text
stringlengths 50
3.94k
| l1
stringclasses 9
values | l2
stringlengths 4
28
| l3
stringlengths 3
33
|
---|---|---|---|
Double Take Comics is a comic book imprint of the American multinational video game publisher and distributor Take-Two Interactive. It was founded in 2013 by former Marvel publisher Bill Jemas. Its titles and characters are loosely inspired by the 1968 film Night of the Living Dead. The company's best-selling title is Z-Men, which is being adapted into a movie by Lionsgate.
|
Agent
|
Company
|
Publisher
|
HC Forward-Morges is an ice hockey team in Morges, Switzerland. They currently play in the Swiss 1. Liga, the third level of ice hockey in Switzerland. Forward Morges formerly played in the National League B, the second level of Swiss ice hockey, but withdrew during the 2005-06 season due to financial problems. They then played in the fourth-level Swiss 2. Liga, before being promoted to the 1. Liga following the 2010-11 season.
|
Agent
|
SportsTeam
|
HockeyTeam
|
The Bronze Anole (Anolis aeneus) is a species of anole lizard that is found in the Caribbean Lesser Antilles and South America. It is distributed on Grenada and throughout the Grenadines islands, and it has been introduced to Trinidad and Tobago. It can also be found in Guyana on the mainland. Males reach a length of 77 mm snout-to-vent. Its dorsal surface color is either pale gray, olive, or chocolate-brown, and it is marked with a pattern of mottling or fine speckles. Its ventral surface is pale, often with dark mottling along the sides. Its dewlap is white or dull green, with a yellow or orange spot near its front edge. Females are brown, with a mid-dorsal stripe or ladder-like marking, and a light flank stripe. It has been the focus of numerous studies of the behavior and ecological strategies employed by Anolis species.
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Reptile
|
Lynton Stott (born 9 May 1971 in Newton-le-Willows) is a professional rugby league footballer of the 1990s and 2000s, playing at club level for both the original and current Sheffield Eagles, Wakefield Trinity Wildcats, Doncaster, Workington Town, and Hull Kingston Rovers, as a Fullback, Wing, or Centre. Lynton Stott runs the Bradford Bulls Lottery, 'The Big One'.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
RugbyPlayer
|
Heterozius rotundifrons, or big hand crab, is a species of crab of the family Belliidae, endemic to New Zealand. The carapace width is up to 25 millimetres (1 in).
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Crustacean
|
Teng Yi (Chinese: 滕義) is a male former table tennis player from China. From 1985 to 1989 he won several medals in singles, doubles, and team events in the Asian Table Tennis Championships and in the World Table Tennis Championships. He also won the gold medal in the Table Tennis World Cup of 1987 in Macao.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
TableTennisPlayer
|
Shim Min-ji (also Sim Min-ji, Korean: 심 민지; born April 25, 1983) is a South Korean former swimmer, who specialized in freestyle and backstroke events. She is a two-time Olympian (2000 and 2004) and a three-time relay medalist at the Asian Games (2002). Shim made her Olympic debut, as a 17-year-old teen, at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, where she competed in the women's 100 m backstroke. Swimming in heat three, Shim finished second behind Zimbabwe's Kirsty Coventry in 1:03.20, but missed the semifinals by 0.15 of a second, as she shared a nineteenth-place tie with Australia's Giaan Rooney in the preliminaries. She also placed seventeenth, as a member of the South Korean team, in the 4×100 m medley relay (4:16.93). When her nation hosted the 2002 Asian Games in Busan, Shim won a total of three bronze medals: 4×100 m freestyle (3:44.81), 4×200 m freestyle (8:19.62), and 4×100 m medley relay (4:13.41). She also attempted for her fourth straight medal in the 100 m backstroke, but missed the podium by a 0.48-second margin behind Japan's Aya Terakawa. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Shim competed again in two swimming events. She cleared a FINA B-standard entry time of 1:02.87 (100 m backstroke) from the World Championships in Barcelona, Spain. She also teamed up with Ryu Yoon-Ji, Sun So-Eun, and Kim Hyun-Joo in the 4×100 m freestyle relay. Swimming the third leg, Shim recorded a split of 56.91, but the South Koreans missed the final by two seconds outside the top 8, in a time of 3:44.84. In the 100 m backstroke, Shim challenged seven other swimmers on the fourth heat, including top medal favorites Laure Manaudou of France and Reiko Nakamura of Japan. She rounded out the field to last place by 0.67 of a second behind Canada's Erin Gammel in 1:03.14. Shim failed to advance into the semifinals, as she placed twenty-fourth overall in the preliminaries.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
Swimmer
|
Me Kaksi is a 1920 poetry collection by Finnish poet Aaro Hellaakoski. The poems use satirical tones reflecting feelings of inadequacy and loneliness.
|
Work
|
WrittenWork
|
Poem
|
The Malaysian Open (formerly known as the Malaysian Tennis Classic) is a professional women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. The event is affiliated with the Women's Tennis Association (WTA), and is an International-level tournament on the WTA Tour. The event has been held at the Bukit Kiara Equestrian & Country Resort and The Royal Selangor Golf Club. The first edition of the event took place from February 22–28, 2010. In 2011 the event became sponsored by BMW.
|
Event
|
Tournament
|
WomensTennisAssociationTournament
|
Maybe is an Irish Thoroughbred racehorse. She was undefeated in five races in 2011 including the Group One Moyglare Stud Stakes and was awarded the title of European Champion Two-Year-Old Filly of 2011 at the Cartier Racing Awards. She was the winter favourite for the 2012 1000 Guineas.
|
Species
|
Horse
|
RaceHorse
|
Don Figlozzi (January 17, 1909 – June 1981) was an American animator and cartoonist. A veteran of Fleischer Studios and member of the National Cartoonists Society, he spent the first half of his career in animation and the second half at the New York Daily News, where his cartoons, signed \"Fig,\" became a fixture. Historian Harvey Deneroff of the Savannah College of Art and Design suggests that Figlozzi may have created the first animations to be used on television.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
ComicsCreator
|
Fugløykalven Lighthouse (Norwegian: Fugløykalven fyr) is a coastal lighthouse in the municipality of Karlsøy in Troms county, Norway. The lighthouse is located on the small island Fugløykalven northwest of the island Nord-Fugløya. This was considered one of the most isolated and difficult assignments of all Norwegian light stations.
|
Place
|
Tower
|
Lighthouse
|
Maxime Simoens (born November 15, 1984 in Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France) is a French designer. He is an \"invited member\" of the Chamber of Parisian Couture union.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
FashionDesigner
|
Blue Haze is a compilation of tracks recorded in 1953 and 1954 by Miles Davis for Prestige Records.
|
Work
|
MusicalWork
|
Album
|
Seventh Dagger Records is a straight edge independent record label releasing largely, but not solely, hardcore and metalcore albums. It was founded in 2001 and based in Creedmoor, North Carolina. Originally formed as a clothing company, Seventh Dagger became well known for their straight edge apparel and \"Kill Your Local Drug Dealer\" shirts. Rhinoceros discusses these shirts in their April 2008 interview with Revolver Magazine.
