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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrea_Soldi
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Andrea Soldi
| null |
Andrea Soldi
| null | null | false | false |
Andrea Soldi was an Italian portraitist active in Britain.
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Andrea Soldi (1703–1771) was an Italian portraitist active in Britain.
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Self-portrait (1743)
| 1,307 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 533 | 668 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_things_named_after_Elizabeth_II
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List of things named after Elizabeth II
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Buildings
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List of things named after Elizabeth II / Structures / Buildings
|
English: Queen Elizabeth Theater, Vancouver, BC
| null | false | true |
This is a list of places, buildings, roads and other things named after Queen Elizabeth II. It is divided by category, though each item's location is noted in the entry.
|
Australia:
Queensland: Queen Elizabeth II Courts of Law, Brisbane
Queensland: Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Sports Centre, Brisbane (former)
Victoria: Queen Elizabeth Centre, Ballarat
Bahamas: Queen Elizabeth Sports Center, Nassau, Bahamas
Canada:
Alberta: Queen Elizabeth II Planetarium, Edmonton
Alberta: Queen Elizabeth Pool / Queen E Pool, Edmonton
British Columbia: Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Vancouver
Manitoba: Queen Elizabeth II Music Building, Brandon University, Brandon
Newfoundland and Labrador: Queen Elizabeth II Library, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland
Ontario: Queen Elizabeth Building, Exhibition Place, Toronto
Quebec: Queen Elizabeth Hotel, Montreal
Saskatchewan: Queen Elizabeth Power Station, Regina
Saskatchewan: Queen Elizabeth II Court, Regina
Fiji: Queen Elizabeth Barracks, Nabua
Ghana: Queen Elizabeth II Hall, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science & Technology (KNUST), Kumasi
Hong Kong: Queen Elizabeth Stadium
New Zealand: Queen Elizabeth II Park, Christchurch
New Zealand: Queen Elizabeth Youth Centre & Memorial Hall, Tauranga
Nigeria: Queen Elizabeth II Hall University of Ibadan, Ibadan
Sierra Leone: Queen Elizabeth II Quay Freetown, Sierra Leone
South Africa: Princess Elizabeth Graving Dock, East London, Eastern Cape, South Africa
Trinidad and Tobago: Princess Elizabeth Centre, Woodbrook, Port of Spain
United Kingdom:
England: Elizabeth Tower, Palace of Westminster, London (formerly the Clock Tower housing Big Ben)
England: The Queen's Terminal, London Heathrow (also known as Terminal 2)
England: Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch, London
England: Queen Elizabeth II Law Courts, Liverpool
England: Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, London
England: Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, London
England: Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
England: Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, London
England: QEII Pier, London
England: Queen Elizabeth II Dock, Eastham, Merseyside
England: Queen Elizabeth II Reservoir, Molesey, Surrey
England: Queen Elizabeth II Hall, Oldham
England: Queen's Building, University of Bristol, Bristol
England: Queen Elizabeth II Court, Winchester, part of the HQ of Hampshire County Council
England: Elizabeth Gate, the main entrance into Kew Gardens, London (formerly the Main Gate)
England: Sapphire Jubilee Community Centre, Collier Row, Romford
England: The Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Leisure Centre, Leicester
England: The Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Pavilion Café, Queen's Park, Bolton
Jersey: Elizabeth Harbour and Terminal, Saint Helier
Scotland: Queen's Gallery, Edinburgh
Former:
New Zealand: QEII Army Memorial Museum, Waiouru
United Kingdom: Queens Building, Heathrow Airport (built in 1953 and demolished in 2009)
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The Queen Elizabeth Theatre, in Vancouver, British Columbia.
| 1,287 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,888 | 2,592 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yusef_Mishleb
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Yusef Mishleb
| null |
Yusef Mishleb
|
Depicted person:  Yusef Mishleb – Israeli general English: Major General Yusef Mishleb, Head of the Home Front Command, with Territorial Commander Citation, above the campaign ribbons from left to right for "Peace For Galilee" and Yom Kippur war. This order of wearing is incorrect and should be reversed. עברית: אלוף (מיל.) יוסף משלב.
| null | false | true |
Aluf Yusef Mishleb is a retired Druze general in the Israel Defense Forces serving last in the position as the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. Mishleb retired in September 2008 after four years in the job and over 35 years in the Israel Defense Forces.
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Aluf (Major General) Yusef Mishleb (sometimes spelled Yosef Mishlev) (Arabic: يوسف مشلب, Hebrew: יוסף מישלב; born 1952) is a retired Druze general in the Israel Defense Forces serving last in the position as the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories. Mishleb retired in September 2008 after four years in the job and over 35 years in the Israel Defense Forces.
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Yusef Mishleb
| 1,310 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 1,229 | 1,763 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FokI
|
FokI
| null |
FokI
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English: RESTRICTION ENDONUCLEASE FOKI BOUND TO DNA. PDB 1fok
| null | true | true |
The enzyme Fok1, naturally found in Flavobacterium okeanokoites, is a bacterial type IIS restriction endonuclease consisting of an N-terminal DNA-binding domain and a non-specific DNA cleavage domain at the C-terminal. Once the protein is bound to duplex DNA via its DNA-binding domain at the 5'-GGATG-3' recognition site, the DNA cleavage domain is activated and cleaves, without further sequence specificity, the first strand 9 nucleotides downstream and the second strand 13 nucleotides upstream of the nearest nucleotide of the recognition site.
Its molecular mass is 65.4 kDa, being composed of 587 amino acids.
|
The enzyme Fok1 (Fok-1), naturally found in Flavobacterium okeanokoites, is a bacterial type IIS restriction endonuclease consisting of an N-terminal DNA-binding domain and a non-specific DNA cleavage domain at the C-terminal. Once the protein is bound to duplex DNA via its DNA-binding domain at the 5'-GGATG-3' recognition site, the DNA cleavage domain is activated and cleaves, without further sequence specificity, the first strand 9 nucleotides downstream and the second strand 13 nucleotides upstream of the nearest nucleotide of the recognition site.
Its molecular mass is 65.4 kDa, being composed of 587 amino acids.
|
Restriction endonuclease Fok1 bound to DNA PDB 1fok [1]
| 1,309 | 0 |
success
| null | 400 | 400 |
{}
| 400 | 400 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rikitea
|
Rikitea
|
Geography
|
Rikitea / Geography
|
English: View of Rikitea's waterfront from the water, with Mt. Duff visible in the background. Mangareva Island, Gambier Islands, French Polynesia
| null | false | true |
Rikitea is a small town on Mangareva, which is part of the Gambier Islands in French Polynesia. A majority of the islanders live in Rikitea. The island was a protectorate of France in 1871 and was annexed in 1881.
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Rikitea is a port town and tourist center situated on Mangareva Lagoon, which contains a number of motu. It is about 1,650 kilometres (1,030 mi) southeast of Tahiti, to the North of the Tropic of Capricorn. The average elevation of the town is 8 metres (26 ft).
The total population of the island was 1100 and most of them lived in Rikitea.
Two mountains, Mt. Duff (482 metres (1,581 ft)) and Mt. Mokoto (129 feet (39 m)), which are approachable by trails, are north of the town. The climb to Duff's peak takes about 90 minutes. The stones found on the hill were used by the ethnic Mangarevans to predict weather and to look for boats headed for the island. The mountain is covered with tall aeho grass.
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Rikitea in the foreground and Mont Duff in the background
| 1,284 | 0 |
success
| null | 500 | 340 |
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| 500 | 340 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannah_Kempfer
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Hannah Kempfer
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Early life, education and career
|
Hannah Kempfer / Biography / Early life, education and career
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English: Johannah Josephine Jensen (Hannah Jensen Kempfer) in Stavanger, Norway (early 1880s).
| null | false | true |
Hannah Jensen Kempfer was a Minnesota schoolteacher, farmer and politician. She was a member of the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1923 to 1930 and from 1933 to 1942, representing District 50 and Otter Tail County. Kempfer was one of the four women first elected to the Minnesota legislature in 1922 after women's suffrage.
Born on a ship in the North Sea, Kempfer was adopted by a Norwegian family that immigrated to the United States in 1885. Her family settled in Minnesota and squatted a piece of railroad land where she grew up in poverty. She became a teacher at a small rural schoolhouse.
As a legislator, she championed the rights of children and fought for the conservation of natural resources. She introduced legislation to protect the Showy Lady's slipper, Minnesota's state flower.
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Johannah Josephine was born on December 22, 1880 in the North Sea on a ship sailing under a British flag. Her father was a sailor and her mother an unwed stewardess. Her mother left her in Stavanger, Norway, where she was taken to an orphanage. Ole and Martha Jensen, a shipbuilder and his wife who had recently lost their only child, adopted Johannah in March 1881. The Jensens immigrated to Adams, Minnesota in 1885 where they stayed with relatives.
In 1889, the Jensens moved to Otter Tail County and, being very poor, squatted a piece of property that belonged to the railroad. When Johannah Josephine was 12, she took the train to Fergus Falls to find work. She was taken in by the family of a milkman. She attended both Fergus Falls High School and Park Region Luther College in Fergus Falls. A teacher shortened her name to Hannah.
At 17, she tested for her teaching certificate and became a teacher in Friberg Township. She began serving hot lunches there and her school became known as "Hot Soup School". She taught from 1898 to 1908 and paid off her debts, buying the land her family had been living on. She also worked as a correspondent for the Fergus Falls newspaper Wheelock's Weekly.
She married Charles Taylor Kempfer, a farmer, on May 23, 1903 and moved to his parents' farm. They never had children of their own, but were foster parents for eleven children that had been orphaned. Kempfer was active in her community, helping to form a farm improvement club and organizing church socials and quilting bees. When a tornado tore through Fergus Falls, she helped organize a relief effort.
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Johannah Josephine Jensen in Stavanger, Norway (circa 1883)
| 1,314 | 0 |
success
| null | 351 | 480 |
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| 351 | 480 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leon_C._Goodrich
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Leon C. Goodrich
|
Works
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Leon C. Goodrich / Works
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English: The Rialto Theater in Casper, Wyoming, on the northeast corner of Second and Center Streets in the original township. The structure, built in 1921 as the New Lyric Theater, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
| null | false | true |
Leon C. Goodrich was an American architect of Casper, Wyoming. A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
|
Works include (with variations in attribution):
Rialto Theatre (1921-1922 remodel), formerly known as the New Lyric Theatre, 102 E. Second St., Casper, Wyoming (Dubois & Goodrich), NRHP-listed
Turner-Cottman Building (1924), Casper, Wyoming, NRHP-listed
St. Anthony School (1927), Casper, Wyoming
Turner-Cottman Building (1924), 120-130 W. Second St., Casper, Wyoming
Paul Stock House (1945-1946), 1300 Sunset Dr, Cody, WY (Goodrich, Leon), NRHP-listed
Wyoming Home & Hospital for the Aged (1948), Thermopolis, Wyoming
Wyoming State Insane Asylum (1948), 831 Highway 150 South, Evanston, Wyoming (four buildings dating to 1948 attributed to Goodrich & Wilking; six large dormitories date from 1907-1935 are attributed to William Dubois)
Odd Fellows Building (1952), 136 S. Wolcott Street, Casper, Wyoming (Goodrich & Wilking), NRHP-listed
Casper Air Terminal (1955), Casper, Wyoming
Sheridan Community College (1958), now known as Sheridan College, 3059 Coffeen Avenue, Sheridan, Wyoming
Casper Junior College (1959), also known as Casper College, 125 College Drive, Casper, Wyoming (works include dormitories designed by Goodrich & Wilking)
Burlington High School, Burlington, Wyoming, considered to be "one of the few Moderne-style institutional buildings in Wyoming."
Casper National Guard Armory, 900 Werner Court, Casper, Wyoming (Leon Goodrich)
Natrona County Courthouse, Casper, Wyoming (Goodrich & Krusmark)
North Casper Clubhouse, 1002 East "L" Street, Casper, Wyoming (Goodrich & Krusmark), NRHP-listed
Ziettermeister Building, Casper, Wyoming (Goodrich & Krusmark)
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Rialto Theatre
| 1,313 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 688 | 1,064 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physaloptera
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Physaloptera
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Physaloptera spp. as human parasites
|
Physaloptera / Physaloptera spp. as human parasites
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English: Figure 3 of paper: The six Physaloptera spp. eggs found in the soil sample. Note the embryos in A, B, D. Arrows in (B) show the considerable thickness of the egg shell. The diagnosis cannot be made with certainty for the egg in (C). Scale bars = 20 μm. Egg shows a hyalinized state of its content (E).
| null | false | true |
Physaloptera is a genus of parasitic nematodes in the family Physalopteridae. Species include:
Physaloptera dilatata
Physaloptera dispar
Physaloptera hispida
Physaloptera losseni
Physaloptera maxillaris
Physaloptera murisbrasiliensis
Physaloptera ngoci
Physaloptera preputialis
Physaloptera retusa
Physaloptera rara
Undescribed or unidentified species have been found on the hispid cotton rat in the southern United States, the marsh rice rat in Florida, and Leontopithecus rosalia, Physalaemus soaresi, Cacajao calvus, and Lagothrix lagotricha in Brazil.
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Most species utilize insects such as crickets, cockroaches, and beetles as intermediate hosts. Several species of Physaloptera can be parasites of primates and man. This rare disease is known as spiruridiasis.
Human infection is considered to be ancient; eggs of Physaloptera sp. were found in a grave of the Bronze Age in Iran.
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Physaloptera spp. eggs found in a grave of the Bronze Age in Iran
| 1,312 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 1,417 | 1,170 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnt_Green_railway_station
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Barnt Green railway station
| null |
Barnt Green railway station
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English: Barnt Green railway station, Worcestershire Opened in 1840 by the Birmingham and Gloucester Railway, later part of the Midland Railway. View south west towards Alvechurch and Redditch (left) on the former 'Gloucester Loop' line, and Blackwell and Gloucester (straight on).
| null | true | true |
Barnt Green railway station serves the village of Barnt Green, North Worcestershire, England. It is situated 9 ¹⁄₂ miles south west of Birmingham New Street. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by West Midlands Trains.
Barnt Green station is at the point of a 'Y' shaped junction between the main line towards Bromsgrove, Worcester and the south-east, and the branch line to Redditch which is part of the Cross-City Line. It has platforms on both lines, until 2018 only the Redditch line platforms saw regular services, however since Cross-City Line services were extended to Bromsgrove, the main line platforms now also see regular use.
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Barnt Green railway station serves the village of Barnt Green, North Worcestershire, England. It is situated 9 ¹⁄₂ miles (15.3 km) south west of Birmingham New Street. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by West Midlands Trains.
Barnt Green station is at the point of a 'Y' shaped junction between the main line towards Bromsgrove, Worcester and the south-east, and the branch line to Redditch which is part of the Cross-City Line. It has platforms on both lines, until 2018 only the Redditch line platforms saw regular services, however since Cross-City Line services were extended to Bromsgrove, the main line platforms now also see regular use.
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The Cross-City Line platforms to the left; to the right, the Worcester Line platforms.
| 1,317 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 1,024 | 648 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eug%C3%A8ne_Alluaud
|
Eugène Alluaud
| null |
Eugène Alluaud
|
English: Spring (Park) Landscape
| null | false | true |
Gilbert Eugène Alluaud was a French landscape painter and ceramicist.
|
Gilbert Eugène Alluaud (25 March 1866, Saint-Martin-Terressus - 27 July 1947, Crozant) was a French landscape painter and ceramicist.
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Spring (Park) Landscape
| 1,320 | 0 |
success
| null | 549 | 457 |
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| 549 | 457 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles-class_submarine
|
Los Angeles-class submarine
|
Engineering and auxiliary systems
|
Los Angeles-class submarine / Design / Engineering and auxiliary systems
|
Taken during an Anti-submarine warfare (ASW) exercise for RIMPAC 2004.
| null | false | true |
The Los Angeles class boats are nuclear-powered fast attack submarines in service with the United States Navy. The submarines are also known as the 688 class, after the hull number of lead vessel USS Los Angeles. They represent two generations and close to half a century of the Navy's attack submarine fleet, which currently has a total of 53 fast attack submarines in all classes. As of 2020, 33 of the Los Angeles class are still in commission and 29 are retired from service. The class has more active nuclear submarines than any other class in the world.
Of the retired boats, a few were in commission for nearly 40 years, including USS Dallas, USS Jacksonville and USS Bremerton. With a wide variance in longevity, 12 of the 688s were laid up halfway through their projected lifespans, USS Phoenix being the youngest-retired at 16 years. Another five also laid up early, due to their midlife reactor refueling being cancelled, and one was lost during overhaul due to arson. Two are being converted to moored training ships, and all others are being scrapped per the Navy's Ship-Submarine Recycling Program. A further four boats were proposed by the Navy, but later cancelled.
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Two watertight compartments are used in the Los Angeles-class submarines. The forward compartment contains crew living spaces, weapons-handling spaces, and control spaces not critical to recovering propulsion. The aft compartment contains the bulk of the submarine's engineering systems, power generation turbines, and water-making equipment. Some submarines in the class are capable of delivering Navy SEALs through either a SEAL Delivery Vehicle deployed from the Dry Deck Shelter or the Advanced SEAL Delivery System mounted on the dorsal side, although the latter was canceled in 2006 and removed from service in 2009. A variety of atmospheric control devices are used to allow the vessel to remain submerged for long periods of time without ventilating, including an electrolytic oxygen generator, which produces oxygen for the crew and hydrogen as a byproduct. The hydrogen is pumped overboard but there is always a risk of fire or explosion from this process.
While on the surface or at snorkel depth, the submarine may use the submarine's auxiliary or emergency diesel generator for power or ventilation (e.g., following a fire). The diesel engine in a 688 class can be quickly started by compressed air during emergencies or to evacuate noxious (nonvolatile) gases from the boat, although 'ventilation' requires raising a snorkel mast. During nonemergency situations, design constraints call for operators to allow the engine to reach normal operating temperatures before it is capable of producing full power, a process that may take from 20 to 30 minutes. However, the diesel generator can be immediately loaded to 100% power output, despite design criteria cautions, at the discretion of the submarine commander on the recommendation of the submarine's engineer, if necessity dictates such actions to: (a) restore electrical power to the submarine, (b) prevent a reactor incident from occurring or escalating, or (c) to protect the lives of the crew or others as determined necessary by the commanding officer.
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USS Key West submerged at periscope depth off the coast of Honolulu, Hawaii in July 2004
| 1,321 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,100 | 742 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007%E2%80%9308_FC_Barcelona_season
|
2007–08 FC Barcelona season
|
Squad information
|
2007–08 FC Barcelona season / Players / Squad information
|
Català: Carles Puyol, jugador del Futbol Club Barcelona, durant el partit FC Barcelona-Getafe CF. Español: Carles Puyol, jugador del Futbol Club Barcelona, durante el partido FC Barcelona-Getafe CF. English: Carles Puyol, FC Barcelona's player, during the match FC Barcelona-Getafe CF.
| null | false | false |
Though it did not produce silverware, Futbol Club Barcelona's 2007–08 season would mark a period of change within the club, having many firsts and lasts. Most importantly, this would be Ronaldinho's last season with the club, being displaced by the coming of Arsenal legend Thierry Henry. This season also marked the breakthrough of young talent Bojan into the first team, as well as the emergence of Lionel Messi as one of the team's key players. On the other hand, this would be Lilian Thuram's last season as a professional footballer, as well as Gianluca Zambrotta's last with the club.
|
The squad has reasonably changed in the summer transfer window. The biggest addition was Thierry Henry, with a transfer fee of €24 million. That equals the transfer fee paid for Samuel Eto'o in 2004, but just below the €30 million paid for Ronaldinho in 2003. Other additions were Eric Abidal, Yaya Touré, and Gabriel Milito that are part of the current start team. On the other end, some important players that were often used last season have left the club, such as, Giovanni van Bronckhorst and Ludovic Giuly. Barcelona still used a great number of players developed in its youth system, 9 of 23, and have two new additions this season: Giovani dos Santos and Bojan (17 years old, the youngest player on the squad).
Most of the players have contracts beyond this end of season, but Deco, an important player, has his contract ending in 2008. The captain is still Carles Puyol, who is from Barcelona's youth system, plays in the first squad since 1999 and currently is the player with the most appearances (268). Currently, the highest scorer is Ronaldinho, with 80 goals. Also Ronaldinho, from August of this year, has a European passport. On mid-October, Samuel Eto'o received Spanish nationality, making him an EU player. The only non-EU player is Yaya Touré. Because Spain ratified the Cotonou Agreement in 2007, however, Touré is now considered an EU player, as his native country of Ivory Coast is a signatory to that agreement, and the 2003 Kolpak ruling extended the Bosman ruling to nations with an associate trading relationship with the EU.
As of 21 October
Last updated: 12 April
Source:FCBarcelona.cat, Players transfer, Wikipedia players' articles, ESPN (for appearances and goals) and footballdatabase.com (for EU passport)
Allowed up to 3 players without EU passport.
Ordered by start team and position on pitch (from back right to front left).
|
Carles Puyol, the captain of FC Barcelona in the 2007-08 season.
| 1,323 | 0 |
success
| null | 468 | 600 |
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| 468 | 600 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrik_Zetterberg
|
Henrik Zetterberg
| null |
Henrik Zetterberg
|
Niklas Kronwall and Henrik Zetterberg of the Detroit Red Wings. (ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily)
| null | true | true |
Carl Henrik Zetterberg is a Swedish former professional ice hockey forward under contract with the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League.
Along with winning the Stanley Cup in 2008, Zetterberg won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the 2008 Stanley Cup playoffs. He won gold medals in the 2006 Ice Hockey World Championships and 2006 Winter Olympics, as part of the first team to ever win both tournaments in the same year, also making him a member of the Triple Gold Club.
|
Carl Henrik Zetterberg ([ˈhɛ̌nːrɪk ˈsɛ̂tːɛrˌbærj]; born 9 October 1980) is a Swedish former professional ice hockey forward under contract with the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League (NHL).
Along with winning the Stanley Cup in 2008, Zetterberg won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the 2008 Stanley Cup playoffs. He won gold medals in the 2006 Ice Hockey World Championships and 2006 Winter Olympics, as part of the first team to ever win both tournaments in the same year, also making him a member of the Triple Gold Club.
|
Zetterberg in 2012
| 1,315 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,244 | 1,370 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_73_Easting
|
Battle of 73 Easting
|
74 Easting and beyond
|
Battle of 73 Easting / 74 Easting and beyond
|
English: The desert lights up with burning Iraqi Type 69 tanks after an attack by the 1st United Kingdom Armored Division during Operation Desert Storm.
| null | false | true |
The Battle of 73 Easting was fought on 26 February 1991, during the Persian Gulf War, between the armoured forces of the United States as well as the 1st Armoured Division of the United Kingdom and those of the Iraqi Republican Guard and its Tawakalna Division. It was named for a UTM north-south coordinate line in the featureless desert that was used as a phase line to measure progress of the offensive as they were going through what the Iraqis thought was trackless desert. The battle was later described in a documentary as "the last great tank battle of the 20th century." This battle took place several hours after another, smaller, tank battle known as the Battle of Al Busayyah.
