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30,113,940
Transportation Journal
Transportation Journal is an academic journal devoted to transportation, logistics and related fields. The journal is published quarterly by the Penn State University Press on behalf of the American Society of Transportation and Logistics.
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30,113,992
Chelopech Hill
Chelopech Hill (, ‘Halm Chelopech’ \'h&lm che-lo-'pech\) is the ice-covered hill rising to 946 m in the north foothills of Detroit Plateau on Trinity Peninsula in Graham Land, Antarctica. It is surmounting Russell West Glacier to the north. The hill is named after the settlement of Chelopech in Western Bulgaria.
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30,114,533
1913 Saskatchewan Huskies football team
The 1913 Saskatchewan Huskies football team represented the University of Saskatchewan in Canadian football. This was their inaugural season and technically represented the College of Arts and Science.
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30,120,180
David M. Louie
David M. Louie (born October 8, 1951, in Oakland, California) is an American attorney, who served as Attorney General of Hawaii for 4 years.
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29,899,115
International Transportation Service
International Transportation Service (ITS) is an American container terminal company that deals with the receipt and shipment of containerized cargo in domestic and foreign trade. It also focuses on marine cargo handling, vessel stevedoring, on-dock rail, and staffing services. ITS is owned by K Line. International Transportation Service serves worldwide. ITS was founded in 1971 and is located at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California. The Green Port Policy was adopted by ITS in 2006 to reduce pollution in Long Beach and Los Angeles. ITS clients have included COSCO Container Lines, Hamburg Sud, Hanjin Shipping, Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha, Ltd., Maersk Line, U.S. Lines and Yang Ming Marine Transport Corporation.
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29,899,371
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chulalongkorn University
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chulalongkorn University () is the first Pharmacy school in Thailand, located in Bangkok. The faculty was founded by Prince Rangsit Prayurasakdi on December 8, 1913 as a department of Doctor for Compounding in the Royal Medical College, commonly called "Rong Rean Prung Ya" which means "School of Compounding Medicine". After the establishment of Chulalongkorn University in 1916, the Royal Medical College became the Faculty of Medicine under the university. The department of Compounding Medicine also had been renamed to "Panak Phat Pasom Ya" or "Doctor for Compounding Medicine Department" () since April 6, 1917. It is the first time that Pharmacy Education in Thailand has been elevated in higher educational system. The school renamed to "Department of Pharmacy" in the 1933. After Thai Pdanukornam suggested to use "pharmacy" (เภสัชกรรม) instead of "compounding medicine" (ปรุงยา). Later, the Chulalongkorn University Act B.E. 2477 divided the department from Faculty of Medicine to be an independent department, and changed a degree to "Certificate in Pharmacy (P.p.)". However the Dean of Faculty of Medicine also acting as a head of Department of Pharmacy. Nowadays, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences Chulalongkorn University has bachelor's degree, master's degree and PhD programs. The undergraduate courses were opened in two programs, including Bachelor in Pharmacy in Pharmaceutical Sciences and Clinical Pharmacy. Both of them are 6-year study programs. The Faculty consists of 7 departments and also exchange students with other universities in other countries such as exchange students program with Chiba University, exchange faculty staff such as faculty researchers and students in universities abroad featuring United States, United Kingdom, Japan and South Korea. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences Chulalongkorn University is ranked 101-150 in the world by QS world university ranking by subject 2017.
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29,899,855
Sailor's Luck
Sailor's Luck is a 1933 pre-Code romantic comedy film directed by Raoul Walsh for Fox Film Corporation. It stars James Dunn, Sally Eilers, Victor Jory, and Frank Moran. The plot has a sailor on shore leave falling for a nice girl, with a series of misunderstandings leading them to doubt each other's loyalty. A cast of colorful characters provides comic relief and the film concludes with a massive brawl between sailors and bouncers at a dance marathon. The film is noted for having a gay swimming-pool attendant.
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29,899,769
Saproamanita thiersii
Saproamanita thiersii (formerly Amanita thiersii), commonly called Thiers' lepidella, is a North-American saprotrophic basidiomycete fungus in the genus "Saproamanita". It is a white mushroom originally described from Texas but today found in nine states of North America. It was named after Harry Delbert Thiers. The cap of this small mushroom is white and convex, measuring and covered by volval remnants. It is sticky to the touch when wet. The gills are variable in length and number and are densely packed in some specimens and widely spaced in others. They are not attached to the stipe, which is long and about thick, with a white ring. The spores measure 7.8–9.8 by 7.3–9.0 µm and are roughly spherical in shape. The spore print is white. The mushroom grows in lawns, pastures and prairies. It is a saprotroph, living on decaying plant material, and not mycorrhizal as is the case with "Amanita" species. Previously it was placed in "Amanita", but in 2016 the saprophytic members of that genus were separated off into the new genus "Saproamanita" by one research group, though this split is controversial. Fruit bodies appear during July and August, either in isolation or in groups, and often form fairy rings. The genome of "S. thiersii" is being sequenced as part of the United States Department of Energy's Joint Genome Institute Community Sequencing Program. It is hoped that this will provide a better understanding of the cellulose decomposition capabilities of the fungus. The toxicity of "S. thiersii" has been suspect, but reportedly it is eaten in Mexico and harvested under the Spanish name "hongos de neblina".
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29,900,189
Forced normalization
Forced Normalization (FN) is a psychological phenomenon in which a long term episodic disorder is treated, and, although the electroencephalogram (EEG) appears to have stabilized, acute behavioral, mood, and psychological disturbances begin to manifest. If, or when, treatment for the disorder is halted, the disturbances go away, but the episodic spikes on the EEG reappear. H. Landolt coined the term 'Forced Normalization' in 1953 in response to a change he witnessed in epileptic EEGs, which monitor electrical activity in the brain.Landolt concluded that forced normalization is "the phenomenon characterized by the fact that, with the occurrence of psychotic states, the electroencephalography becomes more normal or entirely normal, as compared with previous and subsequent EEG findings." Forced normalization, as described by Landolt, was therefore an electrophysiological phenomenon with the electroencephalograph at its helm.Tellenbach's description of "alternative psychosis" or the reciprocal relationship between abnormal mental states and seizures differed from Landolt's in its clinical rather than EEG description. Subsequently, this concept was refined by Wolf, who suggested that the term "paradoxical normalization" was more appropriate and closer to what Landolt intended, wherein both inhibitory processes and epileptic processes (subcortical and restricted) are active at the same time.
