Monday, August 31, 2020

Paerangi

IdiotSavant: Created


[[File:Rakahanga.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Map of Rakahanga Atoll]]
'''Paerangi''' is one of 11 islands in the [[Rakahanga]] atoll of the [[Cook Islands]].<ref></ref> It is in the southwest of the atoll, between the islands of [[Tetaha Kiraro]] and [[Te Kainga]].

==References==




[[Category:Rakahanga]]



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Johann Jacob Baier

Shyamal: /* External links */


[[File:Johann_Jakob_Baier.jpg|thumb|upright]]
'''Johann Jacob Baier''' (14 June 1677– 14 July 1735) was a German physician and naturalist who wrote on the geology and fossils of the [[Nuremberg]] area in his book ''Oryctographia Norica''. He considered the Deluge of the Bible to be the only catastrophe to have occurred in earth history.
[[File:Frontispiece_baier.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Frontispiece from ''Oryctographia Norica'']]
Baier was born in [[Jena]], the son of theologian [[Johann Wilhelm Baier]] and Anna Katharine Musaeus. He was educated at Jena then received a degree in medicine from [[Halle (Saale)|Halle]] after which he became a professor at [[Altdorf, Uri|Altdorf, Switzerland]] from 1704. He became a personal physician to the Emperor in 1731. Baier was elected to the [[German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina|Leopoldina Academy]] over which he presided from 1731.<ref></ref> Apart from his collections of fossils, he also collected portraits of learned people, with a collection of nearly 600 of them.<ref></ref> Baier also published a biographical account of the medical faculty at Altdorf.

== References ==

== External links ==
* [https://ift.tt/3jvcPj1 Oryktographia norica (1708)]
* [https://ift.tt/2GjWGih Sciagraphia Musei Sui (1730)]




[[Category:German paleontologists]]
[[Category:German naturalists]]
[[Category:1677 births]]
[[Category:1735 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Jena]]


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Tetaha Kiraro

IdiotSavant: Created


[[File:Rakahanga.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Map of Rakahanga Atoll]]
'''Tetaha Kiraro''' is one of 11 islands in the [[Rakahanga]] atoll of the [[Cook Islands]].<ref></ref> It is on the west of the atoll, between the islands of [[Tetukono]] and [[Paerangi]].

==References==




[[Category:Rakahanga]]



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Greg Wells discography

Prahlad balaji: Added tag (using Twinkle✧)


Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
This is the production discography of Canadian songwriter and producer [[Greg Wells]].

==Written and co-written songs==
{|class="wikitable"
!colspan="5"|Discography
|-Som
!width="50"|Year
!width="150"|Artist
!width="150"|Album
!width="150"|Song
!width="150"|Co-written with
|-
! rowspan="3"|1997
| [[Aerosmith]]
| ''[[Nine Lives (Aerosmith album)|Nine Lives]]''
| "Fall Together"
| [[Steven Tyler]], [[Mark Hudson (musician)|Mark Hudson]], Dean Grakal
|-
| rowspan="2"|[[Jars of Clay]]
| rowspan="2"|''[[Much Afraid]]''
| "[[Overjoyed (Jars of Clay song)|Overjoyed]]"
| [[Dan Haseltine]], [[Stephen Mason (musician)|Stephen Mason]], [[Mark Hudson (musician)|Mark Hudson]]
|-
| "Tea and Sympathy"
| [[Dan Haseltine]], [[Mark Hudson (musician)|Mark Hudson]]
|-
! 2001
| [[Ellen Reid]]
| ''[[Cinderellen]]''
| "Anybody Will Do"
| Ellen Reid
|-
! rowspan="9"| 2004
| rowspan="9"| [[Otep]]
| rowspan="9"| ''[[House of Secrets (album)|House of Secrets]]''
| "Requiem"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
| "Buried Alive"
| [[Otep Shamaya]], [[Rob Patterson]]
|-
| "House of Secrets"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
| "Hooks & Splinters"
| [[Otep Shamaya]], Jason McGuire
|-
| "Autotopsy Song"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
| "Suicide Trees"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
| "Nein"
| [[Otep Shamaya]], Rob Patterson
|-
| "Self-Made"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
| "Shattered Pieces"
| [[Otep Shamaya]]
|-
! rowspan="5"| 2005
| rowspan="5"| [[Lindsay Lohan]]
| rowspan="5"| ''[[A Little More Personal (Raw)]]''
| "[[Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father)]]"
| Lindsay Lohan, [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "Black Hole"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]], [[Louise Goffin]]
|-
| "My Innocence"
| Lindsay Lohan [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "If You Were Me"
| Lindsay Lohan [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "Who Loves You"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2006
| rowspan="2"| [[Paris Hilton]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Paris (Paris Hilton album)|Paris]]''
| "Screwed"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "Not Leaving Without You"
|Paris Hilton, [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
! 2007
| [[The Veronicas]]
| ''[[Hook Me Up]]''
| "[[Hook Me Up (song)|Hook Me Up]]"
| [[Jessica Origliasso]], [[Lisa Origliasso]], [[Shelly Peiken]]
|-
! rowspan="4"| 2008
| [[Camp Rock]]
| ''[[Camp Rock (soundtrack)]]''
| "[[We Rock (Camp Rock song)|We Rock]]"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| rowspan="2"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[One of the Boys]]''
| "[[Ur So Gay]]"
| Katy Perry
|-
| "Fingerprints
| Katy Perry
|-
| [[Pink (singer)|Pink]]
| ''[[Funhouse (Pink album)|Funhouse]]''
| "Why Did I Ever Like You"
| Pink
|-
! 2009
| [[Kelly Clarkson]]
| ''[[All I Ever Wanted (album)|All I Ever Wanted]]''
| "[[I Do Not Hook Up]]"
| [[Katy Perry]], [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
! rowspan="5"| 2010
| rowspan="2"|[[Boyzone]]
| rowspan="2"|''[[Brother (Boyzone album)|Brother]]''
| "One More Song"
| [[Nasri (musician)|Nasri]]
|-
| "Time"
| [[Aqualung (musician)|Matt Hales]], [[Kim Oliver]]
|-
| rowspan="2"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Teenage Dream (Katy Perry album)|Teenage Dream]]''
| "Pearl"
| Katy Perry, [[Tricky Stewart|Christopher Stewart]]
|-
| "Not Like the Movies"
| Katy Perry
|-
| [[Weezer]]
| ''[[Hurley (album)|Hurley]]''
| "Where's My Sex"
| [[Rivers Cuomo]]
|-
! 2011
| [[Adele]]
| ''[[21 (Adele album)|21]]''
| "One and Only"
| [[Adele|Adele Adkins]], [[Dan Wilson (musician)|Dan Wilson]]
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2013
| rowspan="2"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Prism (Katy Perry album)|Prism]]''
| "[[By the Grace of God (song)|By the Grace of God]]"
| Katy Perry
|-
| "Choose Your Battles"
| Katy Perry, [[Jonatha Brooke]]
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2015
| [[Carly Rae Jepsen]]
| ''[[Emotion (Carly Rae Jepsen album)|Emotion]]''
| "Black Heart"
| Carly Rae Jepsen, [[E. Kidd Bogart]]
|-
| [[Mika (singer)|Mika]]
| ''[[No Place in Heaven]]''
| "Oh Girl You're the Devil"
| Mika, [[The Monsters & Strangerz|Clarence Coffee Jr.]]
|-
! 2016
| [[Keith Urban]]
| ''[[Ripcord (album)|Ripcord]]''
| "[[Wasted Time (Keith Urban song)|Wasted Time]]"
| Keith Urban, [[James Abrahart]]
|-
! rowspan="2"|2017
| [[Dua Lipa]]
| ''[[Dua Lipa (album)|Dua Lipa]]''
| "Garden"
| Dua Lipa, [[Sean Douglas (songwriter)|Sean Douglas]]
|-
| [[Grace VanderWaal]]
| ''[[Just the Beginning (Grace VanderWaal album)|Just the Beginning]]''
| "Lungs"
| Grace VanderWaal
|-
! 2018
| [[Keith Urban]]
| ''[[Graffiti U]]''
| "My Wave"
| Keith Urban, Shy Carter
|-
! 2019
| [[Celine Dion]]
| ''[[Courage (Celine Dion album)|Courage]]''
| "The Hard Way"
| [[Harloe|Jessica Karpov]], Whitney Phillips
|-
! 2020
| [[John Legend]]
| ''[[Bigger Love]]''
| "Never Break"
| [[John Legend|John Stephens]], [[Mr Hudson|Benjamin Hudson Mclldowie]], [[Nasri (musician)|Nasri Atweh]]
|}