The main U.S. unit in the battle was the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, a 4,500 man reconnaissance and security element assigned to VII Corps. It consisted of three ground squadrons, an aviation squadron, and a support squadron. Each ground squadron was made up of three cavalry troops, a tank company, a self-propelled howitzer battery, and a headquarters troop. Each troop comprised 120 soldiers, 12–13 M3 Bradley fighting vehicles and nine M1A1 Abrams main battle tanks.
|
By 22:30, the battle at 2nd ACR's front, at 74 Easting, was ending with most of the engaged Iraqi elements burning or destroyed as the 1st Infantry Division began its forward passage of lines. The 1st Infantry Division passed through the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment's line in total darkness and continued to advance on Objective Norfolk, an area encompassing the intersection of the IPSA Pipeline Road, several desert trails, and a large Iraqi supply depot. Now, instead of three armored cavalry squadrons, the Iraqi 18th and 37th Armored Brigades faced six heavy battalions of American tanks and infantry fighting vehicles and another six battalions of 155 mm field artillery. At approximately 23:30, yet another encounter took place: Lt Colonel Taylor Jones's 3rd Battalion, 66th Armor, ran into an Iraqi tank battalion equipped with T-55s. As before, the Iraqis did not run or surrender, but manned their vehicles and weapons to face the advancing Americans. Initially, many American units advanced past Iraqi tanks and crews, who were in shelters or had not yet turned on their engines and so did not appear to be threats in the American crew's thermal sights.
A slightly disoriented Bradley platoon, attempting to follow the M1 tanks, moved across the front of these Iraqi positions, illuminated by burning vehicles behind them. The Iraqis took advantage of this excellent target and opened fire from three directions. The initial volley hit a Bradley, killing three American soldiers. An American tank company trailing the lead units observed the Iraqi fire and joined the melee, quickly destroying three T-55s before they could get off another shot. At the same time, several small antitank rockets hit the Bradley platoon. From the perspective of the tank gunners looking through the thermal sights of the approaching M1 tanks, these flashes appeared to be T-55 tanks shooting at them. The young and exhausted American gunners, convinced they were fighting against a determined enemy, opened fire and hit three more Bradleys. The brigade commander, Colonel David Weisman, decided to pull the battalions back, consolidate, and use his artillery to destroy the aggressive Iraqi infantry.
|
Burning Iraqi Type 69 tanks after an attack by British troops from the 1st Armoured Division during Operation Desert Storm
| 1,278 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 2,845 | 1,901 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryosuke_Doi
|
Ryosuke Doi
| null |
Ryosuke Doi
|
Deutsch: Übung am Boden während der Gerätefinals der Jungen bei den 1st FIG Artistic Gymnastics Junior World Championships in Győr, Ungarn, am 29. Juni 2019. Abgebildet: Ryosuke Doi.English: Floor exercise during the boys' apparatus finals at the 1st FIG Artistic Gymnastics Junior World Championships on 29 June 2019 in Győr, Hungary. Depicted: Ryosuke Doi.
| null | true | true |
Ryosuke Doi is a Japanese artistic gymnast. In 2019, he won the gold medal in the team event and the silver medal in the men's all-around event at the 2019 Junior World Artistic Gymnastics Championships held in Győr, Hungary. In the floor exercise he finished in 4th place.
In 2016, he won the silver medal in the junior men's floor exercise at the 2016 Pacific Rim Gymnastics Championships held in Everett, Washington, United States.
|
Ryosuke Doi (土井 陵輔, Doi Ryōsuke, born 7 January 2002) is a Japanese artistic gymnast. In 2019, he won the gold medal in the team event and the silver medal in the men's all-around event at the 2019 Junior World Artistic Gymnastics Championships held in Győr, Hungary. In the floor exercise he finished in 4th place.
In 2016, he won the silver medal in the junior men's floor exercise at the 2016 Pacific Rim Gymnastics Championships held in Everett, Washington, United States.
|
Ryosuke Doi in 2019
| 1,316 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,870 | 3,164 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southend_Airport_railway_station
|
Southend Airport railway station
| null |
Southend Airport railway station
|
English: Airport station
| null | true | true |
Southend Airport railway station is on the Shenfield to Southend Line in the East of England, serving London Southend Airport, the village of Sutton and northern parts of Southend-on-Sea. It is 39 miles 44 chains down the line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Rochford and Prittlewell. Train services provide an airport rail link between Southend Airport and Central London.
The station is managed by Stobart Rail but the trains serving it are operated by Greater Anglia. The Engineer's Line Reference for the line is SSV; the station's three-letter station code is SIA. The platforms have an operational length for 12-coach trains.
|
Southend Airport railway station is on the Shenfield to Southend Line in the East of England, serving London Southend Airport, the village of Sutton and northern parts of Southend-on-Sea. It is 39 miles 44 chains (63.65 km) down the line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Rochford and Prittlewell. Train services provide an airport rail link between Southend Airport and Central London.
The station is managed by Stobart Rail (Stobart Aviation operates the airport) but the trains serving it are operated by Greater Anglia. The Engineer's Line Reference for the line is SSV; the station's three-letter station code is SIA. The platforms have an operational length for 12-coach trains.
|
The station in 2012
| 1,311 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 4,928 | 3,264 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compagnie_de_1602
|
Compagnie de 1602
|
Become a "Compagnon"
|
Compagnie de 1602 / Become a "Compagnon"
|
Français : Insigne de l'Escalade 2011 - Monnaie
| null | false | false |
The Compagnie de 1602 is an historic and patriotic association in Geneva who organize the official commemoration of the Escalade. This association was established on March 31, 1926.
|
In 1926 as today, the Members of the Compagnie must be Swiss and receive the signature and agreement of two members (as a sponsorship). The foreigners are welcomed as sympathizers members. Every member - men, women and children - pays a financial contribution. Finally there is no religious, political or social distinction within this association.
In 2011 the association had approximately 2500 members.
|
Patriotic pin representing two sides of a coin of 1602.
| 1,291 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,736 | 3,648 |
|
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porte-de-Benauge
|
Porte-de-Benauge
| null |
Porte-de-Benauge
|
Français : Mairie d'Arbis (Gironde, France)Français : Townhall of Arbis (Gironde, France)
|
The town hall in Arbis
| true | false |
Porte-de-Benauge is a commune. It is found in the region Nouvelle-Aquitaine in the Gironde department in the southwest of France. The municipality was created on 1 January 2019 and consists of the former communes of Arbis and Cantois.
|
Porte-de-Benauge is a commune. It is found in the region Nouvelle-Aquitaine in the Gironde department in the southwest of France. The municipality was created on 1 January 2019 and consists of the former communes of Arbis (the seat) and Cantois.
|
The town hall in Arbis
| 1,325 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,576 | 1,932 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Hawaii
|
List of birds of Hawaii
|
Starlings
|
List of birds of Hawaii / Starlings
| null | null | false | false |
This list of birds of Hawaii is a comprehensive listing of all the bird species seen naturally in the U.S. state of Hawaii as determined by Robert L. and Peter Pyle of the Bishop Museum, Honolulu, and modified by subsequent taxonomic changes.
The scope of this list encompasses the entire Hawaiian Islands chain, from Kure Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands to the north, to the "Big Island" of Hawaii to the south. The list contains 337 species. Of them, 64 are or were endemic to the islands, 130 are vagrants and 52 were introduced by humans. Thirty-three of the 64 endemic species are extinct and two formerly established introduced species were extirpated. The list does not include introduced species that have not become established.
This list is presented in the taxonomic sequence of the Check-list of North and Middle American Birds, 7th edition through the 61st Supplement, published by the American Ornithological Society. Common and scientific names are also those of the Check-list, except that native Hawaiian spelling is used where appropriate and the common names of families are from the Clements taxonomy because the AOS list does not include them.
|
Order: Passeriformes Family: Sturnidae
Starlings are small to medium-sized Old World passerine birds with strong feet. Their flight is strong and direct and most are very gregarious. Their preferred habitat is fairly open country, and they eat insects and fruit. The plumage of several species is dark with a metallic sheen.
Common myna, Acridotheres tristis (I) LC
|
Common myna
| 1,331 | 0 |
success
| null | 640 | 493 |
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| 640 | 493 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanford_Site
|
Hanford Site
|
Geography
|
Hanford Site / Geography
| null | null | false | false |
The Hanford Site is a decommissioned nuclear production complex operated by the United States federal government on the Columbia River in Benton County in the U.S. state of Washington. The site has been known by many names, including Hanford Project, Hanford Works, Hanford Engineer Works and Hanford Nuclear Reservation.
Established in 1943 as part of the Manhattan Project in Hanford, south-central Washington, the site was home to the B Reactor, the first full-scale plutonium production reactor in the world. Plutonium manufactured at the site was used in the first nuclear bomb, tested at the Trinity site, and in Fat Man, the third bomb that was detonated over Nagasaki, Japan.
During the Cold War, the project expanded to include nine nuclear reactors and five large plutonium processing complexes, which produced plutonium for most of the more than 60,000 weapons built for the U.S. nuclear arsenal. Nuclear technology developed rapidly during this period, and Hanford scientists produced major technological achievements.
|
The Hanford Site occupies 586 square miles (1,518 km²)—roughly equivalent to half of the total area of Rhode Island—within Benton County, Washington. This land is closed to the general public. It is a desert environment receiving under 10 inches of annual precipitation, covered mostly by shrub-steppe vegetation. The Columbia River flows along the site for approximately 50 miles (80 km), forming its northern and eastern boundary. The original site was 670 square miles (1,740 km²) and included buffer areas across the river in Grant and Franklin counties. Some of this land has been returned to private use and is now covered with orchards, vineyards, and irrigated fields.
In 2000, large portions of the site were turned over to the Hanford Reach National Monument. The site is divided by function into three main areas. The nuclear reactors were located along the river in an area designated as the 100 Area; the chemical separations complexes were located inland in the Central Plateau, designated as the 200 Area; and various support facilities were located in the southeast corner of the site, designated as the 300 Area.
The site is bordered on the southeast by the Tri-Cities, a metropolitan area composed of Richland, Kennewick, Pasco, and smaller communities, and home to nearly 300,000 residents. Hanford is a primary economic base for these cities.
|
A map shows the main areas of the Hanford Site, as well as the buffer zone that was turned over to the Hanford Reach National Monument in 2000
| 1,329 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 830 | 877 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AARP
|
AARP
|
Activities
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AARP / Activities
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English: Former United States Secretary of Labor Perez at AARP's Life@50+ event in 2015.
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Former United States Secretary of Labor Perez at AARP's Life@50+ event in 2015.
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AARP is a United States-based interest group focusing on issues affecting the elderly. According to the organization, it had more than 38 million members as of 2018. The magazine and bulletin it sends to its members are the two largest-circulation publications in the United States.
AARP was founded in 1958 by Ethel Percy Andrus and Leonard Davis. It is an influential lobbying group in the United States. AARP sells paid memberships, and markets insurance and other services to its members.
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Former United States Secretary of Labor Perez at AARP's Life@50+ event in 2015
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,264 | 1,836 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_and_gliding_animals
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Flying and gliding animals
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Extant
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Flying and gliding animals / Flying animals / Extant
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English: A bee buzzing around the lemon tree on my balcony
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A number of animals have evolved aerial locomotion, either by powered flight or by gliding. Flying and gliding animals have evolved separately many times, without any single ancestor. Flight has evolved at least four times, in the insects, pterosaurs, birds, and bats. Gliding has evolved on many more occasions. Usually the development is to aid canopy animals in getting from tree to tree, although there are other possibilities. Gliding, in particular, has evolved among rainforest animals, especially in the rainforests in Asia where the trees are tall and widely spaced. Several species of aquatic animals, and a few amphibians and reptiles have also evolved to acquire this gliding flight ability, typically as a means of evading predators.
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A bee in flight.
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{}
| 1,024 | 768 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artaxerxes_II_of_Persia
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Artaxerxes II of Persia
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Rise to power
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Artaxerxes II of Persia / Rise to power
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English: Artaxerxes II relief portrait detail
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Artaxerxes II Mnemon was the King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire from 404 BC until his death in 358 BC. He was a son of Darius II and Parysatis.
Greek authors gave him the epithet "Mnemon", meaning "remembering"; "having a good memory."
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Darius II died in 404 BC, just before the final victory of the Egyptian general, Amyrtaeus, over the Persians in Egypt.
His successor was his eldest son Arsames, who was crowned as Artaxerxes II in Pasargadae.
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Portrait of Artaxerxes II
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| null | 503 | 609 |
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| 503 | 609 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_projection
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Map projection
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Equidistant
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Map projection / Projections by preservation of a metric property / Equidistant
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English: Eurasia on two-point equidistant projection. 15° graticule; two anchor points are (45°N, 40°E), (30°N, 110°E). Imagery is a derivative of NASA’s Blue Marble summer month composite with oceans lightened to enhance legibility and contrast. Image created with the Geocart map projection software.
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In cartography, a map projection is a way to flatten a globe's surface into a plane in order to make a map. This requires a systematic transformation of the latitudes and longitudes of locations from the surface of the globe into locations on a plane.
All projections of a sphere on a plane necessarily distort the surface in some way and to some extent. Depending on the purpose of the map, some distortions are acceptable and others are not; therefore, different map projections exist in order to preserve some properties of the sphere-like body at the expense of other properties. Every distinct map projection distorts in a distinct way, by definition. The study of map projections is the characterization of these distortions. There is no limit to the number of possible map projections.
Projections are a subject of several pure mathematical fields, including differential geometry, projective geometry, and manifolds. However, "map projection" refers specifically to a cartographic projection.
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If the length of the line segment connecting two projected points on the plane is proportional to the geodesic (shortest surface) distance between the two unprojected points on the globe, then we say that distance has been preserved between those two points. An equidistant projection preserves distances from one or two special points to all other points. The special point or points may get stretched into a line or curve segment when projected. In that case, the point on the line or curve segment closest to the point being measured to must be used to measure the distance.
Plate carrée: Distances from the two poles are preserved, in equatorial aspect.
Azimuthal equidistant: Distances from the center and edge are preserved.
Equidistant conic: Distances from the two poles are preserved, in equatorial aspect.
Werner cordiform Distances from the North Pole are preserved, in equatorial aspect.
Two-point equidistant: Two "control points" are arbitrarily chosen by the map maker; distances from each control point are preserved.
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A two-point equidistant projection of Eurasia
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,058 | 1,616 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfalz_D.XII
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Pfalz D.XII
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Specifications (D.XII)
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Pfalz D.XII / Specifications (D.XII)
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English: Pfalz D.XII preserved at the Musee de l'Air et de l'Espace, Paris Le Bourget
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The Pfalz D.XII was a German fighter aircraft built by Pfalz Flugzeugwerke. Designed by Rudolph Gehringer as a successor to the Pfalz D.III, the D.XII entered service in significant numbers near the end of the First World War. It was the last Pfalz aircraft to see widespread service. Though the D.XII was an effective fighter aircraft, it was overshadowed by the highly successful Fokker D.VII.
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Data from German Aircraft of the First World War
General characteristics
Crew: 1
Length: 6.35 m (20 ft 10 in)
Wingspan: 9 m (29 ft 6 in)
Height: 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in)
Wing area: 21.7 m² (234 sq ft)
Empty weight: 716 kg (1,579 lb)
Gross weight: 897 kg (1,978 lb)
Powerplant: 1 × Mercedes D.IIIa 6-cyl water-cooled in-line piston engine, 130 kW (180 hp)
Performance
Maximum speed: 170 km/h (110 mph, 92 kn)
Endurance: 2½ hours (420 km)
Service ceiling: 5,600 m (18,500 ft)
Rate of climb: 4.09 m/s (805 ft/min)
Time to altitude:
1,000 m (3,281 ft) in 3 minutes 24 seconds
5,000 m (16,404 ft) in 29 minutes 54 seconds
Armament
Guns: 2 × 7.92 mm (0.312 in) LMG 08/15 machine guns
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Pfalz D.XII (serial 2690/18) displayed at the Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace
| 1,327 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,411 | 1,833 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aitor_Ocio
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Aitor Ocio
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Aitor Ocio
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Español: Aitor Ocio, defensa del Athletic Club de Bilbao. Euskara: Aitor Ocio, Bilboko Athletic Clubeko atzelaria. English: Aitor Ocio, defender of Athletic Bilbao. Deutsch: Aitor Ocio, Fußballverteidiger von Athletic Bilbao.
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Aitor Ocio Carrión is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a central defender.
During his 18-year senior career, in which he amassed La Liga totals of 173 matches and five goals, he played mainly for Athletic Bilbao and Sevilla, winning four major titles with the latter, including two UEFA Cups.
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Aitor Ocio Carrión (born 28 November 1976) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a central defender.
During his 18-year senior career, in which he amassed La Liga totals of 173 matches and five goals, he played mainly for Athletic Bilbao (seven years, two spells) and Sevilla (four), winning four major titles with the latter, including two UEFA Cups.
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Ocio as an Athletic Bilbao player (2008)
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| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 513 | 666 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francky_Dury
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Francky Dury
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Francky Dury
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English: Francky Dury
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Francky Dury is a Belgian football manager who is the current manager of Zulte Waregem.
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Francky Dury (born 11 October 1957) is a Belgian football manager who is the current manager of Zulte Waregem.
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Dury in July 2010
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| null | 647 | 465 |
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| 647 | 465 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutinus_elegans
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Mutinus elegans
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Description
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Mutinus elegans / Description
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English: The "devil's dipstick", species Mutinus elegans (Mont.) Fisch. Photographed in New Port Richey, Pasco County, Florida, USA.
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Mutinus elegans, commonly known as the elegant stinkhorn, the dog stinkhorn, the headless stinkhorn, or the devil's dipstick, is a species of fungus in the family Phallaceae. A saprobic species, it is typically found growing on the ground singly or in small groups on woody debris or leaf litter, during summer and autumn in Japan, Europe, and eastern North America. The fruit body begins its development in an "egg" form, resembling somewhat a puffball partially submerged in the ground. As the fungus matures, a slender orange to pink colored stalk emerges that tapers evenly to a pointed tip. The stalk is covered with a foul-smelling slimy green spore mass on the upper third of its length. Flies and other insects feed upon the slime which contains the spores, assisting in their dispersal. Due to their repellent odor, mature specimens are not generally considered edible, although there are reports of the immature "eggs" being consumed. In the laboratory, Mutinus elegans has been shown to inhibit the growth of several microorganisms that can be pathogenic to humans.
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The young fruiting bodies are initially white and spherical or egg-shaped, partially submerged in the ground, with dimensions of 2 to 3 cm (0.8 to 1.2 in) by 1 to 2 cm (0.4 to 0.8 in). As the fruit body matures, the egg ruptures and the spongy spore-bearing stalk emerges; fully grown, it may be from 1 to 15 cm (0.4 to 5.9 in) long and 1.5 to 2 cm (0.6 to 0.8 in) thick. The stalk is hollow and strongly wrinkled overall; its shape is cylindrical below, but it gradually tapers to a narrow apex with a small opening at the tip. The upper half of the stalk is bright red to reddish orange, and the color gradually loses intensity transforming into pinkish white below. The stalk may be straight, or slightly curved. A gelatinous greenish-brown gleba covers the upper third of the stalk in newly emerged specimens. The remains of the "egg" forms a volva around the base of the stalk. The odor of the gleba is foul; one author describes it as "sickly sweet or metallic". The spores are a greenish-brown color. Fruit bodies are attached to the substrate by whitish rhizomorphs that resemble plant roots. American mycologist Smith noted that the eggs are often slow to open, sometimes taking up to two weeks before the stalk expands.
The spores are 4–7 by 2–3 µm, oblong-elliptical, smooth, and embedded in the gleba. A 1982 study revealed that spores of species in the family Phallaceae, including Mutinus elegans, have a hilar scar (0.2–0.3 µm diameter) that is observable with scanning electron microscopy. The hilar scar is a circular indentation at one end of the spore, and it most likely results during the separation of the attachment of the spore to the sterigma of the basidium.
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Specimen from Florida, USA
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| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 1,086 | 1,654 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Johnson_(publisher)
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Joseph Johnson (publisher)
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Informative texts
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Joseph Johnson (publisher) / 1770s: Establishment / Informative texts
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Title page form Laws Respecting Women
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Title page reads, in part "The Laws Respecting Women, as they regard their Natural Rights, or their Connections and Conduct; In which their Interests and Duties are Daughters, Wards, Heiresses, Spinsters, Sisters, Wives, Widows, Mothers, Legatees, Executrixes, &x. Are ascertained and enumerated: Also, the Obligations of Parent and Child, And the Condition of Minors...."
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Joseph Johnson was an influential 18th-century London bookseller and publisher. His publications covered a wide variety of genres and a broad spectrum of opinions on important issues. Johnson is best known for publishing the works of radical thinkers such as Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Thomas Malthus, Erasmus Darwin and Joel Barlow, feminist economist Priscilla Wakefield, as well as religious dissenters such as Joseph Priestley, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Gilbert Wakefield, and George Walker.
In the 1760s, Johnson established his publishing business, which focused primarily on religious works. He also became friends with Priestley and the artist Henry Fuseli – two relationships that lasted his entire life and brought him much business. In the 1770s and 1780s, Johnson expanded his business, publishing important works in medicine and children's literature as well as the popular poetry of William Cowper and Erasmus Darwin. Throughout his career, Johnson helped shape the thought of his era not only through his publications, but also through his support of innovative writers and thinkers.
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After 1770, Johnson began to publish a wider array of books, particularly scientific and medical texts. One of the most important was John Hunter's A Natural History of the Human Teeth, Part I (1771), which "elevated dentistry to the level of surgery". Johnson also supported doctors when they questioned the efficacy of cures, such as with John Millar in his Observations on Antimony (1774), which claimed that Dr James's Fever Powder was ineffective. This was a risky publication for Johnson, because this patent medicine was quite popular and his fellow bookseller John Newbery had made his fortune from selling it.
In 1777 Johnson published the remarkable Laws Respecting Women, as they Regard Their Natural Rights, which is an explication, for the layperson, of exactly what its title suggests. As Tyson comments, "the ultimate value of this book lies in its arming women with the knowledge of their legal rights in situations where they had traditionally been vulnerable because of ignorance". Johnson published Laws Respecting Women anonymously, but it is sometimes credited to Elizabeth Chudleigh Bristol, known for her bigamous marriage to the 2nd Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull after having previously privately married Augustus John Hervey, afterwards 3rd Earl of Bristol. This publication foreshadowed Johnson's efforts to promote works about women's issues – such as A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) – and his support of women writers.
