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Yangliuqing | Yangliuqing () is a market town in Xiqing District, in the western suburbs of Tianjin, People's Republic of China. Despite its relatively small size, it has been named since 2006 in the "famous historical and cultural market towns in China".
It is best known in China for creating nianhua or Yangliuqing nianhua. For mo... |
Orana Australia Ltd | Orana Australia Ltd is a not-for-profit organisation that provides a diverse range of training and support services to over 650 people with disabilities and their families in South Australia.
History
The Mentally Retarded Children’s Society of SA Inc. was established in 1950 by a group of parents who wanted education,... |
St. Mary's Church, Sønderborg | The St. Mary's Church is a church owned by the Church of Denmark in Sønderborg, Denmark and the church of the parish with the same name. Thanks to its location on a hill, the church building is very iconic for the city.
History
In the Middle Ages there was a leper colony on a hill just outside the city. It was named ... |
Kalitta | Kalitta may refer to:
Connie Kalitta (born 1938), a retired American drag racer and CEO of the eponymous Kallita Air.
Doug Kalitta (born 1964), an American drag racer, nephew of Connie Kalitta and owner of Kalitta Charters.
Scott Kalitta (1962-2008), an American drag racer and son of Connie Kalitta.
Kalitta Air, a car... |
Where Is Freedom? | Where Is Freedom? () is a 1954 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini.
The film had a troubled production because, after shooting some scenes, Rossellini lost interest in the film and abandoned the set. The work was completed after about a year, mainly from Mario Monicelli, with some scenes also sh... |
Latin liturgical rites | Latin liturgical rites, or Western liturgical rites, are Catholic liturgical rites employed by the Latin Church, the largest particular church sui iuris of the Catholic Church, that originated in Europe where the Latin language once dominated. Its language is now known as Ecclesiastical Latin. The most used rite is the... |
Fernaldia pandurata | Fernaldia pandurata (common name: loroco ) is a vine with edible flowers, widespread in Mexico and Central America.
Fernaldia pandurata is an important source of food in El Salvador and Guatemala. The plant's buds and flowers are used for cooking in a variety of ways, including in pupusas.
The name "loroco" is used t... |
Chester Earl Merrow | Chester Earl Merrow (November 15, 1906 – February 10, 1974) was a U.S. Representative from New Hampshire.
Born in Center Ossipee, New Hampshire, Merrow attended the public schools and Brewster Free Academy in Wolfeboro from 1921 to 1925. He was graduated from Colby College, Waterville, Maine, in 1929 and from Teachers... |
Hightech Information System | HIS ("Hightech Information System Limited"; established 1987), is a Hong Kong-based graphics card manufacturer that produces AMD (formerly known as ATI) Radeon graphics cards. Its headquarters are in Hong Kong, with additional sales offices and distribution networks in Europe, the Middle East, North America and Asia Pa... |
AD 47 | __NOTOC__
AD 47 (XLVII) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. "At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Claudius and Vitellius (or, less frequently, year 800 Ab urbe condita). The denomination AD 47 for this year has been used since the earl... |
Ollombo District | Ollombo is a district in the Plateaux Department of Republic of the Congo.
References
Category:Plateaux Department (Republic of the Congo)
Category:Districts of the Republic of the Congo |
Yohmor | Yohmor may refer to:
Yohmor, Beqaa, Lebanon
Yohmor, Nabatieh, Lebanon |
Clancy Rofique | Clancy Rofique (born 22 July 1998) is a Mauritian international footballer who plays as a forward for Ligue 2 side Le Havre and the Mauritius national football team.
Career statistics
International
References
Category:1998 births
Category:Living people
Category:Mauritian footballers
Category:Mauritius international... |
List of Punjabi media | This is a list of media from the Punjab region or published in the Punjabi language. Punjabi journalists have received many international awards for their reporting.
Digital Web channels
After 2019, there is rise digital content and channels in punjabi language:
Punjabi Parchar TV
Punjabi Lehar
Ajit Web TV
Bhulekha TV... |
Nenad Stojanović | Nenad "Purke" Stojanović (; born 22 October 1979) is a Serbian professional footballer who plays as a striker.