==Production and co-productions==
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible"
|+
! colspan="5" |Discography
|-
! width="50" |Year
! width="150" |Artist
! width="150" |Album
! width="150" |Song
! width="150" |Co-produced with
|-
! rowspan="3"|2001
| [[Ellen Reid]]
| ''[[Cinderellen]]''
| "Anybody Will Do"
|
|-
| rowspan="2"|[[Rufus Wainwright]]
| rowspan="2"|''[[Poses (album)|Poses]]''
| "Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk"
|
|-
| "[[Across the Universe]]"
|
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2004
| [[Jesse McCartney]]
| ''[[Beautiful Soul (Jesse McCartney album)|Beautiful Soul]]''
| "[[Beautiful Soul (song)|Beautiful Soul]]"
| [[Adam Watts (musician)|Adam Watts]], [[Andy Dodd]]
|-
| [[Otep]]
| ''[[House of Secrets (album)|House of Secrets]]''
| All songs
|
|-
! rowspan="8"| 2005
| rowspan="7"| [[Lindsay Lohan]]
| rowspan="7"| ''[[A Little More Personal (Raw)]]''
| "[[Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father)]]"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "Black Hole"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "I Live For the Day"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "My Innocence"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "If You Were Me"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "Who Loves You"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| "A Beautiful Life (La Bella Vita)"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
| [[The Veronicas]]
| ''[[The Secret Life of... (album)|The Secret Life of...]]''
| "[[Mother Mother (song)#Cover|Mother Mother]]"
|
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2006
| rowspan="2"| [[Paris Hilton]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Paris (Paris Hilton album)|Paris]]''
| "Screwed"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]], [[Rob Cavallo]]
|-
| "Not Leaving Without You"
| [[Kara DioGuardi]]
|-
! rowspan="4"|2007
| [[Mika (singer)|Mika]]
| ''[[Life in Cartoon Motion]]''
| All songs
| Mika
|-
| rowspan="2"|[[OneRepublic]]
| rowspan="2"|''[[Dreaming Out Loud]]''
| "[[Say (All I Need)]]"
| Andrew Prickett
|-
| "[[Stop and Stare]]"
|
|-
| [[The Veronicas]]
| ''[[Hook Me Up]]''
| "[[Hook Me Up (song)|Hook Me Up]]"
|
|-
! rowspan="6"| 2008
| [[Camp Rock]]
| ''[[Camp Rock (soundtrack)]]''
| "[[We Rock (Camp Rock song)|We Rock]]"
|
|-
| rowspan="4"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="4"| ''[[One of the Boys]]''
| "[[Waking Up in Vegas]]"
| Katy Perry
|-
| "Mannequin"
|
|-
| "[[Ur So Gay]]"
|
|-
| "Fingerprints"
|
|-
| [[Pink (singer)|Pink]]
| ''[[Funhouse (Pink album)|Funhouse]]''
| "Why Did I Ever Like You"
| Pink
|-
! rowspan="12"|2009
| [[Colbie Caillat]]
| ''[[Breakthrough (Colbie Caillat album)|Breakthrough]]''
| "Fearless"
|
|-
| rowspan="11"|[[Jamie Cullum]]
| rowspan="11"| ''[[The Pursuit (album)|The Pursuit]]''
| "[[Just One of Those Things (song)|Just One of Those Things]]"
|
|-
| "[[I'm All Over It]]"
|
|-
| "Wheels"
|
|-
| "You and Me Are Gone"
|
|-
| "Love Ain't Gonna Let You Down"
|
|-
| "Mixtape"
|
|-
| "I Think, I Love"
|
|-
| "We Run Things"
|
|-
| "[[Not While I'm Around (song)|Not While I'm Around]]"
|
|-
| "Music Is Through"
|
|-
| "Grace Is Gone"
|
|-
! rowspan="13"|2010
| rowspan="11"|[[Boyzone]]
| rowspan="11"|''[[Brother (Boyzone album)|Brother]]''
| "[[Gave It All Away]]"
| Ollie Jacobs
|-
| "[[Love Is a Hurricane]]"
|
|-
| "Ruby"
|
|-
| "To Late for Hallelujah"
|
|-
| "Separate Cars"
|
|-
| "One More Song"
|
|-
| "Right Here Waiting"
|
|-
| "Nothing Without You"
|
|-
| "Til the Sun Goes Down"
|
|-
| "Time"
|
|-
| "Let Your Wall Fall Down"
|
|-
| rowspan="2"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Teenage Dream (Katy Perry album)|Teenage Dream]]''
| "Pearl"
| Katy Perry, [[Tricky Stewart|Christopher Stewart]]
|-
| "Not Like the Movies"
| Katy Perry
|-
! rowspan="7"| 2011
| rowspan="5"| [[Colbie Caillat]]
| rowspan="5"| ''[[All of You (Colbie Caillat album)|All of You]]''
| "[[I Do (Colbie Caillat song)|I Do]]"
|
|-
| "Before I Let You Go"
|
|-
| "Dream Life, Life"
|
|-
| "What Means the Most"
|
|-
| "Maria"
|
|-
| rowspan="2"|[[Dia Frampton]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Red (Dia Frampton album)|Red]]''
| "Isabella"
|
|-
| "The Broken Ones"
|
|-
! rowspan="12"|2012
| [[The All-American Rejects]]
| ''[[Kids in the Street]]''
| All songs
|
|-
| [[Elizaveta Khripounova]]
| ''[[Beatrix Runs]]''
| All songs
|
|-
| rowspan="9"|[[Mika (singer)|Mika]]
| rowspan="9"|''[[The Origin of Love]]''
| "[[Origin of Love]]"
| Mika, [[Nick Littlemore]]
|-
| "[[Stardust (Mika song)|Stardust]]"
| [[Benny Benassi]]
|-
| "Make You Happy"
| Mika, Benjamin Garrett
|-
| "Underwater"
| Mika
|-
| "Overrated"
| [[Klas Åhlund]]
|-
| "Step with Me"
| Mika
|-
| "[[Popular Song (Mika song)|Popular Song]]"
| Mika
|-
| "[[Elle me dit]]"
| Mika
|-
| "Karen"
| Mika, [[Nick Littlemore]]
|-
| [[Tristan Prettyman]]
| ''[[Cedar + Gold]]''
| All songs
|
|-
! rowspan="3"| 2013
| rowspan="2"| [[Katy Perry]]
| rowspan="2"| ''[[Prism (Katy Perry album)|Prism]]''
| "[[By the Grace of God (song)|By the Grace of God]]"
| Katy Perry
|-
| "Choose Your Battles"
| Katy Perry
|-
| [[Twenty One Pilots]]
| ''[[Vessel (Twenty One Pilots album)|Vessel]]''
| All songs
|
|-
! rowspan="10"| 2015
| [[Carly Rae Jepsen]]
| ''[[Emotion (Carly Rae Jepsen album)|Emotion]]''
| "Black Heart"
|
|-
| rowspan="9"| [[Mika (singer)|Mika]]
| rowspan="9"|''[[No Place in Heaven]]''
| "Talk About You"
| Mika
|-
| "All She Wants"
| Mika, [[Martin Terefe]]
|-
| "Last Party"
| Mika
|-
| "Oh Girl You're the Devil"
| Mika
|-
| "No Place in Heaven"
| Mika
|-
| "Good Wife"
| Mika, [[David Sneddon]], James Bauer-Mein
|-
| "Rio"
| Mika
|-
| "Ordinary Man"
| Mika
|-
| "Promiseland"
| Mika
|-
! 2016
| [[Keith Urban]]
| ''[[Ripcord (album)|Ripcord]]''
| "[[Wasted Time (Keith Urban song)|Wasted Time]]"
| Keith Urban
|-
! rowspan="10"| 2017
| [[Dua Lipa]]
| ''[[Dua Lipa (album)|Dua Lipa]]''
| "Garden"
| Dua Lipa, [[Stephen Kozmeniuk]]
|-
| rowspan="3"|[[Grace VanderWaal]]
| rowspan="3"|''[[Just the Beginning (Grace VanderWaal album)|Just the Beginning]]''
| "Just a Crush"
|
|-
| "Lungs"
|
|-
| "A Better Life"
|
|-
| rowspan="6"|[[The Greatest Showman]]
| rowspan="6"|''[[The Greatest Showman (soundtrack)]]''
| "[[The Greatest Show]]"
| [[Jake Sinclair (musician)|Jake Sinclair]], Ryan Lewis, Justin Paul, [[Alex Lacamoire]]
|-
| "Come Alive"
| Justin Paul, Ricky Reed, [[Alex Lacamoire]]
|-
| "The Other Side"
| [[Jake Sinclair (musician)|Jake Sinclair]], Justin Paul, [[Alex Lacamoire]]
|-
| "[[This Is Me (The Greatest Showman song)|This Is Me]]"
| [[Adam Gubman]], Justin Paul, [[Alex Lacamoire]]
|-
| "[[Rewrite the Stars]]"
| [[Joseph Trapanese]], Justin Paul, [[Adam Gubman]], [[Alex Lacamoire]], Chris Leon
|-
| "From Now On"
| Justin Paul, [[Alex Lacamoire]]
|-
! 2018
| [[Keith Urban]]
| ''[[Graffiti U]]''
| "My Wave"
| Keith Urban
|-
! rowspan="2"| 2019
| [[Jamie Cullum]]
| ''[[Taller (album)|Taller]]''
| "Love Is in the Picture"
|
|-
| [[Celine Dion]]
| ''[[Courage (Celine Dion album)|Courage]]''
| "The Hard Way"
|
|-
! rowspan="2"|2020
| [[John Legend]]
| ''[[Bigger Love]]''
| "Never Break"
| [[Mr Hudson]], [[Nasri (musician)|Nasri]], Benjamin Rice
|-
| [[Carrie Underwood]]
| ''[[My Gift]]''
| All songs
|
|}

==References==


[[Category:Production discographies]]
[[Category:Pop music discographies]]


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Anthony Therrien

Bearcat: /* External links */


'''Anthony Therrien''' (born 1997) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] actor from [[Charlemagne, Quebec|Charlemagne]], [[Quebec]].<ref>Olivier Boisvert-Magnen, [https://ift.tt/34O8EuA "Anthony Therrien : Faire sa place"]. ''[[Voir]]'', February 28, 2018.</ref> He is most noted for his performances in the films ''[[Fake Tattoos]] (Les faux tatouages)'', for which he was a [[Vancouver Film Critics Circle]] nominee for [[Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor in a Canadian Film|Best Actor in a Canadian Film]] at the [[Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards 2017]], and ''[[Slut in a Good Way]] (Charlotte a du fun)'', for which he received a [[Prix Iris]] nomination for [[Prix Iris for Best Supporting Actor|Best Supporting Actor]] at the [[20th Quebec Cinema Awards]] in 2018.<ref></ref>

He has also appeared in the films ''[[The Torrent (2012 film)|The Torrent]] (Le Torrent)'', ''[[Corbo]]'', ''[[1:54 (film)|1:54]]'', ''Miséricorde'' and ''Vieux Jeu'', and the television series ''Faux départs'' and ''Alerte amber''.

==References==


==External links==
*


[[Category:1997 births]]
[[Category:21st-century Canadian male actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male film actors]]
[[Category:Canadian male television actors]]
[[Category:Male actors from Quebec]]
[[Category:People from Charlemagne, Quebec]]
[[Category:French Quebecers]]
[[Category:Living people]]



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Mayaka Nakagawa

Timpani: +infobox:official website




'''Mayaka Nakagawa''' (born 29 December 1993) is a Japanese pianist. She participated in 2015 in the 17th international [[Chopin]] piano competition in [[Warsaw]].<ref>[https://ift.tt/2G7F88G Participants in the XVII Chopin competition in 2015]</ref>
She is winner of the 13th international piano competition in [[Campillos]] in December 2019.<ref>[https://ift.tt/3jvJqVR Presentation of Nakagawa in ''Malaga Today'' December 9, 2019 (Spanish)]</ref>

== References ==
<references/>

== External links ==
*[https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=mayaka+nakagawa| Mayaka Nakagawa's contributions at Youtube]
*[https://ift.tt/2YP2qa8 The XVII Chopin competition in Warszawa in 2015: Mayaka Nakagawa in the XVII Chopin Competition]





[[category:women]]
[[category:living persons]]
[[category:1993 births]]
[[category:women classical pianists]]
[[category:japanese classical pianists]]
[[category:21st-century classical pianists]]


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Sunday, August 30, 2020

Niclas Malmberg

D7CY689: /* Intimidation letter received from the Chinese Embassy */


[[File:Niclas Malmberg.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Niclas Fredrik Olof Malmberg]]

'''Niclas Fredrik Olof Malmberg''', born May 4, 1970, is a Swedish politician, who in 2014-2018 was a member of the and cultural and media policy spokesperson for the [[Green Party (Sweden)|Green Party]] and a member of the Riksdag's Culture Committee.

==Biography==

Malmberg has a degree as a science journalist from JMK, and has worked as an editor at [[Östhammar]]'s news and free newspaper in [[Uppsala]]. During 1995-1997, Malmberg was a convener of the [[Young Greens (Sweden)|Young Greens]].

Malmberg was [[municipal commissioner]] in [[Uppsala]] between 2002 and 2010 for the [[Green Party (Sweden)|Green Party]]. Since 2007, Malmberg has been a member of the Administrative Foundation for Swedish Radio, Swedish Television and Educational Radio <ref>[https://ift.tt/32yvV0E Stiftelsens styrelse - 8 november 2014]</ref>, and since 2009 a member of the Press Support Committee and was also a member of the state inquiry into press support, Diversity and Reach, and the Media Constitution Committee. Malmberg joined the Government in September 2016. Since 2013, he has been a board member of Sweden's wind power cooperative <ref>[http://www.svef.nu/ Sveriges vindkraftkooperativ.]</ref> and since 2017 a member of the [[Public broadcasting]] Inquiry.

Since 2016, Malmberg has been chairman of the [[Green Party (Sweden)|Green Party]] in [[Uppsala]] County.

Malmberg has also worked as an editor and writer, including writing a textbook on the climate issue aimed at children and young people, the "Little Climate Book", and the music story "Operation save the park".

==Intimidation letter received from the Chinese Embassy==

On August 19, 2020, Niclas Malmberg revealed a threatening letter sent to him by the Chinese Embassy in Sweden<ref name="瑞典議員曝光中共使館恐嚇信">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. The letter requested that Niclas Malmberg not speak for [[Falun Gong]], threatened Malmberg’s reputation and demanded a meeting with Malmberg<ref name="瑞典議員曝光中共使館恐嚇信"/>.