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Laws Respecting Women (1777), published by Johnson, helped Mary Wollstonecraft with the background for her feminist novel Maria: or, The Wrongs of Woman(1798).[41]
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{}
| 297 | 599 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Horn
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Andrew Horn
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Andrew Horn
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English: Title page of Andrew Horn (1642) La somme appelle Mirroir des iustices: vel Speculum Iusticiariorum, Factum per Andream Horne (1st ed.), London:  Printed by E[dward] G[riffin] for Matthew Walbanke and Richard Best and are to be sold at their shops at Grayes Inne Gate OCLC: 84157087. 
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Andrew Horn was a fishmonger of Bridge Street, London, lawyer and legal scholar. He served as Chamberlain of the City of London from 1320 until his death in 1328. Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England describe Horn as "one of the most learned lawyers of his day".
Horn is best known for his book Liber Horn, compiled in 1311. Besides coroners' reports and other mundane matters, Liber Horn contains some of the earliest and most reliable versions of early English laws, including certain Statutes of uncertain date and an annotated copy of Magna Carta of 1297. Horn is also thought to have compiled and edited La somme appelle Mirroir des justices: vel Speculum justiciariorum.
Horn was a member of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers.
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Andrew Horn (c. 1275–1328) was a fishmonger of Bridge Street, London, lawyer and legal scholar. He served as Chamberlain of the City of London from 1320 until his death in 1328. Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England describe Horn as "one of the most learned lawyers of his day".
Horn is best known for his book Liber Horn, compiled in 1311. Besides coroners' reports and other mundane matters, Liber Horn contains some of the earliest and most reliable versions of early English laws, including certain Statutes of uncertain date and an annotated copy of Magna Carta of 1297. Horn is also thought to have compiled and edited La somme appelle Mirroir des justices: vel Speculum justiciariorum (translated variously as The Mirror of Justices or The Mirror of Justice).
Horn was a member of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers.
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The title page of the first edition of Andrew Horn's Mirroir des iustices (1642),[1] written in Anglo-Norman and Latin
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| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 716 | 1,058 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornb%C3%A6k
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Hornbæk
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Hornbæk
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Hornbaek, Denmark
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Hornbæk Harbour
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Hornbæk is a seaside resort town on the north coast of the Danish island of Sjælland, facing the Øresund which separates Denmark from Sweden. It is part of Helsingør Municipality and is located 12 km north-west of Helsingør, and is mainly known for its fashionable holiday homes and broad sandy beaches.
As of 2020, Hornbæk proper has a population of 3,641 but since 2010 it has grown together with neighbouring Dronningmølle in Gribskov Municipality, forming an urban area with a combined population of 5,334.
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Hornbæk ([ˈhoɐ̯nˌpek]) is a seaside resort town on the north coast of the Danish island of Sjælland, facing the Øresund which separates Denmark from Sweden. It is part of Helsingør Municipality and is located 12 km north-west of Helsingør, and is mainly known for its fashionable holiday homes and broad sandy beaches.
As of 2020, Hornbæk proper has a population of 3,641 but since 2010 it has grown together with neighbouring Dronningmølle in Gribskov Municipality, forming an urban area with a combined population of 5,334.
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Hornbæk Harbour
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| 1,280 | 960 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian_temple
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Egyptian temple
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Inner chambers
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Egyptian temple / Design and decoration / Inner chambers
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Deutsch: Heiligtum im Tempel von Edfu, Ägypten
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Small room with a cabinet-like structure near the back
| false | false |
Egyptian temples were built for the official worship of the gods and in commemoration of the pharaohs in ancient Egypt and regions under Egyptian control. Temples were seen as houses for the gods or kings to whom they were dedicated. Within them, the Egyptians performed a variety of rituals, the central functions of Egyptian religion: giving offerings to the gods, reenacting their mythological interactions through festivals, and warding off the forces of chaos. These rituals were seen as necessary for the gods to continue to uphold maat, the divine order of the universe. Housing and caring for the gods were the obligations of pharaohs, who therefore dedicated prodigious resources to temple construction and maintenance. Out of necessity, pharaohs delegated most of their ritual duties to a host of priests, but most of the populace was excluded from direct participation in ceremonies and forbidden to enter a temple's most sacred areas. Nevertheless, a temple was an important religious site for all classes of Egyptians, who went there to pray, give offerings, and seek oracular guidance from the god dwelling within.
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The temple's inner chambers centered on the sanctuary of the temple's primary god, which typically lay along the axis near the back of the temple building, and in pyramid temples directly against the pyramid base. The sanctuary was the focus of temple ritual, the place where the divine presence manifested most strongly. The form in which it manifested itself varied. In Aten temples and traditional solar shrines, the object of ritual was the sun itself or a benben stone representing the sun, worshipped in a court open to the sky. In many mortuary temples, the inner areas contained statues of the deceased pharaoh, or a false door where his bꜣ ("personality", Egyptological ba) was believed to appear to receive offerings.
In most temples, the focus was the cult image: a statue of the temple god which that god's ba was believed to inhabit while interacting with humans. The sanctuary in these temples contained either a naos, a cabinet-like shrine that housed the divine image, or a model barque containing the image within its cabin, which was used to carry the image during festival processions. In some cases the sanctuary may have housed several cult statues. To emphasize the sanctuary's sacred nature, it was kept in total darkness. Whereas in earlier times the sanctuary lay at the very back of the building, in the Late and Ptolemaic periods it became a freestanding building inside the temple, further insulated from the outside world by the surrounding corridors and rooms.
Subsidiary chapels, dedicated to deities associated with the primary god, lay to the sides of the main one. When the main temple god was male, the secondary chapels were often dedicated to that god's mythological consort and child. The secondary chapels in mortuary temples were devoted to gods associated with kingship.
Several other rooms neighbored the sanctuary. Many of these rooms were used to store ceremonial equipment, ritual texts, or temple valuables; others had specific ritual functions. The room where offerings were given to the deity was often separate from the sanctuary itself, and in temples without a barque in the sanctuary, there was a separate shrine to store the barque. In late temples the ritual areas could extend to chapels on the roof and crypts below the floor. Finally, in the exterior wall at the back of the temple, there were often niches for laymen to pray to the temple god, as close as they could come to its dwelling place.
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Shrine in the cella of the Temple of Edfu
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| 3,064 | 4,083 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Minnesota
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History of Minnesota
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European exploration
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History of Minnesota / European exploration
| null | null | false | false |
The history of the U.S. state of Minnesota is shaped by its original Native American residents, European exploration and settlement, and the emergence of industries made possible by the state's natural resources. Minnesota achieved prominence through fur trading, logging, and farming, and later through railroads, and iron mining. While those industries remain important, the state's economy is now driven by banking, computers, and health care.
The earliest known settlers followed herds of large game to the region during the last glacial period. They preceded the Anishinaabe, the Dakota, and other Native American inhabitants. Fur traders from France arrived during the 17th century. Europeans moving west during the 19th century, drove out most of the Native Americans. Fort Snelling, built to protect United States territorial interests, brought early settlers to the area. Early settlers used Saint Anthony Falls for powering sawmills in the area that became Minneapolis, while others settled downriver in the area that became Saint Paul.
Minnesota gained legal existence as the Minnesota Territory in 1849, and became the 32nd U.S. state on May 11, 1858.
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In the late 1650s, Pierre Esprit Radisson and Médard des Groseilliers were likely the first Europeans to meet Dakota Native Americans while following the southern shore of Lake Superior (which would become northern Wisconsin). The north shore was explored in the 1660s. Among the first to do this was Claude Allouez, a missionary on Madeline Island. He made an early map of the area in 1671.
Around this time, the Ojibwa Native Americans reached Minnesota as part of a westward migration. Having come from a region around Maine, they were experienced at dealing with European traders. They dealt in furs and possessed guns. Tensions rose between the Ojibwa and Dakota in the ensuing years.
In 1671, France signed a treaty with a number of tribes to allow trade. Shortly thereafter, French trader Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut arrived in the area and began trading with the local tribes. Du Lhut explored the western area of Lake Superior, near his namesake, the city of Duluth, and areas south of there. He helped to arrange a peace agreement between the Dakota and Ojibwa tribes in 1679.
Father Louis Hennepin with companions Michel Aco and Antoine Auguelle (a.k.a. Picard Du Gay) headed north from the area of Illinois after coming into that area with an exploration party headed by René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle. They were captured by a Dakota tribe in 1680. While with the tribe, they came across and named the Falls of Saint Anthony. Soon, Du Lhut negotiated to have Hennepin's party released from captivity. Hennepin returned to Europe and wrote a book, Description of Louisiana, published in 1683, about his travels where many portions (including the part about Saint Anthony Falls) were strongly embellished. As an example, he described the falls as being a drop of fifty or sixty feet, when they were really only about sixteen feet. Pierre-Charles Le Sueur explored the Minnesota River to the Blue Earth area around 1700. He thought the blue earth was a source of copper, and he told stories about the possibility of mineral wealth, but there actually was no copper to be found.
Explorers searching for the fabled Northwest Passage and large inland seas in North America continued to pass through the state. In 1721, the French built Fort Beauharnois on Lake Pepin. In 1731, the Grand Portage trail was first traversed by a European, Pierre La Vérendrye. He used a map written down on a piece of birch bark by Ochagach, an Assiniboine guide. The North West Company, which traded in fur and competed with the Hudson's Bay Company, was established along the Grand Portage in 1783–1784.
Jonathan Carver, a shoemaker from Massachusetts, visited the area in 1767 as part of another expedition. He and the rest of the exploration party were only able to stay for a relatively short period, due to supply shortages. They headed back east to Fort Michilimackinac, where Carver wrote journals about the trip, though others would later claim the stories were largely plagiarized from others. The stories were published in 1778, but Carver died before the book earned him much money. Carver County and Carver's Cave are named for him.
Until 1818 the Red River Valley was considered British and was subject to several colonization schemes, such as the Red River Colony. The boundary where the Red River crossed the 49th parallel was not marked until 1823, when Stephen H. Long conducted a survey expedition. When several hundred settlers abandoned the Red River Colony in the 1820s, they entered the United States by way of the Red River Valley, instead of moving to eastern Canada or returning to Europe. The region had been occupied by Métis people, the children of voyageurs and Native Americans, since the middle 17th century.
Several efforts were made to determine the source of the Mississippi River. The true source was found in 1832, when Henry Schoolcraft was guided by a group of Ojibwa headed by Ozaawindib ("Yellow Head") to a lake in northern Minnesota. Schoolcraft named it Lake Itasca, combining the Latin words veritas ("truth") and caput ("head"). T
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A painting of Father Hennepin 'discovering' Saint Anthony Falls.
| 1,335 | 0 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodor_Helm
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Theodor Helm
| null |
Theodor Helm
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(Portrait of Theodor Helm 1843-1920, famous Viena music critic Scanned by me from an original family photo in my possession )
| null | false | true |
Theodor Otto Helm was an Austrian music critic and writer.
Theodor Otto Helm was a leading figure in Viennese musical life and a prominent music critic in Vienna for fifty years. While Helm specialized in criticism of the works of Ludwig van Beethoven, Anton Bruckner, Johannes Brahms, Wilhelm Richard Wagner, Franz Liszt, and Antonín Dvořák, he also wrote on younger composers including Béla Bartók and Gustav Mahler, and Arnold Schoenberg. Heavily involved in the Vienna music scene, including the Wiener Akademischer Wagner Verein, Helm counted both Bruckner and Brahms as close acquaintances.
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Theodor Otto Helm (April 9, 1843 in Vienna – December 25, 1920 Vienna) was an Austrian music critic and writer.
Theodor Otto Helm was a leading figure in Viennese musical life and a prominent music critic in Vienna for fifty years (1866–1916). While Helm specialized in criticism of the works of Ludwig van Beethoven, Anton Bruckner, Johannes Brahms, Wilhelm Richard Wagner, Franz Liszt, and Antonín Dvořák, he also wrote on younger composers including Béla Bartók and Gustav Mahler, and Arnold Schoenberg. Heavily involved in the Vienna music scene, including the Wiener Akademischer Wagner Verein, Helm counted both Bruckner and Brahms as close acquaintances.
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Theodor Otto Helm, c. 1899
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/Theodor_Helm.jpg
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcatel_One_Touch_300
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Alcatel One Touch 300
| null |
Alcatel One Touch 300
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English: Alcatel OT 300 series
| null | false | true |
The Alcatel OT 300 is a discontinued, low range mobile phone created by Alcatel and was introduced in Q1 2000. It weighs 103 g and its dimensions are 109 mm × 45 mm × 22 mm, 99 cc. Its monochrome screen has a maximum resolution of 49x96 pixels and the phone includes a NiMH 650 mAh rechargeable battery giving it a standby time of 165 hours.
Related models are OT 301, OT 302 and OT 303. It's being referred as the Alcatel BE-4 on the label.
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The Alcatel OT 300 is a discontinued, low range mobile phone created by Alcatel and was introduced in Q1 2000. It weighs 103 g (3.6 oz) and its dimensions are 109 mm × 45 mm × 22 mm (4.29 in × 1.77 in × 0.87 in), 99 cc (6.0 cu in). Its monochrome screen has a maximum resolution of 49x96 pixels and the phone includes a NiMH 650 mAh rechargeable battery giving it a standby time of 165 hours.
Related models are OT 301, OT 302 and OT 303. It's being referred as the Alcatel BE-4 on the label.
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Alcatel OT 300 series
| 1,342 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,112 | 2,816 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consolidated_Credit_Union_Place
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Consolidated Credit Union Place
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Events
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Consolidated Credit Union Place / Events
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English: Credit Union Place (formerly the Summerside Wellness Centre), a community centre in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.
| null | false | true |
Consolidated Credit Union Place is a multi purpose facility that opened in two stages in April 2006 in the City of Summerside, Prince Edward Island, Canada. It contains an aquatics centre, meeting and convention rooms, a fitness centre, two NHL size ice surface arenas, bowling lanes and an indoor walking track. The swimming portion consists of a 25 metre competition pool, pleasure pool, a water slide, a water mushroom, a hot tub, steam room, and sauna. There is also a conference centre over 4,000 square feet in size, and Iron Haven Gym, with two squash courts and weight lifting equipment. The second portion, the Arenas, were designed to replace Cahill Stadium and Steele Arena.
Beginning in the fall of 2011, the venue was home to the Summerside Storm of the National Basketball League of Canada until the team relocated to the Eastlink Centre in Charlottetown.
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On September 14 and 15, 2011, Elton John performed sold-out shows at Credit Union Place as part of his tour of the Canadian Maritime Provinces.
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Forecourt and main entrance
| 1,348 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,000 | 1,330 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaihimmakuhari_Station
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Kaihimmakuhari Station
| null |
Kaihimmakuhari Station
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English: Kaihimmakuhari (Kaihin-Makuhari) Station on the Keiyo Line, Chiba, Japan日本語: 京葉線海浜幕張駅南口。2013年秋に内外装のリニューアルが行われた。
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Kaihimmakuhari Station is a railway station in Mihama-ku, Chiba city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company.
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Kaihimmakuhari Station (海浜幕張駅, Kaihin-makuhari-eki) is a railway station in Mihama-ku, Chiba city, Chiba Prefecture, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).
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The south entrance in December 2013
| 1,343 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altoona,_Pennsylvania
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Altoona, Pennsylvania
| null |
Altoona, Pennsylvania
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English: A view of Fairview from Altoona Regional
| null | false | true |
Altoona is a city in south central Pennsylvania. About 46,320 people lived there in 2010. The city was founded in 1849. It was incorporated in 1868.
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Altoona is a city in south central Pennsylvania. About 46,320 people lived there in 2010. The city was founded in 1849. It was incorporated in 1868.
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The Fairview District of Altoona, Pa
| 1,340 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celibacy
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Celibacy
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Catholic Church
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Celibacy / Christianity / Catholic Church
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Português: Congresso Clariano (Canindé (Brasil), 9 a 11 ago. 2012)
| null | false | false |
Celibacy is the state of voluntarily being unmarried, sexually abstinent, or both, usually for religious reasons. It is often in association with the role of a religious official or devotee. In its narrow sense, the term celibacy is applied only to those for whom the unmarried state is the result of a sacred vow, act of renunciation, or religious conviction. In a wider sense, it is commonly understood to only mean abstinence from sexual activity.
Celibacy has existed in one form or another throughout history, in virtually all the major religions of the world, and views on it have varied. Judaism strongly opposes celibacy. However, the priests of the Essenes, a Jewish sect during the Second Temple period, practised celibacy. The Romans viewed celibacy as an aberration and legislated fiscal penalties against it, with the sole exception granted to the Vestal Virgins. The Islamic attitudes toward celibacy have been complex as well. Several Hadiths indicate that Prophet Muhammad denounced celibacy, but some Sufi orders embrace it.
Classical Hindu culture encouraged asceticism and celibacy in the later stages of life, after one has met one's societal obligations.
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During the first three or four centuries, no law was promulgated prohibiting clerical marriage. Celibacy was a matter of choice for bishops, priests, and deacons.
Statutes forbidding clergy from having wives were written beginning with the Council of Elvira (306) but these early statutes were not universal and were often defied by clerics and then retracted by hierarchy. The Synod of Gangra (345) condemned a false asceticism whereby worshipers boycotted celebrations presided over by married clergy." The Apostolic Constitutions (c. 400) excommunicated a priest or bishop who left his wife 'under the pretense of piety"’ (Mansi, 1:51).
"A famous letter of Synesius of Cyrene (c. 414) is evidence both for the respecting of personal decision in the matter and for contemporary appreciation of celibacy. For priests and deacons clerical marriage continued to be in vogue".
"The Second Lateran Council (1139) seems to have enacted the first written law making sacred orders a diriment impediment to marriage for the universal Church." Celibacy was first required of some clerics in 1123 at the First Lateran Council. Because clerics resisted it, the celibacy mandate was restated at the Second Lateran Council (1139) and the Council of Trent (1545–64). In places, coercion and enslavement of clerical wives and children was apparently involved in the enforcement of the law. "The earliest decree in which the children [of clerics] were declared to be slaves and never to be enfranchised [freed] seems to have been a canon of the Synod of Pavia in 1018. Similar penalties were promulgated against wives and concubines (see the Synod of Melfi, 1189 can. Xii), who by the very fact of their unlawful connexion with a subdeacon or clerk of higher rank became liable to be seized by the over-lord". Celibacy for priests continues to be a contested issue even today.
In the Roman Catholic Church, the Twelve Apostles are considered to have been the first priests and bishops of the Church. Some say the call to be eunuchs for the sake of Heaven in Matthew 19 was a call to be sexually continent and that this developed into celibacy for priests as the successors of the apostles. Others see the call to be sexually continent in Matthew 19 to be a caution for men who were too readily divorcing and remarrying.
The view of the Church is that celibacy is a reflection of life in Heaven, a source of detachment from the material world which aids in one's relationship with God. Celibacy is designed to "consecrate themselves with undivided heart to the Lord and to "the affairs of the Lord, they give themselves entirely to God and to men. It is a sign of this new life to the service of which the Church's minister is consecrated; accepted with a joyous heart celibacy radiantly proclaims the Reign of God." In contrast, Saint Peter, whom the Church considers its first Pope, was married given that he had a mother-in-law whom Christ healed (Matthew 8).
Usually, only celibate men are ordained as priests in the Latin Rite. Married clergy who have converted from other Christian denominations can be ordained Roman Catholic priests without becoming celibate. Priestly celibacy is not doctrine of the Church (such as the belief in the Assumption of Mary) but a matter of discipline, like the use of the vernacular (local) language in Mass or Lenten fasting and abstinence. As such, it can theoretically change at any time though it still must be obeyed by Catholics until the change were to take place. The Eastern Catholic Churches ordain both celibate and married men. However, in both the East and the West, bishops are chosen from among those who are celibate. In Ireland, several priests have fathered children, the two most prominent being Bishop Eamonn Casey and Father Michael Cleary.
The classical heritage flourished throughout the Middle Ages in both the Byzantine Greek East and the Latin West. Will Durant has made a case that certain prominent features of Plato's ideal community were discernible in the organization, dogma and effectiveness of "the" Medieval Church in Europe:
"The clergy,
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Conventual Franciscan friar, 2012
| 1,339 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,216 | 4,288 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NVI_F.K.32
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NVI F.K.32
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Specifications
|
NVI F.K.32 / Specifications
|
English: Koolhoven FK-32 3-view drawing from Les Ailes February 4,1926
| null | false | true |
The NVI F.K.32 was a tandem two seat biplane training aircraft designed and built in the Netherlands in the mid-1920s. It did not go into service.
|
Data from Wesselink
General characteristics
Crew: Two
Length: 7.10 m (23 ft 4 in)
Wingspan: 8.00 m (26 ft 3 in)
Gross weight: 870 kg (1,918 lb)
Powerplant: 1 × Clerget 9B 9-cylinder rotary engine, 97 kW (130 hp)
Propellers: 2-bladed
Performance
Maximum speed: 150 km/h (93 mph; 81 kn)
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Koolhoven FK-32 3-view drawing from Les Ailes February 4,1926
| 1,341 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 2,441 | 3,671 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Brage_Nordlander
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Nils Brage Nordlander
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Medicine
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Nils Brage Nordlander / Medicine
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Svenska: Medicinhistoriska museet på f.d. mentalsjukhusområdet Ulleråker, Uppsala, Sverige. English: Museum of medicine history at former mental hospital area Ulleråker, Uppsala, Sweden
| null | false | false |
Nils Brage Nordlander was a Swedish speciality doctor attached to the Hospital of Ulleråker. As a politician, he served as the president of the county council of Uppsala, representing the Swedish People's Party, the predecessor of the Liberals.
Nils Brage Nordlander was active in the establishment of the Museum of Medical History in Uppsala along with his wife Brita Nordlander, to which he also became an important donor.
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Nils Brage Nordlander, a recurrent contributor to medical magazines such as Läkartidningen, was a medical pioneer in studies both on dieting and the restless legs syndrome. Besides being an early prominent advocator of the low-carbohydrate diet as "one of the leading experts on dieting", according to Hemmets veckotidning (1966), he was also a pioneer in the study of the restless legs syndrome in 1953, treating patients by injection of iron according to his casual theory attributed to iron deficiency.
Nils Brage Nordlander was active in the establishment of the Museum of Medical History in Uppsala along with his wife Brita Nordlander, to which he also became an important donor.
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The Museum of Medical History in Uppsala.
| 1,297 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 5,336 | 3,557 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seosan
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Seosan
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Yeonghyeon-ri Rock-carved Buddha Triad (용현리 마애여래삼존상)
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Seosan / Culture and tourism / Yeonghyeon-ri Rock-carved Buddha Triad (용현리 마애여래삼존상)
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English: Rock-carved triad buddha in Seosan
| null | false | true |
Seosan is a city in South Chungcheong Province, South Korea, with a population of roughly 175,000 according to the 2017 census. Located at the northwestern end of South Chungcheong Province, it is bounded by Dangjin City, Naepo New Town, Yesan-gun and Hongseong-gun on the east and by Taean-gun and the Yellow Sea on the west, and 125 km south of Seoul, 159 km northwest of Daejeon and 34 km northwest of Naepo New Town. Seosan is the hub of transportation of west coast where Seohaean Expressway, Daejeon-Dangjin Expressway, National Highways No. 29, 32, 38 and 45 intersect meet, this city has great traffic conditions towards the metropolitan area and major cities.