Career
After coming through the youth categories of Red Star Belgrade, Stojanović went on numerous loans, having a breakthrough season at Bosnian club Leotar in 2002–03. He was the team's top scorer with 22 g... |
Canadian Association for Free Expression | The Canadian Association for Free Expression (CAFE) is a Canadian political group led by Paul Fromm, a white supremacist. Established in 1981, CAFE is committed to the promotion and defense of total freedom of speech, and publishes the Free Speech Monitor ten times a year. Although it began in Ontario, it has also been... |
British Motor Museum | The British Motor Museum in Warwickshire, England, holds the World's largest collection of historic British cars. There are over 300 classic cars on display from the British Motor Industry Heritage Trust and the Jaguar Heritage Trust.
History
The collection, now cared for by the British Motor Industry Heritage Trust, ... |
World Art Nouveau Day | World Art Nouveau Day (WAND) is an event dedicated to art nouveau that is celebrated annually on 10 June. The first World Art Nouveau Day in 2013 was organized by The Museum of Applied Arts (Budapest) (IMM) in cooperation with Szecessziós Magazin (a Hungarian Magazine about Art Nouveau). The selected date – 10 June – i... |
Alyse Black | Alyse Black is an American singer and songwriter. Black's music is described as indie pop with jazz influences, in the vein of artists such as Fiona Apple, Regina Spektor and Norah Jones. Her song "Stood for Stand for", which was featured on Black's debut album Too Much & Too Lovely, won Billboard's 2007 World Song Con... |
Martin Delaney | Martin Delaney may refer to:
Martin Delaney (activist) (1945–2009), HIV/AIDS treatment advocate
Martin Delaney (actor), British actor
See also
Martin Delany (1812–1885), African-American abolitionist |
Leonardo Vinicius Pereira Luiz | Leonardo Vinicius Pereira Luiz (born June 5, 1987 in Rio de Janeiro), known as Leonardo Luiz, is a Brazilian footballer who most recently played as defender for Artsul.
Career statistics
References
External links
Category:1987 births
Category:Living people
Category:Brazilian footballers
Category:Association footbal... |
Dallas Bay Skypark | Dallas Bay Skypark is a public-use airport located 11 miles (18 km) north of the central business district of Chattanooga and 4 miles southwest of the central business district of Lakesite (both cities in Hamilton County, Tennessee, United States.) It is located in the community of Middle Valley with a Hixson, Tenness... |
Jason McEndoo | Jason McEndoo (born February 25, 1975) is an American football coach and former center in the National Football League for the Seattle Seahawks. He is currently the tight ends and Cowboy Backs coach for Oklahoma State. He played college football at Washington State University in Pullman and was a member of the 1997 tea... |
Anne Parr, Countess of Pembroke | Anne Herbert, Countess of Pembroke, Baroness Herbert of Cardiff (15 June 1515 – 20 February 1552) was lady-in-waiting to each of Henry VIII of England's six wives. She was the younger sister of his sixth wife, Catherine Parr.
Early years
Anne was born on 15 June 1515 to Sir Thomas Parr and Maud Green. She was the youn... |
General Luna, Surigao del Norte | , officially the , is a in the province of , . According to the , it has a population of people.
Formerly known as Cabuntog, it is home to annual international and national surfing competitions because of the Cloud 9 waves. As a result, the town has the reputation as the "Surfing Capital of the Philippines."
Geog... |
NGC 319 | NGC 319 is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Phoenix. It was first discovered on September 5, 1834 by John Herschel.
References
Category:Galaxies discovered in 1834
0319
18340905
Category:Phoenix (constellation)
Category:Intermediate spiral galaxies |
The Wasps | The Wasps () is the fourth in chronological order of the eleven surviving plays by Aristophanes, the master of an ancient genre of drama called 'Old Comedy'. It was produced at the Lenaia festival in 422 BC, a time when Athens was enjoying a brief respite from the Peloponnesian War following a one-year truce with Spart... |
Rakha Mines railway station | Rakha Mines railway station is a railway station on Howrah–Nagpur–Mumbai line under Kharagpur railway division of South Eastern Railway zone. It is situated at Rakha Mines, Kuldiha in East Singhbhum district in the Indian state of Jharkhand. It is from Tatanagar Junction.
References
Category:Railway stations in Eas... |
António Garrido (referee) | António José da Silva Garrido OIH (3 December 1932 – 10 September 2014) was a Portuguese football referee.
