad. +TV appearances Season 3 finale of The L Word, "Shane McCutcheon's Bachelor party" Logo channel's Hip hop Homo's documentary Pick Up The Mic ONE TV Show.com Episode 11Discography Nedra Johnson's song "Scooter Phat" features God-Des & SheReferencesExternal links God-Des & She Website God-Des & She Official Facebook Page God-Des & She Official Myspace PageCategory:American hip hop groupsCategory:All-female bandsCategory:LGBT hip hop musicians +In 1918, he served as a member of the National Council of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, and in 1919-20 a member of the Provisional People's Representation. +He served as Secretary to the Maine Judicial Council from 1969 to 1978 and has been a consultant to the Maine Advisory Committee on Rules of Evidence since 1973. +Formed in 1969, it was incorporated in 1974 with the incorporation law No. +The Storm earned the right to host the game by winning the regular season series 3–1. +She was an arts student and entertainer, he was on a state visit to Japan. +One mole of hexamethylenetetramine could produce at most one mole of RDX. +Ray Powell reported to his new team with a bad leg in April 1924, and he was sent back to Boston under the terms of the trade agreement. +Real-time optimally adapting mesh (ROAM), is a continuous level of detail algorithm that optimizes terrain meshes. +He was the Deputy Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. +The following is a list of the prominent caves formed in the islands of the Azores:Corvo Gruta da Ponta do MarcoFaial Furna das Cabras Furna Ruim Gruta da Rua do Algar Gruta das Anelares Gruta do Cabeço do Canto Gruta do Cruzeiro Gruta do Luís Pereira Gruta do Parque do Capelo Gruta dos CovõesFlores Furna Jorge Gruta do Galo Gruta dos EnxaréusGraciosa Caldeirinha de Pêro Botelho Furna d' Água Furna da Labarda Furna da Lembradeira Furna da Maria Encantada Furna da Urze Furna da Vizinha Furna de Manuel de Ávila Furna do Abel ou de Lavar Furna do Anel Furna do Calcinhas Furna do Canto Furna do Cão Furna do Cardo Furna do Cavalo Furna do Dragoeiro Furna do Enxofre Furna do Gato Furna do Linheiro Furna do Luís Furna do Moinho Furna do Queimado Furna do Vermelho Furna dos Bolos Furna Furada Galeria do Forninho Gruta de São José Gruta do Bom Jesus Gruta do ManhengoPico Algar da Bagacina Algar da Furna do Abrigo Algar das Hortelãs Algar do Cabeço da Negra Algar do Cabeço da Serreta Algar do Cabeço do Dório de Baixo Algar do Cabeço do Dório de Cima Algar do Caixeiro Algar do Caralhoto da Montanha Algar do Chicharro Algar do Lanchão Algar do Tambor Algar do Tamusgo Algar dos Burros Algar dos Caralhotos Algar dos Terreiros Algar dos Túneis Algar/Gruta das Silvas Algar/Gruta do Alto do Morais Algar/Gruta do Cabeço Bravo Algar/Gruta do Canto da Serra Algar/Gruta do Cogumelo Algar José da Silva Algares do Miradouro Fenda dos Frisos Furna da Água Furna da Baliza Furna da Laje Furna da Miragaia Furna da Prainha do Galeão Furna da Queimada Furna da Sapateira Furna das Barbeiras Furna das Cabras (mar) I Furna das Casas Furna das Casas Velhas Furna das Pombas Furna de Henrique Maciel Furna do Carregadouro Furna do Frei Matias Furna do Frei Matias Troço II Furna do Frei Matias Troço III Furna do Frei Matias Troço IV Furna do Lemos Furna do Manuel José de Lima Furna do Outeiro Furna do Tirana Furna do Zé Capote Furna dos Frades Furna dos Mendonças Furna dos Vimes Furna Nova I Furna Nova II Furna Vermelha Gruta da Agostinha Gruta da Baixa da Ribeirinha Gruta da Barca (Candelária) Gruta da Barca (Madalena) Gruta da Canada da Prainha Gruta da Cisterna Gruta da Estrada Longitudinal I Gruta da Estrada Longitudinal II Gruta da Pia Gruta da Ponte Gruta da Ribeira do Fundo Gruta da Ribeira dos Bodes Gruta da Ribeirinha Gruta da Tia Adelaide Gruta da Transversal Gruta da Travessa do Queimado Gruta das Almas Furna das Cabras (terra) II Gruta das Canárias Gruta das Cascatas Gruta das Laranjeiras Gruta das Pombas Gruta das Teias Gruta das Torres Gruta de São Mateus Gruta Detrás do Cabeço Gruta do Altinho Gruta do Aniceto Mateus Gruta do Cabeço Bravo Gruta do Cabeço da Negra Gruta do Cabeço Gruta do Cabeço do Carvalhal Gruta do Caminho da Montanha Gruta do Caminho do Mato Gruta do Canto Gruta do Cão Gruta do Capitão Gruta do Capitão-Mor Gruta do Carregadouro II Gruta do Cerrado Gruta do Dório Gruta do Esqueleto Gruta do Frei Matias Oeste I Gruta do Frei Matias Oeste II Gruta do Frei Matias Oeste III Gruta do Furtado Gruta do Gabriel Gruta do Galeão II Gruta do Guindaste Gruta do Junçalinho Gruta do Lajido do Meio Gruta do Mistério da Silveira I Gruta do Mistério da Silveira II Gruta do Mistério da Silveira III Gruta do Poço Novo Gruta do Ramal de Santo Amaro Gruta do Ruivo Gruta do Salazar Gruta do Soldão Gruta do Sumidouro Gruta do Tambor Estrada Gruta do Tanquinho Gruta do Tubarão Gruta do Zé Pereira Gruta dos Algares Gruta dos Arcos Gruta dos Azevinhos Gruta dos Bodes Gruta dos Cogumelos Gruta dos Cortiços Gruta dos Montanheiros Gruta dos Túmulos Gruta Grande do Cabeço Bravo Gruta Pequena do Cabeço Bravo Gruta Tavares de Melo Tubo do RochedoSanta Maria Furna do Ilhéu do Romeiro Furna Velha Gruta das Figueiras Gruta de SantanaSão Jorge Algar das Bocas do Fogo Algar do Morro Pelado Algar do Pico da Maria Pires Algar dos Suspiros I Algar dos Suspiros II Furna da Preguiça Furna da Recta da Cruz Furna da Vigia I Furna da Vigia II Furna das Pombas Furna do Poio Furna do Pombal Galeria do Toledo Gruta da Beira Gruta da Canada do Pedroso Gruta da Granja Gruta da Lomba do Gato Gruta da Ribeira do Almeida Gruta da Ribeira Seca Gruta das Três Bocas Gruta do Cerrado dos Algares Gruta do Leão Gruta dos Encantados Grutas do Algar do MontosoSão Miguel Algar da Batalha Algar da Ribeirinha Algar do Pico Queimado Caldeirão Fenda do Pico Queimado Gruta António Borges Gruta da Candelária Gruta da Giesta Gruta da Lagoa Gruta da Manguinha Gruta da Nordela Gruta da Quinta Irene Gruta da Rua do Paim (Carvão II) Gruta da Rua João do Rego (Carvão III) Gruta da Rua José Bensaúde Gruta da Soledade Gruta das Arribanas Gruta das Escadinhas Gruta das Feteiras Gruta das Queimadas Gruta de Água de Pau Gruta de Rabo de Peixe Gruta de Santa Clara Gruta de São Pedro Gruta de Vila Franca Gruta do Carvão Gruta do Enforcado Gruta do Esqueleto Gruta do Livramento Gruta do Pico da Cruz Gruta do Pico do Funcho Gruta dos Valados Panela da Caloura Túnel da CalouraTerceira Algar Adérito de Freitas Algar da Canada do Laranjo Algar das Furnas Algar do Biscoitinho Algar do Canadão Algar do Carvão Algar do Chambre Algar do Funil Algar do João Caldo Quente Algar do Juncal Algar do Negro Algar do Pico Alto Algar do Pico do Funil Algar do Pico Gaspar I Algar do Pico Gaspar II Algar dos Funis Algar/Gruta do Mistério Algar/Gruta do Pico das Dez Cova do Caldeirão (Sé) Cova do Caldeirão (Serreta) Fenda do Pico Zimbreiro Furna da Bugia Furna da Nascente Furna da Rua Longa Furna das Feiticeiras Furna das Pombas Furna d' Água Furna de Santa Maria Furna do Cabrito Furna do Frade Furna do Poço Negro Furna do Portão Furna dos Ninhos Galeria da Queimada Galeria da Ribeira Seca Galeria do Fanal Galeria do Felisberto Joaquim Galeria do Sequeira Galerias da Feteira Gruta Brisa Azul Gruta da Achada Gruta da Baía de Vila Maria Gruta da Branca Opala Gruta da Canada do Laranjo Gruta da Cascata Gruta da Chamusca Gruta da Madre de Deus Gruta da Malha Gruta da Malha Grande Gruta da Santinha Gruta da Terra Mole Gruta das Agulhas Gruta das Cinco Ribeiras Gruta das Laranjas Gruta das Mercês I Gruta das Mercês II Gruta de Santa Catarina Gruta de Santo António Gruta do Alicerce Gruta do Baldio Gruta do Caldeira Gruta do Camarão Gruta do Camelo Gruta do Cerro I Gruta do Cerro II Gruta do Cerro III Gruta do Chocolate Gruta do Coelho Gruta do Esqueleto Gruta do Golfe Gruta do Natal Gruta do Pico do Funil Gruta do Tanque Gruta do Zé Grande I Gruta do Zé Grande II Gruta dos Balcões Gruta dos Buracos Gruta dos Morros da Azenha Gruta dos Principiantes Gruta dos Ratões Gruta dos Ratos Gruta Pequena Tubo I do Monte Brasil Tubo II do Monte BrasilExternal linksSpeleoazores.com Lista das Cavidades vulcânicas dos Açores Montanheiros.comReferences cavesCategory:Caves of Portugal*cavesAzores +Scartella springeri (Springer's blenny) is a species of combtooth blenny found in the eastern Atlantic Ocean, around St. Helena. +If this trade-off exists, a degrowth society would have to choose between prioritizing the ecological integrity and the ensuing collective health or maximizing the healthcare provided to individuals. +See alsoNational Register of Historic Places listings in Penobscot County, MaineReferencesExternal linksChurch web siteCategory:Episcopal church buildings in MaineCategory:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in MaineCategory:Gothic Revival church buildings in MaineCategory:Churches completed in 1892Category:19th-century Episcopal church buildingsCategory:Churches in Penobscot County, MaineCategory:Buildings and structures in Old Town, MaineCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Penobscot County, Maine +However, the line remained open to goods trains, providing a useful link to Ocker Hill Power Station following its opening in 1897. +It is known by Najdan's circles. +At the end of the 17th century Shepetivka became property of Lubomirski family, and in 1703, of the Sanguszko family. +The translation was published by State University of New York Press in 1991 with the title Story of My Life: The Autobiography of George Sand. +BiographyHoosen was born in Chatsworth in the former Natal Province. +Georgian International Academy () is a research and academic institution located in Tbilisi, Georgia. +Among many other roles in musicals, she was nominated for a Tony Award for the role of Jenny in A Joyful Noise (1966). +Locations of devicesAustralasiaAustraliaAdelaide, South AustraliaThe O-Bahn BuswayEuropeUnited KingdomCalcot, BerkshirePollards Way/The ChaseCarters Rise/Underwood RoadIpswich, SuffolkKesgrave guided buswayBracknell, Berkshire Holly Spring LaneOareborough Bus Link, BracknellWells, Somerset BA5 3PZDurston Road under Bishops Park Way bridgeBelgiumSump busters are installed on rural roads in Belgium in order to prevent unwanted traffic by private cars. +NURP may refer to: National Undersea Research Program Nationwide Urban Runoff Program +Applications and user interface elements of SpringBoard can be manually themed but most users choose to use these theming platforms as they are more stable, straightforward, and offer features such as the ability to easily enable/disable themes seamlessly whenever the user chooses. +Side one"Spancil Hill""Coming of the Road" (Billy Edd Wheeler)"Sam Hall""Come to the Bower""Deportees" (Woody Guthrie, Martin Hoffman)"Dollymount Strand"Side two"Irish Soldier Boy""Matt Hyland""The Orange and the Green" (Anthony Murphy; traditional)"James Larkin""James Connolly" (Liam McGowan)"The Lark in the Morning"Category:Paddy Reilly albumsCategory:1973 albums +Franz Joseph University may refer to: Franz Joseph Hungarian Royal University, founded in 1872, a former university in Kolozsvár, Austro-Hungarian Empire (nowadays Cluj-Napoca, Romania) Royal University of Franz Joseph I, founded in 1874 in Zagreb, Austro-Hungarian Empire, nowadays University of Zagreb, Croatia Franz Josephs Universität, founded in 1875 in Czernowitz, Austro-Hungarian Empire, nowadays Chernivtsi University, Ukraine +Track listingPersonnel Simon Huw Jones – vocals Justin Jones – guitar Steven Burrows – bass guitar Nick Havas – drums Mark Tibenham – keyboardsReferencesExternal links Category:1989 albumsCategory:And Also the Trees albums +Professional lifeIn Cincinnati, Manischewitz initially worked as a shochet and peddler; since matzah was not available, he made his own in his basement – originally for his circle of acquaintances, but later for Jews throughout the city. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1970taiella +Various tour guides, restaurants and other attractions. +Flowering occurs between August and October and is followed by fruits which are dry, thin, brittle, 4-sided and long. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Starachowice County +Eretmocera katangensis is a moth of the family Scythrididae. +The altar room is considered sacred; guests and women who have given birth are not allowed to sit on the bed in front of the altar. +A contest also took place with winners chosen by Alice himself based on video karaoke versions of the song sent in by fans. +With a height of 2,318 metres above sea level, the Campolungo is the lowest pass connecting the valleys of Maggia and Leventina. +Game Over: How Nintendo Conquered the World, an edition published by Vintage Press in 1994, contains a new foreword written by author David Sheff pertaining to the controversy over video game content in the early 1990s. +Dictionary of Orchid Names. +His proposers for the latter were Sir Edmund Hirst, James Pickering Kendall, Neil Campbell, Mowbray Ritchie and Thomas Robert Bolam. +Drvnik is a village in the municipality of Knjaževac, Serbia. +See alsoList of rivers of MinnesotaReferencesMinnesota WatershedsUSGS Hydrologic Unit Map - State of Minnesota (1974)Category:Rivers of St. Louis County, Minnesota +Rosers Run is a stream in the U.S. state of Ohio. +Meridarchis erebolimnas is a moth in the Carposinidae family. +Donaldson's passion for the wildlife of Africa led him to write a book "Africa, An Artist's Journal" detailing his travels and experiences that give him the reference for his beautiful paintings. +This method ensures both fair representation at every level for students from every locale and background, and easy and swift communication and co-operation between the various councils. +Crawford returned to television the following year in a made-for-television movie, Maid in America which starred Susan Clark and Alex Karras. +Longitarsus cinerariae is a species of beetle in the subfamily Galerucinae that is endemic to Madeira. +QFX Cimemas multiplex are equipped with digital projectors from Barco, a proponent of digital cinema technology. +Such was the strength of the side that they were premiers in the first two seasons Ross played and he only experienced a loss once. +Dyspessa nigritula is a species of moth of the family Cossidae. +SchoolsThe district houses fourteen elementary schools: Dodge, Engleman, Gates, Howard, Jefferson, Knickrehm, Lincoln, Newell, Seedling Mile, Shoemaker, Starr, Stolley Park, Wasmer, and West Lawn. +Those with the name include: (1902–1943), German economist (1914–1978), Nazi politician (1888–1968), Austrian journalist (1892–1975), photographer, father of Walter Heilig (1925–2006), East-German photographer (see c:Category:Walter Heilig) (1826–1888), businessman, mayor and member of Reichstag (1817–1849), revolutionary in 1848 Morton Heilig (1926–1997), American cinematographer (born 1956), German Green politicianCategory:German-language surnames +"True to Your Heart - Raven-Symoné ft. Brenda Song"The Siamese Cat Song" - Hilary Duff and Haylie Duff"Beauty and the Beast" - Jump 5"When You Wish Upon a Star" - Jesse McCartneySee alsoDisneymaniaPrincess DisneymaniaCategory:Disney PrincessCategory:2006 compilation albumsCategory:Walt Disney Records compilation albumsCategory:Pop compilation albumsCategory:Soundtrack compilation albums +The OICW Increment One Request for Proposals was cancelled in October 2005, while development of the 25×40mm XM25 continued, and the 25×59mm OCSW program as well until its termination. +Rebick also includes brief references to other social justice movements of the time (such as the anti-Vietnam war movement in the 1960s and 70s) and how feminism interacted with them. +In 1636, Shank claimed in legal testimony to have spent £40 to acquire Thompson as an apprentice. +They had several hits, with the best known "Tar Heart" being named as one of the smartest marketing ideas during the Myspace era, when it was erroneously tagged on an early leak of The Knife's 2006 album Silent Shout under the name "F as in Knife", and became a big mystery until it was explained that it actually was a Zeigeist song named "Tar Heart". +The Golden Hurricane were members of Conference USA from 2005 to 2014, winning 40 conference championships, including 16 postseason titles and nine regular season crowns (including three West Division titles). +He competed in the men's triple jump at the 1952 Summer Olympics. +Tak Meydan (, also Romanized as Tak Meydān; also known as Tak Meydūn) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. +Group stagePoints table Note: run rate was used as a tiebreaker in the case of teams finishing on an equal number of points, rather than net run rate (as is now common). +Euro-1996 Qual. +Winner and nomineesAwardsNotes and referencesExternal linksOfficial website31st Guldbagge Awards at Internet Movie DatabaseCategory:1996 in SwedenCategory:1995 film awardsCategory:Guldbagge Awards ceremoniesCategory:1990s in Stockholm +This and the Victorian house built on the site came into the possession of the Yelverton family when William Henry Yelverton married the heiress of John Morgan, the previous owner. +The next year, MCA released Citizen Steely Dan, a boxed set featuring their entire catalog (except their debut single "Dallas"/"Sail The Waterway") on four CDs, plus four extra tracks: "Here at the Western World" (originally released on 1978's "Greatest Hits"), "FM" (1978 single), a 1971 demo of "Everyone's Gone to the Movies" and "Bodhisattva (live)", the latter recorded on a cassette in 1974 and released as a B-side in 1980. +Texas State Highway 35 bypasses the center of the city to the east; it leads north to downtown Houston and southwest to Angleton, the Brazoria County seat. +ReferencesSources Category:1903 birthsCategory:1976 deathsCategory:Landscape artistsCategory:Portrait paintersCategory:20th-century Bulgarian paintersCategory:People from Plovdiv Province +Jan Simon Andersson (born 18 December 1980) is a Swedish bass player, guitarist, vocalist, music programmer, songwriter and record producer, best known for his work as a bass player in progressive metal band Pain of Salvation. +ou Les épreuves de misanthropie et repentir, comedy in one act, with Michel Dieulafoy and Étienne de Jouy1799: La Prisonnière, opera in 1 act and in prose, mixed with ariettes, with Claude Godard d'Aucourt de Saint-Just, music by Boieldieu and Luigi Cherubini1799: Le Vaudeville au Caire, comédie-folie in 1 act and in vaudevilles1799: Emma ou La prisonnière, opéra comique, music by Boieldieu and Cherubini1800: Le Tableau des Sabines, vaudeville in 1 act, with Dieulafoy and de Jouy1803: Le Séducteur amoureux, comedy in 3 acts, in verses1806: L'Ivrogne corrigé, comedy in 2 acts and in prose, with Dieulafoy1819: A-t-il perdu ?, comedy in 1 act and in prose1821: Poésies fugitives1825: Dans quel Siècle sommes-nous ?, comedy in 1 act, mixed with vaudevilles, with Dieulafoy and de Jouy1826: L'Égoïste par régime, comédie en vaudevilles in 1 act, with Ferdinand LaloueBibliography Joseph-Marie Quérard, La France littéraire, 1833, (p. 346) Ludovic Lalanne, Dictionnaire historique de la France, 1872, (p. 1157) Georges Favre, Boieldieu : sa vie, son œuvre, 1944, (p. 9)ReferencesExternal links Charles de Longchamps on data.bnf.frCategory:18th-century French dramatists and playwrightsCategory:19th-century French dramatists and playwrightsCategory:French opera librettistsCategory:1768 birthsCategory:1832 deaths +The 180th meridian is opposite the IERS Reference Meridian and forms a great circle with it dividing the earth into Western Hemisphere and Eastern Hemisphere. +He traveled to the opening of Dai Bosatsu Zendo in New York State, to the San Francisco Zen Center, to the Mount Baldy Zen Center in California, and to Mexico. +Ticul is a city and the municipal seat of the Ticul Municipality, Yucatán in Mexico. +Mường Đun is a commune (xã) and village of the Tủa Chùa District of Điện Biên Province, northwestern Vietnam. +During the 2014–15 season, after he was scoreless in 24 games with HV71 Strandberg was loaned to the Malmö Redhawks in the Allsvenskan on October 18, 2014. +It is theologically and ecclesiastically associated with the Restoration Movement of Christian Churches and Churches of Christ. +A temporary mast was soon erected, restoring the service and a new permanent mast has since been erected. +The Hungarian Eurovision Song Contest, the A Dal 2013 was won by ByeAlex with his own song, Kedvesem, therefore he represented Hungary at the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 where he placed tenth. +Also see the lists of Eagle Scouts, Recipients of the Silver Buffalo Award, Chief Scout Executives, National presidents of the Boy Scouts of America and National commissioners. +ReferencesExternal linksPaul Cummins Ceramics - Home pageCategory:Alumni of the University of DerbyCategory:Ceramics manufacturers of EnglandCategory:English amputeesCategory:English artistsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from ChesterfieldCategory:People with dyslexiaCategory:Members of the Order of the British EmpireCategory:1977 birthsCategory:British people with disabilitiesCategory:Artists with disabilities +She was built by Carrington Slipways at its Ramsay Fibreglass facility in Tomago, New South Wales, launched on 20 June 1987 and commissioned on 10 October 1987. +Shortly afterwards, she joined the Ministry of Information (which later became the Central Office of Information or COI). +Cast Lucy Doraine as Margit Johannes Riemann as Hans Hans Albers as Karl von Behn Rudolf Lettinger as F. A. Mertens Leonhard Haskel as Herr Garson Ilka Grüning as Frau Garson Hugo Werner-Kahle as Andrewowitsch Gosmol Trude Wessely as Lily, Karls Schwester Ferdinand Martini as A. S. Erich Schönfelder as Anno Labraiter Hilde Radney as Dekolletierte Dame Albert Paulig as Herr in der Loge Oscar Sabo as Rowdy Edmonde Guy as Tänzerin Ernst Van Duren as TänzerReferencesBibliography Hans-Michael Bock and Tim Bergfelder. +She began her career as a New York City-based child actress, with credits in film, theatre, and television. +The adjoining land owner, Thomas Brighton, consented to the sale of his plat, and construction of the Irish Hills Observatory commenced. +ChurchAll Saints, the village church, has been standing since 1150, with a major restoration taking place in the 1870s. +See also List of glaciers in the Antarctic GlaciologyReferences Category:Glaciers of Ellsworth Land +The stadium has also hosted a number of England youth international matches, and one senior England friendly international match, against Croatia in 2003. +ReferencesFurther reading Banks, Arthur Geoffrey. +See also TCS-OX2-29References Category:Orexin antagonistsCategory:PyridinesCategory:Sulfonamides +Tunde is a unisex name, originally a diminutive form of a Yoruba name for a native of Nigeria which also means "returns". +Its population was 161 as of the 2010 census. +The average household size was 2.53 and the average family size was 3.11. +References List of Syednas (according to Dawoodi Bohras) (A Chronological List of Duatil Mutlaqin)Daftary, Farhad, The Ismaili, Their History and Doctrine(Chapter -Mustalian Ismailism-p. 300-310)*Daftary, Farhad, The Ismaili, Their History and Doctrine(Chapter -Mustalian Ismailism-p. 300-310)Lathan, Young, Religion, Learning and ScienceBacharach, Joseph W. Meri, Medieval Islamic CivilisationReference ListSee also Dawoodi Bohras Ismaili Shia Islam Mustali TaiyabiCategory:Dawoodi Bohra da'isCategory:1798 deathsCategory:Dawoodi BohrasCategory:Year of birth missing +Giovanni Marinelli (18 October 1879 – 11 January 1944) was an Italian Fascist political leader. +Mesudiye may refer to:Mesudiye, Datça, a small village of Muğla Province in TurkeyMesudiye, Ordu, a district of Ordu Province in TurkeyOttoman battleship Mesudiye, pre-dreadnought battleship, launched 1874, sunk in 1914 +Meiningen is a town in the southern part of the state of Thuringia, Germany. +The Royal Lancers (Queen Elizabeths' Own) is a cavalry regiment of the British Army. +His 23 holds led the team and tied for fourth in the National League in 2008. +MPFrom 1950 to 1953 Kraft was a member of the state parliament of Schleswig-Holstein, where he represented the electoral district of Lauenburg-west. +The WRO Football rules and the Advanced Robotics Challenge game are designed together with experts in the robotic sciences community. +Bulls average 133 cm in height and 830 kg weight. +It contains good historical information. +GeographyState Game Lands Number 33 is located in Rush, Taylor and Worth Townships in Centre County. +Tessonnière was a commune in the department of Deux-Sèvres in western France. +In 2010, he played of the Cedar Rapids Kernels, Quakes and Travelers, hitting a combined .211 with 17 RBI in 84 games. +With this concession agreement, segment Solo-Mantingan-Ngawi will be under PT Solo–Ngawi Jaya, while segment Ngawi-Kertosono will be under PT Ngawi–Kertosono Jaya. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Soviet women's volleyball playersCategory:Olympic volleyball players of the Soviet UnionCategory:Volleyball players at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic gold medalists for the Soviet UnionCategory:1962 birthsCategory:Sportspeople from OdessaCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian women's volleyball playersCategory:Olympic medalists in volleyballCategory:Medalists at the 1988 Summer Olympics +Hamas pipol save fitim insaet lo trak blo' iu? +ReferencesExternal linksJack Kahane family documentsCategory:1887 birthsCategory:1939 deathsCategory:English JewsCategory:English writersCategory:English publishers (people)Category:English people of Romanian-Jewish descentCategory:French people of Romanian-Jewish descentCategory:French publishers (people)Category:French pornographersCategory:English pornographersCategory:English expatriates in FranceCategory:English male writers +His most known role is Jack Vosmyorkin in Jack Vosmyorkin, The American. +Diede de Groot and Yui Kamiji were the defending champions, but chose to compete with different partners. +The team played in the short-lived Canadian Baseball League and was not affiliated with any Major League Baseball team. +The group coancestry of a seed orchard crop can be divided in two terms, one for self-coancestry and one for cross-coancestry. +It was described by Meyrick in 1912. +The larvae feed on Chamaecrista mimosoides and probably Hypericum aethiopicum. +William John "Bill" Jankunis (born June 29, 1955) is an American athlete. +The exedra extends around the installation and to either side of the female sculpture are built-in benches. +The first car, chassis number 101, was finished in just 70 days. +PresentersMain presentersRich Clarke (2006–2008; now with Heart Solent)Lucy Horobin (2006–2011; formerly also a presenter on Heat Radio, now with Heart and Heart London)Alex James (2009–2014; formerly also a presenter on Heat Radio and Q, now with Key 103)Stand-in presentersMatt Wilkins (2008–2013; early breakfast network presenter on Bauer Place stations in Northern England)Stuart Elmore (5–8 June 2012; weekday drivetime presenter on Metro Radio and TFM)James Everton (2012-2014)Former In:Demand variationsHeat In 2009, Bauer Passion station Heat Radio began airing highlights from In:Demand on weekday mornings, with these broadcasts billed as In:Demand Breakfast with Alex and Lucy. +Despite ranked as the number one European Goalie before the draft, he was the seventh goaltender taken. +Central belief“There is a corner in everyone’s mind dreaming of a simple and natural life. +ReferencesCategory:Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)Category:Federal architecture in New York (state)Category:Hotel buildings completed in 1791Category:Buildings and structures in Rensselaer County, New YorkCategory:National Register of Historic Places in Rensselaer County, New York +In the fall of 1879, after nearly a decade in Munich, Duveneck moved to Florence and more than a dozen of his painter friends came with him. +Such changes are shown below. +He was subsequently named as the assistant to the Commander-in-Chief of Islamic Republic of Iran Army. +Cast Ali Atay - Manik Mete Horozoğlu - Dildo Fırat Tanış - Tik Demet Evgar - Nil Rasim Öztekin - Efendi Baba Mustafa Üstündağ - Sadık Erdal Tosun - Halit Aga - SezaiReferencesExternal links Category:2010s action comedy filmsCategory:Turkish filmsCategory:Turkish comedy films +Cortical lesions have been observed specially in people with SPMS but they also appear in RRMS and clinically isolated syndrome. +The locality was established as a Lutheran mission in 1946 and is home to Western Arrernte, Pintupi and Pitjantjatjara people. +SpeciesThese 25 species belong to the genus Ocnaea: Ocnaea auripilosa Johnson, 1923 i c g b Ocnaea boharti Schlinger, 1983 i c g b Ocnaea cisnerosi James, 1950 c g Ocnaea coerulea Cole, 1919 i c g Ocnaea falcifer Aldrich, 1928 c g Ocnaea flavipes Aldrich, 1926 c g Ocnaea gigas Aldrich, 1928 c g Ocnaea gloriosa (Sabrosky, 1943) i c g Ocnaea helluo Osten Sacken, 1877 i c g Ocnaea loewi Cole, 1919 i c g Ocnaea lugubris Gerstaecker, 1856 c g Ocnaea magna (Walker, 1849) i c g Ocnaea metallica (Osten Sacken, 1887) c g Ocnaea micans Erichson, 1840 c g Ocnaea schwarzi Cole, 1919 c g Ocnaea sequoia Sabrosky, 1948 i c g b Ocnaea smithi Sabrosky, 1948 i c g Ocnaea trichocera Osten Sacken, 1887 c g Ocnaea trivittata Aldrich, 1932 c g Ocnaea xuthogaster Schlinger, 1961 i c gThe following five species are sometimes placed in Arrhynchus: Ocnaea maculatus (Schlinger, 1968) c g Ocnaea meridionalis Sabrosky, 1946 c g Ocnaea penai (Schlinger, 1968) c Ocnaea stuardoi Sabrosky, 1946 c g Ocnaea vittata (Philippi, 1871) c gData sources: i = ITIS, c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.netReferencesFurther reading Category:AcroceridaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Nemestrinoidea genera +The municipality is now included in the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. +Halsmer only runs a few races that year. +Adams' Rangers, also known as Adams’ Company of Rangers, were a British Loyalist local volunteer corps and independent military company raised to support the British Army during the American Revolutionary war. +He married ethnologist Caroline Furness Jayne (1873–1909), and they had two children. +Past Atrium Award winners include the San Francisco Chronicle, Detroit Free Press, and Los Angeles Times, as well as individuals such as Sandra Eisert (San Jose Mercury-News) and Jeff Wilkerson (St. Louis Magazine). +While Blake was the first female graduate at Yale, she would remain as the only female law graduate until 1920. +The Schwelm Limestone is a geologic formation in Germany. +This work, though never completed, extended through many volumes, bespeaking an inexhaustible energy and a vast erudition. +ReferencesExternal links Official websiteCategory:Cities and towns in Emilia-Romagna +At the beginning of the second phase of Fall Gelb, the division was ordered to stay in the Nieuwpoort/Dunkirk area and later to Brittany where it stayed as an occupation force until February 1941. +According to a stone inscription dedicated by her elder sister Queen Shin Saw, she was a granddaughter of King Swa Saw Ke of Ava. +He was made Marshal of France in 1514, reconfirmed by Francis I the following year. +ReferencesCategory:ScinaxCategory:Endemic fauna of BrazilCategory:Amphibians described in 2007 +NotesExternal links Category:Living people Category:1928 births Category:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia) Category:Western Bulldogs playersCategory:West Footscray Football Club players +During her tenure as mayor, she received some criticism from residents due to her controversial plan to expand HUD and federally subsidized low-income housing into what was the more recently upscale sections of the city, such as Denbigh. +This collection of stories refers to a Thomas of Eldersfield who was blinded and castrated after losing a judicial duel. +Recenly studies show that septate junctions are also identified in the myelinated nerve fibers of the vertebrates. +Considered the "Father of Southern Leyte", he authored the law that created the province of Southern Leyte. +The Canton of Vinça is a French former canton of the Pyrénées-Orientales department, in the Languedoc-Roussillon region. +See alsoCommunes of the Orne departmentReferencesHermitiere +New Party founder Daniel Cantor and other key staff members left to found the Working Families Party of New York (1998), an organization which has had considerable success in building a New Party-style organization within New York state, and which now has expanded into other states that have fusion voting. +Charlton continued to paint and draw during his career as a teacher and a college inspector, and in retirement he painted full-time and was able to contribute to a number of exhibitions, including at the Royal West of England Academy, the New English Art Club and the Welsh Arts Council. +This constituency no longer exists, since it was removed after 2009, due to delimitation. +The album was re-released with bonus tracks and remixes on Metropolis Records in 2001 as Re:Initiation. +The 2017 Northwest Territories Men's Curling Championship was held from January 19 to 22 at the Yellowknife Curling Centre in Yellowknife. +She is Plaid Cymru – The Party of Wales' Director of Policy and sits on the party's National Executive Committee. +The Graben Tour () is a mining history footpath in the north of the former district of Freiberg in the German Free State of Saxony. +The Administration Building was erected in 1963 on the North Campus across from Wingate Hall. +Frederick Campbell entered the Royal Artillery in 1797. +Chemosin's strong personal best from 2013 earned him a place for the 2014 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships, but he was the worst performer among the Kenyan team, finishing in 24th place more than two and a half minutes behind fellow Kenyan and race winner Geoffrey Kipsang Kamworor. +"I Keep Forgetting You" (Matt Dubey, Dean Fuller) – 2:32 Previously unreleased17. +He entered the reserves in 1919. +Corquín is a municipality in the Honduran department of Copán. +Stanisław Jasiński (born 13 November 1959) is a Polish equestrian. +Dinamo București are among Romania's most successful clubs, having won over twenty competitive honours, including 16 top-flight titles, 4 Romanian Cups, 3 Romanian Supercups, and 1 EHF Champions League. +Although Stubbs won most his matches for Mid-Atlantic, they were usually against lower card wrestlers, such as Bill White, Bob Marcus, and Frank Monte. +He joined his father in the family business after completing his education, but after his health failed him, he was compelled to change his vocation, and upon the formation of the Merchants and Farmers Bank in early 1872, Sharp was appointed the bank's first cashier. +12 athletes participated. +Container Housing units are related to the site and land occupied during a certain amount of time by the need of water supply and excavation, electricity, telecommunications, etc. +CastWilliam Devane as Major Charles RaneTommy Lee Jones as Sergeant Johnny VohdenLinda Haynes as Linda ForchetJames Best as The TexanDabney Coleman as MaxwellLuke Askew as Automatic SlimLawrason Driscoll as Deputy Cliff NicholsLisa Blake Richards as Janet RaneRandy Hermann as Billy SanchezJames Victor as LopezCharles Escamilla as T-BirdPete Ortega as MelioCassie Yates as CandyJordan Gerler as MarkJacque Burandt as BebePaul A. Partain as EthanJames N. Harrell as GrandpaProductionThe film was originally written in 1973 for AIP, where Larry Gordon was head of production. +While there is a grandfather clause in the regulation for wineries opened prior to July 7, 1986, there were at least 5 wineries in the Lake Chelan AVA that contained the word "Chelan" in their name and opened after that grandfather clause cut off date. +1980), Russian open water swimmer and triathleteReferencesNotesSourcesИ. М. Ганжина (I. M. Ganzhina). +If the chosen participant stood in the middle of the room, they could exactly touch opposing walls simultaneously. +SGE may refer to: Sagitta, a constellation SGE, IATA code for Siegerland Airport, Burbach, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honor society in earth sciences Sun Grid Engine, in computing, an open source batch-queuing system GM small gasoline engine, a family of engines produced by General Motors Sportgemeinde Eintracht, former name of Eintracht Frankfurt, a sports club and football team in Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany Sehr gut erhalten ("preserved very good"), German form of the "Very Good" coin grade Stitch's Great Escape!, a theme park attraction at Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World +He retired in the second half of the 1980s. +See alsoMiha Krek, Slovenian lawyerMarko Natlačen, Slovenian politician and juristLeon Rupnik, Slovene general and Nazi collaboratorLiberalism in SloveniaSlovenes, Slovenian peopleSlovene Partisans, part of Europe's most effective anti-Nazi resistance movementSlovene Lands in World War IIReferencesFurther readingLeopoldina Plut-Pregelj, Carole Rogel. +As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 601 and an area of . +Davis began his academic career at Griffith University. +It was established by the order of Tsar Alexander II. +. +External links "Model-Driven Integration in Financial Services" case-study by Metada, 2008Category:Systems engineeringCategory:Unified Modeling Language +Beginning October 24, 2011, The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell switched time slots with The Ed Show, with Ed Schultz taking over the 8p.m. +Bond, Primate (1904–1906)Arthur Sweatman, Primate (1907–1909)Samuel Pritchard Matheson, Primate (1909–1931)Clarendon Lamb Worrell, Primate (1931–1934)Derwyn Trevor Owen, Primate (1934–1947)George Frederick Kingston, Primate (1947–1950)Walter Foster Barfoot, Primate (1950–1959)Howard Clark, Primate (1959–1971)Ted Scott, Primate (1971–1986)Michael Peers, Primate (1986–2004)Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui (complete list) –Peter Kwong, Archbishop (1998–2006)Episcopal Church (United States) – Presiding Bishop (complete list) –Thomas Clark, Presiding Bishop (1899–1903) Daniel Tuttle, Presiding Bishop (1903–1923) Alexander Garrett, Presiding Bishop (1923–1924) Ethelbert Talbot, Presiding Bishop (1924–1926) John Murray, Presiding Bishop (1926–1929) Charles Anderson, Presiding Bishop (1929–1930) DeWolf Perry, Presiding Bishop (1930–1937) Henry Tucker, Presiding Bishop (1938–1946) Henry Sherrill, Presiding Bishop (1947–1958) Arthur Lichtenberger, Presiding Bishop (1958–1964) John Hines, Presiding Bishop (1965–1974) John Allin, Presiding Bishop (1974–1985) Edmond Lee Browning, Presiding Bishop (1986–1997) Frank Griswold, Presiding Bishop (1998–2006) Presidents of the House of Deputies (complete list) –George Werner, President (2000–present)Continuing AnglicanismAmerican Anglican Church – John A. Herzog, Presiding Bishop (1994–present)Anglican Episcopal Church – Reginald Hammond, Presiding Bishop (2000–2004)Anglican Province of America – Walter Grundorf, Presiding Bishop (early 1990s–present)Church of England in South Africa –G. Frederick B. Morris, Presiding Bishop (1955–1965)Stephen Carlton Bradley, Presiding Bishop (1965–1984)Dudley Foord, Presiding Bishop (1986–1989)Joe J. +P76 or P-76 may refer to: Leyland P76, Australian automobile Bell P-76, American fighter aircraft +The deal made Jones the highest-paid fullback in NFL history. +Shader lamps is a computer graphic technique used to change the appearance of physical objects. +BNI may refer to:Organizations BNI (organization), a worldwide business referral organization Banco Nacional de Investimento, the national development bank of Mozambique Bank Negara Indonesia Bureau of National