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5599114
Nick Mondo
Q1364500
en
Matthew Timothy Burns (born March 28, 1980), better known by his ring name "Sick" Nick Mondo, is a retired American professional wrestler. He is currently signed to All Elite Wrestling (AEW) as a director. Since his in-ring retirement in 2003, he has become a filmmaker, actor and stuntman. Burns is best known for his appearances with Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW). He was known throughout his career for his willingness to take extremely dangerous bumps, such as being hit with a weed whacker, getting thrown into a table covered with barbed wire, slammed from a distance of 40 feet onto light tubes and concrete and other ultraviolent spots. In 2004, Burns was inducted into CZW's Hall of Fame.
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5599156
ADT Championship
Q4651204
en
The ADT Championship was a women's professional golf tournament on the U.S.-based LPGA Tour. The season-ending event on the tour, it became the LPGA Playoffs at The ADT from 2006 through 2008.
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5598946
Junior Osborne
Q10379778
en
Junior Osborne (born 12 February 1988) is an English footballer who plays as a full back or centre back for Hendon. Osborne started his career at hometown club Watford and made his first team debut whilst still a member of the club's academy. Aged 17, he started against West Ham United on the final day of the 2004–05 Championship season. Having made two more appearances for Watford in 2005–06, he was sent on loan to Conference side Kidderminster Harriers in February 2006, making three appearances. He was released by Watford in August 2008, having struggled with three separate major ACL knee injuries during his time at the club, and joined Aldershot Town on 10 September. He played eight times for the League Two club up to 1 November 2008, but none thereafter as he suffered a 4 ACL knee injury and he was released in late December. After a brief spell with Wealdstone between January and July 2010, Osborne again had issues with his knees and took a break from the game. Osborne then played in Northwood's friendly win over Brentford XI on 30 July 2011, and played in their first league game of the campaign away against Ashford Town on 13 August 2011. Having also participated in Northwood's home game versus Daventry Town on 20 August, Osborne's signing was confirmed on 21 August. After signing for Northwood, Osborne impressed with a number of outstanding displays, but while playing against Sittingbourne in the FA Trophy preliminary round on 8 October 2011, he was taken off after injuring his knee yet again - the sixth time he had suffered such a serious injury in quick succession. In early 2012, Osborne announced his intention to retire from football having suffered another set back with injury. In total, Osborne played nine games for Northwood, seven of them in the league. After some six years out of football, Osborne made a surprise return in the summer of 2018 by signing for Hendon. He played there for three months before joining Kings Langley. He re-joined Hendon in March 2019.
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459 }, { "uri": "Q48862", "surfaceform": "Aldershot Town", "type": "ORG", "start": 649, "end": 663 }, { "uri": "Q48837", "surfaceform": "League Two", "type": "ORG", "start": 711, "end": 721 }, { "uri": "Q9437", "surfaceform": "Wealdstone", "type": "ORG", "start": 869, "end": 879 }, { "uri": "Q6139010", "surfaceform": "Northwood", "type": "ORG", "start": 1007, "end": 1016 }, { "uri": "Q19571", "surfaceform": "Brentford", "type": "ORG", "start": 1037, "end": 1046 }, { "uri": "Q4805011", "surfaceform": "Ashford Town", "type": "ORG", "start": 1134, "end": 1146 }, { "uri": "Q5230301", "surfaceform": "Daventry Town", "type": "ORG", "start": 1223, "end": 1236 }, { "uri": "Q5213294", "surfaceform": "Sittingbourne", "type": "ORG", "start": 1410, "end": 1423 }, { "uri": "Q1046509", "surfaceform": "FA Trophy", "type": "EVE", "start": 1431, "end": 1440 }, { "uri": "Q4497224", "surfaceform": "Hendon", "type": "ORG", "start": 1909, "end": 1915 }, { "uri": "Q6412944", "surfaceform": "Kings Langley", 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"2008-11-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "1 November 2008", "type": "DATE", "start": 733, "end": 748 }, { "uri": "2010-07-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "July 2010", "type": "DATE", "start": 900, "end": 909 }, { "uri": "2011-07-30T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "30 July 2011", "type": "DATE", "start": 1053, "end": 1065 }, { "uri": "2011-08-13T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "13 August 2011", "type": "DATE", "start": 1150, "end": 1164 }, { "uri": "2011-10-08T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "8 October 2011", "type": "DATE", "start": 1462, "end": 1476 }, { "uri": "2012-01-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "2012", "type": "DATE", "start": 1614, "end": 1618 }, { "uri": "2018-01-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "2018", 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5599205
FC Tirol Innsbruck
Q2387559
en
FC Tirol Innsbruck was an Austrian association football club from Innsbruck, Tyrol which existed between 1993 and 2002, when bankruptcy was declared.
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5599209
Montague Wilmot
Q6904164
en
Montague Wilmot (died May 23, 1766) was an 18th-century British colonial Governor of Nova Scotia.
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5599146
Zia Fariduddin Dagar
Q8071287
en
Zia Fariduddin Dagar (15 June 1932 – 8 May 2013) was an Indian classical vocalist belonging to the Dhrupad tradition, the oldest existing form of north Indian classical music (Hindustani classical music). He was part of the Dagar family of musicians. He taught at the Dhrupad Kendra in Bhopal with his elder brother Zia Mohiuddin Dagar. He also taught as a visiting professor up to the time of the Babri mosque riots. After the riots, he decided to live at the gurukul of his brother Zia Mohiuddin Dagar at Palaspe near Panvel. He was awarded the 1994 Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in Hindustani music-Vocal by Sangeet Natak Akademi. Later
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5599148
Southern Tagalog Arterial Road
Q7570532
en
The Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (also known as the STAR Tollway, Calabarzon Expressway, and Apolinario Mabini Superhighway) is a two-to-four-lane expressway in the province of Batangas in the Philippines. It is operated by STAR Infrastructure Development Corporation (STAR – IDC). The expressway is a component of Expressway 2 (E2) of the Philippine expressway network, which also includes the South Luzon Expressway and Skyway. The expressway starts at the interchange with the Pan-Philippine Highway (also known as the "Maharlika Highway") and the South Luzon Expressway in Santo Tomas and runs southward, near Diversion Road, to Batangas City. It passes through Malvar, Tanauan, Lipa, San Jose, and Ibaan. The expressway was opened on 2001, with its first segment built between Santo Tomas and Lipa. From 2008, it was extended toward Batangas City, and from 2010, the South Luzon Expressway is connected to STAR Tollway, further shortening travel time between Manila and Batangas. The Lipa – Batangas City segment was a two-lane expressway until an addition of a second roadway between Lipa and the Ibaan-Batangas City boundary was opened in 2014. Damage on a bridge in the Ibaan – Batangas City boundary caused by Typhoon Nina (Nock-ten) required the closure of the Ibaan – Batangas City segment for bridge repairs, and diverting traffic to the parallel national roads. With increasing traffic demand in the Batangas City – Bauan area and the Batangas Bay area, proposals to extend the expressway are laid out to decongest the existing routes through those areas. Two projects are proposed to extend the expressway to barangay Pinamucan, within Batangas City, and to the municipality of Bauan. Like the North Luzon Expressway and SLEX before the construction of Skyway Stage 3, STAR Tollway is separate from the SLEX network despite being connected with SLEX since 2010.
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5599303
Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate
Q2505402
en
Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, abbreviated as DHEA sulfate or DHEA-S, also known as androstenolone sulfate, is an endogenous androstane steroid that is produced by the adrenal cortex. It is the 3β-sulfate ester and a metabolite of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) that circulates in far greater relative concentrations. The steroid is hormonally inert and is instead an important neurosteroid and neurotrophin.
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5599330
Sensitivity and specificity
Q3808900
en
Sensitivity and specificity are statistical measures of the performance of a binary classification test that are widely used: *Sensitivity (True Positive rate) measures the proportion of positives that are correctly identified (i.e. the proportion of those who have some condition (affected) who are correctly identified as having the condition). *Specificity (True Negative rate) measures the proportion of negatives that are correctly identified (i.e. the proportion of those who do not have the condition (unaffected) who are correctly identified as not having the condition). The terms “true positive”, “false positive”, “true negative”, and “false negative” refer to the result of a test and the correctness of the classification. For example, if the condition is a disease, “true positive” means “correctly diagnosed as diseased”, “false positive” means “incorrectly diagnosed as diseased”, “true negative” means “correctly diagnosed as not diseased”, and “false negative” means “incorrectly diagnosed as not diseased”. Thus, if a test's sensitivity is 97% and its specificity is 92%, its rate of false negatives is 3% and its rate of false positives is 8%. In a diagnostic test, sensitivity is a measure of how well a test can identify true positives. Sensitivity can also be referred to as the recall, hit rate, or true positive rate. It is the percentage, or proportion, of true positives out of all the samples that have the condition (true positives and false negatives). The sensitivity of a test can help to show how well it can classify samples that have the condition. In a test, specificity is a measure of how well a test can identify true negatives. Specificity is also referred to as selectivity or true negative rate, and it is the percentage, or proportion, of the true negatives out of all the samples that do not have the condition (true negatives and false positives). In a "good" test (one that attempts to identify with precision people who have the condition), the false positives should be very low. That is, people who are identified as having a condition should be highly likely to truly have the condition. This is because people who are identified as having a condition (but do not have it, in truth) may be subjected to: more testing (which could be expensive); stigma (e.g. HIV positive test); anxiety (e.g., I'm sick...I might die). For all testing, both diagnostic and screening, there is a trade-off between sensitivity and specificity. Higher sensitivities will mean lower specificities and vice versa. The terms "sensitivity" and "specificity" were introduced by American biostatistician Jacob Yerushalmy in 1947.