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29,900,076
AACTA Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama
The AACTA Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama is an accolade given by the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA), a non-profit organisation whose aim is to "identify, award, promote and celebrate Australia's greatest achievements in film and television." The award is handed out at the annual AACTA Awards, which rewards achievements in feature film, television, documentaries and short films. From 2000 to 2010, the category was presented by the Australian Film Institute (AFI), the Academy's parent organisation, at the annual Australian Film Institute Awards (known as the AFI Awards). When the AFI launched the Academy in 2011, it changed the annual ceremony to the AACTA Awards, with the current prize being a continuum of the AFI Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama. The award was first presented in 2000 as Best Performance by an Actress in a Guest Role in a Television Drama Series until 2002, when the title was changed to Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama. In the following year, the title was changed to Best Actress in a Supporting or Guest Role in a Television Drama or Comedy. By 2006, a separate comedy accolade was established, and the name changed to the current one. The AACTA Award for Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama is given for performances in television drama series, miniseries, telefeature, children's animation or children's drama series. Candidates for this award must be human and female, and cannot be nominated for best lead actress in a television drama in the same year, for the same production. Sacha Horler and Magda Szubanski have received two nominations each, more than any other actress in this category, with Szubanski winning one in 2000.
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29,901,213
Brabantine Gothic
Brabantine Gothic, occasionally called Brabantian Gothic, is a significant variant of Gothic architecture that is typical for the Low Countries. It surfaced in the first half of the 14th century at St. Rumbold's Cathedral in the City of Mechelen. Reputed architects such as Jean d'Oisy, Jacob van Thienen, Everaert Spoorwater, Matheus de Layens, and the Keldermans and De Waghemakere families disseminated the style and techniques to cities and towns of the Duchy of Brabant and beyond. For churches and other major buildings, the tenor prevailed and lasted throughout the Renaissance.
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29,902,249
Spongodiscidae
Spongodiscidae is a family of radiolarians in the order Spumellaria. According to the original description by Ernst Haeckel, members of the family have a flat discoidal shell, in which a simple spherical central chamber is surrounded by an irregular spongy framework.
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29,902,734
Verkehrsgewerkschaft GDBA
The "Verkehrsgewerkschaft GDBA" ("transport union GDBA") was a German trade union. It was founded on May 23, 1948 in North Rhine-Westphalia as "Gewerkschaft Deutscher Bundesbahnbeamten und Anwärter" and was a member of the German Civil Service Federation. Since autumn 2005 GDBA worked together with the "rival" union Transnet. On November 30, 2010 the delegates of a union convention in Fulda decided to merge with Transnet to the new union EVG.
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29,902,610
Eisenbahn- und Verkehrsgewerkschaft
The Eisenbahn- und Verkehrsgewerkschaft EVG ("railway and transport union") is a German trade union with approximately 204,000 members, which represents most railway-related workers and professionals EVG was founded on November 30, 2010 in Fulda as an unification of the existing unions Transnet (210,000 members) and GDBA (30,000 members), which collaborated since 2005. After a year-long dispute, EVG and German rail operator Deutsche Bahn agreed in 2015 to a wage hike for all 160,000 employees of 3.5 percent, or at least 80 euros more per month; the union had originally called for a monthly wage hike of 6 percent for its workers. In late 2018, EVG again staged a four-hour stoppage that brought long-distance rail traffic to a standstill and disrupted commuter and freight trains; as a result, Deutsche Bahn agreed to a 29-month wage deal, including another 3.5 percent raise. The EVG ia a member of the Confederation of German Trade Unions (DGB). Like both Transnet and GDBA was also EVG is affiliated to the European Transport Workers' Federation and to the International Transport Workers' Federation.
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29,906,270
Ashihara kaikan
Ashihara kaikan is a modern full contact street karate developed from Kyokushin karate by Hideyuki Ashihara with influences from various martial arts including Muay Thai, Pankration, and Jujutsu with an emphasis on "Sabaki", using footwork and techniques to turn an opponent's power and momentum against them and to reposition oneself to the opponent's "blind" spot. The style is focused on practical application in a real fight including multiple attackers.
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29,905,985
2010 Georgia State Panthers football team
The 2010 Georgia State Panthers football team represented Georgia State University during the 2010 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Georgia State played their first-ever season of football in 2010 and were classified as an independent school, meaning they had no athletic conference affiliation. Bill Curry guided the new program's team to a 6–5 record, while all of their home games are played in the Georgia Dome. The team's first official practice took place on August 14, 2009, and the team played its first official public spring scrimmage at the Georgia Dome on April 10, 2010, before 3,192 fans. The Panthers played their first football game at home (the Georgia Dome) on September 2, 2010, against Shorter University (Mid-South Conference) (NAIA). In front of a crowd of 30,237 the Panthers won the game 41-7. The Panthers football program gained national exposure when it played 10th ranked Alabama of the FBS on November 18. Over 100,000 people attended the game held in Bryant–Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, and it was broadcast live on the ESPNU television network. Georgia State lost the game 63–7.
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29,907,321
Johan Evertsen
Johan Evertsen (1 February 1600 – 5 August 1666) was an admiral who was born in the 17th century.
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29,908,192
Caroline Dahl
Caroline Dahl is an American pianist and composer of boogie-woogie and American roots music. She is originally from Louisville, Kentucky, where she played with the Metropolitan Blues All Stars. She has lived in San Francisco for 30+ years where she performs solo around the Bay area and with Tom Rigney & Flambeau. She also performed frequently for more than 25 years at Sunday brunches at Mama's Royal Café (now closed) in Mill Valley. Caroline is also an award-winning fiber artist. The American Music Research Foundation calls Dahl "a self-taught master of the American roots styles of Boogie woogie, Blues, vintage R&B, Jazz, Swing, and Country Swing." She has headlined at festivals in the United States, Europe and Canada, including the International Boogie Woogie Festival in Switzerland, the Festival de Blues in Barcelona, and the Motor City Boogie Woogie Festival in Detroit.
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29,909,187
Institute for Space Applications and Remote Sensing
The Institute for Space Applications and Remote Sensing (ISARS/NOA) () was a research institute in Greece with expertise in multidisciplinary space and environmental sciences. It was an independent research Institute of the National Observatory of Athens (NOA) until 2012 when it was merged with the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics to a single unit entitled Institute for Astronomy, Astrophysics, Space Applications and Remote Sensing (IAASARS). Member scientists of all its research groups have broad knowledge of Space Science and Earth observation techniques and their applications. They collaborate with other research groups in Europe and United States, and have been internationally recognized through editorship in scientific journals, invited talks at international conferences, invited review papers in top journals, high rate of citations and coordination of EU-funded research projects.