|
Agent
|
Company
|
RecordLabel
|
The Copa do Brasil 2004 was the 16th staging of the Copa do Brasil. The competition started on February 4, 2004 and concluded on June 30, 2004 with the second leg of the final, held at the Estádio do Maracanã in Rio de Janeiro, in which Santo André lifted the trophy for the first time with a 2-0 victory over Flamengo. Dauri, of 15 de Novembro, with 8 goals, was the competition's top goal scorer.
|
Event
|
Tournament
|
SoccerTournament
|
The 2016 Labour Party leadership election was called to elect the new Leader of the Labour Party after incumbent Diederik Samsom announced a leadership election to select the Lijsttrekker (top candidate) for the Dutch general election of 2017.
|
Event
|
SocietalEvent
|
Election
|
Guardian Capital Group, founded in 1962, operates several fully owned subsidiaries whose operations are to provide investment management services, financial advisory services, retail distribution of mutual funds, insurance, and general corporate services. Guardian Capital Group is headquartered in Toronto, Canada, and became publicly listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1969. As of December 31, 2015, the company has $24.2 billion in assets under management. In May 2001, Guardian Capital Group sold a portion of its retail mutual fund business with roughly $2 billion in assets under management to the Bank of Montreal in exchange for 4.96 million common shares, worth roughly $180 million. Guardian Capital LP, one of Canada's largest investment management firms and a subsidiary of Guardian Capital Group, actively manages many of BMO's mutual fund products. In January 2009, George Mavroudis was appointed President of Guardian Capital Group. Mavroudis has been with the company since 2005 in the position of Senior Vice-President, Strategic Planning and Development. Prior to joining Guardian Capital Group, Mavroudis held previous appointments as a Managing Director with J.P. Morgan Asset Management in its London, New York City, Moscow, and Toronto offices.
|
Agent
|
Company
|
Bank
|
Moti Lal Bohora was the chief of Nepal Police from 1993-1997. He succeeded Ratna Shumsher J.B.R. as the police chief and was succeeded by Achyut Krishna Kharel. It was during his tenure as chief that the \"People's War\" in Nepal began. He is the last known officer to have remained IGP for a full term (4 years). As of 2014, Former police chief Moti Lal Bohora is involved with Maalika Development Bank in Dhangadi.
|
Agent
|
Person
|
OfficeHolder
|
The Siege of Calcutta was a battle between the British East India Company, and Siraj ud-Daulah, the Nawab of Bengal in India. The Nawab aimed to recapture the city of Calcutta from European control, after tensions had risen due to the East India Company building fortifications in case of French attack as part of the Seven Years' War. The British were unprepared for the attack on June 20th, and Fort William - containing the entire European population of the city - fell almost immediately, leaving the city in Indian hands. Many of the British prisoners were held in a prison called the 'Black Hole' shortly afterwards, with many deaths.
|
Event
|
SocietalEvent
|
MilitaryConflict
|
The 1884 Philadelphia Athletics finished with a 61–46 record and finished in seventh place in the American Association.
|
SportsSeason
|
SportsTeamSeason
|
BaseballSeason
|
The Saluda Mountains are a mountain range that straddles along the North Carolina and South Carolina border, in the southeastern United States. They are part of the Blue Ridge Province of the Southern Appalachian Mountains.
|
Place
|
NaturalPlace
|
MountainRange
|
Horace Austin Warner (\"Haw\") Tabor (November 26, 1830 – April 10, 1899), also known as The Bonanza King of Leadville, was an American prospector, businessman, and Republican politician. His life is the subject of Douglas Moore's opera, The Ballad of Baby Doe; and the 1932 Hollywood biographical movie:Silver Dollar. Also, Graham Masterton's 1987 novel Silver has a protagonist named Henry T. Roberts, whose life includes incidents from Tabor's.
|
Agent
|
Politician
|
Senator
|
Deltophora peltosema is a moth of the Gelechiidae family. It is found in India, Sri Lanka and Australia (Western Australia, Queensland and New South Wales). Records from South Africa and South America are based on misidentifications. The length of the forewings is 5-5.5 mm. The forewings are grey-brown to ochreous, with mostly indistinct dark brown markings. The hindwings are plain pale brown, with hairy margins. Adults have been recorded on wing from September to April.
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Insect
|
Moby Arena is an 8,745-seat basketball arena in Fort Collins, in the U.S. state of Colorado. The arena, officially known as the Colorado State Auditorium-Gymnasium, was opened on January 27, 1966, with a victory over New Mexico State. The arena was built to replace South College Gymnasium, which was built in 1926 and seated 1,500 people.
|
Place
|
SportFacility
|
Stadium
|
Alexander Neubauer (born 15 July 1986) is an Austrian ice hockey player currently playing for Kapfenberg (in the province Styria) of the Austrian Nationalliga. Neubauer began his career with VSV EC in 2003 and remained with the team until 2006 when he joined Graz 99ers.
|
Agent
|
WinterSportPlayer
|
IceHockeyPlayer
|
Hamburg Pavilion is a regional shopping center located along I-75 and Man o' War Boulevard in Lexington, Kentucky. It is one of the state's largest shopping centers with 1,040,000 square feet (97,000 m2) of retail space and is continuing to be developed. Hamburg currently has just over 70 stores, making it the fifth largest shopping center in the state, second in Lexington behind Fayette Mall. The shopping center is anchored by Target, Kohl's, Dick's Sporting Goods, Regal Cinemas, Barnes & Noble, and Best Buy. It is part of the Hamburg Place development. Hamburg Pavilion was developed on land that was once part of Hamburg Place Farm, for which its name is derived. The first stores opened in the shopping center in 1997.
|
Place
|
Building
|
ShoppingMall
|
The Battle of Crete (German: Luftlandeschlacht um Kreta, Greek: Μάχη της Κρήτης, also Unternehmen Merkur, Operation Mercury) was fought during World War II on the Greek island of Crete. It began on the morning of 20 May 1941, when Nazi Germany began an airborne invasion of Crete. Greek forces and other Allied forces, along with Cretan civilians, defended the island. After one day of fighting, the Germans had suffered heavy casualties and the Allied troops were confident that they would defeat the invasion. The next day, through communication failures, Allied tactical hesitation and German offensive operations, Maleme airfield in western Crete fell, enabling the Germans to land reinforcements and overwhelm the defensive positions on the north of the island. Allied forces withdrew to the south coast. Over half were evacuated by the British Royal Navy; the remainder surrendered or joined the Cretan resistance. The Battle of Crete was the first occasion where Fallschirmjäger (German paratroops) were used en masse, the first mainly airborne invasion in military history, the first time the Allies made significant use of intelligence from the decrypted German messages from the Enigma machine and the first time German troops encountered mass resistance from a civilian population. Due to the number of casualties and the belief that airborne forces no longer had the advantage of surprise Adolf Hitler became reluctant to authorise large airborne operations, preferring instead to employ paratroopers as ground troops. In contrast, the Allies were impressed by the potential of paratroopers and started to form airborne-assault and airfield-defence regiments.