==References==


[[Category:1970 births]]
[[Category:Green Party (Sweden) politicians]]
[[Category:Municipal commissioners of Sweden]]
[[Category:Living people]]


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Sherry cobbler

Spudlace: added Category:Fourth of July foods using HotCat



A '''sherry cobbler''' is an American cocktail made with sherry, sugar and citrus. It's origins are not known in detail, but is believed to have originated sometime in the early 19th century. The earliest known mention is from an 1838 diary of a Canadian traveler to the Uniter States, [[Katherine Jane Ellice]], but it didn't gain international name recognition until [[Charles Dickens]] included the drink in ''[[The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit]]''.<ref></ref> To make the drink orange and lemon are muddled with simple syrup, shaken with ice in a cocktail shaker, and strained into a [[highball glass]] filled with crushed ice. Garnishes include mint leaves, raspberry, and orange and lemon slices.<ref></ref> It can also be garnished with pineapple wedges, or any seasonal berries. Some recipes add pineapple juice.<ref></ref>

A 19th-century recipe for [[Fourth of July]] Sherry cobber is made with strawberries, lemon peel, powdered sugar and sherry.<ref></ref>

==References==


[[Category:Cocktails with wine]]
[[Category:Sweet cocktails]]
[[Category:Citrus cocktails]]
[[Category:Cocktails with pineapple juice]]
[[Category:Cocktails with pineapple]]
[[Category:Fourth of July foods]]


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Saturday, August 29, 2020

Protocol Bridge

Chris9594:



Communication Bridges are electronic store-and-forward platforms for connecting different communication segments.

* Bridging connections between two hosts, particularly in peripheral communications (master/slave) arrangements where there must be a defined Master and Slave connection, such as provided by the PCIe standard [[Conventional PCI#PCI bus bridges|Conventional PCI]], and introduced for [[USB]].


* Connecting two points using two different communication protocols, such as a peripheral communication protocol and a network protocol, or between networks.


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Gupta Brindaban, Bangladesh

Preetidipto.21:


Gupta Brindaban is a historical and scenic spot located in [[Ghatail Upazila]] of [[Tangail district]].<ref></ref> It is located in [[Dhalapara Union]], 26 km east of Ghatail Upazila Sadar.<ref></ref>

==History==
The village Gupta Brindaban has an ancient tamal tree around which a fair called 'Baruni Mela' is held every year on the 12th of Chaitra or February. Geographically, Ghatail region has more forest cover. According to the belief of the Hindus, [[Krishna]] and Radha used to spend time under a tamal tree in this place which was once surrounded by dense forest. From that the area was named Gupta Brindaban.

==References==


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A. Salaam

Discospinster: AFC draft (via script)



A Salaam is an India director, writer and producer.


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Friday, August 28, 2020

List of Kapamilya Channel Series

Jjbenedict6: /* 2020 */



This is a list of drama series that have originally aired on the defunct television network [[Kapamilya Channel]]. Titles are sorted by the decade and year of their release. Drama anthologies are excluded.

==2020s==
===2020===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Title
! Premiere date
! Finale date
! Episodes
|-
| ''[[Make It with You (TV series)|Make It with You]]''<ref></ref><ref></ref>
| January 13, 2020
| March 13, 2020
| 45
|-
| ''[[A Soldier's Heart]]''<ref></ref><ref name="Twenty Twenty"></ref>
| January 20, 2020
| September 18, 2020
| 110
|-
| ''[[Love Thy Woman]]''<ref></ref><ref name="Twenty Twenty"/>
| February 10, 2020
| September 11, 2020
| 95
|-
| ''[[24/7 (Philippine TV series)|24/7]]''<ref></ref>
| February 23, 2020
| March 23, 2020
| 4
|-
| ''Paano Kita Mapasasalamatan'' <ref></ref>
| June 13, 2020
|
| 12
|-
| ''[[Ang sa Iyo ay Akin]]''<ref></ref>
| August 17, 2020
|
| Ongoing
|-
| ''[[Kahit Minsan Lang]]''<ref></ref>
| September 14, 2020
|
| rowspan="2"|Not Yet Starting
|-
|''[[Ang Lihim ni Ligaya]]''<ref></ref><ref></ref>
|
|
|-
|}

===2021===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Title
! Premiere date
! Finale date
! Episodes
|-
|''[[He's Into Her]]''
|
|
| rowspan="5"|Soon to be Aired
|-
|''[[The Soulmate Project]]''
|
|
|-
|''Tanging Mahal''
|
|
|-
|''Heart to Heart''
|
|
|-
|''Burado''
|
|
|-
|}


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Mary Jarrett White

Astrophobe: +cat



Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
'''Mary Jarrett White''' was the first woman to vote in the state of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], casting a vote after the passage of the [[Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]] but before it was logistically feasible for women to do so in Georgia. White was also the last private owner of one of the first land grants in the state of Georgia, and she was the founding organizing regent of the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]] in [[Toccoa, Georgia]].

==Life==
White was born Mary Jarrett, and was married to Virgil A. White.<ref></ref>

White was able to vote before women's suffrage was officially instituted in the state of Georgia through the adoption of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. When the amendment was passed, the state decreed that women could vote in the 1920 election only if they had registered 6 months before the election date, which was a tactic to suppress women's votes, since it would not have been reasonable to expect women to register to vote in an election when they did not yet have the right to vote.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> For reasons that are not known, Mary Jarrett White was the only woman who did actually register 6 months before the election took place, even though at the time the amendment had not been ratified.<ref name=nestor15>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> This made White the only woman to vote in the 1920 election, and the first woman to vote in the state of Georgia.<ref></ref>

White was also the last private owner of what is now the Traveler's Rest Historical Site in Toccoa, Georgia.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The land was one of the first land grants in the history of Georgia, when it was given by the government to revolutionary war veteran Major Jesse Walton in 1785.<ref></ref> White's grandfather, Devereaux Jarrett, bought the site near Toccoa, which came to be known as Jarrett Manor.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> White sold the home to the state of Georgia in 1955, when it was officially designated a historical site.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The [[Heritage Documentation Programs|Historic American Buildings Survey]] commissioned drawings of the Traveler's Rest homestead in 1934, and the [[National Register of Historic Places]] named Traveler's Rest a [[National Historic Landmark]] in 1963.<ref name=uga80></ref>

White was a founder and the first organizing regent<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Toccoa, and she also served as secretary of the chapter.<ref></ref> Several events have been held commemorating her founding of the chapter.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> In addition to founding the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, White was an active volunteer with prison reform efforts and the [[Red Cross]].<ref name=uga80/>

White was an elector for Georgia in the [[United States Electoral College]] in 1932.<ref></ref>

==References==





[[Category:People of Georgia (U.S. state) in the American Civil War]]


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Joseph Kondro

Heidil37: /* Media and criminal profiling */ misspelling


'''Joseph Kondro''' (d. May 3, 2012), dubbed “the Longview Serial Killer”, was an American [[serial killer|serial murderer]] implicated in the [[kidnapping]], [[sexual assault]] and [[murder]] of three preteen girls in or near [[Longview, Washington]] in the 1980s and 1990s: 8-year-old Rima Traxler, 12-year-old Kara Rudd and 8-year-old Chila Silvernails. He confessed to the first two and was strongly suspected in the third, and possibly linked to the disappearances of many other young girls in the region, before his death in prison by natural causes in 2012.
==Early life, psychopathic tendencies and criminal history==
Kondro was born to a [[Chippewa]] mother with six other children in [[Michigan]], being handed over for adoption at birth and growing up with his adoptive family in [[Castle Rock, Washington]], attending a [[Catholic school|Catholic parochial school]]. As he would later admit to police, he showed disturbing [[psychopathy|psychopathic]] tendencies from an early age, including engaging in frequent fights with other children, killing animals (including neighborhood pets), wielding a knife and drinking [[Alcoholic drink|alcoholic beverages]] since [[primary school|grade school]], as early as age 7. Kondro would subsequently elaborate on these early signs of psychopathy by explaining in detail his lack of [[empathy]] and violent desires, comparing himself to an [[alligator]] lying in wait, coming up occasionally to feed. He also admitted to [[Molestation|molesting]] young girls while still a child himself, developing fantasies about murder as he grew, and began amassing a lengthy [[criminal record]] including auto and petty theft, [[Driving under the influence|drunk driving]], domestic abuse, drug dealing and [[forgery]]. Kondro had several children but in significant part due to [[substance abuse|drug addiction]] and his recurring troubles with the law, he was not able to care for them.<ref name="LongviewWA1"></ref><ref name="LongviewWA2"></ref><ref name="LongviewWA3"></ref>
==Disappearances of Chila Silvernails and Rima Traxler==
In the early 1980s, authorities were baffled by the unexplained disappearances of several little girls in southwestern [[Washington (state)|Washington State]], including Chila Silvernails of [[Kalama, Washington]], who [[Missing child|vanished]] in 1982 on her way to catching a [[school bus]]. Her nude body was found the day after her disappearance; she had been [[Rape|raped]]and [[Strangulation|strangled]]. Kondro had dated Silvernails’ mother, but he was not initially [[Suspect|suspected]] in the crime. Then on May 15, 1985, another 8-year-old girl, Rima Traxler, a third-grader at St. Helens Elementary School in Longview, went missing. She had been a well-behaved and academically successful schoolgirl with little in the way of conflicts or behavioral issues, so the community suspected that she had become a kidnap [[victim]] rather than a runaway, but there was little trace of exactly when or how she had disappeared. Kondro had been friends with Rima’s mother and stepfather and apparently drinking beer with him on the day she vanished. He was questioned by [[police]], but not named as a [[person of interest]] in the case.<ref name=" LongviewWA1"/><ref name=" LongviewWA2"/><ref name="LongviewWA4"></ref>
==Abduction and murder of Kara Rudd, arrest and prosecution==
On November 21, 1996, Kara Rudd, a 12-year-old girl, entered a car after having been dropped off to Monticello [[Middle School]], and vanished. As with the Traxler case, Rudd had been a popular and successful girl with no behavioral issues so she was not suspected as a runaway, and again there was a connection to Joseph Kondro, but this time the suspicions were more concrete. Kondro had been a childhood friend of Kara’s mother, was known to the victim herself and had frequently stayed in the family’s [[Garage (residential)|garage]], before being [[Eviction|evicted]] due to his [[Alcohol abuse|chronic drinking issues]]. He was seen with [[Laceration|lacerations]] on his [[skin]] that he could not explain shortly after Rudd’s disappearance, possibly with flecks of [[nail polish]] (or nail design or [[nail art]] material), suggestive of scratches from a girl’s long nails acquired in a struggle. Most strikingly, Rudd had told a classmate of her plan to [[Truancy|skip school]] on the day of her disappearance, and she was seen entering a [[Pontiac Firebird]], a vehicle known to be associated with Kondro, who had been the last person to be seen with her prior to Rudd going missing. Authorities still lacked sufficient [[Evidence (law)|evidence]] to make an [[arrest]], but after a fruitless search over 6 weeks for more clues, a [[detective]] on the case, Scott McDaniel, decided to look for additional evidence in the Mount Solo area near the [[Columbia River]], which Kondro was known to frequent. There, police found an abandoned [[Volkswagen]] vehicle and Rudd’s body inside; she had been raped and strangled. The car had acted as a sort of [[refrigerator]] to preserve critical [[Forensic science|forensic evidence]], and [[DNA evidence|DNA samples]] from the [[crime scene]] were found to match samples from Kondro, who was arrested for the abduction, sexual assault and murder of Kara Rudd.<ref name=" LongviewWA3"/><ref name=" LongviewWA1"/><ref name=" LongviewWA2"/><ref name="LongviewWA5"></ref>

