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"\n\nTwo human polls comprise the '''1989–90 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the '''''USA Today'' Coaches' Poll''' is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n No votes\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n20-Nov\n27-Nov\n4-Dec\n11-Dec\n18-Dec\n24-Dec\n1-Jan\n8-Jan\n14-Jan\n21-Jan\n28-Jan\n5-Feb\n12-Feb\n19-Feb\n26-Feb\n5-Mar\n12-Mar\n\nLouisiana Tech\nT1\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n\nStanford\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n\nWashington\n16\n13\n15\n15\n15\n12\n11\n7\n10\n8\n7\n7\n5\n5\n4\n4\n3\n\nTennessee\nT1\n1\n1\n2\n4\n7\n5\n5\n3\n3\n5\n5\n4\n4\n3\n3\n4\n\nUNLV\n10\n9\n13\n13\n13\n9\n8\n6\n4\n4\n3\n3\n2\n2\n5\n5\n5\n\nStephen F. Austin\n12\n12\n10\n11\n10\n15\n14\n13\n11\n9\n9\n9\n8\n8\n7\n6\n6\n\nGeorgia\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n3\n5\n7\n4\n4\n7\n7\n6\n7\n7\n\nTexas\n5\n11\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n4\n6\n5\n6\n6\n6\n6\n8\n8\n8\n\nAuburn\n7\n6\n5\n7\n7\n13\n16\n15\n14\n14\n14\n13\n11\n11\n12\n11\n9\n\nIowa\n11\n10\n7\n5\n5\n4\n7\n10\n13\n13\n13\n16\n14\n13\n11\n10\n10\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n6\n5\n9\n9\n9\n8\n6\n8\n12\n11\n11\n11\n9\n9\n9\n9\n11\n\nVirginia\n15\n15\n12\n12\n12\n10\n10\n12\n9\n12\n12\n12\n10\n10\n15\n13\n12\n\nNorthwestern\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n23\n20\n19\n15\n15\n16\n13\n15\n13\n\nLong Beach St.\n9\n7\n8\n8\n8\n6\n9\n9\n8\n6\n8\n8\n12\n12\n10\n14\n14\n\nPurdue\n8\n8\n11\n10\n11\n11\n13\n11\n7\n10\n10\n10\n13\n15\n16\n16\n15\n\nHawaii\n–\n25\n25\n24\n21\n18\n17\n17\n19\n17\n17\n17\n16\n14\n14\n12\n16\n\nNorthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n24\n23\n23\n22\n18\n18\n17\n\nProvidence\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n23\n20\n–\n–\n–\n24\n22\n23\n22\n20\n18\n\nSouth Carolina\n19\n17\n17\n20\n19\n20\n18\n18\n17\n15\n15\n19\n19\n20\n17\n17\n19\n\nSouthern Miss.\n–\n–\n–\n25\n22\n21\n21\n22\n20\n19\n18\n18\n17\n17\n20\n22\n20\n\nTennessee Tech\n20\n20\n20\n22\n20\n19\n19\n19\n18\n21\n20\n20\n20\n18\n23\n21\n21\n\nArkansas\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n19\n19\n22\n\nLSU\n13\n14\n16\n16\n16\n16\n15\n16\n16\n16\n16\n14\n18\n19\n21\n24\n23\n\nOle Miss\n14\n19\n19\n17\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n–\n–\n25\n24\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n21\n21\n23\n21\n18\n24\n24\n23\n22\n22\n21\n21\n21\n21\n24\n23\n25\n\nDePaul\n–\n–\n22\n19\n24\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nKentucky\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMaryland\n17\n18\n14\n14\n14\n14\n12\n14\n15\n23\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOhio St.\n–\n–\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n18\n16\n18\n23\n23\n22\n22\n21\n24\n25\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOregon\nT23\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nPenn St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n21\n18\n22\n22\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n\nRutgers\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUConn\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n24\n–\n–\n–\n\nVanderbilt\n22\n23\n21\n18\n17\n17\n20\n–\n25\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWestern Ky.\nT23\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n20-Nov\n28-Nov\n5-Dec\n12-Dec\n19-Dec\n26-Dec\n3-Jan\n11-Jan\n17-Jan\n24-Jan\n31-Jan\n7-Feb\n14-Feb\n21-Feb\n28-Feb\n7-Mar\n14-Mar\n19-Mar\n\nStanford\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n1\n\nAuburn\n6\n5\n5\n7\n7\n13\n16\n15\n14\n14\n14\n13\n10\n10\n11\n10\n8\n2\n\nLouisiana Tech\n2\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n3\n\nVirginia\n14\n11\n11\n12\n12\n11\n8\n12\n9\n12\n12\n12\n12\n11\n14\n14\n12\n4\n\nTennessee\n1\n1\n1\n2\n4\n7\n5\n5\n3\n3\n6\n5\n4\n4\n3\n3\n4\n5\n\nTexas\n5\n7\n7\n6\n6\n5\n4\n4\n7\n5\n5\n6\n5\n5\n8\n8\n9\n6\n\nWashington\n16\n14\n14\n14\n14\n12\n12\n8\n11\n8\n8\n8\n6\n6\n4\n4\n3\n7\n\nArkansas\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n24\n17\n17\n21\n8\n\nStephen F. Austin\n13\n10\n10\n11\n11\n14\n14\n13\n12\n9\n10\n10\n8\n8\n7\n6\n7\n9\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n7\n9\n9\n10\n10\n8\n11\n11\n13\n13\n13\n11\n9\n9\n9\n9\n11\n10\n\nProvidence\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n23\n20\n25\n–\n–\n–\n24\n23\n23\n21\n20\n11\n\nOle Miss\n15\n20\n20\n18\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n21\n–\n–\n–\n–\n12\n\nGeorgia\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n3\n4\n7\n3\n3\n7\n7\n6\n7\n6\n13\n\nPurdue\n8\n13\n13\n9\n9\n10\n9\n7\n6\n10\n9\n9\n13\n14\n16\n16\n14\n14\n\nUNLV\n10\n12\n12\n13\n13\n9\n6\n6\n5\n4\n4\n4\n2\n3\n5\n5\n5\n15\n\nSouth Carolina\n20\n17\n17\n21\n20\n18\n17\n18\n17\n15\n15\n19\n19\n21\n18\n18\n19\n16\n\nVanderbilt\n22\n19\n19\n17\n17\n17\n22\n24\n20\n25\n–\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n17\n\nIowa\n11\n6\n6\n5\n5\n4\n7\n9\n10\n11\n11\n15\n14\n13\n12\n11\n10\n18\n\nClemson\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n\nLong Beach St.\n9\n8\n8\n8\n8\n6\n10\n10\n8\n6\n7\n7\n11\n12\n10\n13\n15\n20\n\nNorthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n23\n23\n22\n20\n19\n16\n21\n\nNorthwestern\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n19\n16\n15\n16\n13\n12\n13\n22\n\nSouthern Miss.\n–\n–\n–\n25\n21\n21\n20\n22\n21\n18\n18\n18\n17\n17\n19\n20\n18\n23\n\nHawaii\n–\n25\n25\n22\n19\n19\n18\n17\n19\n16\n17\n17\n16\n15\n15\n15\n17\n24\n\nTennessee Tech\n18\n24\n24\n23\n22\n20\n19\n19\n18\n20\n20\n21\n20\n18\n22\n22\n22\n25\n\nDePaul\n–\n21\n21\n19\n25\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nKentucky\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLSU\n12\n16\n16\n16\n16\n16\n15\n16\n16\n17\n16\n14\n18\n19\n21\n24\n25\n–\n\nMaryland\n17\n15\n15\n15\n15\n15\n13\n14\n15\n23\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOhio St.\n–\n23\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n19\n18\n18\n24\n23\n22\n21\n21\n23\n24\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOregon\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nPenn St.\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n22\n22\n23\n22\n–\n–\n25\n–\n23\n–\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n21\n22\n22\n20\n18\n23\n24\n23\n24\n21\n21\n20\n22\n20\n24\n23\n–\n–\n\nUConn\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n25\n24\n–\n\nWestern Ky.\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"USA Today Coaches poll",
"References"
] | 1989–90 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"\n\n\n\nAndrea Beaton is a Cape Breton-style fiddler. She is the grand-daughter of fiddler Donald Angus Beaton, the niece of Buddy MacMaster, and the daughter of fiddler Kinnon Beaton and pianist Betty Lou Beaton.\n\nShe is a performer in the Mabou Coal Mines style of Cape Breton fiddling, and is also a pianist and tune composer . Since 2002, she has frequently appeared at folk and Celtic festivals, traditional music camps, square dances, and concert showcases. She has released six solo albums, appeared as a guest on a number of Maritime Canadian folk albums, and published three books of her tune compositions.\n\nHer 2009 recording, Branches, received the 2010 East Coast Music Award for Instrumental Recording of the Year .\n",
"*''Licence to Drive'Er'' (2002).\n*''Cuts'' (2004).\n*''The Beaton Family of Mabou'' (contributor) (2004).\n*''The Tap Session'' (2006).\n*''Branches'' (2009).\n*''Little Black Book'' (2012).\n*''With Betty and Dave'' (2016).\n",
"* Andrea Beaton Official Website\n* Celtic Colours Andrea Beaton Artist Profile\n\n==References=="
] | [
"Introduction",
" Discography ",
"External Links"
] | Andrea Beaton |
[
"'''Thull''' is a surname. People with that name include:\n\n* Hans Rudolf Thull (born 1945), German artist\n* Ketty Thull (1905-1987), Luxembourg cook, educator and cookbook writer\n* Marcel Thull (born 1951), Luxembourgian cyclist who competed at the 1976 Summer Olympics\n* Roger Thull (born 1939), Luxembourgian cyclist who competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics\n",
"*\n* Thul, a town of Jacobabad District, Sindh Province, Pakistan\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"See also"
] | Thull |
[
"\n'''Bowling''' at the '''2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games''' was held in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan from 21 to 27 September 2017 at the Bowling Center.\n",
"\n\n\n 1 \n \n 3 \n 2 \n 2 \n 7\n\n 2 \n \n 1 \n 0 \n 3 \n 4\n\n 3 \n \n 1 \n 0 \n 2 \n 3\n\n 4 \n \n 1 \n 0 \n 1 \n 2\n\n 5 \n \n 0 \n 2 \n 0 \n 2\n\n 6 \n \n 0 \n 1 \n 1 \n 2\n\n 7 \n \n 0 \n 1 \n 0 \n 1\n\n 8 \n \n 0 \n 0 \n 2 \n 2\n\n 9 \n \n 0 \n 0 \n 1 \n 1\n\nTotal\n 6 \n 6 \n 12 \n 24\n\n",
"===Men===\n\n\n Singles\n \n \n \n\n \n\n Doubles\n Cho Young-seonKang Hee-won\n Kim Kyung-minChoi Bok-eum\n Shabbir Asgarali DhankotDhruv Sarda\n\n Wu Siu HongMak Cheuk Yin\n\n Team of four\n Tsai Ying-haoChen Chia-hsingTeng Jui-piWu Hao-ming\n Jassim Mohamed Al-MuraikhiSaoud Ahmad AbdullaYousef Abdulrahman Al JabirGhanim Mohammed Aboujassoum\n Choi Bok-eumCho Young-seonKim Kyung-minKang Hee-won\n\n Diwan Rezaldy SyahrilFachri Ibnu AskarBilly Muhammad IslamHardy Rachmadian\n\n\n===Women===\n\n\n Singles\n \n \n \n\n \n\n Doubles\n Zhang ChunliZhang Yuhong\n Baek Seung-jaHong Hae-ni\n Jung Da-wunKim Moon-jeong\n\n Wang Ya-tingPan Yu-fen\n\n Team of four\n Kim Moon-jeongHong Hae-niBaek Seung-jaJung Da-wun\n Maria Liza del RosarioMarie Alexis SyMarian Lara PosadasKrizziah Lyn Tabora\n Zhang ChunliPeng RuiYang LiyanZhang Yuhong\n\n Pan Yu-fenLin Ting-yuWang Ting-wenWang Ya-ting\n\n",
"* Medalists by events\n",
"* Official website\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Medal table",
"Medalists",
" References ",
"External links"
] | Bowling at the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games |
[
"\n'''Raymondville''' is a hamlet in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States. The community is located along the Raquette River and New York State Route 56 north of Norwood. Raymondville has a post office with ZIP code 13678.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | Raymondville, New York |
[
"\n\n'''Selim Abdel-Khalik''' (; born July 24, 1993) is an Egyptian professional footballer who currently plays as an Right back for the Egyptian club Alassiouty Sport. In 2017, Al-Assiouty signed Abdel-Khalik for a 3-year contract for 350,000 Egyptian Pounds from Aswan.\n",
"\n",
"* at KOOORA.com\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References",
"External links"
] | Selim Abdel-Khalik |
[
"\n'''West Stockholm''' is a hamlet in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States. The community is located along the St. Regis River and U.S. Route 11 northeast of Potsdam. West Stockholm has a post office with ZIP code 13696, which opened on March 25, 1825.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | West Stockholm, New York |
[
"\n\n'''''Space Battle''''' is a 1978 Star Trek computer game published by Level IV for the TRS-80 16K Level II microcomputer.\n",
"''Space Battle'' is a game in which the Enterprise is engaged in mortal combat with hordes of weaker Klingons.\n",
"J. Mishcon reviewed ''Space Battle'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Mishcon commented that \"I believe most gamer will set this aside - a nice try, but not really a challenge. The tactics are just too easily optimized.\"\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot summary",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Space Battle |
[
"\n\n",
"*1882 – Population: 8,671.\n*1888 \n**April 28: Batum was officially granted the city status and the right to elect the city council (duma).\n**September 2: Gavronsky elected the first mayor of Batum. \n*1889 – Population: 12,000.\n*1895 – January 25: Prince Luka Asatiani, former mayor of Kutaisi, was elected a mayor of Batum.",
"*1900s, Batumi became a focus of Social Democratic agitation.\n*1901 – Stalin arrived in Batumi, setting up base in Ali, the Persian tavern.\n*1902 \n**Population: 16,000, with 1,000 of them oil refinery workers.\n**January 1: Stalin made a speech to 30 party members shouting \"We mustn't fear death! The sun is rising. Let's sacrifice our lives!\"\n**January 4: Stalin set the refinery on fire, the workers put it out meaning they are due a bonus which is refused. Stalin got a printing press from Tiflis and called a strike.\n**February 17: the strikers win a 30% pay increase.\n**February 26: 389 radical workers are sacked. Stalin calls a second strike.\n**March: mass strike at the Rothschild oil refinery.\n***March 7: strike leaders arrested.\n***March 8: Stalin leads demonstrations outside the police station demanding their release. The prisoners are moved to a transit prison. Governor general Smagin agrees to meet the demonstrators.\n***March 10: A mob tries to storm the prison but a renegade tips off the Cossacks and troops who fire on them though some prisoners escape. The events culminated in rioting in which the future Soviet leader Joseph Stalin played a role. The clashes with police left 15 dead, 54 wounded, and 500 in prison.\n***March 12: the dead workers are buried triggering a 7,000 strong demonstration surrounded by Cossacks and gendarmes who ban songs and speeches.\n*1906 – construction of the Baku-Batumi pipeline completed.\n*1910 – the Russian authorities decided to dismantle the Mikhailovsky naval fortress at Batumi.\n*1912-1913 – a gunboat was stationed permanently to keep a check on arms smuggling.\n*1914 – Although the project to dismantle the Batum fortifications had not been completed by the beginning of World War I.\n**7 and 10 December: the port still remained vulnerable to the powerful Ottoman-German vessels SMS Breslau and Goeben, which shelled Batum, without much effect.\n*1915: the Batumi Naval Detachment was established to support the Russian ground operations against Trebizond.\n*1918\n**12 February: Ottoman Empire briefly occupied Batumi.\n**On 3 March: Soviet Russia granted the Muslim population of Batumi, Kars and Ardahan the right of self-determination under the Ottoman suzerainty.\n**14 March-5 April: The Transcaucasian delegation attempted to reverse the clause on the Trabzon conference, but failed to achieve any results.\n**14 April: the Ottoman army annexed Batum.\n*1919 – the British took over and appointed General James Cooke-Collis as the governor of Batumi. They also Britain created the Batumi council under the presidency of the Russian cadet Pyotr Maslov.\n**14 April 1919, the governor disbanded the council and left the city.\n**July 1920, Britain ceded the entire region to Georgia.\n*March 1921.\nBatumi was briefly occupied by Turkey during the Soviet invasion of Georgia in \n*On 18 March 1921, the city was recovered by Georgian troops, who then ceded its control to the arriving Soviets.\nFinally, in the treaty of Kars, Kemal Atatürk ceded Batumi to the Bolsheviks, on the condition that it be granted autonomy, for the sake of the Muslims among Batumi's mixed population.\nThus, it became the capital of the Adjar ASSR within the Georgian SSR.\nDuring the 1924 August Uprising in Georgia, Batumi remained relatively quiet.\nOn 31 August 1924, the local cell of the anti-Soviet underground organization was destroyed; its leaders, including major general Giorgi Purtseladze (then the chief of staff of the Batum fortifications), were shot.\nDuring World War II, the city sent 12,258 soldiers in the Soviet army, and 4,728 never returned home.\n\n\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Prior to 20th century",
"20th century",
"21st century"
] | Timeline of Batumi |
[
"The '''Union of Nova Scotia Indians''' is a Tribal Council in Nova Scotia, Canada. It was created in 1969. It has six member communities; Acadia, Eskasoni, Membertou, Potlotek, Wagmatcook, and We'koqma'q.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | Union of Nova Scotia Indians |
[
"'''''Starmaster''''' is a play-by-mail game that was published by Schubel & Son.\n",
"''Starmaster'' was a society-level science fiction game, including exploration, diplomacy, colonization, and combat.\n",
"Jerry Epperson reviewed ''Starmaster'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Epperson commented that \"the game is worth the money; it is entertaining and well run. For many, however, money is better spent elsewhere. I recommend ''Starmaster'' to anyone who enjoys SF gaming and play-by-mail games.\"\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Starmaster (play-by-mail game) |
[
"\nEvents from the year '''1921 in Italy'''.\n",
"*Monarch – Victor Emmanuel III (1900–1946)\n*Prime Minister – \n*# Giovanni Giolitti (1920–1921)\n*# Ivanoe Bonomi (1921–1922)\n*Population – 39,943,528\n",
"Logo of the ''Arditi del Popolo'', an axe cutting a fasces.\nIn 1921 Fascist and anti-Fascist violence in Italy grew with Italian army officers beginning to assist the Fascists with their violence against communists and socialists. With the Fascist movement growing, anti-fascists of various political allegiances combined into the ''Arditi del Popolo'' (People's Militia).\n\n===January===\n* January 21 – The Communist Party of Italy () is founded in Livorno, following a split in the Italian Socialist Party on their 17th congress.\n\n===February===\n* February 28 – A fascist squad devastates the ''Camera del lavoro'' in Triest. Shortly afterwards the Milanese branch of the socialist newspaper ''Avanti!'' is burned down.\n\n===April===\n* April 26 – A fascist squad devastates the ''Camera del lavoro'' in Turin.\n\n===May===\n* May 15 – General election. The Liberal governing coalition of Giovanni Giolitti, strengthened by the joining of Fascist candidates in the National Blocs (33 of whom were elected deputies), came short of a majority. The Italian Socialist Party, weakened by the split of the Communist Party of Italy, lost many votes and seats, while the Italian People's Party was steady around 20%. Benito Mussolini is elected for the first time.\n\n===June===\n* June 27 – Prime minister Giolitti resigns, due to the small majority obtained at the confidence vote of June 26.\n\n===July===\n* July 4 – A new conservative government is formed by Ivanoe Bonomi.\n* July 6 – An anti-fascist militia, the ''Arditi del Popolo'', is founded on the initiative of anarchist and republican groups, and rapidly spreads in Liguria, Emilia, Tuscany, Umbria and Lazio. The ''Arditi'' are not supported by the socialist parties (neither by the Italian Socialist Party, PSI, nor by the Communist Party of Italy, PCI).\n* July 21 – In Sarzana Fascist squads occupy the station and are preparing to enter the city to impose the release of a dozen arrested fascists, but are attacked by the Carabinieri and the population resulting in eighteen dead and about thirty injured.\n\n===August===\n* August 2 – Pact of Pacification between Benito Mussolini and his Fascist Revolutionary Party (), and the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and the General Confederation of Labor (CGL). The agreement was short-lived since many of the fascist ''squadristi'' leaders denounced the pacification pact with the socialists, along with Mussolini’s leadership, arguing that the Duce “had not created the movement” and that they could “get along without him.”\n* August 18 – In ''Il Popolo d'Italia'' Mussolini announces his resignation from the executive board of the Fascists because of the resistance to the pacification pact.\n* August 26 – The Fascist National Council rejects Mussolini's resignation from the executive board. With regard to the pacification pact, the council does not impose a precise line and leaves the issue to be resolved autonomously by individual squads.\n\n===November===\n* November 9 – The National Fascist Party (, PNF) is founded during the Third Fascist Congress in Rome on November 7-10, 1921.\n\n===December===\n* December 28 – The Banca Italiana di Sconto goes bust.\n",
"* March 12 – Gianni Agnelli, Italian entrepreneur and principal shareholder of Fiat (d. 2003)\n* May 12 – Giovanni Benelli, Italian Cardinal who served as the Archbishop of Florence (d. 1982)\n* May 31 – Alida Valli, Italian actress who appeared in more than 100 films (d. 2006)\n* August 25 – Cesare Terranova, Italian judge and politician from Sicily killed by the Mafia (d. 1979)\n",