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5599251
Amos Doolittle
Q4747853
en
Amos Doolittle (May 18, 1754 – January 30, 1832) was an American engraver and silversmith, known as "The Revere of Connecticut." His engravings included portraits and maps, made in his New Haven, Connecticut studio. He became famous for his four engravings depicting the Battles of Lexington and Concord, which were based on his first-hand reconnaissance of the battlefield.
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5599165
Georg Wiegner
Q101157
en
Georg Wiegner (April 20, 1883 – April 14, 1936) was a colloid chemist. He was born in Leipzig and died in Zurich. Georg Wiegner studied natural sciences at the University of Leipzig, and received a doctorate in 1906. He was an assistant to Wilhelm Fleischmann at the University of Göttingen from 1907. He was appointed professor of agricultural chemistry at the ETH Zurich in 1913, where he remained until the year of his death, in 1933. He was responsible for seminal discoveries in coagulation and ion exchange. His group at the ETH strongly influenced ecological pedology in Switzerland. The group who worked with him included Hermann Gessner (1897–1981), Hans Jenny (1899–1992) and Hans Pallmann (1903–1965). His group also influenced the work of Max Düggeli, who had a major influence on soil biology in Switzerland.
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5599331
Patrina loukoumia
Q7147967
en
Patrina loukoumia or loukoumia Patron (Greek "Λουκουμια Πατρών") is Turkish Delight ("lukum") produced in Patras, Greece. At the early 20th century, there was one major producer, the "Aggelopouloi Bros" company. The company closed in the early 1990s. The "Aggelopouloi Bros" were the birthplace of the long tradition of Patrina Loukoumia. In 1916, a young man, Vassilios Manoussos (1900–1986) moved to Patras from a nearby village to work for "Aggelopouloi Bros" and learn to make loukoumi. He started producing his own in 1925 and sold it in the streets, or by visiting confectionery shops, door to door. After World War II, he started making chalk, much in need for new schools, but soon moved back to making loukoumia. The family later moved to a small warehouse and then to a bigger one in Pantanassis Street, in the centre of Patras. In the 1950s, a new and larger factory was built in Agyia. The company was named V. Manoussos & Sons (Β. Μανούσος & Υιοί). Later, it started using the trademark "Achaiki" (Αχαϊκή) 'of Achaia'. Vassilios Manoussos introduced , bite-sized pieces remaining from cutting and packing loukoumi. These cuttings were usually melted into the next loukoumi batch, but now they represent more than 30% of all loukoumi sales. Boukies (μπουκιές) literally mean "small bites" or "nuggets". Manoussos also produced "Rahat" brand loukoumi for the Gloria company. Patrina Loukoumia come in three original colours and flavours: red with rose flavour, white with mastic flavour, and green with bergamot flavour. Today there is a variety of new flavours, of fruits, and liqueurs. Manoussos added other products: koufeta (Dragée), vanilla sweet, gum candies (valda type), and other sugared products (like mnimosinou candies). The company was inherited by Vassilios's sons, and ceased operations in 2000. Achaiki was the first Greek producer of "loukoumia" that owned a web page showcasing its products.
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5599317
Giuseppe d'Annibale
Q2254618
en
Giuseppe d'Annibale (22 September 1815 – 18 July 1892) was a cardinal and theologian. He was appointed professor in the Seminary of Rieti and later vicar-general of the diocese. He was preconized Titular Bishop of Caryste by Pope Leo XIII on 12 August 1881, was created Cardinal-Priest of Santi Bonifacio e Alessio on 11 February 1889, and became Prefect of the Congregation of Indulgences. His treatise on moral theology is entitled "Summula theologiae moralis" (Milan, 1881–1883). Another work, a commentary on the Constitution "Apostolicae Sedis" (Rieti, 1880), is also valuable to theologians and canonists.
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5599347
2006 Clipsal 500 Adelaide
Q4605976
en
The 2006 Clipsal 500 Adelaide was the first round of the 2006 V8 Supercar Championship Series. It took place from 23 to 26 March 2006 and was the eighth in a sequence of "Adelaide 500" events for V8 Supercars to be held at the Adelaide Parklands Circuit in Adelaide, South Australia.
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5599404
Bashir Hameed
Q2886764
en
Bashir Hameed (born James Dixon York on December 1, 1940; died August 30, 2008) was a member of the Black Panther Party and the Black Liberation Army. York was born December 1, 1940 in Elizabeth, New Jersey. It was in 1968 while living in Oakland, California that York joined the Black Panther Party. He returned to New Jersey in 1969 to reorganize the Jersey City Branch of the BPP as Deputy Chairman. In 1974 York was serving a two-to-three-year sentence at Trenton State Prison for assaulting a police officer when he escaped during a furlough to visit a sick relative. He was later recaptured and served out the remainder of that sentence.
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5599425
Ewerthon
Q528590
en
Ewerthon Henrique de Souza (born 10 June 1981) is a Brazilian former professional footballer who played as a centre forward or right winger. He was best known for his pace, trickery and long shots, and played for clubs in Brazil, Germany, Spain, Russia and Qatar. He made seven appearances for the Brazil national team and was selected for the 2001 Copa América and the 2003 CONCACAF Gold Cup, finishing as runner-up in the latter. Three years after his retirement, The Versed wrote a report in 2017 about Ewerthon: "he was a forgotten entity on the continent, but for a while at the start of the millennium, he looked destined for the top. Sadly, as is the case with a fair number of South American migrants, he faded into footballing obscurity".
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5599368
Peary caribou
Q1606402
en
The Peary caribou ("Rangifer tarandus pearyi") is a subspecies of caribou found in the High Arctic islands of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories in Canada. They are the smallest of the North American caribou, with the females weighing an average of and the males . In length the females average and the males . Like other caribou, both the males and females have antlers. The males grow their antlers from March to August and the females from June to September, and in both cases the velvet is gone by October. The coat of the caribou is white and thick in the winter. In the summer it becomes short and darker, almost slate-grey in colour. The coat is made up of hollow hair which helps to trap warmer air and insulate the caribou. The males become sexually mature after two years and the females after three years. Breeding is in the fall and depends on the female having built up sufficient fat reserves. The gestation period last for seven to eight months and one calf is produced. Peary caribou feed on most of the available grasses, Cyperaceae (sedges), lichen and mushrooms. In particular they seem to enjoy the purple saxifrage and in summer their muzzles become purple from the plants. Their hooves are sharp and shaped like a shovel to enable them to dig through the snow in search of food. The caribou rarely travel more than from their winter feeding grounds to the summer ones. They are able to outrun the Arctic wolf, their main predator, and are good swimmers. They usually travel in small groups of no more than twelve in the summer and four in the winter. The Peary caribou population has dropped from above 40,000 in 1961 to about 700 in 2009. During this period, the number of days with above freezing temperatures has increased significantly, resulting in ice layers in the snow pack. These ice layers hinder foraging and are the likely cause for dramatic drops in caribou population in the future. The Peary caribou, called "tuktu" in Inuinnaqtun/Inuktitut, and written as "ᕐᑯᑦᓯᑦᑐᒥ ᑐᒃᑐ" in Inuktitut syllabics, is a major food source for the Inuit and was named after the American explorer Robert Peary.
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5599349
Jacques Baron
Q3158194
en
Jacques Baron (1905–1986) was a French surrealist poet whose first collection of poems was published in "Aventure" in 1921. Although he was initially involved with the Dada movement, he became a founding member of the Surrealist movement following his meeting with André Breton in 1921, and contributed to "La Révolution surréaliste". In 1927, like many of his contemporaries, Baron joined the Cercle Communiste Démocratique. Although fascinated by dream-like states of the nomadic unconscious and other imaginary worlds of the "marvelous", a dispute with Breton in 1929 got him expelled from the movement, and prompted him to contribute to "Un Cadavre", an anti-Breton pamphlet. After the break with Surrealism, Baron became associated with Georges Bataille and "Documents", in which he published a short essay on "Crustaceans for the Critical Dictionary" (1929, issue 6), an article on the sculptor Jacques Lipchitz (1930, issue 1), and a poem dedicated to Picasso, "Flames" (1930, issue 3). He later collaborated on a number of reviews such as "Le Voyage en Grèce", "La Critique Sociale" and "Minotaure". Baron also wrote a novel, "Charbon de mer" (1935), a mémoire, "L’An 1 du Surréalisme" (1969), and a collection of poems, "L’Allure poétique" (1973).