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During the Three Kingdoms Period (~ 57 BCE - 668 CE), the Seosan-Haemi area was under the control of the Kingdom of Baekje (백제), and although there are very few ruins from this period in the Seosan-Haemi area, the Yeonghyeon-ri Rock-carved Buddha triad is a phenomenal exception. Carved in either the late 6th or early 7th century CE, the carving consists of a Buddha standing on a lotus leaf, flanked by two Bodhisattva. Although this carving has been designated a National Treasure of Korea, it receives relatively few visitors due to its isolation. The carving is best viewed in the morning, when the entirety of the triad is illuminated by the rising sun, and is accessible by local buses from Seosan and Unsan-ri, or by a half-hour drive or ninety-minute bike ride directly from Seosan.
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Yonghyeon-ri Rock-carved Buddha Triad
| 1,344 | 0 |
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| 1,920 | 1,280 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Morris_(musician)
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Matt Morris (musician)
| null |
Matt Morris (musician)
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English: Matt Morris performs at First Presbyterian Church at the SXSW Festival.
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Morris performing at SXSW in 2010
| true | true |
Matthew David "Matt" Morris is an American producer and songwriter. He has released solo projects on Tennman/Interscope Records, but is best known for his work as a songwriter and producer for a variety of artists, including Joy Williams, Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, Reba McEntire, Mary J. Blige, Sarah McLachlan, Kimbra, and Cher.
He achieved early fame when he appeared on the Disney Channel television series The All-New Mickey Mouse Club, A.K.A. MMC in the early 1990s, where he was a cast member from 1991 to 1996. Morris' January 2010 performance of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" with Justin Timberlake and Charlie Sexton on the Hope for Haiti Now telethon became the most downloaded song from the international broadcast's digital release and went to #1 on the iTunes music chart and #13 on the Billboard Hot 100.
|
Matthew David "Matt" Morris (born Matthew Burton Morris on May 9, 1979) is an American producer and songwriter. He has released solo projects on Tennman/Interscope Records, but is best known for his work as a songwriter and producer for a variety of artists, including Joy Williams, Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, Reba McEntire, Mary J. Blige, Sarah McLachlan, Kimbra, and Cher.
He achieved early fame when he appeared on the Disney Channel television series The All-New Mickey Mouse Club, A.K.A. MMC in the early 1990s, where he was a cast member from 1991 to 1996 (seasons 4–7). Morris' January 2010 performance of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" with Justin Timberlake and Charlie Sexton on the Hope for Haiti Now telethon became the most downloaded song from the international broadcast's digital release and went to #1 on the iTunes music chart and #13 on the Billboard Hot 100.
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Morris performing at SXSW in 2010
| 1,355 | 0 |
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| null | 450 | 543 |
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| 450 | 543 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986_FIFA_World_Cup_Final
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1986 FIFA World Cup Final
| null |
1986 FIFA World Cup Final
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English: Argentina and West Germany entering to the field to play the final.
| null | true | true |
The 1986 FIFA World Cup Final was the final and deciding game of the 1986 FIFA World Cup, held in Mexico. The match was held at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City on 29 June 1986 and had an attendance of 114,600. It was contested by Argentina and West Germany. Argentina won the match 3–2 in normal time.
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The 1986 FIFA World Cup Final was the final and deciding game of the 1986 FIFA World Cup, held in Mexico. The match was held at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City on 29 June 1986 and had an attendance of 114,600. It was contested by Argentina and West Germany. Argentina won the match 3–2 in normal time.
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The teams enter the field at the Estadio Azteca
| 1,357 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,140 | 753 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pago_Ayl%C3%A9s
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Pago Aylés
| null |
Pago Aylés
| null | null | true | false |
Pago Aylés is a branch of Finca Aylés, a Spanish winery in Aragón, Spain. The Pago Aylés branch uses the Vino de Pago wine appellation, a classification for Spanish wine applied to individual vineyards or wine estates, unlike the Denominación de Origen Protegida or Denominación de Origen Calificada which is applied to an entire wine region. The Pago Aylés winery was formed as a Vino de Pago in 2003, and geographically it lies within the extent of the Cariñena DOP. Along with the Vino de Pago appellation, the winery sells wines under the Cariñena DOP appellation as Bodega Aylés Demba wines.
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Pago Aylés is a branch of Finca Aylés, a Spanish winery in Aragón, Spain. The Pago Aylés branch uses the Vino de Pago wine appellation, a classification for Spanish wine applied to individual vineyards or wine estates, unlike the Denominación de Origen Protegida (DOP) or Denominación de Origen Calificada (DOCa) which is applied to an entire wine region. The Pago Aylés winery was formed as a Vino de Pago in 2003, and geographically it lies within the extent of the Cariñena DOP. Along with the Vino de Pago appellation, the winery sells wines under the Cariñena DOP appellation as Bodega Aylés Demba wines.
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Pago Aylés lies geographically within the Cariñena DOP in the province of Zaragoza in the region of Aragon
| 1,352 | 0 |
failed_to_resize
| null | null | null | null | null | null |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heck%27s
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Heck's
| null |
Heck's
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English: Sign from the defunct Heck's Department Store, West Virginia
| null | true | true |
Heck's Department Store, a chain of West Virginia based discount department stores, was founded by Boone County natives and businessmen Fred Haddad, Tom Ellis, and Lester Ellis and wholesale distributor Douglas Cook. The Heck's name was a combination of the names Haddad, Ellis and Cook. Haddad served as President, Lester Ellis was Vice-President, and Tom Ellis was Secretary-Treasurer.
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Heck's Department Store, a chain of West Virginia based discount department stores, was founded by Boone County natives and businessmen Fred Haddad, Tom Ellis, and Lester Ellis and wholesale distributor Douglas Cook. The Heck's name was a combination of the names Haddad, Ellis and Cook. Haddad served as President, Lester Ellis was Vice-President, and Tom Ellis was Secretary-Treasurer.
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Sign from a defunct Heck's Department Store in West Virginia
| 1,356 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,003 | 752 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSF_Lab
|
PSF Lab
| null |
PSF Lab
|
English: Screenshot of PSF Lab 3.0 under Windows 7 x64. It shows a calculated Point Spread Function of a confocal microscope with some aberrations in the xz plane as an example. Français : Capture d'écran/screenshot de PSF Lab 3.0 sous Windows 7 x64. Un example d'une fonction d'étalement du point (anglais: Point Spread Function) calculée dans le plan xz avec quelques aberrations optiques est montré. Deutsch: Screenshot von PSF Lab 3.0 unter Windows 7 x64. Als Beispiel wird eine Punktspreizfunktion (engl. Point Spread Function) in der xz Ebene mit kleinen optischen Aberrationen gezeigt.
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PSF Lab on Windows 7
| true | true |
PSF Lab is a software program that allows the calculation of the illumination point spread function of a confocal microscope under various imaging conditions. The calculation of the electric field vectors is based on a rigorous, vectorial model that takes polarization effects in the near-focus region and high numerical aperture microscope objectives into account.
The polarization of the input beam can be chosen freely. Furthermore, a constant or Gaussian shaped input beam intensity profile can be assumed. On its way from the objective to the focus, the illumination light passes through up to three stratified optical layers, which allows the simulation of an immersion oil/air objective that focusses light through a glass cover slip into the sample medium. Each layer is characterized by its refractive index and thickness. PSF Lab can also simulate microscope objectives that are corrected for certain refractive indices and cover slip thicknesses. Thus, any deviations from the ideal imaging conditions for which the objective was designed for are properly taken into account.
The following optical parameters can be selected:
Input beam
Wavelength
Gaussian profile filling parameter
|
PSF Lab is a software program that allows the calculation of the illumination point spread function (PSF) of a confocal microscope under various imaging conditions. The calculation of the electric field vectors is based on a rigorous, vectorial model that takes polarization effects in the near-focus region and high numerical aperture microscope objectives into account.
The polarization of the input beam (assumed to be collimated and monochromatic) can be chosen freely (linear, circular, or elliptic). Furthermore, a constant or Gaussian shaped input beam intensity profile can be assumed. On its way from the objective to the focus, the illumination light passes through up to three stratified optical layers, which allows the simulation of an immersion oil/air (layer 1) objective that focusses light through a glass cover slip (layer 2) into the sample medium (layer 3). Each layer is characterized by its (constant) refractive index and thickness. PSF Lab can also simulate microscope objectives that are corrected for certain refractive indices and cover slip thicknesses (design parameters). Thus, any deviations from the ideal imaging conditions for which the objective was designed for are properly taken into account.
The following optical parameters can be selected:
Input beam
Wavelength
Gaussian profile filling parameter (0 = constant profile)
Polarization (linear, circular, elliptic)
Outputs
Individual field components
Squared field components
Intensity
Microscope objective
Numerical aperture
Optical media
Refractive index (design and actual)
Thickness (design and actual)
Depth (focus position within medium 3)
The program calculates only 2D section of the PSF, but several calculations can be stacked (with a third party program) to obtain the full 3D PSF. Calculations are organized in "sets", each with its own set of parameters. Loops can be set up such that PSF Lab calculates one or several sets, increasing the resolution of the calculated images in each new iteration. The resulting image is displayed in PSF Lab in linear or logarithmic color scale with user-selectable color map, and the intensity, individual field components, or squared field component distributions can be exported into various formats (data formats: .mat, .h5 (HDF5), .txt (ASCII); image formats: .fig, .ai, .bmp, .emf, .eps, .jpg, .pcx, .pdf, .png, .tif).
|
PSF Lab on Windows 7
| 1,324 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
{}
| 894 | 714 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regiopolis
|
Regiopolis
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Regiopolis Rostock
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Regiopolis / Regiopolis Rostock
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English: Baltic Sail, Hanse Sail Rostock 2010 Harbor Deutsch: Baltic Sail, Hanse Sail Rostock 2010 Stadthafen
| null | false | true |
In Germany, a regiopolis is a city outside the core of a metropolitan area, that serves as an independent driving force for development within a larger region. The concept is used to develop midsized urban regions within regional, national and global contexts. For its surrounding region, the terms regiopolis region and regiopolitan area can be used and may be shortened to regio.
The term regiopolis is a hybrid combination of the words region and polis, and is used in the context of urban and regional planning. It was developed by professors Iris Reuther and Jürgen Aring in Germany in 2006, with Rostock as the first model regiopolis. To use and further develop their common potential, various cooperations between the regiopolis, its surrounding region, business partners and the closest metropolitan areas are fostered.
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The first German city region to work with the regiopolis concept is Rostock. A taskforce with different actors such as the hanseatic city of Rostock, the administrative district of Rostock, the Regional Planning Association Mid Mecklenburg/Rostock and the local business organizations is working on the promotion of the concept. They aim to build up a national and a European network of regiopolis, comparable to the network of European Metropolitan Regions and Areas.
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Rostock city harbour during Hanse Sail
| 1,346 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,785 | 2,165 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-French_War_(1778%E2%80%931783)
|
Anglo-French War (1778–1783)
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Origins
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Anglo-French War (1778–1783) / Origins
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Middle-aged, white-haired man wearing a blue velvet jacket, white shirt, and a chivalric order pinned to his jacket
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The Anglo-French War was a military conflict fought between France and Great Britain, sometimes with their respective allies, between 1778 and 1783. As a consequence, Great Britain was forced to divert resources used to fight the war in North America to theatres in Europe, India and the West Indies, and to rely on what turned out to be the chimera of Loyalist support in its North American operations. From 1778 to 1783, with or without their allies, France and Britain fought over dominance in the English Channel, the Mediterranean, the Indian Ocean and the West Indies.
Within days of the news of Burgoyne's surrender reaching France, King Louis XVI decided to enter into negotiations with the Americans that resulted in a formal Franco-American alliance and the French entry into the war, moving the conflict onto a global stage. Spain did not enter into the war until 1779, when it entered the war as an ally of France pursuant to the secret Treaty of Aranjuez.
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Ever since the Seven Years' War, France's Foreign Ministers, beginning with Choiseul, had followed the general idea that the independence of Britain's North American colonies would be good for France and bad for Britain, and furthermore that French attempts to recover parts of New France would be detrimental to that cause. When war broke out in 1775, the Comte de Vergennes, then the Foreign Minister, outlined a series of proposals that led to secret French and also Spanish support of the rebel movement, and preparations for the war, including expansion of their navies. To further the aim of French participation in the war, Vergennes closely monitored news from North America and London, and worked to remove impediments to Spanish participation in the war. Vergennes went so far as to propose war to King Louis XVI in August 1776, but news of Howe's capture of New York City delayed that plan.
By 1777, the Thirteen Colonies' rebellion was entering its third year. John Burgoyne's surrender at the Battle of Saratoga had signalled that the struggle against the American colonies was likely to prove longer and more costly than expected. British defeat had raised the prospect of French intervention and of a European war. North's government, fearful of war with France, sought reconciliation with the American colonies and was willing to grant a fair measure of autonomy to this end, but what would be enough in 1775 would no longer suffice by 1778. North had no intention of offering independence, but in the wake of Saratoga and with the prospect of a French alliance, the Americans were unlikely to agree with lesser terms.
Although equally interested in maintaining its influence among the German states, France had a double problem. As a supporter of the rebellious British colonies in North America, it was in France's interest to avoid a continental engagement. France could do more damage to the British in North America than in Europe. The diplomatic realignment in 1756 had overthrown 200 years of French foreign policy that united the French Crown and the French populace against the House of Habsburg, arguably bringing to France massive territorial gains in repeated wars with Habsburg Austria and Habsburg Spain. A reversal of this policy in 1756 tied French foreign policy in Europe to Vienna. Despite this restructuring, there existed in the French Court at Versailles, and in France generally, a strong anti-Austrian sentiment. The diplomatic revolution of 1756, sealed in 1770 with the personal union (the diplomatic term for marriage) of Louis, the Dauphin of Viennois, and the Austrian Archduchess Marie Antoinette, was considered both a political and matrimonial mésalliance in the eyes of many Frenchmen. It flew in the face of 200 years of French foreign policy, in which the central axiom "had been hostility to the House of Habsburg". The French foreign minister, the Comte de Vergennes, maintained deep-seated hostility to the Austrians that pre-dated the alliance of 1756. He had not approved of the shift of France's traditional bonds, and considered the Austrians untrustworthy. He managed to extricate France from immediate military obligations to Austria by 1778.
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Vergennes, foreign minister of France, worried that a war over the Bavarian succession would upset his plans against Britain
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chad_Pinder
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Chad Pinder
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Chad Pinder
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A's at Orioles 8/23/17
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Chadwick Hudson Pinder is an American professional baseball utility player for the Oakland Athletics of Major League Baseball.
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Chadwick Hudson Pinder (born March 29, 1992) is an American professional baseball utility player for the Oakland Athletics of Major League Baseball (MLB).
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Pinder in 2017.
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success
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Nagysall%C3%B3
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Battle of Nagysalló
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Background
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Battle of Nagysalló / Background
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English: The region in which the Battle of Nagysalló took place in a map from the middle of the 19th century
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The Battle of Nagysalló, fought on 19 April 1849, was one of the battles between the Habsburg Empire and the Hungarian Revolutionary Army during the Spring Campaign in the Hungarian War of Independence from 1848–1849, fought between the Habsburg Empire and the Hungarian Revolutionary Army. Until 1918 Nagysalló was part of the Kingdom of Hungary; nowadays it is a village in Slovakia, its Slovakian name being Tekovské Lužany. This was the second battle in the second phase of the campaign, whose aim was to break the imperial siege of the fortress of Komárom and at the same time encircle the Habsburg imperial forces headquartered in the Hungarian capitals of Buda and Pest. The Hungarians routed the imperial corps led by Lieutenant General Ludwig von Wohlgemuth, which had come from the Habsburg Hereditary Lands, to help the imperial army sent to suppress the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 and independence.
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After the Battle of Vác the Hungarian army continued its advance in accordance with the plan for the second phase of the Spring Campaign as developed on 7 April. According to this plan the Hungarian army was to split: General Lajos Aulich with the Hungarian II Corps, and Colonel Lajos Asbóth's division remained demonstrating in front of Pest to make the imperials believe the whole Hungarian army was there; this would divert the Imperials’ attention from the north, where the real Hungarian attack was to start with I, III and VII Corps moving west along the northern bank of the Danube via Komárom, to relieve it from the imperial siege. Kmety’s division of VII Corps was to cover the three corps’ march. After I and III corps had occupied Vác, Kmety was then to secure the town while they and the two remaining divisions of VII Corps were to advance to the Garam river, then head south to relieve the northern section of the Austrian siege of the fortress of Komárom. After this, they were to cross the Danube and relieve the southern section of the siege. In the event that all of this was successfully completed, the imperials had only two choices: to retreat from Middle Hungary towards Vienna, or to face encirclement in Pest and Buda by the Hungarians. This plan was very risky (as was the first phase of the Spring Campaign too) because if Windisch-Grätz discovered that there was only one Hungarian corps left in front of Pest, he could attack and destroy Aulich's troops, thus easily cutting the main Hungarian army's lines of communication, and even occupy Debrecen, the seat of the Hungarian Revolutionary Parliament and the National Defense Committee (the interim government of Hungary), or alternatively he could encircle the three corps advancing to relieve Komárom.
Although the president of the National Defense Committee (interim government of Hungary), Lajos Kossuth, who went to the Hungarian headquarters at Gödöllő after the battle of Isaszeg, wanted a direct attack on Pest, he was finally convinced by the Hungarian commander-in-chief, Artúr Görgei that his and the other generals’ plan was better. To help to ensure the Hungarian army's success, the National Defense Committee sent 100 wagonloads of munitions from Debrecen. In the Battle of Vác on 10 April the Hungarian III Corps under General János Damjanich defeated Ramberg's division led by Major General Christian Götz, who was mortally wounded. Even after this battle, the imperial high command under Field Marshal Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz was unsure whether the main Hungarian army had in front of Pest or had already moved north to relieve Komárom. They still believed it was possible that only a secondary force had attacked Vác and moved towards the besieged Hungarian fortress. When Windisch-Grätz finally seemed to grasp what was really happening, he wanted to make a powerful attack against the Hungarians outside Pest on 14 April, then to cross the Danube at Esztergom and cut off the force which was marching towards Komárom. However, his corps commanders, General Franz Schlik and Lieutenant Field Marshal Josip Jelačić refused to obey his orders, so his plan which could have caused serious problems for the Hungarian armies was never realized.
Windisch-Grätz sent the order to Lieutenant General Ludwig von Wohlgemuth to use the reserve corps formed from available imperial troops from Vienna, Styria, Bohemia and Moravia to stop the Hungarian army's westward advance to Komárom. But by the time this happened, Windisch-Grätz was no longer in Hungary, because in the meantime on 12 April he was relieved of his command by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria Feldzeugmeister Ludwig von Welden, the former military governor of Vienna, was designated to replace him but until Welden arrived, Windisch-Grätz had to hand over to Lieutenant Field Marshal Josip Jelačić as interim commander-in-chief of the imperial armies in Hungary. But this change at the head of the imperial forces brought neither lucidity nor organization to the imperial high command, because the first thing Jelačić did
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The region in which the Battle of Nagysalló took place in a map from the middle of the 19th century
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICC_Cricket_Hall_of_Fame
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ICC Cricket Hall of Fame
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Inductees
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ICC Cricket Hall of Fame / Inductees
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Jaques Kallis - South African Cricket New Years Day 2009 training at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
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The ICC Cricket Hall of Fame recognises "the achievements of the legends of the game from cricket's long and illustrious history". It was launched by the International Cricket Council in Dubai on 2 January 2009, in association with the Federation of International Cricketers' Associations, as part of the ICC's centenary celebrations. The initial inductees were the 55 players included in the FICA Hall of Fame which ran from 1999 to 2003, but further members are added each year during the ICC Awards ceremony. The inaugural inductees ranged from W. G. Grace, who retired from Test cricket in 1899, to Graham Gooch, who played his last Test match in 1995. Living inductees receive a commemorative cap; Australian Rod Marsh was the first member of the initial inductees to receive his. Members of the Hall of Fame assist in the selection of future inductees.
South African Barry Richards played the fewest Test matches during his career with four, before South Africa were excluded from participating in international cricket in 1970. Indian Sachin Tendulkar, inducted in July 2019, played the most Tests with 200 in an international career spanning 24 years.
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⁺Inaugural member inducted in January 2009.
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Jacques Kallis, the first and only all-rounder to achieve the doubles of 10,000 runs and 250 wickets in Tests and One Day Internationals.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomposa_Abbey
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Pomposa Abbey
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Pomposa Abbey
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Abbazia di Pomposa
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Pomposa Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in the comune of Codigoro near Ferrara, Italy. It was one of the most important in northern Italy, famous for the Carolingian manuscripts preserved in its rich library, one of the wealthiest of Carolingian repositories, and for the Romanesque buildings.
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Pomposa Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in the comune of Codigoro near Ferrara, Italy. It was one of the most important in northern Italy, famous for the Carolingian manuscripts preserved in its rich library, one of the wealthiest of Carolingian repositories, and for the Romanesque buildings.
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Pomposa Abbey
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seberang_Perai
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Seberang Perai
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Local government
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Seberang Perai / Government and politics / Local government
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English: Description: MPSP Office, Bukit Mertajam
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Seberang Perai is a city in the Malaysian state of Penang. It is situated on the Malay Peninsula opposite Penang Island, bordering Kedah to the north and east and Perak to the south. Its city centre is located in Butterworth, while its local authority, the Seberang Perai City Council, is centred near Bukit Mertajam. As of 2010, Seberang Perai had a population of 815,767, making it the second most populous city in Malaysia.
Originally a part of Kedah, the hinterland was ceded to the British East India Company towards the end of the 18th century. Named after a British officer, Province Wellesley was acquired to provide more agricultural land and as a defensive bulwark against any cross-strait invasion from the mainland. Since then, it has become part of Penang, which was made a British crown colony in 1867.
Seberang Perai has witnessed substantial economic development in the decades after Malaya's independence. Massive industrial estates have been established within Seberang Perai, while the relocation of the Port of Penang's core operations to Butterworth in 1974 has also boosted the city's economy.
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Local administration of Seberang Perai is under the purview of the Seberang Perai City Council, an agency of the Penang state government. Headquartered near Bukit Mertajam, the city council is responsible for urban planning, heritage preservation, public health, sanitation, waste management, traffic management, environmental protection, building control, social and economic development, and general maintenance of urban infrastructure.
The Mayor is appointed by the Penang state government for two years, while each of the 24 councillors is appointed for a one-year term. The current President of the Seberang Perai City Council is Rozali Mohamud, who took office in 2017.
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The seat of the Seberang Perai City Council is located at Bandar Perda near Bukit Mertajam.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alejandro_Sokol
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Alejandro Sokol
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Alejandro Sokol
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Alejandro Sokol
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Alejandro Sokol was an Argentine rock musician, who was part of Sumo and Las Pelotas.