Upon [[interrogation]], Kondro admitted that on the day of Kara Rudd’s disappearance, he had lured the girl into his car and taken her to a [[swimming hole]] in Germany Creek, and then to an abandoned house near the [[Columbia River]], where he raped and strangled her. Then, to avoid the [[Capital punishment|death penalty]], Kondro and his [[Attorney|attorneys]] struck a deal with [[Prosecutor|prosecutors]], in which he confessed to the abduction, sexual assault and murder of Rima Traxler more than a decade before. Kondro explained that he was already known and liked by the Traxler family, and he was able to trick the girl into entering his vehicle by mentioning the word “[[unicorn]]”, which was a safety [[password]] taught to her by her parents, and which Kondro had learned from Rima’s stepfather. He took her to swim at Germany Creek, where he raped, bludgeoned and strangled Traxler, burying her beside a [[tree]]. By the terms of the plea deal, he was sentenced to 55 years in [[prison]] at the Washington State Penitentiary in [[Walla Walla, Washington|Walla Walla]]. Because of his violent and psychopathic tendencies and long criminal rap sheet, authorities strongly suspected that Kondro had been involved in the unexplained disappearances of other preteen girls throughout the region, both before the abduction of Rima Traxler in 1985, and between her disappearance and that of Kara Rudd in 1996. Authorities were especially convinced of Kondro’s role in the kidnapping, rape and murder of Chila Silvernails in 1982, given the striking similarities in [[modus operandi]] between her case and those of the other girls, the location of the crime and the fact that Kondro had dated Silvernails’ mother. Kondro himself admitted to having been a child serial killer preying on many little girls in the area, with additional convictions for molestation and further crimes, and detectives planned to question him further about the other unsolved disappearances, but he balked at discussing the other cases due to concerns about a capital punishment imposition, and died in prison of [[liver]] disease likely related to [[Hepatitis C]] infection.<ref name=" LongviewWA1"/><ref name=" LongviewWA3"/><ref name=" LongviewWA4"/>

==Media and criminal profiling==
Joseph Kondro’s cases, his victims and the circumstances surrounding his actions have all drawn considerable attention across print, Internet and broadcast media not only due to the heinous nature and horrors of his crimes, but also the possible factors and implications in the development of psychopathy, and the potential for [[Psychological profiler|psychological profilers]] to identify warning signs and traits of serial killers and violent criminals. Such [[Offender profiling|criminal profiles]] can be used to identify criminals at high risk of becoming violent offenders, expediting both steps to monitor and alter the violent behavior (including in [[Youth detention center|youth detention centers]] for [[Juvenile delinquency|juvenile offenders]]) as well as protect potential victims.
Kondro exhibited many of the classical traits of psychopathy from a young age, including a short temper and ease to anger, [[Impulse-control disorder|impulsivity]], frequent fighting with other kids, physical roughness, wanton killing of animals and early [[substance abuse]], admitting to drinking before the age of 10. However, he later also showed many of the baffling and seeming contradictory qualities of criminals with [[antisocial personality disorder]], and despite some differences in physical appearance, public persona and the M.O. of his crimes, he had many such traits in common with serial killer [[Ted Bundy]]. Like Bundy, despite his personal instability and tendency to crime and violence, Kondro was able to come off as quite charming and personable. This allowed him to win the trust of those around him, which he used in the commission of his crimes, often perpetrated against the young [[Daughter|daughters]] of his friends. He was also aware on some level that his actions were immoral and monstrous, even apparently able to empathize with families’ desires for justice, yet he said he could not stop himself and compared his drive to violent crime as an [[adrenaline]] rush. He was profiled by [[John E. Douglas]], from the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]] [[Behavioral Science Unit]] (BSU) and one of the founders of criminal profiling, on the [[MSNBC]] [[documentary]] (and subsequently [[Netflix]] series) [[Mindhunter (TV series)|Mindhunter]]. Douglas also discussed his profiling of Kondro in-depth in his book (co-authored with Mark Olshaker), ''The Killer Across the Table''. The detective work and investigations into the abductions of Rima Traxler and Kara Rudd, and possibilities of Kondro’s involvement with other disappearances in the region, were featured in several [[true crime]] articles and books, including ''The Longview Serial Killer'' by author Lori Carangelo, and a number of [[television]] documentaries, including ''[[On the Case with Paula Zahn]]'' (episode “Broken Trust”) and ''[[Cold Case Files]]'' (“Unicorns and Alligators”). <ref name=" LongviewWA2"/><ref name="LongviewWA3"/><ref name=" LongviewWA4"/><ref name=" LongviewWA5"/>

==References==

== External links ==
* Erika Lyn Smith, [https://ift.tt/2QB9jY0 Joseph Kondro Child Serial Killer], “Bella Online” (2019).
* [https://ift.tt/34IFHjF Rima Danette Traxler], “The Charley Project” (2018-12-13).

[[Category:American male criminals]]
[[Category:20th-century American criminals]]
[[Category:American rapists]]
[[Category:American people convicted of murder]]
[[Category:American murderers of children]]
[[Category:American serial killers]]
[[Category:American people convicted of theft]]
[[Category:American people convicted of child sexual abuse]]
[[Category:1960 births]]
[[Category:Forgers]]
[[Category:American people convicted of drug offenses]]


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Senator St. John

BD2412: '''Senator St. John''' may refer to: *Daniel B. St. John (1808–1890), New York State Senate *John St. John (American politician) (1833–1916), Kansas State Senate


'''Senator St. John''' may refer to:

*[[Daniel B. St. John]] (1808–1890), New York State Senate
*[[John St. John (American politician)]] (1833–1916), Kansas State Senate



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Thursday, August 27, 2020

María Clara Sharupi Jua

Bookworm-ce: Added detail from one more source


'''María Clara Sharupi Jua''' (born 1964) is an [[Ecuadorians|Ecuadorian]] [[Translation|translator]], [[poet]], and radio and television presenter who writes in the [[Shuar language]], an [[Indigenous languages of the Americas|indigenous language]] of the Ecuadorian [[Amazon basin]].<ref name=":0">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

== Life ==
María Clara Sharupi Jua is a native of the [[Amazon rainforest]]'s [[Shuar|Shuar Nation]], born in Sevilla Don Bosco in Ecuador's [[Morona-Santiago Province]]. She grew up in the forest, working to help grow food for her family.<ref name=":1"></ref> She then attended [[Politecnica Salesiana University]], where she studied [[electrical engineering]].<ref name=":0" />

She writes poetry in [[Shuar language|Shuar]], her native language, while simultaneously translating it into [[Spanish language|Spanish]] with the goal of attracting a wider readership. She also modifies the writing system of her ancestral language, adapting it to the [[Latin script|Latin alphabet]].<ref name=":2"></ref>

Sharupi Jua's poetry is meant to serve as a reflection of the forest and to share her ancestral stories, as well as the stories of her community today. She is a co-author of the book ''Amanece en nuestras vidas'',<ref></ref> and her other works include the book of poetry ''Tarimiat'', written in Shuar, Spanish, and English.<ref></ref>

In addition, Sharupi Jua is a translator and a presenter in both Shuar and Spanish on radio and TV. She served on the translation team that edited the official Shuar translation of the [[2008 Constitution of Ecuador|Ecuadorian Constitution]].<ref></ref>

In 2011 she participated in the [[Quito]] International Book Festival, and in 2012 she participated in the [[Medellín]] International Poetry Festival.<ref name=":1" /> She lives in Quito, where she has also worked on indigenous issues for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Migration.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":0" />

She was recognized by the [[Andean Community]] for her work to defend and preserve the Shuar language through her poetry.<ref name=":0" />

== References ==
<references />
[[Category:1964 births]]
[[Category:Ecuadorian women writers]]
[[Category:Ecuadorian women poets]]
[[Category:Ecuadorian translators]]
[[Category:Indigenous women of the Americas]]
[[Category:Indigenous writers of the Americas]]


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Abu Bakr al-Samarqandi

TheEagle107: ←Created page with ' '''Abu Bakr Muhammad b. al-Yamān al-Samarqandi''' () was a Hanafi sch...'



'''Abu Bakr Muhammad b. al-Yamān al-Samarqandi''' () was a [[Hanafi]] scholar from [[Samarqand]], who combined both [[feqh]] and [[kalam]]. He paved the way for his compatriot [[Abu Mansur al-Maturidi]] (d. 333/944).<ref></ref>

== Biography ==
Available sources furnish no information concerning his life.

== Works ==
The sources mention the titles of four of his works:<ref></ref>
* '''Kitab al-Anwar'''.
* '''Kitab al-I'tisam''', was simply dedicated to [[hadith]].
* '''Kitab al-Radd 'ala [[al-Karramiyya]]''', a refutation of the [[Karramites]] (al-Karramiyya).
* '''Kitab Ma'alim al-Din''' ('The Lineaments of the Faith'), the title of the book would seem to present the possibility of directly accessing [[theological]] discussions. But a look at the manuscript shows that the theme of the text is completely different. It is confined strictly to argumentation on questions of law, without a single word on theology. There is a manuscript of this book in [[Mashhad]].

== Death ==
Abu Bakr died in the year 268/881–2 after presumably spending his entire life in his hometown of [[Samarqand]].<ref></ref>

== See also ==
* [[Abu Hanifa]]
* [[Abu Mansur al-Maturidi]]
* [[Al-Hakim al-Samarqandi]]
* [[List of Hanafis]]
* [[List of Muslim theologians]]

== References ==







[[Category:Hanafi fiqh scholars]]
[[Category:Muslim theologians]]
[[Category:People from Samarkand]]
[[Category:Sunni Muslim scholars]]
[[Category:881 deaths]]
[[Category:882 deaths]]


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Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature

Jemncoco:


The '''Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature''' is one of the annual awards given by the '''''[[Visual Effects Society]]''''' starting from 2002

=== 2000's ===
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
! width="5%" |Year
! width="40%" |Film
! width="60%" |Nominees
|-
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2002 in film|2002]]''' <small>[[1st Visual Effects Society Awards|(1st)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Sum of All Fears (film)|The Sum of All Fears]]'''''
|'''Glenn Neufeld, Derek Spears, Dan Malvin and [[Al DiSarro]]'''
|-
|''[[Frida]]''
|[[Jeremy Dawson (producer)|Jeremy Dawson]], Daniel Schrecker
|-
|''[[Gangs of New York]]''
|Michael Owens, Camille Geier, [[Ed Hirsh|Edward Hirsh]] and Jon Alexander
|-
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2003 in film|2003]]''' <small>[[2nd Visual Effects Society Awards|(2nd)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Last Samurai]]'''''
|Jeffrey A. Okun, Thomas Boland, Bill Mesa, and Ray McIntyre Jr.
|-
|''[[Bad Boys II]]''
|[[Carey Villegas]], [[Rob Legato]], David Taritero and Layne Friedman
|-
|''[[Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World]]''
|[[Stefen Fangmeier]], [[Nathan McGuinness]], [[Robert Stromberg]], Brooke Breton
|-
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2004 in film|2004]]''' <small>[[3rd Visual Effects Society Awards|(3rd)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Aviator (2004 film)|The Aviator]]'''''
|'''[[Rob Legato]], Ron Ames, Matthew Gratzner, Pete Travers'''
|-
|''[[Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind]]''
|Louis Morin and Mark Dornfeld
|-
|''[[Troy (film)|Troy]]''
|[[Nick Davis (visual effects supervisor)|Nick Davis]], Chas Jarrett, [[Jon Thum]] and [[Gary Brozenich]]
|-
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2005 in film|2005]]''' <small>[[4th Visual Effects Society Awards|(4th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Kingdom of Heaven (film)|Kingdom of Heaven]]'''''
|'''Wes Sewell, Victoria Alonso, [[Tom Wood (visual effects)|Tom Wood]] and[[Gary Brozenich]]'''
|-
|''[[Jarhead (film)|Jarhead]]''
|[[Pablo Helman]], Jeanie King, Grady Cofer and Brett Northcutt
|-
|''[[Memoirs of a Geisha (film)|Memoirs Of A Geisha]]'' – [[Robert Stromberg]]
|Julia Frey, Paul Graff and Adam Watkins
|-
| rowspan="5" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2006 in film|2006]]''' <small>[[5th Visual Effects Society Awards|(5th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Flags of Our Fathers (film)|Flags of Our Fathers]]'''''
|'''Michael Owens, [[Matthew E. Butler|Matthew Butler]], [[Bryan Grill]] and Julian Levi'''
|-
|''[[Blood Diamond]]''
|Jeffrey Okun, Thomas Boland, [[Tim Crosbie]] and Neil Greenberg
|-
|''[[Children of Men]]''
|Lucy Killick, Frazer Churchill, [[Tim Webber]] and [[Paul Corbould]]
|-
|''[[The Da Vinci Code (film)|The Da Vinci Code]]''
|Barrie Hemsley, Angus Bickerton, [[Gary Brozenich]] and Paul Riddle
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2007 in film|2007]]''' <small>[[6th Visual Effects Society Awards|(6th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Ratatouille (film)|Ratatouille]]'''''
|'''Michael Fong, Apurva Shah, Christine Waggoner and Michael Fu'''
|-
|''[[Blades of Glory]]''
|Mark Breakspear, Randy Starr, Shauna Bryan and Kody Sabourin
|-
|''[[The Kite Runner (film)|The Kite Runner]]''
|David Ebner, Les Jones, Todd Perry and Leif Einarsson
|-
|''[[We Own the Night (film)|We Own the Night]]''
|Kelly Port, Julian Levi, Brad Parker, Oliver Sarda
|-
|''[[Zodiac (film)|Zodiac]]''
|[[Eric Barba]], [[Craig Barron]], Janelle Croshaw and Chris Evans
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2008 in film|2008]]''' <small>[[7th Visual Effects Society Awards|(7th)]]</small>
|
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Changeling (film)|Changeling]]'''''
|'''Michael Owens, Geoffrey Hancock, Jinnie Pak and Dennis Hoffman'''
|-
|''[[Eagle Eye (film)|Eagle Eye]]''
|[[Jim Rygiel]], [[Jim Berney]], Crys Forsythe-Smith and David Smith
|-
|''[[Nim's Island]]''
|Camille Cellucci, Scott Gordon, Fred Pienkos and [[James Straus]]
|-
|''[[Synecdoche, New York]]''
|Mark Russell, Richard Friedlander, Eric Robertson and Brett Miller
|-
|''[[Valkyrie (film)|Valkyrie]]''
|[[Richard R. Hoover]], Maricel Pagulayan, Peter Nofz and Daniel Eaton
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2009 in film|2009]]''' <small>[[8th Visual Effects Society Awards|(8th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Sherlock Holmes (2009 film)|Sherlock Holmes]]'''''
|'''[[Jonathan Fawkner]], Chas Jarrett, [[David Vickery]] and Dan Barrow'''
|-
|''[[Angels & Demons (film)|Angels & Demons]]''
|Barrie Hemsley, Angus Bickerton, Ryan Cook and Mark Breakspear
|-
|''[[The Box (2009 film)|The Box]]''
|Thomas Tannenberger, Olcun Tan, Mark Kolpak and Peter Cvijanovic
|-
|''[[Invictus (film)|Invictus]]''
|Michael Owens, Geoff Hancock, Cyndi Ochs, and Dennis Hoffman
|-
|''[[The Road (2009 film)|The Road]]''
|Mark O. Forker, Phillip Moses, Ed Mendez and Paul Graff
|}