Investigations, the external and internal intelligence agency of Ghana Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corporation, by NYSE ticker code Barrow Neurological Institute, a US neurological disease treatment and research institutionOther uses Britten-Norman Islander, a two engine aircraft Nikolassee railway station, by DB station code Benin Airport, by IATA code Bankruptcy Navigator Index +Dolf Benz (15 September 1908 – 14 December 1988) was a Dutch sprinter. +Upset, Panic leaves camp. +In December 1994, Coppen stated that the government's labour laws might affect the major league baseball strike. +HistoryThe region makes claims to be among the earliest viticultural centres of ancient Gaul, though possibly after those of Languedoc around Narbonne, with wine production established in early 1st century. +SeedsA champion seed is indicated in bold while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. +Second specimenIn August 2014, Te Papa received a second colossal squid, captured in early 2014. +Sega Worldwide Soccer '98 is a video game developed and published by Sega for the Sega Saturn and Windows in 1997. +It overlooks Townsville with an elevation of 584 metres. +Joint ownership refers to: Housing equity partnership Jointly owned photovoltaic plant Co-ownership (disambiguation) Joint venture, a business entity created by two or more partiesSee also Concurrent estate +and also played for Payam Mashhad F.C., Zob Ahan F.C., Esteghlal F.C. +Partial filmography For Her People (1914) Yellow Stockings (1928) Power Over Men (1929) Night Birds (1930) The Barton Mystery (1932) Leap Year (1932) Above Rubies (1932) The Little Damozel (1933) Up for the Derby (1933) It's a King (1933) Expert's Opinion (1935) Member of the Jury (1937) Mr. Smith Carries On (1937) Splinters in the Air (1937) The Last Chance (1937) Let's Be Famous (1939)ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1897 birthsCategory:1977 deathsCategory:English male film actorsCategory:English male stage actors +– Slam Bidding and Point Count, Solomon and Bennett L. Disbrow (Philadelphia: Macrae Smith, 1951), 281 pp., How to Bid and What to Lead, Solomon and Disbrow (Macrae Smith, 1953), 128 pp., Hold Our Bridge Hands, Solomon and Bert Wilson (Philadelphia: Lefax Publ., 1969), 140 pp.,Bridge accomplishmentsHonors ACBL Hall of Fame, 2000Wins North American Bridge Championships (14) Master Individual (1) 1947 von Zedtwitz Life Master Pairs (1) 1946 Wernher Open Pairs (1) 1943 Marcus Cup (1) 1967 Mitchell Board-a-Match Teams (2) 1952, 1965 Chicago Mixed Board-a-Match (3) 1949, 1950, 1959 Reisinger (4) 1937, 1938, 1939, 1944 Spingold (1) 1955Runners-up North American Bridge Championships Master Individual (1) 1943 von Zedtwitz Life Master Pairs (1) 1938 Rockwell Mixed Pairs (1) 1961 Silodor Open Pairs (2) 1959, 1968 Hilliard Mixed Pairs (1) 1943 Nail Life Master Open Pairs (1) 1963 Open Pairs (1928-1962) (1) 1956 Vanderbilt (2) 1954, 1958 Mitchell Board-a-Match Teams (2) 1955, 1960 Chicago Mixed Board-a-Match (2) 1939, 1940 Reisinger (2) 1953, 1959 Spingold (1) 1939ReferencesExternal links Category:1906 birthsCategory:1975 deathsCategory:American contract bridge playersCategory:Bermuda Bowl playersCategory:Contract bridge writersCategory:People from PhiladelphiaCategory:20th-century American lawyers +Náutico (nautical in Portuguese) may refer to:Clube Náutico Capibaribe, Brazilian football clubNáutico Futebol Clube, Brazilian football clubClub Náutico, Chilean football club, now known as Universidad de Chile (football club)Club Náutico Hacoaj, Argentine sports clubClub Nautico di Roma, Italian yacht clubClub Náutico, Cuban member's clubNáutico (Havana), neighborhood in Playa, Havana, Cuba +For the 12-month period ending August 31, 2003, the airport had 550 general aviation aircraft operations, an average of 46 per month. +Women's DoublesCategory:French Open by year – Women's DoublesCategory:1981 in women's tennis +Headmasters since Mr Mowll have been Gordon Parke (1960), Nick Bawtree (1986), Hugh Lowries (1991), the Reverend Jeremy Sykes (2006), Colin Baty (2010) and Chris Calvey (2017)Sports The sports that take place areHouses Each pupil belongs to one of the four houses for whom they compete in various sporting activities and academically. +He collaborated in LaTuerka (a TV show presented by Pablo Iglesias Turrión) and worked as researcher for the UCM. +League tableSee also 1972–73 Divizia BReferencesCategory:Liga I seasonsRomaniaCategory:1972–73 in Romanian football +Tapah and Simpang Pulai are the two approaches from Perak. +Daniel Joubert van der Merwe (born in Frankfort, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player who last played for the . +Karvan-e Olya Rural District () is a rural district (dehestan) in Karvan District, Tiran and Karvan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. +It was released on May 15, 1949. +It lies approximately north of Zambrów and west of the regional capital Białystok. +It was depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War on July 13, 1948 in the first phase of Operation Dani. +The Global Lepidoptera Names Index and Butterflies and Moths of the World describe it as a synonym of Lysimelia Walker, [1859] but Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms describes it as a synonym of Lithilaria Rosenstock, 1885. +Robert Marie Joseph "Rob" Meens (born 14 August 1959, Heerlen) is a Dutch historian and professor at Utrecht University. +The restoration of the Hangar would be used to house an aviation museum. +The single debuted at number 95 on the Billboard Hot 100 on the week of 6 November 2010 and peaked at number 91. +Asia Commercial Bank, often abbreviated to ACB, is the largest private bank in Vietnam by assets, headquartered at 442 Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, Ward 5, District 3, Ho Chi Minh City. +Track listingChart performanceWeekly chartsRelease historyReferencesCategory:2015 singlesCategory:2015 songsCategory:Songs written by J. R. RotemCategory:Songs written by Erik HassleCategory:Songs written by Marcus SepehrmaneshCategory:FO&O songs +During World War I (1915 - 1918) he served as first lieutenant in war service. +Grahamsville may refer to:Grahamsville, New York, a hamlet in Sullivan CountyGrahamsville Historic District, in Sullivan County, New YorkSee alsoGrahamville (disambiguation) +After the opening of the Kylesku Bridge, in 1984, she became the Corran Ferry. +In 2016, Kyrgyzstan first time exported approximately one thousand tons of beans to Turkmenistan. +It was designed by architect George C. Sellon and is Classical Revival in style. +On 24 March 1899 Pyotr Pertsov, having learnt of the forthcoming Marks publication, suggested that Chekhov should include into the Collected Works some stories from the Motley Stories first edition. +ReferencesCategory:Valleys and canyons on MarsCategory:Memnonia quadrangle +A.D. Oliver Middle School is located in Brockport, Monroe County, New York. +He was educated in Syria. +Paúl Margraff (born 16 June 1946) is an Ecuadorian sports shooter. +The n-th decagonal number is given by the formula The first few decagonal numbers are: 0, 1, 10, 27, 52, 85, 126, 175, 232, 297, 370, 451, 540, 637, 742, 855, 976, 1105, 1242, 1387, 1540, 1701, 1870, 2047, 2232, 2425, 2626, 2835, 3052, 3277, 3510, 3751, 4000, 4257, 4522, 4795, 5076, 5365, 5662, 5967, 6280, 6601, 6930, 7267, 7612, 7965, 8326 The nth decagonal number can also be calculated by adding the square of n to thrice the (n−1)th pronic number or, to put it algebraically, asProperties Decagonal numbers consistently alternate parity. +During the visit of Prince Henry of Prussia in February 1903, Ridder arranged a dinner in Henry's honor. +Based in Florencia, she dedicated herself to her work and business, but at some point in her life, she had a relationship with a woman, whom would later give her up to the authorities for the murders. +External linksRonald Beeson at CricketArchive Category:1936 birthsCategory:1995 deathsCategory:English cricketersCategory:Lincolnshire cricketersCategory:Sportspeople from Grimsby +In addition, the district may be able to help archaeologists learn more about the early construction of the railroad and the crews that did the work. +AthleticsMenTrack and road eventsField eventsWomenTrack and road eventsField eventsBoxingMenFencingOne male fencer represented Tunisia in 2000. +It is found in Central America and North America. +Naumova was awarded the Order of the UCP-CPSU - also known as "Friendship of the People" - for her humanitarian aid work throughout the world. +It is adjacent to the communities of Lorton and Newington. +See also List of Korean language filmsCategory:2005 filmsCategory:2000s drama filmsCategory:Korean-language filmsCategory:South Korean films +Africa was Chessington's new area for 2012, after the former area, Toytown, was replaced with a new land in line with Chessington's image as being Britain's Wildest Adventure. +He liked to read books, has a calm temperament, and does not like talking much. +- Digitalized by the University and State Library Düsseldorf Category:1797 birthsCategory:1855 deathsCategory:German paintersCategory:German male paintersCategory:Landscape paintersCategory:People from Dresden +Regular seasonExternal links Season on eliteprospects.comNorCategory:GET-ligaen seasonsCategory:1965 in Norwegian sportCategory:1966 in Norwegian sport +She was once more in Dublin in 1900 and lived and worked in Lower Mount St. for about 5 years. +Leda is a town in the Tenkodogo Department of Boulgou Province in south-eastern Burkina Faso. +Extensions of two of the forward girder cross-pieces formed a triangular structure over the wing which acted as a king post for a pair of landing wires. +Romans in Britain may refer to: Roman conquest of Britain Roman Britain, the Roman Empire's governorship of part of Great Britain The Romans in Britain, a controversial 1980 stage play +CastMónica López - IreneEduard Fernández – MarioMaría Pujalte - SofíaAlex Brendemühl - TomásVicenta N'Dongo - SaraChisco Amado - ManuMiranda Makaroff - AnaCarme Plà - EvaLeonor Watling - CristinaÀurea Márquez - SilviaJordi Sànchez - AndrésEric Bonicatto - EricHome media In the City is available in Region 1 DVD in Spanish with English subtitles. +• 1987. +The newspaper La Voix de l'Ain is a weekly publication offering local information for different regions of the department of Ain. +References Category:Populated places in Västra Götaland CountyCategory:Populated places in Tanum Municipality +During Jamieson's deanship, the school received two large endowments from the Annenberg Foundation. +His collaborators included Carlo di Castellamonte, who inherited several of Vitozzi's projects. +Sentences Kerner was on 16 June 1947 sentenced to death for crimes against Penal Codes - for crimes against Norwegian patriots. +Emanuela Brusati (born 19 April 1973) is an Italian former professional tennis player. +MouthpiecesVandoren clarinet and saxophone mouthpieces are made of vulcanised rubber called ebonite. +It is the birthplace of historian Jean-Baptiste-Arthur Allaire. +Parvocaecus is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Parvocaecus anatolicus (Coiffait, 1956) Parvocaecus tokatensis (Vigna Taglianti, 1976) Parvocaecus turcicus (Coiffait, 1956)ReferencesCategory:Trechinae +Software licensing audits are an important part of software asset management, but also serve as a method of corporate reputation management by ensuring that the company is operating within legal and ethical guidelines. +DescriptionThe red-lined wrasse can grow to about in length. +La calle de los suspiros ("Street of Sighs") is a historical street located at Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay. +He was born in 1942 in the Malaysian state of Perak. +She also serves chair of the board for NJ Transit. +Fort Snelling National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located at Fort Snelling just south of Minneapolis in Hennepin County, Minnesota, adjacent to Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport. +The body was at a depth of . +He modified the prototype Kitfox Lite to meet FAR 103 regulations requiring an ultralight aircraft to have an empty weight of less than . +Zeynep Murat Duran (born Zeynep Murat on September 15, 1983) is a European champion Turkish female Taekwondo practitioner. +It was a point of contention that many mineral trains were divided at this location, on the running line, with one portion for Cardiff TVR and one for the Barry line. +The documentary also includes scenes from the film itself. +He only spent one season as a professional with Etoile du Sahel and moved to French club RC Strasbourg in the summer of 2004. +Chinese Film Media Awards (华语电影传媒大奖) are presented by Southern Metropolis Daily annually to honor excellence in Chinese-language cinema. +This was the first time Stamenković managed in the top tier of Serbian football. +He competed in two events at the 1912 Summer Olympics. +A Backstage musical about a showgirl aspiring to greater things while sorting out her financial and romantic problems, it was a major commercial success on its release. +He was editor-in-chief of Tidsskrift for Rettsvitenskap 1974–1999 and served as editor of Norges Lover which was published by the Faculty of Law at the University of Oslo. +In the evenings and on Sundays the westbound terminus is rather than Milngavie. +Shapoorji Pallonji Group, Mumbai based business conglomerate, was founded Shergotty meteorite fell at Sherghati, Gaya, Bihar, India P&O Bank purchased Allahabad Bank Bombay Castle wall was demolishedBirths Charles Astley Fowler, Divisional Commander during the Third Afghan War in 1919, born on 9 November William Birdwood, Commander-in-Chief of the Fifth Army on the Western Front in World War I, born on 13 September in Khadki Lucy Deane Streatfeild, civil servant, a social worker, and one of the first female factory inspectors in the United Kingdom; she was one of the first to raise concerns about the health risks arising from exposure to asbestos, born on 31 July in Madras Edward Allan Wood, Commandant of the Auxiliary Division during the Irish War of Independence, born on 6 May Lala Lajpat Rai, leader in the Indian Independence movement, born on 28 January in Dhudike, Punjab Bessie Sinclair Speechly, a Speechly, born on 31 August in Cottayam, IndiaDeaths Alexander Kinloch Forbes, scholar of the Gujarati language and a colonial administrator in British India, died in PuneReferences IndiaCategory:Years of the 19th century in India +The 2001–02 Romanian Hockey League season was the 72nd season of the Romanian Hockey League. +General electionResultsReferences1914VermontCategory:1914 Vermont elections +It was the last studio album to feature all five original members of the group. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Adana ProvinceCategory:FekeCategory:Villages in Turkey +A Wurlitzer organ was installed in the theater in 1927 and was used to accompany silent movies and for intermissions and shows. +He eventually marries Mary Johnson, a co-worker and fellow Sweathog. +Works Visit India with Chandi (1973) Gaganendra Nath: Cartoon and Sketch ( গগনেন্দ্রনাথঃ কার্টুন ও স্কেচ) (1975) Chandi Lahiri's Third Eye (1964) Bideshider Chokhe Bangla (বিদেশীদের চোখে বাংলা) (1966) Chandi Looks Around (1980) Since Freedom: A History in Cartoons 1947–1993 (1994) Chandi Lahiri Cartoons (2002)Death He died on January 18, 2018 after a brief period of illness in Kolkata, West Bengal. +The route then descends 3 km (2 hours) to the Mount Poroshiri Mountain Cottage. +Dionysious V, Dionysious VI, Poulose Mar Athanasios, Poulose Mar Severios, Daniel Mar Pilexinos, Yuhanon Mar Severios, Yakob Mar Policurpos etc. +Montebello USD serves the city of Montebello, portions of the cities of Bell Gardens, Commerce, Downey, Monterey Park, Pico Rivera, Rosemead, and a part of the unincorporated community of East Los Angeles as well as the unincorporated community of South San Gabriel. +Pay-ye Tom (, also Romanized as Pāy-ye Tom) is a village in Gavkan Rural District, in the Central District of Rigan County, Kerman Province, Iran. +The series takes place in the state of Virginia. +Selected worksClass Cleansing: The Massacre at Katyn (Telos Press Publishing, 2008)From Union to Commonwealth: Nationalism and Separatism in the Soviet Republics Co-Author (Cambridge University Press, 1992)''The Neo-Stalinist State: Class, Ethnicity, and Consensus in Soviet Society" (ME Sharpe Inc, 1994)Noteworthy Journal Articles"The Rebirth of the Stalin Cult in the USSR" (TELOS, Summer 1979)"The Regime and the Working Class in the USSR" (TELOS, Winter 1979-80)"The Price of Sovietization" (TELOS, Spring 1987)"Three Years of Perestroika" (TELOS, Winter 1987-88)"Why Afghanistan?" +The daily segment mixed information about Portland area events and attractions with reminiscences from her youth and college days in addition to trivia and historical anecdotes. +Category:David's Mighty Warriors +NH 84 may refer to: National Highway 84 (India) New Hampshire Route 84, United States +Chester Koo's only son was Koo Kung-yi. +It is found on Sumatra. +The station received CBC news and topical programs by relaying the signal from CBA in Sackville, New Brunswick. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in the ancient Aegean islandsCategory:Former populated places in GreeceCategory:ParosCategory:Lost ancient cities and towns +François Saint-Onge (March 9, 1781 – February 27, 1842) was a merchant and political figure in Lower Canada. +Sirikari is no exception with various churches. +In their seventh season under head coach Jerry Claiborne, the Terrapins compiled a 9–3 record (5–1 in conference), finished in second place in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and outscored their opponents 261 to 167. +It was only in the 1880s, when Marxism had come to the fore as the main economic theory of the workers' movement, that Gossen found (posthumous) recognition. +or about 400,000 in a total population of the three provinces close to 1.5 million. +When exactly it developed its first lower tiara is unclear, though the Catholic Encyclopaedia speculates that it was in or around the 10th century, perhaps to distinguish the ceremonial papal head covering from the ecclesiastical one, the Mitre, which appeared around this era. +ReferencesExternal links Para Fuera Official Website Para Fuera at The One Show Para Fuera official 2010 selection at Sundance Film FestivalCategory:2010 filmsCategory:American documentary filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:Short documentary filmsCategory:Documentary films about old age +In 1978, Young married Sally Carr, lead singer of 70s pop group Middle of the Road, and had a son, Keith, in 1980. +It is the only bridge over the lowest 100 km of the Tana River. +StatisticsSee also List of footballers with 50 or more international goals List of top international men's association football goal scorers by countryReferencesCategory:Egypt national football teamHassanCategory:Association football in Egypt lists +The railway reported financial damages from the accident of . +1993), Abbotsford, British Columbia, CanadaBateman, Robert +Oligocene and Aquitanian gastropod faunas from the Sultanate of Oman and their biogeographic implications for the western Indo-Pacific. +Japanese release track listingPersonnelMatthew Bellamy – lead vocals, lead guitar, piano, synthesizersChris Wolstenholme – bass guitar, rhythm guitar, backing vocals, synthesizersDominic Howard – drums, percussionCharts and certificationsWeekly chartsCertificationsReferences Category:Muse (band) albumsCategory:Albums produced by John LeckieCategory:B-side compilation albumsCategory:2002 compilation albumsCategory:2002 live albumsCategory:Film soundtracks +The assassination may have been political in nature. +Indulin may refer to: Induline, a series of dyestuffs of blue, bluish-red or black shades a trade name for products such as Indulin AA-86, a proprietary fatty amine derivative used as an asphalt emulsifier +ReferencesExternal linksFurther reading +Nodicostellaria kaicherae is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk, in the family Costellariidae, the ribbed miters. +The FTC and AOL claimed to have received over 600,000 complaints relating to spam emails sent by Ganymede, before they were finally taken to court in Arizona for violating anti-spam and obscenity laws. +The cast iron lamp posts were bought from Sheffield City Council and installed in 1969. +The Arizona Wildcats football program is a college football team representing the University of Arizona that is a member of the Pac-12 Conference. +The athlete received three attempts in each of the two lifts; the score for the lift was the heaviest weight successfully lifted. +These are the results of the 2014 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics which took place from August 8 to 10 at the Hillside Stadium in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada. +References Category:Populated places in Khash County +See also List of communities in Puerto RicoReferencesExternal linksCategory:Barrios of Guayanilla, Puerto Rico +She also tells her lover that only God would know what would happen if they did. +Notable peopleFormer directors include Francis Scarfe (1959–78), Harley Granville Barker (1937–39), and Andrew Hussey (2008–14). +Pöttmes is a municipality in the district of Aichach-Friedberg in Bavaria in Germany. +Over the years, the IL Movement has spread from North America to all continents, adapting itself to and getting enriched by different cultures and economic conditions in the process. +ReferencesCategory:Bridges over the Schuylkill RiverCategory:Road bridges in PennsylvaniaCategory:Wooden bridges in PennsylvaniaCategory:Arch bridges in the United StatesCategory:Covered bridges in PennsylvaniaCategory:Covered bridges in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania +There have been two baronetcies created for persons with the surname Duckworth, both in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. +Masaki Takigawa (日本語:滝川雅貴), a character in the light novel series and anime TsuruneSee also Masaki (disambiguation) Masaki (surname) MasaakiCategory:Japanese unisex given names +In marketplaces and gas stations one may find vendors selling koba akondro, a sweet made by wrapping a batter of ground peanuts, mashed bananas, honey and corn flour in banana leaves and steaming or boiling the small cakes until the batter has set. +Category:Villages in Jodhpur district +Amsterdam: F. Muller. +This motif overlaps domains used for calcium binding and regulation. +John Horhn (born February 8, 1955) is an American politician who has served in the Mississippi State Senate from the 26th district since 1993. +Originally focused on email marketing automation, marketing automation refers to a broad range of automation and analytic tools for marketing especially inbound marketing. +SourcesCategory:Mammals described in 1834Category:Endemic fauna of MadagascarCategory:Mammals of MadagascarCategory:Mouse-eared batsCategory:Taxonomy articles created by PolbotCategory:Taxa named by Andrew Smith (zoologist)Category:Bats of Africa +Polycles, an ancient Greek name, may refer to: Polycles (370 BC), sculptor, flourished about the 102nd Olympiad (370 BCE), mentioned in Pliny's Natural History Polycles of Sparta, Olympic winner in 440 BC Polycles of Cyrene, Olympic winner in 348 BC Polycles (155 BC), sculptor flourished about the 156th Olympiad (155 BCE), mentioned in Pliny's Natural History Against Polycles, judicial oration by Pseudo-Demosthenes (384–322 BCE) +Chapters have been established in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide. +ReferencesCategory:Sordariomycetes generaCategory:Annulatascaceae +In 1940, he applied for, but failed to receive, the permission of Nazi German judicial authorities of Silesian Province to open law office in Upper Silesia. +At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2009 in Liberec, Pichlmayer finished 18th in the 10 km individual large hill event. +See alsoBožidar VukovićBožidar GoraždaninĐurađ CrnojevićStefan MarinovićHieromonk MakarijeHieromonk MardarijeHegumen MardarijeVićenco VukovićHieromonk PahomijeTrojan GundulićAndrija PaltašićJakov of Kamena RekaBartolomeo Ginammi who followed Zagurović's footsteps reprinting Serbian books. +The awards are usually issued at a party in November in London, UK. +JCEs are usually the people who manage the position one is looking to fill. +Chrysendeton chalcitis is a moth in the family Crambidae. +They were managed by longtime friend David Hart (who also masterminded and operated the stage lighting) during this era. +From 2006 to 2010 she worked in Washington, D.C. as a producer for the European press corps and the BBC. +The average household size was 2.32 and the average family size was 2.88. +SUP surfSUP raceAPP Sup World Tour spot was reallocated to the best ranked athlete not qualified from the PASA Surf GamesLongboardWomenSUP surfSUP raceAPP Sup World Tour spot was reallocated to the best ranked athlete not qualified from the PASA Surf GamesLongboardReferencesPPCategory:Qualification for the 2019 Pan American GamesQualification +The Enlightening Commentary into the Light of the Holy Qur'an vol. +The restaurant opened in 1945, occasionally serving as an informal meeting place for show business personalities. +Khalij is an Arabic word meaning a "gulf" and may refer to:the Persian Gulf, located between Iran and the Arabian Peninsulathe Khalij el-Arab or Arab's Gulf, a large bay to the west of Alexandria in Egyptthe Khalīj 'Adan or Gulf of Aden, a gulf between Yemen and Somaliathe Khalij Qabis or Gulf of Gabès, a gulf on the eastern coast of Tunisia Khalij (album), a 1990 album by Iranian singer Ebi +The final selection of the host city was carried out on 18 November 2014 in Monaco. +Rick Allen, Jeff Burton and Steve Letarte had the call in the booth for the race. +This table includes buildings in the Gaslamp Quarter Historic District in San Diego, California. +The spotted thrush-babbler (Ptyrticus turdinus) also known as the thrush babbler, is a species of bird in the family Pellorneidae. +A marker bearing the brief history of the structure has been installed in its façade by the National Historical Committee, precursor of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines. +This was the Mean Green's final season as a member of the Sun Belt. +With a sports division now established, Fox decided to seek broadcast rights agreements with other major sports leagues. +Doubles Tom Gullikson / Tim Gullikson defeated Mark Edmondson/ Kim Warwick 3–6, 7–6, 6–3ReferencesStowe Grand PrixStowe Grand Prix +Trechus tyshkanensis is a species of ground beetle in the subfamily Trechinae. +The Bolesław Śmiały coal mine is a large mine in the south of Poland in Łaziska Górne, Silesian Voivodeship, 172 km south-west of the capital, Warsaw. +Llanfwrog is a village in Denbighshire, in northern Wales. +Highbury is a rural locality in the Shire of Mareeba, Queensland, Australia. +Philosophers and sociologists Alfred Baeumler (1887–1968), German philosopher in Nazi Germany. +The ground colour is snow-white. +Category:Huainan +References Category:Unincorporated communities in West VirginiaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Marshall County, West Virginia +Kai van Hese (born 15 June 1989 in The Hague) is a Dutch footballer who plays as a left back for Noordwijk in the Dutch Topklasse. +It grows best in full sun. +The larvae feed on various grasses including wild oats (Avena), bent grass (Agrostis), bluegrass (Poa), Bermuda grass (Cynodon dactylon), and Indian woodoats grass (Chasmanthium latifolia). +The 18th Mieczysław Połukard Criterium of Polish Speedway League Aces was the 1999 version of the Mieczysław Połukard Criterium of Polish Speedway Leagues Aces. +John Keegan may also refer to:John C. Keegan (born 1952), Retired American judge and politician from ArizonaJohn Keegan (footballer) (born 1981), English professional footballerJohn Keegan (politician) (1867–1941), Australian trade unionist and politicianJohn Keegan (writer), Irish mythologist +The nearest railway station is Kanhangad railway station on Mangalore-Palakkad line. +The song is released as the third single from the band's fourth studio album of the same name. +It is found in Brazil. +Statistics Pole Position - #5 Audi Sport Japan Team Goh - 1:27.775 Distance - 869.44 km Average Speed - 144.952 km/hPost-RaceFollowing a successful turn out from a large number of European teams, as well as a handful of American and Japanese teams, the event was considered a success. +A private museum of Asian art with the largest indoor exhibition space in Hakone, extending over five floors, the collection of some 450 pieces centres on early modern and modern Japanese painting while also including Chinese bronzes, lacquer, ceramics, and Buddhist sculpture. +Girone AGirone BGirone CReferences and sourcesAlmanacco Illustrato del Calcio – La Storia 1898–2004, Panini Edizioni, Modena, September 2005Category:Serie C seasons3Italy +The 2019 Wong Tai Sin District Council election was held on 24 November 2019 to elect all 25 members to the District Council. +The school follows the same programs as public schools in France, and the graduation certificate is issued by the French Ministry of Education. +He continued serving as an official in the state of Cao Wei, established by Cao Cao's successor Cao Pi, during the Three Kingdoms period. +The clamps of the haptor attach the animal to the gill of the fish. +As of 1 January 2016, three of them can be bought online on amazon.com, the highest priced at $10,000. +Whenever he tries to use something that requires a spring, Coily shouts "No springs!" +1 Andre Agassi made his final Wimbledon appearance, losing to Nadal in the third round. +EducationPublic education in the community of Reliance is provided by Sweetwater County School District #1. +The district encompasses an estate with two contributing buildings. +They failed to qualify for the Atlantic 10 Tournament. +1st Main District: Mallasa: Amor de Dios, Aranjuez, Mallasilla, Isla Verde, Mallasa, Jupapina, Comunidad Chiaraque2nd Main District: Distrito Sur (South District): Irpavi, Bolonia, Alto Irpavi, Koani, Achumani, Achumani-Meseta, Alto Achumani, Calacoto, Alto Calacoto, Cotacota, Chasquipampa, Ovejuyo, Obrajes, Alto Obrajes, Bajo LLojeta, Bella Vista, Alto Seguencoma, Bajo Seguencoma3rd Main District: San Antonio: Villa de Copacabana, Villa Armonía, Villa San Antonio, Kupini, Callapa, Pampahasi, San Isidro4th Main District: Periférica: Limanipata, Achachicala, Vino Tinto, 25 de Mayo, 5 Dedos, Santiago de Lacaya, Rosasani, La Merced, Chuquiaguillo5th Main District: Max Paredes: Gran Poder, Obispo Indaburu, Villa Victoria, El Tejar, Alto Tejar, Chamoco Chico, Munaypata, Pura Pura, Ciudadela Ferroviaria6th Main District: Distrito Centro (Central District): El Rosario, San Sebastián, Santa Bárbara, Casco Urbano Central, Parque Urbano Central, Miraflores, Casco Viejo7th Main District: Cotahuma: San Jorge, Sopocachi, Alto Sopocachi (Sopocachi Highlands), Pasankeri, Tembladerani, Llojeta, Alpacoma, Belén, Tacagua, San Pedro, Alto San Pedro (San Pedro Highlands)Main neighborhoods and zones San Jorge:, located on the 7th District (Cotahuma) and near Sopocachi, it is one of the main residential and diplomatic areas of the city. +ReferencesBibliography Goble, Alan. +GeographyMaharajganj is located within 6 km of Rajesultanpur and 24 km of Azamgarh. +Carousel went on to win the Film Grand Prix at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity that year. +As with every tournament since UEFA Euro 1984, there was no third place play-off. +when citing a botanical name. +Plagiotremus is a genus of blennies, in particular combtooth blennies, found throughout the Pacific and Indian oceans. +He previously played football on the Saskatoon Hilltops junior football team. +When the Communist Party underwent a major split in 1929, Oscar Öhman sided with the Karl Kilbom faction. +It contained the 986th, 987th and 988th Grenadier Regiments, and the 276th Artillery Regiment. +State Artist (, also sometimes translated as "National Artist") is an honorary title granted to prominent artists by the government of Turkey for their contributions to the Turkish culture. +He was a Roman Catholic and he designed many churches for that denomination. +Cast Rade Marković - The Doctor Bata Živojinović - Korčagin Jovan Janićijević - Gavran Ljubiša Samardžić - Šarac Husein Čokić - Pavle Zdravko Biogradlija - Žarko Rastislav Jović - Ivan Zaim Muzaferija - Nusret Anka Zupanc - Olga Janez Vrhovec - Partisan Doctor Petar Dobric - Partisan Commander Maks Furijan - Oberleutnant Rejhan Demirdzic - Leutnant Rudi Alvadj - Rottenführer Mario Arkus - Train EngineerReferencesExternal links Category:1960s drama filmsCategory:Yugoslav filmsCategory:Films directed by Hajrudin KrvavacCategory:Yugoslav drama films +ReferencesCategory:United States Attorneys for the District of ColumbiaCategory:American people of Irish descentCategory:19th-century American lawyersCategory:1808 birthsCategory:1846 deaths +Garha Khurd is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. +"Archaeology", from 1607 onwards, initially meant what we would call "ancient history" generally, with the narrower modern sense first seen in 1837. +According to one study, a person with a known peanut allergy suffered an acute reaction to a "nut-free" butter containing sunflower seeds. +The diameter of the bull ring at which gives a floor area of over . +Steve, Steven or Stephen James may refer to:Sports Steve James (cricketer) (born 1967), English cricketer and journalist Steve James (footballer) (born 1949), English football player Stephen James (footballer) (born 1965), Australian rules footballer for Richmond Steve James (rugby) (born 1960), Australian rugby union player and rugby league coach Steve James (snooker player) (born 1961), English snooker player Steve Armstrong, real name Steve James (born 1965), American professional wrestlerArts and entertainment Steve James (actor) (1952–1993), American actor Steve James (producer) (born 1955), American producer and director Steven James, authorMusic Steve James (blues musician) (born 1950), American blues musician Steve James (Christian musician) (born 1953), English-born contemporary Christian musician Steve James (DJ) (born 1998), American record producer, writer, and DJOther Stephen James (model) (born 1990), British model and former footballerSee alsoStephan James (disambiguation) +Libin may refer to:People Alvin Libin (born 1931), Canadian businessman and philanthropist Liu Libin (born 1995), Chinese volleyball player Phil Libin (born 1972), Russian entrepreneur Wang Libin (born 1963), Chinese basketball player Xiang Libin (born 1967), Chinese researcher Zalmon Libin (1872-1955), American playwright Zhang Libin (born 1955), Chinese roboticistPlaces Libín, Czech Republic Libin, Belgium, Walloon municipality located in the province of LuxembourgOther Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, Canada +The town is connected to Port-Jérôme-sur-Seine, in Seine-Maritime via a car ferry. +It carried programming from UPN at its sign-on; however, it had lost the affiliation to KTWT-LP by December 2004. +A geological survey is the systematic investigation of the geology beneath a given piece of ground for the purpose of creating a geological map or model. +Wildner may refer to: Johannes Wildner (born 1956), Austrian conductor Martina Wildner (born 1968, Allgäu), German female writerCategory:German-language surnames +He was the Olympic flag bearer for Austria at the 1964 Games. +George Sherman may also refer to: George Sherman (comics) (1928–1974), publicist and head of the Publications Department at the Disney Studio George C. Sherman (1799–1853), New York politician George C. Sherman Jr. (c. 1911–1986), American polo player George Dallas Sherman (1844–1927), military band leaderSee also +Its side walls were reinforced by exterior buttresses in 1884, when a belfry was also added. +Robert Mehlen (born 12 May 1949 in Luxembourg City) is a Luxembourgish politician, President of the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR), and farmer. +"Some Fools Never Learn" is a song written by John Scott Sherrill and recorded by American country music artist Steve Wariner. +Group Stage30 teams from each provincial association will compete. +During the Cristero War, the area saw fighting as well including the capture and execution of three prominent Cristero priests. +playersCategory:Juventus F.C. +DirectorAwards 1963, the 2nd Grand Bell Awards : Best Supporting Actor for (진시황제와 만리장성) 1965, the 3rd Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Supporting Actor for (용사는 살아 있다) 1965, the 4th Grand Bell Awards : Best Supporting Actor for (청일전쟁과 여걸 민비) 1967, the 6th Grand Bell Awards : Best Actor for (고발) 1968, the 7th Grand Bell Awards : Best Supporting Actor for (카인의 후예) 1969, the 6th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Supporting Actor for (카인의 후예) 1970, the 7th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Actor for (돌아온 팔도사나이) 1972, the 9th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Best Actor for (소장수) 1972, the 9th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite Actor 1973, the 10th Blue Dragon Film Awards : Favorite ActorReferencesExternal linksCategory:1930 birthsCategory:1995 deathsCategory:South Korean male actorsCategory:People from SuncheonCategory:20th-century South Korean male actorsCategory:South Korean male film actorsCategory:South Korean male television actors +Gold train or Gold Train may refer to:Train carrying valuables Hungarian Gold Train Kolchak's gold train, a train with Russian Imperial gold supply last held by Admiral Kolchak Nazi gold train, a rumored armored train full of treasures that left Breslau (now Wrocław) in late 1944 and was lostArt, entertainment, and mediaFilm 30 Winchester per El Diablo (1965), an Italian Spaghetti Western filmLiterature The Gold Train: The Destruction of the Jews and the Looting of Hungary (2015), a non-fiction book by Ronald W. ZweigSee alsoGold laundering Money trainNazi gold +Rahul also requests Abhi to marry Anu and keep her happy. +The name was a pun on Lotus Symphony, the dominant productivity software at the time. +Bizim Kand (our village) is a TV series in Azerbaijani languages produced and broadcast by Sahand TV in Tabriz, Iran. +Enoree may refer to: Enoree, South Carolina, a Census-designated place in Spartanburg County in South Carolina in the United States The Enoree River in South Carolina in the United States , a United States Navy oiler in commission from 1943 to 1947, from 1950 to 1954, and from 1956 to 1957 +Virtus FrancavillaOn 24 July 2019, he signed with Virtus Francavilla. +Their cost is also higher than for a half-duplex speakerphone. +by Dipannita Basu and Sidney J. Lemelle, 230-54. +The competition was played as a wartime charities fundraiser between the league's top four clubs. +Afghan New Zealanders are New Zealanders whose ancestry came from Afghanistan or who were born in Afghanistan. +GovernmentThe township is governed by a three-member board of trustees, who are elected in November of odd-numbered years to a four-year term beginning on the following January 1. +See also 2256 Wiśniewski, an asteroid named in his honourReferencesExternal linksDictionary Of Minor Planet Names (Google Books)Wiesław Z. Wiśniewski at Tucson CompleteCategory:1931 birthsCategory:1994 deathsCategory:Polish astronomers +Yazdanabad-e Sofla (, also Romanized as Yazdānābād-e Soflá; also known as Yazdānābād-e Pā’īn) is a village in Quchan Atiq Rural District, in the Central District of Quchan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. +It is unique in that it emphasizes the practical application of forensic