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20231101.en_27013585_5 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CenterServ%20International%2C%20Ltd | CenterServ International, Ltd | CenterServ has two primary lines of business; Cloud Servers and Dedicated Servers offered on a global scale. CenterServ helps design, build, and implement personalized services and offer cloud computing consulting services as part of their service agreements. |
20231101.en_27013585_6 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CenterServ%20International%2C%20Ltd | CenterServ International, Ltd | Although the founders began as MIS administrator and Finance specialist, they found that most companies were often put off by the cloud industry´s lack of services personalization, by centralized decision making purely motivated by profit and also by a lack of data center services accessibility in most parts of the globe. The founders wanted to turn their venture into a socially responsible company where the cloud industry would benefit from CenterServ activities. |
20231101.en_27013585_7 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CenterServ%20International%2C%20Ltd | CenterServ International, Ltd | By involving each systems administrator, in return to access to their facilities, would allow for a more personalized and backed by a more unify data center international network. In order to stay transparent the company would not bind itself with any particular brand, provider, data center, or government. Meanwhile, to ensure optimal customer service, each contract would need to be signed by a CenterServ certified ethical systems administrator. |
20231101.en_27013585_8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CenterServ%20International%2C%20Ltd | CenterServ International, Ltd | CenterServ Think tank gives certifications to systems administrators with an ethical and a socially responsible approach. The cloud will play an important role for the future. CenterServ is taking over some of the responsibilities such has unifying data center nodes all around the globe and increasing level of cloud computing service innovation and perfection. The CenterServ Private Institute is also responsible of selecting franchisee primarily based on their respect of CenterServ's mission and core value. Selected candidates are retained mostly based on past experience, education, relations and/or ideas and innovation. |
20231101.en_27013585_9 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CenterServ%20International%2C%20Ltd | CenterServ International, Ltd | CenterServ built its international presence supported by hundreds of systems administrators dispersed all over the globe, allowing for access to most data center facilities Major client contributors in needs of remote geo-location server access help CenterServ unify and normalize the international cloud access and service level. |
20231101.en_27013606_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo%20Bianchini | Lorenzo Bianchini | Lorenzo Bianchini (born January 17, 1989) is an Italian professional football player who currently plays for A.C. Isola Liri. |
20231101.en_27013610_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectoedemia%20occultella | Ectoedemia occultella | Ectoedemia occultella, the small birch leafminer, is a moth of the family Nepticulidae. It has a Holarctic distribution. It is found in most of Europe, east through Russia (where it has been recorded from Murmansk, Karelia, Leningrad, Samara and Tatarstan and Sakhalin) to Japan. It is also present in North America. Mines very similar to that of Ectoedemia occultella have been found on Rosaceae species in Nepal and Japan and these may belong to this species. |
20231101.en_27013610_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectoedemia%20occultella | Ectoedemia occultella | The wingspan is 5–7 mm. The head is grey, the face whitish. Forewings are light grey irrorated with dark fuscous and with a very indistinct oblique whitish fascia before middle, usually partly or wholly obsolete ; a small tornal spot and larger triangular spot on costa somewhat beyond it ochreous-white. Hindwings grey. Adults are on wing from May to July. |
20231101.en_27013610_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ectoedemia%20occultella | Ectoedemia occultella | The larvae feed on Betula ermani, Betula grossa, Betula humilis, Betula nana, Betula obscura, Betula pendula and Betula pubescens. It has also been recorded from Salix pentandra in Finland. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine consists of a round, primary, upper-surface blotch without a visible initial corridor. There are often several mines in one leaf. The mine has a dark centre, where the larva often retreats. |
20231101.en_27013664_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elspeth%20Thompson | Elspeth Thompson | Elspeth Susan Thompson was born on June 26, 1961, at Staplehurst, Kent. She grew up on a farm. The family moved to Bromley, and she was sent to Mary Datchelor Girls' School in Camberwell Grove. She won a place at Trinity College, Cambridge, where she studied History and the History of Art. |
