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null | Pankratovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245638 | null | null | 63245638 | null | Pankratovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Pankratovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Sidorovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 53 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 49 km, to Sidorovo is 1 km. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Panovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245644 | null | null | 63245644 | null | Panovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Panovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Sidorovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 35 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 37 km, to Sidorovo is 11 km. Gerasimovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Survive the Night | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245650 | null | null | 63245650 | null | Survive the Night
Survive the Night (formerly titled The Long Night) is a 2020 American action thriller film directed by Matt Eskandari and starring Bruce Willis, Chad Michael Murray, and Shea Buckner. It follows a doctor who is taken hostage along with his family inside their home after two injured criminals break in. The film was released in the United States on May 22, 2020.
Principal photography took only 10 days and was in Columbus, Georgia.
On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 17% based on twelve reviews, with an average rating of 4.02/10. On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 26 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Panfilovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245656 | null | null | 63245656 | null | Panfilovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Panfilovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 254 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 31 km, to Yurovo is 7 km. Nazarka is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Teodorico Asejo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245659 | null | null | 63245659 | null | Teodorico Asejo
Teodorico Asejo (born: 21 May 1964) is a sailor from the Philippines. who represented his country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain as crew member in the Soling. With helmsman Mario Almario and fellow crew member Juan Miguel Torres they took the 24th place. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Assanur Rijal | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245661 | null | null | 63245661 | null | Assanur Rijal
Assanur Rijal (born March 2, 1996) is an Indonesian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Liga 1 club, Persiraja Banda Aceh.
In 2017 he joined Aceh United to compete in 2017 Liga 3. By the end of the season, he helped Aceh United to promote to Liga 2 for 2018 season. He was chosen as the best player of the league for this season, as well. The following season, he helped Aceh United to advance to second round in 2018 Liga 2, however, the team failed to secure a promotion to Liga 1. In the beginning of 2019, Aceh United was sold to other owner, and Assanur Rijal decided to resign from the club.
In 2019 he joined another club from Aceh, Persiraja to compete in 2019 Liga 2. He was the top goalscorer of the club in this season with 12 goals, and became the second top goalscorer of the league. He also helped Persiraja to promote to Liga 1. He scored the winning goal for Persiraja in the third place play-off against Sriwijaya. He made his Liga 1 debut in February 29, 2020, when Persiraja hosted Bhayangkara F.C. in the first Persiraja's match in 2020 Liga 1.
Aceh United
Persiraja | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Parshino, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245662 | null | null | 63245662 | null | Parshino, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Parshino () is a rural locality (a village) in Pertsevskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 63 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 25 km, to Sloboda is 20 km. Klimovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Captain Ladurner | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245664 | null | null | 63245664 | null | Captain Ladurner
Captain Ladurner (German: Hauptmann Ladurner) is a 1940 German adventure novel by the South Tyrol mountaineer Luis Trenker. It portrays a group of First World War veterans who conspire to overthrow the Weimar Republic, portrayed as corrupt.
It was released by Trenker following his film "The Fire Devil" which had apparently displeased Adolf Hitler with his glorification of popular revolts. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Peredkovo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245669 | null | null | 63245669 | null | Peredkovo
Peredkovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Pertsevskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 3 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 17 km, to Sloboda is 7 km. Bykovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Costel Burtilă | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245674 | null | null | 63245674 | null | Costel Burtilă
Costel Burtilă (born 14 July 1991) is a Romanian rugby union player. He plays as a prop for French Fédérale 1 club Hyères-Carqueiranne-La Crau.
Costel Burtilă played mostly of his career in French Fédérale 1 league system. His started his rugby career in France in 2012 with Stade Rodez Aveyron. In 2015 he was signed by Fédérale 1 club Cognac playing there for only a season. In 2016 followed a move to Lavaur where he played for two seasons and in 2018 he was signed by Fédérale 1 club Trélissac. After just one season with Trélissac he was signed Hyères-Carqueiranne-La Crau in 2019.
Burtilă is also selected for Romania's national team, the Oaks, making his international debut during the Week 2 of 2020 Rugby Europe Championship in a test match against the "Os Lobos". | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Llashkadrenoc | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245675 | null | null | 63245675 | null | Llashkadrenoc
Llashkadrenoc (, ) is a village in Malishevë municipality, Kosovo. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Juan Miguel Torres | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245678 | null | null | 63245678 | null | Juan Miguel Torres
Juan Miguel Torres (born: 26 February 1968) is a sailor from the Philippines. who represented his country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain as crew member in the Soling. With helmsman Mario Almario and fellow crew member Teodorico Asejo they took the 24th place. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Barham railway station | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245680 | null | null | 63245680 | null | Barham railway station
Barham was a station on the Elham Valley Railway. It opened in 1887 and closed to passengers in 1940 and freight in 1947.
The station opened on 4 July 1887 with the opening of the Elham Valley Railway from Cheriton Junction, on the South Eastern Main Line as far as Barham. An 18-lever signal box was provided. A public siding was located at Wingmore, south of Barham. Initially, there were six passenger trains per day. By 1906 there were nine trains a day, with five on Sunday. This had reduced to six trains a day by 1922. The double track between Barham and Harbledown Junction was reduced to single track from 25 October 1931 and the signal boxes between those points were abolished. Services had been reduced to five trains a day by 1937.
Passenger services between and were withdrawn on 1 December 1940 and the line was placed under military control. On 31 October 1941, a fireman was killed on the footplate near Barham during an air raid. The station remained open to freight during the war. Military control was relinquished on 19 February 1945. The Elham Valley Railway closed on 1 October 1947. The station building at Barham was demolished in November 1963. Barham Signal Box is preserved at , on the East Kent Railway.
` | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Pirogovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245681 | null | null | 63245681 | null | Pirogovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Pirogovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Gryazovetskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 206 as of 2002. There are 7 streets.
The distance to Gryazovets is 1 km. Gryazovets is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Piterimka | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245693 | null | null | 63245693 | null | Piterimka
Piterimka () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 23 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 36.5 km, to Yurovo is 8 km. Filippovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Ploskoye, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245704 | null | null | 63245704 | null | Ploskoye, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Ploskoye () is a rural locality (a settlement) in Rostilovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 562 as of 2002. There are 8 streets.
The distance to Gryazovets is 33 km, to Rostilovo is 18 km. Nefedovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Plyushchevo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245715 | null | null | 63245715 | null | Plyushchevo
Plyushchevo () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 11 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 32 km, to Yurovo is 22 km. Kokarevo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Pogiblovo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245722 | null | null | 63245722 | null | Pogiblovo
Pogiblovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 17 km, to Yurovo is 13 km. Prokopyevo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Podberezhsky | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245731 | null | null | 63245731 | null | Podberezhsky
Podberezhsky () is a rural locality (a passing loop) in Vokhtozhskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 70 km, to Vokhtoga is 10 km. Lapino is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Richard Hoad | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245735 | null | null | 63245735 | null | Richard Hoad
Richard Hoad (born: 24 October 1930) is a sailor from Barbados, who represented his country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain as helmsman in the Soling. With crew members David Staples and Jason Teller they took the 22nd place. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Podkamenka | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245738 | null | null | 63245738 | null | Podkamenka
Podkamenka () is a rural locality (a settlement) in Vokhtozhskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 41 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 104 km. Vostrogsky is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Polovoz | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245749 | null | null | 63245749 | null | Polovoz
Polovoz () is a rural locality (a village) in Rostilovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 26 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 16 km, to Rostilovo is 9 km. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | One-way wave equation | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245755 | null | null | 63245755 | null | One-way wave equation
A one-way wave equation is a partial differential equation used in scientific fields such as geophysics, whose solutions include only waves that propagate in one direction. In the one-dimensional case, the one-way wave equation allows wave propagation to be calculated without the complication of having both an outgoing and incoming wave (e.g. destructive or constructive interference). Several approximation methods use the 1D one-way wave equation for 3D seismic calculations.
The standard 2nd-order wave equation in one dimension can be written as:
where formula_2 is the coordinate, formula_3 is time, formula_4 is the displacement, and formula_5 is the wave velocity.
Due to the ambiguity in the direction of the wave velocity, formula_6, the equation does not constrain the wave direction and so has solutions propagating in both the forward (formula_7) and backward (formula_8) directions. The general solution of the equation is the solutions in these two directions is:
where formula_10 and formula_11 are equal and opposite displacements.
When the one-way wave problem is formulated, the wave propagation direction can be arbitrarily selected by keeping one of the two terms in the general solution.
Factoring the operator on the left side of the equation yields a pair of one-way wave equations, one with solutions that propagate forwards and the other with solutions that propagate backwards.
The forward- and backward-travelling waves are described respectively,
The one-way wave equations (in a homogeneous medium) can also be derived directly from the characteristic specific acoustic impedance. In a longitudinal plane wave, the specific impedance determines the local proportionality of pressure formula_14 and particle velocity formula_15:
The conversion of the impedance equation leads to:
A longitudinal plane wave of angular frequency formula_19 has the displacement formula_4. The pressure formula_21 and the particle velocity formula_22 can be expressed in terms of the displacement formula_23 (formula_24: Elastic Modulus):
These relations inserted into the equation above (*) yield:
With the local wave velocity definition (speed of sound):
directly follows the 1st-order partial differential equation of the one-way wave equation:
The wave velocity formula_5 can be set within this wave equation as formula_34 or formula_35 according to the direction of wave propagation.
For wave propagation in the direction of formula_34 the unique solution is
and for wave propagation in the formula_35 direction the respective solution is | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Suriname at the 2020 Summer Olympics | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245767 | null | null | 63245767 | null | Suriname at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Suriname is expected to compete at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Originally scheduled to take place from 24 July to 9 August 2020, the Games have been postponed to 23 July to 8 August 2021, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. It will be the nation's fourteenth appearance at the Summer Olympics.
Following the completion of the 2020 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, Suriname entered one rider to compete in the men's sprint and keirin at the Games, based on his final individual UCI Olympic rankings. Additionally, this marked the country's recurrence to the sport for the first time since Barcelona 1992. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | David Staples | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245783 | null | null | 63245783 | null | David Staples
David Staples (born: 27 August 1953) is a sailor from Barbados. who represented his country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain as crew member in the Soling. With helmsman Richard Hoad and fellow crew member Jason Teller they took the 22nd place. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Seçishtë | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245794 | null | null | 63245794 | null | Seçishtë
Seçishtë (, ) is a village in Hani i Elezit municipality, Kosovo. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Gerald Stranraer-Mull | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245798 | null | null | 63245798 | null | Gerald Stranraer-Mull
Gerald Hugh Stranraer-Mull (born 1942) is a retired Anglican priest who was Provost of St Andrew's Cathedral, Aberdeen from 1988 to 2008.
Stranraer-Mull was educated at Woodhouse Grove School, King's College London and St Augustine's College, Canterbury and ordained in 1971. After a curacy in Hexham he served at Ellon, Corbridge and Cruden Bay. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Jason Teller | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245799 | null | null | 63245799 | null | Jason Teller
Jason Teller (born: 6 October 1972) is a sailor from Barbados. who represented his country at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain as crew member in the Soling. With helmsman Richard Hoad and fellow crew member David Staples they took the 22nd place. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Alice Vassar LaCour | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245802 | null | null | 63245802 | null | Alice Vassar LaCour
Alice Vassar LaCour (born 1870s – died 1924) was an American educator and singer.
Alice Maud Vassar was from Athens, Alabama, where she attended the Trinity School run by missionary Mary Fletcher Wells. She graduated from Fisk University's normal school in 1887.
LaCour was a Fisk Jubilee Singer, touring with the company from 1890 to 1891. For many years afterward, she was featured on concert programs and conducting choruses at festivals.
LaCour and her husband taught at American Missionary Association (AMA) schools in Jonesborough, Tennessee, Augusta, Georgia, and in Chapel Hill and Lawndale, North Carolina. She was principal of the AMA school in Springfield, Tennessee.
Alice Vassar married fellow educator and Fisk Jubilee singer Paul Louis LaCour in 1893, in Nashville, at a wedding attended by much of the faculty of Fisk University; the university's president, Erastus Milo Cravath, performed the ceremony. The LaCours had daughters Lucile, Marion, and Gretchen. Alice Vassar LaCour died in 1924.
LaCour was a character in "Arise and Build" (2016), a musical play about the history of Trinity School, performed for the school's 150th anniversary. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Poltinino | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245809 | null | null | 63245809 | null | Poltinino
Poltinino () is a rural locality (a village) in Pertsevskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 12 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 17 km, to Sloboda is 7 km. Palkino is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Hanns Sassmann | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245810 | null | null | 63245810 | null | Hanns Sassmann
Hanns Sassmann (1882–1944) was an Austrian playwright, journalist and screenwriter. He was active in both German and Austrian cinema during the Nazi era. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Devil Sister | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245811 | null | null | 63245811 | null | Devil Sister
Devil Sister (from ; ), is an upcoming Thai romantic comedy television series starring Purim Rattanaruangwattana (Pluem) and Sutatta Udomsilp (Punpun).
It is one of the twelve television series for 2020 showcased by GMMTV during their "New & Next" event last 15 October 2019.
Below are the cast of the series: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Polukhino | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245818 | null | null | 63245818 | null | Polukhino
Polukhino () is a rural locality (a village) in Sidorovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 5 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 51.5 km, to Sidorovo is 3.5 km. Gridino is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Uganda Police Band | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245820 | null | null | 63245820 | null | Uganda Police Band
The Uganda Police Band is the sole ensemble of the Uganda Police and the mandated police band of the Republic of Uganda, being stationed in Kampala. It is responsible for playing at police ceremonies and community events. It was founded in the mid-1960s following Ugandan independence. In September 2019, it launched its first affiliated police band in the Lango sub-region.