Sokol was the bassist, and then the drummer, of Sumo in its early days, and left the band because the rock and roll lifestyle went against his convictions, as he was a member of the LDS church.
After the death of Sumo's leader Luca Prodan, Sokol formed Las Pelotas together with fellow ex-Sumo Germán Daffunchio. After 17 years with the band, Sokol left to form his own group, El Vuelto S.A., featuring his son Ismael Sokol, Nicolás Angiolini and Gustavo Bustos, Sebastián Villegas and Damián Bustos.
Sokol died in a bus depot in Río Cuarto, Córdoba Province, of cardio-respiratory failure, when waiting for a bus to take him to Buenos Aires back from the Traslasierra district, where he visited his daughter and grandchildren.
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Alejandro Sokol (30 January 1960 – 12 January 2009) was an Argentine rock musician, who was part of Sumo and Las Pelotas.
Sokol was the bassist, and then the drummer, of Sumo in its early days (1981-1984), and left the band because the rock and roll lifestyle went against his convictions, as he was a member of the LDS church.
After the death of Sumo's leader Luca Prodan, Sokol formed Las Pelotas together with fellow ex-Sumo Germán Daffunchio. After 17 years with the band, Sokol left to form his own group, El Vuelto S.A., featuring his son Ismael Sokol, Nicolás Angiolini and Gustavo Bustos (guitars), Sebastián Villegas (bass) and Damián Bustos (drums).
Sokol died in a bus depot in Río Cuarto, Córdoba Province, of cardio-respiratory failure, when waiting for a bus to take him to Buenos Aires back from the Traslasierra district, where he visited his daughter and grandchildren.
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Alejandro Sokol
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{}
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airports_in_Manitoba
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List of airports in Manitoba
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List of airports and heliports
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List of airports in Manitoba / List of airports and heliports
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English: South Apron
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This is a list of airports in Manitoba. It includes all Nav Canada certified and registered water and land airports, aerodromes and heliports in the Canadian province of Manitoba. Airports names in italics are part of the National Airports System.
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The list is sorted by the name of the community served, click the sort buttons in the table header to switch listing order.
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Thompson Airport
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success
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaita,_Hiroshima
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Kaita, Hiroshima
| null |
Kaita, Hiroshima
| null | null | true | false |
Kaita is a town located in Aki District, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan.
As of April 1, 2017, the town has an estimated population of 29,082 and a population density of 2,100 persons per km². The total area is 13.81 km².
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Kaita (海田町 Kaita-chō) is a town located in Aki District, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan.
As of April 1, 2017, the town has an estimated population of 29,082 and a population density of 2,100 persons per km². The total area is 13.81 km².
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Location of Kaita in Hiroshima Prefecture
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_Hero
|
Guitar Hero
|
Main titles
|
Guitar Hero / Games / Main titles
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English: Gibson Les Paul Xbox 360 controller for Guitar Hero III
| null | false | true |
Guitar Hero is a series of music rhythm game video games first released in 2005, in which players use a guitar-shaped game controller to simulate playing lead, bass guitar, and rhythm guitar across numerous rock songs. Players match notes that scroll on-screen to colored fret buttons on the controller, strumming the controller in time to the music in order to score points, and keep the virtual audience excited. The games attempt to mimic many features of playing a real guitar, including the use of fast-fingering hammer-ons and pull-offs and the use of the whammy bar to alter the pitch of notes. Most games support single player modes, typically a Career mode to play through all the songs in the game, and both competitive and cooperative multiplayer modes. With the introduction of Guitar Hero World Tour in 2008, the game includes support for a four-player band including vocals and drums. The series initially used mostly cover versions of songs created by WaveGroup Sound, but most recent titles feature soundtracks that are fully master recordings, and in some cases, special re-recordings, of the songs.
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The original Guitar Hero was released on the PlayStation 2 in November 2005. Guitar Hero is notable because it comes packaged with a controller peripheral modeled after a black Gibson SG guitar. Rather than a typical gamepad, this guitar controller is the primary input for the game. Playing the game with the guitar controller simulates playing an actual guitar, except it uses five colored "fret buttons" and a "strum bar" instead of frets and strings. The development of Guitar Hero was inspired by Konami's Guitar Freaks video game, which at the time, had not seen much exposure in the North American market; RedOctane, already selling guitar-shaped controllers for imported copies of GuitarFreaks, approached Harmonix about creating a game to use an entirely new Guitar controller. The concept was to have the gameplay of Amplitude with the visuals of Karaoke Revolution, both of which had been developed by Harmonix. The game was met with critical acclaim and received numerous awards for its innovative guitar peripheral and its soundtrack, which comprised 47 playable rock songs (most of which were cover versions of popular songs from artists and bands from the 1960s through modern rock). Guitar Hero has sold nearly 1.5 million copies to date.
The popularity of the series increased dramatically with the release of Guitar Hero II for the PlayStation 2 in 2006. Featuring improved multiplayer gameplay, an improved note-recognizing system, and 64 songs, it became the fifth best-selling video game of 2006. The PlayStation 2 version of the game was offered both separately and in a bundle with a cherry red Gibson SG guitar controller. Guitar Hero II was later released for the Xbox 360 in April 2007 with an exclusive Gibson Explorer guitar controller and an additional 10 songs, among other features. About 3 million units of Guitar Hero II have sold on the PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360.
Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock was released in late 2007 for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X platforms. The title is the first installment of the series to include wireless guitars bundled with the game and also the first to release a special bundle with two guitars. The game includes Slash and Tom Morello as playable characters in addition to the existing fictional avatars; both guitarists performed motion capture to be used for their characters' animation in the game.
Guitar Hero World Tour, previously named Guitar Hero IV, is the fourth full game in the series and was released on October 26, 2008 for PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and Wii. Analysts had expected that future Guitar Hero games in 2008 would include additional instrument peripherals to compete against Rock Band; Guitar Hero World Tour was confirmed as in development following the announcement of the merger between Activision and Vivendi Games in December 2007. Activision's CEO Bobby Kotick announced on April 21, 2008 that Guitar Hero World Tour will branch out into other instruments including vocals. Guitar Hero World Tour includes drums and vocals, and can be bought packaged with a new drum set controller, a microphone, and the standard guitar controller. A larger number of real-world musicians appear as playable characters, including Jimi Hendrix, Billy Corgan, Hayley Williams, Zakk Wylde, Ted Nugent, Travis Barker, Sting, and Ozzy Osbourne. Guitar Hero World Tour also features custom song creation that can be shared with others.
Guitar Hero 5, the fifth main entry in the series, was confirmed in December 2008. It was released on September 1, 2009, and includes 85 songs from 83 different artists. The game includes new game modes and features, including its 'Party Mode,' which gives players the ability to drop-in and out and change difficulties in the middle of a song. Artists including Johnny Cash, Matt Bellamy, Carlos Santana, Kurt Cobain and Shirley Manson appear as playable characters in the game.
Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock, the sixth main console game in the series, was released on September 28, 2010. It is the last ga
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The Gibson Les Paul Guitar controller bundled with Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 releases of Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock (pictured is the Xbox 360 guitar controller). A similar white Gibson Les Paul guitar controller is bundled with the Wii release, which requires the Wii Remote to be inserted in the back. For in-store demos on the Xbox 360, a wired Les Paul controller is used.
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success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marchy_Lee
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Marchy Lee
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2010 Porsche Carrera Cup Asia
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Marchy Lee / 2010 Porsche Carrera Cup Asia
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English: Marchy Lee, Alex Yoong and Matthew Marsh (from left to right), drivers of KK Performance, winners of GTC class at Intercontinental Le Mans Cup race in Zhuhai.
| null | false | true |
Marchy Lee Ying-Kin is a racing driver from Hong Kong. Born in 1976 in Hong Kong, Marchy started his racing career at just 9 years old and has become one of the top racecar drivers in Hong Kong.
He is the first Formula 3 driver from Hong Kong and has competed in the Macau Grand Prix.
Marchy currently resides in Hong Kong with his wife and their two daughters.
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In 2010, Marchy raced in the Porsche Carrera Cup Asia for Red Bull Racing (team is run by Dynaten Motorsports). He scored two wins at Zhuhai in June. At the last round in Zhuhai, the Hong Kong racer, who began as the only other championship contender, fought hard every inch of the way battling first Simonsen and then Christian Menzel, but he could not do enough to stay in the running and became championship runner-up for 2010.
On 7 November 2011, Marchy partnered Matthew Marsh and Alex Yoong to drive an Audi R8 LMS for KK Performance (Again, team is run by Dynaten Motorsport) in the 2010 1000 km of Zhuhai race, part of the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup. Starting eleventh on the grid, the Audi R8 LMS No. 98 was at the heart of the race, before inheriting the lead of GTC after the retirement of the sister car of United Autosport. Lee, Yoong and Marsh took the chequered flag in 12th position overall.
Two weeks later, on 21 November 2010, Marchy drove the same Audi R8 LMS race car to second place in the Macau GT Cup, beaten only by defending champion Keita Sawa's Lamborghini LP560 GT3.
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Marchy Lee, Alex Yoong and Matthew Marsh (from left to right) with their Intercontinental Le Mans Cup – 1000km of Zhuhai GTC class winners' trophies.
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/16/ILMC_GTC_winner01_2048.jpg
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menard_County,_Illinois
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Menard County, Illinois
| null |
Menard County, Illinois
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The Menard County Courthouse in Menard County, Illinois. This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America. Its reference number is 76000722 More images
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Menard County Courthouse
| true | true |
Menard County is a county in the U.S. state of Illinois. According to the 2010 United States Census, it had a population of 12,705. Its county seat is Petersburg, which is also the location of the county's only stop light.
Menard County is part of the Springfield, Illinois, IL Metropolitan Statistical Area.
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Menard County is a county in the U.S. state of Illinois. According to the 2010 United States Census, it had a population of 12,705. Its county seat is Petersburg, which is also the location of the county's only stop light.
Menard County is part of the Springfield, Illinois, IL Metropolitan Statistical Area.
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Menard County Courthouse
| 1,369 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jule
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The Jule
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Bus Fleet
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The Jule / Overview / Bus Fleet
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Jule Transit Trolley in Dubuque, Iowa, United States.
| null | false | true |
The Jule, formerly known as KeyLine Transit, is the operator of mass transit within the City of Dubuque, Iowa. The Jule offers transit bus routes throughout the city, trolley-replica transportation in Downtown Dubuque and the Port of Dubuque, and on-demand paratransit "MiniBus" service citywide. As of the 2011 rebranding, the transit system and city are now both named after Julien Dubuque. In FY 2010, the Jule recorded 371,000 rides.
The Jule is a municipal department of the City of Dubuque that began service following the city's takeover of the Interstate Power and Light Company's bus lines in the early 1970s. Today, the Jule is operated by The East Central Intergovernmental Association, and is supervised by a director who reports to the Dubuque City Manager, Michael Van Milligen, and acts on policy as given by the Dubuque City Council, on advice of the Dubuque Transit Trustee Board.
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In 2011, The Jule updated its 28 bus fleet with new clean diesel buses
4 35' Heavy Duty Gillig low floor for Fixed Route Service
12 30' Medium Duty Eldorado Aero Elite on International Durastar chassis for Fixed Route Service
11 24' light duty Glaval Titan II on GMC Savanna Chassis for Paratransit
1 light duty for Freightliner Sprinter for Paratransit
2 Trolleys for season fixed route trolley Service
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Trolley
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calais
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Calais
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Economy
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Calais / Economy
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Calais centre ville
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Calais is a city and major ferry port in northern France in the department of Pas-de-Calais, of which it is a sub-prefecture. Although Calais is by far the largest city in Pas-de-Calais, the department's prefecture is its third-largest city of Arras. The population of the city proper is 73,911, and that of the urban area is 128,931. Calais overlooks the Strait of Dover, the narrowest point in the English Channel, which is only 34 km wide here, and is the closest French town to England. The White Cliffs of Dover can easily be seen on a clear day from Calais. Calais is a major port for ferries between France and England, and since 1994, the Channel Tunnel has linked nearby Coquelles to Folkestone by rail.
Due to its position, Calais since the Middle Ages has been a major port and a very important centre for transport and trading with England. Calais came under English control after Edward III of England captured the city in 1347, followed by a treaty in 1360 that formally assigned Calais to English rule.
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The city's proximity to England has made it a major port for centuries. It is the principal ferry crossing point between England and France, with the vast majority of Channel crossings being made between Dover and Calais. Companies operating from Calais include SeaFrance (currently in liquidation), DFDS Seaways, and P&O Ferries. The French end of the Channel Tunnel is situated in the vicinity of Calais, in Coquelles some 4 miles (6.4 km) to the west of the town. Calais possesses direct rail links to Paris, 148 miles (238 km) to the south. More than 10 million people visit Calais annually.
From medieval times, English companies thrived in Calais. Calais was a particularly important centre in the production and trade of wool and cloth, which outweighed the costs of maintaining the town as part of England. In 1830 some 113 manufacturers were based in Calais and the St Pierre suburbs, the majority of which were English. There are still two major lace factories in Calais with around 700 looms and 3000 employees. The town exports in the early 20th century were lace, chemicals, paper, wines, especially champagne, spirits, hay, straw, wool, potatoes, woven goods, fruit, glass-ware, lace and metal-ware. Principal imports in the early 20th century included cotton and silk goods, coal, iron and steel, petroleum, timber, raw wool, cotton yarn and cork. During the five years 1901–1905 the average annual value of exports was £8,388,000 (£6,363,000 in the years 1896–1900), of imports £4,145,000 (£3,759,000 in 1896–1900).
As a fishing port, Calais has several notable fishing markets including Les Délices de la Mer and Huîtrière Calaisenne on the Boulevard La Fayette, the latter of which is noted for its oysters, lobster and crabs from Brittany. The Emile Fournier et Fils market on the Rue Mouron sells mainly smoked fish including salmon, trout, herring and halibut.
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Town centre
| 1,370 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_metal
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Transition metal
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Coloured compounds
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Transition metal / Characteristic properties / Coloured compounds
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English: From left to right, aqueous solutions of: cobalt(II) nitrate, Co(NO3)2 (red); potassium dichromate, K2Cr2O7 (orange); potassium chromate, K2CrO4 (yellow); nickel(II) chloride, NiCl2 (green); copper(II) sulfate, CuSO4 (blue); potassium permanganate, KMnO4 (violet). Français : De gauche à droite, des solutions aqueuses de : nitrate de cobalt(II), Co(NO3)2 (rouge); dichromate de potassium, K2Cr2O7 (orange); chromate de potassium, K2CrO4 (jaune); chlorure de nickel(II), NiCl2 (vert); sulfate de cuivre(II), CuSO4 (bleu); permanganate de potassium, KMnO4 (violet).
| null | false | true |
In chemistry, the term transition metal has three possible definitions:
The IUPAC definition defines a transition metal as "an element whose atom has a partially filled d sub-shell, or which can give rise to cations with an incomplete d sub-shell".
Many scientists describe a "transition metal" as any element in the d-block of the periodic table, which includes groups 3 to 12 on the periodic table. In actual practice, the f-block lanthanide and actinide series are also considered transition metals and are called "inner transition metals".
Cotton and Wilkinson expand the brief IUPAC definition by specifying which elements are included. As well as the elements of groups 4 to 11, they add scandium and yttrium in group 3, which have a partially filled d sub-shell in the metallic state. Lanthanum and actinium in group 3 are, however, classified as lanthanides and actinides respectively.
English chemist Charles Bury first used the word transition in this context in 1921, when he referred to a transition series of elements during the change of an inner layer of electrons from a stable group of 8 to one of 18, or from 18 to 32. These elements are now known as the d-block.
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Colour in transition-series metal compounds is generally due to electronic transitions of two principal types.
charge transfer transitions. An electron may jump from a predominantly ligand orbital to a predominantly metal orbital, giving rise to a ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) transition. These can most easily occur when the metal is in a high oxidation state. For example, the colour of chromate, dichromate and permanganate ions is due to LMCT transitions. Another example is that mercuric iodide, HgI₂, is red because of a LMCT transition.
A metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) transition will be most likely when the metal is in a low oxidation state and the ligand is easily reduced.
In general charge transfer transitions result in more intense colours than d-d transitions.
d-d transitions. An electron jumps from one d-orbital to another. In complexes of the transition metals the d orbitals do not all have the same energy. The pattern of splitting of the d orbitals can be calculated using crystal field theory. The extent of the splitting depends on the particular metal, its oxidation state and the nature of the ligands. The actual energy levels are shown on Tanabe–Sugano diagrams.
In centrosymmetric complexes, such as octahedral complexes, d-d transitions are forbidden by the Laporte rule and only occur because of vibronic coupling in which a molecular vibration occurs together with a d-d transition. Tetrahedral complexes have somewhat more intense colour because mixing d and p orbitals is possible when there is no centre of symmetry, so transitions are not pure d-d transitions. The molar absorptivity (ε) of bands caused by d-d transitions are relatively low, roughly in the range 5-500 M⁻¹cm⁻¹ (where M = mol dm⁻³). Some d-d transitions are spin forbidden. An example occurs in octahedral, high-spin complexes of manganese(II),
which has a d⁵ configuration in which all five electron has parallel spins; the colour of such complexes is much weaker than in complexes with spin-allowed transitions. Many compounds of manganese(II) appear almost colourless. The spectrum of [Mn(H
₂O)
₆]²⁺
shows a maximum molar absorptivity of about 0.04 M⁻¹cm⁻¹ in the visible spectrum.
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From left to right, aqueous solutions of: Co(NO
3)
2 (red); K
2Cr
2O
7 (orange); K
2CrO
4 (yellow); NiCl
2 (turquoise); CuSO
4 (blue); KMnO
4 (purple).
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| null | 1,100 | 404 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emlyon_Business_School
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Emlyon Business School
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Campuses
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Emlyon Business School / Campuses
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Français : Adresse de prise de vue : École de management de Lyon, 23 avenue Guy de Collongue, 69130 Ecully.
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EM Lyon Business School
| false | false |
emlyon business school is a leading French business school founded in Lyon, France in 1872 by the local business community, and is affiliated to the Lyon Chamber of Commerce and Industry. A grandes écoles with distinct French flavour, emlyon offers an undergraduate BBA, MBA, EMBA, specialized MSc graduate programs and a PhD program. It is ranked as one of the top business schools in France. It has triple accreditation: EQUIS by the EFMD, AMBA, and the AACSB. emlyon has 6 campuses currently: Lyon, Saint-Étienne, Paris, Shanghai, Casablanca and Bhubaneswar.
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EM Lyon Business School is organized in six campuses in the Urban Community of Lyon (Écully), Saint-Etienne, Shanghai, Casablanca, Bhubaneswar, and Paris.
For many years, emlyon has developed partnerships with Chinese universities. A "Master en Administration des Affaires de Canton" (Master of Business Administration) in collaboration with the "Université Lyon-III" (Jean Moulin University Lyon 3) and the Lingnan College (part of the Sun Yat-sen University) was launched in 1997. It is a fully French speaking Master, which has been awarded in 2004 by the Chinese Ministry of Education. EMLYON opened an office in Shanghai in 2000 and a new campus in September 2007 within the campus of the East China Normal University.
The Casablanca campus was inaugurated in 2015. In 2016, emlyon opened its latest campus in Paris. In 2018, emlyon opened a campus in India with Xavier University.
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EM Lyon Business School, Écully
| 1,375 | 0 |
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HTTP Error 404: Not Found
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lars_Hertervig
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Lars Hertervig
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Lars Hertervig
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only known painting of Hertervig.
| null | true | true |
Lars Hertervig was a Norwegian painter. His semi-fantastical work with motives from the coastal landscape in the traditional district of Ryfylke is regarded as one of the peaks of Norwegian painting.
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Lars Hertervig (16 February 1830 – 6 January 1902) was a Norwegian painter. His semi-fantastical work with motives from the coastal landscape in the traditional district of Ryfylke is regarded as one of the peaks of Norwegian painting.
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Lars Hertervig (1851), portrait by Niels Bjørnsen Møller (1827-1887)
| 1,373 | 0 |
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| 260 | 309 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_prehistoric_life_of_Pennsylvania
|
List of the prehistoric life of Pennsylvania
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Cenozoic
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List of the prehistoric life of Pennsylvania / Cenozoic
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English: Skeletons of grey and dire wolf
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Skeletons look identical
| false | true |
This list of the prehistoric life of Pennsylvania contains the various prehistoric life-forms whose fossilized remains have been reported from within the US state of Pennsylvania.