|
Event
|
SocietalEvent
|
MilitaryConflict
|
Kimberlie R. Acosta (aka Kimberlie R. Hall) is a well known photographer in Indian Country. She has the most comprehensive collection of Native Musician photography archives available from the past 15 years. She has taken pictures of the likes of Buffy Sainte-Marie, Loretta Lynn, Jana, Tina Turner, Joanne Shenandoah, and Bill Miller just to name a few. Since 1999, she has been the official photographer for the Native American Music Awards. Kimberlie is also the advertising director for News From Indian Country, the independent National Indian newspaper, host of RezStyle and co-host of The Native News Update on IndianCountryTV.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
Photographer
|
Akshayraj Kore (born 1 September 1988), is an Indian chess player and a Grandmaster. In 2006, he became Maharashtra's youngest International Master at the time after he won the Invitational IM Norm Round Robin Chess Tournament in Luhansk, Ukraine. In February 2013, he became India's 32nd Grandmaster.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
ChessPlayer
|
Yeosu Expo Station is a KTX station in the city of Yeosu. It is on Jeolla Line.
|
Place
|
Station
|
RailwayStation
|
Joseph Jenkins Roberts (March 15, 1809 – February 24, 1876) was the first (1848–1856) and seventh (1872–1876) President of Liberia. Born free in Norfolk, Virginia, US, Roberts emigrated to Liberia in 1829 as a young man. He opened a trading store in Monrovia, and later engaged in politics. When Liberia became independent in July 26, 1847, Roberts was elected the first Black American president for the Republic of Liberia, serving until 1856. In 1872 he was elected again to serve as Liberia's seventh president.
|
Agent
|
Politician
|
President
|
Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179 (1973), was a decision of the United States Supreme Court overturning the abortion law of Georgia. The Supreme Court's decision was released on January 22, 1973, the same day as the decision in the better-known case of Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). Doe v. Bolton challenged Georgia's much more liberal abortion statute.
|
UnitOfWork
|
LegalCase
|
SupremeCourtOfTheUnitedStatesCase
|
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Wuzhou (Latin: Uceuven(sis), Chinese: 梧州, 蒼梧) is a diocese located in the city of Wuzhou in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Nanning in China.
|
Place
|
ClericalAdministrativeRegion
|
Diocese
|
Elliott William Barnes Sadler (born April 30, 1975) is an American professional stock car racing driver. He currently competes full-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 1 Chevrolet Camaro for JR Motorsports. Sadler is one of twenty-six drivers who have at least one win each of NASCAR's top three series. Sadler was born in Emporia, Virginia; he is the younger brother of former NASCAR driver Hermie Sadler.
|
Agent
|
RacingDriver
|
NascarDriver
|
Pellaea breweri is a species of fern known by the common name Brewer's cliffbrake. It is native to much of the Western United States. It grows in rocky habitat such as cliffs and mountain slopes.
|
Species
|
Plant
|
Fern
|
The Milbank Quarterly is a quarterly peer-reviewed healthcare journal covering health care policy. It was established in 1923 and is published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the Milbank Memorial Fund, an endowed national foundation funded by Elizabeth Milbank Anderson that supports research of issues related to health policy. It covers topics such as the impact of social factors on health, prevention, allocation of health care resources, legal and ethical issues in health policy, health and health care administration, and the organization and financing of health care.
|
Work
|
PeriodicalLiterature
|
AcademicJournal
|
Heinrich Adam (1787 – 15 February 1862) was a German painter.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
Painter
|
John B. \"Jack\" Sidoli (1854 or 1855 – 3 November 1934) was an Australian rules footballer for Port Adelaide in the 19th century, noted for his versatility. He also played cricket for South Australia, and was a member of the Royal South Australian Yacht Squadron. He was both a football and cricket umpire. Sidoli worked as a shipwright and blacksmith in Port Adelaide, initially working in a partnership as Hosie & Sidoli before founding his own business, Sidoli and Son; which he retired from in about 1931. He had one brother, Angelo Gabriel, and two sisters, A. Ringer and L. A. Quinn. Sidoli had three sons, Herbert, Jack and Arnold, and five daughters, Marion, Victoria, Madeline, Lorna and A. B. Mortimer.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
AustralianRulesFootballPlayer
|
KIGC (88.7 FM) is a non-commercial radio station that serves the William Penn College campus and the Oskaloosa, Iowa area. The station broadcasts a Variety format. KIGC is owned by William Penn College. The transmitter and broadcast antenna are located on the campus of William Penn College. According to the FCC database, the antenna is mounted 27 m (89 ft) above ground level. The calculated Height Above Average Terrain is 37 m (121 ft).
|
Agent
|
Broadcaster
|
RadioStation
|
Alice of Schaerbeek, O.Cist. (or Adelaide or Aleydis) (French: Sainte Alix), (1204–1250) was a Cistercian laysister who is venerated as the patron saint of the blind and paralyzed. Her feast day is June 15.
|
Agent
|
Cleric
|
Saint
|
Somewhere Far Beyond is the fourth studio album by German power metal band Blind Guardian. It was released in 1992 and produced by Kalle Trapp. The cover artwork was created by Andreas Marschall, who drew the artwork for other Blind Guardian's releases (Tales from the Twilight World, Nightfall in Middle-Earth, etc.). The album saw the band creating its own original sound, while still employing most of their speed/power metal techniques. The cover art and the two \"Bard's Songs\" gave the band its nickname \"The Bards\". The use of the nickname has been also extended to the fans of the group, Circle of the Bards being the now defunct fan club and Hansi frequently calling the fans Bards. \"The Piper's Calling\" contains the first 3 parts of the Great Highland Bagpipe 2/4 March, \"The 79th's Farewell to Gibraltar\", written by Pipe Major John MacDonald of the 79th Regiment of Foot (Cameronian Volunteers). Part of this composition also appears as a section of the title track, this time played on a different type of bagpipe. The album was acclaimed by power metal fans all across Europe and especially Japan, allowing them to tour for the first time outside Germany. The tour in the Far East led to the band's first live album, Tokyo Tales. It was remastered and re-released on 15 June 2007, with bonus tracks. The album was again re-released and also remixed and remastered as part of A Traveler's Guide to Space and Time boxset.
|
Work
|
MusicalWork
|
Album
|
Los Cochinos (\"The Pigs\") is a 1973 comedy album recorded by Cheech & Chong. The Spanish term cochino is a derogatory way of referring to a pig, as it also means \"dirty\", in contrast to cerdo, a more neutral word for a pig as an animal. In this context, \"cochino\" (\"[dirty] pig\") equates to the American derogatory term \"pig\" for policeman.
|
Work
|
MusicalWork
|
Album
|
Established in 1999, Southern Collegiate Baseball League (SCBL) is a non-profit, wooden bat collegiate summer league with eight teams throughout the Carolinas. College players from four-year institutions (NCAA and NAIA) as well as junior and community colleges are eligible to play. SCBL differs from other summer wooden bat leagues, in that, teams only play a 42-game schedule and pitchers may only throw a maximum of 85 pitches per game. At the end of the season, the teams play in a tournament to determine the League Champion.
|
Agent
|
SportsLeague
|
BaseballLeague
|
The ground jays or ground choughs belong to a distinct group of the passerine order of birds in the genus Podoces of the crow family Corvidae. They inhabit high altitude semi-desert areas from central Asia to Mongolia. Ground jays show adaptations to ground living such as long, strong legs adapted to fast running and the ability to leap and bound onto boulders and rocks with great agility. Their long, curved thick bills are adapted for digging and probing. While capable of flight (which they do infrequently and relatively weakly), they prefer running, and will readily perch on trees and bushes also.