One of the more notable band members was Moses Matovu, who joined in 1968 and went on to found the Afrigo Band. Venancio Okello was the longest serving director of the band, serving until his death in 2002. On 11 January 2019, the 8-year director of the band Josephine Kakooza (nicknamed "Mama Police") died while in service, being the longest serving officer in the UPF at the time of her death (having 50 years of service attributed to her). | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Polushkino, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245827 | null | null | 63245827 | null | Polushkino, Vologda Oblast
Polushkino () is a rural locality (a village) in Komyanskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 13 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 50 km, to Khoroshevo is 16 km. Bobrovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Florence Anderson (trade unionist) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245831 | null | null | 63245831 | null | Florence Anderson (trade unionist)
Florence Anderson (; 1871–1949) was the first female trade union secretary in Victoria, Australia. Anderson was born in Bairnsdale, Victoria. She married John Anderson in 1911 and bore three children. After her husband died she became a cleaner, but according to the "Biographical Register of the Australian Labour Movement 1788-1975" she "rebelled from expectation that cleaners take office towels home to launder" and joined the Female Office Cleaners Union part-time from 1916 and later became a full-time worker in 1919. In 1920 she was made the chair of the Worker's Board with Henry E. Bessell and Richard Brooks.
Anderson was elected the Victorian Secretary of the Miscellaneous Workers Union (the "missos") in 1930, holding office until 1946. She was active in advocating for equal pay, in particular for cleaners who were often women and who worked long hours for little pay. In an interview for "The Labor Call", Anderson called them "Workers of the Dawn, and Dusk too", and that,
She died at her home in Smith St, North Richmond on December 20, 1949 and was buried at Burwood Cemetery. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Popovkino, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245840 | null | null | 63245840 | null | Popovkino, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Popovkino () is a rural locality (a village) in Rostilovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 1 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 24 km, to Rostilovo is 17 km. Osomovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Popovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245845 | null | null | 63245845 | null | Popovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Popovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 2 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 42.5 km, to Yurovo is 14 km. Mikhaylovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Eugênio Souza | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245848 | null | null | 63245848 | null | Eugênio Souza
Eugênio Carlos de Souza (born 25 April 1963), simply known as Eugênio, is a Brazilian retired footballer who played as a defender, and is the manager of Tombense.
Cruzeiro
Vila Nova
Itaúna
Guarani-MG
Tombense
Ipatinga | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Superman Smashes the Klan | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245849 | null | null | 63245849 | null | Superman Smashes the Klan
Superman Smashes the Klan is a three-part superhero limited series comic book written by Gene Luen Yang with art by Gurihiru and published by DC Comics. It is a Superman story loosely based on the 1946 "The Adventures of Superman" radio show's story-arc, "Clan of the Fiery Cross."
In the story, set in 1946, a Chinese-American family, the Lees, move to Metropolis, but find themselves threatened by the local Ku Klux Klan. The children, Tommy and Roberta, find themselves especially threatened while new friends like Jimmy Olsen, Lois Lane and Inspector Henderson try to help and are then similarly targeted. Meanwhile, Superman's own efforts to assist the children are complicated by disturbing visions that prove linked to his own self-doubts and confusion about his own self-identity.
Reviews for "Superman Smashes the Klan" were generally positive, especially with regards to its message and themes. Pierce Lydon of Newsarama praised Gene Luen Yang for exploring the "subtle and insidious ways that prejudice shows up in our everyday life." Rory Wilding of AIPT Comics said the series "succeeds as a positive and somewhat educational adventure about the acceptance of others." | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Posyolok Lnozavoda, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245860 | null | null | 63245860 | null | Posyolok Lnozavoda, Vologda Oblast
Posyolok Lnozavoda () is a rural locality (a settlement) in Rostilovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 370 as of 2002. There are 3 streets.
The distance to Gryazovets is 3.5 km, to Rostilovo is 3.4 km. Kornilyevskaya Sloboda is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | List of presidents of Culiacán Municipality | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245861 | null | null | 63245861 | null | List of presidents of Culiacán Municipality
The following is a list of presidents of Culiacán Municipality in Sinaloa state, Mexico. The municipality includes the city of Culiacán. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | 1,8-Naphthyridine | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245866 | null | null | 63245866 | null | 1,8-Naphthyridine
1,8-Naphthyridine is an organic compound with the formula C8H6N2. It is the most well-studied of the six isomeric naphthyridines, a subset of diazanaphthalenes with nitrogen in the separate rings. Enoxacin, nalidixic acid, and trovafloxacin are 1,8-naphthyridine derivatives with antibacterial properties related to the fluoroquinolones.
With flanking nitrogen centers, 1,8-naphthyridine serves as a binucleating ligand in coordination chemistry. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Prokopyevo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245869 | null | null | 63245869 | null | Prokopyevo
Prokopyevo () is a rural locality (a village) in Yurovskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 18.5 km, to Yurovo is 14 km. Vasyukovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Puzovo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245872 | null | null | 63245872 | null | Puzovo
Puzovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Pertsevskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 7 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 12 km, to Sloboda is 2 km. Chernava is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Vera Hartegg | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245885 | null | null | 63245885 | null | Vera Hartegg
Vera Hartegg (1902–1981) was a German writer and stage and film actress. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Putilovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245886 | null | null | 63245886 | null | Putilovo, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast
Putilovo () is a rural locality (a village) in Vokhtozhskoye Rural Settlement, Gryazovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 77 as of 2002.
The distance to Gryazovets is 73 km, to Vokhtoga is 11 km. Orlovo is the nearest rural locality. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Denis Bovey | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245929 | null | null | 63245929 | null | Denis Bovey
Denis Phillip Bovey (b. 1929) was Provost of St Andrew's Cathedral, Aberdeen from 1983 to 1988. to 2008.
Bovey was educated at Ely Theological College and ordained in 1954. After curacies in Southwick, Sunderland and West Hartlepool he served in Strichen, Old Deer, Longside and Inverurie. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Battle of Piercebridge | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63245978 | null | null | 63245978 | null | Battle of Piercebridge
The Battle of Piercebridge was a battle in County Durham, England, during the First English Civil War on 1 December 1642. The Earl of Newcastle was advancing with a Royalist army of 6,000 from Newcastle upon Tyne to York, when he met a small force of around 580 Parliamentarians at Piercebridge. The Parliamentarians, commanded by Captain John Hotham, were defending the bridge over the River Tees. After three hours of heavy fighting, Hotham and his men retreated, allowing the Royalists a clear path to continue onto York.
In December 1642, the First English Civil War was in its fourth month, since Charles I had raised the Royal Standard in Nottingham and declared the Earl of Essex, and by extension Parliament, traitors. That action had been the culmination of religious, fiscal and legislative tensions going back over fifty years.
Even before the formal start of the war, Yorkshire was a key area in the conflict. After Charles attempted to arrest five members of parliament in January 1642, members of the gentry started openly taking sides and preparing for battle. Sir John Hotham seized Hull for Parliament the same month, and after fleeing London, the King established himself at York in March. The King twice attempted to take Hull in 1642 without success. Although he subsequently returned south, his wife, Henrietta Maria (formally known as Queen Mary) had travelled to the Low Countries to acquire weapons and Newcastle was charged with ensuring her safe travel through the northeast when she returned. On the other side, Ferdinando Fairfax, Lord Fairfax, was appointed as the commander of Parliament's forces in Yorkshire.
In response to requests from Yorkshire Royalists, Newcastle advanced south from Newcastle upon Tyne towards Yorkshire with around 6,000 men, comprising 4,000 infantry, 2,000 cavalry and dragoons, with ten artillery pieces. He had to cross the River Tees at Piercebridge, on the border between County Durham and Yorkshire. To defend against his advance, the Parliamentarians placed a small force of around 580 men (400 infantry and 180 cavalry) with two cannons on the southern side of the bridge, under the command of Captain John Hotham.
On 1 December, Newcastle sent a vanguard into Piercebridge under the command of Colonel Sir Thomas Howard. Howard placed the ten artillery pieces on Carlbury Hill, to the east of the village. Howard's dragoons led the assault, followed by infantry commanded by Sir William Lambton. After a few hours of intense fighting, during which Colonel Howard was killed, the Royalists forced Hotham to retreat. According to Parliamentarian accounts, their forces suffered only minimal casualties.
The Parliamentarians retreated south through Yorkshire towards Knaresborough. With his path clear, Newcastle continued into York, where he arrived on 3 December. His advance had split the Parliamentarian forces, and shifted the balance of power in the county. He subsequently defeated a Parliamentarian force commanded by Fairfax at the Battle of Tadcaster. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas 4 | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246013 | null | null | 63246013 | null | Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas 4
Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas 4 (Persian: عملیات بیت المقدس ۴) was a military operation during Iran-Iraq War which was launched by Iran on 25 March 1988 by the code of "Ya Aba Abd-Allah al-Hussain (a.s.)" (Persian: «یااباعبدالله الحسین (ع)») at the axis of Halabcheh-Shakhshemiran, by the command of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and it was lasted for two days. The goal of the operation was to fulfill/secure the left flank of Operation Dawn 10 area—which was considered as a sensitive area for Iraq.
The operation area of Beitol Moqaddas-4 was a mountainous region, including:
Operation Beit al-Moqaddas-4 resulted in the conquering of several areas of Iraq by Iranian forces, including: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Villa Tesoriera | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246014 | null | null | 63246014 | null | Villa Tesoriera
Villa Tesoriera, also known as La Tesoriera or Villa Sartoriana, is a Baroque-style rural palace located at Corso Francia 186, Turin, Italy. The villa since 2014 was the home of the non-profit organization of "Villa of Composers" that links active composers of written music with libraries of written music. The villa is surrounded by a large park.
The central core of the Villa was built between 1713 and 1715 for Aymo Ferrero Cocconato, treasurer of the Duke of Savoy and King of Sicily, Victor Amadeus II. On the south wall of the first floor of the Villa, a painted plaque attributes the design to Jacopo Maggi (Cremona, 1658-1739), a scenographer, costume designer and impresario of the Teatro Regio in Turin. The frescoes of the Grand Salon have been attributed to Giovanni Battista Pozzo.
In the century after the treasurer's death in 1723, the villa had many owners. In 1869, it was purchased by the Marquis Ferdinando Arborio Gattinara di Breme, Duke of Sartirana, senator of the Kingdom and director of the Accademia Albertina. He commissioned the French- and Dutch-style gardens, and built an east wing addition to the Villa. Multiple contemporary authors comment on the eclectic richness of the holdings in the Villa in this era. After further change of owners, in 1934, the villa was inherited by Prince Amadeus Umberto of Savoy, who added a symmetrical west wing.
The villa was looted during the German army occupation from 1943 and 1944. During the occupation valuable library and furniture collections belonging to the Marquis di Breme went missing. In 2009, now belonging to the City of Turin, more than 2 million euros worth of restoration, and it reopened in 2012, housing the collections of the Andrea della Corte music library. In 2014, the City of Turin partnered with the Villa of Composers, notably to house and update the scores classified in its musical works library. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Crag Hotel | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246028 | null | null | 63246028 | null | Crag Hotel
The Crag Hotel, Penang is an abandoned hotel, and former school building on the north edge of Penang Hill.
The original site was first occupied by a Mr Bright in 1845, and was most likely a private residence. By the early 1850s, it was used as a sanatorium. In 1896, Captain John W Kerr, an employee of the East India Company took over the lease and made numerous improvements to the site and was a popular retreat for Europeans who lived in Georgetown and Penang Island as a way to escape the intense heat and humidity of the lower coastal areas. In 1905, the lease was then taken over by four Armenian immigrants, the Sarkies brothers and following minor renovations was turned into a hotel that boasted nine bungalows. The hotel prospered until the outbreak of World War I, when it was sold to the colonial government. Although it was still managed by the Sarkies brothers, by 1925 it was handed over to the Federated Malay States Railway. Most of the hotel was completely rebuilt in 1930 and it continued operating until the Second World War, when it was requisitioned by the Japanese Army of occupation. The Crag hotel re-opened in 1947, but was not as popular as it had been and finally closed its doors in 1954.
After the war, the building fell into disuse for a number of years, until it was leased to the Uplands School The International School of Penang (Uplands). The international boarding school opened in 1955, as a safe location during the Malayan Emergency. During her overseas tour it was visited by Queen Elizabeth II in 1972. It was moved to a new site in 1977, and the buildings abandoned.
The abandoned buildings became a location for the 1992 Indochine (film), featuring Catherine Deneuve - a French period drama film set in colonial French Indochina during the 1930s to 1950s. Later it was again used for the BBC Channel 4 television series Indian Summers screened 2015–16, a British colonial historical drama series set in India during the 1930s-1940s, featuring Nikesh Patel as Aafrin Dalal and Julie Walters as Cynthia Coffin. The main building becoming the fictional Royal Simla Club.
There have been several attempts to interest an overseas hotel chain to redevelop the Crag Hotel site, but nothing has materialized to date.
The history of Armenians in Singapore and Malaysia
Other Sarkies Brothers hotels: Eastern & Oriental Hotel (1885) Penang, Raffles Hotel (1887) Singapore, Strand Hotel (1901) Yangon (Rangoon).
The Sea View Hotel, Singapore, originally built in 1906 and operated by the Sarkies Brothers under lease until 1931. It was one of the first hotels located outside of the busy town centre. Situated in the Tanjong Katong area, especially popular with clients who had recently recovered from illness and were seeking the tranquillity of an idyllic seaside resort surrounded by coconut trees to rest and recuperate. It was leased to various operators until 1962, when it was demolished and a new property bearing the same name was built in its place. The new hotel operated from 1969 to 2003 before it was pulled down to make way for a condominium development. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | French ship Galatée | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246053 | null | null | 63246053 | null | French ship Galatée
Twenty-two ships of the French Navy have borne the name Galatée or Galathée, in honour of Galatea:
Notes
References
Bibliography | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Den svenska psalmboken (1986) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246056 | null | null | 63246056 | null | Den svenska psalmboken (1986)
Den svenska psalmboken – antagen av 1986 års kyrkomöte is the forth official hymnal of the Church of Sweden.
The process to create a new hymnal began in earnest in 1958 when Rune Pär Olofsson published a critique of the existing 1937 hymnal. The new hymnal was approved at the general conference of the Church of Sweden on August 29, 1986. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Alexander Adamson | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246080 | null | null | 63246080 | null | Alexander Adamson
Alexander Adamson (21 June 1921; 3 September 1983) was Provost of St Andrew's Cathedral, Aberdeen from 1978 to 1983. to 2008.