=== 2010s ===
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
! width="5%" |Year
! width="30%" |Film
! width="65%" |Nominees
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2010 in film|2010]]''' <small>[[9th Visual Effects Society Awards|(9th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Hereafter (film)|Hereafter]]'''''
|'''Michael Owens, Joel Mendias, Bryan Grill, Danielle Plantec'''
|-
|''[[Black Swan (film)|Black Swan]]''
|Dan Schrecker, Colleen Bachman, Michael Capton and Brad Kalinoski
|-
|''[[Green Zone (film)|Green Zone]]''
|Peter Chiang, Charlie Noble, Michael Capton and Matthew Plummer
|-
|''[[Robin Hood (2010 film)|Robin Hood]]''
|[[Richard Stammers]], Allen Maris, Jessica Norman and Max Wood
|-
|''[[Salt (2010 film)|Salt]]''
|Robert Grasmere, Camille Cellucci, Mark Breakspear and Ivan Moran
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2011 in film|2011]]''' <small>[[10th Visual Effects Society Awards|(10th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Hugo (2011 film)|Hugo]]'''''
|'''[[Ben Grossmann]], [[Alex Henning]], [[Rob Legato]] and Karen Murphy'''
|-
|''[[Anonymous (2011 film)|Anonymous]]''
|André Cantarel, [[Volker Engel]], Rony Soussan and [[Marc Weigert]]
|-
|''[[Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows]]''
|Laya Armian, Chas Jarrett, Seth Maury and Sirio Quintavalle
|-
|''[[Source Code]]''
|Annie Godin and Louis Morin
|-
|''[[War Horse (film)|War Horse]]''
|Duncan Burbidge, Ben Morris, Mike Mulholland, Chris Zeh
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2012 in film|2012]]''' <small>[[11th Visual Effects Society Awards|(11th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Impossible (2012 film)|The Impossible]]'''''
|'''Felix Bergés, [[Sandra Hermida Muñiz|Sandra Hermida]], Pau Costa Moeller'''
|-
|''[[Argo (2012 film)|Argo]]''
|Matt Dessero, Gregory McMurry, Tom Smith and Michele Vallillo
|-
|''[[Flight (2012 film)|Flight]]''
|Kevin Ballie, [[Michael Lantieri]], Chris Stoski, Ryan Tudhope
|-
|''[[Rust and Bone]]''
|Béatrice Bauwens, Cédric Fayolle, Nicolas Rey and Stéphane Thibert
|-
|''[[Zero Dark Thirty]]''
|Geoff Anderson, Chris Harvey, Jeremy Hattingh and Richard Stutsman
|-
| rowspan="7" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2013 in film|2013]]''' <small>[[12th Visual Effects Society Awards|(12th)]]</small>
|
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Lone Ranger (2013 film)|The Lone Ranger]]'''''
|'''Tim Alexander, Gary Brozenich, Shari Hanson, Kevin Martel'''
|-
|''[[The Great Gatsby (2013 film)|The Great Gatsby]]''
|Chris Godfrey, Prue Fletcher and Joyce Cox
|-
|''[[Rush (2013 film)|Rush]]''
|Jody Johnson, Moriah Etherington-Sparks, Mark Hodgkins and Antoine Moulineau
|-
|''[[The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013 film)|The Secret Life of Walter Mitty]]''
|[[Guillaume Rocheron]], Kurt Williams, Monette Dubin and Ivan Moran
|-
|''[[White House Down]]''
|Marc Weigert, [[Volker Engel]], Julia Frey and Ollie Rankin
|-
|''[[The Wolf of Wall Street (2013 film)|The Wolf of Wall Street]]''
|Robert Legato, Mark Russell, Joseph Farrell, Lisa Spence
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2014 in film|2014]]''' <small>[[13th Visual Effects Society Awards|(13th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Birdman (film)|Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)]]'''''
|'''Ara Khanikian, Ivy Agregan and Sebastien Moreau'''
|-
|''[[Divergent (film)|Divergent]]''
|[[Jim Berney]], Greg Baxter and Matt Dessero
|-
|''[[The Grand Budapest Hotel|Grand Budapest Hotel]]''
|Gabriel Sanchez, Jenny Foster, Simon Weisse, Jan Burda
|-
|''[[The Imitation Game]]''
|Stuart Bullen, Lucy Ainsworth-Taylor and Simon Rowe
|-
|''[[Unbroken (film)|Unbroken]]''
|[[Bill George (visual effects supervisor)|Bill George]], Steve Gaub, Erin Dusseault, Dave Morley and Brian Cox
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2015 in film|2015]]''' <small>[[14th Visual Effects Society Awards|(14th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Revenant (2015 film)|The Revenant]]'''''
|'''[[Rich McBride]], Ivy Agregan, Jason Smith, Nicolas Chevallier and [[Cameron Waldbauer]]'''
|-
|''[[Bridge of Spies (film)|Bridge of Spies]]''
|Sven Martin, Jennifer Meislohn, Charlie Noble, Sean Stranks and Gerd Nefzer
|-
|''[[Everest (2015 film)|Everest]]''
|Dadi Einarsson, Roma O-Connor, Matthias Bjarnsasson and Richard Van Den Bergh
|-
|''[[In the Heart of the Sea (film)|In The Heart of the Sea]]''
|Jody Johnson, Leslie Lerman, Sean Stranks, Bryan Hirota and Mark Holt
|-
|''[[The Walk (2015 film)|The Walk]]''
|Kevin Baillie, Camille Cellucci, Viktor Muller and Sebastien Moreau
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2016 in film|2016]]''' <small>[[15th Visual Effects Society Awards|(15th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Deepwater Horizon (film)|Deepwater Horizon]]'''''
|'''[[Robert Legato]], [[Adam Valdez]], [[Andrew R. Jones]] and [[Dan Lemmon]]'''
|-
|''[[Allied (film)|Allied]]''
|Kevin Baillie, Sandra Scott, Brennan Doyle, Viktor Muller and Richard Van Den Bergh
|-
|''[[Jason Bourne (film)|Jason Bourne]]''
|Charlie Noble, Dan Barrow, Julian Gnass, Huw Evans and Steve Warner
|-
|''[[Silence (2016 film)|Silence]]''
|[[Pablo Helman]], Brian Barlettani, Ivan Busquets, Juan Garcia and R. Bruce Steinheimer
|-
|''[[Sully (film)|Sully]]''
|Michael Owens, Tyler Kehl, Mark Curtis, Bryan Litson, and Steven Riley
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2017 in film|2017]]''' <small>[[16th Visual Effects Society Awards|(16th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[Dunkirk (2017 film)|Dunkirk]]'''''
|'''[[Andrew Jackson (visual effects)|Andrew Jackson]], Mike Chambers, [[Andrew Lockley]], Alison Wortman and [[Scott R. Fisher|Scott Fisher]]'''
|-
|''[[Darkest Hour (film)|Darkest Hour]]''
|Stephane Naze, Warwick Hewitt, Guillaume Terrien and Benjamin Magana
|-
|''[[Downsizing (film)|Downsizing]]''
|James E. Price, Susan MacLeod, Lindy De Quattro and Stéphane Nazé
|-
|''[[Mother!]]''
|Dan Schrecker, Colleen Bachman, [[Ben Snow]], Wayne Billheimer and Peter Chesney
|-
|''[[Only the Brave (2017 film)|Only the Brave]]''
|[[Eric Barba]], Dione Wood, Matthew Lane, [[Georg Kaltenbrunner]] and Michael Meinardus
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2018 in film|2018]]''' <small>[[17th Visual Effects Society Awards|(17th)]]</small>
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[First Man (film)|First Man]]'''''
|'''[[Paul Lambert (special effects artist)|Paul Lambert]], Kevin Elam, Tristan Myles, [[Ian Hunter (visual effects supervisor)|Ian Hunter]], JD Schwalm'''
|-
|''[[12 Strong]]''
|Roger Nall, Robert Weaver and [[Mike Meinardus]]
|-
|''[[Bird Box (film)|Bird Box]]''
|Marcus Taormina, David Robinson, Mark Bakowski, Sophie Dawes and [[Mike Meinardus]]
|-
|''[[Bohemian Rhapsody (film)|Bohemian Rhapsody]]''
|[[Paul Norris (visual effects)|Paul Norris]], Tim Field, May Leung and Andrew Simmonds
|-
|''[[Outlaw King]]''
|Alex Bicknell, Dan Bethell, Greg O’Connor, Stefano Pepin
|-
| rowspan="6" style="text-align:center" |'''[[2019 in film|2019]]''' <small>[[18th Visual Effects Society Awards|(18th)]]</small>
|
|- style="background:#FAEB86"
|'''''[[The Irishman]]'''''
|'''[[Pablo Helman]], Mitchell Ferm, Jill Brooks, [[Leandro Estebecorena]], Jeff Brink'''
|-
|''[[1917 (2019 film)|1917]]''
|[[Guillaume Rocheron]], Sona Pak, [[Greg Butler (visual effects supervisor)|Greg Butler]], Vijay Selvam and Dominic Tuohy
|-
|''[[The Aeronauts (film)|The Aeronauts]]''
|Louis Morin, Annie Godin, Christian Kaestner, Ara Khanikian and Mike Dawson
|-
|''[[Ford v Ferrari]]''
|Olivier Dumont, Kathy Siegel, Dave Morley, Malte Sarnes and Mark Byers
|-
|''[[Joker (2019 film)|Joker]]''
|Edwin Rivera, Brice Parker, Mathew Giampa, Bryan Godwin, Jeff Brink
|}


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Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Charles Pitts (disambiguation)

Sugarcoma:



'''Charles Pitts''' may refer to:

*[[Charles_Pitts|Charles Pitts]], American soul and blues guitarist
*[[Charles_Pitts_(radio_engineer)|Charles Pitts]], LGBTQ+ activist, and freeform radio pioneer



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Barhadbeshabba

Srnec: Srnec moved page Barhadbeshabba to Barhadbshabba


'''Barhadbshabba''' may refer to:

*[[Barhadbshabba Arbaya]] (late 6th or early 7th  century), Nestorian historian
*[[Barhadbshabba of Hulwan]] (late 6th or early 7th  century), Nestorian bishop, possibly identical with the prec.