medicine to the forensic sciences and crime scene investigation. +Easily swayed by those around him, Kohei often takes care of his sister's three kids because of her habit of wandering around, but he is a passionate man and dreams of finding his star. +At Berlin, the film won the Silver Bear for Outstanding Artistic Contribution. +Category:1220 birthsCategory:1275 deathsCategory:13th-century Catalan peopleCategory:Arabian slaves and freedmen +He was the middle son of Gaius Sentius Saturninus, consul in 19 BC. +Teaching Goral is Professor of Elements of Criminal Law and Criminal Process at the University of Buenos Aires, and Titular Professor of Criminal Law and Special Part at the Catholic University of Salta, in addition to having been a teacher at various institutions of higher learning in Argentina. +The stadium was opened in 1918 and it was the home stadium of Sevilla FC for 10 years until they moved to Estadio de Nervión. +Notable people with the surname include:Gleb Derujinsky (1925–2011), American fashion photographerGleb W. Derujinsky (1888–1975), Russian-American sculptor +In 2016, the name was revived in the form of a website which published phony news stories. +Name and historyRiley Township was established in 1834. +Literary Reminiscences and Gleaning with Illustrations, 1860; mainly on Lancashire poets. +She later stated that this was, in part, a conscious atonement for the failings of a distant ancestor who had been a noted lawyer in Arles. +Venue of concertsHall Community Centre, Church of St. +He made his only appearance in the Football League for Newton Heath on 28 April 1900, scoring in a 2–1 win over Chesterfield at Bank Street. +Clavocerithium taeniatum is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cerithiidae. +Operated by Sandia National Laboratories for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the National Solar Thermal Test Facility (NSTTF) is the only test facility of this type in the United States. +ReferencesExternal links Category:1877 birthsCategory:1944 deathsCategory:People educated at the High School of GlasgowCategory:Alumni of the University of GlasgowCategory:Alumni of the University of EdinburghCategory:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Scottish constituenciesFlemingCategory:Members of the Faculty of AdvocatesCategory:Solicitors General for ScotlandCategory:UK MPs 1924–1929Category:Cameronians officersCategory:Highland Light Infantry officersCategory:British Army personnel of World War ICategory:Recipients of the Military CrossCategory:Recipients of the Croix de guerre (Belgium)Category:Unionist Party (Scotland) MPsCategory:People from RutherglenCategory:Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh +He later became the director of research and publications for IPI and the Independent Commission on Multilateralism (2014-2016). +Notable people with the surname include: Riley Ann Sawyers (2005–2007), American murder victim Rodney Sawyers (born 1967), American racecar driver Shawn Sawyers (born 1976), Jamaican professional football playerSee also Sawyer's, defunct manufacturing and retail company Sawyers, California Genus Monochamus, commonly called sawyer beetles Sawyer (disambiguation) +They had a daughter, Kristin Sigurdsdatter. +In his view such an effort is to be based on "democratic understanding, openness toward the Christian cultural values, equality between men and women and a scientific approach". +The 2016 Serbia Olympic basketball team represented Serbia and won the silver medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. +Princess of BrazilIn 1788, when his eldest brother Joseph, Prince of Brazil died, Infante John became the first in line to his mother's throne. +Parospinus is an extinct genus of prehistoric bony fish that lived during the Santonian. +It closed in 2009. +External links Hohenlohe on Encyclopedia of Austria Hohenlohe on Austrian CommandersSee also Konstantin zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (de) Marie zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (de) Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst, Hohenlohe-SchillingsfürstCategory:1863 birthsCategory:1918 deathsCategory:20th-century Ministers-President of AustriaCategory:Politicians from ViennaCategory:Politicians of BukovinaCategory:Austro-Hungarian politiciansCategory:19th-century Austrian peopleCategory:Ministers-President of AustriaCategory:Austrian people of German descentKonradCategory:Austrian princes +She became inspired to become an author when a close friend of hers read a romantic "Beauty and the Beast"-like excerpt she'd written and suggested she try her hand at romance novels. +(Shown on a darker gray background.) +List(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)See alsoPersian Gulf ResidencyHistory of the United Arab EmiratesForeign relations of the United Arab EmiratesExternal linksBritish representativesCategory:History of the United Arab EmiratesTrucial StatesCategory:United Arab Emirates–United Kingdom relations +Historical importanceButmir is known for archaeological finds dating back to the neolithic period. +Darren Rumble may refer to: Darren Rumble (ice hockey) (born 1969), Canadian ice hockey defender Darren Rumble (Australian rules footballer) (born 1984), defender for the Subiaco and Fremantle football clubs +PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Côtes-d'Armor departmentReferencesINSEEExternal linksFrench Ministry of Culture list for Saint-Lormel Category:Communes of Côtes-d'Armor +Since 1919 he chaired the board of the Central Ukrainian cooperative union - Central. +If such issues are not addressed properly, concurrent design may not work effectively. +McConnell baronets of Belfast, co. Antrim (1900)Sir Robert John McConnell, 1st Baronet (1853–1927)Sir Joseph McConnell, 2nd Baronet (1877–1942)Sir Robert Melville Terence McConnell, 3rd Baronet (1902–1987)(Robert) Shean McConnell, presumed 4th Baronet (born 1930)The heir presumptive is the presumed present holder's nephew Terence Reade McConnell (born 1959). +Heather Mitchell as Ashka – a Spellbinder. +ReferencesCategory:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Belizean male sprintersCategory:Olympic athletes of BelizeCategory:Place of birth missing (living people) +Emerito Concepción (born 4 July 1962) is a Filipino sports shooter. +EtymologyPawtucket is an Algonkian word meaning "at the falls in the river (tidal stream)". +Members of ParliamentElectionsElections in the 1880sElections in the 1890sElections in the 1900sElections in the 1910sSee also Parliamentary constituencies in Shropshire#Historical constituenciesList of former United Kingdom Parliamentary constituenciesUnreformed House of CommonsReferences Category:Parliamentary constituencies in Shropshire (historic)Category:Newport, ShropshireCategory:United Kingdom Parliamentary constituencies established in 1885Category:United Kingdom Parliamentary constituencies disestablished in 1918 +Allodontidae (from ancient Greek "ἄλλος" "ὀδούς", "different tooth") is a family of extinct multituberculate mammal that lived in what is now North America during the Upper Jurassic period. +ReferencesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Pakistani senators (14th Parliament)Category:Year of birth missing (living people) +It was the ancestral castle of the Wittelsbach family, who were rulers of Bavaria for thousand years. +Later that year, at the U.S. National Track Championships, he won gold medals in the elite one kilometer time trial, individual pursuit and team pursuit races. +Alternative spellings (the remaining 13.1%) included Yin. +That was our dream and that dream became the Metalheadz label." +It is noteworthy for its finely-hewn stone cellar walls. +The PO extended the railway afterwards. +Its spores formed permanent dyads. +Late on September 26, Lea Michele tweeted a photo from the set featuring herself, Lambert, Colfer, Naya Rivera and Demi Lovato singing in front of a band. +512 species of insects & spiders, including one Red Data Book entry, the nationally scarce Trechus rivularis ground beetle. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Turek County +Current cross-border traffic consists of containerized goods and freight from Outokumpu. +Lake Alexander is a lake in Southeast Alaska, West of Mole Harbor, on East coast of Admiralty Island; North-East of Sitka, Alaska in the Alexander Archipelago. +Troops on the island of St. Helena who were guarding Boer prisoners of war in the POW camp were awarded the Queen's South Africa Medal without clasp. +In 1950, he was professional at Littleborough C.C..Moving to Worcestershire, his contacts included its President, Sir George Dowty and during the winter and after retirement from professional cricket he worked for his company Dowty Aviation in Cheltenham. +Joel David Williams (born March 16, 1965) is a former American football tight end who played one season with the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League. +For other MeSH codes, see List of MeSH codes. +Ferdinand de Lariboisière (1 January 1856 – 3 May 1931) was a French equestrian. +|}The Robert Mottram Memorial Trophy, currently sponsored by Low Cost Vans, is a Listed National Hunt chase in Great Britain which is open to horses aged four years or older. +The Bulldogs have appeared in and won one bowl game, the 1960 Tangerine Bowl under head coach Eddie Teague. +It was initially used by Ehud Hrushovski to generate a stable structure with an "exotic" geometry, thereby refuting Zil'ber's Conjecture. +1953), Bulgarian wrestlerYelena Pavlova, Kazakhstani volleyball playerIn other fieldsCyril Pavlov (born 1919), Russian Orthodox hieromonk and archimandrite, confessor of Russian patriarchsIgor Pavlov (programmer), Russian freelance programmer, creator of 7-zipIliya Pavlov (1960–2003), Bulgarian businessmanMikhail Pavlov (disambiguation)Nikolay Pavlov (disambiguation)See alsoPavlov (disambiguation)Muriel Pavlow, British actressCategory:Russian-language surnamesCategory:Bulgarian-language surnamesCategory:Patronymic surnames +Coverdale continued to appear in the Second XI Championship and Second XI Trophy for Northamptonshire through to 2007. +Lefkara may refer to: Kato Lefkara, a village in Cyprus Pano Lefkara, a municipality in Cyprus +Cast Hibari MisoraSee also List of films in the public domain in the United StatesReferencesExternal linksCategory:Japanese filmsCategory:Japanese black-and-white filmsCategory:1950 filmsCategory:Films directed by Torajiro SaitoCategory:Shochiku films +In 1941 he succeeded Otfrid Foerster as professor of neurology in Breslau, and in 1945 returned to Heidelberg as a professor of clinical medicine. +See also Prehistoric fish List of prehistoric bony fishReferencesCategory:PalaeonisciformesCategory:Late Permian fish +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Sulęcin County +KA George, a member of the town council. +In 2000 he won the gold medal at the team event together with Tajudeen Agunbiade and Femi Alabi. +Charles A. Shanor is a professor of law at Emory University School of Law in Atlanta, Georgia. +In June 2009, Brady took part in the 2009 NFL/NFLPA "Broadcast Boot Camp," a program designed by the NFL Broadcasting Department and their broadcast partners to prepare players for possible post-playing careers in broadcasting. +He joined United States Steel Corporation in 1965 and held various positions in industrial engineering spending much of his early career in the field. +Chausuyama may refer to:Chausuyama (Aichi), a mountain on the border between Aichi and Nagano Prefectures, JapanChausuyama Station, a railway station in Shinshiro, Aichi Prefecture, Japan +For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. +Males had a median income of $29,375 versus $23,393 for females. +The magazines were very hard to find, as they were custom-made, based on the magazine of the .45 ACP EAA Witness. +Stevens hired Liam Weston, who later became Mayor Pro Tem of El Segundo, California and now a columnist for the Sacramento Union [1], as CFA's eastern regional director in 1987. +ReferencesExternal links Facebook pageCategory:Hindu temples in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Buildings and structures in Clayton County, GeorgiaCategory:Hinduism in the United States Category:Religious buildings and structures completed in 1990Category:1990 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Religious organizations established in 1990Category:Asian-American culture in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Indian-American culture in Georgia (U.S. state)Category:Religious buildings and structures in Clayton County, GeorgiaGeorgia +In March 2004, Moumou was arrested in Copenhagen, Denmark, at the request of Moroccan authorities for his alleged role in the 2003 Casablanca bombings. +In 1924 Skanderbeg was bought by Jadransko-Skadarska Plovidba, founded in Cetinje by Serbian-Albanian bank in 1920. +He also studies human touch perception using behavioral and imaging methods. +Marriage and ChildrenPrior to his marriage, Aymon also fathered several illegitimate children, who were raised in his household, even after his marriage. +After Hungriges Herz became a bestseller in Germany Schätzl started in May 2015 a project on Kickstarter to collect $35000 to produce a short documentary film, ADDICT, based on the book and show the film for free in schools to discuss the problem of eating disorders with young people. +After a final return to Iran, Roshdieh established a new school and a magazine in 1904, both called Maktab. +SpeciesThere are currently five recognized species in this genus: Nimbochromis fuscotaeniatus (Regan, 1922) (Spothead Hap, Fuscotaeniatus Hap) Nimbochromis linni (W. E. Burgess & H. R. Axelrod, 1975) Nimbochromis livingstonii (Günther, 1894) (Livingston's Cichlid) Nimbochromis polystigma (Regan, 1922) Nimbochromis venustus (Boulenger, 1908) (Giraffe Hap, Venustus Hap)ReferencesCategory:HaplochrominiCategory:Fish of AfricaCategory:Cichlid generaCategory:Taxa named by Ethelwynn Trewavas +This database is notable as an extensive collection of edited information about continuing philosophical activity world wide. +Roman Rybarski. +Keti is also a well-known fashion designer in Kazakhstan. +The Oued Miliane has a number of tributaries including Oued el Hamma, and is the second longest course perennial river in the country after the Medjerda. +Gummileru is a village in East Godavari district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. +BiographyMariam C. Said was born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:1988 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Cricketers from KolkataCategory:Indian women cricketersCategory:India women One Day International cricketersCategory:India women Twenty20 International cricketersCategory:Seth Anandram Jaipuria College alumniCategory:University of Calcutta alumniCategory:Central Zone women cricketersCategory:East Zone women cricketersCategory:Railways women cricketersCategory:Bengal women cricketers +Donoso scored his first podium finish in Indy Lights competition in the time-shortened second Mid Ohio 100 race. +This is used in a range of mountaineering activities: rock climbing, technical tree climbing, caving, water crossings and mountain rescue. +Interloper is the third studio album by Swedish ambient duo Carbon Based Lifeforms, released in 2010. +The complex is split into three campuses - an Elementary School (Grades PK-5), a Middle School (Grades 6-8), and a High School (Grades 9-12). +Engineering infrastructureFelskeller tunnel'Felskeller tunnel was near the first Dresden-Plauen station. +Schönebeck (Elbe) is a former Verwaltungsgemeinschaft ("collective municipality") in the Salzlandkreis district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. +The Smerch (Смерч) (Tornado) is a Nanuchka III-class corvette of the Russian Navy. +District Kohistan has 4 Tehsils i.e. +Kasper Lehikoinen (born 20 April 1992) is a Finnish badminton player. +Category:Finnish playsCategory:2006 plays +Paradysstroma is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae. +Service under Empress Anna Having saved her from marriage to Saxe Anna was very familiar with Lacy and he became one of her most trusted generals. +This Wikipedia needs a legal scholar to write on this topic in more depth. +Adding to the list of awards, the Bridge of Life won a Grand CLIO award for Public Relations and two Gold and a Titanium at the Cannes Lions. +The Polk County Historical Museum is located in the courthouse. +In 1707, Hasan Pasha was pardoned and was sent to Egypt whereas Hatice returned to Istanbul. +In 2013 Leek United celebrated its 150th anniversary – and in 2017 reached another milestone, when for the first time in its history the Society's assets reached over £1bn. +Anne Simonett's service was cut short by a brain tumor that proved fatal the following year. +Cryphia olivacea is a moth of the family Noctuidae. +When his father died in 1580, the lordship of Mukhrani passed to the late prince's nephew and Teimuraz's uncle, Erekle I (died 1605), apparently, in the capacity of a regent for the underage Prince Teimuraz. +It details the name of the railway station, its location, dates where known, reason for its existence and any additional information that may aid the researcher. +Martin Mansell (born 13 December 1960) is a former Paralympic athlete from Great Britain competing mainly in swimming. +The village is about 20 km from Livorno and 10 km from Rosignano Marittimo. +Grateful Dead) – 6:30Disc Two"Feel Like A Stranger" > (Barlow, Weir) – 9:29"Althea" > (Hunter, Garcia) – 8:22"Lost Sailor" > (Barlow, Weir) – 5:49"Saint Of Circumstance" (Barlow, Weir) – 6:45"Alabama Getaway" (Hunter, Garcia) – 4:50"Playing In The Band" > (Hunter, Mickey Hart, Weir) – 8:03"Uncle John's Band" > (Hunter, Garcia) – 8:25"Drums" > (Hart, Kreutzmann) – 5:26"Space" > (Grateful Dead) – 2:46"Not Fade Away" > (Buddy Holly, Norman Petty) – 4:52"Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad" > (trad., arr. +Route descriptionThe highway begins at the intersection of PH 1 in Qingshui. +They performed "Georgia On My Mind" at judges retreats where then mentor Willy Moon advanced them to the live shows. +It is found in Namibia. +This cult status increased Qu Yuan's position within China's literary canon, seeing him placed on postage stamps since the 1950s and the Dragon Boat Festival elevated to a national holiday in 2005. +It would greatly shorten the long trip. +ReferencesRegional Statistical Office: Municipalities of Pardubice RegionCategory:Villages in Svitavy District +Levy, former U.S. +He is recruited as a spy and returns to France, where he uses his professional standing to gain valuable information about new U-boat shelters being built at Lorient and then to return to Britain as an officer in the Royal Engineers. +Allegri is an Italian surname. +Some traces of Brethren of Purity doctrines, as well as of their numerology or Hurufism, are found in two Yemenite philosophical midrashim written in 1420-1430: "The Glad Learning" (Midrash ha-hefez) by Zerahyah ha-Rofé (Yahya al-Tabib) and the "Lamp of Intellects" (Siraj al-‘uqul) by Hoter ben Solomon. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Sidi Bel Abbès ProvinceCategory:Communes of Algeria +List of spa towns: Bojnice Brusno Číž Dudince Liptovský Ján Lúčky Piešťany Rajecké Teplice Nimnica Smrdáky Sklené Teplice Vyšné Ružbachy Trenčianske Teplice Turčianske TepliceIn addition to thermal spas there are also several climatic spas (Štrbské Pleso, Nový Smokovec, Štós, Tatranské Matliare, High Tatras). +In these early days scientists were able to discover the time at which the line formed (between January and August, as mentioned earlier). +He is the son of Chris Badenhorst, a former wing that played in two tests for the South Africa national team in 1994 and 1995. +First, for stability there cannot be memory leaks (memory that is allocated but not freed after use). +Above Ground was a band from Christchurch, New Zealand formed in 1983. +Heinrich Christoph Kolbe (2 April 1771 – 16 January 1836) was a German painter. +He then returned to England and died in Liverpool later that year. +VA-923 has the following meanings: Attack Squadron 923 (U.S. Navy), now inactive (see List_of_inactive_United_States_Navy_aircraft_squadrons#Attack_squadrons)State Route 923 (Virginia) +It is widespread from San Luis Potosí south to Nicaragua. +Best known for his inventing and patenting of the V-tail (Polish Patent #15938), which is an aircraft tail configuration that combines the rudder and elevators into one system. +Now based in Scotland, she performs solo works in concerts throughout Europe. +The company itself is independent, based in London and was founded in 2009 by Mike Stevens and Dan Shrimpton, both former employees of Innocent drinks. +OffseasonDecember 4, 1991: Dan Pasqua was signed as a free agent by the White Sox. +There is plenty of drama off the basketball court as well as on it – involving such things as the players' different and sometimes turbulent home lives; Charlie patching up his friendship with Aidan; the players raising money by going street collecting, as well as demonstrating their basketball skills, in order to raise money to keep their team mini-bus on the road so they can continue to travel to away venues and avoid being dropped from the league; and prejudice against disabled people, as is shown when Vicky and Gabby encounter an abusive drunk man at the hotel where the team are staying on the night of an important league away match (the girls give as good as they get by Gabby blasting the man with a fire extinguisher, the girls claiming innocence when the manager arrives, and the drunk being ejected from the premises). +It is affiliated with the Trade Union Congress of Ghana. +The journal was founded in 1975 by Andrew Grossbart. +On September 22nd 2019 the highest price realized for a single matchbook was achieved. +She works with "Brattleboro Retreat", a not-for-profit, mental health and addictions treatment center founded in 1834. +She spent her time resting, visiting family in Australia, and renovating her new home in the south of France. +Hence the official name of the station was changed to Dnipro-Holovnyi. +Four regiments of the British Army have been numbered the 93rd Regiment of Foot:93rd Regiment of Foot (1760), raised in 176093rd Regiment of Foot (1780), raised in 178093rd Regiment of Foot (1793), raised in 179393rd (Sutherland Highlanders) Regiment of Foot, raised in 1799 +Santosh Kumar may refer to: Santosh Kumar (actor), Pakistani film actor Santosh Kumar (politician), Indian politician Santosh Kumar (referee), Indian football referee +Przemkowo may refer to the following places in Poland:Przemkowo, Masovian Voivodeship (east-central Poland)Przemkowo, Pomeranian Voivodeship (north Poland) +All inpatient services were transferred at that time to Research Medical Center, an existing inpatient hospital and trauma center less than two miles away. +ReferencesExternal links Irving Illinois (dead link) Historical Society of Montgomery County IllinoisCategory:Villages in Montgomery County, IllinoisCategory:Villages in Illinois +League tableResultsTop scorersReferencesReferencesExternal linksCategory:Kyrgyzstan League seasons1Kyrgyzstan +Marlen Papava (born 23 April 1941) is a Soviet sports shooter. +Vicente Giner Boira Archive (Biblioteca Valenciana)Category:Intangible Cultural Heritage of HumanityCategory:Province of ValenciaCategory:Agricultural organisations based in SpainCategory:Irrigation in Spain +Regular seasonW = Wins, L = Losses, , PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points AgainstLong Island defeated Philadelphia 2 of 3 games in the regular season. +The Reichenow's seedeater was formerly placed in the genus Serinus but phylogenetic analysis using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences found that the genus was polyphyletic. +They are as follows:Common krait, Bungarus caeruleusRussell's viper, Daboia russelii Indian saw-scaled viper, Echis carinatusIndian cobra, Naja naja Of the Big Four, the common krait is responsible for the most snake bites, followed by the Russell's viper, the saw-scaled viper, and the Indian cobra. +ReceptionAllmusic awarded the album 4 stars calling it "one of Paul Bley's solo piano masterworks". +It stores topological and geometric information defining the shape of models in transmitting files. +Konsepti Group The Konsepti Group consisted of parent company Konsepti Oy, affiliated design agency Design Concept Oy and communications consultancy ToimintaKonsepti Helsinki Oy. +HistoryThe Company was founded in 1996 as a telecommunications business. +Van Horn Park DamsVan Horn Park features Van Horn Park Pond-River, which has two dams that were created to enhance recreational opportunities in the park. +See also League of Conservation VotersExternal links Colorado Conservation VotersCategory:Environmental organizations based in ColoradoCategory:Politics of ColoradoCategory:Environmental organizations established in 1998 +More recently the band have started to Headline their own "tours" and festivals in the UK as well as in the US and Europe, such as Flevo, Big Boss, Festival de Paque, Slot and others. +See alsoList of municipalities in ParanáReferencesCategory:Municipalities in Paraná +He produced more creative commercials by calling the owners of businesses on the air, which he wrote "was mind-blowing to everyone there." +Batman then realizes that since his return after a one year absence, he has eliminated all supercrime in the city. +The men's 1500 metres race of the 2013–14 ISU Speed Skating World Cup 3, arranged in the Alau Ice Palace, in Astana, Kazakhstan, was held on 29 November 2013. +It may also refer to:Meet Me in St. Louis (musical), a 1989 Broadway production based on the film"Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis", a song written to celebrate the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis and featured in both the film and the musicalMeet Me in St. Louis (album), a Decca Records album of songs from the 1944 filmMeet Me in St. Louis (band), a British post-hardcore bandMeet Me in St. Louis (novel), a 1942 novel by Sally Benson +Originally a music camp for flute players and enthusiasts, the event has grown to be multiple festivals involving players, makers, and enthusiasts of other instrument and art forms, including voice and dance. +Career A retired Prima Ballerina. +ex Corrêa - Portia tree (Pantropical)Thespesia populneoides (Roxb.) +Linyanti Combined School is a school in the Linyanti Constituency in Namibia far north-eastern Caprivi Strip. +PlotVered (Ofra Haza) is a beautiful blind girl who sells chocolates and cigarettes in the streets. +In the Jewish angelic hierarchy thrones and wheels are different. +Edmund Weaver may refer to: Edmund Weaver (publisher), 17th-century draper and bookseller in London Edmund Weaver (MP) (1610–1672), English politician Edmund Weaver (astronomer) (1683–1748), English astronomer and land surveyor +RNR may also refer to: Ribonucleotide reductase Rig 'n' Roll, a truck simulation adventure game Right node raising, in linguistics, a mechanism that sees parallel structures share material to their immediate right Royal Newfoundland Regiment, a regiment of the Canadian Army "RnR", a franchise of the FGL Sports R n R, an album by Richard Elliot and Rick Braunthe risk-need-responsivity model of offender treatmentSee also R'n'r (disambiguation) R&R (disambiguation) +Hercules Machinery Corporation (HMC), located in Fort Wayne, IN, is Movax Ltd's only licensed manufacturer for patented Movax Side Grip Sheet Pilers and distributes them exclusively in North America. +See also List of Japanese Infantry DivisionsNotes and referencesThis article incorporates material from Japanese Wikipedia page 第112師団 (日本軍), accessed 27 June 2016 Madej, W. Victor, Japanese Armed Forces Order of Battle, 1937–1945 [2 vols], Allentown, PA: 1981. +It lies approximately south-west of Somonino, south-west of Kartuzy, and south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. +Category:Populated places in Khyber PakhtunkhwaCategory:2005 Kashmir earthquake +3D Printing is a relatively new technology and already a major hobby as the cost of printers has fallen sharply. +Quintus Fabius Ambustus (flourished early 4th century BC) was a military leader of the Roman Republic, and the son of Marcus Fabius Ambustus. +Steve Francis Jones (born 18 October 1960) is an English former footballer who played as a midfielder. +ScheduleReferencesPortland StateCategory:Portland State Vikings football seasonsPortland State Vikings footballPort +ClimateReferencesNotesCategory:Populated places in Chihuahua (state) +G. Todd Davis examines the ways in which Jack conforms to the Byronic hero character trope. +Also photos of naval bases and their specifications were required. +Plantation tours are also available. +Tomonaga's grave was defiled some time later, by Taira no Munekiyo, who brought his head to Kyoto as a trophy. +From 2010 to 2016 he served as Sarawak Political Secretary to the Chief Minister. +SummaryMedal tableReferences Category:Under-18 basketball competitions between national teamsCategory:Basketball competitions in Asia between national teamsCategory:1996 establishments in Southeast AsiaCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 1996Category:Biennial sporting events +Fosheim may refer to:Fosheim Peninsula, located in western Ellesmere Island, a part of the Qikiqtaaluk Region of the Canadian territory of NunavutLage Fosheim (1958-2013), Norwegian record promoter and musicianMinken Fosheim (1956-2018), Norwegian actress and author +Listing "The Best Thing" "Break Me Shake Me" "To the Moon and Back" "The Lover After Me" "I Don't Know You Anymore" "Santa Monica" "Two Beds and a Coffee Machine" "You Can Still Be Free" "The Animal Song" "Hold Me" "Gunning Down Romance" "Crash and Burn" "Truly Madly Deeply" "Chained to You" "I Want You" "I Knew I Loved You" "Affirmation"Credits Executive producer: David Wilson (on behalf of Worldstar) Director: Mark Adamson Producer: Cathie Scott Production manager: Sarah Harold Audio director: John Simpson Director's assistant: Lynda Threlfall Documentary produced by: Ephiphany Productions Producer/Director: Pip Mattiske Production manager: Claire Davidson Savage Garden recorded for: JWM Productions (John Woodruff Management)Category:Savage Garden video albumsCategory:2001 video albums +Elijah, the widow and the widow's sonVictor H. Matthews suggests that the woman "uses sarcasm which is designed to shame the prophet for being the cause of her son's death." +He became a regular in the first team in the 2003–04 season, making 41 league and cup appearances, scoring three goals, as Doncaster won promotion for the second successive year as Football League Third Division champions. +The depot was on the east side of the line, adjacent to the closed Shirebrook West station. +A person must petition the court for a Poor Person Order that allows them to avoid these fees. +The editor-in-chief is Piotr Cap (University of Lodz). +ReferencesNoirmoutierCategory:Houses completed in 1723Category:Monuments historiques of Paris +Like other LCDR locomotives delivered prior to 1874, the locomotives originally had no numbers, being distinguished by name. +Delilah or Delila may also refer to:People Delilah (given name) Delilah (radio host), American radio personality Delilah Rene (born 1960) Delilah (musician), British singer-songwriter Paloma Ayana Stoecker (born 1990) Sophie Delila, London-based French recording artist, songwriter, musician and producerArts and entertainmentMusic Delilah (Tom Jones album), 1968 Delilah (Anderson East album), 2015 "Delilah" (Florence and the Machine song), 2015 "Delilah" (Queen song), 1991 "Delilah" (Tom Jones song), 1968 "Delilah", a song by The Cranberries from Bury the Hatchet "Delilah", a song by The Dresden Dolls from the 2006 album Yes, Virginia... "Delilah", a song by Mavado "Delilah", a jazz standard based on the theme song to the 1949 film Samson and Delilah by Victor Young, featured on the 1954 album Clifford Brown & Max RoachOther Delilah (novel), a 1941 novel by Marcus Goodrich revolving around a fictional US Navy destroyer named Delilah Delilah (TV series), a 1973-1974 Canadian sitcom Delilah (comics), a Marvel Comics character, an enemy of Spider-Man Del Dingle, in the British soap opera Emmerdale Delilah, in the animated series Delilah & Julius Delilah, a horse in the TV series Steptoe and Son'' Delilah, created by American novelist Barry EislerTechnology Delilah (missile), developed by Israel Military Industries Delilah, a secure speech device co-developed by Alan Turing Delilah, nickname of the Norsk Data ND-120/CX processorOther uses Delilah (genus), a genus of longhorn beetles White Lady (cocktail), also known as a Delilah 560 Delila, an asteroidSee also Delilia, a genus of flowering plants +References Category:Populated places in Salamiyah District +The building is A-Listed and was one of James Ingram's finest designs in KilmarnockReferencesExternal linksCategory:Theatres in KilmarnockCategory:Buildings and structures in East AyrshireCategory:KilmarnockCategory:Category A listed buildings in East Ayrshire +He appeared in more than 100 films from 1923 to 1961. +Results2009 electionOut of a total electorate of 226,440, the total number of votes cast was 161,584 (71.4%) of which 1,970 votes were invalid. +It was created in 1988 by division of the municipality of Coronel Freitas. +Tmesisternus giluwe is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. +The competitions were held from Saturday August 4, 1928, to Saturday August 11, 1928. +References Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1956, PG NormandinCategory:1896 birthsCategory:1966 deathsCategory:Nova Scotia Liberal Party MLAsCategory:Acadian people +There are 46 streets. +Joey Palfreyman (born 21 February 1974) is an English darts player who competes in Professional Darts Corporation events. +To understand acculturation at the group level, one must first look at the nature of both cultures before coming into contact with one another. +It includes the Dutee Wilcox Flint auto plant, a nail manufacturing plant, the complex of the National Pipe Bending Company, and others. +The object number of cultural heritage of regional significance is 661710794150005. +Qualified teamsFormatThe finals were played over two legs; home and away. +His first edition, 125 copies of Les Pâques à New York, was published October 1912. +At the 2002 World Lacrosse Championship, Inge was named in the All-Star Team. +In 2010, MaltaToday launched its internet news portal, and is the second most popular local news portal. +On the special, along with past hits, the songs Ross performed from Every Day Is a New Day were "He Lives in You" and the single "Not Over You Yet", recreating elements of the music video with choreography. +Recently restored settlement along the Ping River, which was built by King Mangrai as his capital before he moved it to Chiang MaiWiang Fa Ya, name of the old settlement of Muang Sing, LaosWiang Suan Dok, name of a walled settlement of the Lawa people older than Chiang MaiWiang Nophaburi, name of the place where king Mangrai founded his new city of Chiang MaiSee alsoChiang (place name)Lao WiangMandala (Southeast Asian political model)MueangWiang Subdistrict (disambiguation)References +External links Official Website Category:1942 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from RendsburgCategory:Christian Democratic Union of Germany politiciansCategory:Members of the Bundestag for Schleswig-HolsteinCategory:Officers Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of GermanyCategory:Members of the Landtag of Schleswig-HolsteinCategory:21st-century German politiciansCategory:Members of the Bundestag 2005–2009 +HonoursSouth-East V AFGChampions: 2011–12Current squadExternal links Rakovski at Bulgarian Club DirectoryCategory:Association football clubs established in 2001Category:Football clubs in BulgariaCategory:2001 establishments in Bulgaria +Aleksandra Nikolaevna Bocharova (, born 6 May 1943) is a retired Russian rower who won six medals in quad sculls at the European championships of 1966–1971. +In her performance with the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana under Menuhin in Switzerland in 1991, she was praised by critics as a "brilliant young violinist from Singapore" for her outstanding performance of Mendelssohn's E-minor Violin Concerto. +Almenrausch and Edelweiss may refer to: Almenrausch and Edelweiss (1957 film), an Austrian-West German comedy film Almenrausch and Edelweiss (1928 film), a German silent drama film +Wang Bingzhang may refer to: Wang Bingzhang (general) (王秉璋; 1914–2005), Chinese general Wang Bingzhang (dissident) (王炳章; born 1947), Chinese dissident +Written work Framing the Modern Constitution: A Checklist 1994 Human Rights in the World's Constitutions 1993 Discrimination Against Women: A Global Survey of the Economic, Educational, Social and Political Status of Women 1990 Constitutions That Made History 1988 Resolving Language Conflicts: A Study of the World's Constitution 1986 Independence Documents of the World 1977 The Arab Oil Weapon 1977 Civil Rights and the Black American: A Documentary History 1976 Desegregation and the law: The meaning and effect of the school segregation cases 1957 The American lawyer: A summary of the "Survey of the legal profession 1954NotesCategory:Academics of the London School of EconomicsCategory:1921 birthsCategory:1994 deathsCategory:American civil rights lawyersCategory:American military personnel of World War IICategory:American military personnel of the Korean WarCategory:Columbia Law School alumniCategory:University of Michigan alumniCategory:20th-century American lawyersCategory:Activists from New York CityCategory:Lawyers from New York CityCategory:New York Law School facultyCategory:People from Cherry Hill, New JerseyCategory:United States Army officersCategory:People from BrooklynCategory:Boys High School (Brooklyn) alumniCategory:The Michigan Daily alumni +Order in mathematics may refer to:Set theory Total order and partial order, a binary relation generalizing the usual ordering of numbers and of words in a dictionary Ordered set Order in Ramsey theory, uniform structures in consequence to critical set cardinalityAlgebraOrder (group theory), the cardinality of a group or period of an element Order of a polynomial (disambiguation)Order of a square matrix, its dimensionOrder (ring theory), an algebraic structureOrdered groupOrdered fieldAnalysisOrder (differential equation) or order of highest derivative, of a differential equationLeading-order termsNURBS order, a number one greater than the degree of the polynomial representation of a non-uniform rational B-splineOrder of convergence, a measurement of convergenceOrder of derivationOrder of an entire functionOrder of a power series, the lowest degree of its termsOrdered list, a sequence or tupleOrders of approximation in Big O notationZ-order (curve), a space-filling curveArithmeticMultiplicative order in modular arithmeticOrder of operationsOrders of magnitude, a class of scale or magnitude of any amountCombinatoricsOrder in the Josephus permutationOrdered selections and partitions of the twelvefold way in combinatoricsOrdered set, a bijection, cyclic order, or permutationUnordered subset or combinationWeak order of permutationsFractalsComplexor, or complex order in fractalsOrder of extension in Lakes of WadaOrder of fractal dimension (Rényi dimensions)Orders of construction in the Pythagoras treeGeometryLong-range aperiodic order, in pinwheel tiling, for instanceGraphsGraph order, the number of nodes in a graphFirst order and second order logic of graphsTopological ordering of directed acyclic graphsDegeneracy ordering of undirected graphsElimination