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part_xec/zofia_mrozowska | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zofia_Mrozowska","to":"Zofia Mrozowska"}],"pages":{"21122653":{"pageid":21122653,"ns":0,"title":"Zofia Mrozowska","extract":"Zofia Mrozowska (24 August 1922 \u2013 19 August 1983) was a Polish film actress. She appeared in 20 films between 1947 and 1983.\n\n\nSelected filmography\nUnvanquished City (1950)\nA Woman's Decision (1975)\nThe Constant Factor (1980)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZofia Mrozowska at IMDb"}}}} |
part_xec/zuri_hall | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuri_Hall","to":"Zuri Hall"}],"pages":{"38309602":{"pageid":38309602,"ns":0,"title":"Zuri Hall","extract":"Zuri Hall (born June 2, 1988) is an American entertainment reporter, television personality, actress and producer. Hall serves as a correspondent for Access Hollywood on NBC. She is also the sideline reporter for NBC's primetime summer competition show American Ninja Warrior.\n\n\nPersonal life\nZuri Hall was born on June 2, 1988 in Toledo, Ohio. Growing up, she became fascinated with the arts, more specifically with theatre. She graduated from Maumee Valley Country Day School in 2006. She graduated from The Ohio State University in 2010 with a Bachelor of Arts in strategic communication and a minor in theatre, with an emphasis on acting. She was a four-year Morrill Scholar, earning a full academic scholarship to attend the college.\n\n\nCareer\n\n\nEntertainment broadcasting\nHall competed against hundreds in the search for the next Face of MyINDY-TV and became the first woman to win the position. At WNDY-TV in Indianapolis, she covered local events, starred in station PSAs, and interviewed celebrities. From December 2011 to December 2012, she was an on-camera host and producer of Living Dayton, a local, lifestyle talk show on WDTN in Dayton, Ohio. In the summer of 2012, she was featured as a guest correspondent on BET's 106 & Park.She worked as an official MC for the Indiana Pacers' home games for the 2010-2011 and 2011-2012 NBA seasons. Hall previously emceed for the MiLB's Indianapolis Indians, the WNBA's Indiana Fever, and the 2011 Big Ten Tournament. She also served as the MC for the NCAA Women's Final Four entertainment events, and \"Tourney Town\" for three years - Indianapolis in 2011, Denver in 2012, and Nashville in 2013. Hall was also the official MC for the Super Bowl Village, a 10-day-long entertainment for Super Bowl XLVI, in Indianapolis in 2012. There, she kept crowds energized, entertained between performances and introduced national recording artists to the stage, including Patti LaBelle, LMFAO, and Mike Epps.\nHall anchored the evening news for CW33's 'Nightcap News' at KDAF-TV in Dallas, Texas for much of 2013, before moving to NYC to accept a position at FUSE TV. At FUSE TV, she co-hosted Trending 10, which was a live, daily countdown show. She has also been a recurring guest on VH1's Big Morning Buzz Live and has appeared on E!'s Fashion Police with Joan Rivers.\nUntil July 2015, Hall worked for MTV, where she hosted The Challenge: Battle of the Exes II after-shows and various network specials. In the summer of 2015, Hall appeared alongside popular radio personality Charlamagne Tha God on his new MTV2 show, Uncommon Sense. In October 2015, she returned as The Challenge: Battle of the Bloodlines after-show host.\nFrom 2015 to 2019, Hall was a fill-in anchor and daily correspondent for E! News. During her tenure, she hosted What's Good with Zuri Hall on Instagram and co-hosted What the Fashion on Snapchat. In October 2019, she joined NBC as a correspondent for Access Hollywood and a sideline reporter for American Ninja Warrior. She is also a co-host of their new show AllAccess, which focuses on entertainment news, human interest & true crime stories.\n\n\nActing\nHall started her on-camera career as a commercial actress. She has been featured in national spots for Value City Furniture, and commercials for Safe Auto, Meijer, and Ohio tourism. She has made numerous guest appearances on scripted television shows throughout her career. In 2019, she acted in a cameo opposite Jen Aniston, in Apple TV +'s \"The Morning Show,\" and has made multiple appearances on TV Land's \"Nobodies\" (executive produced by Melissa McCarthy), \"The Arrangement\" on E!, and the digital comedic series \"Hashtaggers\". Hall studied Improv at The Upright Citizens Brigade, in New York City.