"* February 2 – Andrea Carlo Ferrari, Italian cardinal who served as the Archbishop of Milan (b. 1850)\n* March 16 – Olinto De Pretto, Italian industrialist and geologist (b. 1857)\n* August 2 – Enrico Caruso, Italian operatic tenor (b. 1873)\n",
"\n* Berghaus, Günter (1996). '' Futurism and Politics: Between Anarchist Rebellion and Fascist Reaction, 1909-1944'', Providence (RI): Berghahn Books, \n* Bosworth, R. J. B. (2007). '' Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915-1945'', London: Penguin Books, \n* Delzell, Charles F. (ed.) (1971). '' Mediterranean Fascism 1919-1945'', New York (NY), Walker and Company, \n* Payne, Stanley G. (1996). '' A History of Fascism, 1914-1945'', Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, \n* Smith, Dennis Mack (1997). '' Modern Italy: A Political History'', Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, \n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"[[Kingdom of Italy]]",
"Events",
"Births",
"Deaths",
" References "
] | 1921 in Italy |
[
"\n'''Walter Neville Watterson''' (1919 - 18 February 2017) was a British philatelist who was a specialist in the stamps and postal history of Sarawak, Borneo, and Brunei.\n",
"Walter Watterson was born in Wolverhampton in 1919. He married Betty Taylor in Newmarket, Cambridgeshire, in 1949. They had a daughter Claire.\n",
"Watterson was a stalwart of the Northamptonshire Philatelic Society, the East Midlands Federation of Stamp Clubs, the Sarawak Specialists' Society and the Postal History Society. He and Betty were both fellows of the Royal Philatelic Society London.\n\nHis collection of Sarawak was sold by Cavendish Philatelic Auctions in London in September 2017.\n",
"Watterson died in Northampton General Hospital on 18 February 2017. He was pre-deceased by Betty.\n",
"* ''Sarawak: The issues of 1871 and 1875: Plating studies and postal history''. 1989.\n*Borneo: Japanese P.O.W. Camps - Mail of the Forces, P.O.W. and Internees. 1994. \n*Borneo: Pt. 2: Japanese P.O.W. Camps - Mail of the Forces, P.O.W. and Internees. 1994. \n* ''Sarawak Officials: A Survey''. 1996. \n* ''Sarawak: The De La Rue Story''. Brock Publications, 2000. \n* ''Sarawak & Brunei: The De La Rue ink colours''. 2004.\n* ''Labuan: The beginnings, & 'the Crowns'. Brock Publications, 2008. (With Betty Watterson & Leslie Brueckheimer)\n",
"* Postage stamps and postal history of Malaysia\n",
"\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Early life and family",
"Philately",
"Death",
"Selected publications",
"See also",
" References ",
" External links "
] | Neville Watterson |
[
"'''''Sword for Hire''''' is a 1979 role-playing game adventure for ''Tunnels & Trolls'' published by Flying Buffalo.\n",
"''Sword for Hire'' is an adventure in which the player is a low-level fighter or rogue who hears a rumor that a local wizard is hiring mercenaries.\n",
"Lorin Rivers reviewed ''Sword for Hire'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Rivers commented that \"In the balance, this dungeon is certainly worth the price. I recommend it.\"\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot summary",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Sword for Hire (Flying Buffalo) |
[
"'''Francis Ellis''' may refer to:\n\n* Francis Ellis (colonial administrator), administrator of the English East India Company\n* Francis Ellis (cricketer) (1889–?), English cricketer\n* Francis Whyte Ellis (1777–1819), British civil servant and scholar of Tamil and Sanskrit\n",
"* Frank Ellis (disambiguation)\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" See also "
] | Francis Ellis |
[
"\n\n\nThe '''Independence Day of Abkhazia''' (Russian:День независимости Абхазии) is the main state holiday in the partially recognized Republic of Abkhazia. This date is celebrated on September 30. \n",
"September 30 was chosen as the Independence Day to commemorate the date on which the Georgian government troops and ethnic Georgians were driven out by the Abkhaz secessionist forces and their allies from much of Abkhazia, including the capital, Sukhumi, in a series of fierce battles during the in 1993. The Museum of War Glory in central Sukhumi, which was opened in December 2014, has artifacts and memorabilia from the war. \n",
"A military parade is held in the Park of Military Glory. A wreath laying ceremony at the to Vladislav Ardzinba, and Sergey Bagapsh, takes place. Gala concerts, and theatrical performances also take place in Sukhumi's Freedom Square. Many citizens and veterans are awarded the title of Hero of Abkhazia on this day.\n",
"",
"List of national independence days\n\nPublic holidays in Abkhazia\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" History ",
" Celebrations ",
" 20th anniversary ",
" See Also ",
" References "
] | Independence Day (Abkhazia) |
[
"\n'''Antoinette Robain''' (born 7 December 1956 in Paris) is a French architect. In 2004, she won the Prix de l'Équerre d'Argent with Claire Guieysse for the Centre National de la Danse de Pantin.\n",
"\n",
"* http://www.pss-archi.eu/architecte/932/\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" References ",
" External links "
] | Antoinette Robain |
[
"'''''Swordquest''''' is a 1979 board game published by Task Force Games.\n",
"''Swordquest'' is a game in which good, evil, and druidic forces search the towns of the land of Tirrane, hoping to find the lost sword of Lumina.\n",
"Bruce Campbell reviewed ''Swordquest'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Campbell commented that \"''Swordquest'' has enough good points that I don't feel my money was wasted. However, better games are available for less money, so I don't recommend it for any category of gamer.\"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Swordquest (board game) |
[
"\n\n'''''Beyond Valkyrie: Dawn of the 4th Reich''''' is a 2016 American war drama film directed by Claudio Fäh and starring Sean Patrick Flanery, Tom Sizemore, Kip Pardue, Stephen Lang and Rutger Hauer.\n",
"\n",
"*Sean Patrick Flanery as Captain Evan Blackburn\n*Tom Sizemore as Master Sergeant O'Malley\n*Kip Pardue as Clarence Edward\n*Stephen Lang as General Emil F. Reinhardt\n*Rutger Hauer as Oskar Halminski\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot",
"Cast",
"References",
"External links"
] | Beyond Valkyrie: Dawn of the 4th Reich |
[
"'''Chen Qingying''' (Chinese 陈庆英 , Pinyin Chén Qìngyīng ; born 21 October 1941 in Nanchong , Sichuan , Republic of China 1 ) is a Chinese Tibetologist. He is a research fellow with the History Research Institute of the China Tibetology Research Center (Zhongguo Zangxue yanjiu zhongxin). He wrote more than 20 books related to Tibet history According to Amazon description, his masterpiece The System of the Dalai Lama Reincarnation was written on the basis of historical data and archives. \n\nBooks written by Chen Qingying:\n\n#The System of the Dalai Lama Reincarnation \n#The System of the Dalai Lama Reincarnation (Chinese edition) \n#Le Regime De Rrincarnation Du Dalai –Lama/the System of the Dalai Lama Reincarnation (French edition) \n",
"\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | Chen Qingying |
[
"'''''Time Trek''''' is a 1978 Star Trek computer game for the TRS-80 16K Level II microcomputer.\n",
"''Time Trek'' is a game in which the Enterprise tries to destroy all the Klingons before they can wipe out the starbases.\n",
"J. Mishcon reviewed ''Time Trek'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Mishcon commented that \"the real-time aspect of the game and the aggressive tactics of the damn Klingons make this game quite exciting. For those into hand-eye coordination and fast action, ''Time Trek'' will be enjoyable.\"\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot summary",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Time Trek |
[
"'''Japanese Democratic Party''' can refer to:\n\n*Democratic Party (Japan, 1947)\n*Japan Democratic Party (1954)\n*Democratic Party of Japan (1996)\n*Democratic Party of Japan (1998–2016)\n*Democratic Party (Japan) (2016–)\n",
"*List of political parties in Japan\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"See also"
] | Japanese Democratic Party |
[
"\n\nTwo human polls comprise the '''1988–89 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the '''''USA Today'' Coaches' Poll''' is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n Not ranked\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n21-Nov\n28-Nov\n5-Dec\n12-Dec\n19-Dec\n26-Dec\n2-Jan\n9-Jan\n16-Jan\n23-Jan\n30-Jan\n6-Feb\n13-Feb\n20-Feb\n26-Feb\n6-Mar\n13-Mar\n\nTennessee\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n1\n\nAuburn\n7\n5\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n\nLouisiana Tech\n6\n4\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n4\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n3\n\nStanford\n8\n6\n5\n5\n6\n9\n8\n7\n7\n6\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n\nMaryland\n10\n13\n13\n9\n9\n8\n5\n8\n8\n7\n6\n6\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n\nTexas\n3\n9\n8\n10\n13\n13\n14\n14\n11\n10\n11\n9\n8\n8\n6\n6\n6\n\nLong Beach St.\n2\n2\n9\n7\n8\n7\n11\n11\n10\n9\n10\n11\n9\n9\n7\n7\n7\n\nIowa\n5\n7\n11\n8\n7\n6\n6\n5\n5\n4\n7\n7\n7\n7\n9\n8\n8\n\nColorado\n–\n–\nT20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n16\n15\n15\n10\n10\n9\n9\n\nGeorgia\n4\n3\n2\n2\n4\n4\n7\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n8\n10\n10\n\nStephen F. Austin\n–\n–\nT20\n17\n16\n16\n15\n13\n17\n17\n14\n13\n11\n13\n13\n11\n11\n\nOle Miss\n9\n8\n6\n6\n5\n5\n4\n3\n4\n8\n8\n8\n12\n12\n12\n12\n12\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n16\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n19\n16\n13\n13\n12\n13\n15\n14\n13\n13\n\nOhio St.\n12\n17\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n20\n15\n15\n14\n\nPurdue\n–\n16\n14\n12\n12\n12\n10\n9\n9\n11\n9\n10\n10\n11\n11\n14\n15\n\nUNLV\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n18\n19\n19\n18\n17\n16\n17\n16\n16\n16\n\nSouth Carolina\n–\n–\n19\n18\n17\n17\n17\n16\n15\n16\n17\n16\n18\n14\n17\n17\n17\n\nLa Salle\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n19\n18\n18\n18\n\nWestern Ky.\n14\n12\n10\n15\n18\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n\nOld Dominion\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n19\n20\n\nClemson\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nDuke\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIllinois St.\n–\n–\nT20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLSU\n19\n–\n16\n13\n11\n11\n9\n10\n14\n12\n12\n18\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nRutgers\n15\n11\n12\n11\n10\n10\n12\n17\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n18\n19\n18\n19\n20\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSan Diego St.\n20\n20\n15\n16\n15\n15\n16\n15\n12\n14\n19\n19\n17\n16\n–\n–\n–\n\nSouthern California\n17\n14\n17\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nVirginia\n11\n10\n7\n14\n14\n14\n13\n12\n13\n15\n15\n14\n14\n18\n20\n–\n–\n\nWashington\n13\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n18-Nov\n6-Dec\n13-Dec\n20-Dec\n27-Dec\n3-Jan\n10-Jan\n17-Jan\n24-Jan\n31-Jan\n7-Feb\n14-Feb\n21-Feb\n28-Feb\n7-Mar\n14-Mar\n19-Mar\n\nTennessee\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n\nAuburn\n7\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n2\n\nMaryland\n10\n12\n9\n9\n8\n5\n8\n8\n7\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n\nLouisiana Tech\n6\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n4\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n3\n4\n\nStanford\n9\n5\n5\n7\n10\n9\n7\n7\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n\nTexas\n4\n7\n11\n12\n13\n16\n16\n12\n10\n11\n9\n8\n8\n6\n6\n6\n6\n\nLong Beach St.\n2\n9\n8\n6\n6\n11\n11\n10\n9\n10\n11\n9\n9\n7\n7\n7\n7\n\nOle Miss\n8\n6\n6\n4\n4\n4\n3\n4\n8\n8\n8\n12\n10\n11\n9\n9\n8\n\nOhio St.\n12\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n21\n22\n23\n21\n15\n15\n15\n9\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n15\n19\n20\n22\n18\n19\n18\n14\n13\n13\n12\n13\n14\n14\n14\n13\n10\n\nIowa\n5\n10\n7\n8\n7\n7\n5\n5\n5\n7\n7\n7\n7\n9\n8\n8\n11\n\nUNLV\n–\n–\n–\n24\n22\n18\n17\n19\n18\n14\n16\n16\n17\n18\n18\n17\n12\n\nClemson\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n25\n22\n13\n\nLSU\n21\n16\n10\n10\n9\n8\n10\n13\n11\n12\n19\n21\n24\n22\n19\n18\n14\n\nVirginia\n11\n8\n14\n14\n15\n13\n12\n16\n16\n16\n14\n14\n18\n21\n22\n19\n15\n\nStephen F. Austin\n–\n–\n19\n17\n17\n17\n15\n18\n19\n15\n13\n11\n13\n13\n13\n12\n16\n\nPurdue\n–\n14\n12\n13\n12\n10\n9\n9\n12\n9\n10\n10\n11\n10\n11\n14\n17\n\nGeorgia\n3\n2\n2\n5\n5\n6\n6\n6\n4\n6\n6\n6\n6\n8\n10\n10\n18\n\nColorado\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n22\n21\n18\n15\n15\n12\n12\n12\n11\n19\n\nRutgers\n14\n13\n13\n11\n11\n15\n19\n17\n22\n22\n21\n22\n22\n20\n21\n23\n20\n\nOld Dominion\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n–\n24\n20\n23\n20\n18\n19\n16\n17\n20\n21\n\nSouth Carolina\n23\n20\n17\n16\n16\n14\n14\n15\n15\n17\n17\n19\n16\n19\n16\n16\n22\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n16\n17\n18\n18\n19\n20\n20\n20\n17\n20\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n\nTennessee Tech\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n\nJames Madison\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n23\n25\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n\nDuke\n–\n–\n23\n20\n23\n23\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIllinois St.\n–\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLa Salle\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n23\n24\n23\n–\n–\n\nMiddle Tenn.\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNebraska\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSan Diego St.\n20\n15\n15\n15\n14\n12\n13\n11\n14\n19\n18\n17\n15\n23\n24\n–\n–\n\nSouthern California\n17\n18\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nVanderbilt\n–\n–\n22\n21\n21\n21\n21\n21\n23\n25\n24\n20\n20\n17\n20\n21\n–\n\nWake Forest\n19\n21\n21\n23\n24\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWashington\n13\n22\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWestern Ky.\n18\n11\n16\n19\n20\n22\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"USA Today Coaches poll",
"References"
] | 1988–89 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"\n\n'''''Topographic Drama – Live Across America''''' is an upcoming double live album by the progressive rock band Yes, set for release on 24 November 2017 by Rhino Records. The album was recorded in February 2017 in several locations across the United States during their 2016–2017 world tour that featured ''Drama'' (1980) played in its entirely plus half of their double album ''Tales from Topographic Oceans'' (1973).\n",
"In March 2013, the Yes line-up of bassist Chris Squire, guitarist Steve Howe, drummer Alan White, keyboardist Geoff Downes, and singer Jon Davison kicked off their first tour with a live set formed of select past studio albums performed in their entirety and in track order. The idea came about in the second half of 2012 when the group discussed their future touring plans; Howe felt playing a selection of songs from their history had run its course and suggested one with a specific concept, one that was discussed for several years prior, but was not materialised. \n\nThe album documents Yes on the final leg of their world tour that ran between July 2016 and February 2017 that saw the band continue with their album-themed tours. It was recorded in various locations across the United States in February 2017. White sat out for most of the tour to recover from back surgery and was replaced with Jay Schellen, before White returned on the drums on a part-time basis in time for the Japanese leg in November 2016. Schellen continued to play with the band on most shows for the remainder of the tour.\n\nThe tour's set included ''Drama'' (1980) played in its entirety and in track order with \"The Revealing Science of God (Dance of the Dawn)\" and \"Ritual (Nous sommes du soleil)\" which forms half of their double album ''Tales from Topographic Oceans'' (1973). In addition, it featured performances of \"Leaves of Green\", an excerpt of \"The Ancient (Giants Under the Sun)\" from ''Tales from Topographic Oceans'', \"And You and I\" from ''Close to the Edge'' (1972), \"Heart of the Sunrise\" and \"Roundabout\" from ''Fragile'' (1971), and \"Starship Trooper\" from ''The Yes Album'' (1971).\n\ns announcement of their 2018 European tour in celebration of their fiftieth anniversary. They revealed the album was \"on its way\", and officially announced the album on 28 September. Its artwork was designed and illustrated by Yes's longtime cover designer Roger Dean.\n",
"The album is set for release on 24 November 2017, available in 2-CD, 3-LP, and digital versions.\n",
"\n\n",
"'''Yes'''\n* Jon Davison – lead vocals, acoustic guitar, percussion\n* Steve Howe – guitars, backing vocals\n* Chris Squire – bass guitar, backing vocals, harmonica\n* Geoff Downes – keyboards\n* Jay Schellen – additional drums, percussion\n* Alan White – drums, percussion\n\n'''Production'''\n* Roger Dean – artwork\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Background and album ",
" Release ",
" Track listing ",
" Personnel ",
" References "
] | Topographic Drama – Live Across America |
[
"25 of January marches passing before the Amiria Press Authority in Imbaba.\n\nThe '''Amiri Press''' or '''Amiria Press''' (, المطابع الأميرية) (also known as the '''Bulaq Press''' () due to its original location in Bulaq) is one of the main agencies with which Muhammad Ali Pasha modernized Egypt.\n",
"A lithography stamp at the Bulaq Press.\nWooden letter blocks used at the Bulaq Press in 1820.\nThe Amiria Press was established in 1820 and opened officially during the reign of Muhammad Ali Pasha in 1821. At first, it published military books for the Egyptian army, but it soon developed and started to print literary books, science books, and textbooks. It was also Cairo's most active and important Turkish-language press.\n",
"In October of 1862, Muhammad Sa'id Pasha gave the press to Abdurrahman Bik Rushdi. It was then purchased by Isma'il Pasha who added it to the Da'ira Sunnia (الدائرة السنية), or the royal possessions. The Amiria Press returned to the possession of the state in 1880, during the reign of Tewfik Pasha.\n\nOn August 13, 1956, Gamal Abdel Nasser passed Law 312 of 1956 ordering the establishment of the Amiria Press Authority under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Trade & Industry. The first meeting of its administration—headed by the Ministry of Trade and Industry's administrator at the time, Aziz Sedky—was held on September 1, 1956. The ministry later decided to build a new 35,000 m2 building for the Amiria Press Authority, and equip it with state-of-the-art printing technology to spread its messages.\n\nThe Amiria Press Authority officially began operations at its new location on July 28, 1973 during the Sadat administration under Ibrahim Salem Muhammadin, Minister of Trade and Industry at the time.\n",
"* The Official Journal: the official state-run newspaper, published every Thursday\n* Al-Waqa'i' al-Masriyya (Egyptian Affairs): the oldest newspaper in Egypt, published as an appendix of the Official Journal and published daily except Fridays and holidays\n* Other publications—government publications, legal books, calendars, and the Sherif Quranic Press\n",
"\nFile:Machine Envelope Printer.jpg|This envelope printing machine was one of the machine presses at the Bulaq Press. It was renovated during the reign of Khedive Ismail. Purchased in 1869, the British-made printer was used to print all kinds of envelopes. It present now in Library of Alexandria.\n\n",
"* Amiria Press (Arabic)\n* History of the Bulaq Press - Library of Alexandria\n",
"\n Early Arabic Printing\n\n\n\n\n:Category:Cairo\n:Category:History of Egypt (1900–present)\n:Category:Printing\n",
"\n\n\nContent in this edit is translated from the existing Arabic Wikipedia article at ; see its history for attribution."