20231101.en_27013664_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elspeth%20Thompson | Elspeth Thompson | She was the author of many books including A Tale of Two Gardens (2003), The London Gardener (2004) and The Wonderful Weekend Book (2008). She also presented a four-part series on trees for BBC Radio 4, and wrote on gardening and interiors for The Sunday Telegraph, the Observer and the Guardian. |
20231101.en_27013664_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elspeth%20Thompson | Elspeth Thompson | "Life After Elspeth", Sunday Telegraph, 25 July 2010. Interview with husband Frank Wilson. Accessed 14 February 2023. |
20231101.en_27013669_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Julius Gustav Neubronner (8 February 1852 – 17 April 1932) was a German apothecary, inventor, company founder, and a pioneer of amateur photography and film. He was part of a dynasty of apothecaries in Kronberg im Taunus. Neubronner was court apothecary to Kaiserin Friedrich, invented the pigeon photographer method for aerial photography, was one of the first film amateurs in Germany, and founded a factory for adhesive tapes. After his death, the company was directed for 70 years by his son Carl Neubronner (13 January 1896 – 19 November 1997). |
20231101.en_27013669_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | The Neubronner family was resident in Kronberg as an apothecaries' family since Christian Neubronner had taken over a pharmacy there in 1808. In 1844 the pharmacy passed to his son Sohn Wilhelm Georg Neubronner (1813–1894), a longtime friend of painter Anton Burger and father of Julius Neubronner. During the Revolution of 1848 he directed the local militia. The wife of Wilhelm Neubronner and mother of Julius Neubronner came from the Löwe dynasty of actors, and her sister was the singer Sophie Löwe. |
20231101.en_27013669_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | From adolescence, Julius Neubronner was a passionate amateur photographer. In 1865 he found a camera for the Talbot system which his father had built on his own shortly after the invention of photography. All experiments with the obsolete camera failed, and together with a friend the boy secretly bought another camera on credit. |
20231101.en_27013669_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Neubronner initially received his education at home, together with two sisters. His godfather Julius Löwe operated a chemical laboratory in Frankfurt, and from 1864 the now twelve-year-old boy attended the Gymnasium in that city. After three years he changed to Weilburg, where he received the mittlere Reife. After a year of apprenticeship in his father's pharmacy he attended the Royal Realgymnasium in Wiesbaden. |
20231101.en_27013669_4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | In 1873 he finished his apprenticeship as apothecary's assistant in a pharmacy in Berlin, followed by three practical years in pharmacies in Bendorf, Frankfurt, Hannoversch-Münden and Nyon. In Nyon he got into contact with stereoscopy. |
20231101.en_27013669_5 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | From 1876, Neubronner studied pharmacy in Gießen, where he joined the Akademisch-Naturwissenschaftlicher Verein (now a Burschenschaft). Shortly after his pharmaceutical examination in 1877, he began to study chemistry in Berlin in 1878, but soon switched to Heidelberg, where he received his doctorate in 1879. |
20231101.en_27013669_6 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | In 1886, Julius Neubronner took over the pharmacy in Kronberg from his father. In 1887 he bought an important historical building known as Streitkirche ('dispute church'). Planned as a catholic church in the Protestant town of Kronberg, but never inaugurated, it had been the object of a notable conflict. After the necessary modifications (the building had previously been used as an inn), family and pharmacy could move into the building in 1891. |
20231101.en_27013669_7 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | When Emperor Frederick III died in the Year of the Three Emperors 1888 after only 99 days in office, his widow Victoria, Princess Royal, known in Germany as Kaiserin Friedrich, had Schloss Friedrichshof constructed as her new residence in the forest near Kronberg. Neubronner now obtained the rank of a court apothecary. |
20231101.en_27013669_8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Wilhelm Neubronner had used pigeon post for fast delivery of prescriptions, but had stopped the practice after a few years, when the neighbouring villages received their own pharmacies. Inspired by a newspaper report in 1902 that described a similar practice of an apothecary in Boston and showed a lack of awareness with his father's achievements, Julius Neubronner took up and expanded the practice. By pigeon post he obtained urgent chemicals up to from his wholesaler in Frankfurt and delivered urgent medication to the sanatorium in Falkenstein (Königstein im Taunus) The notable sanatorium, founded in 1876 by Peter Dettweiler, was replaced by a recreation home for officers between 1907 und 1909. |
