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Credits adapted from Tidal.
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Gérard Carlier
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Gérard Carlier (1905–1975) was a German-born French screenwriter.
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He worked on several scripts for films starring the comedian Fernandel in the postwar era.
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Aoyama Kumano Shrine
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Aoyama Kumano Shrine is a kumano shrine in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan.
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Samuel August from Sevedstorp and Hanna i Hult
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Samuel August from Sevedstorp and Hanna i Hult (Swedish: "Samuel August från Sevedstorp och Hanna i Hult") is a book by Astrid Lindgren and deals with the love story of her parents Samuel August Erikson and Hanna Jonsson.
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At the age of thirteen Samuel August falls in love with the nine-year-old Hanna.
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Soon Samuel August leaves school and does not see Hannah again for quite a while.
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Until he is eighteen, Samuel August is working as a farmhand.
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But one day the vicarage Näs near Vimmerby is offered for lease and Samuel August becomes the new tenant of the vicarage.
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Over the next few years, Samuel rarely meets Hanna.
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At the age of 25, Samuel August watches Hanna at a festival.
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But he doesn't dare to speak to her.
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So many men are interested in Hanna and Samuel August doesn't believe that she would choose him.
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At a wedding, Hanna realizes that Samuel August is in love with her and invites Samuel August to go for a walk with her.
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Hanna promises to stitch a monogram on Samuels hat.
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After a few months have passed and Samuel August has not seen Hanna, Samuel August writes a letter to Hanna.
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Hanna replies, and they exchange letters until Samuel August unexpectedly meets Hanna again in Vimmerby and drinks tea with her.
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Later he asks Hanna if they could live together.
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Hanna replies that the two of them cannot decide this on their own, but at least she gives Samuel August the first kiss.
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Hanna hesitates a little before the wedding takes place on June 30, 1905.
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When Samuel August brings his wife to Näs a fortnight later, they are living there together for another 56 years.
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As long as he is alive, Samuel August mentions daily how much he loves his Hanna.
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The book is about the love story of Astrid Lindgren's parents.
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In Sweden, the book was first published in 1975 by Rabén & Sjögren.
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It was titled "Samuel August från Sevedstorp och Hanna i Hult".
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Later an audiobook was released which was read by the author Astrid Lindgren.
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The book has been translated into many languages, including German.
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Two of the essays from the book "Samuel August from Sevedstorp and Hanna i Hult" have also been translated into English.
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"Samuel August from Sevedstorp and Hanna i Hult" has been translated by Marlaine Delargy.
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The English version was published by the "Swedish Book Review" in their 2nd edition of their magazine in 2007.
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"I remember..." ("Minnes...") was translated by Patricia Crampton and first published in 1988 in the journal "" (57).
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In 1999 the book was chosen as the love story of the century in Sweden.
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Next to the Love story "Samuel August from Sevedstorp and Hanna i Hult" the Swedish Edition also includes a few other essays, for example "Det började i Kristins kök", in which Astrid Lindgren writes about her neighbour Kristin who read the first books to her and made Astrid Lindgren become interested in literature.
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In another chapter "Minnes..." (Let us remember) Lindgren is talking about her childhood, inspired by a poem from Harry Martinson.
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In 2015, in Sweden the essay "Luise Justine Mejer : en kärlekshistoria från 1700-talets Tyskland" was released as a book on its own by Novelix.
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It is about the German book "Ich war wohl klug, daß ich dich fand", which contains letters of Luise Mejer and Heinrich Christian Boie.
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Astrid Lindgren originally got the book from her German friend Luise Hartung and was impressed by the love story.
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Bendz
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Benz is a surname.
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Notable people with the surname include:
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Niels Florin
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Niels Florin (3 October 1892 – 17 August 1949) was a Danish weightlifter.
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He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1920 Summer Olympics.
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Mniaceae
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Mniaceae is a family of mosses.
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Genera in North America include:
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Rebecca Kilner
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Rebecca M. Kilner FRES is a British evolutionary biologist, and a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Cambridge.
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Kilner studied a BA in Zoology at the University of Oxford in 1992, and received a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology at the University of Cambridge in 1996.
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She worked as a Junior Research Fellow at Magdelene College, Cambridge, and in 1998 was a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellow; she was appointed Lecturer at the University of Cambridge in 2005 and a Reader in 2009.