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5599518
Jade String Quartet
Q6121377
en
Jade String Quartet is a Singapore-based professional string quartet. The leader and founder of the Jade String Quartet is renowned Singaporean violinist Lynnette Seah. This is a list of members of the Jade String Quartet: * First violin: Lynnette Seah * Second violin: Sui Jing Jing * Viola: Yang Shi Li * Violoncello: Chan Wei Shing The Jade String Quartet toured China in 2001, and has given numerous successful performances in Singapore, China, Hong Kong and Indonesia. The quartet performs regularly in the region.
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5599510
Lewis Hayden
Q6536673
en
Lewis Hayden (December 2, 1811 – April 7, 1889) escaped slavery in Kentucky with his family and escaped to Canada. He established a school for African Americans before moving to Boston, Massachusetts to aid in the abolition movement. There he became an abolitionist, lecturer, businessman, and politician. Before the American Civil War, he and his wife Harriet Hayden aided numerous fugitive slaves on the Underground Railroad, often sheltering them at their house. Hayden was elected in 1873 as a Republican representative from Boston to the Massachusetts state legislature. He helped found numerous black lodges of Freemasons. Located on the north side of Beacon Hill, the Lewis and Harriet Hayden House has been designated a National Historic Site on the Black Heritage Trail in Boston.
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5599440
Surinder Kaur
Q422838
en
Surinder Kaur (25 November 1929 – 14 June 2006) was an Indian singer and songwriter. While she mainly sang Punjabi folk songs, where she is credited for pioneering and popularising the genre, Kaur also recorded songs as a playback singer for Hindi films between 1948 and 1952. For her contributions to punjabi music, she earned the sobriquet Nightingale of Punjab, the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1984, and the Padma Shri in 2006. In a career spanning nearly six decades, her repertoire included Punjabi Sufi Kafis of Bulleh Shah and verses by contemporary poets like Nand Lal Noorpuri, Amrita Pritam, Mohan Singh and Shiv Kumar Batalvi giving memorable songs like, "Maavan 'te dheean", "Jutti kasuri", "Madhaniyan", "Ehna akhiyan 'ch pavan kiven kajra" and "Ghaman di raat". In time her wedding songs, most notably "Lathe di chadar", "Suhe ve cheere waleya" and "Kaala doria", have become an indelible part of the Punjabi culture. Kaur was married to Joginder Singh Sodhi, a professor at the Delhi University. The couple had three daughters, the eldest of whom is also a Punjabi folk singer. Kaur died in New Jersey in 2006 following a prolonged illness.
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5599513
RalliSport Challenge 2
Q2525853
en
RalliSport Challenge 2 is a 2004 rally racing video game, and the sequel to the 2002 "RalliSport Challenge". This game contains new features such as a cockpit cameras and ability to change car at the last moment. However, stats like total horsepower and number of gears have been eliminated from the car selection screen. Cars are split up into five categories with two subcategories each plus "Classic" cars. There are four paint schemes on each car and drivers must drive 31, 87, and 249 miles before unlocking a new one. By winning all championships in the career mode, all paint schemes for all cars are unlocked.
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5599561
Federation CJA
Q3091412
en
Federation CJA is a Canadian Jewish organization that raises and distributes funds by facilitating and overseeing the delivery of services and programs. The overall goals of Federation CJA, in Montreal, Canada, Israel and the Jewish world are: * Caring for those who are vulnerable and in need * Ensuring Jewish vibrancy and a Jewish future * Representing and defending our communal interests * Tikun Olam (working on issues affecting wider society)
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5599551
Peter Hubert Evermode Backx
Q7174765
en
Peter Hubert Evermode Backx (1805–1868) was a 19th-century abbot of Tongerlo Abbey, in Belgium.
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5599570
David William Bacon
Q5241105
en
David William Bacon (November 5, 1813 – 1874) was the first Roman Catholic bishop of Portland, Maine.
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5599520
House R 128
Q5913761
en
House R 128 (Sobek House) is a modernist single-family house in Stuttgart, Germany, built by architect Werner Sobek in 1999/2000. The house features a modular and recyclable design, is completely glazed and has no interior dividing walls. It is computerized and meets its own energy requirements completely.
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5599607
Chanonry of Ross
Q5072569
en
Castle Chanonry of Ross, also known as Seaforth Castle, was located in the town of Fortrose, to the north-east of Inverness, on the peninsula known as the Black Isle, Highland, Scotland. Nothing now remains of the castle. The castle was also known as Canonry or Chanonrie of Ross, the former county.
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5599645
Fritz Feigl
Q214308
en
Fritz Feigl (15 May 1891 – 23 January 1971) was a Jewish Austrian-born chemist. He taught at the University of Brazil.
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5599591
Raymond Polin
Q3421099
en
Raymond Polin (July 7, 1910, Briançon, Hautes-Alpes – February 8, 2001) was a French philosopher. He taught at the Paris University (since 1961). He was the president of the University of Paris from 1976 to 1981.
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5599698
United States Penitentiary, Allenwood
Q1238101
en
The United States Penitentiary, Allenwood (USP Allenwood) is a high security United States federal prison in Pennsylvania. It is part of the Allenwood Federal Correctional Complex (FCC Allenwood) and is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice. FCC Allenwood is located on US Route 15 in White Deer, PA, approximately halfway between the cities of Williamsport and Lewisburg and approximately north of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the state capital.
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5599668
Jonathan Hornblower
Q920078
en
Jonathan Hornblower (Chacewater, 5 July 1753 – Penryn, 23 February 1815) was a British pioneer of steam power.
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5599718
Why You Wanna
Q4019660
en
"Why You Wanna" is a song by American rapper T.I., released as the second official single from his fourth album "King" (2006). It samples a slowed down keyboard chord from Crystal Waters' "Gypsy Woman (She's Homeless)". The chorus also interpolates Q-Tip's vocals from "Got 'Til It's Gone" with Janet Jackson and "Find a Way" with his group A Tribe Called Quest.
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5599717
Gaildorf
Q81811
en
Gaildorf is a town in the district of Schwäbisch Hall, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is located on the river Kocher, 13 km south of Schwäbisch Hall. Gaildorf is the approximate center of the Limpurger Land district, formerly a county of the Holy Roman Empire ruled by the counts Schenk von Limpurg until their extinction in 1713, thereafter inherited by a number of female heirs, and mediatized to the Kingdom of Württemberg in 1806.
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5599728
Addiko Bank
Q27926559
en
The Addiko Bank is an Austrian banking group with numerous cross-border activities in the Alps-Adriatic region. The group is active in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro. However, the bank itself did not have a banking license in Austria, which now owned by Austrian Anadi Bank, another bank that was spun off Hypo Alpe-Adria-Bank International AG.
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5599734
Echyridella menziesii
Q3017763
en
Echyridella menziesii, the New Zealand freshwater mussel, also known by its Māori names kākahi, kāeo, and torewai, is a species of freshwater mussel endemic to New Zealand. "E. menziesii" is an aquatic bivalve mollusc in the family Unionidae, the river mussels. They were an important food source for the Māori, but like many freshwater mussels worldwide, are now endangered by pollution and eutrophication of rivers, and the introduction of new species of fish leading to actions via the Treaty of Waitangi claims process.
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5599789
Stapled hemorrhoidopexy
Q1550393
en
Stapled hemorrhoidopexy, is a surgical procedure that involves the cutting and removal of Anal Hemorhoidal Vascular Cushion whose function is to help to seal stools and create continence. Procedure also removes abnormally enlarged hemorrhoidal tissue, followed by the repositioning of the remaining hemorrhoidal tissue back to its normal anatomic position. Severe cases of hemorrhoidal prolapse will normally require surgery. Newer surgical procedures include stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) and procedure for prolapse and hemorrhoids (PPH). Both STARR and PPH are contraindicated in persons with either enterocele or anismus. This procedure is for internal hemorrhoids only and not for external hemorrhoids or anal fissures. During the procedure the anal sphincter muscle is pulled in due to tight stapling and if external hemorrhoids are present they also get pulled in and get hidden and get tucked inside anal sphincter muscle and reappear when staples fall after few months and sphincter comes to its normal position. Previously a lot of surgeons thought that this procedure is for external hemorrhoids also but the external hemorrhoids reappear after the staples fall off.
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5599791
National Center for Reason and Justice
Q6971363
en
The National Center for Reason and Justice is a United States national non-profit organization disseminating information to the public about claims of injustice in the current criminal justice system and facilitating financial and legal assistance for people the organization considers likely to have been falsely accused or wrongfully convicted. According to the NCRJ, most of the individuals whose convictions were overturned have been convicted because of faulty eyewitness testimony, coerced confessions, or the acceptance of junk science in the courtroom. Most NCRJ-sponsored cases involve accusations of sex offenses against children and adolescents, where the accusations are given wide media coverage. NCRJ President Michael Snedeker is a criminal-defense lawyer who has successfully handled the appeals of ritual abuse cases in California. He is author of the "California State Prisoners Handbook" and co-author with Debbie Nathan of "Satan's Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt." Noted NCRJ Directors and advisers include: Elizabeth Loftus, Debbie Nathan and Judith Levine
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5599787
Lappersdorf
Q491550
en
Lappersdorf is a municipality in the district of Regensburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated on the river Regen, 4 km north of Regensburg.