20231101.en_27013669_9 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Between 1903 and 1920 Neubronner recorded a number of amateur films which were restored by the Deutsches Filmmuseum between 1994 and 1996 and later published on YouTube. The cumbersome process of gluing glass photographs for laterna magica presentations inspired him to invent a form of adhesive paper tape, which he patented. For production and marketing he founded the Fabrik für Trockenklebematerial in 1905. Under the name Neubronner GmbH & Co. KG it still exists and has around 80 employees. |
20231101.en_27013669_10 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | In 1886, Julius Neubronner married Charlotte Stiebel (1865–1924). Her father Fritz Stiebel (1824–1902) was a well-known physician in Frankfurt. Her maternal grandfather was Jacques Reiss (1807–1887), patron and honorary citizen of Kronberg and main initiator of the Cronberger Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (Kronberg Railway Society). |
20231101.en_27013669_11 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Like his father, Julius Neubronner was a friend and sponsor of a Kronberg-based group of notable painters known as Kronberger Malerkolonie, whose museum is now located on the first floor of his house. In 1907, he joined the Senckenberg Nature Research Society |
20231101.en_27013669_12 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | In 1907, Neubronner submitted a patent for his invention of aerial photography by means of a pigeon photographer; he was granted the patent in 1908. The invention brought him international notability after he presented it to an interested audience at international expositions in Dresden, Frankfurt and Paris in 1909–1911. Spectators in Dresden could watch the arrival of the camera-equipped carrier pigeons, and the photos were immediately developed and turned into postcards which could be purchased. At the 1910 and 1911 Paris Air Shows he received two gold medals, for the method and for the photographs. The invention was tried out for military air surveillance in the First World War and later, but apart from honourable mentions in encyclopedias (Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, Brockhaus Enzyklopädie) it only caused him expenses. |
20231101.en_27013669_13 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | After Julius Neubronner's death in 1932, the pharmacy stayed in the Neubronner family for two more generations. First it was managed by Wilhelm Neubronner, who wrote a book about Ice stock sport and was generally active in local and national sports. |
20231101.en_27013669_14 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | With his death in 1972, his son Kurt-Heinz Neubronner took over the pharmacy, but in 1995 it was sold. |
20231101.en_27013669_15 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | The factory was taken over by Julius Neubronner's youngest son Carl Neubronner (13 January 1896 – 19 November 1997), who managed it for 70 years. In 1957 he received the Federal Cross of Merit (1st class), in 1966 he made the staff share the company's profits, and he was active in an industry association. |
20231101.en_27013669_16 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Carl Neubronner became known for his experiments with model aircraft: At the age of 16 he developed the "Raketoplan", a rocket-propelled model airplane, and the national rocket model aircraft club still awards an annual Carl Neubronner Prize. |
20231101.en_27013669_17 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius%20Neubronner | Julius Neubronner | Since 1987 the Carl Neubronner Sports Foundation supports sports in Kronberg. Carl Neubronner was married to Erika Neubronner (1923–2005). In April 1997 they founded the socially oriented Carl and Erika Neubronner Foundation. |
20231101.en_27013675_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WSWR | WSWR | WSWR (FM), a radio station based in Shelby, Ohio, USA (known as WMAN-FM from December 2011 until May 2012) |
20231101.en_27013683_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-eighth%20government%20of%20Israel | Twenty-eighth government of Israel | The twenty-eighth government of Israel was formed by Ehud Barak of One Israel on 6 July 1999 after his victory in the May election for Prime Minister. Alongside One Israel (an alliance of the Labor Party, Meimad and Gesher), Barak included Shas, Meretz, Yisrael BaAliyah, the Centre Party, the National Religious Party and United Torah Judaism in his coalition. The parties formed a center-left coalition. United Torah Judaism left the government in September 1999 due to a dispute over the transport of a turbine on Shabbat. |
20231101.en_27013683_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-eighth%20government%20of%20Israel | Twenty-eighth government of Israel | Following the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada, the government began to fall apart. Barak called a special election for Prime Minister in February 2001, which he lost to Likud leader Ariel Sharon. Sharon went on to form the twenty-ninth government on 7 March. |
20231101.en_27013683_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-eighth%20government%20of%20Israel | Twenty-eighth government of Israel | 1 Although Tamir was not a Knesset member at the time, she was later elected to the Knesset on the Labor Party list. |