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Arrest of Maedeh Hojabri

35fd643e-4161-4465-891f-e95ded9196d4:


'''The arrest of Maeda Hojabari''' is an event in July 2018.<ref> صدای آمریکا فارسی|url=https://ir.voanews.com/persiannewsiran/iran-arrest-dancer|access-date=2020-08-27|website=ir.voanews.com|language=fa}}</ref> '''Maedeh Hejbari''' (born in 2001 in Tehran) was arrested shortly after posting clips of her dance on her personal Instagram page and was released on bail after a period of detention.<ref></ref><ref></ref> Sima has provoked the reaction of various domestic and international institutions. He was reportedly fleeing Iran or confessing in Turkey while broadcasting, with the aim of diverting people and the media from the problems in Iran.<ref> دختر رقصنده‌ای که اعترافات او از صدا سیما پخش شد، از ایران گریخت صدای آمریکا فارسی|url=https://ir.voanews.com/persiannewsiran/iran-maedeh-hojabri|access-date=2020-08-27|website=ir.voanews.com|language=fa}}</ref>

== Arrested for publishing dance videos ==
Maedeh was arrested and detained by the NAJA (FATA) Production and Information Exchange (FATA) for publishing dance videos, and was released on bail. Confessions were broadcast on a radio station, which provoked many reactions. FATA police announced in a statement a few days after the confessions were broadcast on television that Maedeh Hejbari had no disciplinary or judicial record with the FATA NAJA police and the provincial FATA police, and that he had not been summoned or interviewed by the FATA police.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2) پلیس فتا|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180712184452/https://www.cyberpolice.ir/news/136961|access-date=2020-08-27|website=web.archive.org}}</ref><ref>[http://etemaadonline.ir/content/218060/%D8%A7%D8%B9%D8%AA%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%81-%D8%B5%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%88%D8%B3%DB%8C%D9%85%D8%A7-%D8%B9%D9%84%DB%8C%D9%87-%D8%AE%D9%88%D8%AF%D8%B4-%D8%A8%D9%88%D8%AF «واکنش توییتری عباس عبدی به انتشار فیلم اعترافات دختر اینستاگرامی:». اعتماد. <bdi>۱۷ تیر ۱۳۹۷</bdi>.]</ref><ref> صدای آمریکا فارسی|url=https://ir.voanews.com/persiannewsiran/iran-arrest-dancer|access-date=2020-08-27|website=ir.voanews.com|language=fa}}</ref><ref> رسانه خبری تحلیلی|url=http://www.ensafnews.com/121840/%d9%88%d8%a7%da%a9%d9%86%d8%b4-%d8%a8%d9%87-%d8%a7%d8%b9%d8%aa%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%81%d8%a7%d8%aa-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%a6%d8%af%d9%87-%d9%87%da%98%d8%a8%d8%b1%db%8c/|access-date=2020-08-27|website=انصاف نیوز|language=fa}}</ref><ref></ref>

News of his arrest and broadcast on Iranian radio and television in non-Iranian media such as Time,<ref></ref> [[Associated Press]],<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>Telegraph,<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> [[The Independent]],<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> [[Global BC|Global BBC]],<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Arab BBC,<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> [[Al Arabiya|Al-Arabiya]] ,<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>[[Al Jazeera]],<ref></ref> [[Sky News Arabia|Sky News Arabic]] <ref></ref> and other media outlets.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The account of Hejbari, which had 600,000 followers, was closed by order of the judiciary.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref> DW 08.07.2018|url=https://www.dw.com/fa-ir/iran/a-44576570|access-date=2020-08-27|website=DW.COM|language=fa-IR}}</ref>

== Dance to Dance Campaign ==
Short videos as well as photos of dancing women and girls, and even men, were posted on social media with the slogan and dance "Dance to Dance" in response to the controversy.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

== References ==
<references />
[[Category:Teen Titans]]
[[Category:Human rights in Iran]]
[[Category:Iranian dancers]]
[[Category:Politics of Iran]]
[[Category:2018 controversies]]


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Emilio Blanco Izaga

AnomieBOT: Dating maintenance tags:


'''Emilio Blanco Izaga''' (1892–1949) was a Spanish military comptroller, ethnographer and architect, who developed his career in the [[Spanish Protectorate in Morocco]]. He published a number of ethnographic and architectural essays on the [[Riffians|Rif region]].

== Biography ==
Born on 15 March 1892 in [[Orduña]], Biscay, he licentiated from the [[Toledo Infantry Academy|Infantry Academy]] in 1913. He was destined to [[Larache]], in the [[Spanish Protectorate in Morocco]] in 1914. A military colonial comptroller in the Spanish protectorate of Morocco from 1927 to 1945, he served as delegate for Native Affairs from 1944 to 1945.

Ascribed to [[Africanist (Spain)|Africanism]], according to Alfonso Iglesias Amorín, Blanco fitted better a profile in the vein of the 19th-century Spanish africanists, underpinned by a greater respect for the local population, a greater awareness of the social and cultural fabric of the Protectorate, and a preference for peaceful solutions rather than the ''africanomilitarismo'' subset embodied by the likes of [[Francisco Franco]], [[José Sanjurjo]], [[Emilio Mola]], [[José Millán-Astray]] and [[Juan Yagüe]], characterised for vying for a rapid military promotion, a lesser cultural acumen and for espousing anti-democratic views.

A Berberophile, he was weary of the Arab and French influences on the [[berber people]], rejecting both Western and Arab influences in the architecture of the region. Striving towards finding an ideal style from the Riffian people, he projected a number of small buildings in the protectorate based on a mashup of ''[[ksar]]'' from Southern Morocco, [[Egyptian Revival architecture|Neo-Pharaonic egyptian architecture]] and Pre-Columbian models.

A keen researcher of the Riffian [[customary law]], he praised the perks of keeping the local assemblies in force, opposed to the influence dictated by the ''[[Makhzen]]''; he got to the point of stating "what is ridiculous (on the Part of the Spanish colonial administration) is not having protected the Rif from [[Sharia]] contamination".

He died in 1949 in [[Madrid]].

has described him as "probably the most relevant Spanish ''rifeñista'' from the 20th century".

== Works ==
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* ''La vivienda rifeña: ensayo de característica e interpretación con ilustraciones del autor'' (1930)
* ''El Rif. La ley rifeña: los cánones rifeños comentados'' (1939).

== References ==
;Citations

;Bibliography
*
*
*
*
*
*
*



[[Category:Spanish architects]]
[[Category:Colonial history of Morocco]]
[[Category:Architecture of Morocco]]
[[Category:Spanish ethnographers]]
[[Category:Spanish military officers]]
[[Category:Rif]]
[[Category:1892 births]]
[[Category:1949 deaths]]
[[Category:Spanish Africanists]]
[[Category:Spanish colonial officials]]


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August 12, 2018

CentreLeftRight: Nominated page for deletion using Page Curation (db-a11, speedy deletion-no context, speedy deletion-no content)




I Really Want That Date Because March 14, 2020 Sucks
[[File:Jhoan Mario.jpeg|thumb]]


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List of admirals of Sweden

Saftgurka: ←Created page with 'Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2) King [[Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden in admiral's uniform]] '''Admirals of Sweden''' have existed...'


Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
[[File:Carl XVI Gustaf.jpg|thumb|King [[Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden]] in admiral's uniform]]

'''Admirals of Sweden''' have existed since 1522.

==History==
In Sweden, the admiral's rank first appeared during the reign of [[Gustav I of Sweden|Gustav I]], who in 1522 gave it to [[Erik Fleming (councilor)|Erik Fleming]], a [[Riksråd|Council of the Realm]]. During Gustav's reign as king and throughout the latter part of the 16th century, the highest command of a fleet was led by a ''översteamiral'' ("colonel admiral"), to whose assistant a ''underamiral'' was appointed. It was not until 1569 that a permanent ''översteamiral'' was appointed; In 1602 the title was exchanged for ''riksamiral'' ("[[Admiral of the Realm]]"). The first permanent ''underamiral'' was appointed in 1575; his office ceased in 1619. Vice admiral is first mentioned in 1577. The admirals of the [[Swedish Navy]] have, incidentally, been as follows: ''generalamiral'' ("[[general admiral]]"), amiralgeneral ("[[General admiral|admiral general]]"), ''storamiral'' ("[[grand admiral]]"), ''överamiral'', ''riksviceamiral'' ("Vice [[Admiral of the Realm]]"), ''amiralgenerallöjtnant'' ("admiral lieutenant general"), ''amirallöjtnant'' ("[[lieutenant admiral]]"), [[Rear admiral#Netherlands|''schoutbynacht'']] and ''konteramiral'' ("[[rear admiral]]").<ref>* |pages=851-852}}</ref>

==Riksamiraler (Admirals of the Realm)==
#[[Klaus Fleming|Clas Eriksson Fleming]] 1571–1595
#[[Joachim Scheel]] 1596–1602
#[[Axel Nilsson Ryning]] 1602–1611
#[[Göran Nilsson Gyllenstierna]] 1611–1618
#[[Carl Gyllenhielm]] 1620–1650
#[[Gabriel Bengtsson Oxenstierna]] 1652–1656
#[[Carl Gustaf Wrangel]] 1657–1664
#[[Gustav Otto Stenbock]] 1664–1675

==Amiralgeneraler (Admiral Generals)==
#[[Hans Wachtmeister]] 1681
#[[Lorentz Creutz|Lorentz Creutz Sr.]] 1675

==Generalamiraler (General Admirals)==
#[[Henrik Horn]] 1677
#[[Henrik af Trolle]] 1780
#[[Anton Johan Wrangel the elder]] 1784
#[[Carl August Ehrensvärd]] 1792
#[[Johan af Puke]] 1812
#[[Victor von Stedingk]] 1818
#[[Rudolf Cederström]] 1823

==Överamiraler==
#[[Claes Sparre]] 1715
#[[Edvard Didrik Taube]] 1734
#[[Carl Georg Siöblad]] 1747
#[[Johan Gustaf Lagerbjelke]] 1809

==Amirallöjtnanter (Lieutenant Admirals)==
#[[Herman Fleming (1619–1673)|Herman Fleming]] 1645