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Acidota
†Acidota crenata
†Acidota quadrata
Aegialia
Agonum
†Agonum affine
†Agonum consimile
†Agonum gratiosum
†Agonum quinquepunctatum
†Agonum simile
Amara
Apalone
†Apalone mutica – tentative report
Aphodius
†Aphodius precursor – type locality for species
Apion
†Arctodus
†Arctodus pristinus – type locality for species
Arpedium
†Arpedium cribratum
†Ateuchus – tentative report
Bembidion
†Bembidion anguliferum group informal
†Bembidion fortestriatum
†Bembidion frontale
†Bembidion incertum group informal
†Bembidion morulum
†Bembidion mutatum
†Bembidion pseudocautum
†Bembidion versicolor – or unidentified comparable form
Blarina
†Blarina brevicauda – type locality for species
†Blarina carolinensis
Bledius
Blethisa
†Blethisa catenaria
Boreaphilus
†Boreaphilus henningianus
†Brachyprotoma
†Brachyprotoma obtusata – type locality for species
Bufo
†Bufo americanus
Canis
†Canis armbrusteri
†Canis dirus
Carabus
†Carabus maeander
†Cariacus
†Cariacus laevicornis – type locality for species
Carphoborus
†Carphoborus andersoni
Castor
†Castor canadensis
†Castoroides
†Castoroides ohioensis
Catops
†Cervalces
Chlaenius
†Chlaenius punctulatus – type locality for species
Colinus
†Colinus virginianus
Coluber
†Coluber acuminatus – type locality for species
†Coluber constrictor
Colymbetes
Crocuta
†Crocuta inexpectatus – type locality for species
Crotalus
†Crotalus horridus
Curimopsis
†Curimopsis moosilauke – or unidentified comparable form
†Cychrus
†Cychrus minor – type locality for species
†Cychrus wheatleyi – type locality for species
Cymindis
†Cymindis aurora – type locality for species
†Cymindis cribricollis
Cytilus
†Cytilus alternatus
Diacheila
†Diacheila arctica
Dicaelus
†Dicaelus alutaceus – type locality for species
Donacia
Dyschirius
†Dyschirius integer group informal
†Dyschirius melancholicus
Elaphe
†Elaphe vulpina
Elaphrus
†Elaphrus americanus
†Elaphrus clairvillei
†Elaphrus lapponicus
Emydoidea
†Emydoidea blandingii
Enochrus
Equus
†Equus complicatus
†Equus pectinatus
Erethizon
†Erethizon dorsatum
Eucnecosum
†Eucnecosum brunnescens
Glyptemys
†Glyptemys insculpta
Gulo
†Gulo gulo
Gymnusa
Harpalus
Helophorus
†Helophorus sempervarians
†Helophorus tuberculatus
†Hesperotestudo
†Hesperotestudo percrassa – type locality for species
Heterodon
†Heterodon platyrhinos
Holoboreaphilus
†Holoboreaphilus nordenskioldi
Homo
†Homo sapiens
Hydraena
Hydroporus
Hyla
†Hyla crucifer
Lampropeltis
†Lampropeltis triangulum
Lasiopodomys – tentative report
Lesteva
†Lesteva pallipes
Lontra
†Lontra canadensis
Loricera
†Loricera pilicornis
Lynx
†Lynx calcaratus – type locality for species
†Mammut
†Mammut americanum
†Mammuthus
†Mammuthus primigenius
Mantura
Marmota
†Marmota monax – or unidentified comparable form
†Megalonyx
†Megalonyx wheatleyi
Meleagris
†Meleagris gallopavo
Mephitis
†Mephitis mephitis
Microedus
†Microedus austinianus
Microtus
†Microtus guildayi – or unidentified comparable form
†Miracinonyx
†Miracinonyx inexpectatus – or unidentified comparable form
Mustela
Mycetoporus
†Mylohyus
†Mylohyus fossilis
Myotis
Napaeozapus
†Napaeozapus insignis
Natrix
Neofiber
†Neofiber diluvianus – type locality for species
Nerodia
†Nerodia sipedon
Nitidotachinus
†Nitidotachinus tachyporoides
Notaris
†Notaris aethiops
Notiophilus
Ochthebius
Odocoileus
†Odocoileus virginianus
Olophrum
†Olophrum boreale
†Olophrum consimile
†Olophrum latum
†Olophrum rotundicolle
Ondatra
†Ondatra idahoensis – type locality for species
Opheodrys
†Opheodrys vernalis
†Osmotherium – type locality for genus
†Osmotherium spelaeum – type locality for species
Oxytelus
Panthera
†Panthera onca
†Paramylodon
†Paramylodon harlani – tentative report
Parascalops
†Parascalops breweri
Patrobus
†Patrobus foveocollis
†Patrobus septentrionis
†Patrobus stygicus
Pekania
†Pekania diluviana
Pelenomus
Peromyscus
†Peromyscus leucopus – tentative report
†Phanaeus
†Phanaeus antiquus – type locality for species
Philonthus
Phloeotribus
†Phloeotribus piceae
Pitymys
†Pitymys cumberlandensis – or unidentified comparable form
Pityophthorus
†Platygonus
†Platygonus vetus – type locality for species
Platynus
†Platy
|
Modern mounted skeleton of Canis lupus, the grey wolf, to scale with a fossilized skeleton of the Pleistocene wolf Canis dirus, or dire wolf
| 1,374 | 0 |
failed_to_download
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HTTP Error 404: Not Found
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galilee_Panhandle
|
Galilee Panhandle
|
Geography
|
Galilee Panhandle / Geography
|
עברית: תצפית על קריית שמונה ועמק החולה ממצפה לירן בדרך נוף הרי נפתלי English: Kiryat Shmona and Hula Valley from Mitzpe Liran, Naftali Mts.
| null | false | false |
The Galilee Panhandle, is an elongated geopolitical area or "panhandle" in northern Israel comprising the northernmost section of the Upper Galilee held by Israel, and the northern Jordan Rift Valley. The Galilee Panhandle incorporates five municipal authorities. Towns in the Galilee Panhandle include Metula and Kiryat Shmona.
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The Galilee Panhandle is a narrow strip of land running from the Israel-Lebanon border in the far north to an imaginary line above the Hula Valley in the south.
|
View of Kiryat Shmona from Mitzpe Liran
| 1,372 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,048 | 1,536 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2709_Sagan
|
2709 Sagan
| null |
2709 Sagan
|
English: A three-dimensional model of 2709 Sagan that was computed using light curve inversion techniques.
| null | true | true |
2709 Sagan, provisional designation 1982 FH, is a stony Florian asteroid from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 6.7 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 21 March 1982, by American astronomer Edward Bowell at Lowell's Anderson Mesa Station near Flagstaff, Arizona, and named after astronomer and science popularizer Carl Sagan.
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2709 Sagan, provisional designation 1982 FH, is a stony Florian asteroid from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 6.7 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 21 March 1982, by American astronomer Edward Bowell at Lowell's Anderson Mesa Station near Flagstaff, Arizona, and named after astronomer and science popularizer Carl Sagan.
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Lightcurve-based 3D-model of Sagan
| 1,380 | 0 |
success
| null | 1,200 | 450 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mill_on_the_Floss
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The Mill on the Floss
|
Minor characters
|
The Mill on the Floss / Characters / Minor characters
|
English: William St. John Harper: Maggie and Lucy Identifier: americanartamer01mont (find matches) Title: American art and American art collections; essays on artistic subjects Year: 1889 (1880s) Authors: Montgomery, Walter Subjects: Art Artists Art Publisher: Boston, E.W. Walker & co Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries Digitizing Sponsor: Smithsonian Libraries View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: and you might never see anything to wound you. I know, dear, said Lucy. I know you never meant to make me unhappy. . . . It is atrouble that has come on us all. You have more tobear than I have; and you gave him upwhen . . . you did what it must have been very hard to do. They were silent again a little while, sitting with clasped hands, and cheeks leaned together. Lucy, Maggie began again, he struggled too. He wanted to be true to you. He willcome back to you. Forgive him: he will be happy then. ... These words were wrung forth from Maggies deepest soul with an effort like the convulsedclutch of a drowning man. Lucy trembled and was silent. A gentle knock came at the door. It was Alice the maid, who entered and said: — I dared nt stay any longer, Miss Deane. Theyll find it out, and therell be such anger atyour coming out so late. Lucy rose and said, Very well, Alice; in a minute. • I m to go away on Friday, Maggie, she added, when Alice had closed the door again. 46 AMERICAN ART Text Appearing After Image: Maggie and Lucy. From The Mill on The Floss! Drawn by Harper. When I come back, and am strong, they will let me do as I like. I shall come to you when Iplease, then. Lucy, said Maggie, with another great effort, I pray to God continually that I may never bethe cause of sorrow to you any more. She pressed the little hand that she held between hers, and looked up into the face that wasbent over hers. Lucy never forgot that look. Maggie, she said, in a low voice that had the solemnity of confession in it, you are betterthan I am. I cant— She broke off there and said no more. But they clasped each other again in a last embrace. Mr. Harper also provided several admirable pictures for a de luxe edition of George Eliotspoems, including his conception ofFedalma, the Spanish gypsy. In the ranks of the numerous clever illustrators who furnish artistic riches to Our Little Ones magazine, we frequently find St. John Harper, many of his charming pictures of and for childrenhaving appeared in its Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
| null | false | true |
The Mill on the Floss is a novel by George Eliot, first published in three volumes in 1860 by William Blackwood. The first American edition was published by Harper & Brothers, Publishers, New York.
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Mr Wakem – Philip's father and rival of Mr Tulliver
Emily Wakem (née Clint) – mother of Philip, dies before the events of the book
Lucy Deane – Tom and Maggie's cousin, a pretty, fair-haired girl, presumed to be betrothed to Stephen Guest
Miss Guest and Laura Guest – sisters to Stephen, figures in local society and friends to Lucy
Mr Riley – auctioneer and appraiser, a friend of Mr Tulliver
Rev. Walter Stelling – teacher of Tom and Phillip
Dr Kenn – the clergyman of St Ogg's
Bob Jakin – a childhood friend of Tom who later helps Tom in business; both Tom and Maggie stay at his house at different times
Mrs Jane Glegg (née Dodson) – leader of the Dodson clan, critical and dominating aunt of Maggie and Tom who stands up for Maggie after her scandal with Stephen
Mrs Sophy Pullet (née Dodson) – sister of Bessy, Tom and Maggie's aunt
Mrs Susan Deane (née Dodson) – sister of Bessy, Tom and Maggie's aunt, mother to Lucy
Gritty Moss (née Tulliver) – Mr Tulliver's sister, mother of many children, including Georgy and Lizzy
Kezia – Tulliver family maid
Luke – the head miller
Yap – the Tullivers' dog (white and brown)
Dr Turnbull - Doctor of Dorlcote Mill
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Reunion of Maggie and Lucy (W. St. John Harper, 1889)
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{}
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_United_States_presidential_election_in_Idaho
|
2016 United States presidential election in Idaho
|
Democratic caucuses
|
2016 United States presidential election in Idaho / Primary elections / Democratic caucuses
| null | null | false | false |
The 2016 United States presidential election in Idaho was held on November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Idaho voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting the Republican Party's nominee, businessman Donald Trump, and running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her running mate, Virginia Senator Tim Kaine.
On March 8, 2016, voters expressed their preferences for the Republican and Constitution parties nominee for president. The Democratic Party held a caucus on March 26. Registered members of the party only voted in their party's primary, while voters who were unaffiliated chose any one primary in which to vote.
Donald Trump won the election in Idaho with 59.25% of the vote. Hillary Clinton received 27.48% of the vote.
McMullin's carrying 6.75% of the popular vote made Idaho his second strongest state in the 2016 election only after neighboring Utah.
| null |
Results of the Democratic primary by county.
| 1,378 | 0 |
failed_to_resize
| null | null | null | null | null | null |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yerevan_Metro
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Yerevan Metro
|
Tokens
|
Yerevan Metro / Tokens
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English: Yerevan metro token, issued May 2018.
| null | false | true |
The Karen Demirchyan Yerevan Subway, colloquially known as the Yerevan Metro, is a rapid transit system that serves the capital of Armenia, Yerevan. Owned by the government, it is operated by the Karen Demirchyan Yerevan Subway CJSC of the Ministry of Transport and Communication of Armenia.
The system was launched in 1981 and, unlike most former Soviet rapid transit systems, its stations are not very deep, there are two stations above ground, one shallow and the rest are considered deep underground, however, the depth of those stations is not great only three stations are greater than 30 meters, Marshal Baghramyan, Barekamutyun and Yeritasardakan. Stations are intricately decorated with national motifs. The metro runs on a 13.4 kilometres line and currently serves 10 active stations.
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Rather than tickets, passengers are sold tokens, which are then used to operate turnstiles in order to reach station platforms. The orange plastic tokens issued since 2009 depict the metro's logo on one side and the city's statue of David of Sassoun on the other.
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Plastic token issued in May 2018, showing the line's logo
| 1,377 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasudeva_(Chahamana_dynasty)
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Vasudeva (Chahamana dynasty)
| null |
Vasudeva (Chahamana dynasty)
|
English: Excavated Site This is a photo of ASI monument number  N-RJ-85.
| null | true | true |
Vasudeva was an Indian king belonging to the Chahamana dynasty of Shakambhari. He ruled the Sapadalaksha country in present-day Rajasthan.
Ignoring Chahamana, the mythical founder of the dynasty, Vasudeva is the earliest known ruler of the dynasty. According to the Prabandha-Kosha of the 14th century Jain scholar Rajashekhara Suri, Vasudeva ascended the throne in 551 CE. The historical accuracy of this statement is not certain.
A mythical account in Prithviraja Vijaya states that Vasudeva received the Sambhar Salt Lake as a gift from a vidyadhara. According to this legend, Vasudeva once found a vidyadhara sleeping in the royal bed. A magic pill which gave the vidyadhara the power to fly had fallen from his mouth. Vasudeva handed over this magic pill to the vidyadhara. The grateful vidyadhara introduced himself as the son of Shakambhara. He told Vasudeva that the goddess Parvati, pleased with Shakambhara's devotion, had been residing in the local forest under the name "Shakambhari". The vidyadhara decided to return the favour to Vasudeva. He asked the king to put his sword in the ground at sunset, and ride a horse back to his capital without looking back.
|
Vasudeva (c. 6th century CE) was an Indian king belonging to the Chahamana dynasty of Shakambhari (modern Sambhar). He ruled the Sapadalaksha country in present-day Rajasthan.
Ignoring Chahamana, the mythical founder of the dynasty, Vasudeva is the earliest known ruler of the dynasty. According to the Prabandha-Kosha of the 14th century Jain scholar Rajashekhara Suri, Vasudeva ascended the throne in 551 CE (608 Vikram Samvat). The historical accuracy of this statement is not certain.
A mythical account in Prithviraja Vijaya states that Vasudeva received the Sambhar Salt Lake as a gift from a vidyadhara (a supernatural being). According to this legend, Vasudeva once found a vidyadhara sleeping in the royal bed. A magic pill which gave the vidyadhara the power to fly had fallen from his mouth. Vasudeva handed over this magic pill to the vidyadhara. The grateful vidyadhara introduced himself as the son of Shakambhara. He told Vasudeva that the goddess Parvati, pleased with Shakambhara's devotion, had been residing in the local forest under the name "Shakambhari". The vidyadhara decided to return the favour to Vasudeva. He asked the king to put his sword in the ground at sunset, and ride a horse back to his capital without looking back. The king did as told, and waves of water followed him. The resulting body of water became the salt lake of Sambhar. The vidyadhara appeared before the king, and told him that the lake would remain in the possession of his descendants. The Bijolia inscription of his descendant Someshvara states that the lake was born of Vasudeva.
The next known Chahamana king is Samantaraja, whose relationship to Vasudeva is not clear from the available historical records.
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The Sambhar Salt Lake
| 1,350 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Pressman
|
Lee Pressman
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Under Philip Murray 1940–1948
|
Lee Pressman / Career / CIO 1936–1948 / Under Philip Murray 1940–1948
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Philip Murray
| null | false | true |
Lee Pressman was a labor attorney and earlier a US government functionary, publicly exposed in 1948 as a spy for Soviet intelligence during the mid-1930s, following his recent departure from Congress of Industrial Organizations as a result of its purge of Communist Party members and fellow travelers. From 1936 to 1948, he represented the CIO and member unions in landmark collective bargaining deals with major corporations including General Motors and U.S. Steel. According to journalist Murray Kempton, anti-communists referred to him as "Comrade Big."
|
On January 14, 1940, John L. Lewis retired from the CIO presidency, and Philip Murray succeeded him.
On May 18, 1940, Pressman again spoke on CBS Radio, this time on the "Wagner Act."
In 1941, FDR appointed CIO vice president Sidney Hill to the Office of Production Management. Hillman lobbied for a mediating entity to OPM, and FDR created the National Defense Mediation Board (NDMB). In June 1941, NMDB and the United Auto Workers took over a North American Aviation factory during a strike. Later in June 1941, at a convention of the National Lawyers Guild in Chicago, Pressman criticized the Vinson and Ball bills before the US Congress, both of which he accused of a "long-range" plan whose aims included "destruction of workers' rights to organize, bargain collectively, and strike"; "destruction of labor organizations as the barrier to unchecked monopoly profits"; and "complete control of the national economy and the government by big business."
Pressman continued to give as good as he got. In February 1940, he held a "heated exchange" with US Representative Clare Hatch during a hearing of the US House Labor Committee, again on the issue of amendments to the NRLA (Wagner Act):
Pressman: I'll answer the question all right, Mr. Hoffman. Representative Thomas can take care of himself.
Hoffman: This boy is not going to tell me what to ask. I won't take this from Pressman. Remember that.
Pressman: I'll remember all I say.
Hoffman: You keep a civil tongue in your head.
In September 1941, Pressman received a pin from pro-Communist Mike Quill, leader of the Transport Workers Union (TWU), a CIO member, during a TWU strike. Pressman then urged TWU strikers to stand up to the New York City government, as he had four years earlier in 1937 when the TWU first left the AFL for the CIO.
In July 1942, the National War Labor Board sought advice on FDR's wage stabilization policy by increasing wages in the four "Little Steel" companies with a combined 157,000 employees by one dollar. CIO president Philip Murray and Pressman both supported the increase.
In July 1943, the CIO formed a political action committee, the "CIO-PAC," chaired by Sidney Hillman, and supported by Pressman and John Abt as co-counsels. In his 1999 memoir, Abt, general counsel for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America under Sidney Hillman, claimed the leaders of the Communist Party of the USA had inspired the idea of the CIO-PAC:
In 1943, Gene Dennis came to me and Lee Pressman to first raise the idea of a political action committee to organize labor support for Roosevelt in the approaching 1944 election. Pressman approached Murray with the idea, as I did with Hillman. Both men seized upon the proposal with great enthusiasm.
Thus, in 1943, as American spy Elizabeth Bentley resurrected the Ware Group (of which Abt had been a member), could not risk involvement with her or the group. Instead, the group reformed under Victor Perlo as the Perlo Group.
In September 1943 at a conference of the National Lawyers Guild, Pressman praised labor for reducing strikes and promoting the war effort. He praised the National War Labor Board's policy for recognizing labor unions as institutions within the basic framework of our democratic society. He criticized "selfish blocs" in Congress that had opposed FDR's program.
In 1944, Pressman participated in resolution of a labor dispute of a national case in basic steel, involving some six hundreds unions on strike. The six-person board consisted of David L. Cole and Nathan P. Feisinger for the government, Philip Murry of the CIO with Pressman as counsel for unions, John Stevens with Chester McLain of U.S. Steel for industry.
During 1945–1947, Pressman worked with John Abt for the CIO to help create the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) as successor to the International Federation of Trade Unions, itself seen as dominated by communist and socialist parties. During formation of the WFTU and in working with pro-Soviet American unions, "the active role played by" Pressman "in writing and rewriting convention resolutions help
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Philip Murray, CIO president {1940-1952)
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/99/Philip_Murray.jpg
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{}
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Baxter
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Eddie Baxter
| null |
Eddie Baxter
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Photo of organist Eddie Baxter in 1966.
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Eddie Baxter, 1966
| true | true |
Eddie Baxter was an American organist who provided music for several TV programs and recorded several albums for various labels, most importantly for Dot.
Baxter was born in Colorado on November 23, 1922. By the age of ten he was playing piano for dancing classes. He moved to Los Angeles at age 13, and became a professional musician during his teenage years. He intended music as a hobby, enrolling in the pre-med program at UCLA. These plans were interrupted by World War II, which he spent in the Army Air Force. Following his discharge, he did not return to his studies but instead joined Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. He then joined Frankie Masters where he added arranging duties to his pianist abilities. He began playing the organ, which diversified his career opportunities. He was the organist for The Continental and made an album with Renzo Cesana for Capitol Records. Through the early 1950s, he was the staff organist at NBC's KNBH which meant he played for award presentations, audience participation shows, game shows, variety shows, and even a space program. At night, Baxter played in nightclubs in both Los Angeles and Las Vegas.
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Eddie Baxter (November 23, 1922 – August 21, 1998) was an American organist who provided music for several TV programs and recorded several albums for various labels, most importantly for Dot.
Baxter was born in Colorado on November 23, 1922. By the age of ten he was playing piano for dancing classes. He moved to Los Angeles at age 13, and became a professional musician during his teenage years. He intended music as a hobby, enrolling in the pre-med program at UCLA. These plans were interrupted by World War II, which he spent in the Army Air Force. Following his discharge, he did not return to his studies but instead joined Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. He then joined Frankie Masters where he added arranging duties to his pianist abilities. He began playing the organ, which diversified his career opportunities. He was the organist for The Continental and made an album with Renzo Cesana for Capitol Records. Through the early 1950s, he was the staff organist at NBC's KNBH which meant he played for award presentations, audience participation shows, game shows, variety shows, and even a space program. At night, Baxter played in nightclubs in both Los Angeles and Las Vegas. He became a spokesperson for Western Airlines and toured while promoting that air carrier. He then became Lowery Organ Company's resident artist, then subsequently was their representative in the Southern California territory. Later in life he resided in Sherman Oaks, California. Baxter died August 21, 1998 in Mission Viejo, California.
Baxter made a number of pipe-organ records. Some of his earlier efforts were not met with enthusiasm by the trade press, as Billboard called them "uninspiring" and gave them 2 stars. 1961 saw Baxter begin a series of LP records with Dot and these albums received much improved reviews from Billboard, which gave his albums 4 stars while noting he "played with feeling," maximizing focus on the melody while utilizing minimal production.
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Eddie Baxter, 1966
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| 209 | 228 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordre_du_Nichan_El-Anouar
|
Ordre du Nichan El-Anouar
| null |
Ordre du Nichan El-Anouar
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English: picture of J.M. Abdul Aziz (1905–1958)
| null | false | true |
The Ordre du Nichan El-Anouar was established in 1887 as a colonial order of merit of the Tajurah sultanate in French Somaliland.
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The Ordre du Nichan El-Anouar (Arabic: Order of the Light) was established in 1887 as a colonial order of merit of the Tajurah sultanate in French Somaliland.
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JM Abdul Aziz (center medal)
| 1,354 | 0 |
success
| null | 382 | 491 |
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| 382 | 491 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavin_Turk
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Gavin Turk
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Sculpture and public works
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Gavin Turk / Sculpture and public works
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English: Gavin Turk 'Nail', 2011, photo by Andy Keate
| null | false | true |
Gavin Turk is a British artist, and is considered to be one of the Young British Artists. Turk's oeuvre deals with issues of authenticity and identity, engaged with modernist and avant-garde debates surrounding the 'myth' of the artist and the 'authorship' of a work of art.
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A series of three-dimensional Trompe-l'œil works includes objects cast into bronze, painted to give the appearance of the original object. Possibly his most revered works, these include bronze sculptures of plastic rubbish bags, see "Bag" (2000). Other sculptures include "Nomad" (2002), a bronze cast of a sleeping bag, and Box (2002), which resembles a cardboard box. Turk is perhaps the leading exponent of the painted bronze, and has cast objects from spent matches to worn paving slabs to discarded vehicle exhaust pipes.
In December 2009, Turk took part in the "Bricks" exhibition at Area 10 in Peckham in Southeast London. However, the day before the exhibition was to start, organizers noticed that his piece entitled "Revolting Brick" had been stolen and replaced with a fake brick. The fake brick held the words "Thank You Have a Nice Day, Next" and was part of a set of 500 that was given away at the exhibition. "Revolting Brick" was number eight in a series of ten that Turk had created and signed. The artist stated that he "was upset but flattered" at what had happened and that the theft "raises questions about value and worth".
In May 2011, Turk's first large-scale, 12-metre public sculpture was unveiled between the One New Change City mall, designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel, and St Paul's Cathedral.
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Gavin Turk 'Nail', 2011, photo by Andy Keate
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azerbaijan_at_the_2017_World_Championships_in_Athletics
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Azerbaijan at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics
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Azerbaijan at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics
| null | null | true | false |
Azerbaijan competed at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics in London, United Kingdom, 4–13 August 2017.
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Azerbaijan competed at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics in London, United Kingdom, 4–13 August 2017.
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Flag of Azerbaijan
| 1,351 | 0 |
failed_to_resize
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pratt_Institute
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Pratt Institute
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Residence halls
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Pratt Institute / Buildings / Residence halls
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English: Looking southeast across Steuben Walk at faculty rowhouses on a sunny midday.