20231101.en_27013683_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-eighth%20government%20of%20Israel | Twenty-eighth government of Israel | 2 The name of the post was changed to Minister of Science, Culture and Sport when Vilnai took office. |
20231101.en_27013709_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherkashin | Cherkashin | Cherkashin () is a Russian masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Cherkashina. It may refer to |
20231101.en_27013712_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Logan%20%28actor%29 | Paul Logan (actor) | Paul Logan Stone (born October 15, 1973) is an American actor, model, martial artist, stuntman, producer and screenwriter. He is best known for his roles in low budget action films such as Syfy's Mega Piranha. Logan is also known for his portrayal of Glen Reiber on the NBC soap opera, Days of Our Lives. |
20231101.en_27013712_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Logan%20%28actor%29 | Paul Logan (actor) | Logan completed a degree in biochemistry at State University of New York at Purchase and followed this with courses of Chiropractic at the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic. |
20231101.en_27013712_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Logan%20%28actor%29 | Paul Logan (actor) | After a few small parts on a few early films and television episodes, Logan gained better screen time with the movie Killers in 1997. Logan would also appear in the Triple-B genre film, L.E.T.H.A.L. Ladies: Return to Savage Beach. A year later he made appearances in the TNT television series' L.A. Heat and UPN's Malcolm & Eddie. In 2000, Logan appeared in the mockumentary, The Independent. In 2001, he appeared in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer spin-off, Angel. In that same year Logan was cast as Glen Reiber in Days of Our Lives. |
20231101.en_27013712_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Logan%20%28actor%29 | Paul Logan (actor) | In 2003, Logan made a guest appearance in an episode of the NBC television sitcom, Friends. He followed this up with a series of action films such as The Eliminator, Curse of the Komodo and Way of the Vampire where he portrayed Dracula. |
20231101.en_27013712_4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Logan%20%28actor%29 | Paul Logan (actor) | In 2008, Logan appeared in The Terminators. A year later, Logan's athletic background came in handy for the martial art-styled action film, Ballistica, with a leading role as a top-notch CIA agent trained in the title art of Ballistica (hand-to-hand combat with firearms). In that same year, he appeared alongside Brittany Murphy in the disaster film Megafault. Logan's third film with The Asylum saw him in a leading role as the US commando sent to South America to stop mutating killer-fish in the SyFy original Mega Piranha. The film garnered 2.2 million viewers on the network, making it the channel's most-watched film of the year so far. |
20231101.en_27013720_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernykh | Chernykh | Chernykh, also transliterated Černych () is a Russian surname. Notable people with the surname include: |
20231101.en_27013725_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhamphomyia%20marginata | Rhamphomyia marginata | Rhamphomyia marginata is a species of dance flies, in the fly family Empididae. It is found in Europe, from Great Britain east to Romania and from Fennoscandia south to France, Austria and Hungary. |
20231101.en_27013728_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simone%20Loiodice | Simone Loiodice | Simone Loiodice (born March 16, 1989 in Rome) is an Italian professional football player who currently plays for S.S. Cosmos. |
20231101.en_27013736_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Ellery%20Racing | Steven Ellery Racing | Steven Ellery Racing was an Australia motorsport team which contested several series in its home country, including as the Supercheap Auto Racing V8 Supercar team. The team ceased operations at the end of 2005, with the lead driver Steven Ellery moving to Triple Eight Race Engineering for the 2005 season. |
20231101.en_27013736_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Ellery%20Racing | Steven Ellery Racing | Formed in 1992 by Bruce Ellery for his son's racing ambitions, Steven Ellery Racing was a team that lasted over a decade in Australian racing. The team ran Formula Ford a Van Diemen in 1992, expanding to a second car in 1993 for Garry Gosatti. The team moved into the Australian Super Touring Championship in 1994 with an ex Glenn Seton Racing Ford Sierra, before upgrading to a Tony Longhurst Racing BMW 318i in 1995. The team disbanded at the end of 1995 as Ellery moved into V8 Supercar racing for other teams. |