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Bird
|
Sharwin I (Persian: شروین) was the fifth ruler of the Bavand dynasty from 772 to 817. He was the son and successor of Surkhab II.
|
Agent
|
Person
|
Monarch
|
Henrik Kristoffersen (born 2 July 1994) is a Norwegian World Cup alpine ski racer and Olympic medalist. Born in Lørenskog in Akershus county, Kristoffersen specializes in the technical events of slalom and giant slalom. He made his World Cup debut March 2012 in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, and attained his first podium in November 2013, a third-place finish in slalom at Levi, Finland. At the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Kristoffersen won the bronze medal in slalom at Rosa Khutor at age 19 to become the youngest male medalist in Olympic alpine skiing history. Kristoffersen is the first to win the three classic slalom races in Adelboden, Wengen and Kitzbühel in the same season. He is the Norwegian with most Slalom FIS World Cup wins of all time. Kristofferson tied Finn Christian Jagge with six wins 18 January 2016. Only a week later (24. January 2016 in Kitzbühel) with his seventh win. And increased his record only two days later (26 January) with another win, this time the night race of Schladming.
|
Agent
|
WinterSportPlayer
|
Skier
|
The P.C. Hooftstraat is a shopping street in Amsterdam, Netherlands. In 1876 it was named after Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft (1581–1647), a Dutch historian, poet and playwright. The street is located in the stadsdeel Amsterdam Oud-Zuid and runs from the Stadhouderskade to the Vondelpark. It is crossed by the Hobbemastraat and the Van Baerlestraat. In 1883 a horsecar-service started in this street to connect the Dam with the Willemsparkweg, one of the new upper-class neighbourhoods in Amsterdam-Zuid. In 1903 this horsecar was replaced by the new electric tramway line 2. A year later another tramway, line 3, also had the street in its route. This tramway was in existence until tracks were added on the Vondelbrug and both lines were switched to use the shorter route. In the last decade the P.C. Hooftstraat has developed to become one of the most expensive shopping streets in the Netherlands. Several Dutch and international and exclusive brands have stores here. The following stores are in the street: \n* 7 For All Mankind \n* Agent Provocateur \n* Bally \n* Brunello Cucinelli \n* Bulgari \n* Burberry \n* Canali \n* Cartier \n* Chanel \n* Chopard \n* Church's \n* Corneliani \n* Dior \n* Dolce & Gabbana \n* Emporio Armani \n* Ermenegildo Zegna \n* Gucci \n* Hackett London \n* Hermès \n* Hugo Boss \n* IWC \n* Jimmy Choo \n* Laurel \n* Louis Vuitton \n* Michael Kors \n* Montblanc \n* Moncler \n* Oger \n* Philipp Plein \n* Prada \n* Paul Smith \n* Ralph Lauren \n* Rolex \n* Salvatore Ferragamo \n* Tiffany & Co \n* Tommy Hilfiger \n* Valentino Apartments here are among the most expensive in the city.
|
Place
|
RouteOfTransportation
|
Road
|
\"Gravedigger\" is a song by Dave Matthews from his debut solo album, Some Devil. This was the first solo single released by Matthews away from the Dave Matthews Band, and it won a Grammy Award for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance at the 46th Grammy Awards held on February 8, 2004. The song has been performed live by Dave Matthews (solo), by Dave Matthews with Tim Reynolds, at Dave Matthews & Friends concerts, and occasionally as an acoustic solo by Matthews during Dave Matthews Band shows. During the Dave Matthews Band's tours in 2008 and 2009, it was played regularly by the full band. Matthews said about the song: \"It's kind of these different stories that are brought together by walking through a graveyard with their names and the dates of their births and their deaths, and the stories that came out of their lives. It's sort of just telling those stories and some others as you wander through a graveyard and what you might think if you could walk into the graves and find out what people went through to get there.\" There was also an acoustic version of the song on the album Some Devil. The song began as an intro played twice solo by Matthews at full-band DMB shows in the spring of 2002, before debuting as a full solo song in the same tour. In the original \"Gravedigger Intro\" version, only two people are mentioned: Merrill Lee (1905–1969) and Robert John Smith.
|
Work
|
MusicalWork
|
Single
|
The Field Elm cultivar Ulmus minor 'Microphylla Pendula' was first listed by Kirchner, in Petzold& Kirchner Arboretum Muscaviense 561, 1864, as Ulmus microphylla pendula Hort.. A tree growing under that name at Kew was classed as a nothomorph of Ulmus minor 'Sarniensis' by Melville.
|
Species
|
Plant
|
CultivatedVariety
|
State Route 167, commonly known as the Valley Freeway, is a state highway in the U.S. state of Washington. It connects Interstate 5 in Tacoma with Interstate 405 in Renton, and is 28.60 miles (46.03 km) long.
|
Place
|
RouteOfTransportation
|
Road
|
Anton Ronald Andrew Murray (30 April 1922 in Grahamstown, Cape Province – 17 April 1995 in Cape Town, Cape Province) was a South African cricketer who played in 10 Tests in a little over a year from December 1952 to February 1954, appearing four times against Australia and then six times against New Zealand. He later toured England as a member of the 1955 South African side but did not appear in any of the Tests there. Outside cricket, he was a schoolmaster who founded a noted school in Pretoria.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
Cricketer
|
Emperor Konoe (近衛天皇 Konoe-tennō, June 16, 1139 – August 22, 1155) was the 76th emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. Konoe's reign spanned the years from 1142 through 1155.
|
Agent
|
Person
|
Monarch
|
Paul Lloyd Martini (born November 2, 1960 in Weston, Ontario) is a Canadian pair skater. With partner Barbara Underhill, he is the 1979-1983 Canadian national champion, the 1984 World champion, and the 1978 World Junior champion. They represented Canada at the 1980 Winter Olympics, where they placed 9th, and at the 1984 Winter Olympics, where they placed 7th.
|
Agent
|
WinterSportPlayer
|
FigureSkater
|
The Lillian Goldman Law Library in Memory of Sol Goldman, commonly known as the Yale Law Library, is the law library of Yale Law School. It is located in the Sterling Law Building and has almost 800,000 volumes of print materials and about 10,000 active serial titles, in which there are 200,000 volumes of foreign and international law materials. It is also well known as the place where Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham met for the first time.
|
Agent
|
EducationalInstitution
|
Library
|
Gravesend Cricket Club is a cricket club which currently plays in Division 2 of the Kent Cricket League. The club was formed in 1880 and plays at the Bat and Ball Ground which has been around for over 150 years (since 1848). First Class Cricket was played at \"The Bat\" (as it is affectionately known) by Kent County Cricket Club and its Second XI. The highest ever score on the ground came from W.G.Grace with 257 for Gloucestershire in 1895, and the most wickets in a match coming from Tich Freeman for Kent in 1931. The club currently has four running league teams, as well as a 5th XI which play friendly matches. Also, the club operates an exciting youth section with teams ranging from U11 to U17 (with the exceptions of U14 and 16). In Autumn 2011, the club was awarded the ECB \"Clubmark\" status which acknowledges the colts section of the club.