] | [
"Introduction",
" Establishment ",
" Ownership ",
" Publications of the Amiria Press Authority ",
"Images",
" Official Website ",
" See Also ",
" References "
] | Amiri Press |
[
"The '''2007 South American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships''' were held in San Cristóbal, Venezuela, October 4–7, 2007. The competition was organized by the Venezuelan Gymnastics Federation.\n",
"\n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n",
";Senior\n\n\n\n \n Valentina MeriñoPaloma GarateCatalina UlloaCatalina Vichez\n Edgarvy GarcésRosimar MarvezYoliana González\n Sabrina TorellaSamantha NigroLissete Martínez\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Participating nations ",
" Medalists ",
" References "
] | 2007 South American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships |
[
"The following is a list of episodes from the series ''Nature Cat''.\n",
"\n\n\n Season\n Episodes\n Originally Aired\n\n First Aired\n Last Aired\n\n \n '''1'''\n 40\n \n \n\n",
"\n===Season 1 (2015–present)===\n\n No. For Series\n No. Overall\n Title\n Original Airdate \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Series overview",
"Episodes",
"External links"
] | List of Nature Cat episodes |
[
"\n\n'''Westermarsch I''' was an independent municipality in Lower Saxony until the municipal reform of 1972 and, as such, a member of the collective municipality (''Samtgemeinde'') of Leybucht. Today Westermarsch I is a part of the East Frisian borough of Norden with about 450 inhabitants (as at 12/2016), spread over an area of 19.42 km².\n",
"The name ''Westermarsch I'' denotes the place as being in the west of the marshlands in the historical region of Norderland (see Ostermarsch). The Roman numeral in the name of the village distinguishes the former communal municipality (''Kommunalgemeinde'') from its the neighbouring village of Westermarsch II.\n",
"As a marsh village, Westermarsch I is characterized by large-scale farming. Within the municipality there are not only isolated Gulf farmhouses, but there are several larger settlements. These include Mittelmarsch, Altendeich and Westermarscherloog.\n\nWestermarsch I is bordered to the east by the town of Norden and to the north by Westermarsch II. The North Sea coast forms its natural boundary in the west and the watercourse of the Norder Tief as well as the Norden subdivision of Neuwesteel to the south.\n\nThe ''Landesstraße'' 27 connects Westermarsch I with the town of Norden and sea port of Greetsiel. ''Kreisstraße'' 214 runs from Westermarsch I to Norddeich.\n",
"The construction of the ''Fokko Ukena Dyke'' began in 1425 as part of the dyking of the so-called Westermarsch ''Neulande'' (\"new lands\"). Until then, as everywhere else in the marshlands, people had built ''warfts'' to protect the inhabitants of the ''Neulande'' from the sea.\n\nThe most significant source about the history of the village is the Altendeich School Chronicle (''Altendeicher Schulchronik''), whose oldest sections date back to 1622 and which, in addition to the development of the school, also describe the history of the place. According to this source, a teacher was already being employed in 1622 to teach the children of farmers and householders. Further data and facts, which are listed in the chronicle, include:\n* c. 1771, a large cattle epidemic raged in Westermarsch, which led to great economic hardship for the village's population of about 600\n* A brickyard with a furnace capacity of some 20,000 bricks was erected on today's ''Kreisstraße'' 214 in 1774. It lasted until the 1970s. Three years later a sugar feeder was built.\n* After a dyke burst in 1825, large parts of the village were devastated.\n* A first regular transport link from Westermarsch to the town of Norden was built between 1873 and 1875. Until then were used because of the poor road conditions the various water courses, large and small, were used as transport routes.\n\nOn 1 July 1972 the municipality of Westermarsch I was incorporated into the borough of Norden.\n",
"Well over 90 % of the Westermarsch population belong to the Evangelical-Lutheran Church, St. Andrew's Church in ''Gottfried-Keller-Straße''.\n\nAbout 3 % are members of the Evangelical free churches. \n\nAround 1 % are Roman Catholic.\n\nThere are no church buildings in Westermarsch I. The various church members have always been looked after by Norden. For several years church services were held in the village halls. A ladies group meets there regularly.\n\nThe AWO playschool meets next to the village hall in an old school. \n\nAn even older school, which became a nationally known bar after its closure, is today a victim of delapidation.\n",
"* Karl Leiner: ''Panorama Landkreis Norden'', Norden 1972, pp. 469ff.\n",
"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Name ",
" Structure, location and communication ",
" History ",
" Religion and social ",
" Literature and sources ",
" References ",
" External links "
] | Westermarsch I |
[
"\n\"'''Know Who You Are'''\" is a song by the British rock band Slade, released in 1970 as a second and final single from their second studio album ''Play It Loud''. The song was written by Jim Lea, Noddy Holder, Don Powell and Dave Hill, and produced by Chas Chandler. It failed to make an appearance in the UK charts.\n",
"After their 1969 debut ''Beginnings'' failed to break the band, then known as Ambrose Slade, into the UK charts, their new manager Chas Chandler encouraged them to begin writing their own material. He also believed they would benefit from a new look and the band soon adopted a skinhead image. Coinciding with this new image, Ambrose Slade changed their name to \"The Slade\" and released the failed single \"Wild Winds Are Blowing\" in October 1969. \"Shape of Things to Come\" followed in March 1970, but again failed to chart. With this, Chandler moved the band from Fontana to Polydor Records, believing a higher profile label would boost sales. The band then began recording material for their second studio album ''Play It Loud''.\n\nThe band's Polydor debut, \"Know Who You Are\", was released in September 1970, but was also a commercial failure, as was ''Play It Loud'' when it was released in November. Lead vocalist Noddy Holder, in his 1999 biography, recalled of the song's failure: \"When it didn't make the charts, frustration started to set in. We couldn't understand why we weren't more popular by then. We had been with Chas for two years, slogging our guts out and still we hadn't had a hit.\" Speaking to ''Goodtimes Magazine'' in 2015, bassist Jim Lea recalled: \"We had no hits. Songs such as \"Know Who You Are\" or \"Shape of Things to Come\" were played on the radio only very infrequently.\" Afterwards, the band dropped their skinhead image and would achieve their commercial breakthrough with their mid-1971 single \"Get Down and Get with It\".\n\n\"Know Who You Are\" developed from the band's 1969 track \"Genesis\", which was an instrumental written by the band and released as a single from ''Beginnings''. During sessions for ''Play It Loud'', the band revisited the song, with drummer Don Powell writing the lyrics. In his 2013 biography, Powell recalled: \"\"Know Who You Are\" is the same as our old instrumental \"Genesis\", so Nod and Dave are credited for that one as well as Jim and myself. I wrote the lyrics for it and some of them are about Dave. I don't know how it came about, but the first line that I came up with was \"H, old babe, sing a song to make out that your playing is easy.\"\"\n",
"\"Know Who You Are\" was released on 7\" vinyl by Polydor Records in the UK only. The B-side, \"Dapple Rose\", was written by Lea and Powell. Also included on ''Play It Loud'', Powell recalled of his lyrics in a 2009 fan forum interview: \"I've always had a fondness for horses and where I lived with my parents there were some fields over the back and there were always gypsies camping there. They used to have these horses and donkeys and they always looked dead to me. They were not looked after which was sad.\"\n\nFollowing its lack of success, \"Know Who You Are\" was quickly deleted by Polydor and has since become a collector's item. The ''Rare Record Price Guide'' of 2014 valued the single at £80. The song later received greater recognition when a live version was included on ''Slade Alive!'', which became the band's first hit album when released in 1972. In addition, the original studio version was included on the 1973 compilation album ''Sladest'', which topped the UK charts.\n",
"The band appeared on the UK show ''Disco 2'' to perform \"Know Who You Are\" and the ''Play It Loud'' track \"Sweet Box\". The performance was broadcast on 31 October 1970. Only a few performances from the show are known to survive, with Slade's performance having not been seen since its original airing. The band also performed the song during a BBC studio session around the same time.\n",
";7\" Single\n#\"Know Who You Are\" - 2:53\n#\"Dapple Rose\" - 3:31\n",
"Upon release, ''New Musical Express'' said: \"A powerful item from the skinhead group, making its Polydor debut. The lyric is forcefully delivered, virtually snarled at times. It's a hard-hitting piece of philosophy with a walloping beat, which explodes into a wall of sound in the title hook. Insistent and gripping, but limited in its appeal.\" ''Record Mirror'' felt the song had \"chart chance\" and commented: \"Chas Chandler, ex-Animal bassist, states categorically that this group will make it. But then he's said that before. About Jimi Hendrix. Lost momentarily in a skin-head scene, this group is basically most musicianly. This is a strange, staccato sort of production... lead voice stamping, as in bovver boots, on the lyrics. Stark simplicity behind. The effect is very good indeed. Darned near slayed me.\"\n\nIn a review of ''Play It Loud'', ''New Musical Express'' noted: \"Aggressive - that's what the music and vocalising of Slade seems to be, though they vary the volume with great skill, at times quiet, then turning it up and shouting at the listener as in \"Know Who You Are\".\" Joe Viglione of AllMusic retrospectively said: \"\"Know Who You Are\" is a wonderful study here; the band is more proper dipping into that Yardbirds bag again on this original. By the time it was re-released on ''Slade Alive'', only two years later, the song would become part of their glam success. But here, Noddy Holder is kept on key by Chas Chandler, and that restraint makes for an intelligent album of rock which draws from all of the aforementioned sources, Ten Years After, Sabbath, The Move, Yardbirds, as well as the Beatles, Steppenwolf, and Kaleidoscope U.K.\" Dave Swanson of ''Ultimate Classic Rock'' commented: \"\"Know Who You Are\" kicks off side two and remains one of the band's finest-ever songs. Showing off the band well on the way to their definitive sound, it's a Slade classic loaded with that dynamic tension the band would explore to greater success within the next year.\"\n\nIn a review of ''Slade Alive!'', Stephen Cook of AllMusic described the song as \"MC5-esque\". In a review of ''Sladest'', ''Gramophone'' said: \"The historians are sure to be thrilled when hearing their initial recordings for the Fontana label and their first Polydor efforts, such as \"Know Who You Are\"...\" Terry Staunton of ''Record Collector'' stated: \"In addition to the hits they’d already amassed, the album showcases a few of the ones that got away, such as the Quo-like boogie of \"Know Who You Are\".\"\n",
";Slade\n*Noddy Holder - lead vocals, guitar\n*Dave Hill - lead guitar, backing vocals\n*Jim Lea - bass, backing vocals\n*Don Powell - drums\n\n;Additional personnel\n*Chas Chandler - producer\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Background",
"Release",
"Promotion",
"Track listing",
"Critical reception",
"Personnel",
"References"
] | Know Who You Are |
[
"\n\n'''Aris Avato F.C.''' is a Greek football club, based in Avato, Xanthi, Greece\n",
"\n===Domestic Titles and honors===\n\n** '''Xanthi FCA Champions: 3'''\n*** 2013-14, 2014-15, 2016-17\n** '''Xanthi FCA Cup Winners: 1'''\n*** 2016-17\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Honors",
"References"
] | Aris Avato F.C. |
[
"\n\n\n'''''My Wife, the Director General''''' (, translit. Miraty Modir 'Am) is a 1966 Egyptian Comedy film directed by Fatin Abdel Wahab\n",
"* Shadia as Ismat Fahmy\n* Salah Zulfikar as Hussein Fahmy\n* Tawfik El Deken as Abou El Khir Hassanein\n* Shafik Nour El Din as Abdel 'Awy \n* Cariman as Aida\n* Adel Imam as Abou El Magd\n",
"* Cinema of Egypt\n* Lists of Egyptian films\n* List of Egyptian films of the 1960's\n",
"\n",
"*\n\n\n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Cast",
"See also",
"References",
"External links"
] | My Wife, the Director General |
[
"'''''Traveller Book 5: High Guard''''' is a 1980 role-playing game supplement for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''High Guard'' is the fifth ''Traveller'' book, detailing characters who join the Navy.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''High Guard'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"Unfortunately, the new rules do violence to the system from Book 2 and the laws of physics.\"\n",
"* ''The Dragon'' #40 (August 1980)\n* ''White Dwarf'' #20 (August–September 1980)\n* ''White Dwarf'' #26 (August–September 1981)\n* ''The Space Gamer'' #48 (February 1982)\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Book 5: High Guard |
[
"\n\n'''Jeneen Frei Njootli''' is an interdisciplinary Vuntut Gwitchin artist known primarily for her work with sound and textiles, and as a core member of the ReMatriate Collective. Her work often focuses on the non-visible qualities, histories, and energy of the materials she uses. She examines and animates their relationship to trade, ceremonial regalia, and the politics of First Nations art. In 2016 she received the William and Meredith Saunderson Prizes for Emerging Artists.\n",
"Jeneen Frei Njootli completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Emily Carr University in 2012, and in 2017 she earned an MFA from the University British Columbia. In 2016 she completed the Earth Line Indigenous Tattoo training residency.\n",
"* 2016 - 2018, wnoondwaamin|we hear them, Group exhibition curated by Lisa Myers, organized by Trinity Square Video, toured to White Water Gallery, the Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba, PAVED Arts, and Contemporary Calgary / Stride Art Gallery Association\n* 2017, Land/Marks, National Parks of Canada\n* 2017, red rose ad lidii, Southern Alberta Art Gallery\n* 2016, Time Immemorial, GAM Gallery\n",
" \n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Education ",
" Significant Exhibitions ",
" References "
] | Jeneen Frei Njootli |
[
"\n\nTwo human polls comprise the '''1987–88 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the '''''USA Today'' Coaches' Poll''' is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n Not ranked\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n23-Nov\n30-Nov\n7-Dec\n14-Dec\n21-Dec\n28-Dec\n4-Jan\n11-Jan\n18-Jan\n25-Jan\n1-Feb\n8-Feb\n15-Feb\n22-Feb\n1-Feb\n7-Mar\n14-Mar\n\nTennessee\n1\n1\n1\n3\n3\n3\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\n\nIowa\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n2\n\nAuburn\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n3\n\nTexas\n2\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n\nLouisiana Tech\n5\n5\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n5\n5\n5\n5\n5\n\nOhio St.\n11\n10\n9\n8\n9\n9\n8\n8\n8\n8\n9\n9\n8\n7\n6\n6\n6\n\nLong Beach St.\n4\n4\n7\n9\n11\n11\n12\n12\n9\n9\n14\n14\n12\n12\n10\n8\n7\n\nRutgers\n9\n9\n10\n10\n8\n8\n10\n9\n10\n14\n8\n6\n6\n6\n7\n9\n8\n\nMaryland\n–\n–\n–\n20\n16\n16\n15\n14\n14\n12\n12\n11\n13\n13\n11\n10\n9\n\nVirginia\n7\n7\n6\n6\n6\n6\n7\n7\n7\n6\n6\n8\n7\n9\n9\n7\n10\n\nWashington\n15\n15\n16\n15\n14\n14\n17\n16\n12\n11\n11\n12\n11\n11\n13\n12\n11\n\nOle Miss\n8\n8\n8\n7\n7\n7\n6\n6\n6\n7\n7\n7\n10\n10\n12\n13\n12\n\nStanford\n20\n17\n15\n14\n12\n12\n11\n10\n11\n10\n10\n10\n9\n8\n8\n11\n13\n\nJames Madison\n–\n–\n20\n18\n19\n19\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n19\n18\n17\n16\n15\n14\n\nSouthern California\n13\n13\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n18\n16\n15\n19\n18\n15\n16\n15\n14\n15\n\nMontana\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n18\n16\n15\n15\n14\n14\n14\n16\n16\n\nGeorgia\n10\n11\n12\n12\n17\n17\n13\n13\n15\n13\n13\n13\n16\n15\n17\n17\n17\n\nNew Mexico St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n18\n18\n18\n18\n\nStephen F. Austin\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n17\n–\n19\n19\n19\n19\n\nLa Salle\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n17\n–\n–\n20\n20\n\nClemson\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n\nDePaul\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n\nDuke\n19\n18\n14\n13\n10\n10\n9\n11\n13\n17\n17\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nHouston\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIllinois\n–\n–\n–\n19\n20\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n18\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nPenn St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n17\n16\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSouthern Ill.\n16\n14\n13\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUNLV\n–\n–\n19\n17\n18\n18\n16\n17\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nVanderbilt\n14\n19\n17\n16\n15\n15\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWake Forest\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n16\n16\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWestern Ky.\n12\n12\n11\n11\n13\n13\n14\n15\n17\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n23-Nov\n1-Dec\n8-Dec\n15-Dec\n22-Dec\n29-Dec\n5-Jan\n12-Jan\n19-Jan\n26-Jan\n2-Feb\n9-Feb\n16-Feb\n23-Feb\n1-Mar\n8-Mar\n15-Mar\n22-Mar\n\nLouisiana Tech\n5\n5\n4\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n5\n5\nT4\nT5\n5\n1\n\nAuburn\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n2\n2\n\nTennessee\n1\n1\n1\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n2\n2\n1\n3\n\nLong Beach St.\n4\n4\n8\n12\n13\n12\n12\n12\n8\n16\n14\n14\n12\n12\n11\n8\n9\n4\n\nTexas\n2\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n4\n4\nT4\n4\n4\n5\n\nIowa\n7\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n3\n3\n3\n6\n\nVirginia\n9\n8\n6\n6\n6\n6\n7\n7\n7\n6\n6\n7\n7\n10\n9\n7\n10\n7\n\nMaryland\n23\n25\n23\n19\n14\n15\n14\n13\n14\n13\nT12\n12\n13\n13\n12\n10\n7\n8\n\nOhio St.\n13\n11\n10\n8\n11\n11\n10\n9\n11\n8\n10\n10\n10\n8\n6\nT5\n6\n9\n\nGeorgia\n8\n10\n12\n9\n19\n19\n15\n14\n16\n12\nT12\n13\n17\n16\n17\n16\n16\n10\n\nRutgers\n10\n9\n9\n10\n8\n8\n11\n10\n10\n9\n8\n6\n6\n6\n7\n9\n8\n11\n\nOle Miss\n6\n7\n7\n7\n7\n7\n5\n5\n6\n7\n7\n8\n9\n9\n10\n11\n12\n12\n\nSouthern California\n14\n13\n19\n24\n23\n24\n22\n21\n18\n15\n21\n20\n18\n17\n16\n12\n13\n13\n\nStanford\n22\n19\n15\n14\n10\n10\n9\n8\n12\n10\n9\n9\n8\n7\n8\n14\n15\n14\n\nJames Madison\n21\n22\n18\n17\n17\n17\n21\n18\n15\n14\nT15\n18\n16\n15\n15\n15\n14\n15\n\nWashington\n16\n17\n16\n16\nT15\n16\n16\n16\n13\n11\n11\n11\n11\n11\n14\n13\n11\n16\n\nMontana\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n22\n20\n18\nT15\n15\n14\n14\n13\n17\n17\n17\n\nStephen F. Austin\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n22\n21\n18\n17\n15\n18\n19\n19\n19\n18\n\nWestern Ky.\n11\n12\n11\n11\nT15\n14\n18\n15\n17\n20\n23\n23\n22\n24\n–\n–\n20\n19\n\nClemson\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n23\n21\n20\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n17\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n21\n\nDePaul\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n24\n22\n20\n24\n–\n22\n\nNew Mexico St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n24\n21\n19\n18\n18\n18\n23\n\nSouth Carolina\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n\nHouston\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n22\n20\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n\nDuke\nT18\n16\n13\n13\n9\n9\n8\n11\n9\n17\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIllinois\n–\n24\n22\n20\n20\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLSU\n20\n20\n24\n22\n24\n23\n23\n24\n21\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNebraska\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n23\n24\n21\n25\n–\n24\n–\n24\n–\n\nNew Orleans\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n24\n20\n19\n20\n23\n21\n21\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\nT18\n21\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nPenn St.\n24\n23\n20\n21\n22\n21\n19\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSouthern Ill.\n15\n14\n14\n23\n21\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUNLV\n25\n–\n21\n18\n18\n18\n13\n17\n19\n22\n22\n22\n23\n20\n22\n20\n22\n–\n\nVanderbilt\n12\n18\n17\n15\n12\n13\n17\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWake Forest\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n19\n17\n16\n19\n21\n23\n22\n23\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"USA Today Coaches poll",
"References"
] | 1987–88 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"\n\nPSM V74 D112 The Neo-Manueline style Portuguese pavilion\n\nThe national commemorative '''Exhibition of the centenary of the opening of the Ports of Brazil''' along with marking a hundred years since the opening of the Brazilian ports celebrated Brazil's trade and development. It was opened on in Urca in Rio de Janeiro on 11 August, stayed open for 3 months and received over 1 million visitors.\n\n===See also===\n* Transfer of the Portuguese Court to Brazil for Brazil 1808 history\n\n===References===\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction"
] | Exhibition of the centenary of the opening of the Ports of Brazil |
[
"\n'''Galkoff's''' was a kosher butchers shop in Liverpool during the early and mid-20th century. Its location at 29 Pembroke Place, Liverpool L3 was at the then heart of the Jewish community in the city. Whilst the shop ceased trading in 1979 and the site is now derelict, the site was Grade II listed in April 2007 in recognition of its significance to Liverpool's Jewish community and for the elegance of its tiled exterior. The building is further protected by a hoarding which has a mural, designed by local artist Donna Berry and executed by the children of King David School, depicting scenes of the life of Liverpool's Jewish community. \n",
"29 Pembroke Place was one of a terrace of Georgian town houses built in 1820. In 1907 it was purchased by Percy Galkoff, a Jewish emigré from Poland, who had it reconstructed as a kosher butcher's shop. In 1933 he added the tiled shop front which is a feature of the building The business was run by him and his family until 1979, when it was sold to Liverpool City Council. The building changed hands several times, becoming derelict despite remedial work, and afflicted throughout by planning blight. The current owners, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, are now co-operating with the Museum of Liverpool Life to preserve the frontage of No.29 and the neighbouring Grade II listed court dwellings, in their “Secret Life of Liverpool” project.\n",
"The shop front of No. 29 was added for Percy Galkoff by local builder John Tomkinson, whose company had also been involved in the building of St Georges Hall in Liverpool city centre. It comprised a facing of green faience tiles with gold patterning, and bearing the legend “P. Galkoff Family Butcher”. It also bore the word “Kosher” in Hebrew lettering, also in gold.\n",
"The site is currently protected by a hoarding, which was decorated with a mural in 2007. The mural was designed by local artist Donna Berry in collaboration with the pupils of King David school. It depicts the history of the Jewish community in Liverpool, and notable people (such as singer Frankie Vaughan, Beatles manager Brian Epstein, and Lord Mayor Louis Caplan) and places (Princes Road Synagogue, Harold House Community Centre) in that community.\n",
"* Grade II listed buildings in Liverpool-L3",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"The shop",
"The frontage",
"The mural",
"See also",
"References"
] | Galkoff's Liverpool |
[
"'''''Traveller Supplement 1: 1001 Characters''''' is a 1978 role-playing game supplement for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''1001 Characters'' offers a list of pre-rolled characters in six major categories.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''1001 Characters'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"This booklet is ... for players who do not want to take the time to create their own characters. It also gives the characteristics of nine famous characters from SF stories, without naming them.\"\n",
"* ''White Dwarf'' #14 (August–September 1979)\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Supplement 1: 1001 Characters |
[
"\nThe '''2018 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship''' will be the 131st staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1887. The championship will begin in May 2018 and will end on 19 August 2018. The draw for the championship will be held in October 2017 and will be broadcast live on RTÉ2.\n\nGalway will be the defending champions.\n\nThe 2018 championship will see the biggest change in format since the introduction of the qualifiers in 2002.\n",