Adamson went to school in Springburn and was the Glasgow Welfare Department until he enlisted in the RAF in 1941. When peace returned he worked for the National Assistance Board. He studied for the priesthood at Lichfield Theological College and was ordained in 1959. After a curacy in Pontefract he was Vicar of Honley with Brockholes from 1962 to 1969; Rector of St John the Evangelist, Aberdeen from 1969 to 1978. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | 2 Kings 10 | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246109 | null | null | 63246109 | null | 2 Kings 10
2 Kings 10 is the tenth chapter of the second part of the Books of Kings in the Hebrew Bible or the Second Book of Kings in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is a compilation of various annals recording the acts of the kings of Israel and Judah by a Deuteronomic compiler in the seventh century BCE, with a supplement added in the sixth century BCE. This chapter records Jehu's massacres of the sons of Ahab, the kinsmen of Ahaziah the king of Judah and the Baal worshippers linked to Jezebel. The narrative is a part of a major section 2 Kings 9:1–15:12 covering the period of Jehu's dynasty.
This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language and since the 16th century is divided into 36 verses.
Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Codex Cairensis (895), Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Fragments containing parts of this chapter in Hebrew were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls, that is, 6Q4 (6QpapKgs; 150–75 BCE) with extant verses 19–21.
There is also a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE. Extant ancient manuscripts of the Septuagint version include Codex Vaticanus (B; formula_1B; 4th century), Codex Alexandrinus (A; formula_1A; 5th century) and Codex Marchalianus (Q; formula_1Q; 6th century).
This chapter and the previous one contain the narrative of Jehu's overthrow of the Omride dynasty and destruction of the Baal worship in Israel, reopening the battle against apostasy which was started by Elijah (). Following his anointing, Jehu executed a total revolution in Israel and Judah, by killing the reigning kings (and their family members) of both kingdoms. The narrative may be divided into two parallel sections, the first one about the assassination of the leaders (including Jezebel, the queen mother of Israel) and the second about the killing of their kinsmen (including the Baal worshippers as Jezebel's "kin"), ending with a summary of Jehu's reign and the consequences of his action in relation to his faithfulness to YHWH. The structure can be as follows:
The eradication of the entire ruling house after a coup was common in the ancient Near East, because it minimized the threat of blood-revenge and claims to the throne. As the royal house of Omri is in Samaria (), Jehu wrote to the Samarians to 'choose between loyalty to the previous dynasty and defection to him, the murderer of their king' (verses 1–5). The Samarians, like the Jezreelites, chose to follow Jehu and they brought the heads of the decapitated 70 Omrides to Jezreel (verses 6–7). Jehu took responsibility for murdering the king, but not for the slaughter of the royal family. It seems that Jehu was God's instrument to fulfill the prophecy spoken through the prophet Elijah (verse 10), but the way he executed the coup was blameworthy, because about 100 years later the prophet Hosea states that God 'will punish the house of Jehu for the blood of Jezreel' ().
The correspondence regarding the fate of the Ahab's sons recalls Ahab and Jezebel's correspondence with the nobles of Jezreel regarding Naboth's fate ().
Forty-two male members of the Judean royal family, who were closely tied and related to the Israelite royal house (cf. 2 Kings 3:7; 8:26, 29) near Betheked (presumably between Jezreel and Samaria) and ignorantly announced 'their allegiance to the Omrides, and thereby condemned themselves to death' (verses 13-14).
In their common 'zeal for the LORD', Jehu formed an alliance with Jehonadab ben Rechab, presumably the leader of a nomadic YHWH-worshipping religious clan which had strictly detached itself from the culture and religion of the country (cf. Jeremiah 35). The news that many Omrides have been killed (verse 17) is related to the full execution of the announcement made in . Jehu (and Jehonadab) then targets the house of Baal in Samaria, established since the time of Ahab (). As the Baal worshippers were closely linked to Ahab's royal family, the attack on them is clearly in line with Jehu's revolution. Jehu gathers all the prophets and priests in the temple using lures and threats (verses 18–19). Jehu's announcement, 'I have a great sacrifice to offer to Baal' (verse 19) is 'cruelly ambiguous, as he initially performs the sacrificial rites as a devout king would do (verse 24), only to order the ensuing human sacrifice'. According to verse 21, all servants of Baal throughout Israel should be eradicated, but individual YHWH-worshippers must first be separated from the mass (verse 22b), recalling the same problem in Genesis 18:17–33. Jehu's soldiers executed the order thoroughly, destroying the "cella" ('the citadel of the temple') and the within it, then transforming the holy site into a latrine, to remain so 'unto this day' (verses 25, 27). Jehu's victory led to a decisive turn in the political and religious history of Israel.
The final passage of this chapter contains annal notes of Jehu's reign. Jehu eradicated Baal worship in Israel, but the idol worship
sites still stood in Bethel and Dan, so he received bad rating, although his dynasty lasted four generations: no more than the Omrides, but longer in years (36 years for house of Omri to 100 years for house of Jehu, of which Jehu himself ruled for 28 years. However, verse 32 immediately shows that it was not a particularly good time for Israel, as the Arameans quickly put Israel under pressure. On the Tel Dan Stele erected presumably by Hazael the king of Aram (Syria) in the same period, it was written that the Arameans had comprehensive victories over Israel and Judah, explicitly stating the killing of "Joram the son of Ahab king of Israel and Ahaziah son of Jehoram of the king of the house of David" with a probable reading of Jehu appointed to rule Israel (line 11–12). This could mean that Jehu (willingly or unwillingly) was Hazael's accomplice. Soon the Assyrians came to defeat the Arameans, so Jehu might have to pay tribute to Shalmaneser III the Assyrian king, as depicted in the Black Obelisk (written in about 825 BCE, found in Nimrud, now in the British Museum). | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | List of presidents of San Luis Potosí Municipality | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246118 | null | null | 63246118 | null | List of presidents of San Luis Potosí Municipality
The following is a list of presidents of San Luis Potosí municipality, Mexico. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Moa Mua Maliepo | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246119 | null | null | 63246119 | null | Moa Mua Maliepo
Moa Mua Maliepo (born 12 May 1996) is a New Zealand-born Romanian rugby union football player. He plays as a centre positions for professional SuperLiga club Timișoara Saracens.
Before joining Timișoara Saracens, Moa Mua Maliepo played for Parramatta Two Blues and most recently for CSM București, from where he transferred to Saracens following the dissolution of his former club.
Maliepo also plays for Romania's national team, the Oaks, making his international debut during the Week 3 of 2020 Rugby Europe Championship in a test match against the "Los Leones". | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Santiago Giménez | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246143 | null | null | 63246143 | null | Santiago Giménez
Santiago Tomás Giménez (born 18 April 2001) is an Argentina-born, Mexican footballer who currently plays as a forward for Cruz Azul. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | List of bridges in Brunei | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246148 | null | null | 63246148 | null | List of bridges in Brunei
This table presents the structures with spans greater than 100 meters (non-exhaustive list). | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | List of bridges in Indonesia | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=63246151 | null | null | 63246151 | null | List of bridges in Indonesia
This table presents the structures with spans greater than 100 meters (non-exhaustive list). | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Tachihikari Denemon | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348676 | null | null | 64348676 | null | Tachihikari Denemon
Tachihikari Denemon (29 March 1897 – 15 May 1952) was a sumo wrestler from Mikasa, Hokkaido, Japan. His highest rank was "ōzeki." He was a member of the Tomozuna and Takasago stable. After retiring in 1927 he was an elder of the Japan Sumo Association under the name of Naruto.
He was born Masaharu Hatta in Mikasa, Sorachi District, Hokkaido, the second son of a miner. In the summer of 1912 in Sapporo he met the "yokozuna" Tachiyama, who recruited him to Tomozuna stable. He made his professional debut in January 1913. Despite his short height he was extremely flexible, able to throw his opponents with both his right hand grip and left hand grip. He was transferred to Takasago stable in May 1919 when his stablemaster Tachiyama (by then going by the elder name Azumazeki) abruptly quit the sumo world. He was diligent about training and reached the top "makuuchi" division in January 1921. In May 1922 he won his first (and only) "kinboshi" by defeating Ōnishiki Uichirō, who had not lost a bout in two years and had also defeated Tachiyama in the latter's last ever bout in January 1917. This in fact turned out to be Ōnishiki's last bout as well, as he quit sumo in the wake of the strike against the Tokyo Sumo Association known as the Mikawajima-Incident. Following this performance Tachihikari was promoted to "sekiwake" in January 1923 and to "ōzeki" in May 1923, ahead of the more favoured . He was the first "ōzeki" of the newly established Japan Sumo Association, formed from a merger of the Tokyo and Osaka associations. Although he did not win any championships at the "ōzeki" rank he continued to have good results until he hurt his right leg in a match against in May 1926. In the four tournaments following that injury he only took part in three bouts, and he finally retired in October 1927 having lost his "ōzeki" rank.
He became a toshiyori or elder of the Japan Sumo Association under the name Naruto Oyakata, affiliated to Takasago stable. In 1937 he took part the "kanreki dohyo-iri" ceremony to mark Tachiyama's 60th birthday, in the role of sword-bearer. In May 1951 he quit the Sumo Association following disagreements with Takasago's stablemaster, ex-Maedayama, that saw him transfer briefly to Tatsunami stable. He returned to his hometown to start full-time operations of a restaurant that he had begun in Otaru. He died in May 1952 at the age of 55. His "shikona" was subsequently used by two other "sekitori," , a university graduate who was in "jūryō" in 1970, and , a "maegashira" in the 1990s. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Friedrich Etzkorn | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348686 | null | null | 64348686 | null | Friedrich Etzkorn
Friedrich Etzkorn (13 April 1874 – 14 January 1946) was a German trade union leader.
Born in Kaiserslautern, Etzkorn completed an apprenticeship as a hairdresser, then travelled as a journeyman to the Rhein-Main area. In 1892, he joined the Union of German Barbers, Hairdressers and Wig Makers, and in 1893, he moved to Pforzheim, and formed a branch of the union there. Over the next two years, he was repeatedly sacked for union activity, and moved to new cities. In 1896, he was appointed as the editor of the union's newspaper, the "Barbier- und Friseur-Zeitung", and moved to Berlin to undertake the role.
While Etzkorn was based in Berlin, the union's leader, Carl Wesche, was in Braunschweig, and at the end of the year, Etzkorn also moved there. The union steadily lost members, and by 1898 was in serious financial difficulties. Etzkorn returned to Pforzheim, and focused his time on the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Wesche was in serious disagreement with Etzkorn over the direction of the union, and in 1899, he had Etzkorn expelled.
Etzkorn remained a popular figure among union members, and was admitted to the Stuttgart branch, in defiance of Wesche. In 1900, Wesche was voted out of office, and Etzkorn was narrowly elected as his successor. He moved the union's headquarters to Hamburg, and polled 300 young union members on their experiences and priorities for the union. He focused on keeping the union united, and restricting the number of apprentices.
The union grew steadily under Etzkorn's leadership, from 869 members in 1905, to 2,500 in 1914. In 1907, Etzkorn persuaded members to move the headquarters to Berlin. That year, he also founded the International Union of Hairdressers, serving as its general secretary. He kept the union together during World War I, although the union had to give up its headquarters and make all its paid staff redundant. From 1916, he supported himself by working as a clerk for the General Commission of German Trade Unions, although after the November Revolution, he was again able to work full-time for the union.
Etzkorn resigned as president of the union, now called the Union of Hairdressers and Assistants, in 1921, and became the trade union editor of "Vorwärts", the SPD newspaper. He remained secretary of the international federation, and in 1928 was made honorary vice president of his old union. In 1932, it merged into the General Union of Public Sector and Transport Workers, and Etzkorn became an honorary president of its municipal section.
In 1933, the Nazi government banned trade unions, and Etzkorn lost his job. He was unemployed until 1938, when he finally found work as a registrar. He survived World War II, and at the end of the war joined the refounded SPD, dying early in 1946. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Nammane Yuvarani (TV series) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348704 | null | null | 64348704 | null | Nammane Yuvarani (TV series)
Nammane Yuvarani(ನಮ್ಮನೆ ಯುವರಾಣಿ) is an Indian Kannada language television drama that premiered on Colors Kannada on 14 January 2019. It came into the foray due some remarkable performances by the lead pair.Telecast of serial began in Colors Kannada channel and remains the same till date.
Nammane Yuvarani is the story of two daughters-in-law, Meera & Ahalya. Ahalya is the perfect daughter-in-law, while Meera is just the opposite. But what happens when it all falls on Meera to save the house from ruin, especially when no one trusts her? Watch her battle her struggles. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348705 | null | null | 64348705 | null | Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui
Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui" (") was a renowned Pakistani academic, educationist, reformer, founding vice chancellor of Sukkur IBA University & former bureaucrat from Sindh , Pakistan
Mr. Siddiqui obtained master's degree in Economics from University of Sindh Jamshoro. He also obtained master's degree in Education from University of Sindh Jamshoro. He went to the US in 1987 and did MBA in Finance from Boston University .
At the beginning, Mr. Siddiqui was a school teacher taught Mathematics, Economics and English language. He then qualified the Competitive Examination of Central Superior Services with flying colors and started his career as a Civil Servant in the Government of Pakistan. He served as Deputy Commissioner of the District, Commissioner of the Division and Home Secretary. Prof. Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui was elected as the New President of Association of Management Development Institutions in South Asia (AMDISA) for 2019–2021, at the 15th General Assembly of AMDISA held on 30 October 2019 at Marino Beach Hotel, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Prof. Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui remain highly respected for his services in education sector of Pakistan. He was called "Modern Day Of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan". The landmark motto of "Merit, Quality, Excellence in Education" was served by Nisar Ahmed Siddiqui in whole Pakistan by founding the Sukkur IBA University in 1994.The institute acquired the status of university in 2017 and he became the founding vice chancellor of university.He also devised the concept of community colleges in Pakistan. In recognition of his valuable services for the education of Pakistan, Government of Pakistan has bestowed him with highest civilian award Sitara-i-Imtiaz
Nisar Siddiqui died on 22 June 2020 in a private hospital in Karachi. He was buried in the premises of Sukkur IBA University. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | James BKS | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348713 | null | null | 64348713 | null | James BKS
Lee-James Edjouma (born 18 November 1982), better known by his stage name James BKS, is a lyricist, a music composer and a producer of African hip hop.
Born in Paris in 1982, Edjouma's career started out in the US when he signed on Akon's label Konvict Muzik. It was around this time that he was working with famous artists such as R. City, T-Pain, and producing for Sean Combs, Snoop Dogg, Ja Rule, and Booba. He then decided to return to France to focus on his personal project.