20231101.en_27013736_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Ellery%20Racing | Steven Ellery Racing | The team only ever ran a single car for Steven Ellery in the main V8 Supercar championship, although it did expand to a second car for Luke Youlden to race in the V8 Supercar Development Series. In 1999 the team raced an ex Stone Brothers Racing Ford EL Falcon using the number #31. In 2000 the team started to use a Ford AU Falcon and brought in Supercheap Auto as naming rights sponsor and continued to use the car and until the start of the 2003 championship when they upgraded to a BA Falcon. The team finished just out of the top ten in most seasons, and Ellery paired with Youlden took third Place at the 2003 Bathurst 1000. In the middle of the Gold Coast round of 2004 Supercheap Auto left the team. The team ran the final two rounds of the season with sponsorship from Chelgrave Contracting, the sponsor which the team had run in 1999 as well as during its Super Touring appearances. At the end of 2004, the team closed its doors as Ellery moved to Team Betta Electrical for the 2005 season. The team would contest the 2005 Holden Performance Driving Centre V8 Supercar Series with two Ford BA Falcon’s for New Zealander Mark Porter and former V8 Utes driver Gary MacDonald before leaving the sport altogether. |
20231101.en_27013754_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | The 27th Young Artist Awards ceremony, presented by the Young Artist Association, honored excellence of young performers under the age of 21 in the fields of film and television for the year 2005, and took place on March 25, 2006 at the Sportsmen's Lodge in Studio City, Los Angeles, California. |
20231101.en_27013754_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Established in 1978 by long-standing Hollywood Foreign Press Association member, Maureen Dragone, the Young Artist Association was the first organization to establish an awards ceremony specifically set to recognize and award the contributions of performers under the age of 21 in the fields of film, television, theater and music. |
20231101.en_27013754_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | William Moseley - The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - Walt Disney Pictures |
20231101.en_27013754_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Georgie Henley - The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - Walt Disney Pictures |
20231101.en_27013754_4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Bad News Bears - ParamountSeth Adkins, Ridge Canipe, Brandon Craggs, Jeffrey Davies, Timmy Deters, Carlos and Emmanuel Estrada, Troy Gentile, Kenneth "KC" Harris, Aman Johal, Carter Jenkins, Tyler Patrick Jones, Sammi Kane Kraft and Jeffrey TedmoriCheaper by the Dozen 2 - 20th Century Fox |
20231101.en_27013754_5 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Brent Kinsman, Shane Kinsman, Forrest Landis, Liliana Mumy, Piper Perabo, Kevin Schmidt, Jacob Smith, Alyson Stoner, Blake Woodruff and Morgan York |
20231101.en_27013754_6 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Drake Bell, Dean Collins, Miranda Cosgrove, Jennifer Habib, Jessica Habib, Miki Ishikawa, Lil' JJ, Tyler Patrick Jones, Brecken Palmer, Bridger Palmer, Danielle Panabaker, Ty Panitz, Slade Pearce, Haley Ramm, Nicholas Roget-King and Andrew Vo |
20231101.en_27013754_7 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ (tie) Marcos Henrique (Brazil) - 2 Filhos de Francisco - Globo Films★ (tie) Dablio Moreira (Brazil) - 2 Filhos de Francisco - Globo FilmsBarney Clark (England) - Oliver Twist - Runteam II Ltd. |
20231101.en_27013754_8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Evan Lee Dahl - Christopher Brennan Saves the World - Fresh Face PicturesCody Estes - See Anthony Run - Manpants Films |
20231101.en_27013754_9 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Mary Ann Springer - Cleats of Imminent Doom - Curious ProductionsAnna Friedman - The Braggart - David Andalman Productions |
20231101.en_27013754_10 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Michael Mitchell - Silver Bells - Hallmark ProductionsChristopher Plumley - The Metro Chase - Legend Family Films |
20231101.en_27013754_11 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Danielle Keaton - American Black Beauty - Fresh Water EntertainmentCourtney Jines - Silver Bells - Hallmark Productions |
20231101.en_27013754_12 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Carter Jenkins - Surface - NBCDylan and Cole Sprouse - The Suite Life of Zack & Cody - Disney Channel |
20231101.en_27013754_13 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Zoey 101 - NickelodeonSean Flynn Amir, Paul Butcher, Kristin Herrera, Victoria Justice, Christopher Massey, Alexa Nikolas, Erin Sanders, Jamie Lynn Spears and Matthew UnderwoodDarcy's Wild Life - Discovery Kids |
20231101.en_27013754_14 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Andrew Chalmers, Shannon Collis, Demetrius Joyette, Melanie Leishman, Sara Paxton and Kerry Michael Saxena |
20231101.en_27013754_15 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Dalmar Abuzeid, Sarah Barrable-Tishauer, John Bregar, Deanna Casaluce, Daniel Clark, Lauren Collins, Ryan Cooley, Marc Donato, Jake Epstein, Stacey Farber, Aubrey Graham, Jake Goldsbie, Shenae Grimes, Jamie Johnston, Shane Kippel, Andrea Lewis, Mike Lobel, Miriam McDonald, Melissa McIntyre, Daniel Morrison, Adamo Ruggiero and Cassie Steele |
20231101.en_27013754_16 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | Jordan Calloway, Bianca Collins, Emma Degerstedt, Dustin Ingram, Malese Jow, Carter Jenkins, Emma Roberts, Brandon Smith and Chelsea Tavares |