Career
Born in Vieira de Leiria, Marinha Grande, Garrido was the first Portuguese referee to officiate a European Cup final in 1980. He refereed three matches in the FIFA World Cup, two in the 1978 and one in the... |
Welding of advanced thermoplastic composites | Advanced thermoplastic composites (ACM) have a high strength fibres held together by a thermoplastic matrix. Advanced thermoplastic composites are becoming more widely used in the aerospace, marine, automotive and energy industry. This is due to the decreasing cost and superior strength to weight ratios, over metallic ... |
Hede | Hede may refer to:
Hede, Sheyang County (合德镇), town in and seat of Sheyang County, Jiangsu, China
Hédé-Bazouges, commune in Ille-et-Vilaine, France
Hede, Sweden, locality in Härjedalen Municipality, Jämtland County
Deborah Hede (born 1959), American artist |
2014–15 Division 1 Féminine | The 2014–15 Division 1 Féminine season was the 41st since its establishment. Lyon were the defending champions. The season began on 30 August 2014 and ended on 9 May 2015. The winter break began on 22 December 2014 and ended on 9 January 2015.
Teams
There were three promoted teams from the Division 2 Féminine, the s... |
Here Come the Blobbies | Here Come the Blobbies is a children's picture book written and illustrated by Jorge Antonio Tello Aliaga. The Blobbies are cute creatures that can "blobbiemorph" into many different shapes.
Storyline
The Blobbies come from Blobbieworld, where every grain of sand, every gust of wind, and every drop of water can feel,... |
Xanthippus | Xanthippus (; , ; c. 525-475 BC) was a wealthy Athenian politician and general during the early part of the 5th century BC. His name means "Yellow Horse." He was the son of Ariphron and father of Pericles. He is often associated with the Alcmaeonid clan. Although not born to the Alcmaeonidae, he married into the fam... |
Wicked Campers | Wicked Campers is an Australian camper van rental company based in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. Founded in 2000 by John Webb, the company also has outlets in other parts of Australia, along with New Zealand, together with operations in Europe, South Africa, Japan, North America, and South America.
Wicked Campers m... |
Sayan | Sayan may refer to:
Sayan (name)
Sayan Mountains, a mountain range in Siberia, Asia
Sayan, India
Sayan, Bali, a village in Indonesia
Sayan, Iran, a village in Hamadan Province, Iran
Sayán District, Peru
Sayán, city in Peru
Sayany-Khakassia, a Russian bandy club
Sayan Plak, a Turkish record label in the 1960s
... |
James Marcus | James Marcus may refer to:
James Marcus (American actor) (1867–1937), American actor
James Marcus (English actor) (born 1942), English actor
James Marcus (Resident Evil), video game character
James S. Marcus (1929–2015), American investment banker and philanthropist |
6/1 | 6/1 may refer to:
June 1 (month-day date notation)
January 6 (day-month date notation)
See also
Sixth (disambiguation)
1/6 (disambiguation)
Six One, news show by RTÉ News
Six of One (disambiguation) |
Kim Burrell | Kimberly Burrell is an American gospel singer from Houston, Texas.
Early life
Burrell is the daughter of a pastor in the Church of God in Christ (COGIC) . Burrell began performing with Reverend James Cleveland's GMWA Youth Mass Choir (also known as Rev. James Cleveland's Kids).
Career
Rise to fame
Burrell's perform... |
Mount McKelvey | Mount McKelvey () is a rocky, mostly ice-free peak, high, situated less than east of Mount Walcott in the eastern portion of the Thiel Mountains of Antarctica. It was surveyed by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Thiel Mountains party of 1960–61, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for... |
Arthur Ribeiro | Arthur Ribeiro (born 21 March 1942) is a Brazilian fencer. He competed in the individual and team épée events at the 1968 Summer Olympics and the individual épée at the 1976 Summer Olympics.
References
Category:1942 births
Category:Living people
Category:Brazilian male fencers
Category:Olympic fencers of Brazil
Categ... |
Cascadura, Rio de Janeiro | Cascadura is a neighborhood in the North Zone of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Category:Neighbourhoods in Rio de Janeiro (city) |
Belgium in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2006 | Belgium chose their Junior Eurovision entry for 2006 through Eurosong for Kids, a national final consisting of 10 songs competing over two semi-finals and a final. The winner of Junior Eurosong was Thor!, with the song "Een tocht door het donker".