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29,911,730
Kiel Baltic Hurricanes
The Kiel Baltic Hurricanes are an American football team based in Kiel, Germany. The club has been, of recent, a strong force in the sport in Germany, playing in five consecutive German Bowls from 2008 to 2012, losing the first two, winning the third, and losing the fourth and fifth. The club is part of the American Sports Club Kiel e.V.
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29,913,421
The Rest of the Dream
The Rest of the Dream is the 1990 album from The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (a.k.a. "The Dirt Band"). It peaked at #53 on the US Country charts. Two singles from the album hit the Billboard Country Top 100 - a cover of Bruce Springsteen's "From Small Things (Big Things One Day Come)" peaked at #65 and "You Made Life Good Again" rose to #60.
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29,915,255
Un'alma innamorata
Un'alma innamorata (HWV 173) is a dramatic secular cantata for soprano and instruments written by Georg Frideric Handel in 1707. Other catalogues of Handel's music have referred to the work as HG liiB,92; and HHA v/5,97. The title of the cantata translates as "A soul in love".
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29,915,555
Shane Sikora
Shane Sikora (born 11 March 1977) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the West Coast Eagles in the Australian Football League (AFL). West Coast recruited the Murray Bushrangers player with the 12th selection of the 1994 AFL Draft, which they had received from Collingwood for Lee Walker. A wingman, he did not make his AFL debut until late in the 1996 season, against Essendon at Subiaco, in which he kicked two behinds and had eight disposals. He played again the following week but had to wait almost two years to make his third appearance, instead spending most of his time with Perth in the WAFL.
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29,915,619
Educational data mining
Educational data mining (EDM) describes a research field concerned with the application of data mining, machine learning and statistics to information generated from educational settings (e.g., universities and intelligent tutoring systems). At a high level, the field seeks to develop and improve methods for exploring this data, which often has multiple levels of meaningful hierarchy, in order to discover new insights about how people learn in the context of such settings. In doing so, EDM has contributed to theories of learning investigated by researchers in educational psychology and the learning sciences. The field is closely tied to that of learning analytics, and the two have been compared and contrasted.
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29,553,558
Mount Gardner
Mount Gardner () is a mountain, high, standing west of Mount Tyree in the west-central part of the Sentinel Range, in the Ellsworth Mountains of Antarctica. It surmounts Patton Glacier to the northeast. The peak was discovered by the Marie Byrd Land Traverse party of 1957–58 under Charles R. Bentley and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Lieutenant Harvey L. Gardner, U.S. Navy, a pilot in Antarctica in the 1957–58 and 1958–59 seasons who was killed in the crash of a UB-1 Otter airplane at Marble Point on January 4, 1959.
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29,553,738
Gemini Nunataks
The Gemini Nunataks () are two nunataks of similar size and appearance in a prominent position near the west wall of Shackleton Glacier, Antarctica, just southeast of Mount Cole. They were named by F. Alton Wade, leader of the Texas Tech Shackleton Glacier Expedition, 1962–63, after the constellation Gemini, which contains the twin stars Castor and Pollux.
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29,553,865
Gibraltar Peak
Gibraltar Peak is a peak in Antarctica.
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29,553,859
Gibbous Rocks
The Gibbous Rocks are a group of rocks located north-west of Cape Belsham, Elephant Island, in the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica. They were so named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee following charting by the Joint Services Expedition, 1970–71. The name is descriptive of their rounded shapes (gibbous meaning humped).
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29,553,975
W. E. Daniel
W. E. Daniel was an American football coach. He served as head football coach at McPherson College in McPherson, Kansas, serving for one season, in 1920, and compiling a record of 5–3–3.
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29,553,990
Sir Thomas Alston, 3rd Baronet
Sir Thomas Alston, 3rd Baronet (c. 1676 – December 1714) was an English Member of Parliament. Thomas Alston was the eldest son of Sir Rowland Alston, 2nd Baronet of Odell, Bedfordshire and Temperance Crew; the family included Puritans on both sides. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. Alston succeeded his father as Baronet in 1697. From 1698 to 1701 he was MP for Bedford: it is unclear with which of the Parliamentary groupings his sympathies lay. He died unmarried, probably in London, in December 1714. "The story that he had wasted his estate and at the time of his death was a prisoner in the Fleet is not borne out by his will, in which the Odell estate and other property in Bedfordshire was left intact and charged with numerous bequests".
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29,554,018
Gless Peak
Gless Peak () is a peak, high, standing west-southwest of Cirque Peak, in the Millen Range, Victoria Land, Antarctica. This topographical feature was first mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960–64, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Elmer E. Gless, a former biologist at Hallett Station, during the Summers of 1965, 1966, 1967 and 1968. The peak lies situated on the Pennell Coast, a portion of Antarctica lying between Cape Williams and Cape Adare.
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29,554,103
Gneiss Point
Gneiss Point () is a rocky point north of Marble Point, on the coast of Victoria Land, Antarctica. It was first mapped by the British Antarctic Expedition, 1910–13, under Robert Falcon Scott and so named because of gneissic granite found here.
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29,554,161
Rolla Reiling
George Rolla Reiling (August 24, 1910 – August 10, 2000) was an American football coach. He was the head football coach at McPherson College in McPherson, Kansas, serving for one season, in 1947, and compiling a record of 1–6.
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29,554,263
Goodenough Glacier
Goodenough Glacier () is a broad sweeping glacier to the south of the Batterbee Mountains, flowing from the west shore of Palmer Land, Antarctica, into George VI Sound and the George VI Ice Shelf. It was discovered in 1936 by A. Stephenson, W.L.S. Fleming, and George C.L. Bertram of the British Graham Land Expedition under John Rymill, while exploring George VI Sound, and was named by Rymill after Margaret Goodenough, wife of Admiral Sir William Goodenough, the latter being one of Rymill's principal supporters in raising funds for the expedition. Bell Rock is a very conspicuous and isolated nunatak located on the glacier.
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29,554,279
Mount Goorhigian
Mount Goorhigian () is, at , the highest mountain of the Demas Range in Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. It was mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1959–65, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names after Martin Goorhigian, a United States Antarctic Research Program meteorologist at Byrd Station, 1961.