\n\n\nSocial Impact & Activism\nHall fronts the partnership between Access Hollywood and the Black & Missing Foundation \u2014 sitting down to exclusively interview authorities and the loved ones of missing people of color, to amplify their stories and highlight cold cases.\nShe was a panelist on Bravo's 2020 televised special \"Race in America : Our Vote Counts\" \u2014 where she discussed the power of the Black vote. Zuri gave the keynote speech for her hometown NAACP chapter's 2018 Freedom Fund banquet \u2014 emphasizing the importance of voting in midterm elections and personal economic empowerment.\nHall also participated in the Ad Council's 'Know Your Girls' campaign (in partnership with Susan G. Komen) to raise breast cancer awareness for Black women; including being a speaker at the BlogHer Health 2019 Summit.\n\n\nNotable Press\nPaper Magazine \"Black Excellence\" Feature \nEssence Magazine's October \"It Girl\" Feature\nHall has been featured in numerous publications\u2014including as Essence Magazine's October 2016 \"It Girl\" of the month (with Barack Obama and Michelle Obama on the cover), PAPER Magazine, O, The Oprah Magazine and numerous South African publications, including Sunday World and True Love magazine. She's also been featured in profile pieces for AXS TV, in Metromix Indy as a Local Celebrity, Ballers Block as a \"game changer\", AMPS Indy, and The Indianapolis Star.\n\n\nOther ventures\nShe also started a YouTube channel titled, \"Hey Zuri Hall\" where she talks about, \"love life, and style for girls who hustle.\" Her channel has more than 100,000 subscribers, and has accumulated over 5 million total views. In November 2019, Hall launched her podcast. Zuri Hall's Hot Happy Mess in collaboration with iHeartRadio and Charlamagne Tha God's Black Effect Podcast Network. She also has a blog on her official website called #AlphaBabe.In 2020, Hall was featured in the season 2 of Bravo TV's program Race in America, a roundtable with NBC members discussing the power of the black vote.\n\n\nAwards and nominations\nOne year after graduating from college, Hall won a Regional Emmy Award for Outstanding Host and Talent. In 2017, she earned a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Entertainment News Program as a part of E! News.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website \nZuri Hall on Twitter\nZuri Hall on Instagram\nZuri Hall at IMDb"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_nemere | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Nemere","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Nemere"}],"pages":{"30092824":{"pageid":30092824,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Nemere","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Nemere (20 April 1942 \u2013 6 May 2001) was a Hungarian fencer. He won gold medals in the team \u00e9p\u00e9e events at the 1964 and 1968 Summer Olympics.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZolt\u00e1n Nemere at Olympics.com\nZolt\u00e1n Nemere at Olympedia"}}}} |
part_xec/zoellner_quartet | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoellner_Quartet","to":"Zoellner Quartet"}],"pages":{"36062330":{"pageid":36062330,"ns":0,"title":"Zoellner Quartet","extract":"The Zoellner Quartet was a string quartet active during the first quarter of the 20th century. It was once described as \"the most celebrated musical organization in the West which devotes its energies exclusively to the highest class of chamber music.\" After training in Europe, the group in its prime years toured widely throughout the United States. Although all members were natives of Brooklyn, New York, the ensemble formed a strong early association with Belgium and in publicity often billed itself as \"The Zoellner Quartet of Brussels\"; its ultimate base of operations was in California. With one brief interruption at the end of World War I, the membership remained constant throughout the quartet's existence: Joseph Zoellner and his children Antoinette; Amandus; and Joseph, Jr. A second \"Zoellner Quartet\" was later formed by Joseph, Jr. and three unrelated musicians.