ordering of chordal graphsOrder, the complexity of a structure within a graph: see haven (graph theory) and bramble (graph theory)Logic In logic, model theory and type theory: Zeroth-order logic First-order logic Second-order logic Higher-order logicOrder theory Order (journal), an academic journal on order theoryDense order, a total order wherein between any unequal pair of elements there is always an intervening element in the orderGlossary of order theoryLexicographical order, an ordering method on sequences analogous to alphabetical order on wordsList of order topics, list of order theory topicsOrder theory, study of various binary relations known as ordersOrder topology, a topology of total order for totally ordered setsOrdinal numbers, numbers assigned to sets based on their set-theoretic orderPartial order, often called just "order" in order theory texts, a transitive antisymmetric relationTotal order, a partial order that is also total, in that either the relation or its inverse holds between any unequal elementsStatistics Order statisticsFirst-order statistics, e.g., arithmetic mean, median, quantilesSecond-order statistics, e.g., correlation, power spectrum, varianceHigher-order statistics, e.g., bispectrum, kurtosis, skewnessCategory:Mathematical terminology +In 2008, Draughn saw action in all 13 games as a tailback and recorded 198 carries for 866 yards and three touchdowns. +Our Lady of Victory Catholic ChurchOur Lady of Victory is the third oldest Catholic Church in Hamilton County, Ohio, established in 1842. +See alsoList of United Nations Security Council Resolutions 101 to 200 (1953–1965)ReferencesText of the Resolution at undocs.orgExternal links 0197 0197 0197Category:1964 in ZambiaCategory:October 1964 events +Firebase Gio Linh (also known as FSB A-2, Alpha 2, Camp Hill, The Alamo or simply Gio Linh) is a former U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Army and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) firebase north of Đông Hà in central Vietnam. +Marie Thora Frederikke Pedersen (1875–1954) was a Danish teacher, school inspector and women's rights proponent who was active in the Danish Union of Teachers (Danmarks Lærerforening) and the Danish Women's Society (Dansk Kvindesamfund). +It was later the Arundel Quarry, and finally the Greenspring Quarry. +The book's title reflects the term of address for a female governmental secretary. +Desmosoma elegans is a species of isopods from the Island of Ischia in the Bay of Naples. +Category:Princes of Anhalt-ZerbstCategory:1230s birthsCategory:1298 deathsCategory:House of Ascania +The list of shipwrecks in October 1824 includes some ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost during October 1824. +Scour was a serious issue at this location, and redesign was necessary on that account. +Hassi Ehel Ahmed Bechna is a village and rural commune in Mauritania. +Over the past four years, an estimated 10,000 attempts have been made to complete the three challenges on the GNC Grip Gauntlet stage and only two individuals have ever completed all three in the ‘heavy’ format." +Biography Oksana Cherkasova was born on August 20, 1951 in the city of Norilsk. +He considered himself to be strongly influenced by Friedrich Nietzsche and the Marquis de Sade, as well as, by surrealism's artists such as André Masson and Hans Bellmer, Dada, the Situationist International's artists such as Guy Debord, the Beat Generation, Bernard Malamud, the band Faust, and, lettrism, and, eventually, changed his last name, on Avoth Yeshurun's suggestion, into a phonetic rendering of quatre mortes, French for "four deaths." +"Mr. Damage"Bonus disc"Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again""Round We Go"ReferencesCategory:2005 live albumsCategory:The Angels (Australian band) albums +Glee: The Music, Volume 2 is the second soundtrack album by the cast of the American musical television series Glee, featuring songs from episodes nine to thirteen of the show's first season. +Doug Satcher is a former professional American football player who played linebacker for three seasons for the Boston PatriotsReferencesCategory:1945 birthsCategory:American football linebackersCategory:Boston Patriots playersCategory:Southern Miss Golden Eagles football playersCategory:Living peopleCategory:American Football League players +References Category:1843 shipsCategory:Ships of the Austro-Hungarian NavyCategory:Maritime incidents in July 1849Category:Paddle steamersCategory:Steamships of Austria-Hungary +She lodged a police complaint following the incident, though following her press statement, Munivel's wife came out and criticised the actress for damaging her relationship with her husband. +redirect Dragon_(Dungeons_%26_Dragons)#Gem_dragonsCategory:Dungeons & Dragons element redirects to lists +In a few days a temporary (permanent/paved) crossover where constructed, allowing the rerouting of northbound traffic to share the southbound bridge while repairs where completed. +It lies approximately north-west of Wola Krzysztoporska, west of Piotrków Trybunalski, and south of the regional capital Łódź. +According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 113 inhabitants. +The building was constructed by Pierce and Morgan of Indianapolis during 1893 and 1894 at a cost of $170,988. +Beşiktaş JK won the league for the first time. +He gave up work on phage after this paper and returned to cancer research before moving to Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake from 1943, working with rocket-program employees as the onsite representative of Caltech. +He represented Ratnagiri-Sindhudurg constituency of Maharashtra and was a member of the Indian National Congress (INC) political party. +The album was certified Platinum in the United Kingdom after selling 300,000 copies. +The town was laid out in the early 1870s. +3" (with Beenie Man and Dennis Brown)"Gun Down" (Jazzwad/Price/Riley/Williams)"Mi Nature" (Dunbar/Price/Shakespeare/Wiliams)"Virgin Island" (Jazzwad/Price/Yebuah)"Who Send Dem" (Jazzwad/Price/Tee Tee Mouse/Yebuah)"Seek God [Remix]" (with Junior Reid)"Maniac" (with Richie Stephens)"Suicide or Murder" (with Jeru the Damaja)"Benz & Bimma" (Dunbar/Price/Shakespeare/Williams)"My Experience" (Jazzwad/Price/Yebuah)PersonnelDennis Brown - PerformerBarrington Levy - PerformerBobby Konders - Arranger, ProducerJunior Reid - PerformerRichie Stephens - ProducerBeenie Man - PerformerThe Fugees - PerformerBackra - Engineer, MixingBusta Rhymes - PerformerAnthony Cameron - Arranger, ProducerDavid Cole - EngineerComputer PaulThe Firehouse CrewSly Dunbar - Arranger, ProducerDean FraserTroy Hightower - EngineerKing Jammys - Arranger, ProducerAnthony Malvo - Arranger, Producer, PerformerFatta Marshall - Engineer, MixingRZA - Arranger, Producer, Engineer, Executive ProducerWarren Riker - Engineer, MixingDavid Sanguinetti - Project CoordinatorErick Sermon - Arranger, ProducerRobbie Shakespeare - Arranger, ProducerRichie Stephens - PerformerLloyd "Gitsy" WillisJohnny Wonder - Executive Producer, Compilation, Editing, Project CoordinatorCollin "Bulbie" York - Producer, Engineer, MixingRaekwon - Performer, Executive ProducerKirk - Engineer, MixingBanton - Engineer, MixingFourth Disciple - EngineerBlahzay Blahzay - Arranger, ProducerBounty Killer - Arranger, Producer, EngineerRed Rose - PerformerWyclef Jean - Arranger, Producer, Engineer, MixingJoel Chin - Compilation, EditingChris Scott - MasteringLeroy Champaign - Art Direction, DesignTim Carter - PhotographyPaul Shields - MasteringJames Goring - Project CoordinatorJazzwadAden "Noble" Jones - Arranger, ProducerFat Man - Engineer, MixingReferencesCategory:Bounty Killer albumsCategory:VP Records albumsCategory:1996 albums +His period of Fatemi Dawat was from 1054 -1056 AH (1646-1648 AD). +As of 2016, 253 members represent constituencies, while 47 were elected from PR lists. +The runic text leaves off a conjunction ok ("and") between two of the names of the sponsors, which has been added in the transcription into Old Norse below. +Mixed martial arts record|-| Loss| align=center| 23–10–1| Rafael Carvalho| Decision (unanimous)| Smash Fight 2| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Curitiba, Parana, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 23–9–1| Ricardo Scrippe de Oliveira| Submission (heel hook)| Watch Out Combat Show 21| | align=center| 1| align=center| 3:09| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil| |-| Loss| align=center| 22–9–1| Patrick Côté| KO (punches)| Amazon Forest Combat 2| | align=center| 1| align=center| 2:44| Manaus, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 22–8–1| Henrique Oliveira| Decision (unanimous)| MMAAD: MMA Against Dengue| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 21–8–1| Andres Osorio| Submission (guillotine choke)| X-Combat Ultra MMA: International Grand Prix| | align=center| 2| align=center| 1:02| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 20–8–1| Matias Lemon| TKO (punches)| Fatality Arena: 2nd Edition| | align=center| 2| align=center| 1:33| Niterói, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 19–8–1| Rick Reeves| Decision (split)| Powerhouse World Promotions: War on the Mainland| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Irvine, California, United States| |-| Loss| align=center| 18–8–1| Jordan Smith| Decision (unanimous)| Washington Combat: Battle of the Legends| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Washington, D.C., District of Columbia| |-| Win| align=center| 18–7–1| Rico Washington Sr.| Decision (unanimous)| Bitetti Combat MMA 5| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Barueri, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 17–7–1| Matias Lemon| TKO (punches)| X-Combat Ultra MMA| | align=center| 1| align=center| 2:50| Espirito Santo, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 16–7–1| Jorge Bezerra| Decision (unanimous)| World Fighting Combat| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Niterói, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 15–7–1| Pedro Paulo| TKO (corner stoppage)| Shooto: Brazil 10| | align=center| 2| align=center| 5:00| Rio de Janeiro, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 14–7–1| Alfonso Garate| Submission (heel hook)| TG: The Glory| | align=center| 2| align=center| 3:45| Amazonas, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 13–7–1| John Cronk| Decision (unanimous)| PCF 1: HellRazor| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Denver, Colorado, United States| |-| Loss| align=center| 12–7–1| Jorge Patino| Decision (split)| Predador FC 6: Octagon| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| São Paulo, Brazil| |-| Loss| align=center| 12–6–1| Demian Maia| Decision (unanimous)| Super Challenge 1| | align=center| 2| align=center| 5:00| São Paulo, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 12–5–1| Leonardo Lucio Nascimento| Decision (unanimous)| Super Challenge 1| | align=center| 2| align=center| 5:00| São Paulo, Brazil| |-| Win| align=center| 11–5–1| Marcelo Brito| Decision (split)| Storm Samurai 11| | align=center| 3| align=center| 5:00| Curitiba, Brazil| |-| Loss| align=center| 10-5-1| Brad Blackburn| Decision (split)| IFL: Legends Championship 2006| | align=center| 3| align=center| 4:00| Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States| |-| Loss| align=center| 10–4–1| Mike Pyle| TKO (punches)| GFC: Team Gracie vs. +In the later 1930s, in response to the economic strictures of the Great Depression, he also wrote detective and crime stories. +ReferencesCategory:Unincorporated communities in CaliforniaCategory:Unincorporated communities in Colusa County, California +The treaty was handled for the U.S. by former Governor of Georgia David Brydie Mitchell who was serving as President James Monroe's agent of Indian affairs for the Creek nation. +The protein encoded by this gene is a member of the tripartite motif (TRIM) family. +ReferencesCategory:1761 birthsCategory:1847 deathsCategory:People from GersCategory:19th-century French politicians +Wescott died on February 16, 1879. +An international television and print ad campaign directed users to a website where various "myths" about the Mac platform were "dispelled". +Maurice Izier (Crest, 18 March 1944) was a French professional road bicycle racer. +Qualification RoundRound of 16Quarter-FinalsSemifinalsFinalReferencesChampions CupEuropeanEuropeanCategory:EuroLeague Women seasons +ResultsMenSourcesReferencesCategory:Nations at the UCI Track Cycling World ChampionshipsCategory:Argentina at cycling events +It occurs in a single location in Atlántida Department, Honduras near Hacienda Agua Caliente, which is about 2 km southwest of Jutiapa. +Rajani may refer to:Rajani (name), people named RajaniRajani (actress) (born 1965), Indian film actressRajani (TV series), a 1980s Indian TV seriesRajani (film), a 2009 Indian Kannada romantic comedy Rajani, an 1877 novel by Bankimchandra ChattopadhyaySee alsoRajini (disambiguation) +Time-slip stories were popularized at the end of the 19th century by Mark Twain's historical novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, which had considerable influence on later writers. +The October 2008 completion of the center was noted as being the main cause of increase in traffic on Seoul Subway Line 2 during the first half of 2009. +Ngazi Sport de Mirontsi is a football club from the Comoros based in Mirontsi. +CastMain Rupert Penry-Jones as Adam Carter Hermione Norris as Ros Myers Raza Jaffrey as Zafar Younis Miranda Raison as Jo Portman Hugh Simon as Malcolm Wynn-Jones Rory MacGregor as Colin Wells (episode 1)with Nicola Walker as Ruth Evershed (episode 1–5)and Peter Firth as Harry PearceGuests Gugu Mbatha-Raw as JennyJames Dicker as Wes Carter Anna Chancellor as Juliet Shaw Robert Glenister as Nicholas Blake (episodes 1 & 2) Lindsay Duncan as Angela Wells Ofo Uhiara as Michael Johnson Tim McInnerny as Oliver Mace Phyllis Logan as Diana JewellEpisodesNotesReferencesExternal links Category:2006 British television seasonsCategory:Spooks +Life and careerCissé was born in Dori, located in Séno Province, and he studied in Ouagadougou, then in the Soviet Union at the National Economic Institute of Kiev. +References Bath, Richard (ed.) +ReferencesCategory:Argentine science fiction novelsCategory:1997 novelsCategory:Spanish-language novels +WorksBarbosa composed a number of works, many with a strong Brazilian theme. +It was described by Stephan von Breuning in 1949. +Wahoon is a rural locality in the North Burnett Region, Queensland, Australia. +In 2008 through 2010 he had residencies at the Shanghai, Beijing and Tianjin Central Conservatories in China. +ScheduleMedalistsRecordsResultsNew recordsReferencesResultsWomen's 69World +Citations and notesExternal links Retinette 022 through Internet ArchiveRetinette IB from Camerapedia through Internet ArchiveRetinette 1BKodak Retinette 1A from Camerapedia through Internet ArchiveKodak Classics by Mischa KoningCategory:Kodak camerasCategory:135 film cameras +ReferencesExternal links Category:1997 video gamesCategory:Action video gamesCategory:Naval video gamesCategory:PlayStation (console) gamesCategory:Psygnosis gamesCategory:Video games about piratesCategory:Video games developed in the United KingdomCategory:Windows games +External linksThe genus Ptilophora (Lepidoptera, Notodontidae) in China, with description of a new speciesCategory:Notodontidae +Taki ad-Din Tmogveli () was a 13th century Georgian noble and one of the commanders of Tamar's army. +Energy is an unincorporated community in Scotland County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. +Now remembering that , we arrive at|}{| class="toccolours collapsible collapsed" width="60%" style="text-align:left"!Equivalent Spring Constant (Parallel)|-|Both springs are touching the block in this case, and whatever distance spring 1 is compressed has to be the same amount spring 2 is compressed. +Pohořelice may refer to: Pohořelice (Brno-Country District) Pohořelice (Zlín District) +The Sellick maneuver was considered the standard of care during rapid sequence induction for many years. +Natto may refer to; Nattō (), a Japanese food made from fermented soybeans Bacillus natto (B. natto), a gram-positive bacteria Natto Wada (1920-1983), Japanese screenwriter Mimi Natto (mangaka), Japanese author published in Monthly Magazine Z Kapi Natto MBE, a Papua New Guinea person honoured at the 2009 Birthday Honours John Kappi Natto, president of the Papua New Guinea Football Association NUT (studio) () Japanese animation studioSee also NATO (disambiguation) Natoo (surname) North American Alternative Trade Organization (NAATO), former name of the Fair Trade Federation +Track listing All compositions by Dorothy Ashby except as indicated "Lonely Melody" (Ollie McLaughlin) - 3:45 "Secret Love" (Sammy Fain, Paul Francis Webster) - 3:32 "Gloomy Sunday" (Rezső Seress, László Jávor, Sam M. Lewis) - 2:34 "Satin Doll" (Duke Ellington) - 5:08 "John R." - 3:15 "Li'l Darlin'" (Neal Hefti) - 4:29 "Booze" - 2:15 "Django" (John Lewis) - 4:30 "You Stepped Out of a Dream" (Nacio Herb Brown, Gus Kahn) - 3:25 "Stranger in Paradise" (Robert Wright, George Forrest) - 3:14Personnel Dorothy Ashby - harpHerman Wright - bassJohn Tooley - drumsReferencesExternal linksA Dorothy Ashby DiscographyCategory:Dorothy Ashby albumsCategory:1962 albumsCategory:Argo Records albums +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Dera Bugti DistrictCategory:Union councils of Balochistan, Pakistan +She was nominated as the ambassador of Maharashtra tourism and culture in Russia by Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on 11 July. +Currier was also noted as a major contributor of crossword puzzles, having published over 1000 large-format puzzles through the Associated Press syndicate. +External links Lockheed Constellation Survivors - A website that explains information and whereabouts of surviving Constellations of all variants, including the L-749 Constellation. +BiographyHe learned music at a young age from his father, who encouraged him to listen to classical Arabic music including Egyptians Sayed Darwich, Mohammed Abdel Wahab, Riadh Sombati, and Zakaria Ahmed. +The ship was repaired in 1996. +The preliminary status of the species is Near Threatened. +Zamenhof said the latter derives from kronprincedzino (crown princess), borrowed from the German Kronprinzessin, and then internally analyzed as kron- (crown) princ- (prince) edzino (wife). +youth entrepreneurship, access to capital, etc.) +The tail is usually truncate but may be slightly emarginate. +He belonged to the Hamzite Sharifs, a division of the dynasty of the Rassids. +In early 2015, Reebok released a shoe designed, in part, by Froning. +One such place, in Gloucestershire, is derived from two Old English elements: the first, cu, meaning "cow"; the second element, leah, meaning "woodland clearing". +Terengganu was promoted from Liga Perdana 2 to a now reduced total number of teams competing in the league from 12 to only ten teams. +The 1988–89 Duleep Trophy was the 28th season of the Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament contested by five zonal teams of India: Central Zone, East Zone, North Zone, South Zone and West Zone. +Criticism and effectsNot all the leaders of the Church were in favor of a Crusade. +A glacier is a mass of ice with sufficient thickness to flow away from the source area in lobes, tongues or masses. +He is most known for his detailed register of properties and incomes of the archdiocese, commonly known as Aslak Bolt's cadastre (Aslak Bolts jordebok) from 1432 to 1433. +Trov partners with insurance carriers based on geographic region to offer coverage for the items protected through the app. +The National Council for Economics and Labour (in italian, Consiglio nazionale dell'economia e del lavoro or CNEL) is a constitutional organ provided for by Article 99 of Constitution of Italy and established in 1957. +Personal lifeDel Valle is engaged to her FlordeLiza co-star Boom Labrusca. +CultureThe settlement in the region (formerly known as Tuat) is quite ancient and the area provides for several different cultures and includes several historic monuments. +The two winners proceed to the championship finals. +The emphasis on the large destroyers and the long time of construction led to a deficit of numbers in destroyer strength in the French Navy. +Subsequently, he received a MSc in Finance and Accounting from the London School of Economics and Political Science. +Yala sub county is one of the administrative units of Siaya County, western Kenya. +ChampionshipsEditionsMedal Table As of 2019:See also World Junior Table Tennis Championships Asian Table Tennis Championships Asian Cup List of table tennis playersReferencesExternal linksEvents-Asian Junior and Cadet ChampionshipsAsian Junior Championships Results (PDF)ITTF StatisticsITTF Museum table tennisCategory:Table tennis competitionsCategory:Recurring sporting events established in 1983Category:Annual sporting events +In 2009, she provided the voice of Jenna in Leisure Suit Larry: Box Office Bust. +D. giganteus may refer to: Dinornis giganteus, the south island giant moa, an extinct bird species found in New Zealand Dyoplosaurus giganteus, a synonym for Tarchia giganteus, an ankylosaurid dinosaur species from the late Cretaceous of Mongolia +In 2015, Ugandan regulators licensed an additional credit bureau, Metropol Credit Reference Bureau Limited. +Machiavelli on Modern Leadership: Why Machiavelli's Iron Rules Are As Timely and Important Today as Five Centuries Ago, New York: Truman Talley Books/St. +Entrepreneurial ventures In 2008, Kalki founded the Sahodari Foundation, an organization that advocates for transgender people in India. +Health careLoring Hospital in Sac City, Iowa, is a 25-bed Critical Access Hospital serving Sac County and neighboring counties. +Post playing careerToday, Peter speaks openly of his sobriety, past struggles, and those who have helped him along the way. +Battle of Stamford may refer to: Battle of Stamford (894) Battle of Stamford (918) +It is found in North America. +The peak is visible from US Route 212, the Beartooth Highway just east of the Northeast Entrance Station to Yellowstone National Park. +Boston was the literary center of the United States at the time, and the impression Riley made on the city's literary community finally encouraged prestigious periodicals to publish his work. +In 1991, as the League of Communists of Montenegro changed its name to Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro after the first multi-party elections, the adjective "Socialist" was deleted from the republic's title (ratified by the 1992 Constitution). +Luz Bulnes Aldunate (died 24 September 2019) was a Chilean lawyer who was a member of the Constitutional Court. +ReferencesCategory:1910 birthsCategory:1981 deathsCategory:Labour Party (Norway) politiciansCategory:Deputy members of the Storting +In 2011 he premiered Redmann's Migrant for bassoon and string quartet in Munich. +New York case law indicates that sandbagging is not allowed in cases where the information about the falsehood of the representation or warranty came directly from the seller. +In his book, Medieval Siege, Jim Bradbury extensively quotes from Tarsusi concerning mangonels of various types, including Arab, Persian and Turkish, describing what could be trebuchets, but not quoted as above. +John Harvey Astell (20 March 1806 – 17 January 1887) was a British Conservative politician. +He has over 20 years of experience as a martial artist and is a world known sparring athlete who has represented Canada, Serbia and Yugoslavia on an international and world level. +Adelso Peña (born 10 November 1953) is a Cuban former sports shooter. +Kelly’s third novel, Hello, Universe — the story of a missing middle-school boy and the group of friends who set out to rescue him — received the 2018 Newbery Medal, among other honors. +Pickering researched the novel in Paraguay when he was sent to look for the Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele by Sir James Goldsmith’s NOW! +Smyrna-Leipsic Road splits northwest from DE 9 north of Leipsic and heads toward Smyrna. +This Saga is a continuation of Feist's preceding works and so far suggests an upcoming, fourth and fifth (final) riftwar. +Some research into CHANS emulates the more traditional research programs that tended to separate the social from the ecological sciences. +ReferencesExternal linksBermuda Volleyball FederationCategory:National women's volleyball teamsVolleyballCategory:Volleyball in BermudaCategory:Women's sport in Bermuda +East Scotia Ridge (nomen nudum) is an as yet undescribed species of small, deep-sea sea snail, a hydrothermal vent limpet, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Lepetodrilidae. +It has similar effects to benzodiazepine drugs, but is structurally distinct and so is classed as a nonbenzodiazepine anxiolytic. +After serving in the United States Navy, he enrolled in law school at the University of Minnesota. +GeneraAcanthella Schmidt, 1862Dictyonella Schmidt, 1868Liosina Thiele, 1899Lipastrotethya de Laubenfels, 1954Phakettia de Laubenfels, 1936Rhaphoxya Hallmann, 1917Scopalina Schmidt, 1862Stylissa Hallmann, 1914Svenzea Alvarez, van Soest & Rützler, 2002Tethyspira Topsent, 1890ReferencesCategory:Halichondrida +He made three further appearances in the 2016–17 season, prior to being loaned out for the following campaign to Primera B Nacional team Juventud Unida. +Notable people with the surname include:Eva Vermandel (born 1974), Belgian photographerRené Vermandel (1893–1958), Belgian cyclist +He supported Baldwin II's daughter, Alice, against her brother-in-law, Fulk of Jerusalem, in 1132, but Fulk defeated her allies. +In 1991 she starred in the series Animal Park. +The first twenty verses are filled with the wonders of the worldly creation (the earth, plants, the peace of night, the mountains and rain). +Recent staff appraisal records were refused as well. +The event, an annual competition, was the fourth since its conception. +DQ denotes disqualification. +It was incorporated into the Guayas Province by the decree issued by President Rafael Correa in 2017. +Regarding religious pluralism, Pius VIII condemned the "foul contrivance of the sophists of this age" that would place Catholicism on par with any other religion. +Chrysopsyche pauliani is a moth of the family Lasiocampidae first described by Pierre Viette in 1962. +orbiculata Chondrodonta sp. +Hassen also competed in the 1964 Summer Olympics as a featherweight. +All of the artists of this period at Bacone were taught the Bacone style, a Flatstyle painting style, which was often showcased at the Philbrook Museum of Art's Indian Annual, a competitive juried art show. +Additionally, Justice Stevens criticized the potential consequences of the majority's opinion, writing that the majority "assumes, without acknowledging, that a police officer may now fire his weapon at an innocent citizen and not implicate the Fourth Amendment—as long as he misses his target." +Fundo Tehuén Airport (formerly Frutillar West Airport), is an airstrip northwest of Frutillar, a town in the Los Lagos Region of Chile. +Joyce Kazmierski (born August 14, 1945) is an American professional golfer. +The table below considers candidates who can be demonstrated to have served for 30 years or longer unless another distinguishing factor warrants inclusion. +From May 1, 1963 to July 31, 1963, the regiment was part of the 11th Light Intervention Division 11e DLI. +He died in Goderich, Ontario in 1875. +He escaped to Gibraltar in 1814 with three of them, but was extradited to Spain by the British authorities. +Ellychnia corrusca, or winter firefly, is a species of firefly in the genus Ellychnia. +Urt or URT may refer to: Urt, a village in France Gare d'Urt, a railway station in Urt Urt, Iran, a village in Iran Surat Thani Airport, in the Phunphin, Surat Thani, Thailand União Recreativa dos Trabalhadores, a Brazilian football (soccer) club Unión de Rugby de Tucumán, a rugby governing organisation in Tucumán province, Argentina Union Refrigerator Transit Line, an American refrigerated rail car line Urat language of Papua New Guinea, ISO 639-3 code The UnReal Times, Indian satire portal +ReferencesExternal links Category:Distance education institutions based in the United KingdomCategory:For-profit universities and colleges in EuropeCategory:Private universities in the United KingdomCategory:Educational institutions established in 1992Category:1992 establishments in the United KingdomCategory:Universities in Greater ManchesterCategory:Apollo GroupCategory:Universities in London +She is also the aunt of the young Malay voice dubbing actor, Arfalie Fikrie Razali. +Inscriptions de l'époque classique, Paris, Armand Colin,2009: La bataille de Marathon, Paris, Éditions Larousse,2014: De la renonciation comme acte politique. +Gymnommopsis gagtea is a species of tachinid flies in the genus Gymnommopsis of the family Tachinidae. +ReferencesCategory:Municipalities in São Paulo (state) +Håvard or Havard may refer to:Given name:Håvard Bøkko (born 1987), Norwegian speedskaterHåvard Bjerkeli (born 1977), Norwegian cross country skierHåvard Flo (born 1970), football player from NorwayHåvard Gimse (born 1966), Norwegian classical pianist from KongsvingerHåvard Halvorsen (born 1973), Norwegian football defenderHåvard Holm (1943–2017), Norwegian civil servantHåvard Homstvedt (born 1976), Norwegian painterHåvard Jørgensen, songwriter, guitarist and vocalistHåvard Kjærstad (born 1947), Norwegian businesspersonHåvard Klemetsen (born 1979), Norwegian Nordic combined skierHåvard Lie (born 1975), retired Norwegian ski jumperHåvard Lothe (born 1982), Norwegian musicianHåvard Nordtveit (born 1990), Norwegian footballerHåvard Rem (born 1959), Norwegian authorHåvard Sakariassen (born 1976), Norwegian football strikerHåvard Solbakken (born 1973), Norwegian cross country skierHåvard Storbæk (born 1986), Norwegian football midfielderHåvard Tvedten (born 1978), Norwegian handball playerHåvard Tveite (born 1962), Norwegian orienteering competitorHåvard Vad Petersson (born 1984), Norwegian curlerSurname:Alexandre Havard, author of Virtuous Leadership — An Agenda for Personal ExcellenceDai Havard (born 1950), British Labour Party politician and Member of ParliamentFloyd Havard (born 1965), British super-featherweight boxing championKenny Havard (born 1971), member of the Louisiana House of RepresentativesMichel Havard (born 1967), member of the National Assembly of FrancePeter Havard-Williams (1922–1995), Welsh librarian and library educatorRené Havard (1923–1987), French film actorRobert Havard (1901–1985), the physician of C.S. +He also served as vice-chairman of the Wintario board. +ReferencesCategory:Communes in Iași County +Mohammed Faraj S. al-Yami (; born 14 August 1997), also known as Mohammed al-Rubaie al-Yami (), is a Saudi Arabian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Al-Ahli . +In 2012, the first Hilton Garden Inn outside of North America was opened in Netherlands—the Hilton Garden Inn Leiden. +During the revival of the event in the decades following World War II, this rule was overturned and currently women take part normally in the plays. +He fell off a scaffold on June 22, 1923 - while building All Souls Church - and died from his injuries. +If Only may refer to:If Only (film), a 2004 film directed by Gil JungerIf Only (TV series), an Armenian TV seriesIf Only (book), Geri Halliwell's 1999 autobiography"If Only" (Dove Cameron song), 2015"If Only" (KT Tunstall song), 2008"If Only" (Hanson song), 2000"If Only", song from Away from the World by Dave Matthews Band"If Only", song from Popstar: A Dream Come True by Sarah Geronimo"If Only", song from Whistle Down the Wind by Andrew Lloyd Webber"If Only", song from Kiss Me Once by Kylie Minogue"If Only", song from Feeling the Space by Yoko Ono"If Only", song from Gouldian Finch Vol. +She left school at 16 to study at the Academy of Music and Theatre in Zurich and has gone on to a career celebrated for her performance as Puck in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, among many other roles, primarily at the Burgtheater in Vienna. +It was love at first sight. +It is found in North America. +ReferencesCategory:1887 birthsCategory:1968 deathsCategory:People from Chrudim DistrictCategory:American male artistic gymnastsCategory:Olympic gymnasts of the United StatesCategory:Gymnasts at the 1924 Summer OlympicsCategory:Czech emigrants to the United States +Saharsa (Vidhan Sabha constituency) () is an assembly constituency in Saharsa district in the Indian state of Bihar. +Further readingExternal links Category:1976 non-fiction booksCategory:American history booksCategory:History books about UkraineCategory:Books about anarchismCategory:Books about military personnelCategory:Biographies (books)Category:University of Washington Press booksCategory:Makhnovism +Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical dry forests. +The painting is a direct jab at the D.A.R., scrutinizing what Wood interpreted as their unfounded elitism. +The club currently plays in Division 3 Mellersta Norrland which is the fifth tier of Swedish football. +DescriptionThe length of the shell attains 10 mm. +Francisco Jiménez is the name of:Francisco Jiménez (equestrian) (1893-1973), Spanish Olympic equestrianFrancisco Jiménez (Tecamachalco Governor), colonial Nahua noble from TecamachalcoFrancisco Jiménez (writer), Mexican American writer, and professor at Santa Clara UniversityFrancisco Jiménez de Cisneros (1436–1517)Xisco (footballer, born 1986), full name, Francisco Jiménez TejadaÉdgar Francisco Jiménez (born 1951), Colombian artistFrancisco Jiménez Merino (born 1959), Mexican IRP politicianFrancisco Herrera Jiménez (born 1965), Mexican IRP politicianFrancisco Manuel Vélez JiménezFrancisco Nicasio Jiménez, Cuban orchestra conductor and dance band directorFrancisco Orozco y Jiménez (1864–1936), Mexican Roman Catholic archbishopSee alsoJiménez (disambiguation) +She has a one-sided love for him since he was her savior. +Most brasilodontid remains are known from the Middle and Late Triassic of Brazil, having been found in the municipalities of Candelária and Faxinal do Soturno. +Bruszer's body was not identified for 37 years (until August 2015) due to an inaccurate physical description generated by the original investigators and the great distance she was found from where she had resided prior to her disappearance. +Her father committed suicide in 2002; she spoke about his death publicly with Anderson Cooper detailing her struggles and to promote suicide awareness. +1250-?) +Shalini Bharat is Director of Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai. +is a railway station on the Suigun Line in Daigo, Kuji District, Ibaraki Prefecture, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). +Disc 1, entitled [e]motion, contains tracks dealing with personal themes and is relatively less mainstream friendly compared to the second disc. +Johnson returned to the Blue for the 2016–17 season, and on February 6, 2017, he was named in the Western Conference All-Star team for the 2017 NBA D-League All-Star Game. +The iris of the optical seeker head is protected by a cap which is ejected by a mechanical timer upon firing. +This is a list of football-related statues. +The year 1959 in art involved some significant events and new works. +However the 1961 elimination of Lumumba saw the PSA go into opposition and the rebellion that broke out in Kwilu during the Congo Crisis was the work of a wing of the PSA under the Maoist Pierre Mulele. +She is also the winner of the 2008 reality TV show "Matrix" season 2. +In patients with hypothyroidism, there will be more free binding sites on TBG (due to the decreased amount of circulating T3 / T4) and as such the THBR will be decreased. +Lilak may refer to:Újpest FC Lilak, Dastestan, Bushehr Province, IranLilak, Tangestan, Bushehr Province, IranSee alsoLilac +Het vind () is the debut studio album by Swedish singer-songwriter Marie Fredriksson, originally released on LP and Cassette formats on 20 September 1984 by EMI Sweden. +In 1995 Buisson played in the longest ever women's singles match at the French Open defeating Noëlle van Lottum in a 4h 7m match. +The Arthur Honegger operetta Les aventures du roi Pausole premiered at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens in Paris. +Arcozelo may refer to the following places in Portugal:Arcozelo (Barcelos), a parish in the municipality of BarcelosArcozelo (Gouveia), a parish in the municipality of Gouveia Arcozelo (Ponte de Lima), a parish in the municipality of Ponte de LimaArcozelo (Vila Nova de Gaia), a parish in the municipality of Vila Nova de Gaia Arcozelo (Vila Verde), a parish in Vila Verde MunicipalitySee alsoArcozelos, a parish in the municipality of Moimenta da Beira +See alsoList of rivers of Schleswig-HolsteinCategory:Rivers of Schleswig-HolsteinCategory:Rivers of Germany +He is also a former Canadian Football League quarterback; he was a backup quarterback for the Toronto Argonauts, the Calgary Stampeders, and the Ottawa Renegades. +This is managed by the grazings committee and is owned by the Scottish Department of Agriculture. +Derek Cecil (born January 5, 1973) is an American actor. +The attack coincided with Operation Steinbock, a bombing and intruder offensive against Greater London and in response to the British offensive against German industrial cities, but the operation was aimed at the British capital rather than British bomber bases. +Mind Magic is the second album by vocalist David Oliver. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Ankara ProvinceCategory:PolatlıCategory:Villages in Turkey +References Category:Populated places in Qeshm County +References Category:Cities and towns in Campania +Żakle is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Suchowola, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. +Saint-Caprais-de-Blaye is a former commune in the Gironde department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France. +Sames may refer to:In people: Sames of Sophene, the founder of the Kingdom of Sophene and the city of Samosata Sames II Theosebes Dikaios, a man of Armenian descent who lived in the 2nd century BC; the second king of Commagene Albert Morris Sames, a United States federal judge Ştefan Sameş, a former Romanian professional football playerIn places: Sames (Amieva), a parish, and the capital of the municipality of Amieva, in the principality of Asturias, Spain Sames, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, a village and commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département of southwestern France +At the 2006 census, its population was 186, in 36 families. +They concluded it to be "solid, if uninspiring, entertainment." +The club competes in the Nigerian Premier League. +Hattan met, and typically defeated, a string of male opponents which brought her to fame and popularity. +Notable people include:Charles Vanderspar, English rugby union internationalGeorge Vanderspar (1858-1940), English cricketerWill Vanderspar (born 1991), English cricketer +Arthur Pearson may refer to: Arthur Pearson (British politician) (1897–1980), British Labour Party Member of Parliament for Pontypridd, 1938–1970 Sir Arthur Pearson, 1st Baronet (1866–1921), British newspaper magnate and publisher Arthur Maurice Pearson (1890–1976), Canadian Senator from Saskatchewan Arthur Pearson (footballer) (1896–1963), Australian footballer Arthur Anselm Pearson (1874–1954), English mycologist Arthur MacDonald Pearson (born 1936), political figure in the Yukon, Canada +Anglo-Chinese School is a family of Methodist schools in Singapore, including: Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) Anglo-Chinese School (Junior) Anglo-Chinese School (Independent) Anglo-Chinese School (Barker Road) Anglo-Chinese School (International) Singapore Anglo-Chinese Junior CollegeACS Jakarta in IndonesiaAnglo-Chinese School may also refer to: Anglo-Chinese Schools, Malaysia, several Methodist schools not affiliated with the Singapore schools, including: Anglo-Chinese School (Melaka) in Malacca Anglo Chinese School, Kampar in Kampar, Perak Anglo Chinese School, Sitiawan in Sitiawan, Manjung, Perak Anglo Chinese School, Klang in Klang, Selangor Anglo-Chinese School (1899 Philippine school) now Tiong Se Academy, in ManilaSee also Ying Wa College or Anglo-Chinese College, founded in Malacca, Malaysia, now in Kowloon, Hong Kong +It is found only in Ecuador. +The cells cause pain and can lead to infertility. +Results continued to be poor and after a 3–0 defeat away at West Bromwich Albion on 13 March, Stoke went and lost the next six matches. +in 1971 with a diploma in Aircraft Maintenance Technology. +Bukovica Mala (Cyrillic: Мала Буковица) is a village in the municipality of Doboj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. +In January 2008 the Tennessee Department of Education proposed that it be demolished, and estimated the cost of demolition at $3.6 million, while renovation would cost $3.7 million. +Boucher's next script would cover Travis' court-martial and Prior would write a script centred on a Ugandan-style society. +This novel was first published on August 1, 2006, by Medallion Press. +Once the humans began performing these rituals, the kamuy were appeased, and the famine ceased. +Till We Meet Again is an adventure drama film directed by Thai filmmaker Bank Tangjaitrong and starring Johan Matton, Linnea Larsdotter, Emrhys Cooper, and Vithaya Pansringarm. +References Category:Populated places in Chaldoran County +ReferencesazumaiCategory:Beetles described in 1968 +The Anti-Corruption Report was established in June 2011, but discontinued in February 2017, having only ever published one report in 2014. +Quercus rapurahuensis, the Talamanca oak, is a tropical species of oak in the red oak group (Quercus section Lobatae). +PlotJunji Ito's Cat Diary: Yon & Mu is an autobiographical manga that draws on manga artist Junji Ito's personal experience with cats. +ReferencesCategory:Modern obsolete currenciesCategory:Currencies of EuropeCategory:1898 establishments in LiechtensteinCategory:1921 disestablishments in Europe +Category:Villages in Rapla CountyCategory:Kreis Wiek +See alsoList of anti-war songsReferencesExternal links Le Déserteur in 45 languages, with the complete history of the song in French, Italian and English, from website Chansons Contre la Guerre (CCG/AWS)"Le Deserteur (Monsieur le President)" performed by Esther & Abi OfarimCategory:1954 songsCategory:Anti-war songsCategory:French songsCategory:Works by Boris VianCategory:Peter, Paul and Mary songs +After Huang captured Tong Pass and approached Chang'an, Emperor Xizong fled toward Xichuan Circuit (西川, headquartered in modern Chengdu, Sichuan), where Tian's brother Chen Jingxuan was military governor. +At an altitude of , it has heavily wooded, lush green surroundings with snow-covered mountains (Chaukhamba is one of them) in the backdrop. +In France EuroCargoRail (ECR) and Veolia Cargo France (since 2009 Europorte) both operate over 10 units, and COLAS Rail 2 units. +She eventually returned to Ivy Town without him and established the firm of Grabemann, Loring and Ross. +The show premiered its fifth season in May 2019 and has yet to produce a sixth season. +He continues active lifestyle and in 2000s he briefly resumed his playing career twice, coming as substitute player in cup game for MTZ-RIPO Minsk in 2007 and 2008 and again in a league game for Dinamo Brest in 2010, setting a record for oldest player in both competitions. +ReferencesExternal links Stefan Czerpak charity home page for the British Heart FoundationCategory:English rugby union coachesCategory:1951 birthsCategory:1998 deathsCategory:Place of birth missing +On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Douaumont-Vaux. +He wrote a book called Zi Guan (), which criticized the Kangxi Dictionary and printed the emperor's name without leaving out a stroke as required by Chinese naming taboo. +Abd Rabbo ( is a male Arabic given name and surname. +The winning Jeff Stoughton rink represented Manitoba at the 2013 Tim Hortons Brier in Edmonton, Alberta. +Biography Song Ge was born and raised in Tianjin, China. +Pollimyrus is a genus of elephantfishes native to Africa. +Political Whick-Whack Mbugua has been dealing with ongoing doctor strikes, a youth spark plan, opening Nakuru's 1st Afro-Asia Expo at WestSide Mall and more of other contributions to his county government. +The Bohol Provincial Board is the Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial legislature) of the Philippine province of Bohol. +Berchan may refer to: Briceni, city in Moldova Berchán, legendary Irish saint +He was the party's nominee for Cook County Circuit Clerk, and ran for the Republican nomination for Illinois's 11th congressional district in 1992 and in 1994. +Krajewski ( ; feminine: Krajewska; plural: Krajewscy) is a Polish-language surname. +ReferencesSee also2008 Italian general election2013 Italian general electionList of mayors of PisaExternal links Category:1953 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Mayors of PisaCategory:Article One (political party) politiciansCategory:Democratic Party (Italy) politiciansCategory:Democrats of the Left politiciansCategory:Democratic Party of the Left politiciansCategory:Italian Communist Party politicians +It was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Leonard G. Fiedler, an electrician with the Byrd Station winter parties of 1960 and 1964. +ReferencesExternal links 1976 County finals programmeTipperaryCategory:Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship +However, the chassis itself was poorly built, and Divila disowned the design, claiming it was unsafe, even going as far as saying that the car was good for nothing but "an interesting flowerpot". +Dennis M. Canario (born August 18, 1960) is an American politician and a Democratic member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives representing District 71 since January 1, 2013. +Miss Moneypenny's was started in the summer of 1993 as a weekly Saturday-night event in Bonds nightclub in Birmingham and with resident DJ's Russell Salsbury and Simon Owen. +7 out of the 9 went on to attend Hills Road Sixth Form College; one pupil is progressing to further training in Art & Design and another to further training in Computer Programming. +Tiotropium mist inhaler (Respimat) has been found to be associated with an increase of all cause mortality in people with COPD. +Personal lifeS. Kumar is married. +The story originally aired on America's Most Wanted on September 8, 2007, on Fox. +Scantlin and Rubin were both arrested and were released after posting $20,000 bail each. +The Wulff construction, Wulff net, Wulff-Bragg's condition and the mineral wulffite are named after him. +He began acting while studying in school at the age of eleven. +The Archive was created as part of the Alaska Native Language Center by state legislation in 1972. +Arthur Riscoe MC (1896–1954) was a British stage and film actor. +At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported. +Murder of Stanford WhiteOn June 26, 1906, Stanford White was shot to death by Harry K. Thaw, the eccentric millionaire, after leaving the Manhattan Club. +Batangas may refer to: Batangas Province Batangas City Batangas Bay Batangas International Port, locally known as Batangas Pier +ReferencesExternal links Public Delivery Martin SchulzeCategory:Culture of SeoulCategory:Murals in South Korea +Forscher entdecken neuen Großsäuger, GEO magazine (in German)Info on the recently discovered Giant PeccaryCategory:PeccariesPeccary, giantPeccary, giantPeccary, giantCategory:Mammals described in 2007Category:Controversial mammal taxa +The 1947 Saint Louis Billikens football team was an American football team that represented Saint Louis University as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference during the 1947 college football season. +She married Charles Shephard Washburne on April 3, 1913. +Neumann Prep closed at the end of the 1989-1990 academic year. +Troop B was sent to defend the airfield of Malang while Troops A and C boarded the Ban Hong Leong on 9 February to defend Penfui airfield in Dutch Timor – the closest airfield to Australia. +Williams instantly assumed frontrunner status in the race, and in September won the D.C. Democratic primary with 50% of the vote in a six-person race, then won the November 3 general election by a 2–1 margin despite not having held any elected office since 1982. +In September 2006, Kensuke Office was announced as a member of the Global Professional Wrestling Alliance and they held their first show on February 11 and it was televised by Gaora TV. +This constituency covers the entire Garhwa district and part of Palamu district. +(FLO) Family Liaison Officer, a role in the British police Florence Regional Airport, South Carolina, U.S., IATA airport code FLO Florence station (South Carolina), U.S., station code FLO Flo, nickname of LB1, a Homo floresiensis fossil Flo, a member of the Kasakela Chimpanzee CommunitySee also Florian (disambiguation) Florence (disambiguation) Flow (disambiguation) Floe Adolphe Le Flô (1804-1887), French Army general and politician Flo & Eddie, a musical pop duo +In Excavating an Empire: Achaemenid Persia in Longue Durée, edited by T. Daryaee, A. Mousavi and Kh. +The new College Football Playoff, which also begins in 2014, does not use poll data to choose its participants. +Ashland had the original supervisor office for the Custer National Forest. +This makes her the first author to win the award in two consecutive years. +Previously there was historical Narrow-gauge railway from Ahmedpur to Katwa route. +Vítor Baptista may refer to:Vítor Baptista (1920–2008), Portuguese footballer Vítor Baptista (1948–1999), Portuguese footballer Vitor Baptista (racing driver) (born 1998), Brazilian racing driver +Among the various capacities he filled in Rome, Connolly served as a professor at the Dominican convent of St. Clement, of which institution he later became prior. +She performed the 100 m breaststroke and 100 m freestyle at the 1974 European Aquatics Championships. +Richard junior died unmarried and the property devolved to his nephew George Emmott Green, who then changed his name to George Emmott Green-Emmott. +This is a list of properties and districts in Candler County, Georgia that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). +The Flops were a collaboration of John Munson (bassist of Semisonic and Trip Shakespeare) and Matt Wilson (frontman of Trip Shakespeare). +Gene The FAM166B gene is located on the short arm of chromosome 9 at 9p13.3 on the minus strand. +It was released on Kinetic Records. +After graduation, she was offered the lead role as the main character Kaja in the drama film Utøya: July 22, shot entirely in a single long-take. +Another suggestion is that the unusual number of illustrations including the biblical figure of Aaron indicate a patron with this name. +This space includes the Corbin Building, and the Dey Street Passageway and headhouse. +While he was at the Institute, Lupien also acted as a contractor on the school's construction projects, which included additions to the school and installing a power plant. +They enjoyed rides on the horse for a few hours. +A parasol-wing Dewoitine-style fighter, it was not successful, and only one was built. +At the 2006 census, its population was 125, in 25 families. +However, because the UMNO case was already in progress, his transfer did not take effect until the case closed. +Marc Jousset as helmsman, took the 9th place in first race of the 0.5 to 1 ton and did not start in the second race. +A parts kit is a kit of firearm parts without the receiver. +Instead, he went overseas in 1995 to play for Gijon Baloncesto in Spain and following season, spent the summer playing for the USBL's Florida Sharks, before going back to Spain to join Estudiantes. +Mäeküla piimamees (The Dairyman of Mäeküla) is a novel by Estonian author Eduard Vilde. +The final season of the anime series Inuyasha aired in Japan on ytv from January 26, 2004, through September 13, 2004. +Ballabio (Valassinese ) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Lecco in the Italian region Lombardy, located about northeast of Milan and about north of Lecco in the Valsassina. +At the 1980 Summer Olympics she did not even progress past round one in the 1500 metres, despite achieving a personal best time of 4.04.70 minutes. +These four musicians were in Paris to play at the 2003 edition of the Sons d'Hiver festival with two different bands: Campbell's Pyramid Trio and Parker's Raining on the Moon quintet, and producer Gérard Terronès got them into the studio. +For child custody, many nations have joined the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction in order to grant recognition to other member states' custody orders and avoid issues of parental kidnapping. +The Bath Road Reservoir, a minor water storage reservoir and ornate brick-built pumping station is an elevated landmark along the Bath Road, built in the late Victorian era. +State Representative Todd Huston will succeed Bosma as Speaker. +References Category:Universities in Costa RicaCategory:Private universities and collegesCategory:Business schools in Costa Rica +Currently APGCL has two Power houses and one new Power house is under construction under BHEL ( Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited ) http://www.bhel.com/home.phpCategory:Sivasagar district +Ruslan Mikhailovich Lyashchuk (; born 21 November 1974) is a former Russian football player. +Torsukattak (old spelling: Torssukátak) may refer to the following landforms in Greenland, from north to south: Torsukattak Strait (Upernavik Archipelago), a strait in the southern part of Upernavik Archipelago () Torsukattak Strait, a strait in the inner part of Uummannaq Fjord () Torsukattak Sound, a sound in Umivik Bay, Eastern Greenland () Torsukattak Fjord, a fjord in Southern Greenland () Torsukattak Fjord (Disko Bay), a fjord in Western Greenland () +ReferencesCategory:National Register of Historic Places in St. Clair County, IllinoisCategory:Buildings and structures in Belleville, IllinoisCategory:Neoclassical architecture in IllinoisCategory:Italianate architecture in IllinoisCategory:Romanesque Revival architecture in IllinoisCategory:Second Empire architecture in IllinoisCategory:Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Illinois +She is A&M's all-time leading scorer. +Senator Bob Smith was defeated in the Republican primary by U.S. Representative John E. Sununu. +Its inhabitants today are predominantly Sunni Muslims. +Held from 10–18 August, a total of 774 athletes from 26 nations competed in a programme featuring ten sports. +It is found in France and Spain, as well as on Sardinia, Sicily, Crete, Cyprus and the Canary Islands. +Head coaching recordReferencesExternal links Texas Southern profileCategory:1972 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:American football quarterbacksCategory:Jackson State Tigers football coachesCategory:Jackson State Tigers football playersCategory:Coahoma Tigers football coachesCategory:North Carolina Central Eagles football coachesCategory:Shaw Bears football coachesCategory:Sportspeople from Baton Rouge, LouisianaCategory:Texas Southern Tigers football coachesCategory:African-American coaches of American footballCategory:African-American players of American football +The winning streak, known as the "Kennett curse", achieved iconic status in the AFL in the intervening years. +From then until 15 December 1948 the 307th Wing controlled, in addition to its own units, the 82d Fighter Wing at Grenier Field, NH. +Legacy Many science fiction authors auction off tuckerizations at science fiction conventions with the proceeds going to charity. +Forced to live in destitution, Dhanpath encourages the village folks to speak out against Narpath's oppression. +To accomplish this, Haakon borrowed large sums of money and offered it to the Hanseatic League in return for the League's neutrality in the upcoming election, which they promptly accepted. +Duran made a victorious start to his career by scoring a knockout over Ben Hamida in the third round. +Igarashi's next project was the PlayStation game Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, where he worked on scenario writing and programming. +External linksJenő Gáspár's profile at Sports Reference.comCategory:1896 birthsCategory:1945 deathsCategory:Hungarian male high jumpersCategory:Olympic athletes of HungaryCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1924 Summer Olympics +The roof of the bridge has not been repaired to date. +45.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 25.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. +Christopher David Rawes Smith (born 21 February 1998) is an English professional footballer who plays as a defender for King's Lynn Town. +He subsequently went to King's College, Cambridge, where he graduated M.A. +CastYoon Sung-mo as Soo-hoShin Ji-hoon as Hyeon-soo Jung Han-bi as Kyeong-ahCho Min-ho as Jin-yeongLee Hyung-won as Pil-hoKong Jung-hwan as Seoul thug 1Jang-won as Seoul thug 2Song Eun-yool as So-yeon Moon Chae-hong as Yoo-mi Yang Taek-ho as Hurricane member 1ReferencesExternal linksCategory:2017 filmsCategory:South Korean films +On September 14, Guzmán was called up to the Yankees. +Gantuangoko recovered the strange artifact and buried it believing its contents were of great importance. +January 2018See alsoReferenceskillings by law enforcement officers 01 +Master of Public ManagementThe school offers the MPM program in two tracks for students who have at least five or more years of professional policy or management-related experience after their undergraduate studies. +In 2008 Invercargill released Boysenbeery - a deeply hued fruit beer which also won a best in class at its Beer Awards debut. +The W.19 continued in service until the Armistice, 55 being produced. +Inayatullah Khan was an Indian politician from the state of the Madhya Pradesh. +Siegfried Viebahn (July 29, 1911 – April 23, 1996) was a German diver who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics. +The 1911–12 Dartmouth men's ice hockey season was the 7th season of play for the program. +Seven of BYU's twelve presidents were alumni of the University. +His earlier studies were in the Jazz Department of New England Conservatory of Music's School of Preparatory Education. +Submerging the mushrooms in boiling water will remove this. +The Cherokee Tobacco case, however, created a new interpretation- that general congressional acts do apply to tribes unless Congress explicitly excludes them. +Lycée Classique d'Echternach, a school at Echternach, Luxembourg Loews Cineplex Entertainment, a cinema chain in the United States which merged with AMC Theatres Choriolysin L, an enzyme Landing Craft, Emergency repairs, a World war 2 landing craft +The average household size was 2.51 and the average family size was 3.00. +Anthology. +HistoryThe population 1901 was 10,235, consisting chieflyof Muhammadzai Pathans. +Forheim is a municipality in the district of Donau-Ries in Bavaria in Germany. +It is located at the junction of the South Gippsland Highway and Barry Road, close to Corner Inlet. +See alsoList of mountain rangesReferencesCategory:Pacific Ranges +The awards are voted for by MEPs and NGOs. +His later film works were often pornography made with his frequent collaborator Bruno Vanni. +It was established in 1994 and is affiliated with the Center for Oceans & Coastal Law at Maine Law. +People with that name include: George Lillycrop (1886 – after 1944), English football player and manager Karen A. Lillycrop (active from 2007), English molecular biologist Tom Lillycrop (born 1991), English rugby league playerSee also Category:Surnames of English origin +SpeciesThese 84 species belong to the genus Dasypogon: Dasypogon acratus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon aegon Walker, 1848 c g Dasypogon aequalis (Walker, 1857) c Dasypogon agathyllus Walker, 1848 c g Dasypogon analis Macquart, 1850 c g Dasypogon anemetus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon aphidas Walker, 1848 c g Dasypogon aphidnus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon arcuatus (Fabricius, 1794) c g Dasypogon atratus (Fabricius, 1794) c g Dasypogon atripennis (Macquart, 1834) c g Dasypogon atripes Fabricius, 1805 c g Dasypogon aurarius Wiedemann, 1821 c g Dasypogon auripilus (Seguy, 1934) c g Dasypogon australis Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon bacescui Weinberg, 1979 c g Dasypogon barrus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon bigoti Bellardi, 1861 c g Dasypogon bonariensis Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon brevipennis (Meigen, 1838) c g Dasypogon caffer (Wiedemann, 1828) c g Dasypogon carvilius Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon castigans Walker, 1851 c g Dasypogon caudatus (Fabricius, 1805) c g Dasypogon cephicus Say, 1829 c g Dasypogon cerretanus Walker, 1848 c g Dasypogon coon Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon copreus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon costalis Lynch Arribalzaga, 1880 c g Dasypogon crassus Macquart, 1849 c g Dasypogon diadema (Fabricius, 1781) c g Dasypogon dorsalis (Wiedemann, 1824) c g Dasypogon equestris Wiedemann, 1828 c g Dasypogon fabricii Wiedemann, 1820 c g Dasypogon flavipennis Macquart, 1846 c g Dasypogon fossius (Walker, 1849) c g Dasypogon fraternus Macquart, 1846 c g Dasypogon fuscipennis Macquart, 1834 c g Dasypogon geradi Weinberg, 1987 g Dasypogon gerardi Weinberg, 1988 c g Dasypogon gougeleti (Bigot, 1878) c g Dasypogon grandis Macquart, 1846 c g Dasypogon iberus Tomasovic, 1999 c g Dasypogon insertus Walker, 1851 c g Dasypogon irinelae Weinberg, 1986 c g Dasypogon kugleri Weinberg, 1986 c g Dasypogon lebasii Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon lenticeps (Thomson, 1869) c g Dasypogon longus Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon luctuosus Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon lugens Philippi, 1865 c g Dasypogon magisi Tomasovic, 1999 c g Dasypogon maricus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon melanogaster g Dasypogon melanopterus Loew, 1869 c g Dasypogon mexicanus Macquart, 1846 c g Dasypogon nigriventris Dufour, 1833 c g Dasypogon occlusus Meijere, 1906 c g Dasypogon octonotatus Loew, 1869 c g Dasypogon olcesci (Bigot, 1878) c g Dasypogon parvus Rondani, 1851 c g Dasypogon potitus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon pumilus Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon punctipennis Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon rapax Walker, 1851 c g Dasypogon regenstreifi Weinberg, 1986 c g Dasypogon reinhardi Wiedemann, 1824 c g Dasypogon rubiginipennis Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon rubiginosum (Bigot, 1878) c g Dasypogon rubinipes (Becker & Stein, 1913) c g Dasypogon rufescens (Macquart, 1834) c g Dasypogon ruficauda (Fabricius, 1805) c g Dasypogon rufipes Philippi, 1865 c g Dasypogon rufiventris Walker, 1854 c g Dasypogon sericeus Philippi, 1865 c g Dasypogon sicanus Costa, 1854 c g Dasypogon silanus Walker, 1849 c g Dasypogon tenuis Macquart, 1838 c g Dasypogon torridus (Walker, 1856) c g Dasypogon tragicus (Wiedemann, 1828) c g Dasypogon tripartitus Walker, 1854 c g Dasypogon tsacasi Weinberg, 1991 c g Dasypogon variabilis Brullé, 1833 c g Dasypogon volcatius Walker, 1849 c gData sources: c = Catalogue of Life, g = GBIF, b = Bugguide.netReferencesFurther reading Category:Asilidae genera +Nirmala College may refer to: Nirmala College, MuvattupuzhaNirmala College for Women, in Coimbatore, Tamil NaduNirmala College of Engineering, in Meloor, KeralaNirmala College, Ranchi +ReferencesCategory:1994 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese male handball playersCategory:Handball players at the 2018 Asian Games +In 2005 the The Black Ice Project/Underground Railroad project was created to identify connections between slavery, safe houses in Brooklyn, transit through Guinea Town, and ex-slaves who played hockey in Canada. +See also List of Drosophila speciesReferencesExternal links Drosophila mauritiana at insectoid.infomautitianaCategory:Insects described in 1974Category:Insects of Mauritius +Geography The Mary River is the eastern boundary of the locality and Myrtle Creek is the southern boundary. +Net Press () is an independent internet news agency in the Republic of North Macedonia. +Namibia contains about 4,000 commercial farms. +The Elizabeth Street Pier extends into Sullivan's Cove (the Port of Hobart) from Franklin Wharf near the intersection with Elizabeth Street. +In the Mesopotamian mythology, Humban was perceived as Huwawa/Humbaba, the guardian of the Cedar Forest in the Epic of Gilgamesh. +10 August – Peter Airey, poet and politician (born 1865) 20 November – Erle Cox, novelist (born 1873)See also 1950 in poetry List of years in literature List of years in Australian literatureReferencesLiteratureCategory:Australian literature by yearCategory:20th-century Australian literatureCategory:Years of the 20th century in literature +For decades, VEGA has continued to provide support on the original ESA operations engineering contract, which has been re-tendered every five years. +ResultMen's eventsReferencesCategory:1995 in swimming +A 2009 study estimated that irrigated corn ethanol implied water consumption at between and for U.S. vehicles. +Swahili Entertainment Inc. and Nomadic Wax Records combined in late 2004 to start the distribution and publishing of East African urban music. +It is a single-span Pratt through truss with a span of and a total structure length of . +Furiosa may refer to: Imperator Furiosa, a character in Mad Max Furiosa, a provisional name of the Alfa Romeo MiTo Phragmacossia furiosa (P. furiosa), a species of moth in the family Cossidae Cynaeda furiosa (C. furiosa), a species of moth in the family CrambidaeSee also Furio (disambiguation) Furioso (disambiguation) Furious (disambiguation) Fury (disambiguation) +It was described by George Hampson in 1918. +A sample survey reveals that the total area of berha (farmland apart from the homestead) is 31,386.37 hectares (31.5%), common grazing land is 8,107.11 hectares (8.1%) and of wojed (gardens around the homestead) is 46,174.03 hectares (46.4%). +BravoThe following programmes were screened on Bravo. +According to Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, there was actually an African-American detective in the Baltimore Police Department homicide division named Vernon Holley. +Skorzeny was photographed at a café on the Champs Elysées in Paris on 13 February 1950. +These exclusive motorcycles continue to be hand built to this day to individual customer specifications by TGA Ltd, now based in northern France. +There are elaborate box pews from the 16th and 17th centuries, the earliest from 1678. +The Bulgarian National Time Trial Championships are held annually to decide the cycling champions in the time trial discipline, across various categories. +Hindus exist in comparatively smaller numbers. +The cambiata is also called changing note in English, though the literal meaning of the Italian is changed note. +Middle of Nowhere may refer to:Places A remote or rural location, for example, "the boonies" Nutt, New Mexico, which as called itself the Middle of NowhereBooks The Middle of Nowhere, a Dragonlance novel by Paul B. Thompson The Middle of Nowhere, a Star Wolf novel by David GerroldFilms Middle of Nowhere (2008 film), a coming-of-age comedy-drama film Middle of Nowhere (2012 film), directed by Ava DuVernayMusicAlbums Middle of Nowhere (album), a 1997 album by Hanson Middle of Nowhere Acoustic, a 2007 live acoustic album and DVD also by Hanson The Middle of Nowhere (Orbital album), 1999 The Middle of Nowhere (Circle II Circle album), 2005 The Middle of Nowhere, a 2000 album by Future Loop Foundation In the Middle of Nowhere (Modern Talking album), a 1986 album by Modern TalkingSongs "In the Middle of Nowhere", a 1965 song by Dusty Springfield "Middle of Nowhere" (song), by Hot Hot Heat "Middle of Nowhere", a song by Selena Gomez & the Scene from their third album When the Sun Goes Down "Middle of Nowhere", a song by The Blank Theory from their 2002 album Beyond the Calm of the Corridor "Middle of Nowhere" (Felix Sandman song) "Middle of Nowhere" (Stone Temple Pilots song) +The immediate opening lures you in with a few familiar quotes, but soon the composition heads into otherworldly passages, with an exploratory treatment," for, with "a range of bass drums, Eastern percussion hints, and interjections of orchestral warm-up moments," the "composition slips by in the shadows, remaining obscured even while enunciating.". +John Holden was a missionary Anglican bishop. +HistoryIn October 1975, a Superior Court judge sentenced to jail 75 of 200 striking members of the River Dell Education Association for violating a back-to-work order that he had issued earlier in the month. +For this reason DQ3 serotyping is a poor method of typing for transplantation or disease association prediction or study. +The Chicago Research and Trading Group was a futures and options trading firm. +He toured with the band from 1998 until 2002, when the band broke up. +Zavrh () is a remote dispersed settlement north of Ravnik in the Municipality of Bloke in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. +Alaska Government-GeneralThe Alaska Territory, the Yukon Territory, the western portion of the Northwest Territories, Alberta, British Columbia, and Washington. +With changes to the format of the competition coming into effect for 2008, Belarus would have to compete in one of two semi-finals for qualification into the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2008. +He sent another expedition to the Californias, with disastrous results. +Warehouse Row Historic District is a national historic district located at Cape Girardeau, Cape Girardeau County, Missouri. +ReferencesCategory:1909 birthsCategory:1987 deathsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1932 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 1936 Summer OlympicsCategory:Finnish male sprintersCategory:Olympic athletes of FinlandCategory:Place of birth missing +CathedralsSee: List of cathedrals in China#Roman CatholicCathedral of the Immaculate Conception, BeijingCathedral of the Immaculate Conception in NanjingChurch of St Joseph, BeijingImmaculate Conception Cathedral of HangzhouSacred Heart Cathedral (Jinan)Sacred Heart Cathedral of GuangzhouSacred Heart Cathedral of ShenyangSaint Dominic's Cathedral, FuzhouSaint Ignatius Cathedral, ShanghaiSt. Francis Cathedral of Xi'anSt. Joseph Cathedral (Tianjin)St. Michael's Cathedral, QingdaoSt. Theresa's Cathedral of ChangchunThe Aowei Church of Holy RosaryBasilicasSheshan BasilicaOther churchesChurch of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, BeijingChurch of the Saviour, BeijingDalian Catholic ChurchSaint Peter's Church, ShanghaiSee alsoList of Roman Catholic dioceses in ChinaRoman Catholicism in China China, CatholicChurches, CatholicChinaCatholic churches +Copernix satellite imageCategory:Ellsworth MountainsCategory:Bulgaria and the AntarcticCategory:Mountains of Ellsworth Land +ReferencesCategory:1958 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Filipino male swimmersCategory:Olympic swimmers of the PhilippinesCategory:Swimmers at the 1972 Summer OlympicsCategory:Swimmers at the 1976 Summer OlympicsCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Asian Games medalists in swimmingCategory:Asian Games bronze medalists for the PhilippinesCategory:Swimmers at the 1974 Asian GamesCategory:Medalists at the 1974 Asian Games +The Communist Platform (, KP) is a political platform and organization in Norway formed after the dissolution of the old Workers' Communist Party (AKP) on March 10, 2007 and its decision to merge into the new "broader" party Red. +LegacyMyers' stepmother, Mary Ware Hewitt Myers (1848-1942), created the John Ripley Myers Lecture Fund at Hamilton College. +The Lozès family migrated to the French suburban city of Creil in 1979, then to Villepinte (Seine-Saint-Denis). +The brothers were born in Halifax, Nova Scotia and worked for McKim, Mead and White for 10 years. +Eskikent is a village in the District of Gerger, Adıyaman Province, Turkey. +KMCA could refer to:KMCA (defunct), a defunct radio station in Redding, California, USAKMCA-LD, a television station (channel 10) licensed to Redding, CaliforniaKorea Music Content Association +Markku Alen emerged on top of the results as the 1986 Olympus first gained full World Championship status, taking a Lancia Delta S4 and co-driver Ilkka Kivimäki to victory. +He served in the House of Lords in this position until 1929, notably overseeing the installation of electric lighting to the House in 1904. +The per capita income for the village was $22,497. +ChampionsGentlemen's Singles William Renshaw defeated Herbert Lawford, 6–0, 5–7, 6–3, 6–4Ladies' Singles Blanche Bingley defeated Maud Watson, 6–3, 6–3Gentlemen's Doubles Ernest Renshaw / William Renshaw defeated Claude Farrer / Arthur Stanley, 6–3, 6–3, 4–6, 7–5ReferencesExternal links Official Wimbledon Championships website Wimbledon ChampionshipsWimbledon ChampionshipsWimbledon ChampionshipsCategory:July 1886 sports events +There is at least one described species in Austrophytomyptera, A. malloi. +Facilities and resourcesThe RSHS for Region 1 campus contains three buildings: the old academic building, a laboratory building, and the administrative building. +The organization has offices in Cairo, Egypt, and Johannesburg, South Africa. +(1975)Union Power and New York: Victor Gotbaum and District Council 37 (with Jewel Bellush) (1984)ReferencesCategory:1917 birthsCategory:2011 deathsCategory:City College of New York alumniCategory:City College of New York facultyCategory:Columbia University alumniCategory:Historians of the United States +Fisher published a sequel to Postcards, The Best Awful There Is, in 2004. +Bundesliga. +It was the second community college to be established in San Diego County. +On All About Jazz Nic Jones noted "it's the one that offers the greatest insight into Collier's more recent methodology, not least because the numbers of musicians involved are more indicative of his later work with larger ensembles". +Historical Vegetarian Party presidential tickets1948 John Maxwell (Vegetarian Party presidential nominee) - Maxwell was born in England, and thus determined to be ineligible. +It was described by Munroe in 1974. +Prince Nasser had no full-brothers or full-sisters. +Among the first tracks as well was "Midnight Sky" which used a Shure SM57 and an AKG C414 XLS for mics. +As with Doghose, there are spelling variants to accommodate the sound : Loghon, Lorhon, Loron. +Kidnapping is a crime in Canada. +Cottrell|Decision (unanimous)|UFC on Fox: Holm vs. Shevchenko ||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Chicago, Illinois, United States| |-|Win|align=center|19–2|Valmir Lázaro|Decision (split)|The Ultimate Fighter Latin America 2 Finale: Magny vs. Gastelum||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Monterrey, Mexico| |-|Loss|align=center|18–2|Kevin Lee|Decision (unanimous)|UFC Fight Night: Henderson vs. Thatch||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Broomfield, Colorado, United States||-|Win|align=center|18–1|Mairbek Taisumov|Decision (unanimous)|UFC Fight Night: Shogun vs. Henderson 2| |align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Natal, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|17–1|Jesse Ronson|Decision (split)|UFC 165||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Toronto, Ontario, Canada||-|Loss|align=center|16–1|Paulo Thiago|Decision (unanimous)|UFC on FX: Belfort vs. Rockhold||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Jaraguá do Sul, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|16–0|Leandro Batata|Decision (unanimous)|Shooto Brazil 30||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Belém, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|15–0|Sérgio Leal|Submission (rear-naked choke)|Jungle Fight 37||align=center|1|align=center|1:49|São Paulo, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|14–0|André Luis Lobato|Decision (unanimous)|Iron Man Championship 6||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Belém, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|13–0|Antônio Carlos Ribeiro|Submission (triangle choke)|Midway Fight||align=center|1|align=center|N/A|Belém, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|12–0|Frederick Samurai|Decision (unanimous)|Mega Champion Fight 2||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Manaus, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|11–0|Valter de Menezes|Decision (unanimous)|Predador FC 5 - Kamae||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|São Paulo, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|10–0|Gabriel Santos|Decision (unanimous)|Macapa Verdadeiro Vale Tudo||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Macapá, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|9–0|Anderson Banana |Submission (rear-naked choke)|Predador FC 4 - Kamae||align=center|1|align=center|N/A|São Paulo, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|8–0|Edilson Florêncio|Decision (unanimous)|Midway Fight||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Belém, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|7–0|Ari dos Santos|Decision (unanimous)|Ilha Combat||align=center|3|align=center|5:00|Macapá, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|6–0|Luis Neto|Submission (punches)|Iron Man Vale Tudo 7||align=center|1|align=center|4:16|Macapá, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|5–0|Elias Monteiro|TKO (punches)|Super Vale Tudo Ananindeua||align=center|1|align=center|1:17|Ananindeua, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|4–0|Cleber Santana|Submission (choke) |Super Vale Tudo Ananindeua||align=center|2|align=center|2:22|Ananindeua, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|3–0|Rogério Gama|Submission (rear-naked choke)|Desafio de Gigantes||align=center|1|align=center|3:47|Macapá, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|2–0|Sérgio de Oliveira|Submission (rear-naked choke)|Desafio de Gigantes||align=center|1|align=center|2:13|Macapá, Brazil||-|Win|align=center|1–0|Sandro Lyon|Submission (rear-naked choke)|Open Fight Vale Tudo 2||align=center|1|align=center|3:58|Belém, Brazil|See also List of current UFC fighters List of male mixed martial artistsReferencesExternal links Category:Brazilian male mixed martial artistsCategory:1983 birthsCategory:Lightweight mixed martial artistsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Sportspeople from BelémCategory:Ultimate Fighting Championship male fightersCategory:People awarded a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsuCategory:Brazilian practitioners of Brazilian jiu-jitsu +Ahmed I or Ahmad I may refer to: Ahmed I Bakhti (1590–1617), Turkish sultan Ahmad I (Kalat), Wāli of Kalat, ruled 1666–1667 Ahmad al-Mansur (1549–1603), sultan of Morocco, ruled 1578–1603 Ahmad I ibn Mustafa (1806–1855), Bey of Tunis Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah (1885–1950), sheikh of Kuwait Ahmad ibn 'Ali Al Thani (1917–1977), emir of QatarSee also Ahmad Amad (disambiguation) Ahmad (disambiguation) +First DivisionArsenal, the most successful English club side of the 1930s, picked up their first postwar