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29,555,332
IAMJRDN
IAMJRDN is the official debut studio album by Canadian R&B singer JRDN. The album features the hit singles, "U Can Have It All" and "Like Magic", which peaked at #20 and #24 on the Canadian Hot 100 respectively. It was released on November 9, 2010.
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29,556,105
Agricultural Appropriations Act of 1922
The United States federal Agricultural Appropriations Act of 1922 merged the Bureau of Markets and Crop Estimates (BMCE) with the Office of Farm Management and Farm Economics (OFMFE) on July 1, 1922, to form the Bureau of Agricultural Economics (BAE). Its purpose was to analyze and receive reports relating to foreign agriculture. It was the central statistical and economic research agency of the Commerce Department, which was responsible for collecting, analyzing, and publishing a wide variety of facts about agriculture. This included data on production, supply and demand, consumption, prices, costs and income, marketing, transportation, labor, agricultural finance, farm management, credit, taxation, land and water utilization, and other aspects of agricultural production and distribution.
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29,557,737
Morgan Ridge
Morgan Ridge () is a small rock ridge trending east–west, standing between Mount Pollard and Mount Small in the Porthos Range of the Prince Charles Mountains in Antarctica. It was mapped from Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions surveys and air photos, 1956–65, and was named by the Antarctic Names Committee of Australia for P.J. Morgan, a glaciologist at Wilkes Station in 1964.
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29,557,807
Morrison Hills
The Morrison Hills () are a series of rugged east–west trending hills between Garrard Glacier and Hewson Glacier in the Queen Alexandra Range of Antarctica. They were named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names after Lieutenant I. James Morrison, U.S. Navy, who did preliminary work leading to the induction of C-130 aircraft into Antarctica in February 1960, and who also participated in U.S. Navy Operation Deep Freeze for several seasons from 1958–59.
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29,557,915
Cape Moyes
Cape Moyes () is an ice-covered headland fronting on the Shackleton Ice Shelf, west of Cape Dovers. It was discovered by the Australasian Antarctic Expedition (AAE) under Mawson, 1911–14, and named by him for Morton H. Moyes, meteorologist with the AAE Western Base party.
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29,557,991
Meteorite Hills
The Meteorite Hills () are a group of hills, long, forming the western portion of the Darwin Mountains in Antarctica. The hills are located between the heads of Darwin Glacier and Hatherton Glacier. The name was proposed by John O. Annexstad of the Meteorite Working Group at the Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, in association with field work carried out in this vicinity by the Antarctic Search for Meteorites, led by William A. Cassidy of the University of Pittsburgh, during the 1978–79 season.
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29,558,029
Mickle Island
Mickle Island is a very small island southeast of Flagstaff Point, close off the west side of Ross Island, Antarctica. It was charted and so named by the British Antarctic Expedition, 1907–09, led by Ernest Shackleton. The name appears to be capricious or whimsical, "" meaning "great."
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29,558,106
Edersee
The Edersee is an 11.8 km² reservoir in Waldeck-Frankenberg, Hesse, Germany with 199.3 million m³ of storage space. It has the 2nd largest area (behind the Forggensee), and the 3rd largest volume (behind the Bleilochstausee and Rurstausee), of all reservoirs in Germany. It is located on the Fulda Tributary of Eder behind the 48m high Edersee Dam.
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29,558,522
Allan Frank
Frederick Allan Frank (born October 24, 1950) is an American singer, songwriter, and performer from Peoria, Illinois.
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29,718,304
Tongue Peak
Tongue Peak is a peak rising to about 2,450 m between Holdsworth Glacier and Scott Glacier, 3 nautical miles (6 km) west-northwest of Mount Farley, in the Queen Maud Mountains, Antarctica. The peak was mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and U.S. Navy aerial photographs, 1960–64. It was geologically mapped by a United States Antarctic Research Program (USARP)-Arizona State University field party, 1978–79, and was named by geologist Scott G. Borg, a member of the party. The name derives from a well-developed tongue-shaped moraine in an abandoned cirque between the west and north ridges of the peak.
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29,717,925
Odontopleurida
Odontopleurida is an order of very spinose trilobites closely related to the trilobites of the order Lichida. Some experts group the Odontopleurid families, Odontopleuridae and Damesellidae, within Lichida. Odontopleurids tend to have convex, bar-shaped cephalons, and lobed, knob-shaped glabella that extend to, or almost to the anterior margin. Many, if not almost all odontopleurids have long spines that are derived either from the margins of the exoskeleton, or from granular or tubercular ornamentation, or both. Many odontopleurids are so spinose so as to be described as having "spines on (their) spines." Odontopleurids have 8 to 13 thoracic segments, with Odontopleuridae odontopleurids having no more than 10, and Damesellidae odontopleurids having no more than 13. The pygidium tends to be very small, and invariably has long spines emanating from it in all known genera. Genera of Damesellidae are restricted to Middle to Upper Cambrian marine strata, and may represent a transition between Cambrian-aged lichids, and odontopleurids of Odontopleuridae. The odontopleurids of Odontopleuridae first appear in the Upper Cambrian, and go extinct before the end of the Frasnian stage of the late Devonian. ;Odontopleuridae *"Acanthalomina" *?"Acidaspidella" *?"Acidaspides" *"Acidaspis" *"Anacaenaspis" *"Apianurus" *"Archaeopleura" *"Boedaspis" *"Borkopleura" *"Brutonaspis" *"Calipernurus" *"Ceratocara" *"Ceratocephala" *"Ceratocephalinus" *"Ceratonurus" *"Chlustinia" *"Dalaspis" *"Diacanthaspis" *"Dicranurus" *"Dudleyaspis" *"Edgecombeaspis" *"Eoleonaspis" *"Exallaspis" *"Gaotania" *"Globulaspis" *"Hispaniaspis" *"Isoprusia" *"Ivanopleura" *"Kettneraspis" *"Koneprusia" *"Laethoprusia" *"Leonaspis" *"Meadowtownella" *"Miraspis" *"Ningnanaspis" *"Odontopleura" *"Orphanaspis" *"Periallaspis" *"Primaspis" *"Proceratocephala" *"Radiaspis" *"Rinconaspis" *"Selenopeltis" *"Selenopeltoides" *"Sinespinaspis" *"Stelckaspis" *"Taemasaspis" *"Uriarra" *"Whittingtonia" ;Damesellidae *?"Adelogonus" *"Bergeronites" *"Blackwelderia" *"Blackwelderioides" *"Chiawangella" *"Cyrtoprora" *"Damesella" *"Damesops" *"Dipentaspis" *"Dipyrgotes" *"Neodrepanura" *"Duamsannella" *"Fengduia" *"Guancenshania" *?"Hercantyx" *"Histiomona" *"Jiawangaspis" *"Karslanus"  *"Liuheaspis" *"Metashantungia" *"Neodamesella" *"Palaeadotes," *"Paradamesella" *"Parashantungia" *"Pingquania" *"Pionaspis" *"Protaitzehoia" *"Pseudoblackwelderia" *"Shantungia" *"Stephanocare" *"Taihangshania" *"Taitzehoia" *"Teinistion" *"Xintaia" *"Yanshanopyge"
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29,718,368
Todd Glacier
Todd Glacier () is a glacier 7 nautical miles (13 km) long flowing southwest into Calmette Bay, western Graham Land. Photographed from the air by Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition (RARE), 1947. Surveyed by British Antarctic Survey (BAS), 1961–62. Named by United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) for Gertrude E. Todd, BAS Scientific Officer and Editor, employed in the London Office, 1950–63.