He is currently signed to Idris Elba’s London-based label, 7Wallace. He released three singles on the lavel, featuring Allan Kingdom, Reo Cragun, Ebenezer, Idris Elba, Q-Tip (A Tribe Called Quest), Little Simz and his father Manu Dibango.
He also co-founded his own record label and music production company, Grown Kid, with his wife. His music has been aired several times on international radios most notably being playlisted on Annie Mac’s radio show on BBC 1Xtra.
James BKS is also a composer of original scores for feature films and advertisement.
James BKS started performing live in late 2019 in Paris, showcasing his live performance for the first time at La Petite Halle de la Villette. He also performed for the Africa Day event on MTV Base Africa and for Arte Concert
Edjouma is the son of famous Cameroonian musician Manu Dibango. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Lake Hancock (Washington) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348718 | null | null | 64348718 | null | Lake Hancock (Washington)
Lake Hancock is a coastal lagoon (and estuary) and former lake on Whidbey Island in the U.S. state of Washington. The elevation reported by United States Geological Survey is . According to some conservationists, it is "the most well preserved estuary on the island". It was a U.S. Navy bombing range between 1943 and 1971, and legally is part of Naval Air Station Whidbey Island. The lake is in Greenbank, Washington about halfway down the length of 55-mile long Whidbey Island and nearly bisects it; the lake has contacted Admiralty Inlet on the island's west side since 1934, and from the east shore of the lake to Saratoga Passage on the east shore of the island near Greenbank Farm is less than one mile. Washington State Route 525 runs about from the lake's eastern shore, down the narrow strip between the two bodies of water.
The area is designated by Washington State Department of Ecology as the "Lake Hancock Munitions Response Site". In 2006, 120 tons of contaminated material including creosote coated logs was removed by helicopter from the lake. The Navy held public hearings in 2016 to determine if further cleanup of unexploded material should be undertaken. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Nissum Bredning | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348788 | null | null | 64348788 | null | Nissum Bredning
Nissum Bredning is the westernmost "bredning" in the Limfjord situated between Thyborøn Channel, through which the fjord is connected to the North Sea, and Oddesund with Oddesund Bridge. Its size is around 200 km2 and the depth is up to 6 meters. The length from east to west is about 24 km, and from south "Gjeller Odde" to the north "Røjensø Odde" is about 10 kilometer; from here it continues as Krik Vig to the north. To the west, at Thyborøn and Harboøre Tange, there are some sandbanks, "Fjordgrund" and "Gåseholm". There is a navigable channel "Sælhundeholm Løb", going south from the channel along Agger Tange, passing Rønland with the chemical factory Cheminova, where it turns east.
At the south end of Harboøre Tange is the town Harboøre, from here the coast turns to the east and a bit south. Partly through the little "Hygum Nor", there are several outlets from Ferring Sø, "Søndervese", and "Nørrevese".
Further east after the outlet of Hove Å, close to the coast, we find "Gjeller Sø", and east of that "Gjeller Odde" and "Follup Odde" forms the entry passage to Lem Vig, and in the south end of that is the city of Lemvig.
Nissum Bredning continues to the east to the cliff at "Toftum Bjerge", which is up to 35 meters high and has layers from three different ice ages. There is a large area with holiday homes at "Toftum", and from here the coast turns north to Grisetåodde and Oddesund, where the bridge leads both the road and the railway over to Thyholm, which southern part is called "Sunddraget".
Nissum Bredning is part of Natura 2000-Area 28 with Nissum Bredning, Skibsted Fjord and Agerø. It is a Ramsar wetland, Special Area of Conservation, and Special Protection Area. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Sir Walter Constable-Maxwell-Scott, 1st Baronet | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348790 | null | null | 64348790 | null | Sir Walter Constable-Maxwell-Scott, 1st Baronet
Major-General Sir Walter Joseph Constable-Maxwell-Scott, 1st Baronet (10 April 1875 – 3 April 1954) was a senior British Army officer.
Educated at Stonyhurst College, Constable-Maxwell-Scott transferred from the militia into the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) on 11 January 1899. He saw action in the Tirah campaign, the Second Boer War and the First World War for which he was appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order. After the war he became commander of the 132nd Infantry Brigade in February 1923, commander of the 1st Rhine Brigade in April 1924 and General Officer Commanding 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division in March 1930 before retiring in March 1934.
He inherited Abbotsford House on the death of his mother, Mary Monica Maxwell-Scott, in March 1920.
In March 1918 he married Mairi Richmond Macdougall; they had two daughters (Patricia Maxwell-Scott and Dame Jean Maxwell-Scott). Following the death of his first wife, he married Marie Louise St. Paul Logan in June 1928. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | 2018 Point Cook Football Club Season | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348796 | null | null | 64348796 | null | 2018 Point Cook Football Club Season | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Orienteering at the 2001 World Games – Women's individual | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348810 | null | null | 64348810 | null | Orienteering at the 2001 World Games – Women's individual
The women's individual competition in orienteering at the 2001 World Games took place on 18 August 2001 in the Iijima Forest in Akita, Japan.
A total of 38 athletes entered the competition. Every athlete had to check in at control points, which were located across the course. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Aparna Vaidik | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348825 | null | null | 64348825 | null | Aparna Vaidik
Aparna Vaidik (born 22 September) is an Indian historian, author, and educator. Her latest book "My Son’s Inheritance: A Secret History of Blood Justice and Lynchings in India", published in January 2020, challenges India's prevailing narrative as an inherently peaceful culture.
She was born in Indore, Madhya Pradesh.
Aparna Vaidik's debut book, "Imperial Andamans: Colonial Encounter and Island History", was published as part of the Cambridge Imperial and Postcolonial Studies Series of Palgrave Macmillan when she was a historian at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. It examines the penal history of the Andaman Islands. Her second book, "My Son’s Inheritance: A Secret History of Blood Justice and Lynchings in India", has drawn international attention.
Her next book, "Waiting for Swaraj: Inner Lives of Indian Revolutionaries" is being published by Cambridge University Press and will be out in 2021. Another book on a famous trial of the Indian revolutionaries in during British India, "Revolutionaries on Trial: Sedition, Betrayal and Martyrdom," is to be published by Aleph in 2022.
Vaidik earned a bachelor's degree in History from St. Stephen’s College, University of Delhi, Summa Cum Laude. She won the Westcott Memorial Prize, E. R. Kapadia Memorial Prize, Shankar Prasad Memorial Gold Medal, and the Dip Chand Memorial Prize for distinguished work in History. At the University of Cambridge she also studied history for a master's degree, with a thesis on Lord Curzon’s cultural policy that won the Dorothy Foster Sturman Prize. Her PhD in History is from Jawaharlal Nehru University's Centre for Historical Studies. She taught for several years in the University of Delhi and at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, before returning to India to accept a position as the founding faculty member of the history department and programme at Ashoka University. The Indian Council for Historical Research has supported her research with grants, as have Georgetown University, the Charles Wallace Trust, and the Andrew Mellon Foundation.
Literacy, libraries, and a free, world-class education for all make up an important part of Vadik's public life. Vaidik is the Trustee President of the Rameshwardass Dharmarth Trust that was set up by her maternal grandfather in 1967. The Trust is known widely for its cultural and educational activities and its building ‘Dharam Bhavan’ is local landmark. The Trust has set up a community library for children with The Community Library Project. Since 2016 she has been part of the civil society protests against lynchings and right-wing government policies.
"Imperial Andamans: Colonial Encounter and Island History", Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series of Palgrave Macmillan, 2010: https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9780230576056
"My Son’s Inheritance: A Secret History of Blood Justice and Lynchings in India", Aleph, 2020: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/times-litfest-2019/speakers/dr-aparna-vaidik/articleshow/71865988.cms
"Waiting for Swaraj: Inner Lives of Indian Revolutionaries", Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2021.
"Revolutionaries on Trial: Sedition, Betrayal and Martyrdom," Aleph, forthcoming 2022.
'Rewriting World History in the Classroom: Pedagogical Dispatches from India,' "Journal of Asian World History" (co-authored with Gwen Kelly). 2019.
‘History of a Renegade Revolutionary: Revolutionism and Betrayal in British India’, "Postcolonial Studies," 2013.
‘Settling the Convict: Matrimony and Family in the Andamans’, "Studies in History," JNU, 2006.
‘Dis-ordering Global Histories: Spatio-Temporal Scales of Historical Writing’ in Suchandra Ghosh and Rila Mukherjee (ed.), "Title TBA", Asiatic Society of India, Kolkata. Forthcoming.
‘The Island Metaphor and Historiographical Warp: Writing Pre-modern History of the Andamans’, in Kenneth Hall (ed.), "Mobility and Circulation in the Eastern Indian Ocean, Primus Books". Forthcoming.
‘Was Bhagat Singh an ‘Internationalist’? Resistance and Identity in Global Age’, in Vivek Sachdeva (ed.), "Identity Assertions and Conflicts in South Asia", Routledge. Forthcoming.
‘History of a renegade revolutionary: revolutionism and betrayal in colonial India’, in "Revolutionary Lives in South Asia: Acts and Afterlives of Anticolonial Political Action", edited by Kama Maclean and J. Daniel Elam, Routledge, UK [Reprint], 2014
‘The Wild Andamans: Island Imageries and Colonial Encounter’ in Deepak Kumar et al., "Nature and the Orient, Vol. II", Oxford University Press, 2010.
‘Working an Island Colony: Convict Labour Regime in the Colonial Andamans (1858-1921)’, in Marcel ven der Linden (ed.), "Towards Global Labour History", Tulika, 2009.
‘Sazaa-i-Kalapani’ in M.P. Singh and Rekha Awasthi, eds., 1857: Bagawat Ke Daur ka Itihas, "Granth Shilpi" [in Hindi], 2009.
‘Renaming, Erasing’, "Indian Express," 9 January 2019
‘Lost Political Narratives: What Earns Swami Agnivesh the Ire of Powers That Be’, "Business Standard," 24 July 2018.
‘A Nation Betrayed’ in "Times of India," 25 February 2016.
‘The Majoritarian Victims: The History of Lynching Black People as a Parable of our Times, in "Scroll.in," 17 Nov 2015.
She is married to a cricket coach, and they live in New Delhi with their two sons. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Standard Building (Columbus, Ohio) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348852 | null | null | 64348852 | null | Standard Building (Columbus, Ohio)
The Standard Building, also known as the Blue Cross Building or as the Gugle Building, is a historic building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. The building was built in 1912. Early tenants included the Lancaster Tire & Rubber Company, the Mutual Life Insurance Company, Irwin Manufacturing Company, and the Grid Graph Company. It also served as the regional headquarters of Standard Oil of Ohio, from 1917 to 1955, occupying its sixth (top) floor. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Columbus Register of Historic Properties in 2019. Also in 2019, Connect Real Estate began redeveloping the building into apartments, with 45 units, including 35 micro studio apartments and 10 one-bedroom units. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | BlueLeaks | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348855 | null | null | 64348855 | null | BlueLeaks
BlueLeaks, sometimes referred to by the Twitter hashtag #BlueLeaks, refers to 269 gigabytes of internal U.S. law enforcement data obtained by the hacker collective Anonymous and released on June 19, 2020, by the activist group Distributed Denial of Secrets, which called it the "largest published hack of American law enforcement agencies."
The data — internal intelligence, bulletins, emails, and reports — was produced between August 1996 to June 2020 by more than 200 law enforcement agencies, which provided it to fusion centers. It was obtained through a security breach of Netsential, a web developer that works with fusion centers and law enforcement.
The leaks were released at hunter.ddossecrets.com and announced on the @DDoSecrets Twitter account. The account was banned shortly after for "dissemination of hacked materials" and "information that could have put individuals at risk of real-world harm". "Wired" reported that Distributed Denial of Secrets attempted to remove sensitive information from the data before publication. National Fusion Center Association (NFCA) officials confirmed the authenticity of the data, according to documents obtained by security journalist Brian Krebs; the organization warned its members that hackers may use the leaked information to target them.
The documents have not shown police misconduct, but have been considered valuable for how they demonstrate the attitudes of law enforcement and their response to the Black Lives Matter movement, George Floyd protests, and COVID-19 pandemic.
The Blue Leaks data comes largely from the intelligence gathered by fusion centers. After the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the United States government sought to improve communication between different levels of law enforcement to better discover and prevent terrorist attacks. They encouraged state and local governments to create fusion centers: physical locations where representatives of different law enforcement agencies share and collectively analyze intelligence before distributing reports back to their respective agencies. Fusion centers have since begun working with private "data brokers" with little public oversight.
Fusion centers have been criticized as privacy-invading, ineffective, and targeted at political groups. In 2012, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that over the 13 months of review, fusion centers did not contribute to the identification or prevention of a terrorist plot, and that of the 386 unclassified fusion center reports it reviewed, three-quarters had no connection to terrorism at all. In 2008, the Department of Homeland Security identified a number of privacy-related concerns created by fusion centers. The Department noted that the excessive secrecy of fusion centers led to comparisons with COINTELPRO, and that fusion center reports sometimes distribute inaccurate or incomplete information. The 2012 Senate report points to a report issued by an Illinois fusion center in 2011. The report wrongly claimed that Russian hackers were to blame for a broken water pump, and despite the Department of Homeland Security publicly stating the report was false, its Office of Intelligence and Analysis included the claims in its report to Congress.
After the killing of George Floyd and other instances of police violence in 2020, law enforcement in the United States came under renewed scrutiny. In early June, the hacker collective Anonymous announced its intent to expose police misconduct. The collective did high-profile hacks in the 2000s and early 2010s. In 2011, Antisec, a subgroup of Anonymous, released law enforcement information in support of Occupy Wall Street protestors, but the collective had few significant operations within the United States since then.
Reports leaked found that the police were aware of the potential for their surveillance to violate the Constitution. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Ok Duck-pil | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348872 | null | null | 64348872 | null | Ok Duck-pil
Ok Duck-pil (born 10 September 1974) is a South Korean former windsurfer. He competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics, 2000 Summer Olympics and the 2004 Summer Olympics. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Cross That Bridge (song) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348880 | null | null | 64348880 | null | Cross That Bridge (song)
"Cross That Bridge" is a song by British pop-rock band The Ward Brothers, which was released in 1986 as the second single from their debut studio album "Madness of It All". It was written by Graham Ward, and produced by Don Was and Phil Brown.