|
Agent
|
SportsTeam
|
CricketTeam
|
Kris Kirchner (born 1960) is an American former competition swimmer who represented the United States in international events. At the 1979 Pan American Games in San Juan Puerto, Rico, he won a gold medal as a member of the winning U.S. team in the 4x200-metre freestyle relay, together with teammates Brian Goodell, David Larson and Rowdy Gaines. He qualified to be a member of the U.S. team for the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, but was unable to participate as a result of the United States-led boycott of the games because of the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. He initially attended Cleveland State University, and competed for the Cleveland State Vikings in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition in 1977 and 1978. After the Pan American Games, he subsequently transferred to the University of Texas at Austin, where he swam for coach Eddie Reese's Texas Longhorns swimming and diving team in 1980 and 1981. He won the NCAA national championship in the 50-yard freestyle, and another in the 400-yard medley relay with teammates Clay Britt, Scott Spann and William Paulus, helping the Longhorns win their first-ever NCAA national team championship in 1981. Kirchner was the head coach of the Indiana Hoosiers swimming and diving team, at Indiana University, from 1991 to 2002. He previously served as an assistant coach for the Texas Longhorns, and head coach for the South Carolina Gamecocks swimming and diving team at the University of South Carolina from 1986 to 1991.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
Swimmer
|
Luis Eduardo Pérez (1774 – August 30, 1841) was the first interim president of Uruguay.
|
Agent
|
Politician
|
President
|
Digital Hardcore Recordings (DHR) is a record label set up in 1994 by Alec Empire, Joel Amaretto and Pete Lawton. Most of the music is recorded in Berlin, though the label is based in London where the records are mastered and manufactured. The funds for setting up the label came from the payment which Atari Teenage Riot received for their aborted record deal with the major UK record label Phonogram Records. The label is acclaimed for its articulation of the digital hardcore style of music - \"Digital hardcore\" is used not only to refer to the record label itself, but to the genre that its artists helped to create. Several artists to this day, though not affiliated with the DHR label, would classify themselves as digital hardcore, tangible proof of DHR's solid influence on the industrial/electronic scene as well as on the rock/metal-scene. In 1995 DHR released its first album (they had previously only released a 12\" in 1994) and a compilation, Harder Than The Rest. Digital Hardcore Festival events were held in several German cities, and the Suicide Club in Berlin, run by a friend of ATR, provided a platform to new bands such as EC8OR. The word about DHR spread to underground scenes in Japan, USA, Australia and Europe. BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel heard about DHR and invited Atari Teenage Riot to play in London. In 1996 DHR made a distribution deal for the US on the Beastie Boys' Grand Royal label then DHR toured there and South East Asia. Atari Teenage Riot toured in support of bands such as Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Beck, Rage Against the Machine and Wu-Tang Clan. In 1997 Atari Teenage Riot, Shizuo and Ec8or embarked on a Digital Hardcore tour of the United States. In 1998 DHR established an office in New York City and its studios in Berlin. In the ensuing years Atari Teenage Riot came under a lot of pressure, amongst other reasons because of member Carl Crack's psychosis (and subsequent death). By 2000 the Berlin music scene in which DHR had found its place was declining, Atari Teenage Riot disbanded and no new groups or artists were being signed to DHR. At the end of that year Alec Empire decided to restructure DHR and began work on a new album. In 2001 Empire released Intelligence and Sacrifice and played shows in the US. He became aware of the growing digital hardcore scene there, releasing a compilation of American bands on DHR entitled Don’t Fuck With Us! Although at present the label is seen as less influential than it was in the 1990s, DHR is nevertheless recognised for its role in the emergence of [breakcore], as well as promoting music its artists believed in.
|
Agent
|
Company
|
RecordLabel
|
The Brazilian snake-necked turtle (Hydromedusa maximiliani ), locally known as cágado da serra, is a species of chelid turtle endemic to southeastern Brazil. It is one of the smallest Brazilian freshwater turtles reaching a maximum carapace length of 20 cm (7.9 in). The species prefers streams with sandy and rocky bottoms and clear water in forests above 600 m (2,000 ft) elevation.
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Reptile
|
The Oxford and Rugby Railway was a railway between Oxford and Fenny Compton that was projected to reach Rugby but failed to do so.
|
Place
|
RouteOfTransportation
|
RailwayLine
|
The Campeonato Brasileiro Série C is the third tier of the Brazilian football league system. Unlike the first and second divisions, the Série C is not played in a double round robin system, arguably because many participating teams lack the financial conditions to travel long distances. Thus, the tournament is organized in regional groups and the table prevents teams from distant states from playing each other in the initial rounds. Until 2008, any professional team could apply, but only 64 teams would take part in the tournament. The teams that had been relegated from Série B in the previous year were joined by teams qualified for each federation state. Qualification rules varied, some federations used the state tournaments as qualification tournaments, others organized exclusive qualification tournaments to the Série C. Beginning in 2009, Série C was reduced from 64 teams to 20 and a new Campeonato Brasileiro Série D is the qualifier for Brazilian league football. In its current format the 20 teams are divided into 2 groups and each team plays all opponents from its own group on a home and away basis. The top four teams in each group qualify for a knock out stage and the four semi-finalists are promoted to Campeonato Brasileiro Série B. The bottom two teams of each group are relegated to Campeonato Brasileiro Série D.
|
Agent
|
SportsLeague
|
SoccerLeague
|
Große Pyra is a river of Saxony, Germany. It is a right tributary of the Zwickauer Mulde, which it joins in Morgenröthe-Rautenkranz.
|
Place
|
Stream
|
River
|
Daniel Bursk \"Dan\" Strickler (May 17, 1897 – June 29, 1992) was the 19th Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1950, under Governor James Duff. He was also a career officer in the United States Army, with service on active duty, in the Army Reserve, and in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard, and he served as commander of the 28th Infantry Division.
|
Agent
|
Politician
|
Governor
|
The Overgate Centre is a shopping centre in Dundee, Scotland. Built in the 1960s to replace buildings erected in the 18th and 19th centuries, most of the original structure (e.g. the Angus Hotel) was demolished and redeveloped from 1998 to 2000. The centre reopened as a fully enclosed shopping mall in 2000 and follows the same basic layout as the 1960s structure. It is the only single-sided shopping mall in Europe. Two levels of retail units are enclosed by a long curved glass elevation looking out to the historic City Churches where a pedestrian precinct remains. It houses over 60 shops, cafes and restaurants as well as three car parks, two being multi-storey. The flagship stores are Debenhams, which is the only store that spans three floors, situated at the west end, and Primark at the opposite end. City House, a ten-storey office building, is located within the Overgate Centre itself and remains from the original 1960s centre. It overlooks the pedestrianised City Square and historic Caird Hall. City House is home to the Dundee offices of Curtis Banks, which employs around 40 members of staff.