Before Eurovision
Eurosong for Kids 2006
Eurosong for Kids was the na... |
Line S1 (Nanjing Metro) | Line S1 of the Nanjing Metro (), is a suburban metro rail line serving the southern suburbs of Nanjing, running from to . It connects Nanjing South railway station with Nanjing Lukou International Airport. It is long has 8 stations. The line started construction on December 27, 2011, and was opened on July 1, 2014. ... |
Scarlet kingsnake | The scarlet kingsnake or scarlet milk snake (Lampropeltis elapsoides) is a species of kingsnake found in the southeastern and eastern portions of the United States. Like all kingsnakes, they are nonvenomous. They are found in pine flatwoods, hydric hammocks, pine savannas, mesic pine-oak forests, prairies, cultivated f... |
Kanjigan | Kanjigan (, also Romanized as Kanjīgān) is a village in Sardasht Rural District, Zeydun District, Behbahan County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 98, in 16 families.
References
Category:Populated places in Behbahan County |
Steve Tambellini | Steven Anthony Tambellini (born May 14, 1958) is a Canadian former NHL player and was the general manager for the Edmonton Oilers, from July 2008 to April 2013. He is currently a scout for the Anaheim Ducks
Playing career
Steve Tambellini played his junior hockey for the Lethbridge Broncos of the WHL from the 1975–76 ... |
Gedrosia (satrapy) | Gedrosia is a dry, mountainous country along the northwestern shores of the Indian Ocean. It was occupied in the Bronze Age by people who settled in the few oases in the region. Other people settled on the coast and became known in Greek as Ichthyophagi.
The country was conquered by the Persian king Cyrus the Great (5... |
Mikhail Ivanov (water polo) | Mikhail Ivanov (born 18 April 1958) is a Russian former water polo player who competed in the 1980 Summer Olympics and in the 1988 Summer Olympics.
References
Category:1958 births
Category:Living people
Category:Russian male water polo players
Category:Olympic water polo players of the Soviet Union
Category:Water pol... |
Ben Bag-Bag | Ben Bag-Bag (, literally, son of Bag-Bag) was a rabbinic sage and disciple of Hillel the Elder during the late Zugot or early Tannaitic period. Aside from a single maxim quoted at the end of Mishna Avot (Pirkei Avot chapter 5) he is not mentioned. There he says, Turn it, and turn it, for everything is in it. Reflect on... |
Harry Sidney Nichols | Harry Sidney Nichols (14 August 1865 – 30 November 1941) was an English publisher of erotica.
Nichols was born in Wortley, Leeds, Yorkshire, the son of glass merchant William Nichols and his wife, Mary Hartley Nichols. He went into business as antiquarian book dealer, but he made his fortune as a Sheffield publisher a... |
Atiwa District | The Atiwa District is one of the twenty-one (21) districts of the Eastern Region of south Ghana. The capital is Kwabeng.
History
Atiwa district was carved out of what is now the East Akim Municipal district in 2004 by the NPP Kufuor government.
List of settlements
Footnotes
References
Category:Districts of Ghan... |
The Setai Miami Beach | The Setai Hotel and Residences, also known as The Setai Miami Beach and The Setai South Beach, is a high rise luxury hotel and condominium located in South Beach, Miami Beach, Florida. The building has 38 floors and is 117.5 meters tall, making it one of the tallest buildings in Miami Beach. The hotel, designed by Jean... |
Bascom Sine Deaver | Bascom Sine Deaver (November 26, 1882 – October 13, 1944) was a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia.
Education and career
Born in Union County, Georgia, Deaver received an Artium Baccalaureus from Mercer University in 1907 and a Bachelor of Laws from Mer... |
Viktor Laiskodat | Viktor Bungtilu Laiskodat (born 17 February 1965) is an Indonesian politician who is the 8th governor of East Nusa Tenggara.