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Pratt Institute is a private university with its main campus in Brooklyn, New York. It has a satellite campus in Manhattan and an extension campus in Utica, New York. The school originated in 1887 with programs primarily in engineering, architecture, and fine arts. Comprising six schools, the Institute is primarily known for its highly ranked programs in architecture, interior design, and industrial design, and offers both undergraduate and master's degree programs in a variety of fields, with a strong focus on research.
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Pratt, a residential campus, offers seven different residence options for its students. All residence hall students are provided with a bed (twin extra-long), a desk, a chair and a dresser. Students residing in a dorm on campus are required to be on a mandatory meal plan (Stabile, Cannoneer, ELJ, and Pantas), while those off campus are able to sign up for an optional meal plan (Willoughby and Grand Avenue). Cannoneer Court, Leo J. Pantas Hall, and Vincent A. Stabile Hall are the primary freshman dorms. In total, 51 percent of undergraduate students reside on campus while 92 percent of incoming freshmen students reside on campus. Pratt offers the following residence halls for students to choose from:
Cannoneer Court, was designed by architecture firm Skidmore, Owings and Merrill in 1986 and was constructed using modular construction. Each individual dorm room was constructed off-site and then set into place like building blocks. This is Pratt's only traditional, corridor-style residence hall and houses students in double rooms. Bathrooms are communal. The building has a lounge and study/work area as well as a garden courtyard. The rooms are air-conditioned and carpeted. Cannoneer Court is primarily a freshman residence hall. This hall is to be replaced with Emerson Hall in the fall 2019 semester.
Esther Lloyd-Jones Hall is named for a trendsetter in modern American higher education. The building was originally a private apartment building built in 1921 but was acquired by Pratt in 1964 as use for dormitories. ELJH accommodates students single and double rooms in apartment-style accommodations. ELJH is occupied primarily by upperclassmen continuing students.
Grand Avenue Residence is home to new and continuing graduate students. The building can accommodate 50 students in efficiency apartments (double and single) and private single rooms within two- and three-bedroom apartments. A double-efficiency apartment is two students sharing a one-room apartment (with kitchen and bath). A single-efficiency apartment is one student in a private one-room apartment with kitchen and bath. A shared single is two or more students, each with its own private bedroom, sharing kitchen, bath, and living room. The building is located one block from campus. Each living room is furnished with a sofa, club chair, coffee table, kitchen table, and chairs.
Leo J. Pantas Hall was opened in 1987 and designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill and sits centrally located on campus. Students live in four-person suites, which consist of two double rooms (two people in each double room), and each suite has its own bathroom. Suites are single sex, but floors are co-ed. The building boasts a work/study rooms and communal lounges. The building was design in brick with a clock tower, echoing the style of original 1887 Main Building. Pantas is primarily a freshmen residence hall.
The Pratt Townhouses are historic landmarks which were originally constructed from 1901 to 1910 in the colonial revival style to serve as faculty housing. The townhomes were designed by Hobart C. Walker. After being neglected for several years, Pratt is in the process of renovating the apartments to be used by upperclassmen.
Vincent A. Stabile Hall opened in the Fall of 1999 and designed by Pasanella+Klein, Stolzman+Berg Architects. Named for the donor and graduate of the Engineering School, it was designed for new undergraduate students. It houses 240 students in four-person suites. Each suite consists of two double rooms with a shared bath. There are kitchenettes located on each floor. Stabile is primarily a freshmen residence hall.
Emerson Hall is the newest dorm on the Pratt campus, built specifically to be a freshman dorm. The dorm is off campus, next to the film and video building. The dorm contains double rooms and triple rooms, with several bathrooms on each floor to be shared by those inhabiting each floor. Emerson will be open for living in the fall 2019 semester.
Willoughby Hall is a former private apartment building built as part of Robert Moses' urban renewal projects surround
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The historic Pratt Townhouses
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d0/Pratt_houses_Steuben_St_jeh.jpg
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_Islands
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Channel Islands
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World War II
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Channel Islands / History / 20th century / World War II
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V for Victory laid into paving during German occupation of Jersey during WWII, later amended to refer to Red Cross ship SS Vega, and subsequently restored as monument.
| null | false | true |
The Channel Islands are an archipelago in the English Channel, off the French coast of Normandy. They include two Crown dependencies: the Bailiwick of Jersey, which is the largest of the islands; and the Bailiwick of Guernsey, consisting of Guernsey, Alderney, Sark, Herm and some smaller islands. They are considered the remnants of the Duchy of Normandy and, although they are not part of the United Kingdom, the UK is responsible for the defence and international relations of the islands. The Crown dependencies are not members of the Commonwealth of Nations nor of the European Union. They have a total population of about 170,499, and the bailiwicks' capitals, Saint Helier and Saint Peter Port, have populations of 33,500 and 18,207, respectively.
"Channel Islands" is a geographical term, not a political unit. The two bailiwicks have been administered separately since the late 13th century. Each has its own independent laws, elections, and representative bodies. Any institution common to both is the exception rather than the rule. The Bailiwick of Guernsey is divided into three jurisdictions – Guernsey, Alderney and Sark – each with its own legislature.
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The islands were the only part of the British Isles to be occupied by the German Army during World War II.
The British Government demilitarised the islands in June 1940, and the lieutenant-governors were withdrawn on 21 June, leaving the insular administrations to continue government as best they could under impending military occupation.
Before German troops landed, between 30 June and 4 July 1940, evacuation took place. Many young men had already left to join the Allied armed forces, as volunteers. 6,600 out of 50,000 left Jersey while 17,000 out of 42,000 left Guernsey. Thousands of children were evacuated with their schools to England and Scotland.
The population of Sark largely remained where they were; but in Alderney, all but six people left. In Alderney, the occupying Germans built four camps in which over 700 people out of a total worker population of about 6,000 died. Due to the destruction of documents, it is impossible to state how many forced workers died in the other islands. Alderney had the only Nazi concentration camps on British soil.
The Royal Navy blockaded the islands from time to time, particularly following the Invasion of Normandy in June 1944. There was considerable hunger and privation during the five years of German occupation, particularly in the final months when the population was close to starvation. Intense negotiations resulted in some humanitarian aid being sent via the Red Cross, leading to the arrival of Red Cross parcels in the supply ship SS Vega in December 1944.
The German occupation of 1940–45 was harsh: over 2,000 Islanders were deported by the Germans, some Jews were sent to concentration camps; Partisan resistance and retribution, accusations of collaboration, and slave labour also occurred. Many Spaniards, initially refugees from the Spanish Civil War, were brought to the islands to build fortifications. Later, Russians and Central Europeans continued the work. Many land mines were laid, with 65,718 land mines laid in Jersey alone.
There was no resistance movement in the Channel Islands on the scale of that in mainland France. This has been ascribed to a range of factors including the physical separation of the Islands, the density of troops (up to one German for every two Islanders), the small size of the Islands precluding any hiding places for resistance groups, and the absence of the Gestapo from the occupying forces. Moreover, much of the population of military age had joined the British Army already.
The end of the occupation came after VE-Day on 8 May 1945, Jersey and Guernsey being liberated on 9 May. The German garrison in Alderney was left until 16 May, and it was one of the last of the Nazi German remnants to surrender. The first evacuees returned on the first sailing from Great Britain on 23 June, but the people of Alderney were unable to start returning until December 1945. Many of the evacuees who returned home had difficulty reconnecting with their families after five years of separation.
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During the German occupation of Jersey, a stonemason repairing the paving of the Royal Square incorporated a V for victory under the noses of the occupiers. This was later amended to refer to the Red Cross ship Vega. The addition of the date 1945 and a more recent frame has transformed it into a monument.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlestown_Vietnam_Veterans_Memorial
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Charlestown Vietnam Veterans Memorial
| null |
Charlestown Vietnam Veterans Memorial
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English: Boston (2019)
| null | true | true |
The Charlestown Vietnam Veterans Memorial is a war memorial commemorating six local men who died who during the Vietnam War, installed outside Veterans Memorial Hall in Charlestown, Boston, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The memorial was dedicated in April 2009.
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The Charlestown Vietnam Veterans Memorial is a war memorial commemorating six local men who died who during the Vietnam War, installed outside Veterans Memorial Hall in Charlestown, Boston, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The memorial was dedicated in April 2009.
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The memorial in 2019
| 1,382 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minkowski_diagram
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Minkowski diagram
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Spacetime diagrams in Newtonian physics
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Minkowski diagram / Spacetime diagrams in Newtonian physics
| null | null | false | false |
The Minkowski diagram, also known as a spacetime diagram, was developed in 1908 by Hermann Minkowski and provides an illustration of the properties of space and time in the special theory of relativity. It allows a qualitative understanding of the corresponding phenomena like time dilation and length contraction without mathematical equations.
Minkowski diagrams are two-dimensional graphs that depict events as happening in a universe consisting of one space dimension and one time dimension. Unlike a regular distance-time graph, the distance is displayed on the horizontal axis and time on the vertical axis. Additionally, the time and space units of measurement are chosen in such a way that an object moving at the speed of light is depicted as following a 45° angle to the diagram's axes.
In this way, each object, like an observer or a vehicle, traces a certain line in the diagram, which is called its world line. Also, each point in the diagram represents a certain position in space and time, and is called an event, regardless of whether anything relevant happens there and then.
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The black axes labelled x and ct on the adjoining diagram are the coordinate system of an observer, referred to as 'at rest', and who is positioned at x = 0. This observer's world line is identical with the ct time axis. Each parallel line to this axis would correspond also to an object at rest but at another position. The blue line describes an object moving with constant speed v to the right, such as a moving observer.
This blue line labelled ct′ may be interpreted as the time axis for the second observer. Together with the x axis, which is identical for both observers, it represents their coordinate system. Since the reference frames are in standard configuration, both observers agree on the location of the origin of their coordinate systems. The axes for the moving observer are not perpendicular to each other and the scale on their time axis is stretched. To determine the coordinates of a certain event, two lines, each parallel to one of the two axes, must be constructed passing through the event, and their intersections with the axes read off.
Determining position and time of the event A as an example in the diagram leads to the same time for both observers, as expected. Only for the position different values result, because the moving observer has approached the position of the event A since t = 0. Generally stated, all events on a line parallel to the x axis happen simultaneously for both observers. There is only one universal time t = t′, modelling the existence of one common position axis. On the other hand, due to two different time axes the observers usually measure different coordinates for the same event. This graphical translation from x and t to x′ and t′ and vice versa is described mathematically by the so-called Galilean transformation.
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In Newtonian physics for both observers the event at A is assigned to the same point in time.
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/56/Minkowski_diagram_-_Newtonian_physics.svg
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Gilgit%E2%80%93Baltistan
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Geography of Gilgit–Baltistan
| null |
Geography of Gilgit–Baltistan
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English: Gilgit-Baltistan map with tehsils labelled
| null | false | true |
Gilgit-Baltistan has been under Pakistan administration since 1947 and was given self-governing status on August 29, 2009. Gilgit-Baltistan comprises 10 districts within three divisions. The four districts of Skardu Kharmang Shigar and Ghanche are in the Baltistan Division, four districts of Gilgit Ghizer Hunza and Nagar districts which were carved out of Gilgit District are in the Gilgit Division and the third division is Diamir, comprising Chilas and Astore. The main political centres are the towns of Gilgit and Skardu.
Gilgit-Baltistan is home to some of the world's highest mountain ranges. The main ranges are the Karakoram and the western Himalayas. The Pamir mountains are to the north and the Hindu Kush lies to the west. Amongst the highest mountains are K2 and Nanga Parbat, one of the most feared mountains in the world.
Many of the highest peaks in Gilgit-Baltistan, such as Baltoro Muztagh, K2, the second-highest mountain in the world, the Gasherbrums, and Masherbrum, 22nd-highest in the world, lie in the Skardu District.
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Gilgit-Baltistan has been under Pakistan administration since 1947 and was given self-governing status on August 29, 2009. Gilgit-Baltistan comprises 10 districts within three divisions. The four districts of Skardu Kharmang Shigar and Ghanche are in the Baltistan Division, four districts of Gilgit Ghizer Hunza and Nagar districts which were carved out of Gilgit District are in the Gilgit Division and the third division is Diamir, comprising Chilas and Astore (which was carved out of the Diamir District in 2004). The main political centres are the towns of Gilgit and Skardu.
Gilgit-Baltistan is home to some of the world's highest mountain ranges. The main ranges are the Karakoram and the western Himalayas. The Pamir mountains are to the north and the Hindu Kush lies to the west. Amongst the highest mountains are K2 (Mount Godwin-Austen) and Nanga Parbat, one of the most feared mountains in the world.
Many of the highest peaks in Gilgit-Baltistan, such as Baltoro Muztagh, K2 (Mount Godwin-Austen) (8,611 m), the second-highest mountain in the world), the Gasherbrums (7,932 - 8,080 meters, ranked 12-17 in the world), and Masherbrum (7,821 m), 22nd-highest in the world), lie in the Skardu District. Other high peaks are Distaghil Sar (7,885 meters, 19th-highest in the world), Kunyang Chhish (7,852 meters, 21st-highest in the world), Batura Sar (7,795 m), 25th-highest in the world), Kanjut Sar (7,790 m), 26th-highest in the world), and Rakaposhi (7,788 m), 27th-highest in the world.
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Districts of Gilgit-Balistan, 2019
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| 8,058 | 4,022 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindenburg-class_airship
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Hindenburg-class airship
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Design and development
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Hindenburg-class airship / Design and development
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The two Hindenburg-class airships were hydrogen-filled, passenger-carrying rigid airships built in Germany in the 1930s and named in honor of Paul von Hindenburg. They were the last such aircraft ever built, and in terms of their length and volume, the largest Zeppelins ever to fly. During the 1930s, airships like the Hindenburg class were widely considered the future of air travel, and the lead ship of the class, LZ 129 Hindenburg, established a regular transatlantic service. The destruction of this ship in a highly publicized accident was to prove the death knell for these expectations. The second ship, LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin, was never operated on a regular passenger service, and was scrapped in 1940 by order of Hermann Göring.
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The Hindenburg class were built to an all-duralumin design. The leader of the design team was Dr. Ludwig Dürr, who had overseen the design of all Zeppelins except LZ-1 (on which he was a crew member), under the overall direction of Dr. Hugo Eckener, the head of the company. They were 245 m (804 ft) long and 41 m (135 ft) in diameter, longer than three Boeing 747s placed end-to-end, longer than four Goodyear GZ-20 "blimps" end-to-end, and only 24 m (79 ft) shorter than the RMS Titanic. The previous largest civilian airship, with a length of 237 m (777 ft) and a width of 40 m (130 ft), was the British R101, which was completed in 1929. The US Navy's Akron and Macon were 239 m (785 ft) long and 44 m (144 ft) wide.
The design originally called for cabins for 50 passengers and a crew complement of 40.
Construction of the first ship, LZ 129, later named Hindenburg, began in 1931, but was suddenly stopped when Luftschiffbau Zeppelin went bankrupt. This led Eckener to make a deal with the Nazi Party which came to power in 1933. He needed money to build the airship; in return he was forced to display the German flag on the fins. Construction resumed in 1935. The keel of the second ship, LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin was laid on June 23, 1936, and the cells were inflated with hydrogen on August 15, 1938. As the second Zeppelin to carry the name Graf Zeppelin (after the LZ 127), it is often referred to as Graf Zeppelin II.
The duralumin frame was covered by cotton cloth varnished with iron oxide and cellulose acetate butyrate impregnated with aluminium powder. The aluminium was added to reflect both ultraviolet, which damaged the fabric, and infrared light, which caused heating of the gas. This was an innovation that was first used on the LZ 126 which was provided as war reparations to the US and served as the USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) from 1924 until decommissioned in 1933.
The rigid structure was held together by many large rings up to the size of a Ferris wheel, 15 of which were gas cell boundaries which formed bulkheads. These bulkheads were braced by steel wires which connected up into the axial catwalk. The longitudinal duralumin girders connected all the rings together and formed "panels". The 16 gas cells were made of cotton and a gas-tight material. On Graf Zeppelin, the cells were lightened and one was made of lightweight silk instead of cotton.
Hydrogen was vented out through valves on the top of the ship. These valves could be controlled both manually and automatically. The axial catwalk was added across the center of the ship to provide access to the gas valves. A keel catwalk provided access to the crew quarters and the engines. Alongside the keel were water ballast and fuel tanks. The tail fins of the airship were over 30 m (100 ft) in length, and were held together with a cross-like structure. The lower tail fin also had an auxiliary control room in case the controls in the gondola malfunctioned.
Hindenburg was powered by four reversible 890 kW (1,190 hp) Daimler-Benz diesel engines which gave the airship a maximum speed of 135 km/h (84 mph). Although the Graf Zeppelin had the same engine car design in its early stages of construction, the pods were later completely redesigned to power tractor propellers. The engines had a water recovery system which captured the exhaust of the engines to minimize weight lost during flight.
To reduce drag, the passenger rooms were contained entirely within the hull, rather than in the gondola as on the LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin, on two decks. The upper deck, "A", contained the passenger quarters, public areas, a dining room, a lounge, and a writing room. The lower deck, "B", contained washrooms, a mess hall for the crew, and a smoking lounge. Long slanted windows ran the length of both decks. The passenger decks were redesigned for Graf Zeppelin; the restaurant was moved to the middle of the quarters and the promenade windows were half a panel lower.
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Hindenburg (dark green) compared to large ships and buildings:
The Pentagon, 1,414 feet, 431 m RMS Queen Mary 2, 1,132 feet, 345 m USS Enterprise, 1,123 feet, 342 m Hindenburg, 804 feet, 245 m Yamato, 863 feet, 263 m Empire State Building, 1,454 feet, 443 m Knock Nevis, ex-Seawise Giant, 1,503 feet, 458 m Apple Park, 1,522 feet, 464 m
| 1,393 | 0 |
failed_to_resize
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowned_eagle
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Crowned eagle
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Relationship with humans
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Crowned eagle / Relationship with humans
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English: « Aquila coronata » = Stephanoaetus coronatus (Crowned Eagle) - young female Français : « Aquila coronata » = Stephanoaetus coronatus (Aigle couronné) - jeune femelle
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The crowned eagle, also known as the African crowned eagle or the crowned hawk-eagle is a large bird of prey found in sub-Saharan Africa; in Southern Africa it is restricted to eastern areas. Its preferred habitats are principally riparian woodlands and various forests. The crowned eagle is the only extant member of the genus Stephanoaetus. A second species, the Malagasy crowned eagle became extinct after humans settled on Madagascar.
At least 90 per cent of the diet is mammalian; the usual prey taken by populations shows pronounced regional differences. Throughout its range the principal prey items are small ungulates, rock hyrax and small primates such as monkeys. Birds and large lizards are barely taken.
Although the crowned eagle's long tail imparts an overall length up to 90 cm, it is somewhat less massive and has a considerably shorter wingspan than Africa's largest eagle, the martial eagle. It is nevertheless considered Africa's most powerful eagle when measured in terms of the weight of its prey items. It often preys on mammals such as bushbuck, exceptionally weighing up to 30 kg albeit usually much less.
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Early illustration of a young female crowned eagle
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominik_Farnbacher
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Dominik Farnbacher
| null |
Dominik Farnbacher
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Le Mans 2010, Drivers' Parade
| null | true | true |
Dominik Farnbacher is a German sports car racing driver, and currently an SRT factory driver, driving an SRT Viper GTS-R in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.
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Dominik Farnbacher (born 26 September 1984 in Ansbach) is a German sports car racing driver, and currently an SRT factory driver, driving an SRT Viper GTS-R in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.
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Farnbacher at Le Mans in 2010
| 1,392 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,327 | 1,560 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheongpung_Cultural_Properties
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Cheongpung Cultural Properties
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Hanbyeong-nu
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Cheongpung Cultural Properties / Complex Structures / Hanbyeong-nu
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Hanbyeong-nu (pavilion) was built in 1317 as an auxiliary structure of a magistrate's office after this area of Cheongpung was elevated from the state of township to county. The pavilion has four bays on the front and three on the side elevations, with a double-story, half-hipped roof. There is a corridor leading to the hall on the west. The main pavilion was built in a double-wing-like bracket structure with double rafters featuring tilted eaves, while the corridor was in a single-wing-like bracket style with single rafters. Cheongpung Cultural Properties Complex - located by the Chungjuho Lake. This complex is a reconstructtion of Cheongpung, a village that became submerged after the construction of Chungju Dam. It took three years to relocate the buildings and structures in the current site at a cost of of over 1.6 trillion won. Designated Treasure #528.
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Cheongpung Cultural Properties Complex is a reconstruction of Cheongpung, a village that became submerged after the construction of Chungju Dam located on a ridge above Chungju Lake, south of Jecheon - North Chungcheong province South Korea. The SBS Jecheon setting is also co-located on the complex site.
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Hanbyeong-nu (pavilion) was built in 1317 (during the reign of King Chungsuk of Goryeo) after this area of Cheongpung was elevated from the state of township to county. It was built as an auxiliary structure to the magistrate's office.
Hanbyeong-nu has four bays in the front and three bays on the sides, with a two-story, half-hipped roof. The main pavilion was built using a double-wing-like bracket style with double rafters featuring tilted eaves.
A corridor leads down the hall to the west in a single-wing-like bracket style using single rafters.
Designated Treasure #528.
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Hanbyeong-nu (pavilion)
| 1,387 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paisley_Park_Records
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Paisley Park Records
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Paisley Park Studios
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Paisley Park Records / Paisley Park Studios
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English: Prince's Paisley Park Studios complex, Chanhassen, Minnesota.
| null | false | true |
Paisley Park Records was an American record label founded by musician Prince in 1985, which was distributed by and funded in part by Warner Bros. Records. It was started in 1985, following the success of the film and album Purple Rain. The label shares its name with Prince's recording complex Paisley Park Studios and the song "Paisley Park" on his 1985 Around the World in a Day album. Paisley Park was opened to the public as a museum and memorial to Prince following his death. October 28, 2016, is officially known as Paisley Park Day in the city of Chanhassen to recognize the opening of the museum.
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The studio was designed by architecture firm BOTO Design Inc, of Santa Monica, California, and officially opened on September 11, 1987. It contains two live music venues used as rehearsal spaces. After the label folded in 1994, Prince continued to live and record at Paisley Park Studios. Prince's intention before his death was to establish Paisley Park as a public venue like Graceland. He was found dead in his estate's elevator on April 21, 2016.