|
Place
|
Building
|
ShoppingMall
|
Ryan Ford (born March 8, 1982) is a Canadian professional boxer and retired mixed martial artist who competed in the Welterweight division. A professional competitor since 2007, Ford has also formerly competed for Bellator, the WSOF, the MFC, TFC, and the AFC.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
MartialArtist
|
Julian Emil-Jamaal Wright (born May 20, 1987) is an American professional basketball player for Trabzonspor of the Turkish Basketball Super League (BSL). He played collegiately for the University of Kansas.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
BasketballPlayer
|
The Otago Rugby Football Union is the official governing body of rugby union for the Otago Region of New Zealand. The union is based in the city of Dunedin, and its home ground is Forsyth Barr Stadium. The top representative team competes in the ITM Cup, New Zealand's top provincial competition. The union was to have been liquidated in March 2012. However a deal involving the Dunedin City Council allowed it to keep operating.
|
Agent
|
SportsTeam
|
RugbyClub
|
Hendrik Reiher (born 25 January 1962 in Eisenhüttenstadt) is a German rowing cox. He competed for the SG Dynamo Potsdam/ Sportvereinigung (SV) Dynamo. He won medals at several Summer Olympics as well as at international rowing competitions.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
Rower
|
Arthur Roche (born 6 March 1950) is an English archbishop of the Catholic Church. On 26 June 2012, he was named by Pope Benedict XVI to serve as the Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, at which time he was raised to his current rank. Roche had served as the ninth Bishop of Leeds, having served previously as Coadjutor Bishop of Leeds and, before that, as an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Westminster, England's principal Catholic diocese.
|
Agent
|
Cleric
|
ChristianBishop
|
American Short Fiction is a nationally circulated literary magazine based in Austin, Texas. Issued triannually, American Short Fiction publishes short fiction, novel excerpts, and an occasional novella, and strives to publish work by both established and emerging contemporary authors. The magazine seeks out stories \"that dive into the wreck, that stretch the reader between recognition and surprise, that conjure a particular world with delicate expertise—stories that take a different way home.\" American Short Fiction sponsors two annual short fiction contests, the American Short Fiction Contest, judged in 2016 by Justin Torres, and the American Short(er) Fiction Prize. The magazine also sponsors a reading series in Austin as well as online workshops for fiction writers.
|
Work
|
PeriodicalLiterature
|
Magazine
|
Leena Puranen (born 18 October 1986) is a Finnish football forward who plays for Swedish lower division team Kungsbacka DFF. In 2012 and 2013 she played for Jitex BK in Sweden's Damallsvenskan. She previously played for FC Ilves, United Pietarsaari and HJK in the Naisten Liiga, and KIF Örebro and Hammarby IF in the Swedish league. Puranen made her senior Finland women's national football team debut in a 4–0 friendly defeat to the United States in Carson, California on 25 August 2007. In May 2009 Puranen suffered an anterior cruciate ligament injury, which ruled her out of UEFA Women's Euro 2009 in Finland. National coach Andrée Jeglertz selected Puranen in Finland's squad for UEFA Women's Euro 2013, but she did not play in any of their three games at the tournament. When Jitex let several players go for financial reasons after the 2013 season, Puranen moved to Division 1 Kungsbacka DFF. By the mid season break she had scored 16 goals at the lower level.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
SoccerPlayer
|
Carlo Bon Compagni, Count of Mombello (Turin, 25 July 1804 – Turin, 14 December 1880) was an Italian judge, educator and politician. Bon Compagni served in early constitutional governments of the Kingdom of Sardinia. He was Minister of Public Education in the Balbo and Casati cabinets, and Minister of Grace and Justice in the second D'Azeglio cabinet and the first Cavour cabinet. A three-time President of the Chamber of Deputies, he became a senator in the unified Kingdom of Italy on 15 November 1874.
|
Agent
|
Politician
|
PrimeMinister
|
The 1934 Detroit Lions season was the fifth season in franchise history. It was the first season the team played in Detroit; the franchise had previously played in Portsmouth, Ohio, as the Portsmouth Spartans. They failed to qualify for the playoffs for the second consecutive season. In Week Eight of the season against the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Lions set a single-game NFL record by rushing for 426 yards as a team in a 40–7 win.
|
SportsSeason
|
FootballLeagueSeason
|
NationalFootballLeagueSeason
|
The bluestripe ribbon snake (Thamnophis sauritus nitae) is a ribbon snake that occurs along the Gulf Coast in Florida. Adults are thin and are black with a mid-dorsal stripe that is a lighter shade of black and two blue stripes, hence the name \"bluestripe ribbon snake\". They are semi-aquatic and are active during the day. They can be found by lakes, rivers, and slow-moving streams.
|
Species
|
Animal
|
Reptile
|
The Blessed Mary Catherine of St. Augustine, O.S.A., (French: Marie-Catherine de Saint-Augustin) (3 May 1632 – 8 May 1668) was a French canoness regular who was instrumental in the development of the Hôtel-Dieu de Québec in service to the colony of New France. She has been beatified by the Catholic Church.
|
Agent
|
Cleric
|
Saint
|
Tardamu Airport (IATA: SAU, ICAO: WATS) is an airport located in Savu Island, Sabu Raijua Regency, East Nusa Tenggara. Due to the short runway, it is only served by Cessna 208 Caravan jetprop aircraft operated by Susi Air up to 4x per day from Kupang, 2x per week from Roti, 3x week from Waingapu and 3x per week from Ende.
|
Place
|
Infrastructure
|
Airport
|
South Gloucestershire Bus & Coach is a bus and coach operator operating school bus services under contract to Bristol City Council and South Gloucestershire Council and coach services under contract to National Express.
|
Agent
|
Company
|
BusCompany
|
The Royal Cliff Hotels Group consists of 4 hotels and a multipurpose convention centre between Jomtien and South Pattaya, Thailand, occupying 64 acres (26 ha) of parkland overlooking the eastern shore of the Gulf of Thailand.
|
Place
|
Building
|
Hotel
|
The Volta a Catalunya (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈbɔɫtə ə kətəˈɫuɲə]; English: Tour of Catalonia, Spanish: Vuelta a Cataluña) is a road bicycle race held annually in Catalonia, Spain. It is part of the UCI World Tour as the fifth event of the competition. It is one of three World Tour stage races in Spain, together with the Vuelta a España and the Tour of the Basque Country. The race has had several different calendar dates, running before in September, June and May. Since 2010 it is on the calendar in late March. Raced over seven days, it covers the autonomous community of Catalonia in Northeast Spain and contains one or more stages in the mountain region of the Pyrenees. The race traditionally finishes with a stage in Barcelona, Catalonia's capital, on a circuit with the famous Montjuïc climb and park. First held in 1911, the Volta a Catalunya is the fourth-oldest still-existing cycling stage race in the world. Only the Tour de France (1903), the Tour of Belgium (1908) and the Giro d'Italia (1909) are older. It was the second cycling event organized on the Iberian peninsula, only after the amateur and sub-23 race Volta a Tarragona (1908), equally held in Catalonia but no longer on the calendar. Catalan cycling icon Mariano Cañardo won the race seven times in the 1920s and 1930s, setting an unsurpassed record.