silverware, finishing top of the First Division by seven points. +The last issue of Campaign magazine appeared in 1982. +The women's half marathon event at the 2007 Summer Universiade was held on 11 August. +He has a cameo in Disney's Alice in Wonderland as a caterpillar being annoyed by a copper centipede bearing resemblance to a dog. +Larger, motor-powered variants of this design exist (typically, a leaf blower working in reverse), where the insects are sucked into a mesh collecting bag in a long plastic tube, and held there by the powerful suction. +The group began with the ideals of Alice Mulenga Lubusha who rechristened herself Alice Lenshina or essentially "Alice Regina." +At the Grammy Awards of 1997, a live version of "The Sinister Minister", a track from the album, won the Best Pop Instrumental Performance award. +External linksCarpenter High SchoolCategory:High schools in SaskatchewanCategory:Meadow Lake, SaskatchewanCategory:Educational institutions with year of establishment missing +ReferencesCategory:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Czech female handball playersCategory:Olympic handball players of CzechoslovakiaCategory:Handball players at the 1988 Summer OlympicsCategory:Sportspeople from Zlín +It was completed and consecrated 12 years afterward. +Rapadama is a town in the Mogtédo Department of Ganzourgou Province in central Burkina Faso. +Elvira Travesí (December 11, 1919 - July 15, 2009) was a Peruvian born Argentinean actress. +RecordsPrior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 2002Category:Endemic fauna of Costa Ricacarinae +Final list * M: Matches W: Win D: Drawn L: Lost G+: Goals earned G-: Goals got P: PointSources Gyarmati Dezső: Aranykor (Hérodotosz Könyvkiadó és Értékesítő Bt., Budapest, 2002.) +When Turbyfill left in 1950, Ed Sprouse became the group's tenor. +Cedar Pond is the name of some bodies of water in the United States:Cedar Pond (Massachusetts), in Lakeville, MassachusettsCedar Pond (New Hampshire), in Milan, New HampshireCedar Pond (New Jersey), In West Milford, New JerseySee alsoCedar Lake (disambiguation) +Following his death, he was eulogized in the House of Commons of Canada, following which the house was adjourned for the day in tribute. +Unless otherwise noted, all times in CDTU.S. Open Cup Due to their hybrid affiliation with the Dynamo, RGVFC was one of 13 teams expressly forbidden from entering the Cup competition. +Many people come and pray at the Tomb of Yeldo and promise that if they were blessed with a baby, they would name their baby as 'Yeldo' or 'Basil'. +Track listings 7" vinyl single "You've Just Stepped In (From Stepping Out on Me)" – 2:17 "(This Bottle's) Taking the Place of My Man" – 2:41ChartsWeekly chartsReferences Category:1968 songsCategory:1968 singlesCategory:Decca Records singlesCategory:Loretta Lynn songsCategory:Song recordings produced by Owen Bradley +Structure 3rd Land Force Brigade 30th Command Battalion - Niš 31st Infantry Battalion - Zaječar 32nd Infantry Battalion - Zaječar 33rd Self-Propelled Howitzer Artillery Battalion - Prokuplje 34th Multiple Rocket Launcher Battalion - Prokuplje 35th Air Defense Artillery Battalion - Niš 36th Tank Battalion - Niš 37th Mechanized Battalion - Kuršumlija 38th Mechanized Battalion - Kuršumlija 39th Logistic Battalion - Niš 310th Engineer Battalion - ProkupljeEquipmentM-84 main battle tankBVP M-80 infantry fighting vehicleBTR-50 command armored personnel carrierBRDM-2 reconnaissance armored car2S1 122mm self-propelled howitzerM-77 Oganj self-propelled multiple rocket launcher9K31 Strela-1 self-propelled SAMBofors L/70 40mm anti-aircraft guninfantry armamentsengineer and logistic vehicles and equipmentExternal links3rd Land Force Brigade Web PageCategory:Brigades of SerbiaCategory:Military units and formations established in 2007Category:2007 establishments in Serbia +In 2016, the school had an enrolment of 16 children with 3 teachers (1 full-time equivalent) and 6 non-teaching staff (2 full-time equivalent). +Melodi Grand Prix 2015During the Melodi Grand Prix 2015 press conference on 21 January 2015, "A Monster Like Me" was announced as one of the eleven songs competing to represent Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015 in Vienna, Austria. +History and operationsThe school was formerly known as MP Shah High School until 1967 when it was renamed Chania High School. +Eddery rode the colt with great confidence, restraining him towards the back of the field and he was still only in fifth place with a furlong and a half to run. +Slaughterville's town council heard presentations by members of PETA and local citizens before voting against the suggestion. +He worked at the Inner London Education Authority from 1978 to 1984, during which time he also completed film studies master's degree at the Polytechnic of Central London (in 1982). +In popular culture Suede's absorbent nature was highlighted in the Seinfeld episode "The Jacket", in which Jerry ventures outside into the snow and ruins his exorbitantly priced suede jacket. +is a railway station on the Nagoya Line in Suzuka, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Kintetsu Railway. +Gregorian – So Sad04. +Alfonso Rodríguez (born 30 May 1929) is a Colombian former sports shooter. +Rail-Veyor is a remote controlled, electrically powered light-rail haulage solution for surface and underground applications in the mining and aggregate industries. +The university has produced more than 50,000 engineers since 1986. +seasonsCharlton Athletic +Her interview five days later with Fox News's Sean Hannity focuses on many of the same questions from Gibson's interview. +Aulos-Sinsat is a commune in the Ariège department in southwestern France. +Qeshlaq-e Hezarat Qoli Abdollah (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Ḩez̤arat Qolī ʿAbdollah) is a village in Qeshlaq-e Jonubi Rural District, Qeshlaq Dasht District, Bileh Savar County, Ardabil Province, Iran. +The show was hosted by Kelly Clarkson. +Sava Vladislavić Returned Home (On St. Sava Day, In Herceg-Novi, consecrated the monument to a famous count), Serbia, national review (Srbija, nacionalna revija), Belgrade, 2014, N. 42. +PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence departmentReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Alpes-de-Haute-ProvenceCategory:Alpes-de-Haute-Provence communes articles needing translation from French Wikipedia +Because of her work there, she became a Senior Scientist appointment to the Naval Research Laboratory and then NASA as Earth Science Enterprise Education Programs Manager. +Production notesThe inspiration for the episode is taken from the true life story of civil rights activist Medgar Evers who was murdered in front of his home in Jackson, Mississippi on June 12, 1963. +External links Category:1970 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from SuitaCategory:Japanese baseball playersCategory:Nippon Professional Baseball infieldersCategory:Yakult Swallows playersCategory:Tokyo Yakult Swallows playersCategory:Baseball players at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:Baseball players at the 2008 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic baseball players of JapanCategory:Olympic bronze medalists for JapanCategory:2006 World Baseball Classic playersCategory:Olympic medalists in baseballCategory:Medalists at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:Japanese baseball coachesCategory:Nippon Professional Baseball coaches +The song was recorded by Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters on March 26, 1947 and was the lead track for Bing Crosby's album Go West Young Man. +ReferencesExternal links places.wonoboCategory:Football in MumbaiCategory:Sports venues in MumbaiCategory:Football venues in MaharashtraCategory:Sports venues in Maharashtra +In 1989, he was promoted to be the Chief of the Parliamentary Affairs section. +Despite mixed reviews, the movie was a commercial success. +Thomas Bernard may refer to: Sir Thomas Bernard, 3rd Baronet (1750–1818), English social helper Thomas Bernard (Irish politician) (c. 1769–1834), Member of Parliament for King's County, 1802–1832 Sir Thomas Bernard, 6th Baronet (1791–1883), Member of Parliament for Aylesbury, 1857–1865 Thomas Dehany Bernard (1815–1904), English Anglican cleric Thomas Bernhard (1931–1989), Austrian novelist, playwright and poetSee alsoBernard (surname) +He did his Engineering from Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology AllahabadSaxena started writing blogs in the year 2011 and his blog was covered by national mainstream media outlets like The Times of India on a couple of occasions. +Among his other compositions are a number of sacred works, including a Dixit Dominus and a Magnificat for four voices with basso continuo. +It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. +Stephen Wangh concludes, "it led others into stereotyped and melodramatic gesticulation, devoid of the very heart that Delsarte had sought to restore." +In both the 2009 and 2014 elections, he topped the poll in the Tuam local electoral area. +In 2004, UNIFI merged with Amicus. +Alexandrov () is the name of several inhabited localities in Russia. +ReferencesCategory:1993 birthsCategory:Sportspeople from KazanCategory:Living peopleCategory:Russian footballersCategory:Russia under-21 international footballersCategory:Association football midfieldersCategory:FC Amkar Perm playersCategory:Russian Premier League playersCategory:FC KAMAZ Naberezhnye Chelny playersCategory:FC Nizhny Novgorod (2015) playersCategory:FC Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk players +ReferencesBobsleigh four-man world championship medalists since 1930Category:Italian male bobsleddersCategory:Possibly living peopleCategory:Year of birth missing +Altıntop is a surname, and may refer to:Halil Altıntop, Turkish football playerHamit Altıntop, Turkish football playerAltıntop (town), A town in Turkey Category:Turkish-language surnames +Bezdek left Arkansas after the 1912 season to become head football coach at Oregon, where he was offered more money and a modern gymnasium and athletic field. +He went on to be a painting contractor. +), a village in Karnataka, IndiaBadas, Kediri, a kecamatan (district) in East Java Province, IndonesiaBadas Islands, a group of islands in Riau Islands Province, Indonesia Kostas Badas (born 1976), Greek footballerSee also Badass (disambiguation) +The Meistriliiga Player of the Year is an annual award given to the best Meistriliiga player for his performances in the league. +ReferencesExternal linksLyrics from Diggiloo ThrushCategory:Eurovision songs of SwitzerlandCategory:Eurovision songs of 1956Category:German-language Swiss songsCategory:1956 songs +CIBN may refer to:Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria, professional organization for bankers in NigeriaChina International Broadcasting Network, Chinese media company +The Amboseli Elephant Research Project is a long-term research project on the ethology of the African elephant, operated by the nonprofit Amboseli Trust for Elephants. +The West Bank city of Jericho is usually visible from the summit, as is Jerusalem on a very clear day. +The CRTC rejected the proposal, citing the need to consult with the industry over design, costs, and governance of the system. +In June 1938, based on the request of her spiritual director, Father Mariano Pinho, several bishops from Portugal wrote to Pope Pius XI, asking him to consecrate the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. +John Humphrys, while conducting an interview, pointed out on the Today programme that the Fearon's testimony was a matter of public record while Lord Falconer of Thoroton, the Lord Chancellor, described the BBC payment as a "disgusting warping of our values". +The active site residues of carboxypeptidases A and B are conserved in this protein. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Afyonkarahisar ProvinceCategory:Villages in Turkey +The triple salt 2KHSO5·KHSO4·K2SO4 (known by the tradename Oxone) is a form with higher stability. +At first, the holiday was observed on the third day of the 10th month on the lunar calendar, but it has been fixed on 3 October of the solar Gregorian calendar since 1949. +He drew and created his own graphic novel and wrote several stories, acted in school productions and wrote and performed in a HSC production. +Transport 6 is a mix album released by Trendroid in 2002. +Nathaniel "Nat" Terry (born July 20, 1956) is a former American football defensive back and return specialist who played a single season in the National Football League for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Detroit Lions. +SeedsQualifiersQualifying drawFirst qualifierSecond qualifierThird qualifierFourth qualifierFifth qualifierSixth qualifierSeventh QualifierEighth QualifierReferencesITF Tennis – Qualifying DrawWomen's Singles QualifyingCategory:Australian Open (tennis) by year – Qualifying +The Crowley Rice Birds were a Minor League Baseball team based in Crowley, Louisiana, that played in the Gulf Coast League in 1908. +HistoryPart of the bridge complex is the octagonal tall (from ground) Wasserturm, which translates to "water tower," in the sense of 'tower standing in the water.' +CategoriesThe Macanese honors system of civil decorations awarded by the government of the Macau Special Administrative Region of China (MSAR) includes:Grand Medal of Lotus Flower (GML) (), the highest award under the MSAR honors and awards system, recognizes lifelong and highly significant contributions to the wellbeing of Macau. +But, things take a U-turn when the underworld led by Kumar (Devan) buys out two guys from the batch and uses them for importing drugs from the neighboring country, which is obviously Pakistan (though never mentioned in the movie). +Anna Kunkel, along with the rest of the girls and the league staff, is included at the display/exhibit. +In 1935 he was elevated to the Episcopate and retired in 1960. +BoxingAs a boxer, Adams has participated in a Fight for Life charity boxing event, trained by Lolo Heimuli. +Mclaughlin Handicap. +See alsoBruce Bromley, his colleague and mentor at CravathReferencesExternal linksABA Journal: Ex-Cravath Lawyer Dies, Father of ‘Big-Case Litigation’TIME: The Case of the CenturyCategory:1931 birthsCategory:2008 deathsCategory:Lawyers from Kansas City, MissouriCategory:20th-century American lawyersCategory:University of Missouri alumniCategory:Yale Law School alumniCategory:United States Marine Corps officersCategory:Cravath, Swaine & Moore people +Three longitudinal audio tracks are recorded on the tape as well: two audio and one Linear timecode (LTC) track. +Starting in the 1960s she started to experiment with fine art, and by 1966 she was exhibiting her art. +Higurashi, Ayumi, Additional voices Let's Go Quintuplets – Harold Monkey Magic – Empress Dowager The New Adventures of Kimba The White Lion – Additional Voices Ogre Slayer – Setsuko Powerpuff Girls Z – Ken Utonium, Bubbles' Grandmother Project A-ko – C-ko Kotobuki Project ARMS – Misa Ranma ½ – Shampoo, Azusa Shiratori, Yuka, Additional Voices Shakugan no Shana – Khamsin Nbh'w (Season 1) The Story of Saiunkoku – Court Lady 3, Lady, Lady of the Night 3, Ryushin Transformers: Armada – Boy at Carnival World Trigger – Yuma Kuga Glitter Force Doki Doki - PattyAnimation 1001 Nights – Shahzaman 16 Hudson – Luc Aaagh! +At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipality Vlorë. +Asperula lasiantha is a species of flowering plant in the family Rubiaceae. +United States Deputy Chief Technology OfficerIn May 2013 Pahlka announced she was temporarily taking the position of deputy chief technology officer for government innovation for the US government's Office of Science and Technology Policy. +Social reformer Savitribai Phule was present at Hari Raoji Chiplunkar's funeral in 1896. +Services Ceriano Laghetto-Groane is served by the line S9 of Milan suburban railway service, operated by the lombard railway company Trenord. +This is a list of members of the Australian House of Representatives from 1977 to 1980, as elected at the 1977 federal election:1 Labor member Gough Whitlam resigned on 31 July 1978; Labor candidate John Kerin won the resulting by-election on 23 September 1978. +Category:Highways in São Paulo (state) +They were caught in a storm when trying to return, and eventually they found their tiny boat blown to Karmøy in south west Norway. +Nevertheless, the extent to which the models of black holes in classical general relativity correspond to physical reality remains unclear, and in particular the implications of the central singularity implicit in these models are still not understood. +The DVD release features three audio mixes as well as a short interview with the band members. +Airport Access Aso-Kumamoto Airport can be accessed by train to Yatsushiro Station or Shin-Yatsushiro Station, and from there taking the Super Banpeiyu Bus service from either station. +The Smith Hill Historic District is a historic district located in northwestern Providence, Rhode Island, just west of the Rhode Island State House and Interstate 95. +The National Turf Writers Association created an award in his name called the "Mr. Fitz Award" to honor a member of the horse racing fraternity each year. +Kunkush (Ancash Quechua for Puya raimondii, also spelled Cuncush) is a mountain in the Andes of Peru which reaches a height of approximately . +HauensteinHauensteinCategory:Mountain passes of Basel-LandschaftCategory:Mountain passes of the canton of Solothurn +It was the home of the Minot SkyRockets basketball team. +Currently this is not being enforced because of unresolved issues. +The present conductor is Jukka Rantamäki. +In 1712, Shogun Ienobu died, and was succeeded by his son, the boy-shōgun Tokugawa Ietsugu. +The roof is surrounded by a "chinese balustrade", a restoration of a feature the house was known to have earlier. +All but one of his victories came while he was teamed with Andrew McKeever. +For example, ethnic traditional cultures influence the conservation of a wide diversity of rice varieties in China (e.g. +The village has a population of 480. +Rinyaújnép () is a village in Somogy county, Hungary. +This station will be on ground level, similar to Sunny Bay Station, so as to not affect the existing railway network. +An AutobiographyReferencesCategory:1823 birthsCategory:1901 deathsCategory:Irish activistsCategory:Irish women activistsCategory:Irish humanitariansCategory:People from County CorkCategory:19th-century Irish people +Playing careerKobayashi was born in Shizuoka on . +Rolón himself conducted its premiere performance when San Martín's remains were repatriated to Argentina in 1880. +ZealandBornholmFunenJutlandReferences WatermillsDenmark +Alex Guerrero may refer to:Alex Guerrero (alternative medicine), an American alternative medicine practitioner known for his infomercials and work with professional football playersAlex Guerrero (baseball), a Cuban-born professional baseball playerAlex Guerrero (lineman), an American professional football lineman +David was born on 4 July 1942 in Weatherfield, Lancashire. +The crew had even placed their sound van onto a bogie coupled behind a train and travelled up and down a stretch of line for an entire day, but the overall sound drowned it out. +The .338-378 Weatherby Magnum is however a belted cartridge and the .338 Remington Ultra Magnum is a rebated rim cartridge. +It has a population of 1,080. +The majority of the Museum's collections were donated over time, starting as a community repository from the Museum's founding in 1936. +Atlanta is a genus of pelagic marine gastropod molluscs in the family Atlantidae. +Akot VidhansabhaKhedkar was elected from Akot Constituency in 1962 to the first legislative assembly of the newly formed state of Maharashtra. +It is a major tourist area in Cambridge, commanding a central position in the University of Cambridge area of the city. +The Most Outstanding Player trophy was not awarded this year, although it would be reintroduced in 1998. +At the 2006 census, its population was 435, in 89 families. +His younger brother Nils was an Olympic diver. +She started racing in 2008 on the Europe Cup, and joined the World Cup for the 2016–17 season. +References Category:Hills of SomersetCategory:Exmoor +Collections availability is ensured through loan documents for users in the reading rooms, interlibrary loan and loan documents at home (for some categories of users). +PCS created and presented six acclaimed performances during the 79th Annual Academy Awards, and produced a series of original segments for the Oprah Winfrey Show and Late Night with Conan O’Brien. +Background and family Crawfoot was baptised in Tarvin, Cheshire, on 1 July 1759, the youngest of nine known children of Thomas Crawfoot (b. c.1719) and Ann (née Brownbill alias Prince) (c.1716 – c.1784), both Anglican adherents. +ReferencesCategory:Villages in Legionowo County +It may refer to:Milan Kosanović (born 1933), rugby playerMilorad Kosanović (born 1951), football player and managerMiloš Kosanović (born 1990), footballerZoran Kosanović (1956–1998), table tennis playerCategory:Serbian-language surnamesCategory:Slavic-language surnamesCategory:Patronymic surnames +The Barony of Glengarnock thereafter remained in the line of the Earls of Glasgow until eventual disposition to the MacGregors of Rannoch. +Steven Hager of High Times was responsible for popularizing the story of the Waldos. +It is famous for being the home of Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, known as the Chofetz Chaim, and his Raduń Yeshiva founded in 1869. +Cates also said that some of her customers tell her that she looks like Phoebe Cates, and that she responds to them by saying "I get that a lot." +The first two-story house to be built in Bath Springs, it contains seven rooms and two halls. +He defeated Japan's Nobuyuki Sato (2:08:48). +Category:1904 birthsCategory:1975 deathsCategory:Australian aviatorsCategory:Members of the Order of the British EmpireCategory:Royal Air Force officersCategory:Royal Australian Air Force officers +Local tourism is also a source of revenue for the Bataks. +Cast Lillian Walker as Betty Thorndyke Coit Albertson as Morgan Spencer Charles B. Middleton as William Russell George Lessey as James Bradley (credited as George A. Lessey) Joe Smith Marba as Kenwah (credited as Joseph Marba) Leora Spellman as Valerie Kernan Bernard Randall as Kip Van Hoan William Pike as James Forsythe Buck Connors (credited as George Connors) Louise Hotaling Ray Allen Herbert Rawlinson as Man in suit F.W. +CompositionElectoral performanceEuropean ParliamentReferencesCategory:Regionalist parties in SpainCategory:Nationalist parties in SpainCategory:Republican parties in SpainCategory:2019 establishments in SpainCategory:Political parties established in 2019Category:Socialist parties in Spain* +In between the club's unique music and dance performances, Eramus introduces three stories about his fellow creatures of the night. +The pressure required to stop the flow across the membrane is called the osmotic pressure. +Sports Center is a multi purpose ice arena and recreational facility located in Bismarck, North Dakota owned and operated by the City of Bismarck Parks & Recreation Department. +In spite of natural deterioration, the Kshethra has maintained its status through its religious and social activities. +The 2017 LNB Pro A Leaders Cup season was the 21st edition of this tournament, the fourth since it was renamed as Leaders Cup. +Caryomyia tubicola, the hickory bullet gall midge, is a species of gall midge in the family Cecidomyiidae. +Ronda made it a point to be well-dressed, even in the pits, which made him stand out. +ReferencesCategory:Butterflies described in 1955Category:Dalla (skippers) +The women's 52 kg powerlifting event at the 2012 Summer Paralympics was contested on 1 September at ExCeL London. +It has a population of 1,755 inhabitants and a total area of 8.36 km². +): Die Generale des Heeres 1921–1945. +The site is not government owned and just copies news from other site (aggregation). +She was completed on 11 August 1904 and commissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as a second class gunboat. +Education and Science Workers' Union may refer to: Education and Science Workers' Union (Germany) Education and Science Workers' Union (Turkey) +The genus has about a hundred varieties but only a few are commercially sold. +Merewether died in Essex in 1899. +Pieter de Molijn (6 April 1595 in London – 23 March 1661 in Haarlem) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver born in England. +20. +Valpei (Valpei-Hukua) is an Oceanic language spoken on the northern tip of Espiritu Santo Island in Vanuatu. +He made 67 League of Wales appearances in the process. +ReferencesFurther readingExternal linksVideo of an arthroscopic acromioplastyCategory:Orthopedic surgical procedures +Because of its extreme rarity and localised occurrence, the species has its own individual Biodiversity Action Plan and is included on a list of the world's most threatened bryophytes. +edited by Dennis Dooley and Gary Engle, copyright 1987 by Octavia Press of Cleveland, Ohio. +There is a similar mineral called arsentsumebite, where the phosphate group PO4 is replaced by the arsenate group AsO4, giving the formula Pb2Cu(AsO4)(SO4)(OH). +In the 3D ideal chain model in chemistry, two angles are necessary to describe the orientation of each monomer. +The term Jewish legion was used in different historical contexts:The Jewish Cavalry Regiment (1792–1794), commanded by Berek Joselewicz participated in the Kościuszko Uprising in Poland The Jewish Legion (1917–1919) was a volunteer unit of the British Army that fought in World War I against the Ottoman Empire The Jewish Brigade (1940–1946) fought for the Allies in World War II +References Category:Populated places in Bampur County +The original bell remains in place. +Gastropoda. +ReferencesCategory:Moths described in 1900tigricolorCategory:Moths of RussiaCategory:Moths of Japan +Reader's Digest Guide to Love and Sex is a 1998 sex manual edited by Amanda Roberts and Barbara Padgett-Yawn and published by Reader's Digest. +Results summary The year in parentheses indicates year of Miss America's Outstanding Teen competition the award/placement was garnered. +MWSS-372 (-), despite having most of the unit's personnel and equipment in Somalia, spearheaded the recovery with communications, heavy equipment and construction support. +See also List of Catholic dioceses (structured view)ReferencesExternal links GCatholic Category:Lists of Roman Catholic dioceses by country +Former assets Pamukbank (taken over by the government's TMSF in 2002) Yapı ve Kredi Bankası (sold in 2005)ReferencesExternal links www.cukurovaholding.com.trCategory:Conglomerate companies of TurkeyCategory:Companies based in IstanbulCategory:Holding companies established in 1923Category:1923 establishments in TurkeyCategory:Holding companies of Turkey +Gather 'Round was an educational series syndicated on numerous PBS stations from September 1, 1978 until January 1, 1979. +When it was introduced, it came with new features such as electronic windshield wipers and downdraft carburetors. +History107.8 FM in SouthamptonThe 107.8 FM service launched under the name SouthCity FM on 5 September 1999. +Schedule BreaksThe Divisione Calcio a 5 has published the calendar of the championship on August 12. +Place of worshipChurches Park Methodist ChurchHindu Temples Jog Maya MandirHinglaj Mata MandirManohar TempleRam Dev Gujarati MandirShri Jai Veer Hanuman MandirShri Nawal MandirSikh Gurdwara Gurdwara Guru Granth Sahib Sikh SabhaReferencesExternal links CDGK sweepers to vacate 35-year-old rickety building in Narain PuraCategory:Neighbourhoods of Karachi +The name “Kiara” was presented to her and she immediately picked it, as it is from a Venezuelan native (indigenous) Princess from the state of Yaracuy, not too far from where the singer was born. +HistoryThe name of Che in the Early Cyrillic alphabet was (črĭvĭ), meaning "worm". +O'Hart, John, Irish Pedigrees. +Eventually servants arrived and chased away the monkeys (which were later destroyed), and the King's wounds were promptly cleaned and dressed but not cauterized. +Its name is descriptive. +Utube or u-tube may refer to: YouTube, an American video-sharing website Oscillating U-tube, a technique to determine the density of fluids Universal Tube & Rollform Equipment, a company U-tube, a design for tubing in a nuclear power steam generatorSee also U-bend, in plumbing +Stay Up Forever is the third studio album by British synthpop group Chungking, released on 13 August 2007 in the United Kingdom. +Elizabeth Caradus (26 April 1832 – 5 November 1912) was a New Zealand suffragist, temperance and welfare worker. +After the suppression of the order in 1312 the house passed to the Hospitallers in 1338. +In September 2017, Iain Dale placed Shabi at No. +There are four lists of state highways in Maryland shorter than one mile split by number ranges: List of state highways in Maryland shorter than one mile (2–699) List of state highways in Maryland shorter than one mile (700–799) List of state highways in Maryland shorter than one mile (800–899) List of state highways in Maryland shorter than one mile (900–999)State highways in Maryland shorter than one mileState highways shorter than one mileMaryland +Of these, one is listed at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II. +In addition, Lieutenant General Theodoros Grivas was bestowed the rank on 23 October 1862 for his leadership in the revolt that led to the ousting of King Otto, but died the following day, before it could be conferred to him in person. +CareerFedorchuk was born in Netishyn, Khmelnytskyi Oblast, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union. +North Atlantic Books. +But Lulu did not realize that it would get her entangled in a murder that only she believes has happened. +References Category:Populated places in Tonekabon County +In the 1960s, the construction of Lantz Arena and a new classroom building for health education resulted in the relocation of many of the programs held in the building. +She graduated in 1996 with BSc(Hons) First Class in Biochemistry, University of Otago. +about the Allied occupation of Vienna and about the-prewar period. +He accepted a faculty position at Saratov in 1963, and defended his Ph.D. thesis in 1966, again at Herzen State Pedagogical University. +Both managers were pleased with their teams' performances, in particular Ferguson, who felt his players coped well in the heat. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Iranian film actressesCategory:Living peopleCategory:Best Supporting Actress Genie and Canadian Screen Award winnersCategory:Year of birth missing (living people) +Iman has one elder brother, Crown Prince Hussein and two younger siblings, Princess Salma and Prince Hashem. +The Everett-Bradner House, also known as the Bradner-Young House, is located at 156 South Street in the village of Goshen, New York. +Euseius tutsi is a species of mite in the family Phytoseiidae. +DenisonSeven seats were up for election. +Ganoblemmus is a genus of crickets in family Gryllidae. +Medal summaryMedal tableMedal eventsReferencesExternal linksOfficial websiteRecords and statistics (reports by Omega) Water polo20172017World Aquatics Championships +The highway travels in a south-north orientation from Holly Hill north to Vance, and then northwest to its northern terminus, completely within Orangeburg County. +Negotiations were held to garner support from previous Rada members Petliura and Vynnychenko, but these activists worked to overthrow Skoropadsky. +Rick Leary is an American transit planner. +In 1952, Taylor and Leon Clore set up Countryman Films, a company which made natural history documentaries. +Bayandina () is a rural locality (a village) in Cherdynsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. +References Category:1792 birthsCategory:1863 deathsCategory:People from Orleans County, New YorkCategory:People from Albion, Orleans County, New YorkCategory:People from Auburn, New York +There are two rooms on the 32nd floor which are only used when the hotel has no rooms (or by request). +The Under-Sheriff is a 1914 American short comedy film featuring Fatty Arbuckle. +It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. +His brother Jack also played with Tipperary. +Muddy Creek Mill is a historic grist mill complex and national historic district located in Tamworth, Cumberland County, Virginia. +This is a sub-article to BiałystokThe city of Białystok is divided into 28 administrative units known in Polish as osiedle (housing estate, or residential neighborhood; plural: osiedla). +The film follows several rivals attempting to gain control of a valuable Spanish copper mine. +To Coleidian police, it looks like an assault, so they catch Alisa and imprison her. +Nature Located at the mouth of the Guadalete river, it consists of marshland, beaches, reed and sand dunes. +Wesleyan College of Manila is currently situated along Leveriza Street corner Balagtas Street in Pasay and claims to be the "only Methodist of higher learning in Metro Manila". +74 Sonbarsha (Vidhan Sabha constituency) (SC) is composed of the following:Sonbarsha, Patarghat and Banma Itahri community development blocks. +3rd FAI World Rally Flying Championship took place between August 28 -August 31, 1980 in Aschaffenburg in West Germany. +Works in the seriesRoll-Call at the Black Wall, oil on canvas, 3 X 4.87 meters (10 X 16 feet), 1980The Flow of Pain, oil on canvas, 3.65 X 5.50 meters (12 X 18 Feet), 1990 Extinguishing the Light (1), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 Extinguishing the Light (2), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 The Gasping Flame (1), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 The Gasping Flame (2), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 Cries and Silence (1), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 Cries and Silence, (2), oil on canvas, 3.65 X 3 meters (12 X 10 feet), 1993–94 Living Memory, oil on canvas, 3.65 X 5.50 meters (12 X 18 feet), 1993–94See alsoThe Floating Shadows (triptych)Cluster PaintingsReferencesExternal linksLiving Memory paintingsInstallation viewCategory:Modern paintingsCategory:War paintingsCategory:Anti-war paintingsCategory:Painting seriesCategory:1990s paintingsCategory:DiptychsCategory:1980 paintings +Measures an average of 8.8 centimeters and weighs an average of 6.8 grams. +In 2015, for the first time of him won the men's singles event through Estonian International tournament. +Santo Stefano Lodigiano borders the following municipalities: Maleo, Corno Giovine, Corno Giovine, Fombio, San Fiorano, Caselle Landi, Piacenza, Piacenza, San Rocco al Porto. +An Educational Encyclopedia of Islam is a 2010 encyclopedia written by Islamic scholar Syed Iqbal Zaheer from Bangalore, India and published by Iqra Publishers. +Pinehurst State Airport , is a public airport located 1 mile (1.6 km) southwest of Pinehurst, in Jackson County, Oregon, USA. +The Boone family was the first to send three generations of players to the All-Star Game. +Brouardel was a major influence on the career of neurologist Georges Gilles de la Tourette (1857–1904). +TCDD Taşımacılık operates two daily trains that stop at the station: the 6th of September Express and the 17th of September Express. +Lupaș is a Romanian surname that may refer to:Alexandru Ioan Lupaș (1942–2007), Romanian mathematicianIoan Lupaș (1880–1967), Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian historian, academic, politician, Orthodox theologian and priestCategory:Romanian-language surnames +ReceptionLady Croissant received a mixed critical reception. +ScheduleRosterReferencesDrexelCategory:Drexel Dragons football seasonsDrexel Dragons football +Charles Barrett may refer to:Charles Barrett (water polo) (born 1901), Irish water polo playerCharles D. Barrett (1885–1943), U.S. Marines officerCharles Golding Barrett (1836–1904), English entomologist (lepidopterist)Charles Leslie Barrett (1879–1959), Australian naturalist, journalist, author and ornithologistCharles W. Barrett (1869–1947), American architect with Barrett & ThomsonC. K. Barrett (Charles Kingsley Barrett, 1917–2011), British biblical scholarRed Barrett (Charles Henry Barrett, 1915–1990), American baseball playerSee alsoCharley Barrett (1893–1924), American football player +BiographyHe was born in 1851 in Drøbak in Akershus, Norway. +The wings are black brown and the wingspan of this species is 14–15 mm. +A shrub up to 4 metres tall, it features rusty stems and hairs on the under side of the leaf. +World War II In June–July 1942, he studied and graduated from the regimental school for junior commanders with the assignment of military rank to senior sergeant and was sent to the front in the army in the Stalingrad area. +Puff adder is the common name of several snake species: Bitis arietans, a venomous snake species found in Africa and the southern Arabian Peninsula Bitis, any other member of this genus Heterodon, a genus of harmless North American colubrid snakes commonly known as hognose snakesPuff adder may also refer to: Puff Adder (comics), a mutant supervillain in the Marvel UniverseSee also Pofadder (disambiguation)Category:Animal common name disambiguation pages +The village has a population of 114. +Eure and Robinson laid the groundwork for another change in the 80s by announcing their intention in 1984 to apply for an FM frequency. +In 1866 a street was named after Izsák Lőwy in his town (next to present Újpest-Városkapu metro station). +The main industrial user was the steel maker Hoogovens (now Tata Steel) where it was used for nearly 25 years. +ReferenceskvetoslavaeCategory:Beetles described in 2006 +Category:Mexican State HighwaysCategory:1994 establishments in MexicoCategory:Transportation in Nuevo León +ReferencesFurther reading Category:HydrophilinaeCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Beetles described in 1863 +Clint Wuttunee, Chief of the Red Pheasant First Nation, challenged the jury selection process. +The rust fungus Puccinia monoica infects the plant leading to pseudoflowers, which mimic those of yellow, early spring wildflowers (e.g. +The earliest historical document relating to the chorus dates from 1402 when a John Dyer was named as the cathedral's organist and chorus-master. +Since then he has played a key role in its success, leading the team to win the 2005 and 2006 seasons of Enterprise Football League (formerly named National Men's First Division Football League) and achieve semi-final in AFC President's Cup 2006. +Records compilation albums +He plays as a center back. +In May 2018, he was named in the startlist for the 2018 Giro d'Italia. +There are several ethnic groups in Dak Khana including Muhajirs, Sindhis, Kashmiris, Seraikis, Pakhtuns, Balochis, Memons, Bohras Ismailis, etc. +Qualifying resultsRaceCaution flagsNotes New Race Record Cristiano da Matta 1:55:28.745 Average Speed 101.164 mphExternal links Friday Qualifying Results Saturday Qualifying Results Race ResultsMontereyCategory:Monterey Grand Prix +He covered various conflicts, including Iraq and the second intifada in Israel. +They performed under the pseudonyms Sep Sev Sev Two, Pat Juba, General Woundwart, and Mr. Gene Poole, respectively. +PopulationSee alsoCommunes of the Haute-Garonne departmentTransportationResidents and visitors can use the on-demand transportation line 119 (TAD 119) operated by TisseoReferencesINSEECategory:Communes of Haute-Garonne +Palaeospinax is an extinct genus of shark which lived from the Early Triassic to the end of the Eocene epoch. +ReceptionCommercial reception"Autumn Morning" achieved a perfect all-kill status two days after its release. +Medan Labuhan is one