"\nA new provincial hurling championship system featuring round-robin formats in Leinster and Munster will be introduced in 2018 after being passed at the GAA’s Special Congress on 30 September 2017. The proposal - which was carried by a narrow margin, 62% voting in favour (a weighted majority of 60% was required) - will play the five-team Munster and Leinster championships on a round-robin basis. The top two teams in each provincial group qualify for the provincial final. \n\nAn amendment to the motion from Laois, Offaly and Meath was carried by 87%. This will see the Tier 2 championship finalists participating in preliminary All-Ireland quarter-finals against the third-placed team in each province with the Tier 2 teams having home advantage. The fourth-placed team in each province will see their season conclude. The bottom placed team in the Leinster round-robin will be relegated to the Tier 2 championship.\n",
"\nTwelve teams will compete in the championship – five in each of the two provincial championships, and two teams gaining entry to the All-Ireland series from the yet to be named Tier 2 championship.\n\n===Venues===\n\n\n\n Team\n Location\n Stadium\n Capacity\n\nClare\nEnnis\nCusack Park\n\n\nCork\nBallintemple\nPáirc Uí Chaoimh\n\n\nDublin\nDonnycarney\nParnell Park\n\n\nGalway\nSalthill\nPearse Stadium\n\n\nKilkenny\nKilkenny\nNowlan Park\n\n\nLimerick\nLimerick\nGaelic Grounds\n\n\nOffaly\nTullamore\nO'Connor Park\n\n\nTipperary \nThurles \nSemple Stadium\n\n\nWaterford\nWaterford\nWalsh Park\n\n\nWexford\nWexford\nInnovate Wexford Park\n\n\n\n===Personnel and kits===\n\n\n\nTeam\nColours\nMainSponsor\nCaptain(s)\nVice-captain(s)\nManager(s)\nMost recent success\n\n\nAll-Ireland\nProvincial\nLeague\n\nClare\nborder\nPat O'Donnell\n\n\nDonal MoloneyGerry O'Connor\n2013\n1998\n2016\n\nCork\nborder\nChill Insurance\n\n\n\n2005\n2017\n1998\n\nDublin\nborder\nAIG\n\n\n\n1938\n2013\n2011\n\nGalway\nborder\nSupermac's\n\n\nMicheal Donoghue\n2017\n2017\n2017\n\n\nKilkenny\nborder\nGlanbia\n\n\nBrian Cody\n2015\n2016\n2014\n\nLimerick\nborder\nSporting Limerick\n\n\nJohn Kiely\n1973\n2013\n1997\n\nOffaly\nborder\nCarroll Cuisine\n\n\n\n1998\n1995\n1990–91\n\nTipperary\nborder\nIntersport/Elverys\n\n\nMichael Ryan\n2016\n2016\n2008\n\nWaterford\nborder\n3\n\n\nDerek McGrath\n1959\n2010\n2015\n\nWexford\nborder\nGain\n\n\nDavy Fitzgerald\n1996\n2004\n1972–73\n\n",
"\n===Group table===\n\n:{| class=\"wikitable\" \n\nTeam\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n1\n20px''' Dublin '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n2\n20px''' Galway '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n3\n20px''' Kilkenny '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n4\n20px''' Offaly '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n5\n20px''' Wexford '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n\n===Group stage===\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n===Leinster final===\n\n\n",
"\n===Group table===\n\n:{| class=\"wikitable\" \n\nTeam\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n1\n20px''' Clare '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n2\n20px''' Cork '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n3\n20px''' Limerick '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n4\n20px''' Tipperary '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n5\n20px''' Waterford '''\n'''0'''\n0\n0\n0\n0-00\n0-00\n0\n'''0'''\n\n\n===Group stage===\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n===Munster final===\n\n\n",
"\n===All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals===\n\n\n\n\n\n===All-Ireland quarter-finals===\n\n\n\n\n\n===All-Ireland semi-finals===\n\n\n\n\n\n===All-Ireland final===\n\n\n",
"\nRTÉ, the national broadcaster in Ireland, will provide the majority of the live television coverage of the hurling championship in the second year of a five-year deal running from 2017 until 2021. Sky Sports will also broadcast a number of matches and will have exclusive rights to some games.\t\n\n\n Live Hurling On TV Schedule\n\n Date\n Fixture &Match Details\n RTÉSky Sports\n\n\n\n\n\n '''Provincial Hurling Matches'''\n\n May\n ?Munster Round 1\n RTÉ\n\n May\n ?Leinster round 1\n RTÉ\n\n\n\n\n\n\n Knockout Stage\n\n All-Ireland Preliminary Quarter-Finals\n\n July\n \n RTÉ\n\n July\n \n RTÉ\n\n\n\n\n All-Ireland Hurling Quarter-Finals\n\n July\n \n RTÉ\n\n July\n \n RTÉ\n\n\n\n All-Ireland Hurling Semi-Finals\n\n July\n \n RTÉ&Sky Sports\n\n July\n \n RTÉ&Sky Sports\n\n\n\n All-Ireland Hurling Final\n\n 19 August 2018\n \n RTÉ&Sky Sports\n\n\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Format change",
"Teams",
"[[Leinster Senior Hurling Championship]]",
"[[Munster Senior Hurling Championship]]",
"[[All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship]]",
"Live Hurling On TV",
"References"
] | 2018 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship |
[
"'''''Traveller Supplement 2: Animal Encounters''''' is a 1979 role-playing game supplement for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''Animal Encounters'' describes the fauna of various worlds, including grazer, intimidators, reducers, and gatherers, appropriate to worlds of varied size and atmosphere.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''Animal Encounters'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"This is the 'monster book' for ''Traveller''.\"\n",
"* ''White Dwarf'' #15 (October–November 1979)\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Supplement 2: Animal Encounters |
[
"\n\n'''''Rosemont''''' is a 2015 American drama film directed by Daniel Petrie Jr. and starring Brad Dourif, Grace Zabriskie and Ayla Kell.\n",
"\n",
"*Brad Dourif as Abe\n*Lochlyn Munro as Craig\n*Grace Zabriskie as Josephine\n*Michael Gross as Dr. Molina\n*Ayla Kell as Lisa\n*Brendan Michael Coughlin as Brad\n",
"Sloan Freer of ''Radio Times'' gave the film three stars out of five. Donna Rolfe of The Dove Foundation gave the film a positive review and wrote, \"This movie has a lot of redeeming qualities about facing life and knowing there is a reason behind things that happen that may never be known, but that change peoples’ lives.\"\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot",
"Cast",
"Reception",
"References",
"External links"
] | Rosemont (film) |
[
"\n'''''Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer''''', was a United States Supreme Court case in which the court found ESOP fiduciaries have the same prudential duties as non-ESOP fiduciaries, as set by ERISA, except that they are not required to diversify their investments beyond shares of the employer's stock.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer |
[
"'''''Traveller Supplement 3: The Spinward Marches''''' is a 1979 role-playing game supplement for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''The Spinward Marches'' includes a description and maps of a region of space, with basic data on hundreds of worlds.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''The Spinward Marches'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"A game master with Book 3 could create a similar region, but this is a time-saver.\"\n",
"* ''White Dwarf'' #20 (August–September 1980)\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Supplement 3: The Spinward Marches |
[
"\n\n\n'''''The Man With Bad Manners''''', first published in 2003, is the seventh out of eleven children's books written by Idries Shah and published by Hoopoe Books. \n\n",
"''The Man With Bad Manners'' is a fable about how a village struggles with a Man with Bad Manners. The story's focus is on peaceful conflict resolution and how the village provides the Man with Bad Manners an opportunity to reform his behavior. The publisher has developed a \"Manual for Parents and Caregivers,\" which is available for free at their website. The manual suggests questions that a parent might ask to enrich a child's understanding of the story's message.\n",
"''The Man With Bad Manners'' comes in several different versions: hardcover, softcover, and hardcover with a CD. The book is published in several different language including English and Spanish as well as several bilingual editions including English and Pashto and English and Dari. \n",
"Marilyn Taniguchi of the Beverly Hills Public Library reviewed ''The Man With Bad Manners'' for the April 2004 issue of the ''School Library Journal''. Taniguchi said that the story and illustrations blend effectively to deliver \"the story's message of peaceful conflict resolution.\"\n\nVeronica Schwartz of the Des Plaines Public Library reviewed ''The Man With Bad Manners'' for the May 2006 issue of the ''School Library Journal''. Schwartz notes that she considers the book \"A fine addition to folk tale collections.\" Schwartz goes on to say that the story covers \"lessons relating to conflict resolution, initiative, cooperation, and an alternative way of seeing things.\"\n\nNoorullah Babrakzai reviewed Shah's entire Children's Book Series which includes \"The Man With Bad Manners\" for Volume 5 Number 2, 2003 (ISSN 1521-0960) issue of the ''Multicultural Perspectives''. Babrakzai notes that \"it would be a mistake to view these tales as merely 'primitive' substitutes for more 'sophisticated' forms of entertainment. There lasting appeal is due, I think, to the fact that they not only entertain, but can be understood on many different levels and provide a form of \"nourishment for the brain\" that can help develop thinking abilities and perceptions.\"\n",
"\n",
"* Hoopoe Books - Read Together Manuals (in English and Spanish)\n* The Idries Shah Foundation\n* The Man With Bad Manners Free Online Read\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Summary",
"Editions",
"Reception",
" References ",
"External links"
] | The Man with Bad Manners |
[
"'''''Traveller Supplement 4: Citizens of the Imperium''''' is a 1979 role-playing game supplement for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''Citizens of the Imperium'' includes creation tables for 12 new kinds of character.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''Citizens of the Imperium'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"You will need all of Books 1-5 to fully appreciate this supplement.\"\n",
"* ''White Dwarf'' #20 (August–September 1980)\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Supplement 4: Citizens of the Imperium |
[
"__FORCETOC__\n\n\n'''Tidofeld''' has been an autonomous part of the East Frisian borough of Norden since 1996 and has around 1,000 inhabitants (as at 12/2016)), spread over an area of just 0.47 km².. Its built-up area is completely integrated with the town itself. Until 1952, Tidofeld was part of the municipality of Lütetsburg.\n",
"The name ''Tidofeld'' goes back to a ''schloss'' that was built here in the 17th century on this site. It was built by Tido, Freiherr of Innhausen and Knyphausen (1582–1638). Freiherr Tido was a brother of Field Marshal Dodo of Innhausen and Knyphausen.\n\nTidofeld gained particular importance from the fact that after the Second World War in a former Wehrmacht barracks (a naval transit camp), a displaced persons camp was established which held 6,000 people and was thus one of the largest camps in Germany. In the middle of the camp a barrack hut was turned into a church building. It was the forerunner of the Church of Grance (''Gnadenkirche'') built in 1961 and - after it was deconsecrated - documentation centre.\n",
"The Church of Mercy, Tidofeld (erbaut 1961), today a documentation centre about the history of the displaced persons\nAmong the attractions in Tidofeld is a permanent exhibition in the disused Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Mercy, which documents the ethnic cleansing of the former German eastern territories. This project is under the patronage of the former Lower Saxon minister-president, David McAllister. Until she stepped down, Margot Käßmann, former state bishop of the Evangelical-Lutheran State Church of Hanover, was a patroness of the documentation centre.\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" History ",
" Sights ",
" References "
] | Tidofeld |
[
" \n'''NGC 4440''' is a barred spiral galaxy located about 55 million light-years away in the constellation of Virgo. NGC 4440 was discovered by astronomer William Herschel on April 17, 1784. It is a member of the Virgo Cluster. \n",
"NGC 4440 has a strong bar in its structure. Surrounding the bar, there are two very open spiral arms.\n",
"* List of NGC objects (4001–5000)\n* Barred spiral galaxy",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Physical characteristics",
" See also ",
"External links",
" References "
] | NGC 4440 |
[
"\n\n'''Jeffrey S. Buchanan''' is a Lieutenant General in the United States Army. He is currently the commander of the United States Army North (Fifth Army). He also serves as the senior commander of Fort Sam Houston and Camp Bullis. \n",
"\nHe has a bachelor of science in wildlife ecology from the University of Arizona and a Master of Arts in leadership development from the United States Military Academy.\n",
"\nHe was commissioned a lieutenant in the infantry in May 1982 after graduating from the University of Arizona. He has served four tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan. He has held command or staff positions in the 82nd Airborne Division, 25th Infantry Division, 101st Airborne Division, and 10th Mountain Division, as well as the U.S. Military Academy and the National Training Center. Recent assignments have included serving as the Deputy Commanding General of I Corps (2012-2013), commander of the US Army Military District of Washington/Joint Force Headquarters-National Capitol Region (2013-2015), and Resolute Support DCOS-Operations/Deputy Commander (Operations) for US Forces-Afghanistan (2015-2016). He has been commander of United States Army North since August 26, 2016.\n\nIn September 2017 he was dispatched to Puerto Rico, a week after the island was devastated by Hurricane Maria. His assignment was to lead all military hurricane relief efforts there and to see how the military can be more effective in the recovery effort, particularly in dealing with the thousands of containers of supplies that are stuck in port because of \"red tape, lack of drivers, and a crippling power outage\".\n",
"\nHe and his wife Laura have three grown children and three grandchildren. \n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Education",
"Military career",
"Personal",
"References"
] | Jeffrey S. Buchanan |
[
"'''''Traveller Supplement Adventure 1: The Kinunir''''' is a 1979 role-playing game adventure for ''Traveller'' published by Game Designers' Workshop.\n",
"''The Kinunir'' involves a small Imperial warship, now missing under mysterious circumstances.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''The Kinunir'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"Could be fun. A prize for referees - but only a very imaginative and painstaking referee will be able to make full use of it. A challenge for any group of players.\"\n\n''The Kinunir'' won the H.G. Wells award for Best Roleplaying Adventure of 1979.\n",
"* ''White Dwarf'' #19 (June–July 1980)\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot summary",
"Reception",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Traveller Adventure 1: The Kinunir |
[
"'''Michael Hudson''' (1605–1648), was a divine who supported the Royalist cause during the English Civil War in which he served as as scoutmaster to northern army. He was one of two people who accompanied King Charles I from Oxford to Newark-on-Trent in 1646 when Charles placed himself under the protection of the Scottish army. He was killed while defending Woodcroft Castle.\n",
"In 1628 Hudson was graduated from Queen's College, Oxford with an M.A, and became fellow c. 1630. He was appointed tutor to the then Prince Charles, who, when king, gave him various; livings; and was his chaplain at Oxford. He was scoutmaster to northern army, 1643–1644 and, along with John Ashburnham, accompanied Charles I to Newark in 1646. At the end of the First English Civil War he was imprisoned. He escaped from prison, but was again captured, 1647, and sent to the Tower of London. In 1648 he escaped again, and promoted royalist rising in eastern counties where was killed while defending Woodcroft Castle.\n",
"Hudson wrote:\n*A treatise in defence of divine right (printed, 1647)\n*Account of King Charles I (printed, 1731)\n",
"\n",
"*\n",
"*\n*\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Biography",
"Works",
"Notes",
"References",
"Further reading"
] | Michael Hudson (royalist) |
[
"\n\n'''''Brachypelma fossorium''''' is a species of spider in the family Theraphosidae (tarantulas), native to Costa Rica.\n",
"''Brachypelma fossorium'' is the smallest of the ''Brachypelma'' species found in Costa Rica. The cephalothorax is less than 18 mm long: 14 mm in the holotype male and 16 mm in the paratype female. The fourth leg is the longest: 43 mm in the holotype male and 54 mm in the paratype female. The body and legs are covered with reddish brown hairs (setae). The \"brush\" of hairs (scopula) on the metatarsus of the fourth leg is short, limited to the third furthest from the body. The male's palpal bulb is less than 4 mm long; the spermatheca of the female is of a similar width. Females have larger chelicerae than males with projections (\"thorns\") on the front.\n",
"''Brachypelma fossorium'' was first described by Carlos Valerio in 1980, as ''Brachypelma fossoria''. The specific name refers to the \"fossorial\" or burrowing habits of the species. The specific name was corrected to ''fossorium'' by Günter Schmidt in 1992, as ''Brachypelma'' is neuter in gender.\n",
"''Brachypelma fossorium'' is found in the Guanacaste Province in Costa Rica, along the north-west Pacific coast of the country. It is found in grasslands in dry tropical areas. The female described by Valerio was collected from a horizontal burrow which it shared with several juveniles. The relatively large chelicerae of the females and the projections on them may be connected to their burrowing habit.\n",
"All species of ''Brachypelma'', including ''B. fossorium'', were placed on CITES Appendix II in 1994, thus restricting trade.\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Description",
"Taxonomy",
"Distribution and habitat",
"Conservation",
"References"
] | Brachypelma fossorium |
[
"\n\n\n'''Dragan Radović''' (; born December 12, 1976), also known by his nickname '''Prle''', is a Montenegrin basketball coach and former player. He currently serves as a head coach for the Lovćen 1947 Cetinje of the Montenegrin Basketball League and the Adriatic Second League.\n",
"Radović started his coaching career in his hometown team Lovćen 1947 in 2003 as an assistant coach. In 2005, he became a head coach and led the Lovćen for two seasons. Later he also coached Lovćen 1947 from 2011 to 2014. Also, he coached other teams from Montenegrin Basketball League such as Ulcinj, Jedinstvo and Teodo Tivat. Prior to 2016–17 season, he was hired to be the head coach of the Bashkimi Prizren in the Kosovo Superleague and the BIBL.\n\nOn July 14, 2017, Radović signed for his third term as head coach for the Lovćen 1947.\n\n=== National team ===\nRadović was a head coach for the Montenegro men's national under-18 basketball team from 2012 to 2015. He won a gold medal at 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division B.\n",
"* 2013 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship Division B: \n",
"\n",
"* Radovic ABA League Profile\n* Coach Profile at eurobasket.com\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Coaching career ",
" Career achievements ",
"References",
" External links "
] | Dragan Radović (basketball) |
[
"'''Dragan Radović''' is the name of:\n* Dragan Radović (basketball) (born 1976), Montenegrin basketball coach and former player\n* Dragan Radović (born 1973), Montenegrin former footballer\n* Dragan Radovich (born 1956), Yugoslavian-American former footballer\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction"
] | Dragan Radović (disambiguation) |
[
"'''Nenad Konstantinović''' () is a politician in Serbia. He was a prominent member of the student movement Otpor! in the late 1990s and early 2000s, later served in the National Assembly as a member of the Democratic Party, and has been a Social Democratic Party member of the assembly since 2016.\n",
"Konstantinović was born in Belgrade, then a part of the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Trained as a lawyer, he served as vice-president of the ''Glavnog odbora Studentskog protesta'' group from 1996 to 1997 and was vice-president of Serbia's Student Parliament from 1997 to 1998.\n\nA vocal critic of Slobodan Milošević's government, Konstantinović became a founding member of the opposition group Otpor! (English: Resistance!) in 1998. In September of the following year, he issued the organization's \"Declaration for Serbia's future,\" which called for the resignation of Milošević and \"free and democratic elections for a constitutive assembly, under the rules and complete control of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe.\" He also called for an alliance of \"all Serbian democratic forces\" around the goals of the manifesto. Konstantinović later became involved in organizing Otpor's daily protests against Milošević in May 2000, arguing during this time that the regime would need to fall as a precondition for democratic change.\n\nMilošević and his allies fell from power in October 2000, and an alliance of opposition parties formed new administrations in both Serbia and Yugoslavia. Konstantinović helped operate a volunteer organization called the Service for Enforcement of Truth in this period, documenting abuses of power by Miloševic-era officials in order to initiate criminal prosecutions. He urged Serbia's leaders to arrest Milošević, although he acknowledged the difficulties prosecutors would face in this matter. \"We don't have any documents with a signature,\" he said. \"Milošević used to give orders by telephone to his cronies so you can only arrest people like Rade Marković and (former customs chief) Mihalj Kertes and press them to talk.\" Following the arrest of Milošević, he urged the government to extradite him to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague.\n",
"Konstantinović joined the Democratic Party in 1998 and was a member of the Assembly of the City of Belgrade.\n\nOtpor! became an organized political party in 2003, and Konstantinović appeared on its electoral list in the 2003 Serbian parliamentary election. The party did not receive enough support to cross the electoral threshold to win representation in the assembly. Konstantinović was subsequently critical of Serbian prime minister Vojislav Koštunica's administration for including Miloševic-era officials.\n\nOtpor! merged into the Democratic Party in September 2004, and Konstantinović signed an accord with Slobodan Gavrilović of the Democratic Party to formalize the arrangement. Konstantinović served on the executive of the Democratic Party from 2004 to 2008.\n\n===Member of the National Assembly (Democratic Party)===\nKonstantinović received the 103th position on the Democratic Party's electoral list, which was largely organized in alphabetical order, in the 2007 Serbian parliamentary election. The list won sixty-four mandates, and Konstantinović was included in the party's parliamentary delegation. (From 2000 to 2011, parliamentary mandates were awarded to sponsoring parties or coalitions rather than to individual candidates, and it was common practice for the mandates to be distributed out of numerical order.) The Democratic Party joined a coalition government after the election, and Konstantinović served as part of its parliamentary majority.\n\nThe Democratic Party contested the 2008 Serbian parliamentary election at the head of the For a European Serbia coalition. Konstantinović was again included in the coalition's electoral list and, when the list won 102 mandates, in the Democratic Party's delegation. The Democratic Party and its allies formed government after this election, and Konstantinović again served on the government side. In January 2009, he replaced Tomislav Nikolić as chair of the parliamentary administrative committee. In this capacity, he initiated the launch of an \"e-parliament\" for the assembly. He also led a working group reviewing the assembly's code of conduct in the same period.\n\nSerbia's electoral system was reformed in 2011, such that parliamentary mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists. Konstantinović was given the sixty-fourth position on the Democratic Party's Choice for a Better Life coalition list in the 2012 election and narrowly won direct re-election when the list won sixty-seventh mandates. The Serbian Progressive Party and its allies formed government after the election, and the Democratic Party moved into opposition.\n\n===Member of the National Assembly (Social Democratic Party)===\nThe Democratic Party subsequently experienced a significant split, with several members including Konstantinović joining the breakaway New Democratic Party under Boris Tadić's leadership. This party contested the 2014 Serbian parliamentary election as a fusion party with the Greens of Serbia and in alliance with the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina, and other parties. Konstantinović received the twenty-eighth position on the alliance's list; the list won eighteen seats, and Konstantinović was not returned to the assembly. The New Democratic Party later renamed itself as the Social Democratic Party.\n\nKonstantinović received the tenth position on the \"Alliance for a Better Serbia\" list (a coalition including the Social Democratic Party) for the 2016 election and returned to parliament when the list won thirteen seats. The election was again won by the Progressive Party and its allies, and Konstantinović again serves as an opposition member. He is currently the deputy chair of the committee on administrative, budgetary, mandate, and immunity issues; a member of the committee on spatial planning, transport, infrastructure, and telecommunications; a deputy member of the committee on the economy, regional development, trade, tourism, and energy; and a member of the parliamentary friendship groups for Croatia, Germany, Italy, Macedonia, Qatar, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.\n\nKonstantinović has also served as a member of the municipal assembly of Savski Venac in Belgrade.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Early life and activism",