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29,718,530
Kay Island
Kay Island () is a small island lying east of Cape Johnson in the northern part of Wood Bay, Victoria Land, Antarctica. It was discovered in 1841 by Captain James Clark Ross, Royal Navy, and named by him for Lieutenant Joseph W. Kay, Director of the Rossbank Observatory in Tasmania, who was third lieutenant on the ship "Terror". Originally charted by Ross as a group of three islands, only this one is now known to exist.
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29,718,515
Vanilla Islands
Vanilla Islands (French: "Les Îles Vanille") is an affiliation of the islands of Seychelles, Madagascar, Réunion (France), Mauritius, Comoros and Mayotte (France) in the Indian Ocean to form a new travel destination brand. Aim of the co-operation that has been founded on August 4, 2010 at La Réunion is to pool forces and jointly market the region compared to the solely individual marketing of each island in the past.
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29,718,571
Keating Massif
Keating Massif () is a rugged mainly ice-covered massif, long, rising to approximately , and lying northwest. It is located at the southern edge of the head of Byrd Glacier. The feature includes Mount Fries and forms the southwestern boundary of Zeller Glacier in the Churchill Mountains of Antarctica. Keating Massif was named in honor of New Zealander Colin Keating, who was the country's Secretary for Justice for the period 1997–2000. He had a distinguished 30-year career in the Public Service, mostly with the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, during which time he had a significant Antarctic focus through his work in the Legal Division and then as the Deputy Secretary responsible for Multi Lateral Affairs, which included the Legal and Antarctic Divisions. Later, as the Deputy Secretary responsible for Corporate Affairs, he retained authority for the Antarctic Policy Unit, at a time of considerable changes to the organizational structure of New Zealand Antarctic institutions from 1985 through to 1993. He provided much of the intellectual input behind New Zealand's work leading to the adoption of the Environment Protocol.
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29,718,850
Russet Hills
Russet Hills () is a line of hills trending east–west for 3.5 nautical miles (6 km) and forming the southern ridge of Gallipoli Heights in the Freyberg Mountains. Named by the New Zealand Antarctic Place-Names Committee (NZ-APC) on the proposal of P.J. Oliver, New Zealand Antarctic Research Program (NZARP) geologist who studied the hills, 1981–82. Named descriptively from the red-colored ignimbrite rock of this feature.
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29,718,870
Rutgers Glacier
Rutgers Glacier () is a steep glacier on the west side of the Royal Society Range in the Ross Dependency, Antarctica. Rutgers Glacier descends southwest from Johns Hopkins Ridge and Mount Rucker to enter the Skelton Glacier. Abbott Spur separates the lower ends of Rutgers Glacier from Allison Glacier.
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29,718,943
Mount Radspinner
Mount Radspinner () is a conspicuous ridge-like mountain, 1,785 m, located just east of Mount Freed and Copperstain Ridge in the east part of Bowers Mountains. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Captain Frank H. Radspinner, Jr., USA, commanding officer of the helicopter detachment that supported the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Topo East-West party that surveyed this area in 1962–63.
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29,718,959
Ragle Glacier
Ragle Glacier () is a small glacier that drains the west end of the Fosdick Mountains, between Mounts Ferranto and Avers, and flows northwest to Block Bay, in Marie Byrd Land. The glacier was photographed by the United States Antarctic Service (USAS) (1939–41), led by Admiral Byrd, and was mapped by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos (1959–65). Named for Dr. B. Harrison Ragle, Admiral Byrd's personal physician in the late 1930s, who made financial contributions toward purchase of first aid equipment and medical supplies for USAS (1939–41) and was a consultant on medical matters for that expedition.
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29,719,105
Kellick Island
Kellick Island is an island long, lying north-east of Round Point, off the north coast of King George Island in the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica. It was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee in 1960 for Captain Kellick, Master of the British sealer "Henry", who visited the South Shetland Islands in 1821–22.
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29,719,100
Rankin Glacier
Rankin Glacier () is a glacier about 12 nautical miles (22 km) long on the east side of Palmer Land. It flows southeast and then east along the south side of Schirmacher Massif to join the Cline Glacier just inland from the head of Odom Inlet. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) in 1974. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for John S. Rankin, United States Antarctic Research Program (USARP) biologist on the International Weddell Sea Oceanographic Expeditions, 1968 and 1969.
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29,719,117
Ranvik Glacier
Ranvik Glacier () is a broad glacier flowing into the southern part of Ranvik Bay in the southeast part of Prydz Bay. Mapped by Norwegian cartographers from air photos taken by the Lars Christensen Expedition (1936–37), and named Ranvikbreen (Ranvik Glacier) for its association with Ranvik Bay.
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29,719,125
Kelly Nunataks
The Kelly Nunataks () are the nunataks that mark the eastern extremity of the Clark Mountains, in the Ford Ranges of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. They were mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1959–65, and were named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for John David Kelly, a United States Antarctic Research Program ionospheric physicist at Byrd Station, 1968.
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29,719,160
Mount Keltie
Mount Keltie () is a mountain high, midway between Mount Kosko and Mount Chalmers in the Conway Range of Antarctica. It was discovered by the British National Antarctic Expedition (1901–04) and named for Sir John Scott Keltie, Secretary of the Royal Geographical Society, 1892–1915.
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29,719,206
Renegar Glacier
Renegar Glacier () is a steep glacier in Antarctica that flows southeast from Mount Dromedary into Koettlitz Glacier. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from ground surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1956–62. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Lieutenant Garland Renegar, U.S. Navy, R4D aircraft pilot at McMurdo Station, 1960.