"Cross That Bridge" reached No. 32 on the UK Singles Chart and remained in the Top 100 for ten weeks. It was the band's only UK Top 40 hit. The song's music video was directed by Meiert Avis.
In a review of "Madness of It All", Robin Denselow of "The Guardian" commented: "The Ward Brothers are best-known for their light and tuneful single "Cross That Bridge", which is the best song here. The rest of the LP sounds classy but anonymous." Jack Lloyd of "The Philadelphia Inquirer" described the song as an "above-average number".
The Ward Brothers
Additional musicians
Production
Other | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Cynthia Paige Simon | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348883 | null | null | 64348883 | null | Cynthia Paige Simon
Cynthia "Cindy" Paige Simon (born October 21, 1970) is an American visually impaired retired Paralympic judoka who competed in international level events. She was also a former swimmer from 1984 to 2000. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Blackboard: African American Bestsellers | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348887 | null | null | 64348887 | null | Blackboard: African American Bestsellers
BlackBoard: African American Bestsellers is an organization that promotes bestselling titles written by and about African Americans. The BlackBoard Bestsellers List was started in August 1991 by Faye Childs and Debbie Wade. The list appears monthly and is syndicated in newspapers. BlackBoard gathers bestseller information from African American bookstores. Each year, the organization announces a list of "Books of The Year," which features both fiction and nonfiction titles.
After receiving rejections from literary agents for her own novel manuscript, told on some occasions "that there was no market for her story because African-Americans don't read," Faye Childs began the work of proving these agents wrong. Childs sought to "find out why so few African-American authors - other than Toni Morrison, Alice Walker and Alex Haley - ever appeared on the New York Times Bestseller List." After two years of research on the buying habits of Black readers, Childs founded BlackBoard with friend and business partner, Debbie Wade. BlackBoard as a platform aims to support Black writers, booksellers, and publishers, with the key mission to "stop the cyclical disappearance of books by or about people of African descent."
As a newspaper-syndicated list, BlackBoard has appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, regularly featured by "Essence" magazine and the American Booksellers Association (ABA). The American Booksellers Association first ran the list in fall of 1991 in "Bookselling This Week." "Essence" published the BlackBoard Bestsellers List monthly from 1992–2000, after which the magazine continued to publish Black bestsellers data without citing BlackBoard. In 2001, at BookExpo America, Childs launched "the new incarnation" of the Bestsellers List in the form of "a four-page, biweekly standalone news publication," the "BlackBoard Biweekly."
BlackBoard determines the bestsellers list through an interactive polling process, collecting data both from fans in the general public and from Black booksellers. With these votes, BlackBoard generates a list of the top ten fiction and top ten nonfiction bestselling titles.
Since the List's inception in 1991, technological advancements have allowed BlackBoard to utilize social media networks and online platforms to gather the poll data used to generate these lists. In addition to a targeted email campaign, BlackBoard's website features a live, interactive "Best Seller Ballot" where visitors to the site can choose the ten titles they would like to see in BlackBoard's top 20. The ballot includes a mix of both fiction and nonfiction titles. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | 11th Massachusetts Battery | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348911 | null | null | 64348911 | null | 11th Massachusetts Battery
The 11th Massachusetts Battery (or 11th Battery Massachusetts Light Artillery) was an artillery battery that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It was formed in response to President Abraham Lincoln's August 1862 call for 300,000 men to serve for nine months. Several months after completing their first term of service, the battery was reorganized for a second term of three years (though the war ended before they could complete this term). It was recruited by Captain Edward J. Jones of Boston and consisted almost entirely of men from that city. The battery served a largely uneventful first term as garrison troops mostly in Centreville, Virginia. During their second term they were involved in heavy combat being part of the Army of the Potomac during Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant's Overland Campaign.
The 11th Massachusetts Battery trained for their nine-month term of service at Camp Meigs in Readville, Massachusetts in August 1862. The unit was mustered into federal service on August 25. It was the only Massachusetts unit of artillery mustered in under the nine-months call, the other 18 Massachusetts nine-months units being infantry regiments. The men were recruited in Boston and mostly came from that city and the immediate vicinity. The unit left Boston by train on October 3, 1862 and reported to Washington, D.C. on October 6. For their first two months of service, they served garrison duty as part of the defenses of Washington at Camp Barry and later at Hall's Hill in Arlington, Virginia. On November 28 they were transferred to the brigade commanded by Francis Randall garrisoned in Centreville, Virginia. During the winter and early spring of 1864, the unit was frequently used as cavalry, conducting picket and reconnaissance duty between Centreville and Union Mills, Virginia. In April the battery was transferred to the brigade commanded by Daniel Sickles and conducted garrison duty at Fort Ramsay in Arlington County, Virginia and Fort Buffalo, Virginia, both part of the defenses of Washington. At the close of their term of service, the unit departed Washington on May 23, 1863 and arrived in Boston on May 28. They were mustered out on May 29. The unit did not have any men killed in action or by disease during its first term.
The battery was reorganized during December 1863 to serve a new term of three years. Reenlisted members of the 11th Massachusetts Battery formed the core of the new iteration. They were joined by new recruits to fill out the ranks. Capt. Edward Jones again served as commanding officer. The members of the battery were mustered in on January 2, 1864, trained at Camp Meigs, and departed Massachusetts on February 5. Reaching Washington, the battery was attached to the Second Division (commanded by Major General Robert B. Potter) of the IX Corps, assigned to the Army of the Potomac. The battery took part in the major battles of the Overland Campaign, though they were not heavily engaged until moved to the front lines on June 19 during the start of the Siege of Petersburg. On August 21 and 22, the battery took part in the Battle of Weldon Railroad while temporarily attached to the II Corps. The battery was in action at various points on the siege line at Petersburg during the fall and winter. On March 25, 1865, the battery played an important role during the Battle of Fort Stedman. As Confederate troops overtook Fort Stedman and temporarily broke through Union siege lines, the 11th Massachusetts Battery, posted in nearby Fort Friend, rendered key service in pushing back the assault. When the Confederate abandoned Petersburg and retreated towards Appomattox Court House, the 11th Massachusetts Battery joined other elements of the Army of the Potomac in pursuit. They were present for the surrender at Appomattox and were detailed with other artillery units to take charge of surrendered Confederate cannons.
The 11th Massachusetts Battery took part in the Grand Review of the Armies in Washington after the close of the war. In June they were ordered home to Boston and were mustered out at Camp Meigs on June 16, 1865. The battery lost three men killed in action and twelve by disease. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Fusgeyer | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348913 | null | null | 64348913 | null | Fusgeyer
The Fusgeyers (Yiddish: פֿוסגײער pedestrian or wayfarer) were a movement of Romanian Jews who emigrated in an organized manner from Romania from 1900 to 1920. The name refers to the fact that they were often too poor to even purchase a train ticket to a port city. Roughly 60,000 Jews left the country during that time period, going to Austria and Germany and then onwards via port cities to Canada and the United States. The number of specifically "fusgeyer" emigrants may be lower, perhaps a few thousand.
"See: History of the Jews in Romania"
The 1866 Constitution of Romania barred citizenship for non-Christians, meaning that most Jews in the country lived with severely reduced rights. Various attempts at mass Jewish emigration happened between that year and 1900, often in the face of resistance from the Romanian government After a famine in 1899, and outbreaks of antisemitic violence, many young Romanian Jews developed a new practice of emigration: banding into disciplined groups which would share resources and leave the country together. The first such group was created in May 1899 in Bârlad. A man named Ginsburg recruited 94 people who started calling themselves the 'Wayfarers from Bârlad'. This group was the inspiration for a number of other groups from other cities, which either named themselves after their city, the name of their occupation, or by a romantic name such as One Heart or The Wandering Jew.
After they reached the Austro-Hungarian border they were often provided funds for rail passage by charitable Jewish organizations.
Many of the current-day articles about the "fusgeyers" cite Jill Culiner's 2004 book "Finding Home: In the Footsteps of the Jewish Fusgeyers" for most of their factual information. Her book in turn was inspired by the Yiddish language memoir of one of the original "fusgeyers", Jacob Finkelstein's “Zikhroynes fun a fusgeyer fun rumania kayn amerika,” which won a contest by YIVO in 1945 and was printed in their journal, "YIVO Bleter". | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Zhang Boli (physician) | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348925 | null | null | 64348925 | null | Zhang Boli (physician)
Zhang Boli (, born 26 February 1948) is a Chinese physician. He is the president of Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, the Honorary President of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, and an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE). Zhang is also a delegate to the 11th, 12th, and 13th National People's Congress.
Zhang makes outstanding contributions to the Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). During the 2003 SARS outbreak, he uses TCM medicine to treat patients. In 2005, he is elected as an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE).
During the 2019–20 COVID-19 pandemic, Zhang strongly advises the use of TCM. With the approval of the Central Guidance Team, he and 208 other experts formed a TCM medical team, and started treating patients in Jiangxia Fangcang Hospital, Wuhan. His son, Zhang Lei (), is also a physician. Zhang Lei also arrived in Wuhan to fight against the coronavirus, however, the father and son never meet with each other until the epidemic have waned in Wuhan. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | 1991 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64348973 | null | null | 64348973 | null | 1991 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election
The 1999 Southend-on-Sea Council election took place on 2 May 1991 to elect members of Southend-on-Sea Borough Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Jan van Hest | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349050 | null | null | 64349050 | null | Jan van Hest
Jan Cornelis Maria van Hest (born 28 September 1968) is a Dutch scientist of organic chemistry, best known for his research regarding polymersomes and nanoreactors. He currently holds the position of professor of bioorganic chemistry at Eindhoven University of Technology and is scientific director at the Institute of Complex Molecular Systems.
Among the awards he has received, he was one of the recipients of the 2020 Spinoza Prize.
Van Hest received his MSc degree in Chemical Engineering with distinction from the Eindhoven University of Technology in 1991.
He subsequently obtained his PhD in macro-organic chemistry from the same university in 1996 under the supervision of Bert Meijer.
His doctoral thesis 'New molecular architectures based on dendrimers' was awarded the DSM Science and Technology award and the SNS Bank Prijs for best thesis in fundamental engineering sciences.
In 1996, van Hest received a NWO Talent stipend for a post-doc position on polypeptide engineering at University of Massachusetts Amherst where he collaborated with professor David Tirrell.
He returned to the Netherlands to work at DSM Research in 1997 as researcher and later as group leader.
Van Hest was appointed as full professor to set up a group in bioorganic chemistry at Radboud University Nijmegen in 2000.
His early career focused on developing self-assembling biohybrid block copolymers.
In 2010 he was awarded a VICI grant for research on artificial organelles, and in 2016 he obtained an ERC Advanced grant on artificial endosymbiosis. Van Hest moved to Eindhoven University of Technology in 2016, to chair the bioorganic chemistry group at the departments of Chemical Engineering and Biomedical Technology.
He was appointed scientific director of the Institute for Complex Molecular Systems (ICMS) at Eindhoven University of Technology in 2018.
To date, van Hest has published over 250 peer reviewed scientific articles, cited more than 15,000 times and has an h-index of 57.
Van Hest was elected member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2019. He was member of The Young Academy of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences from 2005 to 2011.
Additionally, van Hest is an elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry (FRSC), a visiting fellow of the Chinese Academy of Science, a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Royal Netherlands Chemical Society.
Listed are some of the prizes awarded to van Hest:
Van Hest served as vice-dean at the Faculty of Science in Nijmegen from 2006 to 2010.
He is chairman at the Dutch national postgraduate research school Polymer Technology Netherlands.
Van Hest serves as associate editor of Bioconjugate Chemistry.
He is furthermore an advisory board member of Macromolecular Bioscience,
Journal of Materials Chemistry,
and Chemical Science.
Van Hest is a co-founder of the companies Noviosense, Noviotech, Encapson and Future Chemistry and serves on the scientific board at GATT Tech. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Camille Moubarak | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349055 | null | null | 64349055 | null | Camille Moubarak
Monsignor Camille Moubarak (Born December 15, 1947, in Kfarnis, Lebanon) is a Lebanese political scientist, political activist, philosopher, scholar, researcher, poet, writer, and a Maronite Priest. He is best known for his social and political doctrines conferred in Lebanon, for the maintenance of peace and social cohesion in a country torn by tensions and intercommoned strife. He has lectured about peace, held interviews on TV, radio, social networks, and newspapers to spread awareness for all the people around, sparing them from risks of civil war and bringing a sense of democracy, awareness, accepting and tolerating each other.
Mgr. Camille Moubarak started his educational journey at the Protestant Institute in Beirut, and the Lebanese League School, College Notre-Dame de Jamhour (Jesuits school), to end at La Sagesse Brasilia in Beirut. From a school teacher to a college professor at the Institute of Theology - University of St. Joseph (Jesuits order), and at La Sagesse University, Mgr. Moubarak taught anthropology, ethics, multiculturalism and political science. Topics already treated in many of his books to be mentioned later on.
He became the administrator of La Sagesse School in Beirut in 1987 (1987-1997), then La Sagesse School of Jdeideh, Metn, in 1997 (1997-1999), to end up as the President of Sagesse University between 2011 and 2015, as he served previously as Dean of the Faculty of Political Science and International Relations for fifteen years. In 2015 he received the Deanship of the Doctoral Institute at Sagesse University.
Revolutionary and innovator, he endorsed the shift from traditional educational system to a project-based one.
He was ordained priest on June 9, 1984 and served in a number of Maronite parishes within the archdiocese of Beirut such as Saint Joseph at Ashrafieh, Our Lady at Ain Saadeh, Saint George at Beit Mery, Saint Antony at Jdeideh El Metn and lately Our Lady at Hadath. In all stages of his service, he was active in the pastoral field and the theological and social preaching. He was elevated to the dignity of Chorbishop on October 7, 2012.