"Political career",
"References"
] | Nenad Konstantinović |
[
"\n\nTwo human polls comprise the '''1986–87 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the '''''USA Today'' Coaches' Poll''' is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n Not ranked\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n18-Nov\n2-Dec\n9-Dec\n16-Dec\n23-Dec\n30-Dec\n6-Jan\n13-Jan\n20-Jan\n27-Jan\n3-Feb\n10-Feb\n17-Feb\n24-Feb\n3-Mar\n10-Mar\n\nTexas\n1\n1\n1\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n\nAuburn\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n\nLouisiana Tech\n2\n2\n2\n2\n5\n5\n6\n6\n7\n7\n8\n5\n4\n3\n3\n3\n\nLong Beach St.\n7\n7\n7\n7\n8\n7\n7\n7\n5\n5\n4\n6\n5\n5\n4\n4\n\nRutgers\n6\n5\n5\n5\n6\n6\n5\n5\n4\n4\n3\n2\n2\n4\n6\n5\n\nGeorgia\n10\n9\n9\n9\n11\n11\n10\n12\n12\n10\n10\n9\n8\n6\n5\n6\n\nTennessee\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n3\n3\n5\n7\n9\n8\n8\n7\n\nOle Miss\n15\n14\n12\n11\n10\n10\n8\n8\n8\n8\n7\n4\n6\n7\n7\n8\n\nIowa\n8\n11\n17\n17\n14\n14\n14\n10\n10\n13\n12\n11\n11\n10\n10\n9\n\nOhio St.\n16\n15\n13\n12\n16\n20\n18\n18\n17\n12\n11\n10\n10\n11\n11\n10\n\nVirginia\n9\n8\n8\n8\n4\n4\n4\n4\n6\n6\n6\n8\n7\n9\n9\n11\n\nJames Madison\n19\n17\n15\n18\n19\n18\n16\n16\n18\n18\n17\n15\n15\n13\n13\n12\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n–\n20\n20\n20\n15\n15\n13\n14\n14\n11\n13\n14\n13\n16\n16\n13\n\nLSU\n11\n10\n10\n10\n9\n8\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n12\n12\n14\n14\n14\n\nPenn St.\n14\n13\n14\n13\n12\n12\n11\n13\n13\n17\n16\n16\n16\n12\n12\n15\n\nSouthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n17\n17\n16\n16\n14\n17\n17\n15\n15\n16\n\nVillanova\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n20\n19\n17\n17\n\nVanderbilt\n–\n–\n–\n19\n17\n16\n12\n11\n11\n14\n15\n13\n14\n18\n20\n18\n\nSouthern California\n5\n6\n6\n6\n7\n9\n15\n15\n15\n15\n18\n18\n18\n–\n–\n19\n\nWashington\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n19\n17\n19\n20\n\nIllinois\n–\n–\n18\n15\n18\n17\n19\n19\n20\n19\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMaryland\n17\n16\n16\n14\n13\n13\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNebraska\n–\n–\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n12\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOregon\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n–\n\nOregon St.\n–\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSan Diego\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nTexas Tech\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nWestern Ky.\n13\n12\n11\n16\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n24-Nov\n2-Dec\n9-Dec\n16-Dec\n23-Dec\n30-Dec\n6-Jan\n13-Jan\n20-Jan\n27-Jan\n3-Feb\n10-Feb\n17-Feb\n24-Feb\n3-Mar\n10-Mar\n17-Mar\n\nTennessee\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n2\n2\n3\n3\n6\n8\n8\n8\n8\nT7\n1\n\nLouisiana Tech\n2\n2\n2\n2\n5\n5\n5\n5\n7\n7\n8\n5\n4\n3\n3\n3\n2\n\nTexas\n1\n1\n1\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n3\n\nLong Beach St.\n10\n8\n8\n8\n8\n7\n7\n7\n5\n5\n4\n6\n6\n5\n4\n4\n4\n\nRutgers\n6\n5\n5\n5\n6\n6\n6\n6\n4\n4\n3\n2\n2\n4\n7\n6\n5\n\nAuburn\n5\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n4\n3\n2\n2\n2\n6\n\nIowa\n9\n12\n16\n17\n15\n15\n15\n12\n10\n13\n12\n12\n12\n9\n9\n9\n7\n\nOhio St.\n15\n14\n13\n12\n14\n18\n17\n17\n15\n11\n11\n10\n10\n11\n11\n10\n8\n\nGeorgia\n12\n9\n9\n9\n11\n11\n11\n11\n13\n10\n10\n7\n7\n6\n5\n5\n9\n\nVirginia\n7\n7\n7\n7\n4\n4\n4\n4\n6\n6\n7\n9\n9\n10\n10\n11\n10\n\nOle Miss\n16\n16\n12\n11\n10\n10\n8\n8\n8\n8\n5\n3\n5\n7\n6\nT7\n11\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n–\n20\n19\n19\n16\n14\n13\n15\n14\n12\n15\n15\n15\n17\n16\n13\n12\n\nSouthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n19\n16\n16\n17\n16\n14\n18\n17\n15\n14\n16\n13\n\nSouthern California\n4\n6\n6\n6\n7\n8\n18\n18\n16\n15\n20\n20\n19\n21\n23\n20\n14\n\nJames Madison\n18\nT17\n14\n16\n17\n16\n14\n14\n20\n18\n17\n14\n14\n13\n13\n12\n15\n\nPenn St.\n14\n13\n15\n13\n13\n12\n10\n13\n12\n17\n16\n16\n16\n12\n12\n14\n16\n\nOld Dominion\n8\nT17\n24\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n17\n\nWashington\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\nT23\n21\n18\n17\n18\n16\n19\n21\n18\n\nLSU\n13\n11\n10\n10\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n13\n11\n14\n15\n15\n19\n\nOregon\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\nT21\n23\n20\n\nVanderbilt\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n17\n12\n10\n11\n14\n13\n11\n13\n18\nT21\n18\n21\n\nVillanova\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n19\n20\n19\n17\n17\n22\n\nWestern Ky.\n11\n10\n11\n18\n22\n23\n24\n21\n18\n20\n19\n25\n22\n22\n20\n22\n23\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n21\n22\n23\n21\n21\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n\nDuke\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n\nFresno St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n24\n21\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIllinois\n–\n–\n18\n15\n20\n20\n20\n19\n19\n19\n21\n22\n21\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nKentucky\n–\n25\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLa.-Monroe\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMaryland\n17\n15\n17\n14\n12\n13\n19\n22\n25\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMissouri\n23\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n21\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMontana\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n23\n25\n24\n25\n–\n\nNebraska\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNew Orleans\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n20\n18\n19\n–\n\nNorth Carolina\n24\n–\n–\n–\n24\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOklahoma\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n21\n21\n20\nT23\n23\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOregon St.\n–\n–\n21\n24\n23\n22\n22\n23\n22\n24\n22\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSan Diego St.\n19\n24\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSouth Ala.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n23\n25\n24\n–\n\nStanford\n–\n21\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nTexas Tech\n20\n19\n22\n23\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"USA Today Coaches poll",
"References"
] | 1986–87 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"'''''Uncle Ugly's Underground Doom''''' is a 1978 role-playing game adventure for ''Tunnels & Trolls'' published by Flying Buffalo.\n",
"''Uncle Ugly's Underground Doom'' is an adventure involving a series of strange rooms provided for ''Tunnels & Trolls''.\n",
"Forrest Johnson reviewed ''Uncle Ugly's Underground Doom'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Johnson commented that \"The dungeon will in short order chew up a party of the usual invincible solo-dungeon grads. Mostly traps and trickery, some fiendishly clever, some merely fiendish. But look out for the trolls with the zoot suits and violin cases.\"\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot summary",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Uncle Ugly's Underground Doom |
[
"'''Vettore Cappello''' (1400–1467) was a merchant, statesman and military commander of the Republic of Venice. After an early career as a merchant that gained him substantial wealth, he began his political career in 1439. His ascent to higher offices was rapid. He is chiefly remembered for his advocacy of a decisive policy against the Ottoman Empire, and his command of Venetian forces during the first stages of the First Ottoman–Venetian War.\n",
"Vettore Cappello was born to Giorgio Cappello and Coronea Lando. The date of his birth is unknown; his epitaph records that he died at the age of 63, but when he was inscribed at the ''Balla d'Oro'' in 1420, he is recorded as being twenty years of age, and serving as a sailor in the trade convoy to Alexandria. His family was engaged in commerce, and Vettore appears to have been active in his family's commercial interests: along with his brothers, he maintained agents at Bruges and London for a decade from 1431 on, and he was ''patrono'' (responsible for the equipping and manning of a trade galley) in the ''muda'' (annual trade convoy) to Flanders in the years 1428, 1438, and 1441. In 1436 he married Lucia Querini, daughter of Marco, with whom he had six children: Andrea, Lorenzo, Paolo, Alvise, Elena and Paolina.\n",
"Cappello began his political career in October 1439, when he was elected to the ''savii agli Ordini'' (commissioners on naval matters). Cappello held the same office again in October 1440 – March 1441, then was member of the ''Ragion Nuove'' office in 1442, and captain of the trade convoy to Romania (Constantinople and the Black Sea) in 1443. In 1442–1443 he was also elected to various other offices that he did not carry out: captain of the convoys to Modon and the Barbary Coast, and ''sopracomito'' (galley captain) in the guard fleet of the Gulf. In spring 1444 he commanded the two galleys that brought to Venice Mary of Aragon, the bride-to-be of Leonello d'Este, Marquis of Ferrara. His ascent was rapid: in August 1444 and again in the next year, he was elected to the Venetian Senate, and in 1447 to the Council of Ten. In September 1448 he was elected to the ''zonta'' (extraordinary commission) of the Ten, and served in the Senate until March 1449, when he was elected Captain of the Gulf.\n",
"\n\n\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Origin and early life",
"Political and military career",
"Notes",
"References",
"Sources"
] | Vettore Cappello |
[
"'''''Valkenburg Castle''''' is a 1980 board game published by Task Force Games.\n",
"''Valkenburg Castle'' is a fantasy game about a dungeon which pits the players against each other with armies.\n",
"Jerry Epperson reviewed ''Valkenburg Castle'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Epperson commented that \"''Valkenburg Castle'' would be worth the money to a 'hard-core' fantasy gamer; others might do better elsewhere. A lot of good ideas went into this game, but some of them got lost.\"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Valkenburg Castle (board game) |
[
"\n\n\n'''George Holland''' (1918–unknown) was an Australian tennis player. In 1938, tennis legend Don Budge said that, among the younger and less prominent players he had seen on his trip to Australia, Holland had the brightest future. \"I have selected him after careful study of most of the leading young players. I watched many of them in match play during the Australian championships when they did not know I was about\" said Budge, in an article in The Sydney Morning Herald on 14th February 1938. Budge went on to describe Holland's game by saying \"he has a forceful service, hits his ground strokes with freedom and likes to chase them to the net, where he volleys and smashes severely, with just a dash of drop-volleys thrown in occasionally. And he possesses a splendid temperament. I summed him up as a clear-thinking lad with a heart as big as his happy outlook on life\". George Holland made his debut in the Australian championships in 1937 and lost to Arthur Huxley in round one. At the 1938 Australian championships, 19 year old Holland beat Huxley 10-8 in the fifth set in round one. Then in round two Holland caused a big upset by beating reigning French champion and third ranked player in the world Henner Henkel after losing the first 2 sets. From the third set onwards, Holland \"followed everything to the net and made some glorious volleys\" and was in command of the match. \"His groundstrokes had more penetration, he rarely missed his first serve, and he treated Henkel's cannon-balls in cavalier fashion to take command of the attack\" according to The Argus. In the quarter finals, Holland lost in four sets to Adrian Quist. In the first round of the 1939 Australian championships, Holland lost in round one to Vivian McGrath in straight sets. During World War 2, Holland reached the rank of Lieutenant. After the war, Holland resumed his tennis career.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | George Holland (tennis) |
[
"'''Harcourt Powell''' (1718–1782) was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1754 and 1775.\n \nPowell was the son of Thomas Powell of the Six Clerks office, and his wife Anne Harcourt, daughter of Sir Philip Harcourt. He was admitted at Lincolns Inn in 1736. He married Beata Parker, daughter of Rev. Hyde Parker, granddaughter of Sir Henry Parker, 2nd Baronet.\n \nThe Powell family came from Pembrokeshire and held the manor of Uggaton near Brighstone. They acquired three burgages in Newtown, Isle of Wight. In the 1754 general election Powell was returned unopposed as Member of Parliament for Newtown (Isle of Wight) and was returned unopposed again in 1761. In parliament he was an independent country gentleman. In 1768 he had to fight a contested election at Newtown, standing jointly with Sir John Barrington against Sir Thomas Worsley and John Glynn. He was returned unopposed again in 1774, but on 21 March 1775 he accepted 4,000 guineas to vacate his seat in Parliament and convey his three burgages at Newtown to Sir Richard Worsley. There is no record of Powell having spoken during his 21 years in the Commons. \n\nPowell died on 26 February 1782. \n",
"\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References",
"Sources"
] | Harcourt Powell |
[
"\n\n'''Paolo de La Guardia''' (born 24 February 1990 in El Cangrejo, Panama City, Panama) is a Panamanian footballer.\n",
"\nBrought up in the El Cangrejo district of Panama City, a neighborhood described as the one of the most heterogeneous in the capital, his father passed away when he was 13. As a child, he habitually practiced swimming and karate but turned to football at age 9.\n",
"\n===Youth===\n\nLearning to play football with local club Chorrillo at a very young age, la Guardia gradationally advanced from the team's youth categories to their reserve and senior teams by age 16.\n\nGiven the opportunity to participate in an A.C. Milan-hosted youth football camp at Santa Clara beach, Panama, the midfielder impressed the coaches there but never made the trip to Italy.\n\nAt the end of 2010 the Panamanian returned to youth football, joining the La Academia de Saladas in Argentina.\n\n===Senior===\n\nLining up for Panamanian second-tier club S.D. Panamá Oeste, la Guardia sealed a move to W Connection F.C. of the TT Pro League in the winter transfer window that lasted from December 2015 to February 2016.\n",
"\nFavoring a more belligerent style of play rather than a technical one, la Guardia is two-footed and specializes in aerial duels.\n",
"\nHis mother is named Alida de La Guardia.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Early life",
"Career",
"Style of play",
"Personal life",
"References"
] | Paolo De La Guardia |
[
"'''''Warlock''''' is a 1979 board game published by Future and Fantasy Games.\n",
"''Warlock'' is a fantasy game in which two wizards create beings and cast spells, each trying to slay the other.\n",
"Steve Jackson reviewed ''Warlock'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Jackson commented that \"Taken on its own merits, ''Warlock'' would be a good introductory game for younger folk. More experienced gamers will exhaust its possibilities very quickly indeed.\"\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Warlock (board game) |
[
"\n\n'''''Gangsterdam''''' is a 2017 French comedy film starring Kev Adams, Manon Azem, Come Levin and Rutger Hauer.\n",
"\n",
"*Kev Adams as Ruben Jablonski\n*Manon Azem as Nora\n*Come Levin as Durex\n*Hubert Koundé as Ulysse Abraham Bakel\n*Mona Walravens as June\n*Rutger Hauer as Dolph Van Tannen\n*Alex Hendrickx as Caspar Van Tannen\n*Ido Mosseri as Amos Ben Soussan\n*Patrick Timsit as Serge Jablonski\n*Manu Payet as Mischka\n*Talid Ariss as Jonas Jablonski\n",
"\n",
"* \n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Plot",
"Cast",
"References",
"External links"
] | Gangsterdam |
[
"\n'''''Assault Android Cactus''''' is a multidirectional shoot 'em up video game developed and published by Witch Beam. The game was released for Windows, OS X and Linux personal computers in 2015 and the PlayStation 4 video game console in 2016.\n",
"''Assault Android Cactus'' is a multidirectional shoot 'em up video game played primarily from a top-down perspective. Players take control of a galactic police office known as Cactus, who crashes into a spaceship. The player is accompanied by three other character and must battle the evil force aboard the ship. The game can be played in single-player or in local cooperative play with up to four players. The game features four game modes: a story campaign, an endless arcade mode, daily challenges, and a boss rush mode. The game has nine playable characters to choose from, each of which has a distinct design and main weapon. The game includes 25 stages which can morph and transform as the level progresses.\n",
"''Assault Android Cactus'' was developed and published by Brisbane-based video game development studio Witch Beam. One of the game's developers, Sanatana Mishra noted that the team's decision to not launch the game on Xbox One video game console was due to the ID@Xbox parity clause which required developers to launch their games on Xbox One the same day as other platforms.\n",
"The development team were originally targeting a January 2014 release for ''Assault Android Cactus''. However the game was officially released for Windows, OS X, and Linux personal computers on 23 September 2015, after launching in early access. A PlayStation 4 version was released on 8 March 2016. The game was initially in development for the PlayStation Vita and Wii U but did not release on those platforms.\n",
"\n''Assault Android Cactus'' received \"generally favorable\" reviews from professional critics according to review aggregator website Metacritic.\n\n",
"\n",
"* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Development",
"Release",
"Reception",
"References",
"External links"
] | Assault Android Cactus |
[
"\n'''Silver Creek Middle School''' is a public school in Kensington in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States. It opened in 2017.\n\nThe school is part of the Bethesda Chevy Chase High School cluster.\n",
"\n",
"* \n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" References ",
" External links "
] | Silver Creek Middle School |
[
"'''''The Journal of World War II Wargaming''''' was a wargaming magazine first published in 1980 by Nick Schuessler and Wes McCoy.\n",
"''The Journal of World War II Wargaming'' was intended as a critical journal for the WWII wargamer.\n",
"Elton Fewell reviewed ''The Journal of World War II Wargaming'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Fewell commented that \"If you are a 'hardcore' WWII gamer, it's highly recommended. Others might consider it for the theory and analysis it will provide.\"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Contents",
"Reception",
"References"
] | The Journal of World War II Wargaming |
[
"\n\n'''Lukoil Macedonia''' (Macedonia Cyrillic: Лукоил Макеоднија) is a subsidiary company of Lukoil in Macedonia. The first gas station was open for service in 2006.\n",
"Lukoil has recognized its subsidiary in Macedonia for best one in 2012 and 2013.\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Recognition",
"References"
] | Lukoil Macedonia |
[
"'''Amelia Nava''' is the founder and President of Auxilio y Amistad (Aid and Friendship) based in Tiffin, Ohio. Nava was inducted into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in 1986 for her work providing community services to Mexican-American migrant farm workers. In 2012, Farmworker Agencies Liaison Communication and Outreach Network (FALCON) recognized Nava with their Advocate for Community Service award. \n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" References "
] | Amelia Nava |
[
"'''''Panzer Pranks''''' is a 1980 board wargame published by Chaosium.\n",
"''Panzer Pranks'' is a comedic combat simulation game.\n",
"Joseph M. Hurst reviewed ''Panzer Pranks'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Hurst commented that \"This game is a lot more fun to read than to play. It is a satire on simulation mania, and uses both rapier and bludgeon freely and sometimes simultaneously.\"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Panzer Pranks |
[
"'''Declaration of Honolulu, 1966''' is a communiqué and diplomatic proclamation acceded by foreign diplomats representing the Republic of Vietnam and the United States. The declaration asserts democratic social principles for South Vietnam while combating external aggression and insurgency by Democratic Republic of Vietnam.\n\nThe United States acknowledged South Vietnam opposing two conflicting fronts.\n\n* Guerrilla or military warfare pursued by North Vietnam communist state\n* Social injustice against disease, hunger, ignorance, and political apathy\n\nThe declaration established several economic and social terms for promoting peace and social justice in South Vietnam.\n\n* Agricultural education for new species of corn, rice, and vegetable seeds\n* Construction projects for rural Vietnam\n* Control economic inflation\n* Enhance education and health programs\n* Safeguard refugees from communist aggressors by providing care and education for South Vietnamese children and families\n",
"The conference was held from February 5, 1966 to February 8, 1966 on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The foreign dignitaries conducted the meeting at Camp Smith with Pearl Harbor in the distance.\n\nThe South Vietnam Chief of State Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, South Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyễn Cao Kỳ, and United States President Lyndon Johnson exchanged concerns regarding United States sanctions for democracy in South Vietnam in conjunction with joint warfare in South Vietnam establishing a counter-insurgency for the North Vietnamese insurrection.\n",
"United States President Lyndon Johnson disclosed the declaration in a public statement on February 8, 1966. The document content was authored as four parts proposing the intents of the joint governments and their common diplomatic commitment.\n\n:Part I: ''Joint Declaration by Republic of Vietnam and United States''\n:Part II: ''Purposes of Vietnam Government''\n:Part III: ''Purposes of United States Government''\n:Part IV: ''Common Commitment''\n",
"\n\nImage:Honolulu Conference, Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam) and Lieutenant General Nguyen Van Thieu (South... - NARA - 192496.tif|Honolulu Conference: Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam) and Lieutenant General Nguyen Van Thieu (South Vietnam)\nImage:Honolulu Conference, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and President Lyndon B. Johnson at the table - NARA - 192495.tif|Honolulu Conference: Secretary of State Dean Rusk and President Lyndon B. Johnson at the table\nImage:Honolulu Conference, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam), President... - NARA - 192497.tif|Honolulu Conference: Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam), President Lyndon B. Johnson and Lieutenant General Nguyen Van Thieu (South Vietnam)\nImage:Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam) and President Lyndon B. Johnson - NARA - 192504.tif|Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky (South Vietnam) and President Lyndon B. Johnson\nImage:Honolulu Conference, The long table - NARA - 192494.tif|Honolulu Conference: The long table\nImage:Wheeler and Johnson at Hawaii Conference.jpg|General Earle Wheeler holding up a model of a U.S. Army helicopter as Ambassador Vu Van Thai and President Lyndon B. Johnson look on.\nImage:General William Westmoreland and President Lyndon B. Johnson at the Honolulu Conference - NARA - 192559.tif|General William Westmoreland and President Lyndon B. Johnson at the Honolulu Conference\n\n\n",
"\n\n:1965 in the Vietnam War\n:1966 in the Vietnam War\n:1967 in the Vietnam War\n:17th Parallel Vietnam Demilitarized Zone\n:Authoritarianism and Totalitarianism\n:Communism in Vietnam\n:History of Vietnam\n:McNamara Line\n:Partition of Vietnam\n:Role of the United States in the Vietnam War\n:Tet Offensive\n:Trotskyism in Vietnam\n:Vietnam Humanitarian Assistance and Evacuation Act of 1975\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n* \n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Hawaii Conference of February 1966",
"Pledge of the Declaration",
"1966 Honolulu Conference",
"See also",
"Bibliography",