20231101.en_27013754_17 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Matthew Josten - Chicken Little - Walt Disney PicturesJake T. Austin - Go, Diego, Go! - Nickelodeon |
20231101.en_27013754_18 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Tajja Isen - Atomic Betty - Cartoon NetworkSarah Heinke - Strawberry Shortcake - Dic Entertainment |
20231101.en_27013754_19 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit - DreamWorks/AardmanHowl's Moving Castle - Buena Vista Pictures |
20231101.en_27013754_20 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27th%20Young%20Artist%20Awards | 27th Young Artist Awards | ★ The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - Walt Disney PicturesCinderella Man - Universal |
20231101.en_27013759_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | Ola Gorie (born 27 October 1937) is a Scottish jewellery designer and one of the founders of the modern craft movement in Scotland. |
20231101.en_27013759_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | Ola Gorie was born in Kirkwall, Orkney. Her mother was Minnie Gorie, her father Patrick Gorie; together her parents ran a long-established grocers and wine merchants, Kirkness & Gorie, in central Kirkwall. Despite growing up in a commercial environment, Ola decided to pursue an artistic career, and attended Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen. While there, she shared a flat with noted Orcadian painter Sylvia Wishart, leaving in 1960 as the first graduate of its jewellery department. |
20231101.en_27013759_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | Ola Gorie returned to Orkney where three jewellery shops in Kirkwall agreed to sell her designs. When she took over her own shop, success came quickly. Her early designs, the first to be originated in Orkney since Viking times, drew heavily on Orkney's Norse heritage, featuring images such as the Maes Howe Dragon, inspired by Viking graffiti in a Neolithic tomb. Her jewellery found quick acceptance both locally and, by the end of the sixties, across the country. Appreciation of it grew as part of the wider craft movement in Britain in general, and the Scottish Highlands in particular. Her work drew inspiration from Orkney's Norse, Pictish, Scottish and Celtic heritage and also from natural forms, and art history. Commissions for one-off pieces came from the Queen Mother, Liberty of London, the British Museum and the House of Commons. |
20231101.en_27013759_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | By the time of her retirement from business, in 1997, Ola Gorie employed as many as 55 staff, and her jewellery was exported around the world. The business is now run, on a smaller scale, by Ola Gorie's daughter, textile designer Ingrid Tait, and operates out of the same premises the family business has occupied since 1859. |
20231101.en_27013759_4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | In 1999, Ola Gorie was awarded an MBE in recognition of her services to the jewellery industry. Other awards include winner of the Scottish Gift of the Year in 1997 (shortlisted in 1998, 1999 and 2003) and runner up in 2000's Kayman Award. She lives in Orkney, and is involved in many artistic activities. |
20231101.en_27013759_5 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ola%20Gorie | Ola Gorie | In November 2010, the Orkney Museum launched a retrospective exhibition, 'Celebrating 50 Years of Ola Gorie'. It ran to the end of January 2011 and confirms her importance in contemporary Orcadian culture. The exhibition brought together many of her early and iconic designs, along with designs sketches, the tools of her craft and original artefacts from the museum's collection which had inspired her, including a 2nd-century AD brooch. Another ancient piece of jewellery, the Westness Brooch, was found in a Viking boat burial on the Orkney isle of Rousay. However, her jewellery extends far beyond the Orkney influence: she was an early admirer of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and helped revive his style. The natural world of seaweed, thistles and pearls have a place in the collection too. Among the cabinets of wax moulds, account books and relics of a career was a letter from Margaret Thatcher who admired a ring. |
20231101.en_27013778_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%20Nippon%20Professional%20Baseball%20season | 2010 Nippon Professional Baseball season | Note: All of the games that are played in the first two rounds of the Climax Series are held at the higher seed's home stadium. The team with the higher regular-season standing also advances if the round ends in a tie. |
20231101.en_27013791_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhamphomyia%20albidiventris | Rhamphomyia albidiventris | Rhamphomyia albidiventris is a species of dance flies, in the fly family Empididae. It is included in the subgenus Pararhamphomyia. It has a limited distribution. It has been recorded from Great Britain, Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Bosnia, Finland and central Russia. |