Born in Kupang, he was elected into the Indonesian Parliament, the People's Representative Council (Dewan Perwakilian Rakyat, sometimes referred to as the House of Representatives) from his home... |
LMS Ivatt Class 4 | The LMS Ivatt Class 4 2-6-0 is a class of steam locomotive primarily designed for medium freight work but also widely used on secondary passenger services. The London Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) built 162 of this type between 1947 and 1952, but only three were built by the LMS before nationalisation in 1948. De... |
La Belle (ship) | La Belle was one of Robert de La Salle's four ships when he explored the Gulf of Mexico with the ill-fated mission of starting a French colony at the mouth of the Mississippi River in 1685. La Belle was wrecked in present-day Matagorda Bay the following year, dooming La Salle's Texas colony to failure. The wreckage o... |
Grey thrush | The name grey thrush can refer to several species of bird:
Japanese thrush (Turdus cardis) of eastern Asia
Grey ground-thrush (Zoothera princei) of Africa
Grey shrike-thrush (Colluricincla harmonica) of Australasia
Category:Animal common name disambiguation pages |
Nioumamilima | Nioumamilima is a village on the island of Grande Comore (Ngazidja) in the Comoros. According to the 1991 census, the village had a population of 804.
References
Category:Populated places in Grande Comore |
Purcell Mountains | The Purcell Mountains are a mountain range in southeastern British Columbia, Canada. They are a subrange of the Columbia Mountains, which includes the Selkirk, Monashee, and Cariboo Mountains. They are located on the west side of the Rocky Mountain Trench in the area of the Columbia Valley, and on the east side of the ... |
Walking With (album) | Walking With () is the sixth solo studio album by South Korean pop singer-songwriter Kim Dong-ryool, and his seventh solo album overall. It was released on October 1, 2014 by the artist's label Music Farm and distributed by LOEN Entertainment. Guitarist Lee Sang-soon (who has also been known as Lee Hyori's husband) and... |
Voice – The Best of Tour | Voice – The Best of Tour was a concert tour by British singer-songwriter Beverley Knight, organised to support the album Voice - The Best of Beverley Knight. It began on 9 November 2006 in Cardiff and ended on 6 December 2006 in Plymouth.
Set list
"Good Morning World" (Intro)
"Made It Back"
"Get Up"
"Flavour of th... |
New York County Courthouse | The New York State Supreme Court Building, originally known as the New York County Courthouse, at 60 Centre Street on Foley Square in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, houses the Civil and Appellate Terms of the New York State Supreme Court for the state's First Judicial District, which is coex... |
North West Staffordshire (UK Parliament constituency) | North West Staffordshire was a constituency in Staffordshire which returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Elections were held using the first past the post voting system.
History
The constituency was created for the 1885 general election, and abolished for th... |
Gainsborough and Horncastle (UK Parliament constituency) | Gainsborough and Horncastle is a former county constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election. It existed from 1983 to 1997. The area of and around Horncastle is now in the constituency of L... |
Kopaniny, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship | Kopaniny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Końskie, within Końskie County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately west of Końskie and north-west of the regional capital Kielce.
References
Category:Villages in Końskie County |
BIST | BIST may refer to:
Bansal Institute of Science and Technology
Built-in self-test
Borsa Istanbul |
Snow (picture book) | Snow is a children's picture book by Uri Shulevitz. It received a Caldecott Honor in 1999. It also won the Charlotte Zolotow Award in 1999.
Description
This book uses lively watercolor and pen-and-ink illustrations to show the transformation of the city as snow falls. The beginning pages use a dull and bleak palette... |
David Walker (West Virginia politician) | David Allen Walker (born January 16, 1952 in Charleston, West Virginia) is an American politician and was a Democratic member of the West Virginia House of Delegates representing District 33 since January 2009.
Education
Walker graduated from Herbert Hoover High School.
Elections
2012 Walker was challenged for the M... |
Sarah Lesch | Sarah Lesch (born 1 March 1986) is a German singer-songwriter who performs with a guitar and ukulele.
Life and career
Sarah Lesch was born in Altenburg, Thuringia and moved with her mother to Swabia at the age of five. Her father Ralf Kruse is a Leipzig musician. He played among others with Amor & Die Kids and the Or... |
Patrick Onyango Sumba | Patrick Onyango Sumba (July 22, 1948 - October 12, 2009) was a Kenyan triple jumper and journalist who competed for Kenya at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich in the triple jump event.
References
Category:1948 births
Category:2009 deaths
Category:Kenyan male triple jumpers
Category:Kenyan male long jumpers
Category:... |
Reginald II, Count of Bar | Reginald II of Bar ( or ) (died 25 July 1170) was a Count of Bar and Lord of Mousson from 1149 till his death. He was the son of Reginald I, Count of Bar and lord of Mousson, and Giselle of Vaudémont.