\n\n\nFormation and European career\nJoseph Zoellner founded the quartet, most likely in 1903 but possibly in 1904, in Brooklyn, where he operated a music school. From the group's founding until 1906 the members lived in Stockton, California, where he had opened a similar school or music store. Under sponsorship of Ethel Crocker, wife of San Francisco banking magnate William Henry Crocker, the Zoellners then went to Belgium for several years to hone their skills with the celebrated Belgian pedagogue C\u00e9sar Thomson, who had also taught three members of the group's contemporary, the Flonzaley Quartet.The Zoellner Quartet's first European appearances were at C\u00e9sar Thomson's private soirees, but the group soon began performing more widely in Belgium and in Paris and Berlin. Of particular note, late in the period of its European residency, the mother of King Albert I of Belgium presented the quartet with a gold medal specially struck by goldsmith C.H. Samuels after the group performed as royal guests of the Belgian king and queen in 1911.\n\n\nNorth American career\nFollowing its journeyman years in Europe, the quartet in the 1912\u20131913 season embarked on what would be a constant round of activity in Canada and the United States, keeping to an intense schedule during annual coast-to-coast tours. During an early 1919 tour of western Canada starting in Victoria, British Columbia, in the final city of Winnipeg the quartet gave its 500th performance in six years of touring; by 1921, its total was reported to be 1,100 performances upon return from a tour of the US East and Midwest, within a week of which it was scheduled to perform yet again in Los Angeles. In nine weeks ending in late March 1923 alone, the quartet performed 46 concerts in connection with its twelfth tour of the US East. In later years, Amandus was said to have participated in more than 2,500 performances during his career with the quartet. The quartet prided itself on keeping to non-stop schedules in its numerous transcontinental tours without letup or delays, even when on one occasion in 1921 Joseph, Jr. fell in Topeka, Kansas and was relegated to use of a crutch for a few days.In its North American years, as its celebrity grew, the quartet's members naturally associated with notable musicians such as Ernestine Schumann-Heink, Mischa Elman, and\u2014not surprisingly, given the quartet's Belgian connections\u2014Eug\u00e8ne Ysa\u00ffe. The group also, however, had less obvious associations with the famous of its day. In one colorful incident, as the quartet toured during the 1916\u20131917 season, it crossed paths with the famous deafblind author, activist, and lecturer Helen Keller and her teacher and companion Anne Sullivan in Oklahoma City, where Keller was scheduled for a lecture. Keller proposed as an experiment that the quartet should play for her, to determine whether she could sense music; readily acceding to her request, the quartet played music including the celebrated second movement, andante cantabile, from Tchaikovsky's String Quartet no. 1 in D Major, op. 11, as she held her fingertips lightly on a resonant tabletop. Keller quickly sensed the musical vibrations, swaying in time, alternately crying and smiling. Afterward, Keller reacted as follows:\nWhen you play to me I see and hear and feel many things that I cannot easily put into words. I feel the sweep and surge and mighty pulse of life. Oh, you are masters of a wondrous art, subtle and superfine. When you play to me immediately a miracle is wrought, sight is given the blind, and deaf ears hear sweet, strange sounds.\nEach note is a picture, a fragrance, the flash of a wing, a lovely girl with pearls in her hair, a group of exquisite children dancing and swinging garlands of flowers\u2014a bright mingling of colors and twinkling feet. There are notes that laugh and kiss and sigh and melt together. And notes that weep and rage and fly apart like shattered crystal.\n\nBut mostly the violins sing of lovely things\u2014woods and streams and sun-kissed hills, the faint sound of tiny creatures flitting about in the grass and under the petals of the flowers, the noiseless stirring of shadows in my garden, and the soft breathings of shy things that light on my hand for an instant, or touch my hair with their wings. O, yes! and a thousand, thousand other things that I cannot describe come thronging through my soul when the Zoellner Quartet plays to me.