Mgr. Camille Moubarak son of Moubarak Moubarak and Zahia Chahine, was born on December 15th, 1947. He used to be homeschooled by his parents until he joined the school of Lebanese Missionaries in Jounieh, Lebanon. After that, he was sent to the public school of Ain Dara and then to the secondary public school of Furn el Chebbak where he finished secondary school with a concentration in philosophy. He later joined the University of St. Joseph of the Jesuits in Beirut, where he majored in Literature and graduated with a PhD. His dissertation was titled "Ibn Khaldun's Racial Discrimination." Afterwards, he went for another major in Philosophy and Theology at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik - Jounieh. Then he went to Rome and joined the Pontifical Lateran University where he deepened his studies in economic, political and reformatory theories, and graduated with a doctorate degree in Social Ecclesial Doctrine. His thesis was titled "The Issue of Minorities between Politics and Religion."
In poetry:
In Prose: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Death of Sarah Reed | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349063 | null | null | 64349063 | null | Death of Sarah Reed
Sarah Lynne Reed (22 June 1984 - 11 January 2016) was a British prisoner waiting for psychiatric reports before a possible trial. A woman with a history of mental health problems, and a victim of police brutality a few years earlier, Reed died while on remand in Holloway prison. It was later found that the denial of medical treatment had led to her death, and that she would not have been able to plead.
A mixed-race black woman, Reed's mental health problems began in 2003 after the sudden death of her baby daughter. Along with the baby's father, she was given the wrapped remains to take to the undertakers in a taxi. In 2012, Reed was the victim of a severe attack from a white police officer PC James Kiddie, and suffered two broken ribs. She had been arrested by Kiddie for suspected shoplifting; Reed was later acquitted. Kiddie was prosecuted, and convicted of common assault in 2014. He was dismissed from the Metropolitan Police. The officer had two previous confirmed complaints lodged against him, the second for discriminatory comments made in 2011.
While in the psychiatric Maudsley Hospital in 2014, Reed told her family that she was sexually assaulted by an elderly male patient; some reports say this was a case of attempted rape. After reportedly acting in self-defence, she was charged with GBH with intent and held in Holloway prison on remand from October 2015 for psychiatric assessment to determine whether she was able to plead at trial. The report had not been written by the time of her death in January 2016, nor had a letter been sent to ensure her transfer to a more appropriate secure psychiatric facility. On 11 January 2016, in Holloway prison's medical wing, Reed was found to be unresponsive on her prison bed with strips of linen around her neck. The Ministry of Justice said that CPR was attempted, but she was pronounced dead shortly after she was found. She suffered from bulimia, alcohol and substance abuse and paranoid schizophrenia. A vigil was held outside Holloway prison in February 2016 on the day of her funeral.
The inquest verdict was that Reed had killed herself by self-strangulation. The jury decided she had died when her mind was unsound, but was unable to determine whether her death was intentional. Unacceptable delays in medical care contributed to her death.
Holloway prison was closed in May 2016 after being considered inadequate; an official decision which was endorsed by the prison inspectorate whose October 2016 report had criticised the prison's slow transfer of women with mental health issues to secure hospitals. Reed was the last woman to die in Holloway prison; reports of the racist treatment of prisoners dated back to the 1980s. Frances Crook, the chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, in an article for "The Guardian" about this case, said the custodial remand of women in the United Kingdom is "scandalously high"; 70% of the women so held do not receive a custodial sentence after their trial. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Ádám Baranyai | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349067 | null | null | 64349067 | null | Ádám Baranyai
Ádám Baranyai (born 5 March 1993) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Kisvárda FC.
. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Birner | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349071 | null | null | 64349071 | null | Birner
Birner is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Lighthouse Point Lighthouse | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349084 | null | null | 64349084 | null | Lighthouse Point Lighthouse
The Lighthouse Point Light is an active lighthouse in Beaver Harbour, New Brunswick on "Drews Head", as it was known, on the western side of the bay.
The first lighthouse was inaugurated on 15 January 1876 and consisted of a white wooden quadrangular tower with balcony and red lantern attached to the keeper's house; the light was at of height above sea level and emitted a fixed white light. In 1900 was activated a hand foghorn and in 1905 a seventh-order lens and lamp substituted the original lamp and reflectors; the new fixed white light was visible up to . In 1915 a fourth-order lens was set up and in the 1960s a new metal square pyramidal skeletal tower was built to substitute the older.
The current lighthouse was erected in 1984 and consist of a fiberglass cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern. The light is positioned at above sea level and emits one white flash 6 seconds long in a 6 seconds period visible up to a distance of . The lighthouse is completely automated and managed by the Canadian Coast Guard with the identification code number CCG 83. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Jodi Rowley | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349092 | null | null | 64349092 | null | Jodi Rowley
Jodi J. L. Rowley is an Australian herpetologist and conservationist.
Rowley received her bachelor's degree in environmental science at University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, and her PhD from James Cook University. Her doctoral thesis was on the topic of amphibian decline caused by chytridiomycosis. After finishing her PhD, in 2006 she moved to Cambodia to work for Conservation International as a wildlife biologist. She returned to Australia in 2008, and began working at the Australian Museum. In 2016, she was appointed curator of Amphibian & Reptile Conservation Biology at the Australian Museum. Her current work concerns a mixture of taxonomy and conservation biology. One of her on-going projects is to search for the Peppered tree frog. She has run numerous research expeditions in Australia and South-East Asia.
Rowley is a member of the New-South Wales Threatened Species Scientific Committee, the IUCN Amphibian Red List Authority, and the Steering Committee of AmphibiaWeb. She is also chair of the Mainland Southeast Asia, IUCN Species Survival Commission Amphibian Specialist Group.
Rowley was one of the co-founders of the FrogID app and is its chief scientist. The app uses citizen science to gather data on the distribution and activity of Australian frogs, to inform both research and conservation.
Rowley is an editor for Amphibia for Zootaxa.
Rowley has had three species named in her honour, one Vietnamese snake, "Cylindrophis jodiae," named in 2015; and two Vietnamese frogs, "Leptorachella rowleyae" named in 2018, and "Zhangixalus jodiae" named in 2020. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Northern & Scottish Airways | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349096 | null | null | 64349096 | null | Northern & Scottish Airways
Northern & Scottish Airways was a regional airline established in Glasgow in 1934. It was taken over in 1937, eventually becoming part of British European Airways.
The potential of running scheduled air services to the Western Isles of Scotland was successfully demonstrated in 1933 by a bus operator from Ayr, John Sword, with his Midland & Scottish Air Ferries company. After that operation was suddenly stopped in the summer of 1934, another bus company manager, George Nicholson, took on the challenge.
On 1 July 1934 he formed his company, Northern Airways, and on 1 August started testing the market by operating scheduled flights from Newcastle (Cramlington Airfield) to the Isle of Man (Hall Caine Airport) via Carlisle (Kingstown Municipal Airport) in his De Havilland DH.84 Dragon G-ACFG. Despite stopping the experiment on 30 September, on 21 November he renamed his airline Northern & Scottish Airways Ltd (N&SA), and on 1 December 1934 with the same aircraft started a service from Glasgow Renfrew Airport to Campbeltown (Kintyre Airport) and Islay (Port Ellen, also known as Duich or Glenegedale), a route that had been pioneered by John Sword.
The new route made a slow start, but by the following summer, had grown to two daily flights, and on 17 May 1935 he started a service between Glasgow and the Isle of Man (Hall Caine Airport). On 1 January 1935, Nicholson had agreed a contract with Argyll County Council to provide air ambulance services. Nicholson appointed David Barclay as chief pilot that year.
These activities were being watched by Clive Pearson, head of the powerful investment group Whitehall Securities Corporation, who had already started Spartan Air Lines and was looking to link it to the north of England and to Scotland. N&SA fitted the bill, so on 23 May 1935, Pearson took control of N&SA, leaving Nicholson as its head. In June, Pearson took a majority holding in Highland Airways, which served the Scottish Northern Isles, thus almost completing his coverage of Scottish air routes.
Services continued as before, now also bolstered with Spartan Cruiser airliners brought in from Spartan Air Lines, and the two main routes. Isle of Man to Glasgow, and Glasgow to Campbeltown and Islay were operated as part of the United Airways schedule, United being Pearson's new airline operating in the north of England with a link to Spartan at London’s Heston Aerodrome.
In September 1935 Pearson created British Airways Ltd by combining Spartan Air Lines, United Airways, and the previously independent Hillman’s Airways. N&SA was kept out of the new company, bur the two co-operated, and aircraft were transferred between them, N&SA taking several of their De Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapides to provide extra capacity.
On 5 December 1935 David Barclay flew Dragon G-ACFG on another new route, to Glen Brittle, on the Isle of Skye, extending the following month to Askernish on South Uist, and again in February 1936 to Sollas on North Uist. The service ran every day except Sundays, operating from Renfrew in a circular fashion, with Monday, Wednesday and Friday flights calling at Skye, North then South Uist, and Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday flights calling at South then North Uist, and Skye.
During 1936 further additions were made to these routes with on-demand services from North and South Uist to Barra and Benbecula, and from North Uist to Harris on the Isle of Lewis and Harris.
On 1 July 1936, Pearson took full control of N&SA, but still kept it separate from British Airways. The company kept its identity and George Nicholson was retained as the managing director. N&SA took over all of British Airways’ internal routes from Liverpool northwards, and expanded its air ambulance work with a new contract with Inverness County Council.
On 12 August 1937 Pearson formed one large airline called Scottish Airways. He brought in investment from LMS Railway, and from David MacBrayne, the Scottish ferry company which established Western Isles Airways as its investment tool. They brought N&SA and Highland Airways into the new airline, still keeping their separate identities, enabling Nicholson to stay in charge of his airline except that it was renamed Northern Airways Ltd. On 2 August 1938 Northern Airways completely lost its identity, becoming the Southern Division of Scottish Airways, still based in Glasgow and with Nicholson still in charge.
On 1 February 1947, in the process of nationalising all British scheduled airlines, the new British European Airways (BEA) took over Scottish Airways, and on 30 September 1948 Nicholson was made redundant. He died in South Africa in 1950.
From timetable dated 1 July 1936
Another Rapide, G-ADAE, was initially registered to N&SA but was delivered to United Airways.
The livery was overall silver with blue lettering and trim.
The following aircraft were involved in accidents or incidents while with N&SA: G-ACVT, G-ACYL, G-ADBU and G-ADEM. See Fleet list above for details. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Avraham Moshe Bonhart | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349104 | null | null | 64349104 | null | Avraham Moshe Bonhart
Abraham Moses Bonhart of Peshischa (Yiddish: אברהם משה בונהרד מפשיסחא; - December 7, 1828) was the Second Grand Rabbi of Przysucha, Poland, and the son of Simcha Bunim of Peshischa. After his father's death in 1827, he led the divided Peshischa community for a year, until his death in 1828.
Probably born in Przysucha around 1800, in his early years he studied under his father, later marring Braindel Yosepov the daughter of Reb Shmuel Yosepov the son in law of Yaakov Yitzchak Rabinowicz. Nearing the end of his father's life, his father would often praise Rabbi Avraham Moshe stating that "his soul originated in a supreme place". After his father's death in 1827, the Peshischa community was divided as to who would succeed him. Generally rabbinic succession would pass down from father to son, however the Peshischa community didn't believe in dynasties. At first, Rabbi Avraham Moshe refused the position to avoid a schism in the community, but after much pressure from his followers he agreed. Nevertheless, the community split into two, with half supporting Rabbi Avraham Moshe and the other supporting Rabbi Israel Yitzhak Kalish. Ultimately after Rabbi Avraham Moshe's short tenure as rabbi, the leadership fell into the hands of Rabbi Israel Yitzhak Kalish who helped to incorporate the community into Kotkz led by Menachem Mendel of Kotzk. Rabbi Avraham Moshe had three children; Soroh Hodel, an unknown daughter who married Gershon Feigenbaum, and Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Mordechai Bonhart. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | GK Investment | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349105 | null | null | 64349105 | null | GK Investment
GK Investment Holding Group SA is a Lugano-based private equity and investment firm whose primary focus is in the healthcare Real Estate, Private Equity and Consultancy sector. The principal areas of investment interest are in Africa, Europe, and the Middle East.
The firm was founded in 2015 by Tunisian businessman Kamel Ghribi. It initially started as a trade facilitating company dealing with the export of commodities such as crude oil, condensate, cotton, phosphates, and coffee from the Middle East and Africa regions for private and public sector clients. The company undertook strategic consultancy mandates to establish industrial projects in high growth markets.
"GruppoOspedaliero San Donato" (GSD Healthcare) - private hospital group in Italy with 44 hospitals and clinics. GK Investment Holding Chairman Kamel Ghribi is Vice President of GSD Healthcare in Italy and Chairman of GSD Middle East. GSD is currently the largest private healthcare group in Italy with estimated revenues of over €1.7 billion.
In February 2020, the company confirmed that it will submit a potential bid to acquire UAE-based, $2 billion debt-ridden healthcare company NMC Health. The founder of the NMC Health, B. R. Shetty stepped down from the board due to inaccurate reporting of his holdings.
However, within a month, by March 2020, the company reiterated its stand on investing in NMC Health. It issued a statement that included an offer of only operational support to NMC Health assisting the latter in its continued delivery of healthcare services in Europe, Middle East and Asia. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Dara Norman | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349107 | null | null | 64349107 | null | Dara Norman
Dara J. Norman is an astronomer and the Deputy Director of the Community Science and Data Center at the National Science Foundation's National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory (NOIRlab) in Tucson, Arizona. She is also the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy Diversity Advocate at NOAO. Her research centers on the influence of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) on the evolution of galaxies. In 2020, she was inducted into the inaugural cohort of American Astronomical Society Fellows in recognition of her leadership and achievements.
Norman grew up on the south side of Chicago, Illinois where she developed a love of astronomy, influenced by her mother, who was a fan of science fiction and the United States Space program. As a child, she wanted to grow up to be an astronomer before attending Massachusetts Institute of Technology. There, she studied under the mentorship of James Elliott, who was known for his leadership of the team that discovered Uranus's rings. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in 1988 in Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Science.
After completing her undergraduate studies, Norman worked at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center for three years. While presenting her research at the 1992 American Astronomical Society meeting, she met Bruce Margon, the chairman of the University of Washington's Astronomy department where she had recently applied to attend graduate school. The two had recently observed the same active galaxy using the Hubble Space Telescope, which they discussed during Norman's poster presentation. Norman was ultimately admitted to the University's graduate program and began in the Fall of 1992.Norman received her Doctorate degree in 1999, becoming the first African American woman to earn her Ph.D. in astronomy at the university. During her doctoral work, she specialized in gravitational lensing studied quasars. Following her doctoral work, she became a National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow, working at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) with the Deep Lens Survey team. In that role, she worked to understand how observed galaxies are magnified by gravitational lensing and how this so-called "magnification bias" affects our view of the universe.