==Amiraler (Admirals)==
#[[Ivar Fleming]] 1534
#[[Jakob Bagge]] 1555
#[[Nils Jespersson Kruse]] 1563
#[[Klas Horn|Klas Kristersson Horn af Åminne]] 1564
#[[Bengt Halstensson Bagge]] 1569
#[[Herman Fleming (circa 1520-1583)|Herman Fleming]] 1574
#[[Hans Claësson Bjelkenstjerna]] 1611
#[[Clas Fleming (admiral)|Clas Fleming]] 1620
#[[Nils Göransson Stiernsköld]] 1627
#[[Åke Ulfsparre]] 1640
#[[Mårten Anckarhielm]] 1653
#[[Göran Göransson Gyllenstierna the elder]] 1640
#[[Klas Hansson Bjelkenstjerna]] 1654
#[[Sten Nilsson Bielke]] 1657
#[[Claes Nilsson Stiernsköld]] 1661
#[[Claes Uggla]] 1670
#[[Erik Carlsson Sjöblad]] 1676
#[[Hans Clerck]] 1676
#[[Johan Bär]] 1676
#[[Johan Olofsson Bergenstierna]] 1676
#[[Gustaf Adolph Sparre]] 1690
#[[Cornelius Anckarstjerna]] 1692
#[[Evert Fredrik Taube]] 1700
#[[Jacob De Prou]] 1709
#[[Axel Johan Lewenhaupt]] 1712
#[[Gustaf Wattrang]] 1712
#[[Erik Johan Lillie]] 1715
#[[Gustaf von Psilander]] 1715
#[[Mikael Henck]] 1715
#[[Carl Henrik von Löwe]] 1719
#[[Jonas Fredrik Örnfelt]] 1719
#[[Olof Strömstierna]] 1719
#[[Nils Ehrenschiöld]] 1721
#[[Olof von Unge]] 1734
#[[Gustaf Grubbe]] 1736
#[[Jean von Utfall]] 1742
#[[Theodor Ankarcrona]] 1742
#[[Abraham Falkengréen]] 1749
#[[Carl Hans Sparre]] 1754
#[[Erik Arvid Sparre]] 1755
#[[Didrik Henrik Taube]] 1768
#[[Nils Lillienanckar]] 1771
#[[Carl Vilhelm Modée]] 1793
#[[Salomon von Rajalin]] 1809
#[[Henrik Johan Nauckhoff]] 1817
#[[Magnus Palmqvist (1761–1834)|Magnus Palmqvist]] 1818
#[[Per Gustaf Lagerstråle]] 1818
#[[Carl Fredrik Coyet]] 1827
#[[Johan Lagerbielke]] 1827
#[[Otto Gustaf Nordensköld]] 1845
#[[Johan Henrik Kreüger]] 1857
#[[Carl August Gyllengranat]] 1858
#[[Carl Magnus Ehnemark]] 1862
#[[Christian Anders Sundin]] 1884
#[[Carl Gustaf von Otter]] 1889
#[[Louis Palander|Louis Palander af Vega]] 1900
#[[Fredrik von Otter]] 1900
#[[Hjalmar af Klintberg]] 1903
#[[Gustav V|King Gustav V]] 1907
#[[Carl Hjulhammar]] 1911
#[[Wilhelm Dyrssen]] 1923
#[[Carl August Ehrensvärd (1858–1944)|Carl August Ehrensvärd]] 1924
#[[Henning von Krusenstierna]] 1927
#[[Otto Lybeck]] 1936
#[[Fabian Tamm]] 1947
#[[Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden|King Gustaf VI Adolf]] 1950
#[[Stig H:son Ericson]] 1961
#[[Prince Bertil|The Duke of Halland]] 1969
#[[Åke Lindemalm]] 1970
#[[Carl XVI Gustaf|King Carl XVI Gustaf]] 1973
#[[Bengt Lundvall]] 1978
#[[Bror Stefenson]] 1991

<gallery class="center">
File:SWE-NavyOF9.svg|Admiral
File:OF-9_Amiral_FL_ärm_pre-2003.jpg|Pre-2003 sleeve insignia for a four star admiral
File:OF-9 Amiral FL arm.jpg|Insignia for Admiral (OF-9) in the Swedish Navy.
File:OF-9_Amiral_FL_hylsa.jpg|[[Shoulder mark]] of a Swedish four star admiral
File:Naval Rank Flag of Sweden - Amiralsflagga.svg|Admiral flag
File:Swedish command flag (1875-1905) - Admiral.svg|Admiral command flag 1875–1905
File:Swedish-Norwegian command flag (1815-1844) - Admiral.svg|Admiral command flag 1815–1844
</gallery>

==Viceamiraler (Vice Admirals)==
#[[Henrik Fleming]] 1628
#[[Peter Blume (naval officer)|Peter Blume]] 1644
#[[Richard Clerck]] 1657
#[[Nils Ehrenschiöld]] 1716
#[[Olof von Unge]] 1734
#[[Anton Johan Wrangel the elder]] 1740
#[[Thomas von Rajalin]] 1741
#[[Hans Anckarcrantz]] 1754
#[[Axel Lagerbielke]] 1758
#[[Nils Brahe the younger]] 1760
#[[Johan von Rajalin]] 1765
#[[Sebald Hertman von Graman]] 1765
#[[Christopher Falkengréen]] 1769
#[[Carl Tersmeden]] 1774
#[[Johan Nordenankar]] 1776
#[[Otto Henrik Nordenskjöld]] 1790
#[[Fredrik Henrik af Chapman]] 1791
#[[Carl Olof Cronstedt]] 1801
#[[Baltzar von Platen (statesman)|Baltzar von Platen]] 1814
#[[Carl Johan af Wirsén]] 1825
#[[Gustaf af Klint]] 1825
#[[Carl Reinhold Nordenskiöld]] 1858
#[[Philip Virgin]] 1889
#[[Knut Peyron]] 1897
#[[Jarl Christerson]] 1898
#[[Prince Oscar Bernadotte|The Count of Wisborg]] 1903
#[[Carl Olsen (admiral)|Carl Olsen]] 1908
#[[Ludvig Sidner]] 1911
#[[Gustaf Dyrssen (1858–1934)|Gustaf Dyrssen]] 1917
#[[Gustaf Lagercrantz]] 1919
#[[Carl Alarik Wachtmeister]] 1925
#[[Henry Lindberg]] 1925
#[[Carl Fredrik Riben]] 1930
#[[John Schneidler]] 1932
#[[Charles de Champs]] 1934
#[[Harald Åkermark]] 1934
#[[Claës Lindsström]] 1942
#[[Hans Simonsson (Swedish Navy officer)|Hans Simonsson]] 1945
#[[Helge Strömbäck]] 1945
#[[Gunnar Bjurner]] 1947
#[[Gösta Ehrensvärd]] 1950
#[[Erik Anderberg]] 1957
#[[Erik Samuelson (Swedish Navy officer)|Erik Samuelson]] 1958
#[[Gunnar Jedeur-Palmgren]] 1962
#[[Erik af Klint (1901–1981)|Erik af Klint]] 1966
#[[Bertil Berthelsson]] 1967
#[[Oscar Krokstedt]] 1968
#[[Sigurd Lagerman]] 1968
#[[Holger Henning]] 1970
#[[Einar Blidberg]] 1971
#[[Karl Segrell]] 1971
#[[Per Rudberg]] 1978
#[[Bengt Schuback]] 1978
#[[Dick Börjesson]] 1990
#[[Peter Nordbeck (Swedish Navy officer)|Peter Nordbeck]] 1994
#[[Frank Rosenius]] 1998
#[[Jan Thörnqvist]] 2016<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
#[[Jonas Haggren]] 2018<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

<gallery class="center">
File:SWE-NavyOF8.svg|Vice admiral
File:OF-8 Viceamiral FL ärm pre-2003.jpg|Pre-2003 sleeve insignia for a three star admiral
File:OF-8 Viceamiral FL arm.jpg|Insignia for Vice Admiral (OF-8) in the Swedish Navy.
File:OF-8 Viceamiral FL hylsa.jpg|[[Shoulder mark]] of a Swedish three star admiral
File:Naval Rank Flag of Sweden - Viceamiralsflagga.svg|Vice admiral flag
File:Swedish command flag (1875-1905) - Vice Admiral.svg|Vice admiral command flag 1875–1905
File:Swedish-Norwegian command flag (1815-1844) - Vice Admiral.svg|Vice admiral command flag 1815–1844
</gallery>

==Konteramiraler (Rear admirals)==
#[[Per Lilliehorn]] 1789
#[[Carl Fredrik Eneskjöld]] 1793
#[[Harald af Cristiernin]] 1795
#[[Georg Christian de Frese]] 1797
#[[Carl Adolph Danckwardt]] 1800
#[[Claes Hjelmstjerna]] 1800
#[[Carl Fredric Aschling]] 1808
#[[Maurits Peter von Krusenstierna]] 1809
#[[Carl Edvard Carlheim-Gyllensköld]] 1811
#[[Hans Henrik Anckarheim]] 1812
#[[Carl af Klint]] 1823
#[[Claes August Cronstedt]] 1823
#[[Carl Ulner]] 1852
#[[Salomon Mauritz von Krusenstierna]] 1861
#[[Oscar Stackelberg]] 1886
#[[Jacob Hägg]] 1899
#[[Arvid Lindman]] 1907
#[[Sten Ankarcrona]] 1916
#[[Bernhard Juel]] 1919
#[[Albert Fallenius]] 1923
#[[Hans Ericson (1868–1945)|Hans Ericson]] 1928
#[[Gunnar Unger]] 1931
#[[Marc Giron]] 1942
#[[Yngve Ekstrand]] 1942
#[[Erik Wetter]] 1943
#[[Eskil Gester]] 1952
#[[Ragnar Wetterblad]] 1953
#[[Moje Östberg]] 1955
#[[Einar Blidberg]] 1957
#[[Gunnar Fogelberg]] 1959
#[[Stig Bergelin]] 1963
#[[Hans C:son Uggla]] 1964
#[[Dag Arvas]] 1966
#[[Christer Kierkegaard]] 1970
#[[Gunnar Grandin]] 1970
#[[Rolf Rheborg]] 1973
#[[Bengt Rasin]] 1977
#[[Carl-Fredrik Algernon]] 1978
#[[Jan Enquist]] 1982
#[[Ola Backman]] 1982
#[[Göran Wallén]] 1984
#[[Claes Tornberg]] 1985
#[[Cay Holmberg]] 1990
#[[Sten Swedlund]] 1990
#[[Torsten Lindh]] 1994
#[[Bertil Björkman]] 1997
#[[Göran Larsbrink]] 2001
#[[Jörgen Ericsson]] 2001
#[[Anders Grenstad]] 2005
#[[Leif Nylander]] c. 2005
#[[Stefan Engdahl]] 2006
#[[Odd Werin]] 2010
#[[Thomas Engevall]] 2014
#[[Jens Nykvist]] 2016
#[[Ewa Skoog Haslum]] 2020

<gallery class="center">
File:SWE-NavyOF7.svg|Rear admiral
File:OF-7 Konteramiral FL ärm pre-2003.jpg|Pre-2003 sleeve insignia for a two star admiral
File:OF-7 Konteramiral FL arm.jpg|Insignia for Rear Admiral (OF-7) in the Swedish Navy.
File:OF-7 Konteramiral FL hylsa.jpg|[[Shoulder mark]] of a Swedish two star admiral
File:Naval Rank Flag of Sweden - Konteramiralsflagga.svg|Rear admiral flag
File:Swedish command flag (1875-1905) - Rear Admiral.svg|Rear admiral command flag 1875–1905
File:Swedish-Norwegian command flag (1815-1844) - Rear Admiral.svg|Rear admiral command flag 1815–1844
</gallery>

==Flottiljamiraler (Rear admiral (lower half)/Flotilla admiral)==
#[[Mats Fogelmark]] ?
#[[Peter Bager]] ?
#[[Stefan Engdahl]] 2000
#[[Lars Salomonsson]] 2003
#[[Bengt Jarvid]] 2008

<gallery class="center">
File:SWE-NavyOF6.svg|Rear admiral (lower half)
File:OF-6 Flottiljamiral FL arm.jpg|Insignia for Rear Admiral (OF-6) in the Swedish Navy.
File:OF-6 Flottiljamiral FL hylsa.jpg|[[Shoulder mark]] of a Swedish one star admiral
File:Naval Rank Flag of Sweden - Flottiljamiralsflagga.svg|Rear admiral (lower half) flag
</gallery>

==See also==
* [[Lord High Admiral of Sweden]]

==References==



[[Category:Swedish admirals| ]]
[[Category:Lists of Swedish military personnel]]
[[Category:Lists of admirals|Sweden]]


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List of The Jack and Marc Show characters

Captain Calm: Requesting speedy deletion (CSD A1). (TW)



Lloyd of Lloyds Automotive Mafia
The Ruskies
Big Ethel Brunzy


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Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Between the Wars (documentary series)

CFLeon:




'''''Between the Wars''''' was a 1978 [[documentary]] television series. Covering the [[Interwar Period]] from 1918 to 1941 in 16 half-hour episodes. the series was produced by [[Alan Landsburg Productions]]. Each episode was narrated by [[Eric Sevareid]].