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In 2013, Kilner was appointed Professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Cambridge, and in 2019, Kilner was made a Director of the Cambridge University Museum of Zoology.
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Kilner's research looks at how social evolution can generate biodiversity and much of her work looks at burying beetles (Silphidae) and birds.
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Her earlier research looked at birds that are brood parasites, which take advantage of other species' nests and parental care.
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In particular she found that cuckoos are able to produce eggs that mimic those of their host bird species.
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Kilner found that cowbirds, which are also brood parasites, do not try to outcompete the host chicks that they hatch next to (as with cuckoos) and instead cowbirds do better when the host chicks remain.
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Parental care is common in burying beetles.
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Kilner's work on burying beetles has shown that beetle parents can produce a slime mixture that can influence bacteria communities on the meat they provide for their larval offspring; the bacteria aid digestion in the beetle stomach and prevent decomposition of the meat, so that beetle larvae grow larger and healthier.
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She also examined what happens when parents are prevented from caring for larvae over 30 successive generations.
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She found that the beetle larvae evolved larger jaws to help them feed from carcasses better without help.
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She also found that motherless beetle larvae were less competitive between each other and had higher survival rates than when mothered larvae had to cope alone.
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Her research with burying beetles has also shown that they can form symbiotic relationships with mites.
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Smaller beetles which lose out in fights with larger beetles can benefit from the phoretic mite "Poecilochirus carabi," which helps them to warm up and enables them to win contests with other beetles for a carcass food source.
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William Trego Webb
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William Trego Webb (24 August 1847 – 8 January 1934) was a British educationist and author who taught English Literature in various colleges in Bengal in India in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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A prolific writer, he also produced a number of English language grammar books for Indian students with fellow-academic F. J. Rowe.
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William Trego Webb was born in Ipswich in 1847, the eldest son of Frances Webb (1809–1883) and the Rev.
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James Webb (1803-1881), a Baptist minister of Stoke Green in Ipswich.
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He attended Ipswich School and matriculated at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge on 26 March 1866, taking his B.A.
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in 1870 and gaining his M.A.
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in 1874.
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He was an Assistant Master at La Martiniere College in Calcutta from 1870 to 1875.
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He entered the Indian Education Service in Bengal in 1875, and was Professor of English Literature at Dacca College from 1875 to 1878.
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Webb was Professor of English Literature at the Presidency College in Calcutta from 1878 to 1892.
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While working for the Bengal Education Department Webb collaborated with F. J. Rowe to produce a number of English grammar books for Indian students.
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Webb married Isabel Mary "née" Aldis (1864-1952) on 27 September 1886 at St. George's church in Walsall in Stafford and with her had four children including Captain Noel William Ward Webb (1896–1917), a British World War I flying ace credited with fourteen aerial victories.
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He was the first pilot to use the Sopwith Camel to claim an enemy aircraft.
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He also claimed the life of German ace "Leutnant" Otto Brauneck for his ninth victory.
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Another son was Lieutenant Paul Frederic Hobson Webb (1889-1918), who was killed in action on 7 July 1918 while serving in No.
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27 Squadron RAF.
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His daughter Phillis Emily Cunnington was a physician, costume collector, historian and author.
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William Trego Webb died in January 1934 in his cottage The Nothe at West Mersea in Essex.
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In his will he left £30,724 15s to his widow Isabel Mary Webb.
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John F. Gonge
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John F. Gonge (born November 5, 1921) was a lieutenant general in the United States Air Force.
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He was served as vice commander-in-chief of the Military Airlift Command from 1975 to 1977.
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Kees Tijman
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Kees Tijman (12 June 1897 – 28 September 1954) was a Dutch weightlifter.
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He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1920 Summer Olympics.
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Guillermo Tegue
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Guillermo Alejandro Tegue Caicedo (born 6 February 2000) is a Colombian footballer who currently plays as a defender for Independiente Medellín.
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Lionel De Haes
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Lionel De Haes was a Belgian weightlifter.
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He competed in the men's featherweight event at the 1920 Summer Olympics.
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Juniso Kumano Shrine
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Juniso Kumano Shrine is a Kumano shrine in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.
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List of television awards
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This list of television awards is a index to articles on notable awards that are given to television shows in different countries and categories.
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