\nFor his part, Joseph Zoellner rather more prosaically stated that he and the rest of the quartet felt they had been playing to a \"responsive instrument\" and were impressed with Keller's ability to interpret the music. For instance, although no one had told her the Tchaikovsky work supposedly had its basis in an old fisherman's song, Keller described it as evoking the sea and the ocean breeze on her face.More than a dozen years later, in January 1931, Albert Einstein, who was then engaged in research at the California Institute of Technology, visited the Zoellner family's conservatory and played violin with members of the quartet in music of Beethoven and Mozart. The following year, a few days before Einstein sailed for what would be his last visit to Germany, he presented Joseph Zoellner with an autographed photograph as a memento of the occasion.In the United States, as in Europe, the quartet was no stranger to the major cultural centers. Upon its return to America it first performed in New York City at Aeolian Hall on January 7, 1914, when, demonstrating a recurrent predilection for adventurously mixing music old and new, the program featured Glazounov's Suite in C Major, op. 35; Haydn's Quartet in G Major, op. 76 no. 1; and the Romantische Serenade of Jan Brandts Buys, which had been heard in New York on only one prior occasion. The quartet's sixth transcontinental tour of the United States and Canada, announced in late 1917, included two performances in New York City and others in Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago.The quartet saw its mission as broader than performing in such major venues, however; its aim was to widen the audience for chamber music, which the Zoellners considered an intimate form with personal appeal to the audience, even one lacking cultured appreciation of music. Thus, with missionary zeal, they consistently performed in towns well removed from the regular concert circuit, often ones that had never been visited by a string quartet. Toward the end of its 1921 season, for instance, the quartet had already committed to return engagements in Topeka and Wichita, Kansas; St. Joseph, Missouri; Dubuque, Iowa; Richmond, Indiana; and Peoria, Illinois. Pursuing this educational goal, the Zoellners performed in such unconventional surroundings as trains and an Illinois insane asylum. In 1916 the quartet presented Charles Sanford Skilton's \"Indian Dances\" to traditional audiences in Boston and also to five hundred Native Americans in Oklahoma, in each case receiving a standing ovation.In parallel with this diversity of performance locales, the quartet appears to have cultivated qualities calculated to please both cosmopolitan and discerning but less urbanized audiences and critics. Following the 1914 Aeolian Hall performance, a review in The New York Times commended the group's tone, intonation, and ensemble, while, tellingly, the Lawrence, Kansas Lawrence Journal-World in 1917 described the quartet as follows: \"The Zoellner Quartet is a great favorite with Lawrence audiences, as its programs suit the tastes of the average concert-goer, and this without the inclusion of superficial music.\"Giving an idea of how the quartet assembled its programs and the widely scattered smaller venues in which it played on what were tight schedules in those days before air travel, some of its documented performances in 1917 were as follows:\n\nThe performance in Lawrence, scheduled for April 5, included the String Quartet no. 1 in B-Flat on Maori (New Zealand) Themes by Alfred Hill; the adagio from a Mozart quartet in B-Flat major; the scherzo from Alexander Glazunov's Quartet no. 4 in A Minor; a piano quintet by Edgar Stillman Kelley, with Carl Preyer, head of the piano department at the local School of Fine Arts, at the keyboard; and arrangements of \"Cherry Ripe\" by Frank Bridge and of a German folk song by Kaessmayer.\nFive days later, in Appleton, Wisconsin, the Quartet performed the same Hill quartet, Glazunov scherzo, and folk song arrangements, to which were added the nocturne from the Second Quartet by Alexander Borodin; the lullaby from a quartet by Skilton; and two works presented by subsets of the quartet: Sinding's Serenade for Two Violins and Piano, featuring Atoinette and Amandus on violins and Joseph, Jr. on piano, and Dvo\u0159\u00e1k's Ballade in D Minor for Violin and Piano, performed by Amandus, presumably again with Joseph, Jr. as pianist.\nOn November 5, the quartet performed at the North Dakota Agricultural College, now North Dakota State University. The program included the \"American\" Quartet of Anton\u00edn Dvo\u0159\u00e1k; \"Deep River\" (arr. Burleigh and Kramer) and a Russian folksong (arr. Kaessmeyer); a suite for two violins and piano by Em\u00e1nuel Mo\u00f3r, played by Antoinette and Amandus with Joseph, Jr. on the piano; and K\u00e1roly Thern's \"Genius Loci\" and Skilton's \"War Dance\" as encores, both by request.