In 2011, the series was repackaged by [[Questar, Inc]] as "The Road to World War II".

==Episodes==
* 1. ''Versailles: The Lost Peace''
* 2. ''Return to Isolationism''
* 3. ''The First SALT Talks''
* 4. ''Radio, Racism and Foreign Policy''
* 5. ''The Great Depression and Foreign Affairs''
* 6. ''FDR and Hitler: The Rise to Power''
* 7. ''FDR and Hitler: The Dynamics of Power''
* 8. ''America in the Pacific: The Clash of Two Cultures''
* 9. ''The Recognition of Russia A Climate of Mutual Distrust''
* 10. ''Latin America: Intervention in Our Own Backyard''
* 11. ''The Italian-Ethiopian War Africa in World Affairs''
* 12. ''The Spanish Civil War''
* 13. ''The Phoney War''
* 14. ''FDR and Churchill: The Human Partnership''
* 15. ''Japan Invades China: Crisis in the Far East''
* 16. ''War Comes to Pearl Harbor''

==References==


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List of 4K channels in Pakistan

Taimoorahmed11: /* Defunct */









This is a complete list of [[4K resolution|4K]] Ultra High Definition (UHD) channels in Pakistan which can be viewed over satellite. The first 4K channel to be launched in Pakistan was [[Bol News|BOL News]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

==Currently==

{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Channel
!Genre
!Language
|-
|BOL News UHD
|News
|Urdu
|-
|BOL Entertainment UHD
|Entertainment
|Urdu
|-
|Indus News
|News
|English
|}

== Defunct ==

{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Channel
|-
|BOL News Balochi
|-
|BOL News English
|-
|BOL News Pashto
|-
|BOL News Punjabi
|-
|BOL News Sindhi
|}

== References ==

[[Category:4K television channels]]


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Šatrija (disambiguation)

Staszek Lem: ←Created page with ''''Šatrija''' is a hill and a hillfort in the Samogitia region of Lithuania '''Šatrija''' may also refer to: *" sewing...'


'''[[Šatrija]]''' is a hill and a [[hillfort]] in the [[Samogitia]] region of [[Lithuania]]

'''Šatrija''' may also refer to:
*" sewing factory, Lithuania
*" River, Lithuania
*, Vilnius Municipality state educational and recreational establishment for children and youth



[[lt:Šatrija (reikšmės)]]


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2020 Winter Youth Olympics torch relay

Discospinster: AFC draft (via script)



2 Candidate cities
On November 28, 2013, the International Olympic Committee announced the two candidate cities: 5

2.1 Swiss flag Lausanne, Switzerland
The candidacy was confirmed on July 12, 2013. Lausanne is the headquarters of the International Olympic Committee and is considered the Olympic Capital.6

2.2 Flag of Romania Brașov, Romania
Brașov submitted its candidacy in November 2013. At the beginning of 2013, Brașov held the European Youth Olympic Festival in its winter edition.7

128th Session of the International Olympic Committee
July 31, 2015, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
City Voting
Flag of Switzerland Lausanne (SUI) 71
Flag of Romania Brașov (RUM) 10
3 Candidates discarded
Bulgarian flag Sofia, Bulgaria
American Flag Lake Placid, United States
4 Organization
4.1 Venues
4.2 Lausanne
Vaudoise Aréna - Opening and Closing Ceremonies, Final Ice Hockey, Figure Skating, Short Track
Lausanne Campus - Olympic Village
Le Flon - Medal Ceremonies
4.3 Swear
Prémanon, France - Ski Jumping, Biathlon, Nordic Combined
Le Brassus - Cross-country skiing
4.4 Alps
Leysin - Freestyle Skiing (Halfpipe, Slopestyle), Snowboarding (Halfpipe, Slopestyle)
Les Diablerets - Alpine skiing
Villars-sur-Ollon - Ski Cross, Snowboard Cross, Mountaineering
Champéry - Curling
St. Moritz - Speed ​​Skating, Bobsleigh, Skeleton, Luge, Medal Ceremonies


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2016 Winter Youth torch relay

Discospinster: AFC draft (via script)



Nine competition and eleven non-competition venues were used, with all except the Youth Olympic Village in Lillehammer being existing venues. The games were held in four municipalities: Lillehammer, Hamar, Gjøvik and Øyer. The former three are located nearby the lake of Mjøsa and each have about 27,000 residents, while Øyer has 5,000 residents and is located in the valley of Gudbrandsdalen. There were five competition venues in Lillehammer, two in Hamar and one in Gjøvik and Øyer.[12]

In Lillehammer, the twin ski jumping hill of Lysgårdsbakken has a spectator capacity of 35,000. Lysgårdsbakken has a hill size of 138 and a K-point of 120, while the normal hill has a hill size of 100 and a K-point of 90.[13] Birkebeineren Ski Stadium hosted cross-country skiing, biathlon and Nordic combined,[14] with the stadium itself having a capacity for 31,000 spectators during cross-country skiing and 13,500 during biathlon. In addition, spectators could watch from along the tracks.[15] Kanthaugen Freestyle Arena has a capacity for 15,000 spectators and hosted freestyle skiing and half-pipe snowboarding.[16]

Lillehammer Olympic Bobsleigh and Luge Track is located at Hunderfossen and is the only bobsleigh, luge and skeleton track in the Nordic Countries.[17] Kristins Hall hosted both ice hockey and curling.[18] Gjøvik Olympic Cavern Hall is located in a man-made cave and featured the short track speed skating events.[19] In Hamar, Vikingskipet hosted long track speed skating and Hamar Olympic Amphitheatre hosted figure skating.[20] Alpine skiing and slopestyle snowboarding were undertaken at Hafjell in Øyer.[21]

Stampesletta, a multi-sports complex next to Kristins Hall, hosted the opening and closing ceremonies. The medal ceremonies took place in the town plaza. Athletes and leader accommodation were provided at two Olympic Villages, one in Lillehammer for the Lillehammer and Øyer-based events, and one in Hamar for the Hamar and Gjøvik-based events. The Lillehammer village consisted of student apartments in combination with a hotel and apartment resort. They used Håkons Hall for dining. The Hamar village was Hotel Scandic Hamar.[22] In addition, there are five designated cultural venues in Lillehammer: Kulturhuset Banken, Lillehammer Art Museum, Lillehammer University College, Maihaugen and the Nansen Academy.[23] The Main Media Centre was located at Mesna Upper Secondary School, which is adjacent to Stampesletta.[24]

All the competition venues were built ahead of the 1994 Winter Olympics.[25] Kristins Hall is the only venue not used during those Games,[26] while Håkons Hall and Kvitfjell were used. During Lillehammer 2016 Youth Olympic Games, Håkonshall was the venue for the Learn & Share program, whilst Kristins Hall was the official venue for ice hockey and curling. Kvitfjell was not used, and Hafjell was the main venue for downhill skiing, snowboard, and freeskiing instead.


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1972 Summer Olympics torch relay

Alfredokudai1: ←Created page with 'From July 28 to August 26, 1972, 6,000 relievers covered 5,532 kilometers carrying the Olympic torch along the following route: Greece: Olympia, Athens, Thessal...'


From July 28 to August 26, 1972, 6,000 relievers covered 5,532 kilometers carrying the Olympic torch along the following route:

Greece: Olympia, Athens, Thessaloniki.
Turkey: Istanbul
Bulgaria: Varna
Romania: Bucharest, Timisoara.
Yugoslavia: Belgrade
Hungary: Budapest
Austria: Vienna, Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck.
Germany: Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Munich.
Secondary relays brought the Olympic flame to Augsburg and Kiel.5

4 Great moments


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Sheilah Lukins

Elizabeth.fleet: /* Works */


'''Sheilah Lukins''' is a Canadian writer residing in St. Phillips, Newfoundland.<ref name=":5">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> She writes both non-fiction titles and books for children. The first book in her children's series, ''Full Speed Ahead: Errol's Bell Island Adventure'', won the Bruneau Family Children's/Young Adult Award, which is a part of the Newfoundland and Labrador Book Awards<ref name=":0">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref name=":1">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref name=":2">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. The second book in the series, ''Flying Ace: Errol's Gander Adventure'', won a Canada Book Award.<ref name=":3">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref name=":4">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Along with writing, she works at the Memorial University Library.<ref name=":5" />

== Works ==

=== Non-Fiction ===

* ''For Maids Who Brew and Bake: Rare and Excellent Recipes from 17th Century Newfoundland'' (2003)
* ''Rain, Drizzle, and Fog: Newfoundland Weather Stories''
* ''Bottom's Up, A History of Alcohol in Newfoundland and Labrador'' (2020)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

=== Children's Books ===

* ''Full Speed Ahead: Errol's Bell Island Adventure'' (2016)
* ''Flying Ace: Errol's Gander Adventure (2019)''<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
* ''Once upon an Iceberg: Errol's Twillingate Adventure'' (2020)

== Awards ==

* Canada Book Award for ''Flying Ace: Errol's Gander Adventure''<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":3" />
* Bruneau Family Children's/Young Adult Award for ''Full Speed Ahead: Errol's Bell Island Adventure''<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":2" />
* Gourmand Award for Drink History for ''Bottom's Up, A History of Alcohol in Newfoundland and Labrador''<ref></ref>

== References ==


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Monday, August 24, 2020

William L. “Corn Pop” Morris

Number9060862: ←Created page with 'William L. “Corn Pop” Morris William L. “Corn Pop” Morris (Born 1946 - Died December 2, 2016) was a Wilmington, Delaware...'


[[File:Cornpop.png|right|thumb|William L. “Corn Pop” Morris]]
William L. “Corn Pop” Morris
(Born 1946 - Died December 2, 2016) was a Wilmington, Delaware resident alleged by former Vice President Joe Biden to have been the leader of a gang known as the “The Romans”.<ref>https://ift.tt/31pI3Si </ref> <ref>https://ift.tt/31rahw1> <ref>https://ift.tt/34u5LyQ> <ref> https://ift.tt/34sOWo0> <ref> https://ift.tt/3aWjnE4> While campaigning for the Presidency in 2019, Biden told a group of African American children that while serving as a life guard at a community pool in 1962, Biden told Corn Pop to stop jumping on the diving board.<ref>https://ift.tt/31pI3Si </ref> <ref>https://ift.tt/31rahw1> <ref>https://ift.tt/34u5LyQ> <ref>https://ift.tt/34sOWo0> <ref> https://ift.tt/3aWjnE4> During the exchange, Biden says he called Corn Pop “Esther Williams” as a derogatory reference to Corn Pop wearing a bathing cap similar to that worn by the 1940’s swimmer and actress. <ref>https://ift.tt/31pI3Si </ref> <ref>https://ift.tt/31rahw1> <ref>https://ift.tt/2QpaCsZ> <ref> https://ift.tt/3aWjnE4> Biden said Corn Pop challenged him to a fight, but Biden confronted Corn Pop with a chain and convinced Corn Pop to back down. <ref>https://ift.tt/31pI3Si </ref> <ref>https://ift.tt/31rahw1> <ref>https://ift.tt/34u5LyQ> <ref>https://ift.tt/34sOWo0> <ref> https://ift.tt/3aWjnE4>


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