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5599681
Homosexual transsexual
Q18349935
en
Homosexual transsexual is a taxonomic category of transsexual individuals used in sexology, psychology, and psychiatry. It categorizes trans women who are exclusively attracted to men, and less often trans men who are exclusively attracted to women, based on their sex assigned at birth, rather than their current gender identity. The concept of categorizing trans women by sexual orientation originated with Magnus Hirschfeld in 1923, and was further developed by the sexologist Harry Benjamin in 1966 as a component of the Benjamin scale. The specific term "homosexual transsexual" was coined by Kurt Freund in 1973, and used from 1982 onward by him and others. In the DSM III, published in 1980, transsexualism was to be diagnosed and the sexual orientation of a transsexual specified using the terms "homosexual", "heterosexual", "asexual", or unspecified. This convention had its origins in the taxonomic work of researchers like Hirschfeld, Benjamin, and Freund, which found that grouping trans women by sexual orientation reveals important qualitative and statistical differences between them. These differences have been maintained by various researchers as indicative or suggestive of multiple, distinct etiologies. The term "homosexual transsexual" has since been used in publications by a variety of academics, including Benjamin, Freund, Blanchard, and Anne Lawrence, as well as J. Michael Bailey and James Cantor, among others. Sexologist Ray Blanchard uses the concept in relation to one type of male-to-female (MTF) transsexual in his transsexualism typology developed in the late 1980s. The term "homosexual transsexual" has attracted controversy. It has been criticized from a lexical standpoint by Benjamin, Bruce Bagemihl, and John Bancroft as being confusing (though supported "conceptually" by the former two), as well as insensitive to the gender identities of those whom it is intended to describe. The alternatives "androphilic" and "gynephilic" have been proposed by Milton Diamond as descriptors for sexual orientation that do not make assumptions about the sex or gender identity of the person being described. Terms such as "androphilia" and "gynephilia" are sometimes used instead of, or concurrently with, "homosexual", "heterosexual", or "non-homosexual" in current research, such as research which has used the Modified Androphilia Scale to assess the attraction to men of a given trans woman. S. J. Wahng contended in 2004 that the term "homosexual transsexual" is "archaic". Though the term "transsexuality" was removed as a mental disorder from the DSM-IV and was replaced with gender identity disorder as a diagnostic label, attraction to males, females, both, or neither was specified in the DSM IV-TR. Most of the research on homosexual transsexuality has been conducted on trans women. They are usually socioeconomically disadvantaged, born later in a series of brothers, are unlikely to display cross-gender fetishism or autogynephilia, and come out at a younger age than non-homosexual trans women. Relatively little research has been done on gender variance in assigned females, and the prevalence of female-to-male gender dysphoria (GD) is less than that of male-to-female GD.
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5599840
Hadamar
Q565530
en
Hadamar is a small town in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hessen, Germany. Hadamar is known for its Clinic for Forensic Psychiatry/Centre for Social Psychiatry, lying at the edge of town, in whose outlying buildings is also found the Hadamar Memorial. This memorializes the murder of people with handicaps and mental illnesses under the Nazi regime at the "NS-Tötungsanstalt Hadamar".
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5599938
Joseph Hornblower
Q16239961
en
Joseph Hornblower (1696? – 1762) was an English engineer, a pioneer of steam power.
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5599759
Gary Mex Glazner
Q5525586
en
Gary Mex Glazner (born 1957), is a poet and author. He was the Managing Director of the Bowery Poetry Club in New York City, 2007 to 2010. In 1990, Glazner working as a florist in San Francisco. As poet and organizer in that city's ever-evolving spoken word community, he was instrumental in organizing the first ever National Poetry Slam, which featured poets from San Francisco, Chicago and New York City. In the book, "Words in Your Face: A Guided Tour Through Twenty Years of the New York City Poetry Slam", author Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz wrote: To promote the first National Poetry Slam, Glazner used such "unpredictable" ideas as hiring a circus barker outside of the venues in which the slams were happening "like at the freak show at Coney Island", selling hot dogs from a vendor during the slam, and the use of a "PoJ Kit," which Glazner described as a mobile DJ unit wherein poets can perform and broadcast their poems onto the street while being driven around in Glazner's car. Glazner's relationship continued with the Poetry Slam movement. In 1993, he helped organize the fourth National Poetry Slam held in San Francisco again. In 2000, he organized the "Slam America" bus tour, which involved "38 live poetry shows in 32 cities over 30 days with more than 100 poets." The poets in tour would perform and tour together in various "legs" as the tour bus as they traveled to the 2000 National Poetry Slam held in Providence, RI. The tour resulted in the documentary, "Busload of Poets." Glazner also edited the anthology, "Poetry Slam: The Competitive Art of Spoken Word" which was published by Manic D Press in 2000. The book "documents 10 years of poetry slams, with 100 poems from national slam champions and a dozen essays on how to run a slam, winning strategies, tips for memorizing poems, and more." In addition to his work in the Poetry Slam community, Glazner has authored four books: 2002's "Ears on Fire: Snapshot Essays in a World of Poets" (La Alameda Press), 2005's "How to Make a Living as a Poet" (Soft Skull Press) 2006's "How to Make a Life as a Poet" (Soft Skull Press) and 2014's "Dementia Arts: Celebrating Creativity in Eldercare," (Health Professions Press). Glazner was poet-in-residence at Desert Academy in Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2005-2006. His Precision Poetry Drill Team was featured on National Public Radio's All Things Considered: New Mexico School Lets Students Letter in Poetry Glazner is the founder and Executive Director of the "Alzheimer's Poetry Project" In 2013 the Alzheimer's Poetry Project was the recipient of the "2013, Rosalinde Gilbert Innovations in Alzheimer’s Disease Caregiving Legacy Award." In 2012, the Alzheimer's Poetry Project was the recipient of the MetLife Foundation Creativity and Aging in America Leadership Award in the category of Community Engagement. The award was administered by the National Center for Creative Aging. In 2018, Glazner was the co-recipient of the International Leadership in Arts and Health Award, administered by the "Australian Centre for Arts and Health." In 2020, in response to COVID-19, Glazner began to use robots to deliver poetry programs and creativity training to help reduce social isolation of elders in nursing homes. "Times Villager Robot helps senior-living residents communicate with families." Glazner currently lives in Brooklyn, New York.
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5599899
2006–07 Heineken Cup
Q255929
en
The 2006–07 Heineken Cup was the 12th edition of the European Heineken Cup rugby union club tournament. The pool draw took place on 21 June at Twickenham. The pool stages started on 20 October and concluded in January, going for six rounds. Following the quarter- and semi-finals, the final was played on 20 May before a near-capacity crowd at the 82,000-seat redeveloped Twickenham in London. London Wasps defeated Leicester Tigers 25–9, denying Tigers the domestic and European treble.
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5599973
Celia Hart
Q4496081
en
Celia Hart (January 4, 1962 – September 7, 2008) was a Cuban physicist and writer. Until May 2006, she was a member of the Cuban Communist Party. She was the daughter of two historic leaders of the Cuban Revolution, Haydee Santamaría and Armando Hart.
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5599994
Lobos de Arecibo
Q615664
en
Lobos de Arecibo () were a professional baseball team in the Puerto Rican Professional Baseball League, based in Arecibo. The Lobos won the 1983 national baseball championship and the 1983 Caribbean World Series, the only time the franchise won both titles.
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5599992
Kakongo
Q369587
en
Kakongo was a former small kingdom located on the Atlantic coast of Central Africa, in the modern-day Republic of Congo and Cabinda, Angola. It along with its southern neighbor, Ngoyo, and Loango, its neighbor on the north were important political commercial centers during the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries. The people speak a dialect of the Kikongo language and thus may be considered a part of the Bakongo ethnicity. Kakongo was a vassal of Kongo for a part of its history. The kingdom was
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5600011
Allen McKay
Q4731774
en
Allen McKay (5 February 1927 – 2 May 2013) was a British Labour Party politician.
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5600097
Layout manager
Q1594330
en
Layout managers are software components used in widget toolkits which have the ability to lay out graphical control elements by their relative positions without using distance units. It is often more natural to define component layouts in this manner than to define their position in pixels or common distance units, so a number of popular widget toolkits include this ability by default. Widget toolkits that provide this function can generally be classified into two groups: *Those where the layout behavior is coded in special graphic containers. This is the case in XUL and the .NET Framework widget toolkit (both in Windows Forms and in XAML). *Those where the layout behavior is coded in layout managers, that can be applied to any graphic container. This is the case in the Swing widget toolkit that is part of the Java API.