of 21 administrative districts (kecamatan) in the city of Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia. +A music video has also been shot for the song, watch it . +In the summer season there is a boat service on the lake transporting hikers between the southern and northern end. +ReferencesCategory:1946 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Place of birth missing (living people)Category:Russian snooker players +CareerAt the 2012 WPA World Eight-ball Championship, Jun-Lin defeated compatriot Fu Che-wei in the final 11–6, after previously winning his semi-final 9–7 against Chris Melling. +Tapes) - 6:36"Promised Land" (The R.E.L. +Ming chases after Prince and a gunfight ensues between them. +The film was released on February 8, 1917, by Paramount Pictures. +The 13th Asian Athletics Championships were held in Jakarta, Indonesia in late August 2000. +Viscount Brentford, of Newick in the County of Sussex, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. +He was a member of the House of Assembly of Bermuda, representing the Pembroke West Central constituency for the former the United Bermuda Party (UBP), for 21 years from 1968 to 1989. +Among these may be mentioned (1838), Nestorians and their Rituals (1852), The Travels of Ludovico Varthema in India and the East, A.d. 1503-8 (1873) (both these for the Hakluyt Society), and an English-Arabic Lexicon (1881). +1926). +SpeciesAtitara aculeataAtitara americana Atitara polyphyllaReferencesCategory:Arecaceae generaCategory:Cocoseae +2004| type_strain =BCRC 17210, CCRC 17210, DSM 18899, LMG 22011| synonyms = }}Chitinimonas taiwanensis is a Gram-negative, chitinolytic, catalase- and oxidase-positive motile bacterium with a single flagellum of the genus Chitinimonas and the family of Burkholderiaceae which was isolated from the surface of a freshwater pond for shrimp (Macrobrachium rosenbergii'') in Pingtung City in southern Taiwan. +Praha: Bonaventura, 1994. . +The Minnesota Zephyr was a heritage railroad operating out of Stillwater, Minnesota. +Here her name according to the custom of the Ottoman court was changed to Gülcemal. +Cynan Nant Nyfer ("Cynan of the Nevern Valley"; fl. +XEED broadcast with 1,000 watts day and 250 at night. +There are 16 streets. +S-Band TX (AMSAT, UK)Radio amateurs from the United Kingdom have developed the S-Band transmitter (S-Band TX). +Its territory lies within the Vilnius district municipality, the Trakai district municipality, and the Elektrėnai municipality. +In the U.S., "Love Story" was released in March 1969, with "A Song for Jeffrey" on the B-side. +Presumably, separable states are not connected by any wormholes, but yet a superposition of such states is connected by a wormhole. +By the time of his decision to run in the 1978 Yukon general election, Hanson was so well known in Mayo that he only half-jokingly ran on the theme that he did not need to actually conduct a campaign. +After completing his investigation and analysis, Gregor characterized Zamenhof's Esperanto translation as being consistently clear and accurate, managing to be simultaneously "both conservative and original," and writes that it "deserves a high place among the great Bibles of the world." +See also List of composers of classical Turkish musicReferencesCategory:Composers of Ottoman classical musicCategory:Composers of Turkish makam musicCategory:19th-century composersCategory:19th-century people of the Ottoman EmpireCategory:1846 deathsCategory:Year of birth missing +The Society converted the building into its headquarters and commissioned extensions, including the Society's lecture theatre, from G. L. Kennedy and F. B. Nightingale in 1928 to 1930. +At the 2001 Universiade he also competed for the Namibian 4 x 100 metres relay team who set a national record of 39.48 seconds. +First, a spin-forbidden reaction proceeds through the minimum energy crossing point (MECP) rather than through transition state (TS). +playersCategory:Year of death missingCategory:Middlesex Regiment soldiersCategory:Footballers from StockportCategory:Association football forwards +Seeing may refer to: Visual perception Astronomical seeing, the blurring effects of air turbulence in the atmosphere In the occult seeing refers to "the sight" or the ability to see auras or to predict the future; see fortune-telling Seeing (novel), the English title of José Saramago's 2004 novel Ensaio sobre a Lucidez "Seeing", a song on the Moby Grape album Moby Grape '69 Seeing (composition), 1998 piano concerto by Christopher RouseSee also See (disambiguation) Seeing I (novel) +It is one of the seven assembly segments of Vijayawada Lok Sabha constituency, along with Vijayawada West, Vijayawada Central, Vijayawada East, Mylavaram, Nandigama, and Jaggayyapeta. +Tüttleben is a municipality in the district of Gotha, in Thuringia, Germany. +Abu ’l-Muʿīn al-Nasafī, Tabṣirat al-adilla, quoted in Muḥammad b. Tāwīt al-Ṭānd̲j̲ī, Abū Manṣūr al-Māturīdī, in IFD, iv/1-2 (1955), 1–12 Ibn Abi ’l-Wafāʾ, al-Ḏj̲awāhir al-muḍīʾa, Ḥaydarābād 1332/1914, ii, 130-1 Bayāḍī, Is̲h̲ārāt al-marām, ed. +It is included in the National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2017–2021, which categorized it as a local general aviation facility. +Another of Waller's sons, Samuel Edward Waller, became an artist. +SHAPE also functions as experts for The Economist. +CeDAMar uses data to create an estimation of global species diversity and provide a better understanding of the history of deep-sea fauna, including its present diversity and dependence on environmental parameters. +In 1920 he played in two first-class matches, firstly for Oxford University against the Army at the University Parks, Oxford, on 9 to 11 June. +ReferencesCategory:1945 shipsCategory:Ships built in JapanCategory:Type D escort shipsCategory:Ships built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries +She competed in the 2018 Winter Olympics. +He became lieutenant-colonel of Colonel John Foulkes' Regiment of Foot on 21 September 1689, and lieutenant-colonel of Colonel Edward Lloyd's Regiment of Foot on 1 October 1692. +Simon Wright is a food writer, broadcaster and restaurateur. +The company consisted of the consumer communications equipment businesses of the companies. +The house is located on Monument Street, with the Concord River just behind it. +Nusantara Satu or Nusantara Satu 1 (formerly known as PSN VI or PSN-6) is an Indonesian communications satellite. +The Netherlands has a rail network totalling of track, or 3,013 route km. +The length of the forewings is 5–5.5 mm. +Males had a median income of $35,198 versus $26,345 for females. +The Swallowing Dark (Liverpool Playhouse Studio, Theatre503, Inis Nua Theatre Philadelphia USA), was shortlisted for the Susan Smith Blackburn Award. +It was described by George Hampson in 1919. +Traditional Ties is a third album by the progressive bluegrass band Hot Rize. +The rural district has 8 villages. +Former Brooklyn Borough president Howard Golden talked about the move: "Gold's is a vital part of our borough's history. +The Whitefish Lake First Nation is a First Nations band government in northern Alberta. +Some bars have entered the permanent collection from there. +is an album by saxophonist Gene Ammons recorded in 1961 and released on the Prestige label. +Sycosis vulgaris is a cutaneous condition characterized by a chronic infection of the chin or bearded region. +The DDS attracted major research funding from industrial partners such as Ford Motor Company USA, QinetiQ, BAE Systems, Thales, Fisher Defence, BBC Scotland and Shed Media, and Historic Scotland. +During the Russian Civil War, she served with some of her sister ships as part of the British intervention forces fighting in support of White Russian forces on the Dvina River from 1918–1919. +They are distributed in the districts of Amravati and Nagpur. +Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. +Particularly in Sufism it refers to a spiritual guide. +Why Not Models in Models.com'Why Not Model Agency at Modelscouts.comWhy Not Model Agency at LatitudeTalent.comCategory:Modeling agenciesCategory:Italian fashionCategory:Companies based in MilanCategory:Business services companies established in 1976Category:1976 establishments in Italy +: Disputatio Nova Expanded and Revised Edition, Hart, Clive, Edwin Mellen Press, 2003. . +Christ the King may also refer to:Feast of Christ the King, observed in the Catholic Church, and many Protestant churches, since 1925Cathedrals and churchesChrist the King Cathedral (disambiguation), the name of many church buildings around the worldChrist the King Anglican Church, Birmingham, Alabama, United StatesChrist the King Catholic Church in Kahului, Hawaii, United StatesChrist the King Graceland Independent Anglican Church of Canada, Newmarket, Ontario, CanadaChurch of Christ the King, Bloomsbury, London, EnglandChrist the King, Cockfosters, London, England: former priory now parish church and spirituality centreSchoolsChrist the King School (disambiguation)Christ the King (Georgetown, Ontario), a secondary schoolChrist the King Anglican College, Cobram, Victoria, AustraliaChrist the King Catholic Voluntary Academy, Arnold, Nottinghamshire, EnglandChrist the King College, Sierra Leone, AfricaChrist the King College, Isle of Wight, Isle of Wight, EnglandChrist the King Seminary, PhilippinesChrist the King Seminary (Pakistan)Christ the King Sixth Form College, Lewisham, EnglandSeminary of Christ the King, British Columbia, CanadaOtherAnglican Diocese of Christ the King, in southern AfricaAnglican Province of Christ the King, a part of the Continuing Anglican movement in the United StatesChrist the King Priory, a monastery of Missionary Benedictines in Schuyler, Nebraska, United StatesChrist the King Priory (Uganda), a monastery of Missionary Benedictines in Tororo, UgandaCommunity of Christ the King, an order of Anglican nunsFranciscan Missionaries of Christ the King, a Roman Catholic religious congregationInstitute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest, an order of Catholic priestsStatuesChrist the King (Świebodzin), a statue in Świebodzin, PolandChrist the King (Dili)Christ the King (Almada)Christ the King (Aherlow)Christ the King (Lubango)Christ the King (Madeira)Cristo Rey (Colombian statue)Cristo Rey (Mexican statue)See alsoCristo Rei, Portuguese translation of "Christ the King"Cristo Rey, Spanish translation of "Christ the King" +M. Bullard gave 20 acres (80,000 m2) as the Lakeview townsite. +In the extreme this results in the train entering a curve at a speed at which it cannot negotiate the curve, and gross derailment takes place. +and portions of Pearland. +Boonstra competed in the 2005 World Championships in Athletics. +Cardinality of infinite setsTwo sets are said to have the same cardinality or cardinal number if there exists a bijection (a one-to-one correspondence) between them. +References Category:Unincorporated communities in West VirginiaCategory:Former populated places in West Virginia +SuccessionSuccession is by absolute primogeniture governed by the provisions of the Act of Settlement, 1701, and the Bill of Rights, 1689. +GNP Records was an American jazz record label. +It is a marine, tropical eel which is known from the western Pacific Ocean, including India and Hong Kong. +ReferencesCategory:2007 songsCategory:2000s balladsCategory:Leona Lewis songsCategory:Contemporary R&B balladsCategory:Songs written by Jörgen ElofssonCategory:Song recordings produced by Steve Mac +In 1914 the current Frogner Stadium was built right next to the old stadium. +He played for the Hungarian national team at the 1928 and 1936 Winter Olympics and at the World Championships. +It is endemic to Papua New Guinea. +Hanna is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Hanna Township, LaPorte County, Indiana, United States. +She then moved to Fortuna Ltd. where she rose to become co-owner and director until her retirement in 2008. +Finally the hermit changes the tiger back into a mouse and tells him to learn how to take care of himself. +It was written by guitarist Tommy Shaw who had just recently joined the band. +ReferencesNotesSourcesCategory:Urban-type settlements in Sverdlovsk Oblast +Harold Avington Throckmorton (April 12, 1897 – November 5, 1973) was an American tennis player in the early 20th century. +In mathematics, a generalized map is a topological model which allows one to represent and to handle subdivided objects. +IncumbentsPresident: Enrique Olaya HerreraEventsFebruary 14 - unsuccessful attempt by Peruvian Air Force to bomb Colombian Navy, President Herrera breaks off diplomatic relationsFebruary 15 - Colombian forces attack Peruvian positions at Tarapaca, AmazonasMay 14 - Colombian parliamentary election, 1933May 24 - end of the Colombia-Peru WarAugust 27 - opening of Captain Germán Olano Moreno Air Baseestablishment of Captain Luis F. Gómez Niño Air BaseBirthsDeathsCategory:1933 in Colombia +PopulationAccording to the 1991 census, the population was 630, consisting of: Croats – 582 (92.38%) Serbs – 41 (6.50%) others and unknown – 7 (1.11%)ReferencesCategory:Villages in the Federation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaCategory:Populated places in Čapljina +Its density at 25 °C and otherwise standard conditions is 0.766 g/ml. +King Æscwine succeeds his father Cenfus as ruler of Wessex (approximate date). +Biological substrates of emotional reactivity and regulation in adolescence during an emotional go-nogo task. +Country Jam USA is a 3-day annual country music festival held in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. +They all have their own problems, Vartika is infatuated with a married man, Neena's involved with an older guy, and Puja can't choose between two guys. +Ferry service is available between Galveston Island and the Bolivar Peninsula. +Marleen Barr teaches communication and media studies at Fordham University, New York City. +It was created for the 2016 general election and elects 2 MHKs; currently Jason Moorhouse and Graham Cregeen. +She missed 2004 because of an Achilles tendon injury and spent the 2005 season trying to return to her best but she only managed 1.92 metres, which, however, was enough for a second place in the Russian championships. +The wingspan is 16–17 mm. +It borders the villages of Lilli, Äriküla, Leeli and Univere as well as other villages in the former Abja Parish. +HonoursClub Iranian Futsal Super League Champion (1): 2013–14 (Dabiri Tabriz) Runners-up (1): 2012–13 (Saba Qom)References Category:1989 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:People from QomCategory:Iranian men's futsal playersCategory:Almas Shahr Qom FSC playersCategory:Dabiri FSC playersCategory:Shahid Mansouri FSC playersCategory:Sohan Mohammad Sima FSC playersCategory:Farsh Ara FSC playersCategory:Arjan Shiraz FSC playersCategory:Melli Haffari FSC players +Major public holidaysSee also 1973 in Israeli film 1973 in Israeli television 1973 in Israeli music 1973 in Israeli sport Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 1973ReferencesExternal links +He was born New London, Connecticut. +One man known to have appreciated alliterative verse during the time it was still being composed was Robert Thornton, a 15th-century landowner from North Yorkshire. +Taylor Township may refer to:Canada Taylor Township, Cochrane District, OntarioUnited StatesArkansas Taylor Township, Columbia County, Arkansas, in Columbia County, Arkansas Taylor Township, Craighead County, Arkansas, in Craighead County, Arkansas Taylor Township, Nevada County, Arkansas, in Nevada County, ArkansasIllinois Taylor Township, Ogle County, IllinoisIndiana Taylor Township, Greene County, Indiana Taylor Township, Harrison County, Indiana Taylor Township, Howard County, Indiana Taylor Township, Owen County, IndianaIowa Taylor Township, Allamakee County, Iowa Taylor Township, Appanoose County, Iowa Taylor Township, Benton County, Iowa Taylor Township, Dubuque County, Iowa, in Dubuque County, Iowa Taylor Township, Harrison County, Iowa Taylor Township, Marshall County, IowaMichigan Taylor Township, Michigan, defunctMinnesota Taylor Township, Beltrami County, Minnesota Taylor Township, Traverse County, MinnesotaMissouri Taylor Township, Greene County, Missouri, in Greene County, Missouri Taylor Township, Grundy County, Missouri Taylor Township, Shelby County, Missouri Taylor Township, Sullivan County, Missouri, in Sullivan County, MissouriNorth Dakota Taylor Township, Sargent County, North Dakota, in Sargent County, North DakotaOhio Taylor Township, Union County, OhioOklahoma Taylor Township, Cleveland County, OklahomaPennsylvania Taylor Township, Blair County, Pennsylvania Taylor Township, Centre County, Pennsylvania Taylor Township, Fulton County, Pennsylvania Taylor Township, Lawrence County, PennsylvaniaSouth Dakota Taylor Township, Hanson County, South Dakota, in Hanson County, South Dakota Taylor Township, Tripp County, South Dakota, in Tripp County, South DakotaSee alsoTaylor (disambiguation)Category:Township name disambiguation pages +Alternative spelling include Nyström, Nystrøm or Nystroem and can refer to:NystromAnna Nystrom (1849-1913), Swedish missionary in the Caucasus, Persia, and Xinjiang, ChinaBob Nystrom (born 1952), Swedish-Canadian retired professional ice hockey right-wingerDave Nystrom, Canadian comedian and writer Eric Nystrom (born 1983), American ice hockey player John W. Nystrom, Swedish-American engineer who proposed a hexadecimal systemKarl F. Nystrom, American railroad engineer at the Milwaukee RoadLorne Nystrom, Canadian politicianMae Taylor Nystrom, American suffragistPaul Nystrom, American professor of marketing at Columbia UniversityStefan Nystrom, Australian criminalNyströmAnders Nyström, Swedish rock musicianAnn-Christine Nyström, Finnish singer Bob Nyström, Swedish-born Canadian ice hockey player David Nyström, Swedish ice hockey playerEmilia Nyström, Finnish beach volleyball player Erika Nyström, Finnish beach volleyball player Hjalmar Nyström (1904-1960), Finnish wrestler and Olympic medalist Jenny Nyström, Swedish painter and illustratorJohan Olof Nyström, Swedish Olympic swimmerJohan Nyström (swimmer), Swedish swimmer Johan Nyström (athlete) (1874–1968), Swedish track and field athlete Joakim Nyström, Swedish tennis playerLars-Fredrik Nyström, Swedish ice hockey player Per Nyström, Swedish historian and politicianRikard Nyström (1884-1943), Swedish missionary Usko Nyström (1861-1925), Finnish architectNystrømLene Nystrøm Rasted, Norwegian singerSøren Nystrøm Rasted, Danish musicianSteffen Nystrøm, Norwegian football (soccer) playerNystroemGösta Nystroem, Swedish composerOtherNyström method - Numerical analysis named after Evert Johannes Nyström. +The SMS Remix of the song was released as a promotional single and was given out with issues of Celebrity Magazine. +Category:1980s British music television seriesCategory:1990s British music television seriesCategory:1980s British game showsCategory:1990s British game showsCategory:1989 British television series debutsCategory:1990 British television series endingsCategory:British game showsCategory:English-language television programsCategory:ITV game showsCategory:Musical game showsCategory:Television programmes produced by Television South West (TSW) +In England, Smith's of Worcester listed Ulmus monumentalis separately from Ulmus 'Wheatley' in the 1880s. +The Midland School is located in Paramus, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. +Indeed a recent study of the phylogeny of the subfamily Syrphinae found it to be closer to other certain other genera – Rohdendorfia, Syrphocheilosia and Spazigaster. +Meanwhile, Moje continued working with the glass rods. +Equality: A Critical Introduction (Routledge; 2014) David Kahane, Daniel Weinstock, Dominique Leydet, Melissa Williams, eds. +Denis Tabako (born 20 February 1974) is a Belarusian rower. +Wood was the father of David, Colin, Sidney III, and W. Godfrey Wood. +John McEnroe (Champion) Roscoe Tanner (Semifinals)DrawReferences1981 World Championship Tennis Finals DrawSingles +David Kurtz is an American film score composer who has won Daytime Emmy Awards for his work on The Bold and the Beautiful and The Young and the Restless. +With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR), the successor of JGR, on 1 April 1987, control of the station passed to JR Kyushu. +OverviewSt Peter's School is accredited by the Spanish Ministry of Education, the Generalitat de Catalunya, the International Baccalaureate and by the Best Schools in Spain CICAE. +It was licensed to the Sunshine Coast Regional Council in 2010. +Succeeding in both endeavors, Lio gathers all combat-worthy Cybertronians to return home to face Shokaract, only for Elephorca and Drancron to appear to aid their comrade. +Birstall Priory or Burstall Priory was a priory in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Skeffling, England. +Despite the clear distinction in styles of music, the album sound is consistent due to little instrumentation. +Framing error can refer to the following:General form of a framing error is the result of starting to read a sequence of data at the wrong point. +Masuzoa is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species: Masuzoa baicalensis Shilenkov & Anichtchenko, 2008 Masuzoa notabilis Ueno, 1960 Masuzoa ussuriensis Lafer, 1989ReferencesCategory:Trechinae +The Danish American Frontier Award is the most prestigious honor awarded by the Danish American community in the western United States. +ReferencesExternal linksCategory:Fungal plant pathogens and diseasesCategory:Saccharomycetes +The film stars Parambrata Chattopadhyay, Paoli Dam, Anindya Chatterjee, Indrasish Roy and Kaushik Sen.ReferencesCategory:Cinema chains in India +There is probably one generation per year. +given any x in X, the singleton set {x} is a closed set. +The green-capped tanager (Tangara meyerdeschauenseei) is a species of bird in the family Thraupidae. +Our Crazy Aunts in the South Seas () is a 1964 Austrian comedy film directed by Rolf Olsen and starring Gunther Philipp, Gus Backus, and Udo Jürgens. +This is the nearest boat-ramp to Mount Carmel on the Indiana side of the river. +More than 2,000 of his sermons are archived, and recordings of many of them are available in collections such as The Words of Gardner Taylor: 50 Years of Timeless Treasures and at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta. +Tal El (, lit. +The team then was renamed as the Drummondville A's, during what turned out to be their final season in the league. +The detectives question Monica Krol (Maria Marlow), Piotr's wife, who says the police should have arrested Stan 17 years ago. +A recitation paying homage to the American truck driver, "Giddyup Go" was Sovine's second No. +The album's title and artwork is a parody of the comic book and cartoon series Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. +ReferencesSee also Composite Antarctic Gazetteer List of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic islands List of Antarctic islands south of 60° S SCAR Territorial claims in AntarcticaCategory:Islands of the Palmer Archipelago +HD 210702 b is an exoplanet located approximately 177 light-years away in the constellation of Pegasus, orbiting the star HD 210702. +Lawrence O'Connor may refer to:Larry O'Connor (radio host) (born 1967), American radio hostLarry O'Connor (politician) (born 1956), Canadian politicianLarry O'Connor (athlete) (1916–1995), Canadian Olympic athleteLawrence J. O'Connor (died 1900), American architectLawrence O'Connor (rapist) (died 1964), criminal executed by the state of Texas in 1964 +Barren Township, Arkansas may refer to: Barren Township, Independence County, Arkansas Barren Township, Jackson County, ArkansasSee also List of townships in Arkansas Barren Township (disambiguation)Category:Arkansas township disambiguation pages +Track listing "Inceptus" - 2:40 "Exodus" - 1:47 "Psykerion: The Question" - 3:02 "In the Words of Avakus" - 1:52 "Light Year Time" - 5:33 "Kerakryps" - 5:27 "The Black Hole Lounge" - 1:08 "Circuits of O.D.D." +Round of 32|}Round of 16|}Quarter-finals|}Semifinals|}FinalReferencesWomen's CupRussian Women's CupCategory:Russian Women's Cup +His sole starting game for the club was in round when regular halfback Jason Taylor was dropped to the bench by coach Warren Ryan after a poor game. +The assessment of the status of the KPA 10th Division would prove to be incorrect; the division had maintained a formal organization of a headquarters and three regiments and with a surviving strength of about two thousand and had managed by the opening of Operation Ripper on 7 March 1951 to slip north through the Taebaek Mountains to the Irwol Mountain region, northeast of Andong. +Luo performs Hokkien pop and Mandopop, and received a Golden Bell Award in 1997, followed by a Golden Melody Award in 2001. +Natalie Giselle Juncos (born 28 December 1990) is an American-born Argentine footballer who plays as a defender for Racing Club de Avellaneda and the Argentina women's national team. +He also composed music for the video game based on the original Battlestar Galactica series, Terminator 3: Redemption, TMNT, Anderson's Cross, Company of Heroes 2, Haze, Splinter Cell: Double Agent (main theme only), Clive Barker's Jericho and is credited with doing additional music for Van Helsing. +For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 99.8 males. +He was succeeded by his son Firuz Shah Suri, who was only twelve. +It came into being on February 22, 2007, encompassing the northern parts of the island of Saint Martin and neighbouring islets, the largest of which is Île Tintamarre. +Nonetheless it remains one of his most popular songs. +He attempted to return to the House of Commons as a Liberal candidate in the 1958 general election in Vancouver South, and in the 1962 general election in Okanagan Boundary, but was badly defeated both times. +At the 2006 census, its population was 198, in 47 families. +ReferencesExternal links Official Website of the Iligan City Government - Maria Cristina FallsSee alsoList of waterfalls in MindanaoCategory:Waterfalls of the PhilippinesCategory:Landforms of Lanao del NorteCategory:Tourist attractions in Iligan +They occasionally enter into estuarine waters. +Comparison with pedunculate oak Significant botanical differences from pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) include the stalked leaves, and the stalkless (sessile) acorns from which one of its common names is derived. +(Springer, 1966)Alexander Catsch Dekorporierung radioaktiver und stabiler Metallionen (Thiemig, 1968)A. Catsch The Chelation of Heavy Metals (International encyclopedia of pharmacology and therapeutics) (Pergamon Press, 1979)Catsch, A., and A. E. Harmuth-Hoene Pharmacology and Therapeutic Applications of Agents Used in Heavy Metal Poisoning In Alexander Catsch The Chelation of Heavy Metals 171-183 (Pergammon Press, 1979)Publications of the KFKAlexander Catsch, H. Immel-Teller, and D. Schindewolf-Jordan Kernforschungszentrum Karlsruhe. +For the genus of jumping spiders, see Irura (spider). +Rebow married firstly in 1835 Mary Ormsby, daughter of General Slater Rebow of Wivenhoe Park, and widow of Sir Thomas Ormsby, 3rd Baronet. +21 Corps, 21st Corps, Twenty First Corps, or XXI Corps may refer to:XXI Corps (German Empire), a unit of the Imperial German Army prior to and during World War IXXI Corps (Ottoman Empire), active during World War IXXI Corps (United Kingdom), active during World War IIndian XXI Corps, active during World War IIXXI Corps (India), currently active Indian Army corpsXXI Corps (United States), active during World War IIXXI Corps (Union Army), active during the American Civil War XXI Mountain Corps (Wehrmacht), active during World War IISee alsoList of military corps by number 21st Army (disambiguation) 21st Brigade (disambiguation) 21st Division (disambiguation) 21st Regiment (disambiguation) 21 Squadron (disambiguation) +"On my record, there's none of that, and I'm really proud of that – which is funny to say, because it seems like that should be the standard if you're listening to an album. +He is a New Zealand champion sheepdog trialist. +Domestically, it borders the following districts, namely, Zawiya in east, Jabal al Gharbi in southeast and Nalut in the southwest. +Though one of the oldest offices in government anywhere, it has no particular function today because the use of a privy seal has been obsolete for centuries; thus the office has generally been used as a kind of minister without portfolio. +In the 1950s a gun with more range and a faster rate of fire than the 5"/38 caliber gun used in World War II was needed, therefore, the gun was created concurrently with the 3"/70 Mark 26 gun for different usages. += Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted inOther batters Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. +ISKA Lightweight World Title Fight (60 kg): Kickboxing Rules / 3Min. +1959See alsoKehr's signKerr (disambiguation) +It is the subject of a chapter of Wainwright's book The Outlying Fells of Lakeland. +It regularly features The Intercept editor and journalist Glenn Greenwald as well as senior correspondent, author, and journalist Naomi Klein. +Michael Chiang (born 27 October 1955 in Muar, Malaysia) is a prolific playwright and screenwriter in Singapore. +The vast amount of water building up behind the earthen dam from the landslide did not hold long and, when it burst, the water rushed though the dam and caused a major flood downstream, killing about 500 people and destroying another 25 farms as well as several churches. +Barry Warren (born 12 July 1933 in London, died 22 February 1994 in Chichester, Sussex) was a British actor, born as Barry Christopher J. Warren. +Kenseth fell two positions after being passed by Allmendinger and Harvick. +References Category:Towns in New South WalesCategory:Northern Rivers +The City of Barstow annexed Nebo Center in 2001. +References Category:Shire of Murray +Esparza grew up interested in art, but it was not until he attended East Los Angeles College during his early twenties that he began to focus on performance art. +Significant parts of the 3D objects available at Threeding are digital copies of historical artifacts which is a new line in the world of 3D printing repositories. +United Synagogue Review. +The court was established by a recommendation to support the Sami language-speaking region of Finnmark. +Aldemaro Romero en Maracaibo is the name of a 33-RPM LP album by Venezuelan composer/arranger/conductor Aldemaro Romero, released in 1967 (see 1967 in music), along with the label Cymbal. +Under Guidara's leadership, the restaurant has garnered four stars from the New York Times, five stars from the Forbes Travel Guide, three Michelin Stars, and the #1 spot on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants List. +The 2016 Indian Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 5–9 July 2016 at the HICC Novotel Hotel in Hyderabad, India. +Abaw is a village in Ye Township in Mawlamyine District in the Mon State of south-east Burma. +Use for: Framing applications where tension forces could pull the joint apartMitred half lapThe mitred half lap is the weakest version of the joint because of the reduced gluing surface. +ReferencesCategory:Short stories by Kate ChopinCategory:Louisiana in fiction +1)) were caught off the eastern coast of the Gulf of Thailand. +He made his officiate debut in Premier League matches, between Johor Darul Ta'zim II and USM FC on 11 March 2011, with results end with a 2–1 win for USM FC. +Always Have, Always Will can refer to:Always Have, Always Will (Ace of Base song) Always Have, Always Will (Janie Fricke song) +However, he lost his seat in the December general election of the same year, and never returned to Parliament. +Medal summaryMen's eventsWomen's eventsA = affected by altitudeMedal tableReferences . +On 27 November 2012 an attempt by some University of Jaffna students to commemorate Maaveerar Naal by lighting oil lamps was broken by the Sri Lankan security forces who broke the lamps, threatened the students and pointing weapons at them. +The 2002 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship was held in Azadi Volleyball Hall, Tehran, Iran from 10 September to 17 September 2002. +In their eighth year under head coach Henry L. Williams, the Golden Gophers compiled a 2–2–1 record (0–1–1 against Western Conference opponents) and outscored all opponents 55 to 52. +References The Dawn Category:Pakistani male field hockey playersCategory:1981 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Olympic field hockey players of PakistanCategory:Field hockey players at the 2000 Summer OlympicsCategory:Field hockey players at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:2002 Men's Hockey World Cup playersCategory:Field hockey players at the 2002 Asian GamesCategory:Commonwealth Games medallists in field hockeyCategory:Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for PakistanCategory:Field hockey players at the 2002 Commonwealth GamesCategory:Asian Games competitors for Pakistan +The courts became involved in 1813 but were overtaken by events in January 1814, when part of the bridge collapsed due to a severe frost. +As a high school baseball player, Nieuwenhuis was a lightly recruited second baseman and pitcher whose fastball reached 90 miles per hour. +& Dalby, J. T., 2000. +Tablighi Jamaat Tablighi Jamaat, a non political Deobandi missionary organisation, began as an offshoot of the Deobandi movement. +ScheduleTeam leadersReferencesCategory:Wake Forest Demon Deacons football seasonsWake ForestWake Forest footballCategory:Seattle Bowl champion seasons +On March 22, 1873, the Spanish Government approved the proposal which became known as the Moret Law. +It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. +ReferencesCategory:Volvo Ocean Race yachtsCategory:Volvo Open 70 yachtsCategory:Sailing yachts of the United States +The Bangor Railway & Electric Company, founded as the Bangor Street Railway and renamed in 1924 as Bangor Hydro-Electric, operated trolleys on an electric railway between Bangor and Charleston, Maine, from 1889 to 1930. +The meat is first boiled and then allowed to thoroughly dry overnight before frying to achieve its characteristic chicharon-like texture. +ScheduleReferencesTennesseeCategory:Tennessee Volunteers football seasonsCategory:College football undefeated seasonsTennessee Volunteers football +A pensionary at the Villa Medici in Rome from 1749 to 1753, as well as a student of François Lemoyne, he joined the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture in France in 1757. +It is found in Southern Asia. +He died on September 1, 1865, in Matagorda, and was buried in Matagorda Cemetery located on South Gulf Road. +Bundesliga in 1977–78. +He published Out-door gardening during every week in the year: shewing how, when, and where to sow, plant, and cultivate all crops in the kitchen, fruit and flower garden in 1859, and In-door gardening for every week in the year: showing the most successful treatment for all plants cultivated in the greenhouse, conservatory, stove, pit, orchid and forcing-house in 1860. +In 1975 he was promoted to major and from 1975 to 1976 he was a teacher of tactics at the Swedish Coast Artillery School (Kustartilleriets skjutskola, KAS), after which he attended the Staff Course at the Swedish Armed Forces Staff College from 1976 to 1978. +The Lambarene non-directional beacon (Ident: LB) is located southwest of the field. +Demographics India census, Auraia had a population of 486 in 85 households. +He was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. +Kevin O'Brien may refer to:SportsmenKevin O'Brien (American football) (born 1970), American football playerKevin O'Brien (Australian footballer) (born 1932), Australian rules footballerKevin O'Brien (cricketer) (born 1984), Irish cricketer Kevin O'Brien (Dublin footballer) (born 1991), Gaelic footballer for Dublin Kevin O'Brien (rugby league) (born 1932), Australian rugby league footballerKevin O'Brien (rugby union) (born 1955), 1980s Ireland rugby union internationalKevin O'Brien (Wicklow footballer), Irish football playerKevin O'Brien (jockey), 1990s UK and Ireland steeplechase rider in Punchestown Champion ChasePoliticiansKevin O'Brien (Newfoundland and Labrador politician) (born 1956), Newfoundland and Labrador MHAKevin O'Brien (Nunavut politician) (born 1956), Nunavut and Northwest Territories MLAOthersKevin F. O'Brien, American Jesuit and academic administratorKevin O'Brien (architect) (born 1972), architect in QueenslandKevin O'Brien (author), railroad inspector and novelistKevin O'Brien (director), American director and storyboard artistKevin O'Brien (Texas pastor) (1955–2008), Independent Baptist clergyman +The effective literacy rate (i.e. +BiographySmith is the son of baseball executive Tal Smith. +The four sierras culminate up to 600 m, with asymmetric limestone crests dividing the basins. +On 24 February 2017, Morrell joined Margate on loan for a month. +colspan="13" style="background:#DCDCDC; text-align:center" | Midfielders|-! +Stephen Singer is an American film actor. +T. Marimuthu is an Indian politician and former Member of the Legislative Assembly of Tamil Nadu. +Corpus would only be around until 1893, when he left to follow King into the lucrative natural gas business, stemming from discoveries made during King's overseeing of construction of Hiram Walker’s summer hotel, The Mettawas. +Events in the year 2012 in Hong Kong. +ReferencesExternal links Category:Living peopleCategory:21st-century French male actorsCategory:1970 birthsCategory:French male film actorsCategory:French male television actorsCategory:People from Les Sables-d'Olonne +Surrey Wildlife Trust (SWT) was founded in 1959 as Surrey Naturalists' Trust and it is one of forty-six wildlife trusts covering Great Britain, Northern Ireland, Isle of Man and Alderney. +These American television programs premiered or are scheduled to premiere in 2020. +The expressway connects the following cities: Xinmin, Liaoning Zhangwu County, Fuxin, Liaoning Horqin District, Tongliao, Inner Mongolia Lubei, Jarud Banner, Tongliao, Inner MongoliaCurrently only the section from Xinmin to Zhangwu County is complete. +The population was 77 at the 2000 census. +(Heritage №), as a forward (prior to the specialist positions of; ), during the era of contested scrums. +The 1st was inactivated and replaced by the 71st Tactical Missile Squadron, which was simultaneously activated on 18 Jun 1958.In 1985 the World War II 881st Bombardment Squadron was consolidated with the squadron, but it was not activated. +ReferencesExternal linksNPS pageNRHP nomination formCategory:Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Philadelphia +It is associated with Hizen Province in modern-day Saga Prefecture. +Čivčije Bukovičke (Cyrillic: Чивчије Буковичке) is a village in the municipality of Doboj, Bosnia and Herzegovina. +She is in Venice to give a lecture on the Bosch triptych from which the film gets its name. +Fréchette's medal was afterwards upgraded to gold by the International Swimming Federation, while Babb-Sprague was allowed to retain hers. +The Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts that New Jersey established has been adopted in other states that regulate mixed martial arts, including Nevada, Louisiana and California. +The project will be floated in the market for solicitation of expression of interest from the potential investors in June 2017. +Stankovo may refer to: Stankovo, Slovenia, a hamlet near Brežice Stankovo, Croatia, a village near Jastrebarsko +Later in his career, he did not have the size or power to compete at the upper echelon of the heavyweight division when he moved up in weight class. +In the Jewish Community of Württemberg he was working to promote the migration. +He