|
Event
|
Race
|
CyclingRace
|
Johann Christian Michel Ezdorf or Etzdorf (1801–1851), a German landscape painter, was born at Pösneck, in the duchy of Saxe-Meiningen. He studied landscape painting in Munich and its environs, and displayed an especial talent in representing gloomy forests, taking as his models the works of Ruisdael and Van Everdingen. He visited Norway, the North Cape, Sweden, Iceland, and England. One of his best paintings is in the Modern Gallery at Munich; it represents a Forge by the side of a Waterfall. He died at Munich in 1851. His younger brother Christian Friedrich Ezdorf (1807-1858) was also a landscape painter. He was educated in art at the Munich Academy, and at first practised porcelain painting, but afterwards devoted himself to landscapes, in which he followed much the same style as his brother, producing forest scenes, rooky valleys, and winter pieces. After his brother's death he returned for a while to Pösneck, but afterwards took to the business of tanning, and settled first in Kissingen and finally in Würzburg, where he died in 1858. Besides his paintings he has left eighteen etchings of landscapes, mostly after his brother, and one lithograph.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
Painter
|
The Wiltshire Women's cricket team is the women's representative cricket team for the English historic county of Wiltshire. They play in Division Five South and West of the Women's County Championship.
|
Agent
|
SportsTeam
|
CricketTeam
|
Ignazio Oliva (17th century) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active near his natal city of Orta di Atella. He was a pupil of Domenico Gargiulo. He is known for painting outdoor vedute: seascapes and landscapes.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
Painter
|
Lake Rosalind is a small inland lake located in Bruce County, Ontario, Canada between the towns of Hanover and Walkerton. Lake Rosalind and the interconnected Marl Lake to its south are manmade lakes that were created by the excavation of marl for local cement plants in the early 1900s and the construction of dams later in 1939 and 1946. Both lakes are relatively shallow and small in area (38 hectares and 14 hectares, respectively). Marl Lake receives Lake Rosalind's overflow through a culvert, and there is also an interconnected \"North Lake\" to the north of Lake Rosalind. Almost the entire lakefront is developed, with mostly small properties that have been \"urbanized\" with hardened shorelines and manicured lawns. The high level of development resulted from the proximity of Hanover and Walkerton and excellent road system in the area. The major source of water for the lake is from groundwater aquifers; there are no major streams or creeks that flow into the lake. There is minimal surface runoff from surrounding land, which is used for agricultural purposes. Lake Rosalind is considered a headwater lake and provides water for the Saugeen River. Little forest cover remains around the lake. In the fall of 2006, Lake Rosalind was infested with blue-green algae, which put a sudden halt to all water-related activities. Over the winter the algae died off, but residents are urged to not use lawn fertilizers and to keep their shoreline natural.
|
Place
|
BodyOfWater
|
Lake
|
The Daxing Line of the Beijing Subway (Chinese: 北京地铁大兴线; pinyin: běijīng dìtiě dàxīng xiàn) is a rapid transit line that connects the southern Daxing District of the city with the subway network. It extends Line 4 south from its southern terminus at Majialou, on the 4th Ring Road in Fengtai District, to Nanzhao Lu, beyond the 6th Ring Road in Daxing District. The Daxing Line is about 21.7 km in length with 18 km underground. Of the 12 stations, only Xihongmen is above the surface. Full-scale construction began in 2007 and the line was opened on December 30, 2010, 14:00 local time.
|
Place
|
RouteOfTransportation
|
RailwayLine
|
GVK One is a shopping mall located in Banjara Hills, Hyderabad, India. The 350,000 sq.ft mall was opened to public on 1 May 2009. The mall has 70 branded stores and its anchor store Shoppers Stop spans 60,000 sq.ft in three levels. The mall has six screen INOX multiplex housed in it. The mall is established and promoted by GVK Power and Infrastructure limited.
|
Place
|
Building
|
ShoppingMall
|
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Memphis (Latin: Dioecesis Memphitana in Tennesia) is a Roman Catholic diocese in Tennessee. It was founded on June 20, 1970, when Pope Paul VI removed the counties in the state west of the Tennessee River from the Diocese of Nashville, which, prior to that time, encompassed the entire state. The diocese is broken into two deaneries, the Memphis Deanery comprising Shelby County and the Jackson Deanery which encompassed the other 20 counties in the diocese. Currently, there are 28 parishes in the Memphis Deanery, 14 parishes and 5 missions in the Jackson Deanery.
|
Place
|
ClericalAdministrativeRegion
|
Diocese
|
James M. \"Big Jim\" Tatum (July 22, 1913 – July 23, 1959) was an American football and baseball player and coach. Tatum served as the head football coach at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1942, 1956–1958), the University of Oklahoma (1946), and the University of Maryland, College Park (1947–1955), compiling a career college football record of 100–35–7. His 1953 Maryland team won a national title. As a head coach, he employed the split-T formation with great success, a system he had learned as an assistant under Don Faurot at the Iowa Pre-Flight School during World War II. Tatum was also the head baseball coach at Cornell University from 1937 to 1939, tallying a mark of 20–40–1. Tatum's career was cut short by his untimely death in 1959. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1984.
|
Agent
|
Coach
|
CollegeCoach
|
Waiaru was educated at Bishop Patteson Theological Centre, Kohimarama, Guadalcanal, and Pacific Theological College and ordained deacon in St Barnabas' Cathedral, Honiara, on 10 December 1972, and priest in St Paul's Pro-Cathedral, Lolowai, on 4 May 1976. His first post was as Chaplain at Vureas High School in Vanuatu. From 1981 to 1987 he was Bishop of Temotu in the Solomon Islands. He was installed as Archbishop of Melanesia on 17 April 1988.
|
Agent
|
Cleric
|
ChristianBishop
|
Craig A. Spence (born 17 September 1974) is an Australian professional golfer. Spence was born in Colac, Victoria and first played golf at the age of 10. Around the age of 15 he began competing at an amateur level. He then went on to the Victorian Institute of Sport, winning two Victorian Amateurs back to back. He turned professional in 1996 and joined the PGA Tour of Australasia. In 1999 Spence made his professional breakthrough with victory in the Ericsson Australian Masters. Having opened up with a 9 under par first round, he finished by hitting a 6 iron to two feet for a birdie on the final hole to win by a single stroke over Australia's most successful golfer, playing partner Greg Norman. Following that win Spence received invites to tournaments around the world, on five of the major tours. He managed to record top 5 finishes in events on all of those tours. At the end of 1999, Spence earned his PGA Tour card for the 2000 season with a top 10 finish at the tour's Qualifying School. His rookie year on the PGA Tour was a struggle and he missed out on keeping a full card for 2001, finishing 129th on the money list. He made just two cuts the following season to lose all playing rights on the tour. He spent two more years in the United States competing mostly on mini-tours while receiving invites to a limited number of second tier Nationwide Tour events. He also continued to play on the PGA Tour of Australasia with limited success. Spence turned his attentions to Europe at the end of 2003, earning a spot on the European Tour for 2004 via the qualifying school. In his début season, he made just three cuts as he failed to keep his card for the 2005 season. He then returned to the United States, to play on the Gateway Tour in preparation for another try at qualifying for the PGA Tour. Having missed out on reaching the final qualifying tournament by one shot in 2006, he and his family moved back to Australia. Spence is married to Nicole, an American. They have two children.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
GolfPlayer
|
Jaihind Television is a Malayalam channel, based in Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), Kerala. It was launched on 17 August 2007, in Delhi by Indian National Congress President and United Progressive Alliance Chairperson Sonia Gandhi. This channel is promoted by the Congress party with the support of non-resident Indians. Bharat Broadcasting Network Limited with Aniyankutty, a Dubai-based businessman as its chairman and Jaihind Communications with Vijayan Thomas, another Dubai-based businessman as its chairman jointly runs the channel. Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee President Ramesh Chennithala is the chairman of the channel. M.M. Hassan, former minister and official spokesman of Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee, holds the office of managing director. K. P. Mohanan is the CEO and J. S. Indukumar formerly of Asianet is the executive editor of news.