\nA week later, on November 12, the quartet was in Columbia, Missouri to present the season's second Phi Mu Alpha concert at the University Auditorium. The works on the program again included the \"American\" Quartet and also Haydn's Quartet in C Major, op. 74, no. 1; Two Sketches for String Quartet by Eugene Goossens; and Quartet no. 2 in A Major, op. 28 by Eduard N\u00e1pravn\u00edk.From the beginning of its US career, the quartet also performed under the auspices of various performing arts societies and series, academic and civic, scattered across the United States. Among these appearances were the following:\n\nJune 26, 1912, 24th annual convention of the New York State Music Teachers' Association at Columbia University. Marie Rappold and Frank Croxton also performed, and David Bispham and Reginald de Koven discussed presentation of opera in English.\nFebruary 4, 1914, Saturday Morning Musical Club at the Temple of Music and Art in Tucson, Arizona.\n1915\u201316 season, fourth formal season of the Tuesday Morning Musical Club Concert Series, now Tuesday Musical, in Omaha, Nebraska; the quartet made a return appearance in the 1919\u20131920 season.\nBetween 1911 and 1920, performance series of the Schubert Club of St. Paul, Minnesota.The performances noted above suggest the Zoellner Quartet's breadth of repertory. This musical catholicity did not escape critical notice, as, for example, in a review by Florence Lawrence in the Los Angeles Examiner of July 26, 1919: \"[T]he brilliant closing concert of the Zoellner chamber music season last night ... proved the climax in this unusual course, in which modern and classical works have been especially well contrasted, and testified vividly to the fine artistry of the musicians. It was a great personal achievement for the artists.\" Occasioning that review was the conclusion of a marathon series of ten weekly recitals from May 23 to July 25, 1919 at the Ebell Club Auditorium in Los Angeles. Works presented over the course of this venture, ranging from Baroque to then-contemporary, were as follows:\nBeethoven: Quartets no. 4 in C Minor, op. 18 no. 4; no. 6 in B-Flat Major, op. 18 no. 6; and no. 10 in E-Flat Major (\"Harp\")\nBorodin: Quartet No. 2 in D Major\nBrandts-Buys: Romantic Serenade, Op. 25\nBridge: Noveletten; (arr.) Two Old English Songs. The quartet had begun including the Noveletten in its programs during its 1916 tour of Canada and the United States.\nDebussy: Quartet in G Minor, op. 10\nDohn\u00e1nyi: Quartet no. 2 in D-Flat Major, op. 15\nDvo\u0159\u00e1k: Quartet no. 12 in F, op. 96 (\"American\")\nFasch: Sonate A Quatre\nFranck: Quartet in D Major\nGlazounov: Suite in C Major, Op. 35\nEugene Goossens: Two Sketches, op. 15\nHandel: Sonata in G Minor for two violins and piano\nHaydn: Quartets op. 51 (\"Seven Last Words of Christ\"); in C Major, op. 74 no. 1; and in G Major, op. 76 no. 1\nHill: Quartet no. 1 in B-Flat\nJean Baptiste Loeillet (1653\u20131728): Sonate a Trois for violin, viola, and piano\nWitold Maliszewski: Quartet no. 1 in F Major, op. 2\nMilhaud: Quartet in C\nJules Mouquet: Quartet no. 1 in C Minor, op. 3\nMozart: Quartets no. 16 in E-Flat Major, K. 428; no. 17 in B-Flat Major, K. 458 (\"Hunt\"); and no. 21 in D Major, K. 575 (\"Violet\")\nEduard N\u00e1pravn\u00edk: Quartet no. 2 in A Major, op. 28\nSchubert: Quartet in E-Flat Major, D. 87 (op. 125 no. 1)\nSchumann: Quartet in A Major, op. 41 no. 3\n\n\nConservatory\nIn 1922, the family, which had resided at 909 St. Marks Ave. in New York City and summered in Wrentham, Massachusetts, shifted its base of operations to California, where it had already performed actively, and settled in Los Angeles. There the Zoellners opened a conservatory, which eventually added branches in Hollywood and Burbank, California; it was still active as of 1942, well after the quartet's retirement, when the Hollywood branch conferred an honorary Doctor of Music Degree on bandmaster Earl Irons. Upon its resettlement, the quartet continued to be an active part of musical life in its adopted home. Nor did it restrict its educational endeavors to the activities of its own school: the quartet participated in the Behymer Philharmonic Series, a youth promotion initiative of low-priced concerts, four for $1.00, organized by Lynden Behymer.