In 1135, he attended the Council of Hugh of Metz with his father and brother. He took part in the second crusade with ... |
McGeoch | McGeoch is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Alex McGeoch (1854–1922), Scottish footballer
Catherine McGeoch, American computer scientist
Charles McGeoch (1899–1985), American football coach
Ian McGeoch (1914–2007), British Royal Navy officer
John McGeoch (1955–2004), Scottish guitarist
John Alexande... |
Pétillon metro station | Pétillon is one of the Brussels Metro stations on the eastern branch of line 5. The metro station is located in the municipality of Etterbeek. The station was opened in 1976 and is named after Major Pétillon, a Belgian colonial pioneer who died in Etterbeek in 1909. The station underwent an 18-month, 6.3 million euro ... |
Arthur Scott (rower) | Arthur Valentine Scott (13 February 1887 – 26 July 1966) was a South Australian rower and an AIF artilleryman who saw active service on the Western Front in WWI. He was a four-time national champion who represented Australia at the 1924 Summer Olympics in the men's eight rowing crew. He was a member of the AIF #1 eight... |
Panchadasi | Panchadasi or Panchadashi ( Devanagari: पंचदशी IAST paṃcadaśī) is a simple yet comprehensive manual of Advaita Vedanta (अद्वैत वेदान्त, advaita vedānta) written in the fourteenth century A.D (1386-1391) by Vidyaranya (विद्यारण्य), previously known as Madhavacharya (माधवाचार्य).
Pancha (पंच) is five and dasi (दशी) is t... |
Soma Dey | Soma Dey (, born 1947) is an Indian actress who is known for her work in Bengali cinema. She is best known for her role as Chintamani in Govinda Ray's Bilwamangal (1976).
Soma Dey made her big screen debut with Haraye Khunji (1974) and subsequently appeared in films such as Janmabhumi (1974), Bilwamangal (1976), Bondi... |
The Blue Hour (1953 film) | The Blue Hour () is a 1953 West German comedy film directed by Veit Harlan and starring Kristina Söderbaum, Hans Nielsen and Kurt Kreuger.
Production began on the film in October 1952. It was shot at studios in Göttingen and on location on the island of Capri. The film's sets were designed by the art director Walter H... |
WCBC (AM) | WCBC is an AM radio station that serves the greater area of Cumberland, Maryland. Founded in April 1976, WCBC provides news coverage: locally, regionally, and nationally; weather forecasts; participation in major community events to promote the area and its organizations by way of remote broadcasts and community servi... |
Trigonopterus viduus | Trigonopterus viduus is a species of flightless weevil in the genus Trigonopterus from Indonesia.
Description
The species is endemic to Sulawesi in Indonesia. The species was described in May 2019.
References
viduus
Category:Beetles of Asia
Category:Insects of Indonesia
Category:Endemic fauna of Indonesia |
Stillingia spinulosa | Stillingia spinulosa is a species of flowering plant in the euphorb family known by the common name annual toothleaf. It is native to the Southwestern United States where it occurs in the creosote scrub of the deserts. It is an annual or perennial herb producing a clump of thick, leafy stems approaching a meter in maxi... |
38th Reconnaissance Squadron | The 38th Reconnaissance Squadron is a United States Air Force unit. Part of the 55th Wing at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska. It operates the Boeing RC-135 aircraft conducting reconnaissance missions.
Mission
The mission of the 38th Reconnaissance Squadron is to provide RC-135 aircraft and personnel to conduct global ... |
Feldberg Foundation | The Feldberg Foundation promotes scientific exchange between German and British scientists in the field of experimental medical research. The foundation is registered in Hamburg, Germany with the secretariat based in the UK.
The pharmacologist Wilhelm Feldberg, who as a Jew had been forced to emigrate from Germany in ... |
125th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment | The 125th Pennsylvania Infantry volunteered during the American Civil War and served a 9-month term from August 1862 to May 1863. It selected the motto In God We Trust. The Regiment fought at the Battle of Antietam under the leadership of Colonel Jacob C. Higgins less than six weeks after being recruited in Blair, Camb... |
Locally discrete collection | In mathematics, particularly topology, collections of subsets are said to be locally discrete if they look like they have precisely one element from a local point of view. The study of locally discrete collections is worthwhile as Bing's metrization theorem shows.
Formal definition
Let X be a topological space. A col... |
Deep in the Iris | Deep in the Iris is the third studio album by Canadian experimental pop/art rock band Braids. It was released by Arbutus Records worldwide, excluding Canada where it was released by Flemish Eye, on 28 April 2015. It has been described as the band's "sunniest and most immediate record".