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5599837
Twenty20 International
Q252171
en
A Twenty20 International (T20I) is a form of cricket, played between two of the international members of the International Cricket Council (ICC), in which each team faces a maximum of twenty overs. The matches have top-class status and are the highest T20 standard. The game is played under the rules of Twenty20 cricket. Starting from the format's inception in 2005, T20I status only applied to Full Members and some Associate Member teams. However, in April 2018, the ICC announced that it would grant T20I status to all its 105 members from 1 January 2019. The shortened format was initially introduced to bolster crowds for the domestic game, and was not intended to be played internationally, but the first Twenty20 International took place on 17 February 2005 when Australia defeated New Zealand, and the first tournament was played two years later, with the introduction of the ICC T20 World Cup. In 2016, for the first time in a calendar year, more Twenty20 International matches (100) were played than ODI matches (99). As of 3 May 2019, 80 nations feature in ICC T20I team rankings. Twenty20 International format also sees one mandatory powerplay taken in the first six overs. This shorter format of the game makes reaching the traditional milestones of scoring a century or taking five wickets in an innings more difficult, and few players have achieved these. The highest individual score in a Twenty20 International is 172, made by Australia's Aaron Finch against Zimbabwe in 2018, while India's Deepak Chahar has the best bowling figures of 6/7 against Bangladesh in November 2019.
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5600066
Fury of the Furries
Q686277
en
Fury of the Furries is a puzzle-platform game developed by Kalisto and published by Mindscape for Amiga, Amiga CD32, Macintosh, and MS-DOS. It was later relicensed by Namco as Pac-In-Time, replacing the characters to fit the Pac-Man franchise.
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5600090
Klis
Q738630
en
Klis (, , ) is a Croatian town located around a mountain fortress bearing the same name. It is located in the region of Dalmatia, located just northeast of Solin and Split near the eponymous mountain pass. It has a population of 3,001, totalling 4,801 together with the eight other villages in its municipality (2011 census). The Klis mountain pass separates the mountains Mosor and Kozjak at an altitude of 360m. It has had a major strategic value throughout history because any inland force passing through Klis would have been able to easily reach the entire region of Split and Kaštela. During the Ottoman wars in Europe an already existing Roman fortress on a nearby hill was expanded into Klis Fortress. It was the centre of a sanjak within the Province of Bosnia during Ottoman rule. Klis was also ruled by the Kingdom of Bosnia, the Venetian Republic, and Austria-Hungary. Due to its geographical position Klis is also susceptible to a rather strong bura wind.
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5600044
John Bintcliffe
Q6221936
en
John Bintcliffe (born 7 February 1966 in Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire, England) is a motor racing figure. He has been involved in the British Touring Car Championship as both driver and team owner. He won the Renault Clio Cup in 1994, and the Ford Credit Fiesta series a year later. He competed in the British Touring Car Championship for Audi from 1996 to 1998, teamed with series champions Frank Biela and Yvan Muller. Due to its Quattro 4-wheel drive system, Audi initially had the best car, and despite his lack of experience John was able to twice finish 7th in the championship, taking 2 race wins against many higher profile drivers. However, the team struggled in 1998, and John was 15th overall, only just ahead of independent champion Tommy Rustad. This may be an unfair reflection on John, given teammate Muller's success; in the same year Frank Biela only mustered 14th place in the German equivalent series, using the same 2-wheel drive Audi. He is the team manager for the Bintcliffe Sport team, based on the Barr Lane estate in York . Having run Paul O'Neill in the MGF Cup, they raced in the BTCC's Class B in 2000 (with Rob Collard among their drivers), and the equivalent Production Class in 2001. They also ran Jason Plato and Darren Manning in ASCAR. John returned to racing in 2011 racing in an Audi R8 LMS in the British GT championship for United Autosports. Bintcliffe is now director of Donotbend Ltd., a designer furniture outlet based in Minskip near York.
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5600098
Ronnie Johncox
Q7365894
en
Ronnie Johncox (born February 13, 1969, Jackson, Michigan), is a professional racecar driver with over 200 wins. He is a former driver in the Indy Racing League. He raced in the 1999-2000 seasons with 8 career starts. His best career IRL finish was in 11th position in his first contest, the Longhorn 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. In 2002–2003, he stepped down to the Indy Pro Series, where he raced 10 times with one pole, three Top 5 finishes and eight Top 10s. His last professional race was in the 2003 Freedom 100 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He currently owns and operates Technique, Inc. which is a prototype metal stamping and laser cutting company based in Jackson, Michigan and Technique Engineered Chassis Components in Mooresville, NC that most notably produces "kits" to assemble the racing chassis of the NASCAR Car of Tomorrow. Many of the top teams in NASCAR use Technique Engineered Chassis Components. He is a graduate of Michigan State University.
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5600196
Hakkōda Tunnel
Q284705
en
The is a railway tunnel located in central Aomori Prefecture, in the Tōhoku region of Japan. It passes through the Hakkōda mountain range and links the town of Shichinohe with the city of Aomori. The Hakkōda Tunnel is part of the northern section of the Tōhoku Shinkansen, located between Shichinohe-Towada and Shin Aomori stations.
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5600211
Private Dancer Tour
Q4352859
en
Private Dancer Tour is a 1985 concert tour by the American-born Swiss singer Tina Turner. In conjunction with her multi-platinum selling album "Private Dancer", the tour helped to establish Turner as a major solo artist and live performer and is often considered one of the best comebacks in music history. The 180-date tour encompassed Europe, North America, Australia and Asia. Turner also played a show in Budapest, the only show of the tour behind the Iron Curtain. The concerts received additional accolades, receiving an "Most Creative Tour Package Award" and "Comeback Tour Of The Year Award" from Pollstar Awards.
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5600291
Siaya
Q2422035
en
Siaya is a town in Siaya County of Kenya. It is the capital of Siaya County. It is located northwest of Kisumu, the provincial capital. The urban center had a population of 33,153 in 2019. Siaya municipality has five wards: Mjini, Siaya Central, Siaya East, Siaya North and Siaya West. All of them are part of Alego Constituency. With the new constitution, it is now also in Siaya County of which it is also its headquarters.
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5600311
Derrynoose
Q1569907
en
Derrynoose () is a village and civil parish in south County Armagh, Northern Ireland, 4.5 km south-west of Keady. The village lies partly in the townland of Mullyard (in the civil parish of Derrynoose) and partly in the townland of Crossnamoyle (in the civil parish of Keady). The civil parish is situated in the historic baronies of Armagh and Tiranny and is within the Armagh City and District Council area.
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5600027
Jacques-André Boiffard
Q958849
en
Jacques-André Boiffard (1902–1961) was a French photographer, born in Épernon in Eure-et-Loir. He was a medical student in Paris until 1924 when he met André Breton through Pierre Naville, a Surrealist writer, and childhood friend. In the mid-1920s, Boiffard decided to dedicate himself to research in the Bureau of Surrealist Research, writing the preface with Paul Éluard and Roger Vitrac to the first issue of "La Révolution surréaliste". Preferring photography to literature, he served as Man Ray’s assistant from 1924 to 1929. During the 1920s, he took portraits of the English writer Nancy Cunard and photographs of Paris which Breton used to illustrate his novel "Nadja". In 1928, Boiffard was abruptly expelled from the movement for taking photographs of Simone Breton. He co-founded a studio, "Studio unis", with photographer Eli Lotar in 1929, although the studio went bankrupt in 1932. From 1929 onward, Boiffard was closely associated with Georges Bataille and the circle of writers involved in "Documents", in which his best-known work was published, illustrating articles such as Bataille’s "The Big Toe" (1929, issue 6), Robert Desnos’ "Pygmalion and the Sphinx" (1930, issue 1), and Georges Limbour’s "Eschyle, the carnival and the civilized" (1930, issue 2). Boiffard's photographs often manipulate scale and point of view, transpose multiple exposures, and contrast brightly lit objects against darkened backgrounds. He also made several photograms. In 1930, he contributed to "Un Cadavre", a pamphlet that attacked Breton. During the political turmoil of the 1930s, Boiffard was a member of the Groupe Octobre led by Jacques Prévert, and he exhibited his work as part of the Association des Écrivains et Artistes Révolutionnaires. He accompanied members of the Groupe October to Russia in 1933. Boiffard then set out on a world tour with fellow photographer Eli Lotar. Although partly financed by museologist Georges Henri Rivière and the Vicomte de Noailles the trip came to an early end in Tangiers. Following his return to Paris, Boiffard exhibited photographs from his travel in 1934 at the Galerie de la Pléiade. Following his father's death in 1935 Boiffard resumed his studies to earn a doctorate in medicine in 1940 specializing in radiology, once and for all putting an end to his career as a photographer. He served as a radiologist at the Hôpital Saint-Louis in Paris from 1940 to 1959. He died in Paris in 1961.