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29,719,217
Kendall Terrace
Kendall Terrace () is an ice-free volcanic ash terrace extending along the northwestern side of Deception Island, in the South Shetland Islands. It was named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee in 1957 for Lieutenant Edward N. Kendall, Royal Navy, the surveyor on HMS "Chanticleer", who made the first survey of Deception Island in January–March 1829.
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29,719,265
Mount Remington
Mount Remington () is a mountain (1,775 m) 4 nautical miles (7 km) northwest of Mount Bresnahan in the north part of Helliwell Hills. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960–63. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Benjamin F. Remington, Jr., meteorologist who wintered over at Little America V, 1957, and at South Pole Station, 1959.
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29,719,382
Kessens Peak
Kessens Peak () is a peak, high, located southeast of Mount Paine in the La Gorce Mountains, in the Queen Maud Mountains of Antarctica. It was mapped by the United States Geological Survey from surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960–63, and was named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names for Gerard R. Kessens of U.S. Navy Squadron VX-6, a photographer on Operation Deep Freeze 1966 and 1967.
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29,719,567
1893 Pittsburgh Athletic Club football season
The 1893 Pittsburgh Athletic Club football season was their third season in existence. The team finished with a record of 7–2.
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29,719,855
Den nya nordiska floran
Den nya nordiska floran ("The new Nordic flora") is a book of Swedish flora from 2003 by Bo Mossberg and Lennart Stenberg, with illustrations by Bo Mossberg. It contains descriptions, illustrations and distribution maps of all plants in Sweden, Denmark, Norway (including Svalbard), Finland, Faroe Islands and Iceland, a total of more than 3,250 species. It is a sequel to the earlier book "Den nordiska floran". It has been called indispensable as a reference book, but criticized for being too heavy to be a field flora. It was translated into Danish by Jon Feilberg, titled "Den Nye Nordiske Flora". The book is fact-checked by Thomas Karlsson. It was also translated into Norwegian by Steinar Moen, with fact-checking by Svein Båtvik. The title of this version is "Gyldendals store nordiske flora. Revidert og utvidet utgave".
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29,720,075
Euprophantis autoglypta
Euprophantis autoglypta is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is known from India and Indonesia (Java).
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29,720,172
Mount Ratliff
Mount Ratliff () is a mountain, 2,520 m, located north of Watson Escarpment and 8 nautical miles (15 km) north-northeast of Mount Doumani. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from ground surveys and U.S. Navy air photos, 1960–63. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Charles E. Ratliff, aviation machinist mate with U.S. Navy Squadron VX-6 in several Operation Deep Freeze deployments, 1963–67.
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29,720,560
Lyttelton Peak
Lyttelton Peak () is, at , the highest peak of the Cobham Range, Antarctica. It was mapped by the New Zealand Geological Survey Antarctic Expedition (1961–62) and given the family name of Charles Lyttelton, 10th Viscount Cobham, the then Governor-General of New Zealand.
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29,720,837
Gilbert Shakespeare
Gilbert Shakespeare (baptised 13 October 1566, buried probably 3 February 1612) was a younger brother of William Shakespeare. His name is found in local records of Stratford-upon-Avon and London.
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29,721,409
You're Never Too Old for Young Love
"You're Never Too Old for Young Love" is a song written by Frank J. Myers and Rick Giles, and recorded by American country music artist Eddy Raven. It was released in March 1987 as the third single from the album "Right Hand Man". The song reached #3 on the "Billboard" Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.
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29,537,340
Filipe Nzanza
Filipe Nzanza (born April 21, 1970) is a retired Angolan football player. He has played for Angola national team and for Clube Desportivo Primeiro de Agosto.
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29,537,981
Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet
Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet (c. 1548 – 6 July 1614) of Hanwell in Oxfordshire, was an English Puritan Member of Parliament.
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29,538,301
Honmyō-ji
is a Buddhist temple of the Nichiren sect, Rokujōmon-ryū (六条門流), in Nishi-ku, Kumamoto, Japan. It is the most high-ranking temple of the sect in Kyushu. In Honmyō-ji is the grave of Katō Kiyomasa, (1562–1611), a Japanese "daimyō", builder of Kumamoto Castle and a dedicated buddhist of Nichiren Buddhism.
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29,538,427
Sasisena Temple
Sasisena Temple or Nimunhi Temple (Temple with no entrance and exit) is found in Sonepur city of Subarnapur district, Odisha, India. The Sasisena Kavya written by Pratap Rai a well-known poet of 17th century describes the detail story behind this temple.. The present Sasisena temple was built by Maharaja Vira Mitrodaya Singh (1902-1937 AD). However, it is reported that the Sasisena memorial was built before the second half of 18th century AD.
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29,538,276
Viceland
Viceland (stylized in all caps), and Vice on TV in the United States and United Kingdom, are brands used for television channels owned and programmed by Vice Media. Viceland launched on February 29, 2016 with two branded cable channels; the American version (rebranded from H2) is a joint venture majority-owned by A&E Networks (who owns a 10% stake in Vice Media, alongside a separate 10% stake owned directly by A&E's co-owner Disney), while the now defunct Canadian version (rebranded from Bio) operated as a Category A-licensed specialty channel majority-owned by Rogers Media. Operating under the creative direction of film director Spike Jonze, Viceland was a lifestyle-oriented channel that primarily aired documentary and reality series aimed towards millennials, leveraging the resources of Vice's verticals with new original series, along with adaptations of and reruns of existing Vice web series. Some of the network's launch programs were hosted by existing Vice personalities such as Action Bronson and Thomas Morton, as well as notable figures such as Eddie Huang, Elliot Page, and Lance Bangs.
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29,538,300
Johann Zarco
Johann Zarco (born 16 July 1990) is a Grand Prix motorcycle racer from France, best known for winning the 2015 and 2016 Moto2 World Championships. Following a difficult 2019 season, for 2020 Zarco is contracted to ride in MotoGP with Avintia Ducati. In 2016, Zarco got his first taste of MotoGP, testing the Suzuki GSX-RR with Suzuki Team in a private test at track in Ruyo, Japan. From 2017 he was a member of the Tech 3 Yamaha MotoGP satellite team, and in early 2018 it was announced that he would ride for the factory KTM MotoGP team from 2019. In August 2019, Zarco announced he would not ride for KTM in 2020, the second-year of his contract. The KTM team then announced in September 2019 he would not ride in the remaining six 2019 events, with test rider Mika Kallio taking his place. Zarco was offered a Honda for the last three races of the 2019 season. Riding for Honda effectively removed the possibility of becoming a Yamaha factory test rider for 2020. With 16 Grands Prix victories, Zarco is also the most successful French rider in Grand Prix racing.