"External links"
] | Declaration of Honolulu, 1966 |
[
"'''''Streets of Stalingrad''''' is a 1979 board wargame published by Phoenix Games.\n",
"''Streets of Stalingrad'' is a company/platoon level game of the street fighting that took place in the late autumn of 1942.\n",
"Nick Schuessler reviewed ''Streets of Stalingrad'' in ''The Space Gamer'' No. 28. Schuessler commented that \"city fighting has never been done that well. SOS is no worse than previous efforts, and should get marks for a good try.\"\n",
"\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Gameplay",
"Reception",
"References"
] | Streets of Stalingrad |
[
"\n\n\n\n'''Leaena Tambyah''' (born 1937) is a special education advocate who founded Singapore's first school for children with multiple disabilities. The school was originally called the Handicapped Children's Playgroup, but went on to become the AWWA School. Tambyah also founded a programme called TEACH ME (Therapy and Educational Assistance for Children in Mainstream Education) to try to bring disabled children into mainstream schools, and to provide mobile therapy services to children whose families could not afford to bring them to a hospital.\n",
"Leaena Chelliah was born in 1937. She and her family moved from Penang to Singapore in 1940, when her father was appointed as headmaster of Saint Andrew's School. She attended Raffles Girls' School, then Raffles Institution, before moving to England to earn her bachelor's degree in social science at the University of Birmingham. She returned to Singapore in 1960, and the next year began working as an assistant director at the Ministry of Social Affairs. She married John Tambyah in 1964. They had met in 1953 while she was attending Raffles Girls' School and he was attending Raffles Institution. She left her job when she became pregnant with the first of their children.\n",
"After resigning from her job at the Ministry of Social Affairs to raise her children, Tambyah worked part-time as a social worker and volunteered extensively. During this time she began volunteering at the Asian Women's Welfare Association (AWWA), where she helped run a family service centre.\n\nIn 1979, she organized the Handicapped Children's Playgroup, a weekly playgroup at the Church of St. Ignatius for a small number of children with multiple disabilities, who at the time were not accepted to mainstream or special needs schools. This was the first school for multiply-disabled children in Singapore. She chaired the playgroup from 1979 until 1985. In 1986, the playgroup won a United Nations Community Excellence Award. The playgroup has since become the AWWA School.\n\nTambyah organized a project called TEACH ME (Therapy and Educational Assistance for Children in Mainstream Education) in 1991. This project brought some children from special needs schools into mainstream schools. It also included a mobile therapy clinic to treat physically disabled children whose parents could not afford to bring them to hospitals for therapy. In 1994, the Family Resource and Training Centre gave TEACH ME the Innovative Programme Award.\n\nIn 1984, Tambyah was awarded the Public Service Medal for her work. In 1991, she earned a special volunteer award from the Community Chest of Singapore. In 1994, she received the Public Service Star, and was named ''Her World'' Woman of the Year for her work to help children with special needs. In 2011, she was given the Special Recognition Award at the President's Volunteerism & Philanthropy Awards.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Early life ",
" Special education advocacy ",
" References "
] | Leaena Tambyah |
[
"\n\n'''Sindur Khela''' (), literally meaning 'vermillion game', is a Bengali Hindu tradition where married women smear each other with sindur on Vijayadashami, the last day of the Durga Puja. On the day of the Vijayadashami after the conclusion of the ritual worship, married Bengali Hindu women apply sindur on the forehead and feet of the goddess and offer sweets to her. Then they put sindur on each other's faces and offer sweets to each other. \n",
"The exact date and place of origin of the tradition is not known. According to one theory, the tradition originated around 200 years ago in the Durga Pujas of the zamindar houses to usher bonhomie among the housewives. According to a second theory, the tradition of Sindur Khela is as old as Durga Puja itself, around 400 years. The ritual is enjoyed just like a game and hence the name ''Sindur Khela''. Sindur Khela is regarded as one of the most important rituals of Vijayadashami.\n",
"Women pose for photographs after Sindur Khela in Sainthia, West Bengal\nThe ritual worship of the goddess concludes with the Visarjan Puja. It is followed by Devi Baran, where the married women bid farewell to the goddess. The women are usually dressed in white saris with red borders and adorn traditional jewelries. Each of the women perform ''arati'' and smear the goddess' forehead and feet with sindur. They also offer her sweets and betel leaves. Following that the women smear each other's foreheads with sindur. Then they put sindur on each other's ''shankha'', ''pala'' and ''noa'', the conch shell, coral and iron bangles respectively, which are the worn by the married Bengali Hindu women. Then then smear each others faces with sindur. Finally they offer sweets to each other as ''prasad''. According to commonly held belief, if a women plays Sindur Khela by following the proper custom, she will never be widowed.\n\nSindur Khela symbolizes the power of womanhood in protecting her husband and children from all evil. Through the ritual of Sindur Khela, the Bengali Hindu women pray for long and happy married lives of each other. Family tiffs and petty quarrels between neighbours are settled through this ritual. Unmarried women and widows are barred from participating in the ritual.\n\nIn some parts of West Bengal, Sindur Khela is celebrated before Vijayadashami. In Dubrajpur, the Sindur Khela is celebrated on Mahasaptami itself. After bathing the ''nabapatrika'' and the following ritual worship, sindur is applied on the forehead of the goddess. After that the married women engaged in Sindur Khela. In the village of Bijra near Memari in Purba Bardhaman district, the family pujas of Ghosh and Bose family celebrate Sindur Khela on Mahastami. The tradition is almost 500 years old. After the ritual worship on Mahastami, the entire married womenfolk of the village celebrate Sindur Khela. Many people from adjoining areas came to Bijra to see this ritual.\n",
"The ritual has been criticized in the recent times for multiple reasons. The ritual has been criticized as non-inclusive in character because the participation in the ritual is strictly limited to married women only. In 2017, The Times of India initiated an Internet video campaign featuring Rituparna Sengupta, that called for participation of single women, widows, transgenders, lesbians and sex workers in Sindur Khela.\n\nThe ritual has been criticized by Taslima Nasrin for being patriarchal in nature, because of the over emphasis on the married status of the goddess as well as the women. Bengali Hindu girls grow up seeing the married ladies in their family participate in the playful ritual, which creates among them a sense of life being incomplete without getting married. Critics feel that this can create a regressive impact on young women.\n",
"Every year, the Kolkata based celebrities including the Tollywood actresses engage in Sindur Khela at the Manicktalla Chaltabagan Lohapatty puja pandal in north central Kolkata. Sindur Khela is a colourful, vibrant and spectacular ritual and so it has been the focus of Indian films. Some films and soaps have been titled in the name of the ritual.\n\n* Sindur Khela (1999), feature film\n* Sindoorkhela (2010-12), television soap\n* Ki Kore Toke Bolbo (2016) originally titled Sindur Khela, feature film\n",
"* Gaye holud\n* Holi\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Origin ",
" Contemporary ritual ",
" Criticism ",
" In popular culture ",
" See also ",
" References "
] | Sindur Khela |
[
"\n\n'''Alexander Vasilyevich Kruglov''' () was a Russian writer, poet, publicist, biographer and editor.\n\nBorn in Veliky Ustyug, he spent his childhood in Vologda and in 1873, having graduated from the Teachers' College there, moved to Saint Petersburg where he started to publish stories and poetry, to become in several years' time one of Russia's most popular children's authors. Among Kruglov's best-known books addressed to the young readership, were the collections of short stories, ''Follow Me, Children'' (1888), ''For the Little Ones'' (1898), ''Forget-Me-Nots'' (1900), as well as the novellas ''Ivan Ivanovich and His Company'' (1882), ''Bolshak'' (1883), ''From the Golden Years of Childhood'' (1889). His acclaimed biography of Mikhail Lomonosov, written while still in Vologda, at age 18, was later released as a book and enjoyed eight re-issues.\n\nKruglov's more serious works (''Living Souls'', 1885; ''On the Historical River'', 1890 and others) were influenced by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, whom he considered to be his teacher. He is credited with being the first Russian author who wrote about the Komi peoples and the great hardships they were suffering at the time. Initially a narodnik, later in his life Kruglov became a conservative. In 1907—1914 he published and edited the magazine ''Dnevnik Pisatelya'' (Writer's Diary), a pro-monarchist publication.\n",
"",
"* The Works by Kruglov at Lib.ru\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" References ",
"External links"
] | Alexander Kruglov |
[
"\n\n\n\nAndy Murray was the defending champion but withdrew with a hip injury before the tournament began. \n",
"The top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round. \n\n\n\n",
"\n===Finals===\n\n\n===Top Half===\n====Section 1====\n\n\n====Section 2====\n\n\n===Bottom Half===\n====Section 3====\n\n\n====Section 4====\n\n",
"===Seeds===\n\n\n===Qualifiers===\n\n\n===Draw===\n\n====First Qualifier====\n\n\n====Second Qualifier====\n\n\n====Third Qualifier====\n\n\n====Fourth Qualifier====\n\n\n====Fifth Qualifier====\n\n\n====Sixth Qualifier====\n\n\n====Seventh Qualifier====\n\n",
"* Main Draw\n* Qualifying Draw\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Seeds",
"Draw",
"Qualifying",
"References"
] | 2017 Shanghai Rolex Masters – Singles |
[
"The '''2006 Pan American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships''' were held in San Cristóbal, Venezuela, December 12–17, 2006. The competition was organized by the Venezuelan Gymnastics Federation.\n",
"{| \n\n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n ''Unknown''\n \n\n \n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n \n\n \n Marcela LopezCibele OlianiMarcela Matos\n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n Lorena LuisioJorge FillonAmilcar CortiFlorencia RiopaBarbara RivasMatin Brizzi\n ''Unknown''\n ''Unknown''\n\n \n \n \n \n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Medalists ",
"References"
] | 2006 Pan American Aerobic Gymnastics Championships |
[
"This is a list of '''listed buildings in Christianshavn, Copenhagen, Denmark.\n\n=== List===\n\n\n Listing name\n Image\n Location\n Year built\n Summary\n \n\n Aircondition, Christiania \n \n Norddyssen 61, 1441 København K \n 1728 \n Gunpowder magazine in Dyssen's 2md redan from 1789 \n \n\n 125px \n Norddyssen 61A, 1441 København K \n 1728 \n Guardhouse in Dyssen's 2md redan from 1789 \n \n\n Autogena, Christiania \n \n Midtdyssen 51, 1441 København K \n 1728 \n Gunpowder magazine in Dyssen's 3rd redan from 1780 \n \n\n \n Midtdyssen 53, 1441 København K \n 1728 \n Guardhouse in Dyssen's 3rd redan from 178+ \n \n\n Christianshavns Vold \n 125px \n Langebrogade 4, 1411 København K \n \n Former storage building inside Kalvebod Bastion from c. 1800 \n \n\n 125px \n Langebrogade 4, 1411 København K \n \n Former forge inside Kalvebod Bastion from 1757 \n \n\n 125px \n Langebrogade 10, 1400 København K \n \n Gunpowder magazine from c. 1750 inside Enhjørningens Bastion \n \n\n 125px \n Torvegade 75, 1400 København K \n \n The demolished Amager Gate's guardhouse from 1718-20 \n \n\n 125px \n Torvegade 79, 1400 København K \n \n Amagerbros Ravelin's Bomhus from 1728 \n \n\n 125px \n Christianshavns Voldgade 50, 1424 København K \n \n Lille Mølle: Stub mill (mill cap removed in c. 1893) which was converted into a private residence in 1918 \n \n\n \n Christianshavns Voldgade 52, 1424 København K \n \n \n \n\n 125px \n Christianshavns Voldgade 54, 1424 København K \n \n Steam mill from 1832 \n \n\n \n Krudtløbsvej 8, 1439 København K \n \n Gunpowder magazine from1744-45 by C.E.D. von Oetken inside Charlotte Amalies Bastion \n \n\n \n Refshalevej 110, 1432 København K \n \n Half-timbered building at Quinti Lynette \n \n\n \n Refshalevej 110, 1432 København K \n \n Brick building at Quinti Lynette \n \n\n Dronningensgade 11 \n 125px \n Dronningensgade 11, 1414 København K \n C. 1783 \n Townhouse from c. 1783 \n \n\n Dronningensgade 13 \n \n Dronningensgade 13, 1414 København K \n \n Townhouse from c. 1875 with older celler and extended with an extra floor in 1844 \n \n\n Dronningensgade 14 \n 125px \n Dronningensgade 14, 1414 København K \n C. 1783 \n Townhouse from c. 1734 \n \n\n Dronningensgade 15 \n 125px \n Dronningensgade 15, 1414 København K \n C. 1776 \n Townhouse from 1775–76 \n \n\n Dronningensgade 21 \n \n Dronningensgade 21, 1414 København K \n C. 1776 \n Townhouse from 1775–76 \n \n\n Hans Caspersen House \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 33, 1414 København K \n C. 1740 \n Seven-bay house from c. 1740, height increased in 1783 \n \n\n Hans Caspersen House \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 39, 1414 København K \n 1770 \n Canal house from 1770 \n \n\n Hans Caspersen House \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 50, 1415 København K \n 1769 \n House from 1769 and c. 1850 \n \n\n Heering House (2) \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 11, 1414 København K \n c. 1770 \n Townhouse from 1785 possibly designed by Georg Erdman Rosenberg and five bays of an extension from c. 1804 \n \n\n\n\n\n Holmen \n \n Arsenalvej 2, 1436 København K \n 1863 \n Værftbrovagten: The eastern guardhouse from 1863 designed by J. G. Zinn \n \n\n 125px \n Galionsvej 33, 1437 København K \n \n Kuglegården (5): \n Søndre Masteskure: One-storey building ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Galionsvej 41, 1437 København K \n \n \n Søndre Mersehus: Two-storey building ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Galionsvej 40, 1437 København K \n \n \n Søndre Hovedmagasin (29):\n\n 125px \n Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 1, 1434 København K \n \n Kuglegården (5): \n \n\n 125px \n Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 41, 1434 København K \n \n Beklædningsmagasinet: Three-storey building from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Philip De Langes Allé 3, 1434 København K \n \n Gymnastik- og eEksercerhuset from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Philip De Langes Allé 9A, 1434 København K \n \n Modelsamlingsbygningen: Three-storey building from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 51, 1434 København K \n \n Grov- og kleinsmedjen: Three-storey building from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 54, 1434 København K \n \n Kabysse- og vandkassemagasin: Three-storey building from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n 125px \n Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 55, 1434 København K \n \n \nNordre Kedelsmedie og Elværk: Three-storey building from 1999 ( Ref)\n\n\n\n\n 125px \n Leo Mathisens Vej 1, 1434 København K \n \n Kobbersmedjen: One-storey building ( Ref)\n\n\n\n\n 125px \n A.H. Vedels Plads 6, 1439 København K \n1738 \n Arresthuset: Jailhouse from 1890 designed by C.T. Andersen \n \n\n 125px \n A.H. Vedels Plads 8 & Ved Sixtusbatteriet 1, 1439 København K \n 1910 \n Naval Barracks from 1908-10 designed by V. Birkmand \n \n\n \n Ved Sixtusbatteriet 1, 1439 København K \n 1799 \n Schrødersee Monument on the Sixtus Battery from 1797–99 designed by Caspar Frederik Harsdorff \n \n\n 125px \n Margretheholmsvej 18, 1432 København K \n 1745 \n Hovedvagten: Guardhouse from 1744–45 designed by Philip de Lange \n \n\n 125px \n A.H. Vedels Plads 20, 1439 København K \n 1764 \n Planbygningen from 1763–64 designed by Philip de Lange \n \n\n 125px \n A.H. Vedels Plads 22, 1439 København K \n 1751 \n Mastekranen: Masting sheer from 1751 designed by Philip de Lange \n \n\n 125px \n Takkeladsvej 1 & 7, 1439 København K \n 1729 \n Vestre Takkelagehus (2): Half-timbered storage building from 1729 designed by Olaus Judichær. It has been divided into two detached portions to make room for a tramway from Nyholm to Frederiksholm \n \n\n 125px \n Ved Søminegraven 1, 1439 København K \n 1729 \n Østre Takkelagehus: Two detached storage buildings (the eastern and the western portion) from 1729 designed by Olaus Judichær \n \n\n 125px \n Margretheholmsvej 2, 1432 København K \n 1921 \n Hangar H; Former hangar from 1921 \n \n\n 125px \n Spanteloftvej 12, 1439 København K \n 1743 \n Spanteloftsbygningen from 1742–43 by J.G. Kreysig and S. Sørensen\n \n\n Overgaden Neden Vandet 9 \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 9A, 1414 København K \n 1799 \n Four-storey house from 1799 \n \n\n Overgaden Neden Vandet 15 \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 15, 1414 København K \n 1858 \n House from 1858 with rear wing from 1858 \n \n\n \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 15A, 1414 København K \n \n Two storey building in the courtyard which dates from the early 18th century but was adapted in 1961 \n \n\n Overgaden Neden Vandet 19: Warehouses\n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 19A, 1414 København K \n \n Former warehouse \n \n\n \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 19C, 1414 København K \n \n Former warehouse \n \n\n \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 19D, 1414 København K \n \n Former warehouse \n \n\n Overgaden neden Vandet 31 \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 31, 1414 København K \n 1747 \n Five-bay canal house with two-storey wall dormer and rear wing from 1746–47 \n \n\n Overgaden neden Vandet 37 \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 37, 1414 København K \n 1747 \n Canal house with two-storey wall dormer and rear wing from c. 1750\n \n\n Overgaden Neden Vandet 45-47: Snorrebroens Pakhus \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 45, 1414 København K \n 1799 \n Snorrebroens Pakhus: Two identical warehouses from 1799–1801 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 8 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 8, 1415 København K \n \n Corner building from the 18th century \n \n\n Brøste House \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 10, 1415 København K \n 1785 \n Townhouse from 1785 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 12-14 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 12, 1415 København K \n 1797 \n House from 1797 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 16 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 16, 1415 København K \n 1797 \n House from the 17th century and later with facade altered in 1957 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 18 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 18, 1415 København K \n 1802\n House from 1802 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 20 \n \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 20, 1415 København K \n 1802 \n House from 1802 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 22 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 22, 1415 København K \n \n House dating from c. 1650 but the facade altered in c. 1800 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 24 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 24, 1415 København K \n C. 1730 \n House from c. 1730 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 26 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 26, 1415 København K \n C. 1750 \n House from c. 1750 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 28 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 28, 1415 København K \n C. 1730 \n House and attached five-bay building from c. 1730 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 52\n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 52, 1415 København K \n \n House from 1772 (height increased in 1886) with side wings to the north and south \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 54 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 54, 1415 København K \n \n House with two side wings from 1745, rebuilt in 1846 \n \n\n Overgaden oven Vandet 56 \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 54, 1415 København K \n \n Corner building from the 18th century \n \n\n Philip de Lange House \n \n Prinsessegade 54, 1422 København K \n C. 1750 \n Two-storey detached house located in a courtyard; built by Philip de Lange for his own use in the 1750s \n \n\n Prinsessegade 7 A \n 125px \n Prinsessegade 7A, 1422 København K \n 1769 \n House from 1769 \n \n\n Prinsessegade 18 \n \n Prinsessegade 18, 1422 København K \n 1785 \n House from 1785 \n \n\n Prinsessegade 52 \n 125px \n Prinsessegade 52, 1422 København K \n C. 1750 \n House from c. 1750 possibly designed by Johan Christian Conradi (extended lengthwise in 1783 and heightwise in 1833) and attached wing from 1857 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 3 B \n \n Sankt Annæ Gade 3B, 1416 København K \n Six-bay house and attached wing from the 18th century \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 4 \n \n Sankt Annæ Gade 4A, 1416 København K \n 1624 \n Two-storey, 12-bay house from 1622–24 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 6 og Wildersgade 45 \n \n Sankt Annæ Gade 6, 1416 København K \n 1848 \n Corner building and two attached wings from 1847–48 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 10 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 10, 1416 København K \n c. 1750 \n House from c. 1750 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 12 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 12, 1416 København K \n \n House from before 1779 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 14 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 14, 1416 København K \n c. 1650 \n House from c. 1540 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 16 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 16, 1416 København K \n \n House from before 753 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 18 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 18, 1416 København K \n c. 1759 \n House from c. 1759 \n \n\n Sankt Annæ Gade 20-22 \n 125px \n Sankt Annæ Gade 221416 København K \n \n Corner building from 1804 which was rebuilt in 1860 \n \n\n Sofiegade Public Baths \n 125px \n Sofiegade 15A, 1418 København K \n c. 1664 \n Former public wash house from 1909 designed by city architect Hans Wright \n \n\n Søkvæsthuset \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 58A, 1415 København K \n 1781 \n The Bådmandsstræde wing: Five-storey wing on Bådmandsstræde from 1780–81 af Johan Bernhardt Schottmann \n \n\n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 60A, 1415 København K \n \n Small building to the south \n \n\n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 60B, 1415 København K \n 1756 \n The main wing on Overgaden from 1754–55 by Johan Christian Conradi \n \n\n \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 62C, 1415 København K \n 1779 \n Heiberg's House: Garden house from 1779 by Georg Erdman Rosenberg, rebuilt after a fire in 1838 \n \n\n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 64, 1415 København K \n 1843 \n SMall building to the north \n \n\n Steinfass House \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 32A, 1415 København K \n c. 1770 \n Townhouse from c. 1770 \n \n\n Strandgade 4 and 4 B \n 125px \n Strandgade 4B, 1401 København K \n 1783 \n Warehouse from the 1780s, extended to its current height in 1874 \n \n\n 125px \n Strandgade 4, 1401 København K \n 1789 \n Jacob Holm House: Residential building from 1789 \n \n\n Strandgade 6:Lehn House (2) \n 125px \n Strandgade 6, 1401 København K \n 1703/1850 \n Townhouse from 1703, altered in c, 1850. Pavilion from 1743 \n \n\n Strandgade 8 \n 125px \n Strandgade 8A, 1401 København K \n \n \n \n\n Strandgade 10Schottmann House (2) \n 125px \n Strandgade 10, 1414 København K \n c. 1770 \n Townhouse from 1668 which was rebuilt in 1775 by Johan Bernhardt Schottmann with side wing, a half timbered building and a rear wing \n \n\n Strandgade 12: Jennow House \n 125px \n Strandgade 12, 1401 København K \n 1731–94 \n Residential building \n \n\n Strandgade 14:Rhode House \n 125px \n Strandgade 14, 1401 København K \n 1649/1794 \n Townhouse from c. 1640, altered and extended with two extra floors in 1794 \n \n\n Strandgade 22: Cort Adeler House \n 125px \n Strandgade 22, 1401 København K \n 1769 \n Townhouse from c. 1630 which was rebuilt in 1670 and extended with an extra floor in 1769 as well as a new wing from 1769 and a wall \n \n\n Strandgade 24 \n 125px \n Strandgade 42, 1401 København K \n 1731–94\n Residential complex from 1670, extended with an extra floor in 1748 \n \n\n Strandgade 44:Old Artillery Barracks (3) \n 125px \n Strandgade 44A, B and H, 1401 København K \n c. 1664 \n Merchant house from c. 1664, later converted into artillery barrack and altered several times, booth in 1775 and later \n \n\n Strandgade 25:Asiatisk Kompagni \n 125px \n Strandgade 25, 1401 København K \n 1738 \n Former headquarters of Asiatisk Kompagni from 1738 by Philip de Lange \n \n\n 125px \n Strandgade 25, 1401 København K \n 1781 \n Building from 1781 identical to the building from 1781, the wall with gateway that connects them and an attached warehouse which is also from 1781 \n \n\n 125px \n Strandgade 25, 1401 København K \n1738 \n Eigtved Warehouse: 21-bay warehouse from 1750 by Niels Eigtved \n \n\n Strandgade 26:Behagen House \n 125px \n Strandgade 26, 1401 København K \n 1626/1769\n Two buildings from 126 which were rebuilt and connected in 1758 as well as a wall and two pillars in the courtyard \n \n\n Strandgade 28–30:Sigvert Grubbe House \n 125px \n Strandgade 28, 1401 København K \n 1622 \n Sigvert Grubbe House. Gabled townhouse from 1622 \n \n\n 125px \n Strandgade 30, 1401 København K \n c. 1635 \n Townhouse from c. 1635 with gate from 1710 and two attached wings of which the northeastern dates from 1636 and the southwestern dates from 1709–13 \n \n\n 125px \n Wildersgade 41, 1408 København K \n \n Townhouse and two attached buildings to the rear, one of them being and eight-bay building with timber framing \n \n\n 125px \n Wildersgade 43, 1408 København K \n \n Townhouse and attached three-storey warehouse from c. 1800 \n \n\n Strandgade 32:Mikkel Vibe House \n 125px \n Strandgade 32, 1401 København K\n 1624 \n House consisting of a wing on Strandgade probably from 1624 with alterations from 1816 and 1839 and a wing on Sankt Annæ Gade from c. 1622–24 as well as a rear wing \n \n\n Strandgade 34:Topp House \n 125px \n Strandgade 34, 1401 København K \n 1733 \n House from 1733 \n \n\n 125px \n Torvegade 22, 1400 København K \n 1778 \n Warehouse from 1777–78 \n \n\n Strandgade 36:Niels Brock House (2) \n 125px \n Strandgade 36, 1401 København K \n 1780 \n Residential complex from 1780 and later and a warehouse fronting Wildersgade \n \n\n Strandgade 38 \n 125px \n Strandgade 38, 1401 København K \n 1688 \n Residential building from 1688 with later alterations \n \n\n Strandgade 40 \n125px \n Strandgade 40, 1401 København K \n \n Residential building from the 17th century and 1780 \n \n\n Strandgade 42 \n 125px \n Strandgade 42, 1401 København K \n \n Two-winged residential building from the 17th century and 1780–1800 \n \n\n Strandgade 46:Andreas Bjørn House \n 125px \n Strandgade 46, 1401 København K \n c. 1770 \n House built for Andreas Bjørn on Strandgade in 1733–34 (gate from c. 1760) and Bådsmandsstræde built in 1761 extended with extra flor in 1830 \n \n\n Strandgade 52-54 \n 125px \n Strandgade 52-54, 1401 København K \n C. 1741 \n Two-sotey building from c. 1741 by Andreas Bjørn \n \n\n Strandgade 104–106:Grønlandske Handels Plads \n 125px \n Strandgade 89, 1401 København K \n 1767 \n North Atlantic House: 22 bay long warehouse from 1766–67 by Johan Christian Conradi \n \n\n \n Strandgade 104, 1401 København K \n 1806 \n Skindpakhuset: Former warehouse from 1805-06 \n \n\n 125px \n Strandgade 106, 1401 København K \n 1781 \n \"\"Det brede Pakhus\"\", or \"\"Det store Bakkehus\"\": Former warehouse from 1781 \n \n\n Torvegade 22 \n 125px \n Torvegade 22, 1400 København K \n \n House from the 17th century with two attached buildings in the courtyard \n \n\n Torvegade 24 \n \n Torvegade 24, 1400 København K \n 1893 \nHouse from 1793 which was rebuilt in about 1900 and a staircase tower from 1793 formerly part of two buildings in the courtyard \n \n\n Torvegade 28 \n 125px \n Torvegade 28, 1400 København K \n \n(ca. 1700 which was rebuilt in 1852 as well as building on Wildersgade (No. 26) from 1782–91 which was increased in height in 1852 with two wings in the courtyard from 1777–82 \n \n\n Torvegade 30 \n 125px \n Torvegade 30, 1400 København K \n 1769 \n House fronting the street from 1769 \n \n\n \n Torvegade 30, 1400 København K \n \n Building in the courtyard from before 1729 which was rebuilt before 1838 \n \n\n Torvegade 32 \n 125px \n Torvegade 32, 1400 København K \n \n House from 1756–57 which was expanded with extra height in 1846 \n \n\n Treschows Stiftelse \n 125px \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 76, 1415 København K \n 1853 \n Residential building from 1863 \n \n\n \n Overgaden Oven Vandet 80, 1415 København K \n 1857 \n Residential building from 1857 \n \n\n Wilders Plads 10 \n 125px \n Wilders Plads 7, 1403 København K \n 1736 \n Half-timbered house from 1736 \n \n\n Wildersgade 15 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 15, 1408 København K \n C. 1778 \n Townhouse from c. 1778 \n \n\n Wildersgade 17 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 17, 1408 København K \n C. 1790\n Late 18th-century townhouse with small staircase house \n \n\n Wildersgade 19 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 19, 1408 København K \n C. 1750 \n Late 18th-century townhouse fwhich was rebuilt in c. 1850 \n \n\n Wildersgade 20 og Overgaden neden Vandet 17 \n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 17, 1414 København K \n 1738 \n Townhouse from 1790 \n \n\n 125px \n Wildersgade 20, 1408 København K \n 1781 \n Building on Overgaden and a small building which connects it to the building on Wildersgade from 1887 by Frederik Bøttger \n \n\n Wildersgade 34 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 34, 1408 København K \n C. 1778 \n Two townhouses from 1764 which were expanded with extra height in 1780 and a northeastern rear wing \n \n\n Wildersgade 36 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 36, 1408 København K \n C. 1790\n Townhouse from c. 1725, a rear wing from c. 1780 by Johan Bernhardt Schottmann and a gallery which was closed in connection with a rebuilding in 1832 \n \n\n Wildersgade 37 \n \n Wilders Plads 7, 1403 København K \n \n Residential building on the street, originally two houses to huse houses from the early 18th century but merged into one in 1750, expanded with extra height in 1776 an altered with new façade decorations in 1850–1900 as well as a rear wing from 1776 which was shortened in 1978). \n \n\n Wildersgade 40\n 125px \n Wildersgade 40, 1408 København K \n \n House originallt from 1728 but the front rebuilt in brick and expanded with two extra floors in 1798 \n \n\n Wildersgade 46 \n \n Wildersgade 46, 1408 København K \n \n Townhouse originally from 1760 but extended heightwise in 1801 and an attached side wing \n \n\n Wildersgade 49 \n \n Wildersgade 49, 1408 København K \n \n Townhouse dating from some time between 1783 and 1801 \n \n\n Wildersgade 52 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 52, 1408 København K \n c. 1700 \n House and rear wing from c. 1700 \n \n\n Wildersgade 53 \n \n Wildersgade 53, 1408 København K \n \n House from 1631 which was altered and expanded with an extra floor in 1776 \n \n\n Wildersgade 58 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 59, 1408 København K \n \n House from the early 18th century \n \n\n Wildersgade 64-66 \n 125px \n Wildersgade 64, 1408 København K \n \n Warehouse from before 1725 which was altered in 1794 and again in 1884 \n \n\n Wildersgade Barracks \n 125px \n Wildersgade 60A, 1408 København K \n 1738 \n Former barracks from 1902 by Jørgen Henrich Rawert, small gate wing and single-storey wing to the left of it \n \n\n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 49A, 1414 København K \n \n Former warehouse and wall and gatehouse \n \n\n 125px \n Overgaden Neden Vandet 49B, 1414 København K \n \n Former warehouse and the low building on the corner of Bådsmandsstræde \n \n\n\n",
"\n",
"* Danish Agency of Culture\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References",
"External links"
] | Listed buildings in Christianshavn |
[
"Front view of Prozone Mall, Coimbatore\n'''Prozone mall (Coimbatore)''' is a mall launched in July 19, 2017 at Sivanandapuram, Coimbatore.\n",
"The Mall was constructed by Prozone Intu Pvt. Ltd., a specialist retail and residential-led mixed-use real estate development company.\n",
"\nthumb\nthumb\nthumb\nthumb\nthumb\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" History ",
" Gallery "
] | Prozone Mall (Coimbatore) |
[
"'''Joy Alice Hintz''' (February 7, 1926–April 2009) was a writer and a community advocate for migrant workers in Ohio and a peace advocate in Central America. Hinz was inducted into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in 1993.\n",
"Joy Alice Posey was born in Zanesville, Ohio, on February 7, 1926 and grew up in Columbus. She earned a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Science degrees from Ohio State University. She married Howard Hintz in 1952. They relocated to Tiffin, Ohio when he was took a faculty position at Heidelberg College. During her first years in Tiffin, she taught school in Tiffin and Attica, Ohio. In 1956, Hintz took the position as curator of the Charles H. Jones Collection of Minerals at Heidelberg College and she remained in the job for 25 years.\n",
"Hintz was appointed to a migrant workers committee by Ohio Governor John Gilligan. She was president of the Committee on Migrant Relations of Tiffin, and a founder of Auxilio y Amistad (Aid and Friendship.)\n",
"Hintz studied the migrants farmworkers and wrote several books and articles about their working conditions. She collected and compiled anthologies of workers' poems, essays, and drawings. \n",
"Hintz was inducted in to the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in 1993, and the Ohio Farmworker Advocate Hall of Fame. She received the NAACP Peacemaker Award. She died from complications of Alzheimer's disease in 2009.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Early life, education, and career ",
" Advocacy for migrant farm workers ",
" Writer ",
" Death and legacy ",
" References "
] | Joy Alice Hintz |
[
"\n\n\n\n'''Bolachikkalaki''' village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. Administratively it is under Vijayapur Taluka of Vijayapur district, Karnataka. It is located nearly 45 kilometres (25 mi) from district headquarter Vijayapur.\n",
"In the 2011 census, the village had a population of 3,095.\n",
"Village is situated geographically at 16* 32' 10'' north latitude and 75* 31' 19'' east longitude.\n",
"*Shri Hanuman Temple\n*Shri Durga Devi Temple\n*Shri Pandurang Temple\n*Shri Mallikarjun Temple\n",
"Village is having mainly Hindu and Muslim community people.\n",
"People speak mainly in ''Kannada'' also Hindi, Marathi, Urdu and English as well.\n",
"Mosque and Maszid for Muslim community. Moharam and Uras festivals are celebrated by both Hindu and Muslim religion.\n",
"The village land is quite fertile, with over 70% of it being well-suited to cultivation and crop production. Farmers there grow mainly sugar cane, grapes, maize, and sorgham. Small areas are planted in citrus orchards, and crops such as onions and turmeric. Irrigation is mainly based upon distribution canals from the river, borewells and open wells.\n",
"In village a ''Govt Higher Primary School'' has currently working with 1st to 7th standard having more than 150 students.\n",
"There are various associations doing cultural, sports, programmes and other activities.\n",
"The main celebrated each year are ''Kara Hunnume'', ''Nagara Panchami'', ''Deepavli'', ''Ugadi'', and ''Dassara''.\n",
"The village literacy rate is about 75%. Males has 75% and Female has 65% of literacy.\n",
"Village is comes under Babaleshwar Assembly Constituency and Vijayapur Parliamentary Constituency.\n",
"* Babaleshwar - 08355\n",
"* Sarawad - 586125\nHead office is in Sarawad.\n",
"'''State Highway - 55''' => Babaleshwar - Kambagi - Galagali- Mudhol\n",
"\n",
"* \n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Demographics",
"Geography",
"Temples",
"Religion",
"Language",
"Mosques",
"Agriculture",
"Education",
"Charities/Trusts",
"Festivals",
"Literacy Rate",
"Politics",
"Telephone Code",
"PIN Code",
"State Highway",
"References",
"External links"
] | Bolachikkalaki |
[
"\n\nThe passenger train locomotives number 27–29 of Stockholm–Roslagens Järnvägar, usually referred to as '''''stortyskarna''''' (literally \"the Great Germans\"), were the largest steam locomotives ever built for the Swedish three foot gauge railways. Initially used in fast passenger trains from Stockholm to Rimbo and Hallstavik, they were moved to freight service after the Stockholm–Rimbo Line was electrified in 1946. They hauled iron ore from Dannemora mine and transporter wagons from Uppsala, but were replaced by diesel locomotives during the 1950s. Two locomotives were leased at different times to the narrow-gauge network in Västergötland. Their last service was between Rimbo and Hallstavik in 1960. SRJ 28 has been preserved.\n",
"\nNumber 27–29, delivered in 1920 from Henschel & Son in Kassel, Germany, were the last steam locomotives ordered by SRJ. Prices were low in Germany at the time, and several Swedish railways bought locomotives from Henschel and other German manufacturers. The 2-6-2 locomotives had superheaters, relatively large bogie tenders, and were initially equipped with feedwater heaters, but the latter were removed as being too difficult to maintain. They were the largest and heaviest steam locomotives ever built for the 891 mm gauge. Intended for fast passenger trains, they were capable of considerably higher speeds than the official limit, but the railway itself only allowed . \n\nThe locomotives were mostly used on from Stockholm to Rimbo and Hallstavik, occasionally from Rimbo to Norrtälje, although tank locomotives dominated on the latter line due to the turntable being too short for tender locomotives. The trains between Stockholm and Rimbo sometimes had fourteen carriages, including direct carriages to Norrtälje and Hallstavik. Express trains were introduced in June 1928, running the 57 km between Rimbo and Stockholm in one hour and five minutes. The purchase of the locomotives was partly due to an expected increase in traffic after Faringe–Gimo Järnväg was opened, but they were hardly ever used on that railway before the Second World War, except in the very first train.\n\nSRJ already operated electric local trains near Stockholm, and wartime difficulties with obtaining coal made them extend the electrification, reaching Rimbo in 1946 and Norrtälje in 1949. The need for large passenger train locomotives was now drastically reduced. SRJ considered rebuilding number 27–29 to 2-6-4 tank locomotives, and NOHAB offered to do so at a cost of 34,500 Swedish crowns for one locomotive of 89,400 crowns for all three, but it was never done. Instead they were moved to freight service between Rimbo and Hallstavik and iron ore trains between Dannemora and Hargshamn. They were still used in some passenger trains, including a Sunday evening train from Gimo to Rimbo that sometimes had ten bogie carriages.\n\nSRJ 28 in Uppsala in 2004. \nAt this time Västergötland–Göteborgs Järnvägar (VGJ) were in need of more locomotives on its large network in Västergötland. SRJ 28 was leased to VGJ in 1947–1948; after returning to SRJ it was overhauled and equipped with roller bearings in the tender bogies. SRJ 27 was leased to the Swedish State Railways (SJ) in 1952–1955 for use on the now nationalized VGJ network. While in Västergötland it received a six-wheeled tender from an SJ locomotive, B2p number 3105, and this was also used on SRJ until number 27 was scrapped in 1962.\n\nTransporter wagons were introduced in freight trains from Uppsala to Norrtälje and Hallstavik in 1955, enabling direct transports to the normal-gauge network. This caused a large increase in freight traffic via Uppsala, and SRJ 27–29 were generally used in these trains. Smaller steam locomotives hauling trains with transporter wagons were prone to get stuck at a gradient near Faringe. Diesel locomotives were however introduced during the 1950s, and steam locomotives were hardly ever seen on the Uppsala–Rimbo line after 1958, but SRJ 28 was used on the line to Hallstavik until the autumn of 1960. That locomotive was then preserved in Faringe before being transferred to the Swedish Railway Museum in 1970. It was returned to Faringe in 1987 on loan to the heritage railway Upsala-Lenna Jernväg. The other two locomotives were scrapped in 1962.\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" History ",
" References "
] | Stortyskarna |
[
"\n\nTwo human polls comprise the '''1985–86 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the '''''USA Today'' Coaches' Poll''' is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n Not ranked\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n12-Nov\n1-Dec\n8-Dec\n15-Dec\n22-Dec\n29-Dec\n5-Jan\n12-Jan\n19-Jan\n26-Jan\n2-Feb\n9-Feb\n16-Feb\n23-Feb\n2-Mar\n9-Mar\n\nTexas\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n\nGeorgia\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n\nSouthern California\n7\n5\n4\n3\n3\n2\n2\n5\n5\n4\n7\n7\n7\n4\n4\n3\n\nLouisiana Tech\n4\n4\n3\n7\n7\n6\n5\n3\n3\n5\n4\n3\n5\n6\n6\n4\n\nWestern Ky.\n6\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n7\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n6\n5\n5\n5\n\nVirginia\n18\n10\n7\n6\n5\n5\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n5\n3\n3\n3\n6\n\nAuburn\n8\n12\n12\n11\n10\n10\n10\n9\n10\n8\n11\n10\n9\n9\n9\n7\n\nLong Beach St.\n11\n7\n6\n4\n4\n4\n6\n7\n7\n7\n6\n6\n4\n7\n7\n8\n\nLSU\n19\n14\n13\n12\n13\n12\n12\n10\n8\n12\n13\n9\n10\n10\n10\n9\n\nRutgers\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n18\n13\n12\n10\n9\n12\n8\n8\n8\n10\n\nOle Miss\n12\n8\n8\n8\n8\n8\n8\n8\n9\n9\n8\n8\n11\n12\n12\n11\n\nOhio St.\n10\n16\n18\n16\n14\n14\n15\n14\n13\n13\n12\n11\n12\n11\n11\n12\n\nPenn St.\n13\n6\n10\n10\n11\n13\n16\n15\n16\n15\n14\n15\n13\n16\n16\n13\n\nIowa\n14\n15\n14\n18\n19\n19\n17\n16\n17\n17\n18\n16\n14\n13\n13\n14\n\nTennessee\n9\n11\n11\n13\n12\n11\n11\n12\n11\n11\n10\n14\n15\n14\n14\n15\n\nNorth Carolina\n17\n19\n19\n20\n18\n17\n19\n18\n15\n16\n15\n13\n17\n17\n17\n16\n\nJames Madison\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n19\n18\nT18\n18\n18\n17\n\nSouthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n18\n\nOklahoma\n–\n17\n15\n14\n16\n15\n13\n11\n14\n14\n16\n17\n16\n15\n15\n19\n\nVanderbilt\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n\nDuke\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n18\n17\n20\nT18\n–\n–\n–\n\nHouston\n–\n–\n–\n19\n17\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIdaho\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLa.-Monroe\n3\n3\n5\n5\n6\n7\n9\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n15\n20\n20\n–\n20\n18\n14\n17\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nNorthwestern\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n5\n13\n17\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nProvidence\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n20\n–\n\nSaint Joseph’s\nT20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSaint Peter’s\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n20\n19\n20\n19\n19\n–\n\nSan Diego St.\n16\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUNLV\nT20\n18\n16\n17\n15\n16\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\nPS\n3-Dec\n10-Dec\n17-Dec\n24-Dec\n31-Dec\n7-Jan\n14-Jan\n21-Jan\n28-Jan\n4-Feb\n11-Feb\n18-Feb\n25-Feb\n4-Mar\n11-Mar\n18-Mar\n\nTexas\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n\nSouthern California\n7\n5\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n5\n5\n4\n7\n7\n7\n5\n3\n3\n2\n\nWestern Ky.\n6\n8\n8\n7\n7\n8\n7\n7\n6\n6\n4\n3\n6\n4\n4\n4\n3\n\nGeorgia\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n2\n4\n\nTennessee\n11\n14\n15\n14\n14\n13\n12\n13\n11\n15\n12\n14\n12\n14\n15\n16\n5\n\nOle Miss\n12\n9\n9\n10\n10\n10\n10\n8\n9\n8\n8\n8\n11\n11\n11\n9\n6\n\nLouisiana Tech\n4\n4\n10\n8\n9\n7\n6\n3\n3\n5\n5\n4\n5\n6\n7\n5\n7\n\nLSU\n18\n13\n7\n9\n12\n12\n11\n10\n8\n12\n11\n12\n10\n10\n10\n8\n8\n\nAuburn\n8\n10\n12\n11\n8\n9\n8\n9\n10\n9\n13\n10\n9\n9\n13\n10\n9\n\nRutgers\n–\n24\n22\n22\n19\n24\n21\n17\n12\n11\n9\n9\n8\n8\n6\n11\n10\n\nLa.-Monroe\n3\n3\n5\n5\n6\n6\n9\n11\n14\n10\n17\n19\n17\n16\n9\n12\n11\n\nLong Beach St.\n9\n6\n4\n4\n4\n4\n4\n6\n7\n7\n6\n6\n3\n7\n5\n7\n12\n\nPenn St.\n13\n7\n11\n12\n11\n11\n15\n14\n15\n16\n14\n15\n13\n17\n16\n13\n13\n\nVirginia\n16\n11\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n4\n4\n3\n3\n5\n4\n3\n8\n6\n14\n\nNorth Carolina\n17\n19\n21\n19\n18\n19\n18\n18\n16\n17\n15\n13\n18\n18\n18\n17\n15\n\nJames Madison\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n21\n19\n19\n20\n22\n16\n\nOhio St.\n10\n16\n17\n15\n15\n14\n14\n16\n13\n14\n10\n11\n14\n12\n14\n15\n17\n\nOklahoma\n23\n15\n14\n13\n17\n16\n13\n12\n17\n13\n16\n17\n16\n15\n17\n18\n18\n\nIowa\n14\n18\n16\n18\n21\n17\n16\n15\n18\n18\n18\n16\n15\n13\n12\n14\n19\n\nMontana\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n24\n25\n20\n\nTexas Tech\n20\n23\n24\n24\n–\n–\n24\n22\n19\n19\n19\n18\n20\n21\n22\n19\n21\n\nSouthern Ill.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n23\n22\n23\n21\n22\n\nDrake\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n21\n22\n25\n25\n22\n23\n19\nT23\n22\n20\n22\n22\n24\n23\n21\n24\n24\n\nVanderbilt\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n22\n21\n21\n21\n20\n24\n–\n–\n19\n20\n25\n\nDuke\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n25\n–\n21\n25\n–\n–\n–\n\nHouston\n24\n25\n18\n16\n13\n20\n20\n20\n20\n22\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nKansas St.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nKentucky\n–\n21\n20\n21\n23\n22\n23\nT23\n24\n24\n23\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMaryland\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n23\n–\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n15\n20\n23\n23\n20\n18\n17\n19\n23\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOhio\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n24\n–\n–\n–\n\nOld Dominion\n5\n12\n19\n20\n24\n21\n–\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nSaint Peter’s\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n25\n25\n21\n20\n22\n20\n25\n–\n–\n\nSan Diego St.\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUCLA\n25\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nUNLV\n22\n17\n13\n17\n16\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"USA Today Coaches poll",
"References"
] | 1985–86 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"Perth and Kinross shown within Scotland\nA '''scheduled monument ''' in Scotland is a nationally important archaeological site or monument which is given legal protection by being placed on a list (or \"schedule\") maintained by Historic Environment Scotland. The aim of scheduling is to preserve the country's most significant sites and monuments as far as possible in the form in which they have been inherited. \n\nThe process of scheduling is governed by the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979, which aims \"to make provision for the investigation, preservation and recording of matters of archaeological or historical interest\". The term \"scheduled monument\" can apply to the whole range of archaeological sites which have been deliberately constructed by human activity but are not always visible above ground. They range from prehistoric standing stones and burial sites, through Roman remains and medieval structures such as castles and monasteries, to later structures such as industrial sites and buildings constructed for the World Wars .\nSome buildings or structures which were both scheduled and listed have had their listing designations removed to reduce the duplication. \n\nIn 2017 there were 8238 scheduled monuments in Scotland.\n",
"{| class=\"wikitable sortable\" style=\"font-size: 90%;width:100%;border:0px;text-align:left;line-height:150%;\"\n Name\n Location\nDescription\n Ref No\nImage\n\n Arnot Tower\n Scotlandwell\n Gutted 16th-century tower-house\n SM996 \n 100px\n\n Coupar Angus Abbey gatehouse\n Coupar Angus\n Ruined gatehouse to medieval Cistercian abbey\n SM1629 \n\n Black Castle of Moulin\n Moulin\n Ruined castle\n SM1636 \n 100px\n\n Dundurn Fort\n Comrie\n Prehistoric Pictish hillfort\n SM2885 \n 100px\n\n Croft Moraig Stone Circle\n Near Aberfeldy\n Prehistoric stone circle \n SM5024 \n 100px\n\n Coupar Angus Abbey precincts\n Coupar Angus\n Subterranean remains of large abbey complex\n SM5772 \n\n\n Abernethy Round Tower and Pictish Stone\n Abernethy, Perth and Kinross\n Medieval round tower with Pictish symbol stone at base\n SM90005 \n 100px\n\n Balvaird Castle\n Abernethy, Perth and Kinross\n Ruined 15th-century L-plan tower-house\n SM90027 \n 100px\n\n Burleigh Castle\n Orwell\n Medieval tower-house\n SM90045 \n 100px\n\n Huntingtower Castle\n Tibbermore\n Connected 15th- and 16th-century towers\n SM90164 \n 100px\n\n Loch Leven Castle\n Kinross\n Remains of castle on Castle Island in Loch Leven\n SM90204 \n 100px\n\n",
"* List of Category A listed buildings in Perth and Kinross\n",
"\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Notable Scheduled Monuments in Perth and Kinross",
"See also",
"References"
] | Scheduled monuments in Perth and Kinross |
[
"Saquayamycin A\n'''Angucyclines''' are antibiotics isolated from Streptomyces species, which are used in chemotherapy as cytostatics against various types of cancer. The angucyclines include for example aquayamycin, the landomycins, moromycins, saquayamycins, urdamycins and vineomycins.\n",
"* J. Rohr and R. Thiericke: ''Angucycline group antibiotics'', Natural Product Reports, 1992, 9(2), pp. 103–137 (doi:10.1039/NP9920900103).\n",