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"end": 1655 }, { "uri": "Q182711", "surfaceform": "Association des Écrivains et Artistes Révolutionnaires", "type": "ORG", "start": 1698, "end": 1752 }, { "uri": "Q769724", "surfaceform": "Eli Lotar", "type": "PER", "start": 1881, "end": 1890 }, { "uri": "Q353820", "surfaceform": "Georges Henri Rivière", "type": "PER", "start": 1932, "end": 1953 }, { "uri": "Q1353831", "surfaceform": "Vicomte de Noailles", "type": "Concept", "start": 1962, "end": 1981 }, { "uri": "Q1569396", "surfaceform": "Hôpital Saint-Louis", "type": "LOC", "start": 2374, "end": 2393 }, { "uri": "Q958849", "surfaceform": "Jacques-André Boiffard", "type": "PER", "start": 0, "end": 22 }, { "uri": "1924-01-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "1924", "type": "DATE", "start": 136, "end": 140 }, { "uri": "1924-01-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "1924", "type": "DATE", "start": 520, "end": 524 }, { "uri": 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"end": 2420 }, { "uri": "1961-01-01T00:00:00Z^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime", "surfaceform": "1961", "type": "DATE", "start": 2442, "end": 2446 }, { "uri": "+1902^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1902", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 24, "end": 28 }, { "uri": "+1961^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1961", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 29, "end": 33 }, { "uri": "-1920^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "-1920", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 244, "end": 249 }, { "uri": "+1929^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1929", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1123, "end": 1127 }, { "uri": "+6^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "6", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1135, "end": 1136 }, { "uri": "+1930^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1930", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1182, "end": 1186 }, { "uri": "+1^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1194, "end": 1195 }, { "uri": "+1930^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "1930", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1263, "end": 1267 }, { "uri": "+2^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#decimal", "surfaceform": "2", "type": "NUMBER", "start": 1275, "end": 1276 } ]
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5600312
General López Department
Q1190551
en
The General López Department (in Spanish, Departamento General López) is an administrative subdivision ("departamento") of the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. It is located in the south of the province. Its head town is Melincué (population 2,200), and its largest city is Venado Tuerto (population 70,000). It is bordered by the Caseros Department in the north, and by the Constitución Department in the north-east; the rest of its borders coincide with interprovincial limits (with Córdoba in the west and with Buenos Aires in the south and east). The towns and cities in this department are (in alphabetical order): Aarón Castellanos, Amenábar, Cafferata, Cañada del Ucle, Carmen, Carreras, Chapuy, Chovet, Christophersen, Diego de Alvear, Elortondo, Firmat, Hughes, La Chispa, Labordeboy, Lazzarino, Maggiolo, María Teresa, Melincué, Miguel Torres, Murphy, Rufino, San Eduardo, San Francisco de Santa Fe, San Gregorio, Sancti Spiritu, Santa Isabel, Teodelina, Venado Tuerto, Villa Cañás, Wheelwright.
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5600364
Werner Sobek
Q70696
en
Werner Sobek (born May 16, 1953) is a German architect and structural engineer.
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5600298
Operation Swath-10
Q663501
en
Operation Swath-10 () was a military offensive undertaken by the Croatian Army ("Hrvatska vojska", or HV) against the SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces on Bilogora Mountain in western Slavonia. Occurring from 31 October to 4 November 1991, during the Croatian War of Independence, the operation was a Croatian victory and its success set the stage for follow-up advances by Croatian forces on Papuk Mountain in Operation Papuk-91 in late November and December. By the end of the year the HV gained control of Papuk, securing transport routes between eastern Slavonia and the rest of Croatia. The offensives were accompanied by the displacement of most of the Croatian Serb population of the area captured by the HV. The refugees initially fled to Bosnia and Herzegovina, but the majority were soon settled in the JNA-held Baranja region of eastern Croatia. The offensive provoked accusations that Croatian troops had committed ethnic cleansing and civil-rights abuses. These accusations were contested by the European Community Monitor Mission (ECMM). A month after the operation, the retreating paramilitary unit known as the White Eagles perpetrated the Voćin massacre, and its war crimes were prosecuted at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
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5600230
Carol Lou Trio
Q5044444
en
The Carol Lou Trio was a jazz combo which gained modest popularity in the mid-eastern United States between the 1950s and 1970s, and international distribution of its few recordings. The group was headed by Carol Lou Hedges (born May 20, 1931, Peru, Indiana), whose modest demeanor belied her piano virtuosity and swinging style. Husband and bassist John Hedges was the other permanent member of the group, with various drummers having been employed, including future drummer for the Count Basie band and Tony Bennett, Harold Jones (drummer) in 1956-57. The trio's reputation spread mostly by word of mouth, but it did release several singles and one album. Having remarried, Carol Lou Woodward continued to play as a soloist and in small combos in and around her home since 1957, Richmond, Indiana, where Gennett Records produced important early jazz recording, including the first by Louis Armstrong. In 2013 Woodward recorded an album for the Starr-Gennett Foundation called “Rags to Richmond: A Tribute to Ragtime and Starr Piano.” The album includes three compositions by erstwhile Richmond resident May Aufderheide, a leading female ragtime composer. In 2006, Woodward released a CD featuring solo piano arrangements of jazz and popular music standards, "An Evening With Carol Lou". In 2008 she released a holiday collection titled “Christmas With Carol Lou." She has said that her favorite pianist is Gene Harris, whose style has been described as "hard-swinging, soulful, blues-drenched". Woodward's considerable talent might have carried her to greater recognition, but she chose instead to raise a family and live quietly. John Hedges died in October, 2012. Carol Lou retired in 2016.
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5600454
Ece Ayhan Çağlar
Q3564174
en
Ece Ayhan Çağlar (September 10, 1931 in Muğla – July 13, 2002 in İzmir) was a contemporary Turkish poet. He used the name "Ece Ayhan" in his poems. He is one of the prominent figures of the "II. New Movement", however he didn't accept this name and preferred "Civilian Poetry". He was openly homosexual.
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5600438
CFMG-FM
Q5010703
en
CFMG-FM (104.9 FM) is a Canadian radio station, broadcasting from Edmonton, Alberta. Branded as "104.9 Virgin Radio", the station airs a Top 40/CHR format. The station also broadcasts a Punjabi language format on a Subsidiary Communications Multiplex Operation frequency.
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5600384
Darren Morningstar
Q443125
en
Darren Morningstar (born April 22, 1969) is an American retired professional basketball player who was selected by the Boston Celtics in the second round (47th pick overall) of the 1992 NBA draft. A 6'10" and 325 lb center, Morningstar played in only one NBA season, splitting time with the Dallas Mavericks and Utah Jazz. He played collegiately at both the United States Naval Academy and at the University of Pittsburgh.
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5600470
Marla Heasley
Q461297
en
Marla Heasley (born September 4, 1959, Hollywood, California) is an American film and TV actress.
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5600460
Feng Qing
Q5374517
en
Empress Feng Qing (馮清) was an empress of the Chinese/Xianbei dynasty Northern Wei. She was Emperor Xiaowen's first empress. Feng Qing was a daughter of Feng Xi (馮熙) the Prince of Changli, who was a brother of the powerful Grand Empress Dowager Feng, the wife of Emperor Wencheng and regent over his son Emperor Xianwen and grandson Emperor Xiaowen. (Through her father, she was therefore also a great-granddaughter of the Northern Yan emperor Feng Hong.) Her mother was probably Feng Xi's wife Princess Boling. She had two older sisters (by Feng Xi's concubine Lady Chang) who were concubines of Emperor Xiaowen — Feng Run and an unnamed sister, but the unnamed sister died early, and after Feng Run had a major illness, she left the palace and became a Buddhist nun. In 493, Emperor Xiaowen took Feng Qing as his empress. She initially was much favored. However, after Emperor Xiaowen found out that Feng Run had recovered, he took Feng Run back as a concubine. (There is some evidence, but not conclusive evidence, that Feng Qing might have been involved in her sister's being returned to the palace.) Feng Run, because she was Emperor Xiaowen's concubine earlier and an older sister, refused to submit to Feng Qing, and tried to undermine Feng Qing's position as an empress, including accusing her of being against Emperor Xiaowen's Sinicization program. In 496, Emperor Xiaowen deposed Feng Qing. Because Feng Qing was virtuous and much interested in Buddhism, she became a Buddhist nun and remained one for the rest of her life. |- style="text-align: center;"
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5600435
Just Like a Woman
Q2551868
en
"Just Like a Woman" is a song written by Bob Dylan and first released on his 1966 album, "Blonde on Blonde". It was also released as a single in the U.S. during August 1966 and peaked at #33 on the "Billboard" Hot 100. Dylan's recording of "Just Like a Woman" was not issued as a single in the United Kingdom but the British beat group, Manfred Mann, did release a hit single version of the song in July 1966, which peaked at #10 on the UK Singles Chart. In 2011, "Rolling Stone" magazine ranked Dylan's version of the song at #232 in their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
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5600519
North Heaton
Q7055578
en
North Heaton is a ward of Newcastle City Council in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. It covers the northern part of the Heaton district as well as High Heaton. The Ward population at the 2011 Census was 9,574. There are two schools in the area, Heaton Manor School and Ravenswood Primary School. The Coast Road which is the main traffic artery out of the east of the city runs through the ward. The Ward is represented by 3 Councillors and as of 07/05/2015 the ward political composition is made up of 1 Labour and 2 Liberal Democrat Councillors.