\nThe quartet retired in 1925. As noted below, however, members of the family continued their involvement in music, both through the conservatory and through various institutions of higher learning, and evidently they still performed together occasionally, at least for a time, in that context. An appearance in a radio broadcast on station KHJ, Los Angeles, was scheduled for as late as November 24, 1927, and the group's informal performance with Albert Einstein took place in 1931.\n\n\nPremieres and dedications\nThe Zoellner Quartet gave premieres or was dedicatee of works by a number of contemporary composers. Among them were the following:\n\nArthur Farwell, acting at the suggestion of Joseph Zoellner, wrote a string quartet titled \"The Hako\" in 1922 and dedicated it to the Zoellner Quartet, which performed it in 1923 at the Ojai Music Festival in Ojai, California.\nCharles Sanford Skilton dedicated his Two Indian Dances to the Zoellner Quartet, which premiered them in January 1916. Carl Fischer Music published the works a year later, by which time Skilton had orchestrated them, and later still he incorporated them into his Suite Primeval. The Zoellner Quartet's Edison recording of the second number, \"War Dance,\" can be heard via the link above.\nEugene Goossens wrote a quartet for the Zoellners; they programmed it for their Eastern US tour in early 1919.\nThe Quartet premiered \"Impressions of a Rainy Day,\" a suite for quartet by Roy Harris, on March 15, 1926 at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles.\nDuring its 1923 tour of the eastern United States, the Quartet gave the American premiere of Joseph Jongen's Serenade Tendre.\nAlso receiving its American premiere during the 1923 tour was a Fantasie for string quartet by Marion Frances Ralston.\n\n\nPersonnel\n\nThe quartet's configuration was unusual, particularly for its day. Being, in the words of one 1917 article, \"about the only string quartet in existence\" to \"honor\" a female with the first violinist's chair in an otherwise entirely male ensemble, it drew public attention, as when, after a concert in Quebec, a suffragette leapt to her feet and cried, \"I never thought I'd live to see it, but it comes to pass\u2014one woman leading three men. Votes for women!\" Moreover, the founder and most senior member, both by age and experience, served as violist. All three of the quartet's junior members studied first with their father before continuing studies in Brussels.\n\nAntoinette Zoellner was first violinist. Information from her gravesite indicates that she was born on December 1, 1885, although other sources give 1889 or 1891; if either of the latter dates is correct, she would have been improbably young to take the first violinist's chair upon the quartet's founding. She studied with her father and, from 1907 to 1912, with C\u00e9sar Thomson; she also studied singing with Raimund von zur-M\u00fchlen. As of 1920, she shared a residence in Los Angeles with her father and brother Joseph, Jr. She died on March 11, 1962.\nAmandus Carl Zoellner, second violinist, was born on November 7, 1892 and died on June 14, 1955. He and his wife, Ruth, n\u00e9e Koehler, had at least two children, daughters Ruth and Marjorie; the former did not follow her father into music but eventually fell heir to the quartet's archives and arranged for their institutional preservation, with the scores going to Scripps College in Claremont, California and memorabilia and scrapbooks to UCLA. When not playing the violin, Amandus enjoyed photography and fishing.\nJoseph Zoellner, the quartet's violist and father of the other three members, was born on February 2, 1862 and died on January 24, 1950. Initially, he trained as a violinist, first in New York and then in Germany. By the time he founded the quartet, he was a musical veteran, having already served as first violinist of the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in New York. He also gave initial training to all three other members of the quartet before their studies in Belgium.\nJoseph Zoellner, Jr., cellist for nearly the entire life of the quartet, was born on October 26, 1886 and died in September 1964. Zoellner was a 1910 graduate of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels in both piano, in which he took honors, and cello; his teachers included Jean G\u00e9rardy for cello, Paul Gilson for harmony, and Arthur de Greef for piano. Joseph, Jr. was the sole member to leave the quartet, when for a few months at the end of World War I he served as a corporal in the United States Army; the quartet's concert manager, Harry Culbertson of Chicago, likewise enlisted at that time. Both men had returned to civilian life by early 1919.