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Guy of Anderlecht
Belgian Christian saint
Sixth Army
active United States Army formation
National Public Safety Commission
Japanese government commission
Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance
American retirement system
list of infectious diseases
Wikimedia list article
Neil Sheehan
American writer, historian, soldier (1936-2021)
XVIII Airborne Corps
corps of the United States Army
J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur
French writer (1735-1813)
Salomé
1923 film by Charles Bryant
Litae
In Greek mythology, Litae (; Ancient Greek: Λιταί means 'prayers') were personifications of prayers offered up in repentance and were ministers of the god Zeus. They were described as hobbling, old women. Their opposite number was Ate, the spirit of delusion and folly, in whose wake they followed.
Michael Augustine Corrigan
Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York (1839–1902)
Great Bible
English Bible translation, published in 1539; authorized by Henry VIII of England
William Colgate
soap manufacturer and philanthropist (2783-1857)
Lucy Aikin
British feminist historian and poet (1781-1864)
George Cassander
Flemish theologian
1935 Labor Day hurricane
Category 5 Atlantic hurricane in 1935
Explorer 35
space probe
United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps
federal uniformed service of the U.S. Public Health Service
I Corps
corps of the United States Army
7th Infantry Division
active US Army formation
Lyman Hall
American physician (1724-1790)
USS Ticonderoga
1981 Ticonderoga-class cruiser
VII Corps
formation of the United States Army (1918–19, 1921-27, 1941–46, 1950–92)
National Security Strategy
publication
Saint Marcouf
thumb|Marcouf giving the cure to the king. Marculf (in French Marcoult, Marcouf, Marcoul or Marcou) (d. 558) was the abbot at Nantus in the Cotentin. He is regarded as a saint and is associated with the healing of scrofula.
Skynet
series of British military communications satellites
Ebeye Island
island in the Marshall Islands
William Freeman Vilas
Union Army officer and politician (1840-1908)
Konrad von Marburg
Murdered German priest
demographics of Angola
demographics of country
Catholic Diocese of Richmond
Catholic Diocese of Richmond, United States of America
1938 New England hurricane
Category 5 Atlantic hurricane in 1938
Maximin of Trier
4th-century Bishop of Trier
John Banim
Irish writer (1798–1842)
Winifred
7th-century Welsh saint
Geography of Guyana
Overview of the geography of Guyana
bremelanotide
USS Sampson
2006 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer
Operation Argus
Series of US nuclear weapon and missile tests
Army Ballistic Missile Agency
US agency
USS Stout
1992 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer
Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse
diocese of the Catholic Church in USA
demographics of Ghana
Population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, religious affiliations of Ghana
Federico Santa María Technical University
Chilean university
36th Infantry Division
active United States Army National Guard formation
William Ward, 2nd Earl of Dudley
British politician (1867-1932)
Patrick Hamilton
Scottish clergyman and martyr; (1504–1528)
Wisconsin State Assembly
lower house of the Wisconsin Legislature
Mamre
Mamre (; ), full name "Oaks of Mamre", refers to an ancient religious site originally focused on a single holy tree growing "since time immemorial" at Hebron in Canaan. It is best known from the biblical story of Abraham and the three visitors. He pitched his tents is known as the oak or terebinth of Mamre. Modern scholars have identified four sites near Hebron which, in different historical periods, could have been successively known as Mamre: Khirbet Nimra, also known as Ayn Nimreh, (a little excavated Persian and Hellenistic period site, a hypothetical identification, not proven by any arch
Poena
In Greek mythology, Poena or Poine () is the spirit of punishment and the attendant of punishment to Nemesis, the goddess of divine retribution. Some depictions are of a single being, and some depictions are of multiple beings—in the plural, the name is Poenai (); the Poenai are akin to the Erinyes.
Tropical Storm Allison
Atlantic tropical storm in 2001
free-space optical communication
communication using light sent through free space
National Education Association
US teachers' trade union
Ardglass
thumb|right|250px|Jordan's Castle, 2007 thumb|right|250px|Bathing house
transport in North Korea
The transportation systems available in North Korea.
David Franklin Houston
American academic, businessman and politician (1866-1940)
Sisters of Mercy
Roman Catholic institute of religious sisters
military history of the United States
history of all of the United States military involvements
City Hall
former New York City IRT Lexington Avenue Line subway station
Reference Daily Intake
quantity of nutrient