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5600583
The Mick Jagger Centre
Q7751256
en
The Mick Jagger Centre is a performing arts venue in Dartford, Kent, England, UK, within the grounds of Dartford Grammar School. It is named after the Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger, who was a pupil at the school. It has two main stages and holds theatre workshops in the summer.
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5600552
Valentín
Q643902
en
Valentín is a 2002 Argentine-French-Italian drama film written and directed by Alejandro Agresti. The film features Rodrigo Noya as Valentín and Carmen Maura as the grandmother. Director Alejandro Agresti also stars as Valentín's father. The story revolves around the world of an eight-year-old boy, Valentín (Noya), who dreams of one day becoming an astronaut. While caught in the middle of his family, he attempts to better the bewildering world around him.
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5600540
Tuckasegee River
Q7851033
en
The Tuckasegee River (variant spellings include Tuckaseegee and Tuckaseigee) flows entirely within western North Carolina. It begins its course in Jackson County above Cullowhee at the confluence of Panthertown and Greenland creeks. It flows in a northwesterly direction into Swain County, where the Oconaluftee flows into it before the Tuckaseegee heads northwest. The county seat, Bryson City developed along both sides of the Tuckaseegee, and Bryson City Island Park was developed. The river next enters Fontana Lake, formed by the Fontana Dam upriver on the Little Tennessee River. The Tuckaseegee ultimately flows as a tributary into the Little Tennessee River below the lake. The name Tuckasegee may be an anglicization or transliteration of the Cherokee word "daksiyi"—[takhšiyi] in the local Cherokee variety, meaning 'Turtle Place.' Several Cherokee towns developed along the river, including Kituwa, believed to be the "mother town" of the Cherokee. It developed around an earthen platform mound, likely built about 1000 CE. The mound, although reduced in height, is visible on the of land reacquired in 1996 by the federally recognized Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. This land also includes the former site of an early 18th-century Cherokee town. The EBCI conducted an archeological survey in 1997 that found evidence of thousands of years of habitation at this site and are keeping it undeveloped as sacred ground. Many of the mounds in this area were built by about 1000 CE, during the South Appalachian Mississippian culture era. In each of their major towns, the Cherokee built a townhouse as their expression of public architecture on top of such a mound, if it existed. The townhouse was the Cherokee expression of public architecture, emphasizing their decentralized society based on community consensus. In some places, they built a townhouse on the main town plaza. The river also has several stone fishing weirs built by prehistoric indigenous peoples. It is believed that the weirs were built by peoples who lived here prior to the Cherokee in the Southeast. The weirs are most easily viewed when water levels are low. One near Webster, North Carolina, is the most intact and has a characteristic "V" shape. Fishing, hiking, and paddling are among the recreational opportunities along the river.
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5600598
American Savoyards
Q4744918
en
American Savoyards was an Off-Broadway and touring repertory theatre company that produced light operas, principally the works of Gilbert and Sullivan, in New York City and on tour between 1948 and 1967.
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5600671
Mike Yurosek
Q6849357
en
Mike Yurosek (September 28, 1922 – June 12, 2005) was a California farmer known as the "father of the baby carrot."
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5600372
SAP ERP
Q167533
en
SAP ERP is an enterprise resource planning software developed by the German company SAP SE. SAP ERP incorporates the key business functions of an organization. The latest version of SAP ERP (V.6.0) was made available in 2006. The most recent Enhancement Package (EHP8) for SAP ERP 6.0 was released in 2016. Business Processes included in SAP ERP are Operations (Sales & Distribution, Materials Management, Production Planning, Logistics Execution, and Quality Management), Financials (Financial Accounting, Management Accounting, Financial Supply Chain Management), Human Capital Management (Training, Payroll, e-Recruiting) and Corporate Services (Travel Management, Environment, Health and Safety, and Real-Estate Management).
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5600712
Javanshir
Q1249785
en
Javanshir (alternate spellings: Javansher, Juansher, Ĵuanšēr, Jivanshir; ""; literally "young lion"), was the prince of Caucasian Albania from 637 to 680, hailing from the region of Gardman. His life and deeds were the subject of legends that were recorded in Armenian medieval texts. He was from the Parthian Mihranid family, an offshoot of the House of Mihran, one of the seven Parthian clans of the Sasanian Empire.
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5600673
Bussunda
Q713054
en
Cláudio Besserman Vianna (Rio de Janeiro, June 25, 1962 — Vaterstetten, June 17, 2006), commonly known as Bussunda (), was a Brazilian humorist and TV comedian, member of the Casseta & Planeta troupe. He was born in Rio de Janeiro, where he lived and worked, having started his career in the 1980s as a writer for satirical magazine "Casseta Popular". One of the most popular Brazilian comedians of his generation, the overweight Bussunda was famous for his impersonations of football striker Ronaldo and of Brazil's president Lula. He also did the voice of Shrek in the Brazilian Portuguese version of "Shrek" and "Shrek 2". He was of Jewish descent.
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5600797
Dramelay
Q633384
en
Dramelay is a commune in the Jura department in Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in eastern France.
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5600722
El Dorado Adventist School
Q5351168
en
El Dorado Adventist School is a non-profit, WASC accredited, coeducational K-8 school owned and operated by local church constituencies and the Northern California Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. It is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist education system, the world's second largest Christian school system. It is in the Sierra foothill community of Placerville, California, United States. Established in 1913 as the Wide Awake School, serving 14 elementary students, the school moved to its present location in 1936 and became the Camino-Placerville Junior Academy, teaching grades K-10. The school later became El Dorado Junior Academy and existed as a K-10 program until 1996 when a decision was made to become a full K-12 school. The school became El Dorado Adventist School, and from 1996 to 2003, the high school program existed as an extension school of Rio Lindo Adventist Academy in Healdsburg. In the fall of 2003, the North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists gave El Dorado Adventist School the authorization to become a stand-alone, fully functioning K-12 institution, and in June 2004, the school celebrated its first official graduates. The Placerville and Camino Seventh-day Adventist Churches own El Dorado Adventist School in conjunction with the Northern California Conference, which supports and coordinates the efforts of 47 schools and over 3800 students. The Placerville Church has a membership of 757 and the Camino Church has a membership of 255. The pastors of the two churches are heavily involved in the school program of El Dorado Adventist School by serving on the school board, giving weekly worships and leading out in spiritual activities involving EAS students.
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5600865
Max Raphael
Q1528524
en
::"For the British film actor see Max Raphael (actor). For the pseudonymous American actor with the same name see Lloyd Sherr." Max Raphael (August 27, 1889 – July 14, 1952) was a German-American art historian. He was of Jewish parentage. He was born on August 27, 1889, in Schönlanke, Prussia, Germany. Between 1924 and 1932 he taught art history to the working class at the "Volkhochschule" in Berlin. With the rise of the Nazis he moved to Paris, where he continued his writing. After the Germans occupied Paris in 1940 he was temporarily interned at Gurs internment camp and Camp des Milles. Once released he migrated, with help from the Quakers, to the United States through Barcelona and Lisbon. In New York Raphael lived in penury until he received one of the first fellowships awarded by the Bollingen Foundation. He died by suicide in New York City on July 14, 1952.
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5600771
Operation Hurricane-91
Q3513572
en
Operation Hurricane-91 () was a military offensive undertaken by the Croatian Army ("Hrvatska vojska" – HV) against the Yugoslav People's Army ("Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija" – JNA) and SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces in the Sava River valley, in the region of Western Slavonia during the Croatian War of Independence. The operation began on 29 October 1991 and ended on 3 January 1992 when a nationwide ceasefire was signed to implement the Vance plan. The offensive was aimed at recapturing the region, in conjunction with two other HV offensives launched against SAO Western Slavonia in the north of the region within days. Even though the offensive captured a portion of the targeted area, including the town of Lipik as the first of the larger settlements captured by the HV during the war, the mission objectives were not met before the ceasefire took effect. SAO Western Slavonia retained control of the town of Okučani and its surroundings, including a short section of the Zagreb–Slavonski Brod motorway. The halting of Operation Hurricane-91 due to the ceasefire of 3 January 1992 led to opposing assessments on the possible outcomes of the offensive had there been no ceasefire. Assessments range from claims that the JNA was on the brink of defeat in the area, to estimates that the HV was too exhausted and its ammunition stocks too low to permit a successful conclusion of the offensive. The three HV offensives launched in Western Slavonia in late 1991 led to the displacement of approximately 20,000 Croatian Serb refugees who were later settled in the JNA-held Baranja region in eastern Croatia.