was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-fast bowler who played for Nottinghamshire. +He played at representative level for Great Britain and England, and at club level for Sheffield Eagles, Halifax, Hull FC, Wakefield Trinity Wildcats (captain) (Heritage № 1181), and York City Knights, as a , i.e. +W. K. V. Gale, The Black Country Iron Industry (Iron and Steel Institute, London, 1966), 66–9. +In April 2006, The Phoenix published an article detailing how the Young Progressive Democrats had successfully launched a campaign to prevent Ógra Fianna Fáil becoming members of the European Liberal Youth. +Syngamia fervidalis is a moth in the family Crambidae. +At the beginning of the 1970s, Koshimizu started to explore specifically the structure of surfaces. +Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). +The museum was forced to close in October 2019 due to declining visitor numbers and the withdrawal of funding by Great Yarmouth Borough Castle. +The head, throat and wings are generally a shiny green-purple colour, but with a bronze tinge to the feathers. +Yury Malyshev, or Yuri Malyshev, may refer to: Yury Malyshev (cosmonaut) (1941–1999), Soviet cosmonaut Yury Malyshev (rower) (born 1947), Soviet Olympic rower Yury Malyshev (speed skater) (born 1933), Soviet Olympic speed skater +External linksSoonerSports - Ben Betts BioCategory:1968 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Basketball coaches from VirginiaCategory:Basketball players from VirginiaCategory:College of Charleston Cougars men's basketball coachesCategory:Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons men's basketball coachesCategory:Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball coachesCategory:Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball coachesCategory:Sportspeople from Lynchburg, VirginiaCategory:South Carolina State Bulldogs basketball coachesCategory:Tennessee State Tigers basketball coachesCategory:VCU Rams men's basketball coachesCategory:Guards (basketball) +Williams died in Manchester in 1973; in 1975 his Wales rugby union cap was awarded to him posthumously under an 'amnesty'. +See also List of fossiliferous stratigraphic units in FranceReferences Category:Cretaceous France +Bayne may refer to: Bayne (surname), a list of people Bayne, Lincoln County, Kansas, a former settlement Bayne, Russell County, Kansas, a former settlement Bayne, Washington, an unincorporated communitySee also Bayne No. +The settlement has a population of 7. +Final resultsMen's singlesWomen's singlesReferencesCategory:All England Open Badminton ChampionshipsAll England Badminton ChampionshipsCategory:All England Open Badminton Championships in LondonAll England ChampionshipsAll England Badminton ChampionshipsAll England Badminton Championships +Dante Alvarado LeónIván CejaJustino MoraNalleli CoboSarahí Espinoza SalamancaXiuhtezcatl MartínezReferencesExternal links Category:Premios JuventudPremios JuventudPremios JuventudPremios JuventudPremios JuventudPremios JuventudPremios JuventudCategory:2010s in Miami +The community was named after Valona, in Albania. +Conundrum Press is the name of two book publishing companies in North America:Conundrum Press (Canada)Conundrum Press (United States) +Synta Pharmaceuticals announced on February 26, 2009 the suspension of all clinical trials involving Elesclomol due to safety concerns. +Main sightsCastle, now a private patrician residencePalazzo del Corpo di Guardia (13th-14th centuries)Parish church of Santa Sabina, in Gothic-Romanesque styleReferencesCategory:Cities and towns in Piedmont +Little is known of Arden's early life other than that she studied under the Italian Arturo Buzzi-Peccia and that there are photographs of her singing at a patriotic event on the steps of New York’s Federal Hall National Memorial during World War I (possibly after she joined the Metropolitan Opera). +Carlos Alexandre Torres (born 22 August 1966), known as Alexandre Torres, is a Brazilian retired professional footballer who played as a defender. +Demographics, the population of Stone Oak is estimated to be 75,984, an increase of 55,927 people since 2000. +["Pioneers of Progress: The Southgate Family in Northern Kentucky," Northern Kentucky Heritage Magazine, volume XIX, #2, page 3]After the death of Mr. Carneal, the home was purchased by William Wright Southgate, a Congressman from Northern Kentucky who circa 1835 added the large west wing as residence for his extended family of thirteen children, in-laws, and household retainers. +A campground and a cultural center for the Hahamongna tribe are located at the site. +Preliminary spectroscopic surveys of the asteroid's surface by OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, detected the presence of hydrated minerals in the form of clay. +The Argiles du Gault is a Mesozoic geologic formation in northern France and southern England. +These days the shortwave transmissions of Bad Dürrheim transmitter have been moved to Bodenseesender. +The mall celebrated its grand opening as Santa Fe Place in November 2005. +20th–21st centuriesFresh concerns grew that the Thames might be vulnerable to attack from torpedo boats and armoured cruisers, and in 1903 four quick-firing 12-pounder, 12 cwt (5.4 kg, 50.8 kg) guns were positioned on Tilbury's south-east curtain wall, supplemented in 1904 by two 6-inch (15 cm) breech loading guns. +Winstead House may refer to:in the United States(by state then city)Merritt-Winstead House, Roxboro, North Carolina, listed on the NRHP in Person CountyJohn M. Winstead Houses, Brentwood, Tennessee, NRHP-listed, in Williamson CountyWinstead House (Franklin, Tennessee), listed on the NRHP in Williamson CountyWinstead Hill, a historic house in Franklin, Tennessee, listed on the NRHP in Williamson CountyWinstead Mansion, in Knoxville, Tennessee, a house located within Bethel Confederate Cemetery near the Mabry-Hazen House +Bekabad may refer to: Bek-Abad, a village in Jalal-Abad Province, Kyrgyzstan Bekabad, a town in Tashkent Region, Uzbekistan +Eventually, unable to resist the Algerian assaults, the men of General Camille Alphonse Trézel retreated. +Red Star Haasdonk first reached national football in 2000–01, and they finished first of the series in Promotion. +The highlight of Barton's tenure with Kenton came on the Capitol release Stan Kenton Conducts the Jazz Compositions of Dee Barton where he is showcased as both composer and drummer. +Malware including Bitcoin mining functionality was also secretly downloaded and activated by adware bundled with regular software downloads, both distributed by related companies in Israel and Ukraine. +NotesExternal links Category:1913 birthsCategory:1975 deathsCategory:Australian rules footballers from Victoria (Australia)Category:Fitzroy Football Club players +His further activities caused him to be exiled in Boven-Digoel several times. +The agreement is that Arthur and Mavis will use the money as a deposit for a house, although Mavis's parents distrust Arthur and refer to him as a "dreamer". +The 2018 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 3 May 2018 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council. +The 1994–95 Magyar Kupa (English: Hungarian Cup) was the 55th season of Hungary's annual knock-out cup football competition. +The Thursday () is a 1963 Italian comedy film directed by Dino Risi. +Competition recordReferencesCategory:1981 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Senegalese male middle-distance runnersCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer OlympicsCategory:Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer OlympicsCategory:Olympic athletes of Senegal +The Production Designer was Prav Menon-Johansson. +FinalReferences Results IAAFHCategory:400 metres hurdles at the World Athletics ChampionshipsCategory:2001 in women's athletics +It was reclassified in 1982 in the genus Allocasuarina by Lawrence Alexander Sidney Johnson in the Journal of the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. +CareerSpedding played in one BDO World Darts Championships in 2000, losing 3-0 to Steve Douglas and played in one PDC World Darts Championships in 2001, losing 3-1 to John Lowe. +The tunnel runs alongside Cavenagh Road and, after passing the junction of Bukit Timah Road and Cavenagh Road, becomes an above ground expressway on Kampong Java Flyover. +Marin Catholic High School (familiarly known as MC) is a Roman Catholic college preparatory school located in unincorporated Kentfield in Marin County, California. +): Die Lebenserinnerungen des Fürsten Otto zu Stolberg-Wernigerode (1837-1896), Jüttners Buchhandlung, Wernigerode 1996, Sunhild Minkner: Bemerkenswerte Frauen, paperback, Wernigerode 1999AnnaAnnaCategory:German countessesCategory:1837 birthsCategory:1907 deathsCategory:19th-century German people +The Liberal government had made an election promise in 1896 to provide an opportunity for Canadians to register their opinions about the sale of alcohol. +Research Methods in Applied Linguistics. +After not entering any races in 2006, Souza returned to the Busch Series in 2007, again at Mexico City, but now using the No. +Guchil is a state constituency in Kelantan, Malaysia, that has been represented in the Kelantan State Legislative Assembly. +He broke Oddmund Vaagsholm's previous record of 34 goals for the first team. +In January 2012 Ingham Regional Medical Center was renamed McLaren Greater Lansing. +Next season Dynamo yielded the first place. +He is the brother of former England Test player Alan and uncle of Mark. +María Fernández Almenar is a Spanish football midfielder, currently anattached. +Maria Bonita or María Bonita may refer to:Maria Bonita (bandit) (1911–1938), nickname of Maria Déia, a Brazilian banditMaria Bonita (novel), a 1914 Brazilian romance novelMaria Bonita (film), a 1937 Brazilian film María Bonita (album), a 1992 album by Manuel Mijares María Bonita (telenovela), a 1995 Colombian telenovelaMaría Bonita (song) [es: María Bonita (canción)], a 1946 song composed and interpreted by Mexican composer Agustin Lara +The Humanities Building opened in 2000. +ReferencesCategory:MayfliesCategory:Articles created by QbugbotCategory:Insects described in 1992 +Despite being supported by the US, the group condemned the American-led intervention in Syria against ISIL and the al-Nusra Front. +Sarnówko may refer to the following places:Sarnówko, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship (north-central Poland)Sarnówko, Gmina Kartuzy in Pomeranian Voivodeship (north Poland)Sarnówko, Gmina Somonino in Pomeranian Voivodeship (north Poland) +BERROBI in the Bernardo Estornés Lasa - Auñamendi Encyclopedia (Euskomedia Fundazioa) Information available in SpanishCategory:Municipalities in GipuzkoaCategory:Populated places in Gipuzkoa +He signed with Chungju Hummel before the 2016 season starts. +He has lived and worked there since then. +Mr. Greenstreet is puffier than usual, and Mr. Lorre more disinterested and wan. +Derr (1891 – 1974), American actorHelen Derr (1918–2011), American journalistJohn W. Derr (born 1941), former Maryland State SenatorKenneth T. Derr, American businessmanMark Derr, American authorZac Derr, American football placekickerRichard Derr (1918–1992), American film and television actorJill Mulvay Derr (born 1948), American history professorManuela Derr (born 1971), retired East German sprinterSee alsoTemple of Derr, Ancient Egyptian temple +GAL also operated an RAF flying training school at Fairoaks aerodrome, Surrey. +He watched Brown's sales technique and was impressed enough to lure Brown to work for NEMS with the offer of a higher salary and a commission on sales. +It was the 26th edition of the tournament. +Associated schoolsSt Gregory's College, CampbelltownJohn Therry Catholic HighMount Carmel Catholic CollegeMagdalene Catholic HighOther Good Samaritan schoolsThe College is a sister school to other Good Samaritan schools in Australia and overseas - St Marys Star of the Sea College (Wollongong NSW), Mater Dei School (Camden, NSW), Mount St. Benedict College (Pennant Hills NSW), Stella Maris College (Manly NSW), Rosebank College (Five Dock NSW), St. Scholasticas College (Glebe NSW), Mater Christi College (Belgrave VIC), Santa Maria College (Northcote VIC), Lourdes Hill College (Hawthorne QLD), Seiwa Junior and Senior High School (Sasebo Japan), and Kinder School (Bacolod, Philippines). +One of these families is known as the sodium:dicarboxylate symporter family (SDF) (it is different from divalent anion–sodium symporter). +Geeks Jose Rodriguez praised the show with "holy crap this show is hilarious [...] [I]t’s exactly the kind of offbeat, disturbing, and hilarious show that Adult Swim used to make. +It was released on INO Records in 2005. +ListSee also List of public art in Rosenborg Castle Gardens List of public art in Copenhagen Botanical Garden List of public art in CopenhagenCategory:Public art in CopenhagenCategory:Copenhagen-related lists +References Category:Populated places in Jalal-Abad Region +OBJ3 is agent-oriented and runs on Kyoto Common Lisp AKCL. +Category:1920 birthsCategory:2007 deathsCategory:People from Mödling DistrictCategory:20th-century artistsCategory:Austrian artistsCategory:Outsider artistsCategory:Austrian military personnel of World War II +Paolo Bellino (born 19 August 1969) is an Italian male retired hurdler who participated at the 1991 World Championships in Athletics. +Rustai-ye Taleqani (, also Romanized as Rūstāī-ye Ţāleqānī; also known as Ţāleqānī) is a village in Vahdat Rural District, in the Central District of Zarand County, Kerman Province, Iran. +His works continue to be reprinted and studied today — perhaps alone among "Thomist" philosophers, his work and reputation have not suffered from the general decline of interest in and regard for medieval philosophy since the 1960s. +However, the wartime demands for power and industrial water by the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal and by the Keihin Industrial complex became critical, and General Sadao Araki ordered troops into the area to force compliance with the relocation. +Engineers have made it possible for researchers and servicemen to stay on the mountain throughout the year. +Shurab (, also Romanized as Shūrāb) is a village in Gavkan Rural District, in the Central District of Rigan County, Kerman Province, Iran. +Each gun weighed approximately . +In his first season at Brighton he also made 4 FA Cup match appearances, with Brighton getting to the semi final and 1 League Cup appearance. +References Category:Populated places in Astara County +Today, the Western Lands Commissioner is part of the Department of Lands. +ReferencesCategory:Populated places in Bolu ProvinceCategory:Bolu DistrictCategory:Villages in Turkey +The song has received criticism for its lyrics, including "The heat was hot"; "There were plants, and birds, and rocks, and things"; and "'Cause there ain't no one for to give you no pain." +Its revision started in 2006, supported by the European Commission through CARE, the Coordination Action for Robotics in Europe. +He was still engaged in this position when he died in 1982. +The album is a double CD. +It debuted at number two on the Billboard 200, selling 101,000 equivalent album units and 88,000 copies in the first week. +Pam Hart is a former international lawn bowls competitor for Australia. +At this time, Hawthorne was known for its hunting and fishing and "Northern sportsmen frequented the area to enjoy" it. +is a natural satellite of Jupiter, and is one of the smallest known natural satellites in the Solar System. +InternationalU17'sAeta first international experience was with the Solomon Islands national under-17 football team. +This crossing is open 24/7. +References Category:Districts of Zambia +History The station opened in 1871 by the North Eastern Railway. +During this period he made various copies of the old masters, including one of Raphael's Transfiguration which was bought as an altarpiece for Christ Church, Albany Street, London, on the recommendation of the painter William Collins. +The main entrance is along the southeast wall of the cemetery and a Cross of Sacrifice is located in the east corner. +If no other Bagrationi prince is born in either the Gruzinsky or Mukhraneli branch who is of senior descent in the male line, and he survives those now living, he will become the genealogical heir male of the Bagrationi dynasty as well as the heir general of Georgia's last monarch, King George XII. +The race was won by Italian Gianni Morbidelli, driving for Forti Corse outfit, who finished ahead of fellow Italians Antonio Tamburini and Giovanni Bonanno. +It is found in Paraguay. +There are 7 streets. +EducationA native of Chicago, Illinois, Mills graduated from Illinois State University in 1950. +Seven of these are in the Bario area while the others are around the outskirts of the plateau. +- a South African Afromontane forest treeScolopia oldhamii HanceScolopia oreophila KillickScolopia pusilla (Gaertn.) +Marmorosphax kaala is a species of skink found in New Caledonia. +Putnam & Sons) Miscellaneous Poems (published in 1880 by Moxon, Saunders and Co.) Personal Recollections of Notable People at Home and Abroad (published in 1895 in two volumes by Dodd Mead)Personal lifeIn 1858, Tuckerman married Mary Fleming (1837–1901). +Nigino () is a rural locality (a village) and the administrative center of Niginskoye Rural Settlement, Nikolsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. +The village is located in the Gjøvdal valley, just north of the river Gjøv. +ReferencesExternal linksIndex FungorumCategory:Sordariomycetes incertae sedisCategory:Monotypic Sordariomycetes genera +Notable people with this surname include:Julienne Stroeve, American climatologistRoy Stroeve, former professional footballer +ReferencesExternal linksAn Illustrated glossary of roofs and roofing terms. +The future author attended primary school in Bacău city, before being sent over to a girls' institute and boarding school in Iași. +The men's 4 x 400 metres relay at the 1958 European Athletics Championships was held in Stockholm, Sweden, at Stockholms Olympiastadion on 23 and 24 August 1958. +ReligionMorse was a devout member of the Primitive Methodist Church and was a delegate to its centenary conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. +Playboy Club may refer to: Playboy Club, a chain of nightclubs operated by Playboy Enterprises between 1960 and 1991 Playboy Club (Las Vegas), a revival of the chain at the Palms Casino Resort The Playboy Club, an American television series broadcast on NBCSee also +They both lead a small band - Louis Armstrong's All Stars, and play classic compositions by Ellington such as "Mood Indigo" and "Black And Tan Fantasy". +ReferencesCategory:Cities and towns in Bludenz District +Track listingChart rankingsSalesRelease historyReferences Category:2012 singlesCategory:2012 songsCategory:Japanese film songsCategory:Japanese-language songsCategory:Superfly (band) songsCategory:Warner Music Japan singles +Oishi Dam () is a dam in the Niigata Prefecture, Japan, completed in 1978. +A production also was staged at the Center Stage Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, starring Tania Myren-Zobel as Agnes. +This example does indeed strengthen the Somali saying: "Tol waa tolane", which means "clan is something joined together" The same could be said about Gaaljecel, Degodi and Hawadle who have allied themselves to the Hawiye section of Irir in the borders of Somalia, the Dabarre and Irrole of Maqarre and the Garre who have allied themselves to the Digil Rahanweyn confederacy and 'Awrmale to the Harti Darood section. +The ALCEs were commanded by lieutenant colonels, usually had several supervising majors, a supervising senior NCO (usually an E-7) over AFSC 27150 (mission monitors or mission controllers) E-3s to E-6s. +PlotCast Ken Maynard as Ken LanceCecilia Parker as Ray MarshHooper Atchley as Sam BurkettWalter Miller as Chris HoganWilliam Gould as JonesJack Rockwell as Hank RiversSheldon Lewis as Lawyer HawkinsEd Brady as DenverFred MacKaye as Ken Lance imposter William Dyer as Red Hogan Jack Richardson as SheriffEdward Coxen as Jim Lance Lafe McKee as PostmasterTarzan as TarzanReferencesExternal links Category:1933 filmsCategory:American filmsCategory:English-language filmsCategory:American Western (genre) filmsCategory:1930s Western (genre) filmsCategory:Universal Pictures filmsCategory:Films directed by Alan JamesCategory:American black-and-white films +It was converted into a deluxe hotel for the nobility and the high bourgeoisie in 1873, and kept the name Villa d'Este to take advantage of the apparent link with the famous Villa d'Este in Tivoli, near Rome. +Hancock Whitney Center has its own ZIP code, 70139 surrounded by 70130. +The country had an estimated population of 74,530,300. +I would suggest the division of Kimberley." +In 2006, he appeared in a new reality show on MTV, Totally Boyband. +Harpy shared with 11 other ships the prize money for Noord Beck, captured on 23 June 1781, and the recapture of Neptune four days later. +DC Comics launched the miniseries in July 2010, releasing 16 issues until the last one in October 2011. +Born in Chicoutimi, Quebec in 1931, Lamarre received a Bachelor of Applied Sciences in Civil Engineering from the École Polytechnique de Montréal, an affiliate college of Université de Montréal, in 1952. +Jaundice is possible and death after some months. +Governor of RajasthanSingh was sworn in as Governor of Rajasthan on 4 September 2014. +He has also played in the Finnish SM-liiga for HIFK and the American Hockey League for the St. John's Maple Leafs. +This occurs predominantly with programs shared between subscription television networks. +Based in Boston, Massachusetts and London, Fidelity Ventures invested in emerging technology companies in North America and Europe. +Professional career Nay started her music career at a young age; in 2001 she made her appearance at the Lebanese music festival by the UNISCO; also Nay participated in the Arab Pop show Star Club in 2004 by New TV. +Norm Hall (May 14, 1926 – March 11, 1992), was an American racecar driver. +In 1885 Kelly's noted six almshouses, built in 1866 for the benefit of six poor people by James Fowler, on the site of an older glebe house. +The 1991 AAA Championships was an outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA), held from 26–27 July at Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, England. +Norman Leslie Douglas Webster, dedicated a relocated army hut as a place of worship for the St Lucia congregation. +Theme songThe theme song of the telenovela is "Mentira" (in English "It's a lie") and it is performed by Gilberto Santa Rosa. +External linksProfile at HokejPortal.cz Tomáš PékCategory:Living peopleCategory:HC Slovan Bratislava playersCategory:Slovak ice hockey goaltendersCategory:1991 births +It has a population of 569. +Player statisticsSeasonPlayoffsAwards and recordsRolando Blackman, NBA All-Star GameTransactionsReferencesSee also1984-85 NBA seasonCategory:Dallas Mavericks seasonsDalDallasDallas +Telugu SongsAll the tunes for all the songs for both languages are the same. +Minervarya marathi is a species of frog native to Maharashtra, India. +Melbourne: Bas Publishing. +DemographicsPopulationLanguageSee alsoList of municipalities in Quebec Saint-MichelReferencesCategory:Incorporated places in Les Jardins-de-Napierville Regional County MunicipalityCategory:Municipalities in Quebec +Fourth, Chayes combined the elements of transparency, dispute settlement, and capacity building into a broader process of “jawboning” – the effort to persuade the violator to change its ways. +The remainder of the team left Munich on September 7. +This is an incomplete List of ghost towns in Mississippi. +See also List of Prime Ministers of JordanReferencesExternal linksJordan Prime Ministry websiteCategory:Prime Ministers of JordanCategory:Government ministers of JordanCategory:Construction ministers of JordanCategory:Transport ministers of JordanCategory:Education ministers of JordanCategory:Foreign ministers of JordanCategory:State ministers of JordanCategory:Deputy prime ministers of JordanCategory:Defence ministers of JordanCategory:Tourism ministers of JordanCategory:Interior ministers of JordanCategory:Municipal affairs ministers of JordanCategory:Alumni of the University of OxfordCategory:American University of Beirut alumniAhmadCategory:1903 birthsCategory:1981 deathsCategory:Jordanian people of Palestinian descentCategory:Members of the Senate of JordanCategory:People from Nablus +CastRatheeshSarithaTG RaviMadhuriDisco ShantiKuthiravattam PappuSoundtrackThe music was composed by Raveendran with lyrics by Devadas. +Frank Chianelli (April 28, 1956 – April 14, 2002) was an American racing driver from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. +Kennington may also refer to Kennington, Kent, a suburb of Ashford, England Kennington, Oxfordshire, England Kennington, New Zealand Kennington, Victoria, a suburb of Bendigo, AustraliaRailway stationsKennington tube station, LondonSee also Kensington (disambiguation) +He competed in the individual foil and épée events at the 1900 Summer Olympics. +At five, her father, who was engaged in various sports, brought her to tennis. +She studied at the Conservatoire Nationale de Musique et d'Art and took courses in drama and literature at the Institut Britannique in Paris. +Aloha Airlines Flight 243 which suffered an explosive decompression near Maui, HI on April 28, 1988 .243 Winchester and .243 WSSM, rifle rounds The number of Earth Days for the planet Venus to complete one Venusian day, one revolution A song from Laggan Rhye with the title 35 is about 35 and 243, using the difference between a nautical mile and a statute mile in meters. +SpeciesE. aldrichi (Alexander, 1927)E. aleator (Alexander, 1945)E. amamiana (Alexander, 1956)E. angolensis (Alexander, 1963)E. angustior (Alexander, 1919)E. apicata (Loew, 1871)E. apiculata (Alexander, 1919)E. aprilina (Osten Sacken, 1860)E. bicolorata (Alexander, 1958)E. bifida (Alexander, 1921)E. bipartita Stary, 2009E. concreta (Edwards, 1933)E. czernyi (Strobl, 1909)E. delicola (Alexander, 1962)E. delmastroi Stary, 2009E. diacis (Alexander, 1972)E. dietziana (Alexander, 1925)E. dravidiana (Alexander, 1971)E. dubiosa (Alexander, 1917)E. dulitensis (Edwards, 1926)E. edentata (Alexander, 1919)E. fascipennis (Brunetti, 1912)E. fumigata (Alexander, 1966)E. fuscoanalis (Alexander, 1971)E. granulata (Edwards, 1926)E. hidana (Alexander, 1970)E. igorota (Alexander, 1931)E. irene (Alexander, 1927)E. johnsoni (Alexander, 1914)E. kintaro (Alexander, 1957)E. laciniata (Edwards, 1928)E. latinigra (Alexander, 1941)E. lilliputina (Alexander, 1936)E. lucasi Stary, 2009E. maculata (Meigen, 1804)E. marmorataeformis (Riedel, 1914)E. marmorea (Alexander, 1934)E. maroccana Stary, 2009E. martinovskyi Stary, 2009E. miliaria (Egger, 1863)E. minor Stary, 2009E. mishimai (Alexander, 1969)E. modoc (Alexander, 1946)E. mundata (Loew, 1871)E. nupta (Alexander, 1947)E. ornata (Brunetti, 1912)E. oxyacantha (Alexander, 1971)E. paraprilina (Alexander, 1937)E. pectinistylus Stary, 2009E. perdilata (Alexander, 1966)E. persalsa (Alexander, 1940)E. pluriguttula (Alexander, 1966)E. prolongata (Alexander, 1956)E. punctulata Stary, 2009E. pusilla (Kuntze, 1920)E. sabrina (Alexander, 1929)E. serenensis (Alexander, 1940)E. serotinella (Alexander, 1926)E. serrulata (Alexander, 1932)E. seticellula (Alexander, 1938)E. shannoni (Alexander, 1921)E. similissima (Alexander, 1941)E. smithersi (Alexander, 1958)E. solstitialis (Alexander, 1926)E. sparsipunctum Stary, 2009E. subannulata (Alexander, 1946)E. subaprilina (Alexander, 1919)E. subdilata (Alexander, 1972)E. submarmorata (Verrall, 1887)E. suensoni (Alexander, 1926)E. superlineata (Doane, 1900)E. tigricosta Stary, 2009E. trimaculata (Zetterstedt, 1838)E. urania (Speiser, 1923)E. ussuriana (Alexander, 1933)E. venaguttula (Alexander, 1934)E. vernata (Alexander, 1927)E. verralli (Bergroth, 1912)E. verrucosa Savchenko, 1976E. villiersi (Alexander, 1958)E. woodgatei (Alexander, 1946)ReferencesCatalogue of the Craneflies of the WorldCategory:LimoniidaeCategory:Nematocera genera +DistributionConchoderma virgatum has a cosmopolitan distribution, being found in all the world's oceans attached to a wide range of drifting and swimming objects, as well as benthic habitats. +As of December 31, 2018, it was listed as the 63rd largest commercial bank in the United States as reported by the Federal Reserve Bank. +Poręba Spytkowska is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Brzesko, within Brzesko County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, in southern Poland. +He was also committed to the YMCA and served on the Central Council of its Metropolitan branch. +He competed at the 1972 Winter Olympics. +Modesto Lara Arias (born October 29, 1973) is a male judoka from the Dominican Republic, who won the silver medal in the men's extra lightweight division (– 60 kg) at the 2003 Pan American Games in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. +233 Squadron or 233rd Squadron may refer to: No. +ReferencesExternal links Parishes and Schools in ManipurCategory:UkhrulCategory:High schools and secondary schools in Manipur +They have been guided by, amongst others, Sandor Vegh, Thomas Brandis and the Amadeus Quartet. +Cascade Falls is a waterfall in the small town of Osceola, Wisconsin. +His series of drawings depict the same subjects as his paintings but with voluntarily blurred outlines. +The station began operation on April 10, 2010. +He also envisions a library and a museum dedicated to the histories of both Lahores. +It is found in Thailand. +Misprinting ErrorOnce the Dark Genesis box set was released, reports started coming in of misprintings on the discs. +Most recently, he served as vice president of public safety, health, environment and security for CSX Transportation, where he was responsible for hazardous materials transportation safety, homeland security, railroad policing, crisis management, environmental compliance and operations, occupational health management, and continuity of business operations. +References cyphotergousCategory:Fish described in 1988 +ReferencesCategory:United States federal taxation legislationCategory:1941 in American law +Adjacent stations|-!colspan=5|Tenryū Hamanako RailroadStation historyToyooka Station was established on June 1, 1940 in former Toyora village as , when the section of the Japan National Railways Futamata Line was extended from Enshū-Mori Station to Kanasashi Station. +Filibacter limicola is a Gram-negative bacterium from the genus of Filibacter which has been isolated from lake sediment from the English Lake District in Blelham Tarn in England. +Registration for the distance learning programme is possible throughout the year. +Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests and subtropical or tropical moist montane forests. +An example of a rectilinear eight-bar linkage. +Engelbrecht and von Grosse's synthesis of CrO2F2, and most successive syntheses, involve treating chromium trioxide with a fluorinating agent:CrO3 + 2 HF → CrO2F2 + H2OThe reaction is reversible, as water will readily hydrolyze CrO2F2 back to CrO3. +In 1967, he married Tatyana Akbarovna. +Choudhary Rahmat Ali Peter Bayley Charlie Bean John Desmond Bernal Archie Bland Peregrine Bland Andrew Bowie, philosopher Angus Bowie Ajahn Brahm Malcolm Brenner John Burnett, historian Henry Cantrell Don Carson, theologian Graham Chapman Alan J. Charig Joe Craig Francis Darwin Umar Bin Muhammad Daudpota Gerald Davies Simon Davies, lawyer Leonard Dawe Walter Duranty Gurusaday Dutt John Evelyn (1591–1664) Sebastian Faulks Reo Fortune James Fox, art historian Michael Frayn Graeme Garden Edward Pritchard Gee Edward George, Baron George Dick Greenwood Alexander Guttenplan Joseph Hall, Bishop Clare Hammond Edith Heard, epigenetics researcher Freddie Highmore Richard Holmes, military historian Thomas Hooker Jeremiah Horrocks Sir Fred Hoyle, astronomer Jonathan James-Moore Griff Rhys Jones Majid Khan (born 1946), cricketer Tom King, Baron King of Bridgwater F. R. Leavis John Lennox Gordon Luce Garry John Martin Rory McGrath Scott Mead Alexander Morrison, judge Richard W. Murphy Ronald Norrish Mary-Ann Ochota Maggie O'Farrell Lawrence Ogilvie C. Northcote Parkinson Cecil Parkinson Steven Poole George Porter Karel Reisz Hugo Rifkind Alan Rouse Peter Rubin Stephen Sackur Birbal Sahni William Sancroft Herchel Smith Dan Stevens Anthony Stone Stephen Timms Justine Waddell John Wallis, mathematician Hugh Walpole, novelist Thomas Watson Steve Woolgar Tim Yeo Benjamin Yeoh Thomas Young, polymathReferencesCategory:Emmanuel College, Cambridge Emmanuel +This is a list of Spanish television related events from 2016. +As an example, R packages tnet, igraphtosonia and cccd depend on igraph R package. +The dessert is popular in Benin and Togo. +Ishi may also refer to:Eshraque "iSHi" Mughal (born 1981), Swedish music producer and songwriterIshi: The Last of His Tribe, TV-film on the Indian Ishi, 1978Ishi Press, Japanese publishing company focused on the game GoSee alsoIshii, Japanese surname +P. P. S. J. Rome 1765; Graz 1768. +Military service He served in the Australian Medical Corps during the First World War but was killed in action at the Menin Road Ridge, aged 26, on 20 September 1917, while serving at the Passchendaele front. +DescriptionA three-storey Federation commercial building, with a symmetrical Inter War Functionalist shopfront with recessed central porch that has a polychrome terrazzo floor. +It was nominated for being West-central Minnesota's most prominent house of a single individual who established and promoted a rural townsite, and for being the oldest and most architecturally significant Victorian house in Murdock. +Arroyo Dolores (Spanish for Our Lady of Sorrow Creek) is a river in San Francisco, California that has been largely culverted. +They had at least one child. +Mazzei later sued the Fresno County District Attorney and a police officer for an alleged violation of his civil rights. +The bounds of the precursors are predicted based on conservation and base pairing and are not generally known. +She became waterlogged and the survivors of her were rescued at sea on 1 December 1835, leaving her in a sinking state. +49-55 Michael Bull (2008) Sound Moves : iPod Culture and Urban Experience''. +References Category:Geology of AustriaCategory:Sedimentary basins of Europe +It was built following the recommendation of then Prime Minister Turgut Özal, who was inspired by the shopping mall Houston Galleria in Houston, Texas, United States. +: Don't See What You Are Singing (2018) Dragon Quest: Your Story (2019) 108: Revenge and Adventure of Goro Kaiba (2019), Goro Kaiba Kaiji: Final Game (2020)TelevisionTaro no To" (2011) - Okamoto TaroAmachan (2013)Chikaemon (2016) – Chikamatsu MonzaemonMiotsukushi Ryōrichō (2017)Idaten (2019) – Tachibanaya Enkyō IVReferencesExternal links Category:Japanese male actorsCategory:1962 birthsCategory:Living peopleCategory:Japanese theatre directorsCategory:Japanese film directorsCategory:Japanese screenwritersCategory:People from KitakyushuCategory:20th-century Japanese novelistsCategory:21st-century Japanese novelists +CareerDuring her career, Tadros has been appointed member of the board of directors of the American Academy of Otolaryngology and several times at the American Association of Occupational Health Nurses (AAO-HNS), Chair of young physicians section (2010-1013), residents & fellows section (2004), and a member at large (2003). +Magnetic resonance images suggested that the recovery rates for those suffering from broken heart syndrome are faster than those who had heart attacks and complete recovery to the heart is achieved within two months. +Firuz Kola-ye Olya () may refer to: Firuz Kola-ye Olya, Amol Firuz Kola-ye Olya, Nowshahr +With the loss of Derby and East Anglia and the advance of King Edward, their ruler, Jarl Thurferth, and the men of Northampton and Cambridge submitted to the West Saxons in 917. +Personal lifeHis elder brother, Conte Quinto Mazzolini, served as Italian consul in Jerusalem, and undertook negotiations with Abraham Stern, head of the Lehi terrorist group, which sought (but failed) to obtain Italian recognition of Jewish sovereignty in Palestine in exchange for placing Zionism under the aegis of Italian fascism. +Deeds "Longfellow", a song by Days Of The New from their album Days of the NewSee alsoÉamon de Valera (1882–1975), Irish statesman nicknamed "The Long Fellow" Longfellow Bridge Longfellow Creek, a stream in the Delridge district of West Seattle, in Seattle, Washington Longfellow Elementary School (disambiguation) Longfellow Gardens and Zoo Longfellow Middle School (disambiguation) Longfellow Mountains, in honor of the Maine-born poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807–1882) Longfellow House–Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site (formerly Longfellow National Historic Site) Longfellow Square Longfellow Stakes, an American Thoroughbred horse race Wadsworth-Longfellow +Since 2008, approximately half of the Budweiser Clydesdales are kept at the Warm Springs Ranch near Booneville, Missouri. +Life and workLaumon studied at the École Normale Supérieure and Paris-Sud 11 University, Orsay. +It is found only in South Africa. +The mugni (archlute) is a Persian stringed musical instrument which resembles a tar except that the two globes are connected and not separated like the tar's. +LegendAP PollThe final AP Poll was released on December 2, at the end of the 1940 regular season, weeks before the major bowls. +From 2003 to 2013 he was chief conductor of the Staatsoperette Dresden. +This is a list of places in the United States named for Lewis Cass:Counties Cass County, Illinois Cass County, Indiana Cass County, Iowa Cass County, Michigan Cass County, Minnesota Cass County, Missouri Cass County, Nebraska Cass County, Texas In addition, Bartow County, Georgia was formerly Cass County, until after the American Civil War. +1944), former Anglican Bishop of TewkesburyJoseph J. +MenWomenReferencesCategory:Nations at the 2019 World Aquatics ChampionshipsCategory:Mauritius at the World Aquatics ChampionshipsWorld Aquatics Championships +It is a Swiss heritage site of national significance. +GSM (Global System for Mobile communications) is a European standard for mobile devices. +CastYoshimi Tokui as TetsuKento Hayashi as ShuheiSadao AbeTetsuji TamayamaNao ŌmoriKazuki KitamuraArata IuraMitsuko BaishoKento AyashiHirofumi Arai Jun MurakamiReferencesExternal linksOfficial film website Category:1994 mangaCategory:Kodansha mangaCategory:Live-action films based on mangaCategory:Manga adapted into filmsCategory:Seinen manga +ReferencesExternal linksRegina – Support Data: Weber-Seifert dodecahedral spaceThe Weber–Seifert dodecahedral space: Answering a computational challengeCategory:Riemannian geometryCategory:3-manifolds +Defendente may refer to: Defendens, a martyr of the Theban Legion Defendente Ferrari (c. 1480/1485 – c. 1540), an Italian painter active in Piedmont +Joliette railway station is a Heritage Railway Station located at 380 Champlain Street in Joliette, Quebec, Canada. +The next year, he drove the #64 Schneider Chevy to three top-ten finishes. +The current president is Torsten Schaub at the University of Potsdam. +Joan Robledo-Palop is an art historian, entrepreneur and art collector born in Valencia, Spain, and based in New York, USA. +On April 16, 2015, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York approved an agreement between Picard on the one hand, and Defender and related entities on the other hand. +He was a former chairman of the London Press Club. +First final round|}Final fourSemifinals|}3rd place match|}Final|}Final standing12-man Roster for Final Round