Norman is now an associate scientist and the Deputy Director of the Community Science and Data Center (CSDC) at the National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory (NOIRLab), which operates NOAO as of October 1, 2019. Her research interests have evolved to focus on Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), which are compact regions at the center of galaxies that are thought to be powered by supermassive black holes. AGN, which can be more luminous than an entire galaxy of stars, form as stars and gases are accreted through the activity of a supermassive black hole. Norman's research seeks to understand how these active galaxies form and why some of them are brighter than others.
Norman is recognized as a leader in diversity, equity, and inclusion, serving as the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy Diversity Advocate at NOAO. In this role, she works on establishing and implementing recruitment and retention initiatives for minorities and women in astronomy. She also serves as a member of the American Astronomical Society's Committee on the Status of Minorities in Astronomy. She has served as an expert panelist in a number of National Academy of Sciences studies, which have culminated in the Academies' 2013 report on advancing women of color in academia and a 2018 report on sexual harassment in the sciences"."Her advocacy efforts around inclusion focus on two areas of access: (1) access to sitting on advisory committees and leadership boards, ensuring that these groups are representative of the communities they seek to serve, and (2) access to large datasets, ensuring that the requisite training and infrastructure is available. In order to address the latter, she and her colleagues have advocated for making coding and development training widely available across the astronomy and astrophysics workforce, regardless of academic affiliation or career stage. She has noted that data access is becoming a prerequisite for telescope access, which is an essential component in advancing astronomers' research and careers. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Beyak | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349110 | null | null | 64349110 | null | Beyak
Beyak is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Thomas Bywater Smithies | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349136 | null | null | 64349136 | null | Thomas Bywater Smithies
Thomas Bywater Smithies (27 August 1817 — 20 July 1883) was an English radical publisher and campaigner for temperance and animal welfare. He was the founder and editor of "The British Workman".
Smithies was born in York, to James and Catherine Smithies, the second of ten children. His mother was a campaigner for abolitionism, animal welfare and temperance. He was converted to Methodism at age 15, joining the Methodist Society. The following year, he started work at the Yorkshire Fire and Life Insurance Company, where he worked for 18 years, while also working as a Sunday school teacher. He became teetotal in 1837, aged 20.
In 1849, Smithies moved to London to become the manager of the Gutta Percha Company. In 1851, he published "Sunday Scholars' Friend" and the "Band of Hope Review" (1851–1937). This was followed by "The British Workman" in 1855; edited by Smithies. Subsequent publications included "The Infant's Magazine", "The Children's Friend", "The Family Friend", "The Friendly Visitor", and "The Weekly Welcome".
In 1879, he published the "Band of Mercy Advocate" (1879–1934), a periodical for the Bands of Mercy movement, which was founded by his mother.
On 20 July 1883, after a period of long illness, Smithies died of heart disease, aged 67. He was buried with his mother in Abney Park Cemetery. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Clara Schlee Laddey | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349138 | null | null | 64349138 | null | Clara Schlee Laddey
Clara Schlee Laddey (April 6, 1856 – September 11, 1932) was a German-born American suffragist and lecturer on women's rights.
Clara Schlee was born in Stuttgart, the daughter of Adolf I. Schlee and Pauline Steimie. She studied music in Stuttgart and at a finishing school in Switzerland. At age 16, she attended the first meeting of a women's organization in Germany, and recited a poem at the event.
Laddey was a lecturer on women's rights and a member of local women's clubs in New Jersey. She was president of the Civic Club of Arlington from 1905 to 1908, and president of the New Jersey Woman's Suffrage Association from 1908 to 1912. She attended the National American Woman Suffrage Association's annual meeting in Seattle in 1909, and led the New Jersey contingent in a suffrage parade in New York City in 1912. She made "suffragette cheese" from her own secret recipe, which the New Jersey association sold as a fundraiser at event booths. When she completed her term as president of the New Jersey suffragists, she was succeeded by Lillian Feickert, the association's enrollment chair.
Laddey used her German-language skills to speak to immigrant women in Wisconsin, Ohio, and Pennsylvania about suffrage. In 1913 Laddey attended the International Women's Suffrage Congress in Budapest. In 1920 she was a founding member of the New Jersey state chapter of the League of Women Voters.
In 1931 and 1932, she was finance chair of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), and in this capacity toured in the western United States, lecturing with Katherine Devereux Blake.
Schlee married Victor H. G. Laddey in 1876. They had three children, John, Eric, and Paula, before they family moved to the United States in 1888. Paula Laddey became a lawyer and clubwoman in New Jersey. Victor Laddey died in 1929; Clara Schlee Laddey died in 1932, aged 76 years, in Alton, New Hampshire. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Matthew Prince | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349143 | null | null | 64349143 | null | Matthew Prince
Matthew Prince (born, 1974) is the co-founder and CEO of CloudFlare, a U.S. company that provides content delivery network services, DDoS mitigation, Internet security and distributed domain name server services.
Prince earned a B.A. in English Literature and Computer Science from Trinity College in Hartford in 1996. While attending at the Trinity College, Prince was editor-in-chief in The Trinity Tripod, a co-founder in The Trincoll Journal, a member of the Writing Associate, part of the Student Network Administrator, and was also in Debate Society.
In 2000, Prince earned a J.D. in Law from the University of Chicago, where he was also editor-in-chief for The Phoenix Legal Magazine and a managing editor for The Legal Forum Topical Law Review. In 2009, Prince earned his MBA from Harvard Business School. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349183 | null | null | 64349183 | null | Timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland
The following is a timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland.
The NPHET, a group within the Department of Health, began monitoring the spread of the virus before it was confirmed to have reached Ireland. According to "The Irish Times", the NPHET for COVID-19 was created on 27 January 2020. NPHET continued to meet after the virus had arrived in Ireland to co-ordinate the national response to the pandemic. The Coronavirus Expert Advisory Group—a subgroup of NPHET chaired by Dr Cillian de Gascun, the UCD-based Director of the National Virus Reference Laboratory – met for the first time on 5 February in Dublin.
On 29 February, the first confirmed case in the Republic of Ireland was announced involving a male student from the east of the country, who had arrived there from Northern Italy. Authorities shut a secondary school linked to the case as a precautionary measure. The State did not name the school involved, but—shortly afterwards—the "Irish Examiner"'s Political Editor, Daniel McConnell, tweeted a copy of the letter it had sent to parents informing them it would close.
On 3 March, a second case was confirmed of a female in the east of the country who had been to Northern Italy. She had no contact with the first case. On 4 March, four more cases were confirmed, two females and two males in the west of the country who travelled from northern Italy, bringing the total to six. On 5 March, seven more cases were confirmed, bringing the total to 13. Four of the cases were related to travel from Northern Italy—four males from the east of the country—one of these four cases was connected to Trinity College Dublin. Two of the seven cases were associated with close contact with a confirmed case—two females in the west of the country. One of the seven cases was a male in the south of the country who had no history of travel abroad.
On 6 March, it was reported that more than 60 staff at Cork University Hospital would have to self-isolate following a case of community transmission of COVID-19 at the hospital. The same day brought confirmation of five more cases, bringing the total in the country at that time to 18.
On 7 March, one more case was confirmed bringing the total to 19. On 8 March, two more cases were confirmed bringing the total to 21. On 9 March, three more cases were confirmed bringing the total to 24. On 10 March, ten more cases were confirmed bringing the total to 34.
On 11 March, an elderly patient in Naas General Hospital in County Kildare (south-west of the country's capital city, Dublin) became Ireland's first fatality from the virus; nine new cases were announced. This brought confirmed cases to 43. Cork University Hospital discharged a patient who had been admitted for coronavirus disease after they made a full recovery.
On 12 March, 27 new cases were confirmed, bringing the total cases in the country to 70. In response to the increase of cases, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced the closure of all schools, colleges and childcare facilities until 29 March. The announcement, which came one day after the World Health Organization formally declared that the outbreak was pandemic, also marked Ireland's movement from the Containment Phase in its strategy to combat the spread of the virus (a strategy which the Department of the Taoiseach had reaffirmed just three days earlier) towards the Delay Phase.
On 13 March, 20 new cases were confirmed, bringing the total cases in the country to 90. On 14 March, 39 new cases were confirmed and another death announced of a man in the East of the country with underlying medical conditions. This brought the total cases to 129, with 2 deaths in total.
On 15 March, 40 new cases were confirmed. The total number of cases stood at 169 with 2 deaths. University Hospital Limerick discharged four patients. The Government ordered bars and public houses to close and advised against house parties.
On 16 March, 54 new cases were confirmed. The total number of cases stood at 223 with 2 deaths. On 17 March, 69 new cases were confirmed, bringing total cases in the country to 292 with 2 deaths
On 18 March, 74 new cases were confirmed, bringing total cases in the country to 366 with 2 deaths.
More detailed information about hospital statistics, age range affected, how COVID-19 was spreading, healthcare workers and cases by county was published by the National Public Health Emergency Team starting on this day. It showed that the virus was present in 23 of the 26 counties, with Laois, Leitrim and Monaghan the only three yet to record a case.
On 19 March, 191 new cases were confirmed, bringing total to 557. 1 new death was recorded, bringing the total to 3 deaths. The woman died in an isolation ward in St Vincent's Hospital. Her daughter later spoke to the media and urged the public to protect themselves from the virus.
On 20 March, 126 new cases were reported, bringing the total to 683. It was also confirmed that the virus had since infected Laois and Leitrim, leaving Monaghan as the last of the 26 counties. On 21 March, 102 new cases were reported, bringing the total to 785.
On 22 March, 121 new cases were announced, bringing the total to 906. A fourth death was also announced, bringing the total number of deaths to 4. The man, who died at the Mater Hospital, was musical director of a choir in Dublin and former Head of Vocal Studies at the Royal Irish Academy of Music.
On 23 March, a further 219 cases and 2 more deaths were announced, bringing the totals to 1,125 cases and 6 deaths. Of those then diagnosed, 208 were health care workers. On 24 March, a further 204 cases and one more death were announced, bringing the total number of cases to 1,329 and 7 deaths. On 25 March, 235 cases were confirmed, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 1,564. Two deaths also occurred, bringing the total number of deaths to 9. On 26 March, 255 cases and 10 deaths were confirmed, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 1,819, and the total number of deaths to 19, more than double the previous day's total. According to Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan, most of the deaths occurred in "institutional settings", i.e. hospitals and nursing homes. At this point, deaths began to accelerate rapidly.
On 27 March, 302 new cases as well as 3 new deaths brought the total number of confirmed cases and deaths to 2,121 and 22, respectively. Among the deaths was the country's first healthcare fatality, who was based in the east. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced a series of measures which he summed up as: "Stay at Home" (subject to certain exemptions). Merrion Street described it as "a more intensive phase in our response to COVID-19". The measures, which coincided with an escalating death toll, were also a response to increased reliance on intensive care units (ICUs) to treat critically ill patients, and an attempt to lower this number before capacity was reached.
On 28 March, 294 new cases, as well as 14 new deaths, brought the total number of confirmed cases and deaths to 2,415 and 36, respectively. On 29 March, 200 cases and 10 deaths were reported, bringing the total number of confirmed cases and deaths to 2,615 and 46, respectively. On 30 March, 295 cases and 8 deaths were reported, bringing the total number of confirmed cases and deaths to 2,910 and 54, respectively. On 31 March, 325 cases and 17 deaths were reported, bringing the total number of confirmed cases and deaths to 3,235 and 71, respectively.
On 1 April, an additional 212 cases and 14 deaths were reported, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 3,447, and the total number of deaths to 85. It was also announced that Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan, who displayed signs of illness during the previous evening's news conference, had entered hospital for non-COVID reasons; Ronan Glynn (Deputy Chief Medical Officer and Head of the Department of Health's Health Protection Unit) took charge.
On 2 April, a further 402 cases and 13 deaths were announced, bringing the totals to 3,849 cases and 98 deaths. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan said of the intensive care unit (ICU) figures: “Of 148 cases admitted to ICU, 25 of those cases have been discharged, sadly there have been 14 deaths from ICU and 109 remain in ICU. The median age of ICU admission is 62.”
On 3 April, a further 424 cases and 22 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 4,273 cases and 120 deaths. One patient was discharged from Sligo University Hospital after being admitted to hospital for 10 days.
On 4 April, a further 331 cases and 17 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 4,604 cases and 137 deaths. On 5 April, a further 390 cases and 21 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 4,994 cases and 158 deaths. The number of confirmed and suspected cases in hospitals, as of 4 April, was published. On 6 April, a further 370 cases and 16 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 5,364 cases and 174 deaths. On 7 April, a further 345 cases and 36 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 5,709 cases and 210 deaths. On 8 April, a further 365 cases and 25 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 6,074 cases and 235 deaths. On 9 April, a further 500 cases and 28 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 6,574 cases and 263 deaths.
On 10 April, a further 480 cases and 25 deaths were initially reported by the Department of Health, bringing the totals to 7,054 cases and 288 deaths. It was reported that there was a discrepancy between the number of cases confirmed by Ireland's Department of Health and the ECDC, due to swab tests sent to Germany for analysis to clear the backlog and testing in Ireland. 14,000 samples returned from German labs, of which 1,035 tested positive, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 8,089. 62 patients admitted to ICU were discharged as of that date. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced that measures introduced on 27 March would be extended until at least 5 May.
On 11 April, a further 553 cases, together with an additional 286 cases from previous samples sent to Germany, and 33 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 8,928 cases and 320 deaths. Minister for Health Simon Harris said between 25,000 and 30,000 tests had been sent to Germany and "well over" half of the results had been returned, with the remainder due back by next week. On 12 April, a further 430 cases, together with an additional 297 cases from previous samples sent to Germany, and 14 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 9,655 cases and 334 deaths. The National Public Health Emergency Team said there would be a "real danger" of a second wave of virus cases, if the changing of restrictions was not done correctly. On 13 April, a further 527 cases, together with an additional 465 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 31 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 10,647 cases and 365 deaths. Around 80% of cases are mild to moderate illness, close to 14% have severe disease and around 6% are critical. The Minister for Health claimed Ireland's approach to tackling COVID-19 was the "right strategy" that was "going to save lives". On 14 April, a further 548 cases, together with an additional 284 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 41 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 11,479 cases and 406 deaths.