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5600996
Ellen van Maris
Q16189386
en
Ellen van Maris (born 1957 in Amstelveen) is a former professional female bodybuilder from the Netherlands.
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5601011
Scott Kosar
Q1313744
en
Scott Kosar is an American screenwriter whose films include "The Machinist", the 2003 remake of the classic horror film "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre", and the 2005 remake of "The Amityville Horror". In June 2006, Kosar was presented with the Distinguished Achievement in Screenwriting Award by the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. Kosar was appointed the Hunter/Zakin screenwriting chair at UCLA for 2009–2010.
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5578942
Tveit
Q1025357
en
Tveit is a village and surrounding district in Oddernes borough in the city of Kristiansand in Agder county, Norway. The Tveit district is located in the northeastern part of Kristiansand, northeast of the Topdalsfjorden along the lower part of the Tovdalselva river. Tveit is the site of the main airport for Southern Norway: Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik. The district was the separate municipality of Tveit from 1838 until it was merged into Kristiansand in 1965. The village of Tveit lies along the Tovdalselva river, about northeast of the airport. Tveit Church is located in the village. The stone church was built in the 12th century, and it is the oldest building in the village. The village has a population (2016) of 1,418 which gives the village a population density of .
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5601052
The Co-Optimists
Q7726511
en
The Co-Optimists is a stage variety revue that opened in London on 27 June 1921. The show was devised by Davy Burnaby. The piece was a co-operative venture by what "The Times" called "a group of well-known musical comedy and variety artists" presenting "an all-star 'pierrot' entertainment in the West-end." It opened at the small Royalty Theatre and soon transferred to the much larger Palace Theatre. The show ran initially for 500 performances; it was completely rewritten and revived at regular intervals to keep it fresh. The final edition, beginning in November 1926 and closing on 4 August 1927, was the 13th version. "The Co-Optimists" provided an early platform for the comedy actor and singer Stanley Holloway and brought him wider notice throughout the UK. In 1929, the revue was made into a feature film with the same name, again starring Holloway. In December 1926, Lee DeForest filmed Betty Chester singing "Pig-Tail Alley" in a short film, "Betty Chester, the Well-Known Co-Optimist Star", made in his Phonofilm sound-on-film process.
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5578988
João das Regras
Q6298448
en
João das Regras (??? - 3 May 1404), in English, literally John of the Rules, was a Portuguese jurist of the second half of the 14th century. In the context of the 1383—1385 Crisis, in Portugal, he stood out for his masterly representation for the cause of the Master of Avis in the Coimbra Courts of 1385, the corollary of which was his acclaim as King of Portugal.
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5579043
Alan, 1st Earl of Richmond
Q593670
en
Alan, 1st Earl of Richmond (before 1100 – 15 September 1146), Breton "Alan Penteur", also known as "Alan the Black", was a Breton noble who fought for Stephen, King of England. Alan was the third son of Stephen, Count of Tréguier, and Hawise de Guingamp.
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5579087
Barbara Brooks Wallace
Q4858773
en
Barbara Brooks Wallace (December 3, 1922 – November 27, 2018) was an American children's writer. She won the NLAPW Children's Book Award and International Youth Library "Best of the Best" for "Claudia" (2001) and William Allen White Children's Book Award for "Peppermints in the Parlor" (1983).
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5579082
National Library of Azerbaijan
Q2452823
en
The Mirza Fatali Akhundov National Library of Azerbaijan (Azerbaijani: "Mirzə Fətəli Axundov adına Azərbaycan Milli Kitabxanası") is the national library of the Republic of Azerbaijan, located in Baku and founded in 1922. It is named after Mirza Fatali Akhundov, an Azerbaijani dramatist and philosopher. The library is located on Khagani Street and overlooks Rəşid Behbudov Avenue and Nizami Street. Its facades feature the statues of various writers and poets: Nizami Ganjavi, Mahsati, Uzeyir Hajibeyov, Shota Rustaveli, Alexander Pushkin and several others. A vast, eight-stage repository occupies the four floors of the building and is equipped with special elevators, which deliver the books to the outlets. The capacity of reading rooms is 500 seats. Orders are also accepted by e-mail upon electronic registration. The library includes 25 sections and 26 sectors. The fund of the library covers approximately 4,513,000 publishing materials.
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5579114
Deep Breakfast
Q5250100
en
Deep Breakfast is Ray Lynch's third studio album, released on December 12, 1984. Upon its initial release, the artist sold over 72,000 albums out of his small apartment in San Rafael, California. After signing with Music West Records, the album was released widely on March 1986. Upon its re-release, the album was universally praised for its mesh of electronic and classical sounds, with several calling it an evolution to the respective genres. Eventually, in 1989, the album peaked at #2 on Billboard's "Top New Age Albums" chart, behind David Lanz's album "Cristofori's Dream". The album was eventually certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America in 1994.
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5579161
Savage Aural Hotbed
Q7427700
en
Savage Aural Hotbed (abbreviated as SAH) is a "found object" band based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. Formed in 1988, SAH is a four-member band that performs instrumental percussive and ambient music. They are heavily influenced by Japanese taiko drumming, but also feature usage of home-made instruments, metal and plastic barrels, saw-blades, power-tools, and other hardware, both in the albums and in the live shows. They have released seven albums. The band has been embraced by industrial, techno, and contemporary classical music enthusiasts. They have also worked with many different dance troupes including Ballet of the Dolls and the Flying Foot Forum. Savage Aural Hotbed has also been featured in an article on National Public Radio's Weekend Edition. They have won four Minnesota Music Awards. Current members are Mark Black, Stuart DeVaan, Dean Hawthorne, and William Melton. Past members are David Sarrazin, Valts Treibergs, and Tom Zosell. The band has been honored with a star on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First Avenue, recognizing performers that have played sold-out shows or have otherwise demonstrated a major contribution to the culture at the iconic venue. Receiving a star "might be the most prestigious public honor an artist can receive in Minneapolis," according to journalist Steve Marsh.
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5579031
Codonopsis
Q1106504
en
Codonopsis is a genus of flowering plant in the family Campanulaceae. As currently recognized, "Codonopsis" includes two other groups sometimes separated as distinct genera, i.e. "Campanumoea" and "Leptocodon." The enlarged genus "Codonopsis" is widespread across eastern, southern, central, and southeastern Asia, including China, Japan, the Russian Far East, Kazakhstan, the Indian Subcontinent, Iran, Indochina, Indonesia, etc. Codonopsis Examples and Information
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5579174
Godin Tepe
Q774339
en
Godin Tepe is an archaeological site in western Iran, situated in the valley of Kangavar in Kermanshah Province. Discovered in 1961, the site was excavated from 1965 to 1973 by a Canadian expedition headed by T. Cuyler Young Jr. and sponsored by the Royal Ontario Museum (Toronto, Ontario, Canada). The importance of the site may have been due to its role as a trading outpost in the early Mesopotamian trade networks.
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5579193
Zane State College
Q8066116
en
Zane State College is a public community college in Zanesville, and Cambridge, Ohio. It was established in 1969 as Muskingum Area Technical College. It offers over 40 associate degree programs and certificates, workshops, and occupational skills training. Zane State College shares its main campus with Ohio University – Zanesville.
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5579189
Olivia Bonamy
Q2625575
en
Olivia Bonamy (born 21 September 1972) is a French actress. She is best known for her appearances in the films "Jefferson in Paris", Jacques Audiard's "Read My Lips", the thriller "Ils" and "Le ciel, les oiseaux et ta mère".
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5579191
State of Somaliland
Q1106857
en
The State of Somaliland (, ) was a short-lived independent country in the territory of present-day unilaterally declared Republic of Somaliland. It existed on the territory of former British Somaliland for five days between 26 June 1960 and 1 July 1960, when it merged with the formerly Italian administered Trust Territory of Somaliland to form the Somali Republic.
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5579221
No Blue Thing
Q12040991
en
No Blue Thing is Ray Lynch’s fourth studio album, released on August 15, 1989. It peaked at #1 on Billboard's "Top New Age Albums" chart as well as #197 on Billboard's "Top 200 Albums". The album also peaked at #16 on "Gavin Report".
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5579273
Rupert Wainwright
Q971738
en
Rupert Wainwright is an English film and television director, writer, and actor.
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5579293
Nothing Above My Shoulders but the Evening
Q7062714
en
Nothing Above My Shoulders but the Evening is Ray Lynch’s fifth and final studio album. It reflects Lynch's classical background and features performances by members of the San Francisco Symphony. The album was released after Lynch signed with Windham Hill Records. It peaked at #1 on "Billboard"s "Top New Age Albums" chart.
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5579274
Wanda Nevada
Q2547870
en
Wanda Nevada is a 1979 American western comedy film starring Peter Fonda and Brooke Shields as the title character. It was also directed by Peter Fonda. Henry Fonda makes a cameo appearance as an Arizona prospector, making it the only film to feature the father and son together. Peter Fonda reportedly paid Henry $1000 () for one day's work on the film after receiving a call from his father that he was out of work.
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