20231101.en_27013816_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soufri%C3%A8re%20Estate | Soufrière Estate | Soufrière Estate (jointly controlled with Diamond Estate), located on the Caribbean island of Saint Lucia, was originally established in 1713 as a estate granted to three Devaux brothers for services to King Louis XIV of France. Later on, mineral springs were discovered and were used as restorative baths by the French soldiers. In 1784, the Baron de Laborie, the French Governor of St Lucia, sent samples of the water to Paris for testing and it is believed to be good for rheumatism and skin complaints. |
20231101.en_27013816_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soufri%C3%A8re%20Estate | Soufrière Estate | In the wars following the French Revolution, the baths fell into disuse and it was not until the 1930s when Andre duBoulay, the owner of Soufrière and Diamond Estates restored the baths for his private use. When his daughter Joan Devaux took over the management of the estate in 1983, she opened it up to the public seeing the tourism potential of the estate. |
20231101.en_27013816_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soufri%C3%A8re%20Estate | Soufrière Estate | The Diamond Botanical Gardens (also known as the St. Lucia Botanical Gardens) is a area planted within the estate and includes Diamond Falls. There is a river running through the estate called Diamond River, it is black through the volcanic mud and there are mineral deposits on the river's banks. |
20231101.en_27013816_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soufri%C3%A8re%20Estate | Soufrière Estate | There are also nature trails as well as a watermill constructed in 1765. It was originally built to crush sugar cane, but more recently it was used to provide hydroelectric power for Soufrière. |
20231101.en_27013853_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudio%20Cafiero | Claudio Cafiero | Claudio Cafiero (born September 19, 1989) is an Italian professional football player who currently plays for S.S.D. Pomezia Calcio. |
20231101.en_27013874_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chyba | Chyba | Andrew Chyba, Green party candidate for South Wales West in 2011 National Assembly for Wales election |
20231101.en_27013874_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chyba | Chyba | Jiří Chyba, Czech paracyclist, competed in 2011 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships – Men's individual pursuit |
20231101.en_27013879_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regine%20Live%3A%20Songbird%20Sings%20the%20Classics | Regine Live: Songbird Sings the Classics | Regine Live: Songbird Sing the Classics is the first live album of singer-actress Regine Velasquez-Alcasid. It was released in 2000 in the Philippines, under Viva Records. The album was certified 6× platinum by PRIMA, denoting shipments of 200,000+ copies sold in Philippines. |
20231101.en_27013879_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regine%20Live%3A%20Songbird%20Sings%20the%20Classics | Regine Live: Songbird Sings the Classics | This album was recorded live from Velasquez's concert "Songbird Sings the Classics" at The Westin Philippine Plaza on October 6, 2000. |
20231101.en_27013879_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regine%20Live%3A%20Songbird%20Sings%20the%20Classics | Regine Live: Songbird Sings the Classics | In a review of the album, David Gonzales of AllMusic wrote: "Velasquez's voice is difficult to hear on the beginning of "Autumn Leaves", a problem which plagues other songs here, including "Sometime Somewhere", "If You Go Away", "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life", and "Run to You", among others. She sings in a very high, thin register in the beginning of many songs, and this probably contributes to the problem, but the technical mixing could have been better, too." |
20231101.en_27013879_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regine%20Live%3A%20Songbird%20Sings%20the%20Classics | Regine Live: Songbird Sings the Classics | 2 ("Ngayon at Kailanman", "Iduyan Mo", "Kailan", "Hangggang sa Dulo ng Walang Hanggan", "Kastilyong Buhangin") |
20231101.en_27013934_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloyd | Cloyd | Cloyd H. Marvin (1889–1969), longest serving president of George Washington University, and the then-youngest American university president |
20231101.en_27013937_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cofer | Cofer | James Erwin Cofer (born 1949), a former president of Missouri State University and University of Louisiana |
20231101.en_27013949_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio%20Campilongo | Antonio Campilongo | He played one season (1939/40, 10 games, 2 goals) in the Serie A for A.S. Roma. He also held Italian citizenship. |
20231101.en_27013951_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colombini | Colombini | Giovanni Colombini (Founder of the Congregation of Jesuati) (c. 1300–1367), Italian merchant, the founder of the Congregation of Jesuati |
20231101.en_27013959_0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | John Rice Irwin (December 11, 1930 – January 16, 2022) was an American cultural historian, and founder of the Museum of Appalachia in Norris, Tennessee. |