On 15 April, a further 657 cases, together with an additional 411 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 38 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 12,547 cases and 444 deaths. Among the deaths announced, a 23-year-old said to be the youngest person to have died in the country at the time. Also on this date, a spokesperson for the Ireland East Hospital Group confirmed the deaths of two healthcare workers, a man and a woman, at the same hospital in Kilkenny, the man having died at home the previous day and the woman having died in the hospital that day.
On 16 April, a further 629 cases, together with an additional 95 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 43 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 13,271 cases and 486 deaths. One death, previously reported, was de-notified. The National Public Health Emergency Team reported that lockdown and other measures had driven the growth rate of the pandemic "as low as it needs to be" and was "close to zero".
On 17 April, a further 597 cases, together with an additional 112 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 44 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 13,980 cases and 530 deaths. On 18 April, a further 630 cases, together with an additional 148 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 41 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 14,758 cases and 571 deaths. Chief Medical Officer, Tony Holohan, reported that the curve had flattened and that no peak would be coming. He said the lockdown should continue until 5 May and that the government should focus on contact tracing.
On 19 April, a further 445 cases, together with an additional 48 cases from the backlog of tests at the laboratory in Germany, and 39 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 15,251 cases and 610 deaths. On 20 April, a further 401 cases and 77 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 15,652 cases and 687 deaths. On 21 April, a further 388 cases and 44 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 16,040 cases and 730 deaths. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan announced that 8,377 people had recovered in the community and that 856 people were discharged from hospital as of that date. It was also announced that one previously reported death was no longer classified as related to COVID-19.
On 22 April, a further 631 cases and 49 deaths were reported, and 10 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 16,671 cases and 769 deaths. On 23 April, a further 936 cases and 28 deaths were reported, and 3 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 17,607 cases and 794 deaths. Chief Medical Officer Holohan said that above 45% of deaths in the country until this time had been among residents of nursing homes.
On 24 April, a further 577 cases and 37 deaths, and 185 probable deaths were reported, and 2 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 18,184 cases and 1,014 deaths. The HPSC defines a probable death as "a death where a lab test has not been done but where a doctor believes a death is associated with current COVID-19." The total number of deaths includes probable deaths in accordance with advice from the ECDC.
On 25 April, a further 377 cases and 52 deaths (including 10 probable deaths) were reported, and 3 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 18,561 cases and 1,063 deaths. On 26 April, a further 701 cases and 26 deaths (including 3 probable deaths) were reported, and 2 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 19,262 cases and 1,087 deaths. On 27 April, a further 386 cases and 18 deaths were reported, and 3 deaths previously reported were reclassified as unrelated to COVID-19, bringing the totals to 19,648 cases and 1,102 deaths. On 28 April, a further 299 cases were initially reported but the number was corrected to 229 by Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan, and 59 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 19,877 cases and 1,159 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified.
On 29 April, a further 376 cases and 31 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 20,253 cases and 1,190 deaths. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan said "We estimate that as of Saturday 25th April 12,222 COVID-19 cases (64%) in the community have recovered. 1,164 cases (6%) have been discharged from hospital which gives us a total recovery rate of 70%." On 30 April, a further 359 cases and 43 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 20,612 cases and 1,232 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified.
On 1 May, a further 221 cases and 34 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 20,833 cases and 1,265 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced the extension of the current restrictions to 18 May at the earliest. A roadmap to easing restrictions in Ireland that includes five stages was adopted by the government on 1 May 2020 and subsequently published online.
On 2 May, a further 343 cases and 25 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 21,176 cases and 1,286 deaths. 4 previously notified deaths were de-notified. On 3 May, a further 330 cases and 19 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 21,506 cases and 1,303 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified. On 4 May, a further 266 cases and 16 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 21,772 cases and 1,319 deaths.
On 5 May, a further 211 cases and 23 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 21,983 cases and 1,339 deaths. 3 previously notified deaths were de-notified. On 6 May, a further 265 cases and 37 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 22,248 cases and 1,375 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan announced that 17,110 had recovered in the community and that 1,399 people had been discharged from hospital as of that date. On 7 May, a further 137 cases and 29 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 22,385 cases and 1,403 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. On 8 May, a further 156 cases and 27 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 22,541 cases and 1,429 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified.
On 9 May, a further 219 cases and 18 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 22,760 cases and 1,446 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. On 10 May, a further 236 cases and 12 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 22,996 cases and 1,458 deaths. On 11 May, a further 139 cases and 15 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 23,135 cases and 1,467 deaths. 6 previously notified deaths were de-notified. On 12 May, a further 107 cases and 24 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 23,242 cases and 1,488 deaths. 3 previously notified deaths were de-notified.
On 13 May, a further 159 cases and 10 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 23,401 cases and 1,497 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Ronan Glynn announced that 17,877 people had recovered in the community and 1,593 people had recovered in hospital as of 10 May.
On 14 May, a further 426 cases and 10 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 23,827 cases and 1,506 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified.
On 15 May, a further 129 cases and 16 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 23,956 cases and 1,518 deaths. 4 previously notified deaths were de-notified. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan announced seven children in Ireland had been identified with links to paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome, a new illness temporarily associated with COVID-19. The Government of Ireland confirmed that phase one of easing the COVID-19 restrictions would begin on Monday 18 May. Among the heritage sites reopening under phase one were Cong Abbey, Farmleigh, Kilkenny Castle, Knocknarea, the National Botanic Gardens and Trim Castle.
On 16 May, a further 92 cases and 15 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,048 cases and 1,533 deaths. On 17 May, a further 64 cases and 10 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,112 cases and 1,543 deaths.
On 18 May, a further 88 cases and 4 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,200 cases and 1,547 deaths. On 19 May, a further 51 cases and 16 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,251 cases and 1,561 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified.
On 20 May, a further 64 cases and 11 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,315 cases and 1,571 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Ronan Glynn announced that 21,060 people have recovered from COVID-19 as of 20 May. Tony Holohan was absent "at short notice".
On 21 May, a further 76 cases and 12 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,391 cases and 1,583 deaths. On 22 May, a further 115 cases and 11 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,506 cases and 1,592 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified. On 23 May, a further 76 cases and 13 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,582 cases and 1,604 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. On 24 May, a further 57 cases and 4 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,639 cases and 1,608 deaths. On 24 May, Transport Infrastructure Ireland data and AA analysis recorded a traffic increase of 30% over the previous week on the M50 motorway.
On 25 May, a further 59 cases and no deaths were reported (for the first time no deaths reported since 21 March), bringing the totals to 24,698 cases and 1,606 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified.
On 26 May, a further 37 cases and 9 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,735 cases and 1,615 deaths.
On 27 May, a further 73 cases and 17 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,803 cases and 1,631 deaths. 1 previously notified death was de-notified. Minister for Health Simon Harris announced that 22,089 people had recovered as of 27 May.
On 28 May, a further 46 cases and 9 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,841 cases and 1,639 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 8 cases were de-notified. On 29 May, a further 39 cases and 6 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,876 cases and 1,645 deaths. 4 previously notified cases were de-notified. On 30 May, a further 59 cases and 9 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,929 cases and 1,651 deaths. 3 previously notified deaths and 6 cases were de-notified. On 31 May, a further 66 cases and 2 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 24,990 cases and 1,652 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 5 cases were de-notified.
On 1 June, a further 77 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,062 cases and 1,650 deaths. 3 previously notified deaths and 2 cases were de-notified.
On 2 June, a further 10 cases and 8 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,066 cases and 1,658 deaths. 6 previously notified cases were de-notified. Dr. Tony Holohan, Chief Medical Officer, Department of Health, said: "Over the past week there have been approximately 500 new cases of COVID-19 notified, 54% of which are aged between 24-55 years old.
On 3 June, a further 47 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,111 cases and 1,659 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths and 2 cases were de-notified. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan announced that 22,698 people had recovered as of 31 May.
On 4 June, a further 38 cases and 5 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,142 cases and 1,664 deaths. 7 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 5 June, a further 28 cases and 7 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,163 cases and 1,670 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 7 cases were de-notified. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced a series of changes to the government's roadmap of easing COVID-19 restrictions in Ireland, which he summed up as: "Stay Local". The Government of Ireland confirmed that "phase two plus" of easing the COVID-19 restrictions would begin on Monday 8 June.
On 6 June, a further 24 cases and 9 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,183 cases and 1,678 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 4 cases were de-notified. On 7 June, a further 25 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,201 cases and 1,679 deaths. 7 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 8 June, a further 9 cases and 4 deaths were reported (lowest number of new cases reported since 11 March), bringing the totals to 25,207 cases and 1,683 deaths. 3 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 9 June, a further 9 cases and 9 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,215 cases and 1,691 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 1 case was de-notified.
On 10 June, a further 19 cases and 5 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,231 cases and 1,695 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 3 cases were de-notified. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Ronan Glynn announced that 23,213 people had recovered, a rate of 92%. However he said that people who have recovered are experiencing longer term effects including fatigue and decreased exercise capacity.
On 11 June, a further 8 cases and 8 deaths were reported (lowest number of new cases reported since 8 March), bringing the totals to 25,238 cases and 1,703 deaths. 1 previously notified case was de-notified.
On 12 June, a further 13 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,250 cases and 1,705 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 1 case was de-notified. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced that travel restrictions remain in place and that nobody should leave Ireland for the purpose of tourism or leisure.
On 13 June, a further 46 cases and 5 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,295 cases and 1,705 deaths. 5 previously notified deaths and 1 case was de-notified.
On 14 June, a further 8 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,303 cases and 1,706 deaths.
On 15 June, a further 18 cases and no deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,321 cases and 1,706 deaths.
On 16 June, a further 14 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,334 cases and 1,709 deaths. 1 previously notified case was de-notified.
On 17 June, a further 8 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,341 cases and 1,710 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths and 1 case was de-notified. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Ronan Glynn announced that 23,308 people had recovered.
On 18 June, a further 16 cases and 4 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,355 cases and 1,714 deaths. 2 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 19 June, a further 13 cases and 2 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,368 cases and 1,714 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar announced a further re-configuration of the government's roadmap of easing COVID-19 restrictions with hairdressers, barbers, gyms, cinemas and churches reopening from 29 June.
On 20 June, a further 22 cases and 2 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,374 cases and 1,715 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 16 cases were de-notified.
On 21 June, a further 6 cases and no deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,379 cases and 1,715 deaths. 1 previously notified case was de-notified.
On 22 June, a further 4 cases and 2 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,383 cases and 1,717 deaths.
On 23 June, a further 10 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,391 cases and 1,720 deaths. 2 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 24 June, a further 5 cases and 6 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,396 cases and 1,726 deaths. It was announced that 23,349 people had recovered as of 21 June, a rate of 92%.
On 25 June, a further 11 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,405 cases and 1,727 deaths. 2 previously notified cases were de-notified. The Government of Ireland confirmed that phase three of easing the COVID-19 restrictions would begin on Monday 29 June. Minister for Health Simon Harris announced that face coverings will be mandatory for passengers on public transport to allow capacity on buses, trains and trams to increase, with sanctions for non-compliance.
On 26 June, a further 11 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,414 cases and 1,730 deaths. 2 previously notified cases were de-notified.
On 27 June, a further 23 cases and 6 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,437 cases and 1,734 deaths. 2 previously notified deaths were de-notified.
On 28 June, a further 3 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,439 cases and 1,735 deaths. 1 previously notified case was de-notified.
On 29 June, a further 24 cases and no deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,462 cases and 1,735 deaths. Phase three of the government's roadmap of easing COVID-19 restrictions began. Remaining businesses reopened including all pubs serving food, cafés, restaurants, hotels, hairdressers, beauty salons and tourist attractions.
On 30 June, a further 11 cases and 1 death were reported, bringing the totals to 25,473 cases and 1,736 deaths.
On 1 July, a further 6 cases and 3 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,477 cases and 1,738 deaths. 1 previously notified death and 2 cases were de-notified.
On 2 July, a further 15 cases and 5 deaths were reported, bringing the totals to 25,489 cases and 1,738 deaths. 5 previously notified deaths and 3 cases were de-notified. Chief Medical Officer Tony Holohan announced his resignation to spend time with his family. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Ronan Glynn will succeed him as Acting Chief Medical Officer. | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | MacTier Subdivision | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349186 | null | null | 64349186 | null | MacTier Subdivision
The MacTier subdivision is a major rail line owned and operated by Canadian Pacific. The line stretches from Toronto to MacTier in northern Muskoka. The MacTier subdivision is the easternmost section of CPR's present-day transcontinental route and is the railroad's only connection between its eastern and western holdings, fully in Canada. The route is single-track in its entirety and hosts only freight rail service. Between 1955 and 1978 the MacTier subdivision hosted CPR's premier transcontinental passenger train, Canadian, from Toronto to Vancouver. Operation of the Canadian was transferred to VIA Rail in 1978, which switched over to CNR's Newmarket Subdivision, rejoining the former CPR route at Parry Sound, north of MacTier.
The MacTier subdivision begins at the West Toronto Diamond in Toronto, where it diverges northwest from CPR's Galt Subdivision. From here, the line parallels GO Transit's Kitchener line for about until diverging north. Just after crossing into York, the railway crosses under Canadian National's Halton subdivision. Here the line passes just east of CPR's Vaughan Intermodal facility. Following three sidings at Bolton, Palgrave and Ypres, the railway junctions with the Barrie Collingwood Railway, which runs east to Barrie. Following this junction, the route winds its way through northern Simcoe County until entering the dense forests of northern Ontario. The route enters Muskoka after crossing the Trent-Severn Waterway at Severn Falls. Travelling through the wilderness, the route reaches Bala, where it begins to parallel Canadian National's Bala Subdivision until reaching MacTier, Ontario. The subdivision ends at MacTier, where the Parry Sound Subdivision continues north to Sudbury.
The MacTier subdivision had three stations served by the Canadian, all closed in 1978: | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
null | Karenza | null | null | null | You are Caeden AI. A helpful assistant made by Caeden Rajoo. | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=64349191 | null | null | 64349191 | null | Karenza
Karenza may refer to | null | en.wikipedia.org | null | null |
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