|
Agent
|
Broadcaster
|
BroadcastNetwork
|
Cute, stylized as ℃-ute (キュート Kyūto), is a Japanese idol girl group, consisting of five members. Cute is part of Hello! Project, produced by Tsunku, who also writes almost all the group's songs. Cute made its major debut in 2007 and that year won the Japan Record Award for Best New Artist. In 2008, the group was nominated for the main Japan Record Award, the Grand Prix, its song being named one of the year's best songs. As of May 2013, all of the group's major-label singles have debuted in the top 10 of the Oricon Weekly Singles Chart.
|
Agent
|
Group
|
Band
|
The Shine Again Stakes is an American Thoroughbred horse race held annually at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland. Contested over a distance of one mile and one sixteenth (eight and a half furlongs) on the dirt, it is open to fillies and mares three-years-old and up that are Registered Maryland-breds. Run during the latter part of May during Preakness week. The race was named in honor of Shine Again, a fourth generation homebred in Allaire duPont's stable. She was brilliant over three seasons of competition in which she was named Maryland-bred horse of the Year in 2003, Maryland-bred champion older mare in three consecutive years while earning state-bred champion sprinter title in two of those years. She retired after the 2003 season as the ninth leading Maryland-bred money earner of all time, with $1,271,840. From 34 career starts, she won 14 races (eight stakes), was second 10 times (eight stakes) and third in seven others (five stakes). Shine Again was a daughter of Wild Again out of the Two Punch mare Shiner. Shine Again was under the guidance of Hall of Fame trainer Allen Jerkins, she won four stakes races that season including the grade one Ballerina Handicap at Saratoga Race Course plus the grade two First Flight Handicap and placed in four other graded stakes races. The very next year she returned to defend her titles in the Ballerina and the First Flight and won both, she also had five graded stakes placings including the grade one Ruffian Handicap. She just missed the three-peat in the Ballerina at age six, finishing second by a neck. In that year she won the grade two Genuine Risk Handicap while placing in five other additional graded stakes races.
|
Event
|
Race
|
HorseRace
|
Christina Pie was a World Series of Poker champion in the 1999 $1,000 Ladies - Limit 7 Card Stud. As of 2008, her total WSOP tournament winnings exceed $90,515.
|
Agent
|
Athlete
|
PokerPlayer
|
Karaçal Dam is a dam in Turkey. The development was backed by the Turkish State Hydraulic Works.
|
Place
|
Infrastructure
|
Dam
|
1248 Jugurtha (also known as 1932 RO, 1930 DU, A901 VE, and A915 XB) is a main-belt asteroid discovered on September 1, 1932, by Cyril V. Jackson at the Union Observatory in Johannesburg, South Africa, and independently rediscovered later in the same month by Grigory Neujmin at the Simeiz Observatory in Ukraine. It is named after Jugurtha, who was a king of Numidia, in North Africa, in the second century BC. 1248 Jugurtha is estimated to be approximately 76 km in diameter, and has a synodic period of rotation of approximately 12.19 hours.
|
Place
|
CelestialBody
|
Planet
|
Microstrobos is a genus of plant belonging to the podocarp family (Podocarpaceae). Its name comes from Greek (mikros meaning \"small\" and strobos \"cone\"). It has 2 species, which are evergreen dioecious shrubs.
|
Species
|
Plant
|
Conifer
|
Wolfgang Lettl (18 December 1919 – 10 February 2008) was a surrealist painter who was born and who died in Augsburg, Germany. In 1939, at the age of 20, Wolfgang joined the German Army and served as a communications officer in occupied Paris from 1940 to 1943, during which time he worked on his watercolours and first became exposed to surrealism. Later in the war, he became a reconnaissance airman in Norway, where he was captured at the end of the war and held for four months. He returned to Augsburg in 1945, and worked there as a freelance painter from 1945 to 1948. In 1949, however, the currency reform forced him to turn to construction work to make ends meet. He continued working on his landscapes, portraits and surrealist art while working construction jobs and odd jobs. From 1954 onwards, he was able to concentrate on his art. He married Franziska Link in 1949. Success with his freelance art led him to develop his surrealism, and in 1963 he participated in the Grosse Kunstausstellung München (the \"Grand Art Exhibition Munich\"), becoming a member of the Neue Münchener Künstlergenossenschaft (\"New Munich Artists' Cooperative Society\"). One-man shows in Germany and abroad followed. In addition to his surrealist work, the landscapes around his second home in Apulia, Italy, inspired him to sometimes paint in an impressionistic style. In 1992, on the occasion of a retrospective exhibition at the Toskan Hall of Columns, he offered his paintings to the city of Augsburg on permanent loan. After the opening of the \"Lettl Atrium - Museum for Surreal Art\" in Augsburg in 1993, Lettl has concentrated on experiments in other media (including film), as well as continuing with his painting. A major retrospective exhibition was held in Augsburg in 2000.
|
Agent
|
Artist
|
Painter
|
Salim Rubai Ali (Arabic: سالم ربيع علي; ca. 1935 – 26 June 1978) was the head of state of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) from 22 June 1969 until his surrender and execution by firing squad on 26 June 1978. Rubai Ali led the left wing of the National Front for the Liberation of South Yemen (NF), which forced the British to withdraw from South Arabia on 29 November 1967. Rubai Ali's radicals gained dominance over the more moderate President Qahtan al-Shaabi's elements, allowing Rubai Ali to seize power; he retained the title of Chairman of the Presidential Council throughout his term, even as the NF changed the name of the country from the People's Republic of South Yemen to the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen in 1970. Rubai Ali's NF joined with other parties in 1975, creating the United Political Organisation NF (التنظيم السياسي الموحد الجبهة القومية), all rival parties were outlawed earlier. He opposed the idea of the Yemeni Socialist Party's (YSP) future creation promoted by Abdul Fattah Ismail. He appointed Muhammad Ali Haitham as his Prime Minister when he became Chairman. Haitham served until August 1971, when he was replaced by Ali Nasir Muhammad. In 1978, Ali Nasir Muhammad overthrew and executed Rubai Ali, after a short battle which took place in Almodowar Palace, located in At-Tawahi, Aden, which Rubai Ali used as a fortification.
|
Agent
|
Person
|
OfficeHolder
|
The 2012-13 season is Bristol City's 111th season in the Football League. It is their 6th in the Football League Championship (Second Tier) since joining in 2007. Bristol City had three kits this year, using last season's away kit (yellow and navy) as this year's third kit, however it was never used in the campaign.
|
SportsSeason
|
SportsTeamSeason
|
SoccerClubSeason
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.