Recombee Public Scenario

By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
The First National Bank of Punta Gorda (also known as the Old Merchants Bank of Punta Gorda) was a bank headquartered in Punta Gorda, Florida. In 1985, it was acquired by First Florida Bank, which became part of Bank of America in 1999. On March 14, 1991, its branch location was added to the National Register of Historic Places. == References ==
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
Claude-Hélène Perrot (13 September 1928 – 16 July 2019) was a French historian and Africanist who specialized in the history of Côte d'Ivoire. She served as a professor of contemporary African history at the University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from 1983 to 1993. Perrot's main areas of research concerned the history of the Akan of Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana before colonization, mainly the Anyi and the Eotile; the use of oral tradition by historians; as well as relations between traditional African religions and political power.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
The Latke Who Couldn't Stop Screaming: A Christmas Story is a children's book written by Lemony Snicket and illustrated by Lisa Brown. An irate latke at Hanukkah escapes from being cooked in a hot frying pan. He runs into various Christmas symbols (such as Christmas lights, a candy cane and pine tree) who are all ignorant and uneducated about the customs of Hanukkah.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
The 16th Infantry Division was a formation of the Ottoman Turkish Army during the Balkan Wars and the First World War. == Formation == 33rd Infantry Regiment 47th Infantry Regiment 48th Infantry Regiment 125th Infantry Regiment == References == Bean, Charles (1941). Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918. Volume II (11th ed.). Brisbane: University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0702215864.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
Philip Moeller is a journalist and primary author of the "Get What's Yours" series of books published by Simon & Schuster. Moeller was a reporter for the Charlotte Observer and the Chicago Sun-Times, business editor for the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Baltimore Sun, and editor of The Hartford Business Journal. He later wrote for U.S.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
The arrondissement of Thann is a former arrondissement of France in the Haut-Rhin department in the Alsace region. In 2015 it was disbanded, and most of its communes were assigned to the new arrondissement of Thann-Guebwiller, some to the arrondissements of Mulhouse and Altkirch. It had 52 communes, and its population was 81,614 (2012). == Composition == The communes of the arrondissement of Thann, and their INSEE codes, were: == History == The arrondissement of Thann was created in 1919. It was disbanded in 2015.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
ORP Ślązak (Polish for Silesian) was a World War II Hunt-class destroyer. Initially laid down in 1940 for the Royal Navy as HMS Bedale, in 1942 she was commissioned by the Polish Navy. After World War II, she was leased to the Indian Navy in 1953, where she served as a training ship until 1976. She was scrapped in 1979. == History as ORP Ślązak == Ślazak was commissioned on 17 April 1942. During the Second World War she took part in 32 patrols and escorted 104 convoys. Ślązak was one of eight Hunt-class ships that took part in the Dieppe Raid.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
Salman Ebrahim is a citizen of Bahrain who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba. The Department of Defense reports that Al Khalifa was born on July 24, 1979, in Rifah, Bahrain.
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
Menus may be: the plural of "menu" (see Menu for use in restaurants, and Menu (computing) for use in user interfaces) Les Menus, a commune in France "Menus" (New Girl), an episode of the TV series Menus of Megara, ancient Greek athlete == See also == Menu (disambiguation)
By Anonymous (not verified), 11 July, 2024
Archmere Academy is a private Roman Catholic college preparatory school located in Claymont, Delaware, United States. 514 students were enrolled for the 2020–21 academic year. The academy is co-educational and is run independently within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington. == History == Archmere Academy was founded in 1932 by the Norbertine religious order, initially as an all-boys school. It began on the former estate of U.S. industrialist John J. Raskob, who lived there with his wife Helena and their 12 children until 1931.