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29,538,828
Metropolis Coffee Company
Metropolis Coffee Company is a coffee roasting company, wholesaler and retailer with locations at 1039 W. Granville Avenue and 3057 N. Rockwell Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. The company supplies coffee to hundreds of cafes and restaurants throughout the US, Canada, and Korea. In 2005, they were named by "Newcity" as the best place in Chicago to buy coffee beans and noted for their donation of $2 to Oxfam for Tsunami for each pound of beans purchased. Metropolis is also a back-to-back winner of the Good Food Awards, and winner of Roast Magazine's Roaster of the Year - A national roasting competition. Metropolis was founded by father and son Jeff and Tony Dreyfuss, both of whom travel overseas to purchase their beans from places including Peru and the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
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29,539,090
Air Mata di Kuala Lumpur
"Air Mata di Kuala Lumpur" (Enghish: "Tears in Kuala Lumpur") is a song written by Malaysian silver-screen legend P. Ramlee. The song was his last song composed before his death on 29 May 1973, at the age of 44. The song was sung by his wife, Saloma.
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29,539,622
Viruthan Shanku
Viruthan Shanku () is a 1968 Malayalam comedy film directed by P. Venu, starring Adoor Bhasi and Ambika in the lead roles.
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29,539,910
Mississippi Department of Marine Resources
The Mississippi Department of Marine Resources (MDMR) is a state agency of Mississippi headquartered in the Eldon Bolton State Office building in Biloxi, Mississippi. It was created by the legislature as a new state agency in 1994 to manage Mississippi's coastal resources through the authority of the Commission on Marine Resources (CMR). The MDMR is dedicated to enhancing, protecting and conserving the marine interests of Mississippi for present and future generations. Through the several offices and bureaus comprising the MDMR, the agency, together with the CMR, provides public services and plays a role in administering and enforcing Mississippi Seafood Laws, the Mississippi Coastal Wetlands Protection Act, the Public Trust Tidelands Act, the Boat and Water Safety Act, the Derelict Vessel Act, the Non-Point Source Pollution Act, the Magnuson Act, the Wallop-Breaux Sportfish Restoration Act, Marine Litter Act and other state and federal mandates.
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29,542,155
Ronald Thomas Shepherd
Ronald Thomas Shepherd OBE (1896–1955) was a British aviator and test pilot for Rolls-Royce. He was the first person to fly an aircraft powered by the Rolls-Royce Merlin aero-engine.
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29,543,436
Nils Bosson Sture
Nils Bosson Sture (1426–1494) was a Swedish noble and supporter of Sten Sture's reign as King of Sweden. He is famous for his flanking movement to surprise King Christian I of Denmark's army at the Battle of Brunkeberg in 1471. He died as a politician in the Swedish government in Stockholm, a proud man.
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29,544,476
Kerja Tahun
Kerja Tahun, or Merdang Merdem, is a week-long annual festival held by the Karo people of North Sumatra to celebrate the rice-planting. 'Kerja' in this sense is a Karo word meaning 'party', and not the Indonesian 'kerja', which means work.
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29,544,686
Bolden
Bolden is a 2019 American drama film based on the life of cornetist Buddy Bolden (1877–1931). One of the seminal figures in jazz history, Bolden left no surviving recordings, having been committed in 1907 at age 30 to the Louisiana State Insane Asylum, where he spent the rest of his life after a diagnosis of acute alcoholic psychosis. The musical drama is directed by Daniel Pritzker, and features original music written, arranged and performed by Wynton Marsalis. The film stars Gary Carr as Bolden, and co-stars Erik LaRay Harvey, Reno Wilson, Yaya DaCosta, Ian McShane and Michael Rooker. The score by Marsalis includes vocalists Catherine Russell, Brianna Thomas, Don Vappie, and instrumentalists including Wycliffe Gordon, Victor Goines, Marcus Printup, and others. The film contains performances by Reno Wilson playing Louis Armstrong (acting and singing). "Bolden" was released in theaters on May 3, 2019, by Abramorama.
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'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P86', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'composer', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q273076', 'boundaries': [451, 466], 'surfaceform': 'Wynton Marsalis', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 2, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q5524814', 'boundaries': [483, 492], 'surfaceform': 'Gary Carr', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q22811322', 'boundaries': [517, 534], 'surfaceform': 'Erik LaRay Harvey', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q4356358', 'boundaries': [536, 547], 'surfaceform': 'Reno Wilson', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q260211', 'boundaries': [549, 561], 'surfaceform': 'Yaya DaCosta', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q234141', 'boundaries': [563, 574], 'surfaceform': 'Ian McShane', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [496, 502], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q525065', 'boundaries': [579, 593], 'surfaceform': 'Michael Rooker', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 3, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [870, 876], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P161', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'cast member', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q4356358', 'boundaries': [809, 820], 'surfaceform': 'Reno Wilson', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 5, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [74, 80], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P136', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'genre', 'annotator': 'Simple-Aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q130232', 'boundaries': [26, 36], 'surfaceform': 'drama film', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 0, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'Simple-Aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q16866068', 'boundaries': [74, 80], 'surfaceform': 'Bolden', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P577', 'boundaries': None, 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29,544,818
Citizens Telecommunications Company of West Virginia
Citizens Telecommunications Company of West Virginia is the local exchange carrier of telephone service in some regions in West Virginia. The company was founded in 1897 as the Short Line Telephone Company. In 1975, the company changed its name to Mountain State Telephone Company. In 1995, the company became Citizens Mountain State Telephone Company in 1995 upon its acquisition from Alltel. The company operated separately from Citizens' existing operations in West Virginia that operated under the Citizens Telecommunications Company of West Virginia name. In 2000, Citizens Mountain State absorbed the former GTE operations that Citizens acquired in 1994. At this point, Citizens Mountain State Telephone Company then changed its name to Citizens Telecommunications Company of West Virginia. In 2001, the company began doing business as Frontier Communications of West Virginia. The company operates separately from Frontier West Virginia, regulated as a Bell Operating Company, which was acquired by Frontier in 2010.
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29,545,859
Mingo County Schools
Mingo County Schools is the operating school district within Mingo County, West Virginia. It is governed by the Mingo County Board of Education.