Background
Writing and recordin... |
Paul Holmes (academic) | The Rev. Paul A. Holmes, S.T.D., is a Vice-President of Seton Hall University and was Interim Dean of the John C. Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Relations until January 2007.
Education
A native of Newark and West Orange, New Jersey, Fr. Holmes received a bachelor's degree in sociology from Seton Hall ... |
Photinia glabra | Photinia glabra, the Japanese photinia, is a species in the family Rosaceae.
References
glabra |
HMS P33 | Two ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS P33.
, a P-class patrol boat launched in 1916 and sold in 1921.
, a U-class submarine launched in January 1941 and sunk in August 1941.
References
Category:Royal Navy ship names |
Red Hook Crit | Red Hook Crit was a criterium cycle race which has been held annually in Red Hook, Brooklyn since 2008. It was founded by David Trimble. Red Hook races are also held in three European cities: Milan since 2010, Barcelona since 2013, and at the Greenwich Peninsula, London since 2015.
Riders use brakeless fixed-gear b... |
Double canon | Double canon may refer to:
Double canon in music, where it refers to a canon with two simultaneous themes
Double canon in French typography, where it refers to 56-point type |
Barry Du Bois | Barry Du Bois (born 4 August 1960) is an Australian designer, building expert, television presenter and author. Du Bois is currently a co-host and design/building expert on Network 10's lifestyle program The Living Room.
Du Bois first appeared on reality renovation show The Renovators as a building mentor and judge.
... |
Nick Katzman | Nick Katzman (born 1951) is an American blues musician. Katzman was born in New York City, and lives in both Manhattan and Berlin, Germany. He plays in a variety of musical genres, including Chicago blues, Mississippi blues, Texas blues, and ragtime.
Biography
As a teenager in the 1960s, Katzman saw many of the surv... |
Selin Demiratar | Selin Demiratar (born 20 March 1983) is a Turkish actress.
Biography
Selin Demiratar was born in 1983 in Erzincan. She first explored acting at the Antalya Municipal Theatre.
In 1999, she won the Miss Globe Turkey beauty pageant and finished in third place at Miss Globe World. After moving to Istanbul, she started h... |
Venus and the Razorblades | Venus and the Razorblades were a short-lived punk rock band from Los Angeles, California, formed and managed by Kim Fowley after he severed professional relations with The Runaways. They are believed to be one of the first mixed-gender American punk band. The band included guitarist/singer Roni Lee (born Rhonda Lee Ryc... |
Bedoya (surname) | Bedoya is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Alejandro Bedoya (born 1987), American soccer player
Alfonso Bedoya (1904–1957), Mexican actor, frequently in U.S. films
Carlos García-Bedoya (1925–1980), Peruvian diplomat
Felipe Francisco Molina y Bedoya, diplomat from Costa Rica, born in the city of Guat... |
Robert W. Bussard | Robert W. Bussard (August 11, 1928 – October 6, 2007) was an American physicist who worked primarily in nuclear fusion energy research. He was the recipient of the Schreiber-Spence Achievement Award for STAIF-2004. He was also a fellow of the International Academy of Astronautics and held a Ph.D. from Princeton Univers... |
Hanif Shah al-Hussaini | Mawlawi Hanif Shah al-Hussaini was elected to represent Khost Province in Afghanistan's Wolesi Jirga, the lower house of its National Legislature, in 2005.
A report on Khost prepared at the Navy Postgraduate School stated that he "was associated with Hezbi Islami, and possibly the Qanooni faction".
It stated that he w... |
2015–16 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – World Cup 1 – Women's 3000 metres | The women's 3000 metres race of the 2015–16 ISU Speed Skating World Cup 1, arranged in the Olympic Oval, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, was held on 13 November 2015.
Martina Sáblíková of the Czech Republic won the race, while Irene Schouten of the Netherlands came second, and Natalya Voronina of Russia came third. Misak... |
List of museums in Province of Milan | This is a list of museums in the Province of Milan, Lombardy Region, Italy.
Museums and ecomuseums
References
External links
Cultural observatory of Lombardy Region
Museums in the Province of Milan
Milan, Province
Category:Metropolitan City of Milan
.
Category:Buildings and structures in the Province of Milan |
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