"* Anthracyclines\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Notes ",
" See also "
] | Angucyclines |
[
"\n\n'''Lillian Shadic''' '''Campbell''' (June 14, 1929 – June 27, 2017) was an All-American Girls Professional Baseball League center fielder. Listed at 5' 5\", 145 lb., she batted and threw right handed.\n\nLillian Shadic played one season barnstorming in the All-American League. \n\nBorn in Chatham, New York, Shadic was dubbed ''Pete'' as a child and she retained this nickname for the rest of her life. She was a graduate off the Roeliff Jansen High School in Craryville, New York, where she played basketball and softball before answering a press advertisement about the league. \n\nPete did not just excel at softball, but she was even part of the Roe Jan, a local boys baseball team. She then went to a tryout in New Jersey and received an offer to play in the league during the 1949 season. Never having travelled, she decided to join one of the traveling teams and was assigned to the Springfield Sallies, as they toured in twenty six states, including exhibition contests at Griffith Stadium and Yankee Stadium. While no oficial statistics were kept by the league, she was credited for hitting two home runs in a single game.\n\nAfterwards, Lillian returned home and married Clifford H. Campbell Sr. in 1950. They raised seven children and she assisted him on the family dairy farm until 1988. In her spare time, she played softball, basketball and bowling, while coaching her sons in little league baseball and her daughters in softball. Besides, she did volunteer work at Taconic Hills High School and also drove the school bus for seventeen years. There is a plaque near the school softball honoring her.\n\nIn 1988 was inaugurated a permanent display at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum at Cooperstown, New York, that honors those who were part of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. The lively Pete, along with the rest of the girls and the league staff, is included at the display/exhibit.\n\nLillian Shadic died in 2017 in Albany, New York following a brief illness, just 13 days later of her 88th birthday. \n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Sources"
] | Lillian Shadic |
[
"\n\n\nThe '''2017 Israeli Basketball League Cup''', for sponsorships reasons the '''Winner League Cup''', was the 12th edition of the pre-season tournament of the Israeli Basketball Premier League.\n",
"\n\n===Quarterfinals===\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n===Final===\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Bracket",
"References"
] | 2017 Israeli Basketball League Cup |
[
"\n\n\n'''Ahmad Kamal Abdullah''' (born 30 January 1941, Gombak, Kuala Lumpur) is a Malaysian poet, novelist, playwright, literary critic writing in Malay. He is known under the pseudonym Kemala. He is a Malaysian National Laureate.\n",
"Teacher by education. From 1958-1962, Kemala studied at Sultan Idris Teacher’s College (Maktab Perguruan Sultan Idris) in Tanjung Malim. In 2000, he defended his thesis on Malay literature and received the title of PhD at the National University of Malaysia. The initiator of the International Poetic Readings in Kuala Lumpur and the international writers' organization of Nusantara countries \"Great Malay Nusantara\" (Numera) (2012).\n",
"He took an active part in the movement of \"poetry of social protest\" and also known as the author of the philosophical and love lyrics .\n\nHe continues the traditions of poetic-philosophical understanding of the world laid by the poet-mystic Hamzah Fansuri, developing them and introducing his own rhythms and colors . His verses, sometimes with a touch of religious mysticism, create an atmosphere of poetic meditation of a man who constantly is in amazement of the mysteries of life .\n\nHe is the author of poetic collections \"Meditasi” (Meditation, 1972), \"Serah Terima” (Transfer of Affairs, 1973), \"Era\" (1975), \"Kaktus-Kaktus” (Cacti, 1976) , “Ayn” (1983, 1989), “Pelabuhan Putih” (The White Harbor , 1989), “Titir Zikir” (A Drop of Dhikr, 1995), and “Ziarah Tanah Kudup” (Pilgrimage to the Land of Flowers, 2006). His book \"Mim\" (1999) absorbed various creative motifs, including reflections on the poet's and his poetry’s place and impressions of his trip to the Soviet Union (October 1989).\n",
"\"His poems are musical, full of inner rhythm, he perfectly uses all the possibilities of the Malay language, extracting from it sometimes tender and sincere, sometimes ecstatic and explosive sounds, filling each line with movement and turning each verse into a living organism. The combination of feelings and visions permeated with a passionate love for God is the inexhaustible source of the poet's creative inspiration: it is a fusion of sounding image and music, avant-gardism and traditional Sufi motifs, as well as a rhythmic series of folklore forms.\" ''Anna Pogadaeva'' \n",
"* Literary Prize of Malaysia (1972, 1995, 1999)\n* S.E.A. Write Award, Thailand (1986)\n* Title of Dato ' Paduka Mahkota (2001)\n* The title of Pujangga (Writer), Sultan Idris Pedagogical University (2003)\n* Selangor Literary Prize (2005)\n* Award of Abdul Rahman Auf (2006)\n* Title Malaysian National Laureate (2011)\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Brief biography ",
" Creativity ",
" Criticism. Evaluation of creativity ",
" Awards ",
" References "
] | Ahmad Kamal Abdullah |
[
"\n\n'''Pattadakal''', formerly known as '''Raktapura''', is a small town in the Bagalkot district of north Karnataka, India. It is famous for its UNESCO world heritage site.\n\nPattadakal region was settled in pre-historic times, as evidence by megalithic dolmens. Located along the Malprabha river where it turns north, its red color soil and stone mountains nearby attracted its mention in ancient and medieval era Indian texts. The modern town contains the 7th and 8th century collection of nine Hindu and one Jain temple built by the Chalukya dynasty. It is considered by UNESCO as the masterpiece of architectural forms from northern and southern India, that made the town and nearby region as the cradle of temple architecture and arts.\n\nThe town is spread over 14.56 square kilometers, at an altitude of 593 meters. The summer (April-June) temperatures peak over 40 C, monsoons typically arrive by mid June. The weather and temperatures cool by late August, with winter temperatures ranging between 15 and 28 C. Pattadakal is about from the larger town of Badami, and about from Aihole – another site with over a hundred ancient and early medieval era Hindu, Jain and Buddhist monuments. Pattadakal and neighboring villages constitute the Bagalkot taluk whose combined population was 173,181 according to the official 2011 census.\n",
"*Badami\n*Badami cave temples\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"See also",
"References",
"Bibliography"
] | Pattadakal (town) |
[
"\n'''Vice President of Chad''' () was a political position in Chad from 1975 to 1982.\n\nThere were no provisions defined for succession during the regime of Hissène Habré until 1989. According to the current Constitution of Chad, the president of the National Assembly is the successor of President of Chad in case of a vacancy.\n\n\nName\nTook office\nLeft office\n Head of State\n Notes\n\nMamari Djime Ngakinar\nApril 1975\nAugust 1978\nFélix Malloum\n\n\nHissène Habré\nAugust 1978\nMarch 1979\nFélix Malloum\n\n\nNegué Djogo\nApril 1979\nAugust 1979\nLol Mahamat Choua\n \n\nWadel Abdelkader Kamougué\nAugust 1979\nJune 1982\nGoukouni Oueddei\n\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"References"
] | Vice President of Chad |
[
"\n'''Clara H. Hazelrigg''' (pen name, '''C. H. H.'''; November 23, 1861 - ) was an American author, educator and reformer. She began teaching school at a young age, and after marriage and removing to Kansas, she taught school and served as principal of a ward school. She generally wrote under the initials of \"C. H. H.\", by which signature she was well-known in the literary world.\n",
"Clara H. Espy was born in Council Grove, Kansas, November 23, 1861, or November 23, 1859. She was the youngest living daughter of Col. H. J. Espy. Her mother was Melora E. Cook, teacher in the schools of Sandusky, Ohio. Her father was apprenticed to learn a trade, but ran away at the age of 13 to become a soldier, For more than 10 years, he was a member of the standing army of the United States. He served with distinction in the Mexican war and was Colonel of the 68th Indiana Volunteers during the American Civil War. Wounded several times, carried off the field of Chickamauga for dead, his injuries caused his death shortly after the close of the war, and his four children were left orphans, their mother having died in 1861. With an only sister, Clara returned to Indiana, where she had resided during the war. In 1866, she returned to Kansas, but upon the death of her father in 1868, she again went to Indiana, where she attended school.\n\nFrom the age of 11, she supported herself. When 12 years old, she wrote for the press, but, being of a sensitive, retiring disposition, she shrank from public criticism and seldom wrote over her own name. \n",
"At the age of 14, she began teaching in a private school. She also taught in the public schools of Ripley County, Indiana.\n\nOn December 27, 1877, she married W. A. Hazelrigg, of Greensburg, Indiana. They had one child, a girl. \n\nIn 1883, or 1884, the couple removed to Kansas and located in Butler County, where Hazelrigg resumed her work as teacher. She was also principal of one of the city schools in El Dorado, Kansas. Hazelrigg attended business college at Emporia and was elected superintendent of the Butler county schools. After the family removed to Topeka, their vacations were spent upon the husband's ranch in New Mexico. \n\nHazelrigg traveled much during her vacations, and wrote constantly during the entire year for the press. She wrote for many prominent periodicals in various States. She was the editor of a department in a prominent Chicago paper, and was a regular contributor to the Topeka \"Lancet.\" \nIn 1895, she published a ''History of Kansas'', which showed evidence of considerable research and literary ability. This was her best known literary work. \n\nIn 1897, Hazelrigg was ordained and served as an evangelist. Hazelrigg was the pastor who converted Jesse Bader. She devoted much time to active church work, and won a wide reputation as an evangelist. She supported the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the work of the Woman's Relief Corps. \n",
"* ''A new history of Kansas : designed expressly for use in the public schools'', 1895\n",
"\n\n===Attribution===\n* \n* \n* \n\n===Bibliography===\n* \n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Early years",
"Career",
"Selected works",
"References",
"External links"
] | Clara H. Hazelrigg |
[
"\n'''The Guildhall''' is an important civic building in Newcastle upon Tyne. It is a Grade I listed building.\n",
"The building was designed by Robert Trollope and completed in 1655. The frontage was rebuilt to designs by William Newton and David Stephenson in 1794. The east end of the building is an extension designed by John Dobson and completed in 1823. The main room is 92 feet long and 30 feet broad. The mayor and sheriff were allowed to hold borough courts there.\n",
"\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"History",
"References"
] | Guildhall, Newcastle upon Tyne |
[
"\n\nA single human poll represents the '''1984–85 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings''', the AP Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. \n\nThe AP poll was initially a poll of coaches conducted via telephone, where coaches identified top teams and a list of the Top 20 team was produced. The contributors continued to be coaches until 1994, when the AP took over administration of the poll from Mel Greenberg, and switched to a panel of writers.The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play.\n",
"{| style=\"border:1px solid black;\"\n – \n \n Not ranked\n\n (#) \n \n Ranking\n\n",
"Source\n\n\nTeam\n15-Nov\n26-Nov\n2-Dec\n9-Dec\n16-Dec\n24-Dec\n30-Dec\n6-Jan\n13-Jan\n20-Jan\n27-Jan\n3-Feb\n10-Feb\n17-Feb\n24-Feb\n3-Mar\n10-Mar\n\nTexas\n2\n3\n2\n2\n2\n2\n4\n3\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n\nLa.-Monroe\n7\n7\n7\n6\n5\n5\n5\n4\n4\n4\n6\n4\n4\n2\n2\n2\n2\n\nLong Beach St.\n4\n4\n4\n4\n3\n3\n3\n2\n3\n3\n3\n2\n2\n4\n4\n3\n3\n\nLouisiana Tech\n8\n8\n8\n7\n7\n7\n7\n7\n6\n6\n4\n6\n6\n5\n5\n4\n4\n\nOld Dominion\n3\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n3\n3\n7\n7\n5\n5\n\nOle Miss\n6\n6\n6\n8\n8\n8\n8\n8\n7\n7\n7\n5\n5\n3\n3\n6\n6\n\nOhio St.\n17\n15\n12\n10\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n9\n8\n8\n8\n8\n8\n7\n7\n\nGeorgia\n1\n1\n3\n3\n6\n6\n6\n5\n5\n5\n5\n7\n7\n6\n6\n8\n8\n\nPenn St.\n10\n10\n13\n12\n11\n10\n10\n10\n10\n12\n12\n10\n10\n10\n9\n10\n9\n\nAuburn\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n16\n14\n12\n11\n10\n10\n9\n9\n9\n11\n9\n10\n\nWashington\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n18\n16\n14\n13\n12\n13\n12\n12\n11\n\nNorth Carolina St.\n19\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n17\n–\n–\n20\n15\n15\n14\n13\n12\n\nTennessee\n14\n12\n16\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\nT20\n18\n15\n13\n\nWestern Ky.\n–\n–\n–\n–\n17\n15\n17\n16\n14\n11\n11\n11\n11\n11\n13\n14\n14\n\nSouthern California\n5\n5\n5\n5\n4\n4\n2\n6\n8\n8\n9\n12\n13\n12\n10\n11\n15\n\nUNLV\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n17\n16\n16\n\nSaint Joseph’s\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n–\n–\n18\n18\n17\n18\n17\n16\n18\n17\n\nUCLA\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n18\n\nTexas Tech\n–\n–\n20\n16\n14\n–\n16\n17\n16\n14\n13\n14\n16\n–\n19\n17\n19\n\nSan Diego\n13\n11\n9\n9\n12\n12\n12\n14\n13\n13\n16\n15\n14\n14\n15\n19\n20\n\nAlabama\n20\n20\n15\n19\n20\n20\n20\n18\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nIdaho\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\nT20\n–\n–\n–\n\nKentucky\n–\n–\n14\n14\n13\n13\n13\n13\n12\n15\n17\n19\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nLSU\n9\n9\n11\n13\n16\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMaryland\n18\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMemphis\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n–\n–\n–\n20\n20\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMiami (FL)\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n20\n20\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nMissouri\n11\n17\n19\n18\n18\n18\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nOklahoma\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n19\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nRutgers\n16\n14\n17\n17\n15\n14\n15\n15\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nTennessee Tech\n–\n–\n–\n20\n–\n17\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n19\n–\n–\n–\n\nVanderbilt\n12\n16\n18\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n–\n\nVirginia\n15\n13\n10\n11\n10\n11\n11\n11\n15\n17\n15\n16\n17\n16\n20\n–\n–\n\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Legend",
"AP Poll",
"References"
] | 1984–85 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings |
[
"\n'''''That Night's Wife''''' (Italian:'''La moglie di quella notte''') is a 1930 Japanese crime and drama film directed by Yasujirô Ozu. The film starring Tokihiko Okada, Tatsuo Saitô, Chishû Ryû, Emiko Yagumo and Tôgô Yamamoto in the lead roles.\n",
"* Mitsuko Ichimura as Michiko, daughter\n* Tokihiko Okada as Shuji Hashizume, husband\n* Chishû Ryû as Policeman\n* Tatsuo Saitô as Suda, doctor\n* Emiko Yagumo as Mayumi, wife\n* Tôgô Yamamoto as Detective Kagawa\n",
"\n",
"* \n* \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Cast",
"References",
"External links"
] | That Night's Wife |
[
"'''C/2017 K2 (PANSTARRS)''' is a new comet discovered in 2017 at a distance beyond the orbit of Saturn and estimated to be 12 miles across. It has a hyperbolic orbit and will reach perihelion around 2022, close to the orbit of Mars.\n",
"\n* A Comet Active Beyond the Crystallization Zone\n* MPEC 2017-K90 : COMET C/2017 K2 (PANSTARRS)\n* NASA's Hubble Observes the Farthest Active Inbound Comet Yet Seen\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" References"
] | C/2017 K2 |
[
"\n\nThe '''Tipperary Militia''' was a regiment of militia raised in County Tipperary. Formed in 1793 it was converted in 1854 to an Artillery Militia unit, which was eventually disbanded in 1909.\n",
"The unit was first raised in 1793 as an infantry unit by John Bagwell (1751–1816), who was the member of parliament for Tipperary. In 1812 the unit was designated the '''Tipperary (or Duke of Clarence's Munster) Regiment of Militia'''.\n\nIn December 1854 the Militia was reorganised with the unit being converted into an Artillery unit. The Corps of Artillery was designated '''The South Tipperary Artillery Regiment of Militia'''. \n\nThe unit was embodied during the Crimean War (1855-6), the Indian Mutiny (1858-1861) and during the South African War (1900) but never served overseas. The unit was redesignated as '''The Tipperary Royal Garrison Artillery (Militia)''' in 1902. It was transferred to the Special Reserve Royal Field Artillery in 1908 on the formation of the Territorial Force and disbanded the following year.\n",
"\n",
"*\n*\n* Litchfield, Norman E H, 1987. ''The Militia Artillery 1852-1909'', The Sherwood Press, Nottingham. \n* Ryan, C A, Maj, 1890. Records of the Tipperary Artillery 1793-1889\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"History",
"References",
"Bibliography"
] | Tipperary Militia |
[
"\n\nRobonauts is a 2D Arcade-like Shooting game that was released in Sep. 15 and Sep. 19 in the Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4 respectively.\n\nIt was developed and published by Qubic Games.\n",
"The Player/s is a Robonaut/s or a 'Robot Astronaut.\" who goes around planets shooting enemies. A gateway is present at every level, which if used will send the player/s to the next level. However, the gateway is only accessible if all enemies are defeated. The player/s have the option to shoot with Primary and Secondary weapons.\n\nThe game has multiple features which are only present in this game.\n\n=== Switching Gravity ===\nThe feature allows the player/s to switch to other planets that are directly on top of/ under of/ or next to the player/s.\n\n=== Tactical Mode ===\nThis feature pauses the game and shows a map of the current level. It also highlights remaining enemies which can be useful if one wants to open access to a gateway.\n\n=== Game Modes ===\nBesides the Single Player Campaign, there is also a Co-Op feature and a Vs. Game mode.\n\nAll multiplayer modes are local-only and the game does not support online play.\n",
"The soundtrack was composed by Simon Viklund. It features Arcade Music with Robotic beats.\n",
"The game is rated 69.00% at Gamerankings.com which is a Website that tracks other reviews and combines them all.\n",
"Nintendo Switch\n\nPlayStation 4\n\nGamerankings\n\nNintendo\n\nList of Nintendo Switch Games\n",
"http://qubicgames.com/games/robonauts/-The Main Website\n\nhttp://www.gamerankings.com/switch/221044-robonauts/index.html- The Gamerankings Review\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
" Gameplay ",
" Soundtrack ",
" Reception ",
" See also ",
" External Links "
] | Robonauts |
[
"\n\n\n\n'''Newborn Woman''' is the third and last album by Vicki Lawrence, recorded and released in 1979 on Windmill Record Company, prodcued by both Al Capps and Ted Glasser. This album features the songs, \"Your Lies\" and \"Don't Stop The Music\".\n",
"\n;Side One\n\n# Don't Stop The Music\n# It's Always Been You\n# Midnight Robbery\n# Never Gonna Let You Go\n\n\n;Side Two\n\n# Star Love\n# Your Lies\n# Baby When You're Near Me\n# Just One Time\n# Newborn Woman\n",
"\n* Arranged By – Al Capps\n* Backing Vocals – Jim Haas, Jon Joyce, Julia Waters, Maxine Waters, Mitch Gordon, Stan Farber, Stephanie Spruill\n* Bass – Jim Hughart, Mike Porcaro\n* Concertmaster – Gordon Marron\n* Drums – Willie Ornelas\n* Guitar – Larry Rolando, Norman Sallitt, Rick Littlefield\n* Keyboards – Mark William Gibbons, Steve Rucker\n* Horns – Quitman Dennis, Lew McCreary, Bill Peterson \n",
"\n*Engineer – Mark Piscetelli\n*Art Direction – Linda Kay Klouda-Lavezzo\n*Design – Linda Kay Klouda-Lavezzo\n",
"\n* https://www.discogs.com/Vicki-Lawrence-Newborn-Woman/release/2668760\n* https://musicbrainz.org/release-group/588a04a4-eb2a-423b-834d-46d5921376c6\n* https://vickilawrence.bandcamp.com/album/newborn-woman\n* https://theanalogkidblog.com/2016/10/04/groovy-tuesday-vicki-lawrences-newborn-woman/\n* https://www.datalounge.com/thread/10200792-vicki-lawrence-don-t-stop-the-music-from-her-newborn-woman-album\n* http://souldennis.blogspot.com/2010/05/vicki-lawrence-never-gonna-let-you-go.html\n* http://themusicofvickilawrence.webstarts.com/newborn_woman.html\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Track listing",
"Personnel",
"Credits",
"External links"
] | Newborn Woman (Vicki Lawrence album) |
[
" \n'''NGC 4606''' is a spiral galaxy located about 55 million light-years away in the constellation of Virgo. NGC 4606 was discovered by astronomer William Herschel on March 15, 1784. NGC 4606 appears to be in a pair with the galaxy NGC 4607. The galaxy is a member of the Virgo Cluster. ",
"* List of NGC objects (4001–5000)",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"See also",
"External links",
" References "
] | NGC 4606 |
[
"\n\n\n\n\n'''Carlos Lamela''' (Madrid, October 10,1957) is a Spanish architect, co-founder and executive president of Estudio Lamela.\n",
"Superior architect by the Technical School of Architecture of Madrid in 1981 and \"designer\" by the UIA of Florence (Italy) in 1984.\nHis entire professional career has been spent at the architecture firm of Estudio Lamela, founded by his late father, Antonio Lamela, in 1954, and of which he is currently the chief executive and owner. It should be noted that his work, particularly the large public facilities such as airports and soccer stadiums, has earned international recognition by critics for its excellence. \nHe is former president of the Spanish chapter of the Urban Land Institute.\n",
"Under his direction the following projects have been developed:\n\n===Spain===\n\n* Canalejas Complex (2012-2018) is a project in seven historic buildings in Madrid that will house a shopping arcade, high-level residences and the future Four Seasons hotel with 200 rooms.Estudio Lamela. Mock-up of the Canalejas Complex\n\n===Outside of Spain===\n\n* Brussels: Astro Tower (2010-2017), at 113 metres and 41 floors, it is the tallest ‘green’ building in Europe. Estudio Lamela. Astro Tower in Brussels, Belgium.)\n",
"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Biography",
"Work",
" References "
] | Carlos Lamela |
[
"\n\n'''''Ships in the Night''''' is the second album by Vicki Lawrence, recorded and released in 1974 on Stateside Records only in Australia, Europe and Asia. It was shelved in the US until Varèse Sarabande re-released it worldwide four decades later with two bonus deleted tracks, \"I'm Glad I'm Not Her\" and \"Old Home Movies\" and another bonus track, \"The Other Woman\", co-written by Tom Bahler and Henry Shannon. This album featured the song, \"Funny Girl\", not to be confused with the musical, soundtrack and film, and a cover of the Stevie Wonder tune, \"You Are the Sunshine of My Life\".\n",
";Side One\n# Mama's Gonna Make It All Better (Mary Dean & Al Capps)\n# Who Broke Your Heart And Made You Write That Song (Michael Chain)\n# In Another Woman's Arms (John Durrill)\n# Take Me To Heaven (Richard Mainegra & Susan Taylor)\n# Cameo (Arthur Hamilton, Annette Tucker & Yolanda Garrett)\n\n;Side Two\n# Ships in the Night (Bobby Russell)\n# Funny Girl (Bobby Russell)\n# Makin' Love In My Mind (Bobby Flax & Lanny Lambert)\n# Who Do I Call When I Need You (Gloria Sklerov & Molly Ann Leiken)\n# The Light On The Back Porch Door (Gloria Sklerov, Harry Lloyd & Yolanda Garrett)\n# You Are the Sunshine of My Life (Stevie Wonder)\n\n'''U.S. re-released version with bonus tracks'''\n# Mama's Gonna Make It All Better (Mary Dean & Al Capps)\n# Who Broke Your Heart And Made You Write That Song (Michael Chain)\n# In Another Woman's Arms (John Durrill)\n# Take Me To Heaven (Richard Mainegra & Susan Taylor)\n# Cameo (Arthur Hamilton, Annette Tucker & Yolanda Garrett)\n# Ships in the Night (Bobby Russell)\n# Funny Girl (Bobby Russell)\n# Makin' Love In My Mind (Bobby Flax & Lanny Lambert)\n# Who Do I Call When I Need You (Gloria Sklerov & Molly Ann Leiken)\n# The Light On The Back Porch Door (Gloria Sklerov, Harry Lloyd & Yolanda Garrett)\n# You Are the Sunshine of My Life (Stevie Wonder)\n# Old Home Movies (Wayne Parker & Richard Torst)\n# The Other Woman (Tom Bahler & Henry Shannon)\n# I'm Glad I'm Not Her (Gloria Sklerov & Molly Ann Leikin)\n",
"* Produced by Snuff Garrett\n* Arranged by Al Capps\n",
"*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Track listing",
"Credits",
"External links"
] | Ships in the Night (Vicki Lawrence album) |
[
"\n\n'''''Time of Parting''''' (, ''Vreme razdelno'') is a novel written by Anton Donchev and published in 1964.\n",
"''Time of Parting'' was judged the 2nd greatest work ever in the Bulgarian Big Read in 2008–09.",
"\n\n\n\n\n"
] | [
"Introduction",
"Reviews",
"References"
] | Time of Parting |
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