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The Paisley Park Studios complex in Chanhassen, Minnesota
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,542 | 1,151 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minneapolis_City_Hall
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Minneapolis City Hall
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Interior
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Minneapolis City Hall / Interior
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English: The Neptunian figure of the Father of Waters sits atop articles representing the river, the most prominent of which is the Louisiana alligator.
| null | false | true |
Minneapolis City Hall and Hennepin County Courthouse, designed by Long and Kees in 1888, is the main building used by the city government of Minneapolis, Minnesota as well as by Hennepin County, Minnesota. The structure has served as mainly local government offices since it was built, and today the building is 60 percent occupied by the city and 40 percent occupied by the County. The building is jointly owned by the city and county and managed by the Municipal Building Commission. The Commission consists of the chair of the County Board, the mayor of the City of Minneapolis, a member of the County Board and a member of the Minneapolis City Council. The County Board chair serves as the president of the Commission and the mayor serves as the vice president. The building bears a striking resemblance to the city hall buildings in Cincinnati and Toronto. The City Hall and Courthouse was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.
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Inside, on the 4th Street side, there is a large five-story rotunda including a large sculpture, "Father of Waters," by American sculptor Larkin Goldsmith Mead who lived in Florence, Italy at the time. According to legend, rubbing his big toe brings good luck. It was placed inside the building in 1906.
Originally, the building had a red terracotta roof, but it began leaking so a copper roof was installed. At 180,000 pounds (81.6 t), it was said to be the largest in the country. The copper has since acquired its characteristic green patina.
Over the years, some of the larger spaces in the building were subdivided to make more office space. In the 1940s and 1950s, the city built a mezzanine floor over its side of the 3rd floor, and the county built an annex building on its side of the courtyard. In 1981, a committee plan recommended converting some of the spaces back to their original design and that other spaces be converted to a more open design with offices fronting onto the courtyard instead of the current corridors. The plan also called for the annex building in the courtyard to be demolished, the courtyard domed, and the Father of Waters sculpture moved in there. Many of these aspects of the plan were rejected, although restoration of certain historic spaces has been completed.
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The "Father of Waters" sculpture
| 1,349 | 0 |
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| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 4,288 | 2,848 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toney%27s_Brook
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Toney's Brook
| null |
Toney's Brook
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English: Looking north along Toney's Brook from footbridge at a gazebo on a former mill site on a sunny early afternoon.
| null | false | true |
Toney's Brook is a tributary of the Second River in Essex County, New Jersey in the United States.
Named for Anthony Oliff, a resident of Montclair, Toney's Brook originates in Montclair northwest of the Upper Montclair railway station, now with two branches, east and west of the elevated railroad tracks at Bellevue. In Montclair it is joined by two tributary streams, both originally also called Toney's, one called Tunnel Brook arising from the cliff near Claremont Ave. and continues through Anderson Park, Edgemont Memorial Park, Montclair High School and Glenfield Park.
In Glenfield Park, the brook continues southeast into Glen Ridge, where it flows through The Glen.
It then flows into Bloomfield and, in Watsessing Park, joins the Second River, a tributary of the Passaic River. Many roads have been built over the brook and in some places it is covered up completely, canalized or culvertised.
In the 19th and early 20th century, Toney's Brook supported several mills, which produced lumber, beer, calico, brass fittings, and pasteboard boxes.
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Toney's Brook is a tributary of the Second River in Essex County, New Jersey in the United States.
Named for Anthony Oliff, a resident of Montclair(Newark in his time), Toney's Brook originates in Montclair northwest of the Upper Montclair railway station(originally north of the Montclair Presby Iris Garden), now with two branches, east and west of the elevated railroad tracks at Bellevue. In Montclair it is joined by two tributary streams, both originally also called Toney's, one called Tunnel Brook arising from the cliff near Claremont Ave.) and continues through Anderson Park, Edgemont Memorial Park, Montclair High School and Glenfield Park.
In Glenfield Park, the brook continues southeast into Glen Ridge, where it flows through The Glen (the glen for which that borough is named).
It then flows into Bloomfield and, in Watsessing Park, joins the Second River, a tributary of the Passaic River. Many roads have been built over the brook and in some places it is covered up completely, canalized or culvertised.
In the 19th and early 20th century, Toney's Brook supported several mills, which produced lumber, beer, calico, brass fittings, and pasteboard boxes.
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The Brook in The Glen in Glen Ridge
| 1,358 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 4,124 | 3,063 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cineplex_Entertainment_movie_theatres
|
List of Cineplex Entertainment movie theatres
|
Colossus
|
List of Cineplex Entertainment movie theatres / Banners / Legacy banners from Famous Players / Colossus
|
Français : Cinémas Cineplex Laval, Centropolis, Laval, Québec.
| null | false | false |
This is a list of Canadian movie theatres operated by Cineplex Entertainment, under the Galaxy, Cineplex Odeon, SilverCity, Cinema City, Famous Players, Coliseum, Colossus, Scotiabank Theatre, Cineplex Cinemas and Cineplex VIP Cinemas brandings. Cineplex, however, has discontinued the Coliseum and Colossus banners, created by Famous Players in the late 1990s, replacing them with the Cineplex Cinemas banner, but the unique architectural features of these theatres has been preserved. As a result, theatres built in this fashion will feature the name of their former banner in the "Format" column of this list.
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Larger than Coliseum were Famous Players' three Colossus theatres, re-branded to Cineplex Cinemas since 2015. In its design, the top of the buildings have a giant UFO landing site with the flying saucer sits on top of the foyer and is flanked by lights that appear to be afterburners. Passing through the massive main entrance were automatic ticketing machines in an alien figure appearance. These are now replaced by generic Cineplex ticketing machine.
This brand focused on city suburbs and was built to challenge then-competitor AMC Theatres entry into the Canadian market. Each Colossus features 19 screens, or 18 in Laval, using the following technologies: Real D 3D (seven to eight screens), UltraAVX (one or two screens), D-Box (one screen) and IMAX (one screen, excluding Laval). The two theatres excluding Laval have a licensed lounge named "The Pod".
All locations feature an Xscape Entertainment Centre to replace their older TechTown arcades. Colossus debuted on February 12, 1999 in Vaughan, north of Toronto, Ontario. One of its screens was the first IMAX 3D theatre in Ontario. The second location opened in the Langley suburb of Vancouver on May 19, 1999. As of July 20, 2017, both of these locations offer IMAX 70 mm film playback. The final Colossus was opened in the Laval suburb of Montreal on November 17, 2000.
|
Cinémas Cineplex Laval, formerly branded as Colossus, features a UFO design in its foyer.
| 1,388 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 4,250 | 800 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-6_(Michigan_highway)
|
M-6 (Michigan highway)
|
Phase I
|
M-6 (Michigan highway) / History / Current freeway / Phase I
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English: Aerial photo of the M-6/M-37 interchange in Caledonia, Michigan under construction
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Aerial photo of
| false | true |
M-6, or the Paul B. Henry Freeway, is a 19.7-mile-long east–west freeway and state trunkline highway in the United States that serves portions of southern Kent and eastern Ottawa counties south of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Although the freeway is named for Paul B. Henry, local residents and the press continue to use the original name, South Beltline as well on occasion. The freeway connects Interstate 196 on the west with I-96 on the east. M-6 also provides a connection to U.S. Highway 131 in the middle of its corridor while running through several townships on the south side of the Grand Rapids metropolitan area in Western Michigan. Each end is in a rural area while the central section has suburban development along the trunkline.
The freeway was originally conceived in the 1960s. It took 32 years to approve, plan, finance, and build the freeway from the time that the state first authorized funding in 1972 to the time of the ribbon-cutting ceremony in 2004 that opened the South Beltline to traffic. The project cost around $700 million or around $35 million per mile. Initial construction started in November 1997, with the first phase opened in November 2001.
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Proposals for the South Beltline Freeway were nearly 25 years old by the time initial construction was started in 1997. The Michigan State Legislature named the South Beltline around the same time for the Congressman Paul B. Henry, who died in office in 1993, serving in Gerald Ford's old US House seat. The cost of the construction of new roads like the South Beltline was a campaign issue when Engler ran for re-election against Geoffrey Feiger in 1998. The entire freeway was projected to open by 2008, with the first phase opening in 2002. MDOT gave the South Beltline its numerical designation on the July 1999 edition of the state map, marking M-6 for the first time as a dotted line, to denote it was "under construction". The legislature approved Engler's "Build Michigan III" program in 2000; the plan accelerated road projects in the state. The capital outlay for the year was $82 million (equivalent to $119 million in 2018). Condemnation proceedings were initiated in the Kent County Circuit Court in 1999 to clear the way for the acquisitions. Land that contained homes, farms, trailer parks, and businesses was purchased by MDOT to acquire the right-of-way needed for the freeway. The land needed measured 360 feet (110 m) wide and 20 miles (32 km) long. Land acquisitions for the South Beltline Freeway were completed in July 2001. Construction started later in the fall of 2001 on the second and third phases of the project.
The first leg of the South Beltline Freeway, located between M-37 (Broadmoor Avenue) and I-96, was finished six months early. Dry summer weather allowed the roadbed contractors to finish their portion of the five-mile (8.0 km) section of the freeway early, earning them a $300,000 bonus (equivalent to $415,000 in 2018). The overpasses for the remaining sections of the freeway were completed while the first phase was under construction, leaving the interchanges at US 131 and I-196 and the connecting roadbed to be completed at that time. The first section was paved in asphalt after MDOT reversed the decision to pave the whole freeway in concrete. That stretch of freeway opened to traffic on November 20, 2001. The state kept the overall project in an accelerated status headed into the next phases in 2002.
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M-37 interchange incomplete while the remainder of the freeway was under construction
| 1,359 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,072 | 2,048 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radha
|
Radha
|
Influence
|
Radha / Influence
|
English: 14th century Fresco of Krishna on interior wall City Palace, Udaipur
| null | false | true |
Radha, also called Radhika, Radhe, Madhavi, Keshavi, Raseshwari, Kishori, Shyama and Radharani is a popular and revered goddess in Hinduism, especially in the Gaudiya Vaishnavism tradition and is worshipped as the goddess of love, tenderness, compassion and devotion. She is the eternal consort of Lord Krishna and resides with him in their eternal abode Goloka dham. She is the internal potency or Hladini Shakti of Krishna. According to scriptures, she was the chief of the milkmaids who are known for their supreme devotion towards Krishna. She is the personification of complete devotion unto Shri Krishna and is revered as the epitome of selfless love and service towards Krishna. She is also considered by some as the feminine form of Lord Krishna himself. Every year Radharani's birthday is celebrated as Radhashtami.
She is also considered by some as a metaphor for the human spirit, her love and longing for Lord Krishna is theologically viewed as symbolic of the human quest for spiritual growth and union with the divine. She has inspired numerous literary works, and her Rasa lila dance with Krishna has inspired many types of performance arts.
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In some devotional (bhakti) traditions of Vaishnavism that focus on Krishna, Radha represents "the feeling of love towards Krishna". For some of the adherents of these traditions, her importance approaches or even exceeds that of Krishna. Radha is worshipped along with Krishna in Bengal, Assam and Odisha by Vaishnava Hindus. Elsewhere, such as with Visnusvamins, she is a revered deity. She is considered to be Krishna's original shakti, the supreme goddess in both the Nimbarka Sampradaya and following the advent of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu also within the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition.
Radha Chalisa mentions that Krishna accompanies one who chants "Radha" with pure heart. Other gopis are usually considered to be self-willing maidservants (Sevika) of Radha. Radharani's superiority is seen in Krishna's flute, which repeats the name Radha.
Radha's connection to Krishna is of two types: svakiya-rasa (married relationship) and parakiya-rasa (a relationship signified with eternal mental "love"). The Gaudiya tradition focuses upon parakiya-rasa as the highest form of love, wherein Radha and Krishna share thoughts even through separation. The love the gopis feel for Krishna is also described in this esoteric manner as the highest platform of spontaneous love of God, and not of a sexual nature.
|
14th-century fresco of Radha Krishna in Udaipur, Rajasthan
| 1,398 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 781 | 1,069 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_River,_New_York
|
Pearl River, New York
|
Education
|
Pearl River, New York / Education
|
English: 2008 No Child Left Behind Blue Ribbon School Logo
| null | false | true |
Pearl River is a hamlet and census-designated place in the town of Orangetown, Rockland County, New York, United States. It is located east of Chestnut Ridge, south of Nanuet, west of Blauvelt, New York, and north of Montvale and Old Tappan, New Jersey. The population was 15,876 at the 2010 census.
Pearl River is 20 miles north of midtown Manhattan and lies just north of the New Jersey border. It is the first of three New York stops on New Jersey Transit's Pascack Valley Line.
In 2011, CNNMoney.com ranked Pearl River 78th on its annual "100 Best Places to Live" list.
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The community is served by the Pearl River School District. Pearl River High School is located at 275 East Central Avenue and serves students in grades 8 through 12. It currently has 1055 students enrolled. 96% of the class of 2009 continued on to college, university, or technical school.
In 2001, the Pearl River School District won the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.
In 2008 & 2014, Franklin Avenue Elementary School was a U.S. Department of Education Blue Ribbon School of Excellence Award winner.
In 2011, Pearl River Middle School was a Blue Ribbon School of Excellence Award winner.
Saint Margaret School is a Catholic school serving grades Pre-K through 8.
Pearl River School District
In 2017 U.S. News & World Report ranked Pearl River High School with a Silver award as the 76 Best High School in New York State and 727 nationally.
In 2018, ranked 214 Best School Districts in Pearl River by Niche's.
Pearl River High School was named the #1 high school in Rockland County by US News in 2019.
|
Blue Ribbon
|
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/United_States_Department_of_Education_Blue_Ribbon_School_Logo.jpg
| 1,396 | 0 |
success
| null | 350 | 357 |
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| 350 | 357 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sh%C5%8Dnan-Enoshima_Station
|
Shōnan-Enoshima Station
| null |
Shōnan-Enoshima Station
|
日本語: 2018年に完成した湘南江の島駅の駅ビル。
| null | true | false |
Shōnan-Enoshima Station is a monorail train station on the Shōnan Monorail Enoshima Line located in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is the southern terminus of the Shōnan Monorail Enoshima Line and is located 6.6 kilometers from the northern terminus at Ōfuna Station.
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Shōnan-Enoshima Station (湘南江の島駅, Shōnan-Enoshima-eki) is a monorail train station on the Shōnan Monorail Enoshima Line located in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is the southern terminus of the Shōnan Monorail Enoshima Line and is located 6.6 kilometers from the northern terminus at Ōfuna Station.
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Shōnan-Enoshima Station (December 2018)
| 1,386 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 2,560 | 1,920 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfume
|
Perfume
|
Fragrant extracts
|
Perfume / Fragrant extracts
|
Deutsch: Flaschen mit dem Parfum-Rohstoff Indisches Patschuli-Öl (lat. Pogostemon cablin) English: Pogostemon cablin Русский: Масло пачули
| null | false | false |
Perfume is a mixture of fragrant essential oils or aroma compounds, fixatives and solvents, used to give the human body, animals, food, objects, and living-spaces an agreeable scent.
It is usually in liquid form and used to give a pleasant scent to a person's body.
Ancient texts and archaeological excavations show the use of perfumes in some of the earliest human civilizations. Modern perfumery began in the late 19th century with the commercial synthesis of aroma compounds such as vanillin or coumarin, which allowed for the composition of perfumes with smells previously unattainable solely from natural aromatics alone.
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Although fragrant extracts are known to the general public as the generic term "essential oils", a more specific language is used in the fragrance industry to describe the source, purity, and technique used to obtain a particular fragrant extract.
Of these extracts, only absolutes, essential oils, and tinctures are directly used to formulate perfumes.
Absolute: Fragrant materials that are purified from a pommade or concrete by soaking them in ethanol. By using a slightly hydrophilic compound such as ethanol, most of the fragrant compounds from the waxy source materials can be extracted without dissolving any of the fragrantless waxy molecules. Absolutes are usually found in the form of an oily liquid.
Concrete: Fragrant materials that have been extracted from raw materials through solvent extraction using volatile hydrocarbons. Concretes usually contain a large amount of wax due to the ease in which the solvents dissolve various hydrophobic compounds. As such concretes are usually further purified through distillation or ethanol based solvent extraction. Concretes are typically either waxy or resinous solids or thick oily liquids.
Essential oil: Fragrant materials that have been extracted from a source material directly through distillation or expression and obtained in the form of an oily liquid. Oils extracted through expression are sometimes called expression oils.
Pomade: A fragrant mass of solid fat created from the enfleurage process, in which odorous compounds in raw materials are adsorbed into animal fats. Pommades are found in the form of an oily and sticky solid.
Tincture: Fragrant materials produced by directly soaking and infusing raw materials in ethanol. Tinctures are typically thin liquids.
Products from different extraction methods are known under different names even though their starting materials are the same. For instance, orange blossoms from Citrus aurantium that have undergone solvent extraction produces "orange blossom absolute" but that which have been steam distilled is known as "neroli oil".
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Indian Patchouli - Tincture
| 1,406 | 0 |
success
| null | 238 | 306 |
{}
| 238 | 306 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westwood_Hall
|
Westwood Hall
|
Lodge
|
Westwood Hall / Lodge
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English: Grade II-listed building on Westwood Road, Leek, Staffordshire
| null | false | true |
Westwood Hall is a former stately home in Leek, Staffordshire, England.
It is a Grade II listed building. It has been a school since 1921, and is now Westwood College.
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The former lodge on the eastern approach to Westwood Hall is on Westwood Park Drive, grid reference SJ 971 563. It is a Grade II listed building, and is presumed to be by the architects of the hall, Hadfield Weightman and Goldie. It is of red sandstone. Above the archway over the former driveway to the hall, in low relief, is the date: "ANNO DOMINI 1852".
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The lodge on Westwood Park Drive, viewed from the east.
| 1,404 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,600 | 1,200 |
|
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tipaza
|
Tipaza
| null |
Tipaza
|
Français : Phare de Tipaza. Español: Faro de Tipasa.
| null | true | false |
Tipaza is a town on the coast of Algeria. It is the capital of the Tipaza Province. It was formed in 1857. It is known for its sandy beach and ancient ruins.
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Tipaza is a town on the coast of Algeria. It is the capital of the Tipaza Province. It was formed in 1857. It is known for its sandy beach and ancient ruins.
|
Tipaza Lighthouse and the promontory
| 1,394 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,648 | 2,736 |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Virginia_Route_34
|
West Virginia Route 34
| null |
West Virginia Route 34
|
English: View north along West Virginia State Route 34 at U.S. Route 35 in Putnam County, West Virginia
| null | false | true |
West Virginia Route 34 is a north–south state highway in the U.S. state of West Virginia. The southern terminus of the route is at West Virginia Route 3 three miles east of Hamlin. The northern terminus is at Interstate 77 exit 124 in Kenna.
The portion of the highway between Scott Depot and Hurricane has seen heavy commercial and residential development since the 1980s. The area, known as Teays Valley, has grown into a major suburb of Charleston, the state's capital.
|
West Virginia Route 34 is a north–south state highway in the U.S. state of West Virginia. The southern terminus of the route is at West Virginia Route 3 three miles (5 km) east of Hamlin. The northern terminus is at Interstate 77 exit 124 in Kenna.
The portion of the highway between Scott Depot and Hurricane has seen heavy commercial and residential development since the 1980s. The area, known as Teays Valley, has grown into a major suburb of Charleston, the state's capital.
|
View north along WV 34 at US 35 in Putnam County
| 1,401 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 3,264 | 2,448 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Cron
|
Kevin Cron
| null |
Kevin Cron
|
English: Kevin Cron of the Arizona Diamondbacks on the field at Nationals Park in 2019
| null | true | true |
Kevin Scott Cron is an American professional baseball first baseman for the Arizona Diamondbacks of Major League Baseball.
|
Kevin Scott Cron (born February 17, 1993) is an American professional baseball first baseman for the Arizona Diamondbacks of Major League Baseball (MLB).
|
Cron with the Diamondbacks in 2019
| 1,403 | 0 |
success
| null | 512 | 512 |
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| 1,129 | 1,408 |
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess
|
Chess
|
Modern
|
Chess / Place in culture / Modern
|
The Red King asleep, by John Tenniel for "Through the Looking Glass" by Lewis Carroll
| null | false | true |
Chess is a two-player strategy board game played on a checkered board with 64 squares arranged in an 8×8 square grid. Played by millions of people worldwide, chess is believed to be derived from the Indian game chaturanga sometime before the 7th century. Chaturanga is also the likely ancestor of the East Asian strategy games xiangqi, janggi, and shogi. Chess reached Europe via Persia and Arabia by the 9th century, due to the Umayyad conquest of Hispania. The queen and bishop assumed their current powers in Spain in the late 15th century, and the modern rules were standardized in the 19th century.
Play involves no hidden information. Each player begins with 16 pieces: one king, one queen, two rooks, two knights, two bishops, and eight pawns. Each piece type moves differently, with the most powerful being the queen and the least powerful the pawn. The objective is to checkmate the opponent's king by placing it under an inescapable threat of capture. To this end, a player's pieces are used to attack and capture the opponent's pieces, while supporting one another.
|
During the Age of Enlightenment, chess was viewed as a means of self-improvement. Benjamin Franklin, in his article "The Morals of Chess" (1750), wrote:
The Game of Chess is not merely an idle amusement; several very valuable qualities of the mind, useful in the course of human life, are to be acquired and strengthened by it, so as to become habits ready on all occasions; for life is a kind of Chess, in which we have often points to gain, and competitors or adversaries to contend with, and in which there is a vast variety of good and ill events, that are, in some degree, the effect of prudence, or the want of it. By playing at Chess then, we may learn:
I. Foresight, which looks a little into futurity, and considers the consequences that may attend an action [...]
II. Circumspection, which surveys the whole Chess-board, or scene of action: – the relation of the several Pieces, and their situations [...]
III. Caution, not to make our moves too hastily [...]
Chess was occasionally criticized in the 19th century as a waste of time.
Chess is taught to children in schools around the world today. Many schools host chess clubs, and there are many scholastic tournaments specifically for children. Tournaments are held regularly in many countries, hosted by organizations such as the United States Chess Federation and the National Scholastic Chess Foundation.
Chess is often depicted in the arts; significant works where chess plays a key role range from Thomas Middleton's A Game at Chess to Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll, to Vladimir Nabokov's The Defense, to The Royal Game by Stefan Zweig. Chess is featured in films like Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal and Satyajit Ray's The Chess Players.
Chess is also present in contemporary popular culture. For example, the characters in Star Trek play a futuristic version of the game called "Tri-Dimensional Chess". "Wizard's Chess" is featured in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter plays. The hero of Searching for Bobby Fischer struggles against adopting the aggressive and misanthropic views of a world chess champion. Chess is used as the core theme in the musical Chess by Tim Rice, Björn Ulvaeus, and Benny Andersson. The thriller film Knight Moves is about a chess grandmaster who is accused of being a serial killer. Pawn Sacrifice, starring Tobey Maguire as Bobby Fischer and Liev Schreiber as Boris Spassky, depicts the drama surrounding the 1972 World Chess Championship in Iceland during the Cold War.
|
Through the Looking-Glass: the Red King is snoring. Illustration by Sir John Tenniel.
| 1,409 | 0 |
success
| null | 715 | 474 |
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| 715 | 474 |
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