20231101.en_27013959_1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | His interest in history began at an early age, and was inspired by his grandparents to start a museum. He founded the Museum of Appalachia in 1968, which has since grown significantly in both its size and visitation. He was awarded several accolades and awards, and had eight different published books (seven of which are nationally and internationally distributed). |
20231101.en_27013959_2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | Irwin was born on December 11, 1930, in Union County, Tennessee. While he was an infant, Irwin and his family were forced to move because their land would be appropriated and flooded for the Norris Dam. After settling on another farm near Clinton, Tennessee, they were again forced to move for the development of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, in the early 1940s. They finally moved to a farm near Norris, Tennessee, where he would stay until he was 18. There, Irwin and his brother were taught how to farm, hunt, fish, and trap animals. |
20231101.en_27013959_3 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | In the late 1940s, Irwin served in the U.S. Army infantry. He completed his bachelor's degree at Lincoln Memorial University with majors in history and economics. He earned his master's degree in international law at the University of Tennessee. At the age of 31, he was elected superintendent of schools in Anderson County, Tennessee, becoming the youngest superintendent in Tennessee. Irwin was also good friends with writer Alex Haley, and inspired one of Haley's writings with his museum. He and his wife, Elizabeth McDaniel, were married from 1954 until her death in 2008. They had two children: Elaine Meyer and Karen Erickson (died 1999), and three grandchildren. In August 2009, he announced that he was leaving his position as owner of the museum. In an interview on August 28, 2009, Irwin stated: |
20231101.en_27013959_4 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | He lived his last years at Norris Health and Rehab Center. He died at a nursing home in Clinton, Tennessee on January 16, 2022, at the age of 91. |
20231101.en_27013959_5 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | Irwin's interest in human history was provoked by his grandparents' stories. His grandfather once advised him, "You ought to keep these old-timey things that belonged to our people and start you a little museum sometime." Eventually in the 1960s he took that advice to heart. At a public auction in the early 1960s, he realized that the sales transactions were separating the artifacts of the past from the stories that his grandparents told. A person attending the sale told him that he was going to make a coffee table from the old spinning wheel he had just purchased. Irwin said of this conversation, "I just plain hated the idea of that object being hauled to Terre Haute or Dayton and made into a table completely removed from the context of the region, and from the people who made it and used it." Meanwhile, he spent $4 at the auction to buy an old horse shoeing box that had been found in the Clinch River in the aftermath of the deadly Big Barren Creek Flood of 1916. In later years, he said that he bought it not for its value as an antique, but for the history it embodied. His collection grew from that beginning, as he began to travel around the countryside to find and "save the past" in the form of artifacts. |
20231101.en_27013959_6 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | In 1968, Irwin founded the Museum of Appalachia to house and display his growing collection. By 1980, the museum had grown so large that Irwin left his position as director of the Tennessee Appalachia Education Cooperative to devote all of his time to the museum. |
20231101.en_27013959_7 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | Although the museum started as only a small log building, as of 2010, it has grown to a village-farm complex, comprehending more than 35 original mountain structures, two large display buildings containing thousands of Appalachian artifacts, farm animals, and several gardens. The museum was converted to a non-profit organization in 2003 and in May 2007, the museum announced its formal association with the Smithsonian Institution's Affiliations Program. |
20231101.en_27013959_8 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Rice%20Irwin | John Rice Irwin | John Rice Irwin is generally known as the founder of the Museum of Appalachia. He was also the author of seven nationally and internationally distributed books. He lectured on the subject on Appalachian history throughout the eastern United States. In 1989, Irwin was one of 29 MacArthur Fellow grantees, which are provided to "extraordinary talented individuals." He was honored by the East Tennessee Historical Society in 1992 as one of nine East Tennesseans "whose accomplishments have distinguished them far beyond East Tennessee," and in 1993, he was awarded a Doctorate of Humane Letters from Cumberland College. In 1994, he was inducted into the Junior Achievement of East Tennessee's Business Hall of Fame. Six years later in 2000, he was the recipient of the annual Outstanding Educational Service to Appalachia Award. He was the 2008 recipient of the Trailblazer Award, and in 2009 was named to the Anderson County Hall of Fame. |
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