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29,545,453
Remontay McClain
Remontay McClain (born September 21, 1992) is an American sprinter who specializes in the 100 and 200 metres dash. While attending Covina High School, McClain ran the second-fastest 100 metres by a high school athlete in 2010, behind only Oliver Bradwell. A native of Victorville, California, McClain moved to Covina, California when he was 13. In his junior year at Covina High School, McClain won both the 100 m and 200 m California state championship. He was named a 2010 and 2011 All-USA track and field selection by "USA Today". In his senior year, McClain repeated as 100 m and 200 m state champion, by setting Division 3 meet records in both events. He became only the third athlete in the 93 competitions of the CIF State Track and Field Championship meet to win back-to-back titles in the 100 and 200 meters, following Charlie Paddock (1917, 1918) and Randall Carroll (2008, 2009). Also an American football player, McClain was listed as one of the best wide receivers in Southern California before Covina was knocked out of the CIF playoffs by Whittier Christian High School his senior season. He committed to Azusa Pacific University on November 10, 2010.
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29,546,030
2011 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts
The 2011 New Brunswick Scotties Tournament of Hearts was held January 26-30 at the Curling Beauséjour Inc. in Moncton, New Brunswick.The winning team of Andrea Kelly represented New Brunswick at the 2011 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, where they finished round robin play with a record of 3-8.
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29,508,958
Turks in Berlin
Turks in Berlin () are people of Turkish ethnicity living in Berlin where they form the largest ethnic minority group, and the largest Turkish community outside Turkey. The largest communities can be found in Kreuzberg, Neukölln, and Wedding, with substantial populations in other areas, almost exclusively those of the former West Berlin.
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29,509,761
2010 Scottish Challenge Cup Final
The 2010 Scottish Challenge Cup Final was played between Queen of the South and Ross County at McDiarmid Park, Perth. Ross County won 2–0. The game had been postponed from November to April due to inclement weather. Queen of the South beat Peterhead 2–1 in their semi-final and Ross County beat Partick Thistle 4–3 on penalties after their semi-final ended at 2–2.
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29,509,944
Andrea Cesaro
Andrea Cesaro (born 10 April 1986) is an Italian footballer who most recently played for Celano.
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29,510,252
Ali Omari
Ali Omari (born 3 June 1983) is an Afghan footballer. He earned one cap for the Afghanistan national team.
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29,511,014
Caucasian goby
The Caucasian goby ("Ponticola constructor") is a species of goby native to rivers of the Caucasus draining to the Black Sea in Europe and Asia. This species is strictly a fresh water species and will not enter brackish water. It can reach a length of SL.
[{'subject': {'uri': 'Q18869', 'boundaries': [90, 98], 'surfaceform': 'Caucasus', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P706', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'located in or next to body of water', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q166', 'boundaries': [115, 124], 'surfaceform': 'Black Sea ', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 0, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q166', 'boundaries': [115, 2124], 'surfaceform': 'Black Sea', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'P47', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'shares border with', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q18869', 'boundaries': [90, 98], 'surfaceform': 'Caucasus', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 0, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, {'subject': {'uri': 'Q3757305', 'boundaries': [4, 18], 'surfaceform': 'Caucasian goby', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'predicate': {'uri': 'Q4110708', 'boundaries': None, 'surfaceform': 'species of fish', 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}, 'object': {'uri': 'Q18869', 'boundaries': [90, 98], 'surfaceform': 'Caucasus', 'annotator': 'Me'}, 'sentence_id': 0, 'dependency_path': None, 'confidence': None, 'annotator': 'NoSubject-Triple-aligner'}]
29,511,800
Mannlgrat
The Mannlgrat is an east-facing ridge on the "Hoher Göll" in the Bavarian Alps rising above Obersalzberg near Berchtesgaden. The ridge rises from a col separating it from a subpeak of the Hoher Göll, the "Kehlstein", upon which the famous Kehlsteinhaus is located. Served by a Klettersteig, the Mannlgrat is regarded as the easiest route to the Hoher Göll's summit.
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29,512,409
Gutenko Nunataks
The Gutenko Nunataks are small, elongated nunataks west of Mount Morgan in the Ford Ranges of Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. They were discovered on aerial flights made from the West Base of the United States Antarctic Service in 1940, and named for Sigmund Gutenko, a cook and steward at West Base.
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29,512,527
Guido Island
Guido Island () is an island lying northeast of Prioress Island in the Wauwermans Islands, in the Wilhelm Archipelago, Antarctica. It was shown on an Argentine government chart of 1950; the name "Isla Guido Spano" appears on a 1957 chart and is for Carlos Guido Spano (1829–1918), a famous Argentine poet.
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29,512,635
Grunden Rock
Grunden Rock () is a rock high, surrounded by a group of smaller rocks, lying close east of Hut Cove along the south side of the entrance to Hope Bay, at the northeast end of the Antarctic Peninsula. It was discovered by the Swedish Antarctic Expedition under Otto Nordenskiöld, 1901–04. The Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in 1945 named the entire group of rocks for Toralf Grunden, a member of the Swedish Expedition who wintered at Hope Bay in 1903, but in 1952 the name was restricted to the largest rock in this group for easier reference to the light beacon established on the main rock by the Argentine government during the previous season.
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29,512,666
Kielce Power Station
Kielce Power Station () is a coal-fired combined power and heat plant at Kielce, Poland. It went operational in 1987 and consists of one 140 MW unit, six 25 MW units and one 10 MW cogeneration unit. It is operated by PGE. The facility has two flue gas stacks, which are both equipped with telecommunication equipment, whereby the larger chimney, which is tall with rooftop antennas (without it is tall) is used for FM- and TV-broadcasting. The other chimney is tall.
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29,512,802
Treves Butte
Treves Butte is a prominent, partly ice-covered butte (2,100 m) immediately northwest of Discovery Ridge in the Ohio Range. Named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) for Samuel B. Treves, geologist, who worked several seasons in Antarctica and who in the 1960-61 and 1961-62 seasons made investigations in the Ohio Range and other parts of the Horlick Mountains.
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29,512,874
Trillingane Nunataks
Trillingane Nunataks () are three nunataks standing 6 nautical miles (11 km) northeast of Balchen Mountain at the east end of the Sor Rondane Mountains. Mapped by Norwegian cartographers in 1957 from air photos taken by U.S. Navy Operation Highjump, 1946–47, and named Trillingane (the triplets).
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