\nRobert Alter, who had played with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, substituted for Joseph, Jr. as cellist while the latter served in the army at the end of 1918, when the quartet had scheduled a tour of California. Alter had good chamber music credentials through his association with Alwin Schroeder, cellist for the Kneisel Quartet from 1891 to 1907.Joseph, Sr.; Antoinette; and Amandus are all buried in the Great Mausoleum at Forrest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. Joseph, Jr. is interred with his wife, Mabel R. Zoellner, at San Gabriel Cemetery.\n\n\nOutside activities\nUnlike their colleagues of the Flonzaley Quartet, who agreed to restrict themselves to performing as a group, various members of the Zoellner Quartet engaged in extensive outside activities. Besides individual undertakings, as noted above the family as a whole opened a music conservatory, eventually with locations in Los Angeles, Hollywood, and Burbank.Joseph, Jr. for three years was a member of the Symphony Concerts Durand in Brussels, and later served as dean and head of the piano department at the family's conservatory. He also was heard as accompanist for other artists; for instance, he and pianist/composer Charles Gilbert Spross performed with Gina Ciaparelli in the Lyceum at New York's Carnegie Hall on March 5, 1912. On that occasion he played two solos and the obbligato part in Courtlandt Palmer's Lethe.Joseph, Sr. also was a member of the Durand orchestra. He headed the violin department at the Ecole Communale in Etterbeek, now Brussels, from 1907 to 1912 and later the same department at the University of Redlands in Redlands, California. As in Brooklyn and Stockton, he was proprietor of a music school in Brussels.Amandus taught violin at the Ecole Communale when his father was director there, and like his father and brother he was a member of the Durand orchestra. Also like his father, Amandus served as university violin department director, first at Pomona College in Claremont, California and then at Occidental College in Los Angeles. At the latter he performed solo recitals as well as with the quartet. He helped found the Zoellner Conservatory of Music and eventually served as its president.Joseph, Sr. and Amandus together compiled The Zoellner Quartette Repertoire Album, a collection of music published by Carl Fischer Music. In addition, Joseph, Sr.; Amandus; and Antoinette all contributed essays regarding quartet playing to an omnibus volume on string instruments.\n\n\nThe New Zoellner Quartet\nJoseph, Jr. followed his father's example by founding a quartet of his own, although it was not made up of relatives. This ensemble was based in Chicago, home town of Joseph, Jr.'s wife; the other members, all with previous connections to artistic organizations in that city, were Charles Buckley and Michael Rill, first and second violinists, respectively, and violist Jose Marones. A family account dated the founding to 1950, but promotional literature cited a review in 1938. In either event, sources agree that the new group was active through the 1950s, although it appears not to have achieved its predecessor's level of widespread recognition.\n\n\nRecordings\nThe original Zoellner Quartet left six sides issued as Edison diamond discs and at least three more recorded for Columbia. All were acoustic recordings, and, like their counterparts in the contemporary Flonzaley Quartet's acoustic discography, comprised isolated movements, arrangements, and encore pieces rather than complete works. As noted above, one of the Edison records captured a performance of Skilton's \"War Dance,\" of which the Zoellner Quartet was dedicatee.\n\nAnonymous: Humoresque on Two American Folk Songs, Columbia 37391; also issued as A-7534 (Nov. 1915)\nBoccherini: Quintet in E, op. 13 no. 5 \u2013 Minuet. Edison 80608-R (Nov. 1, 1920)\nEmmett: Dixie. Presumably Columbia (1915)\nHaydn: Quartet in D Major, op. 64 no. 5 (\"Lark\")\u2014Adagio Cantabile. Edison 80600-L (April 1921)\nIlyinsky: Orchestral Suite no. 3, op. 13 (\"Noure and Anitra\")\u2014no. 7, Berceuse. Edison 80692-R (Oct. 13, 1921)\nIppolitov-Ivanov: String Quartet No. 1 in A Minor, Op. 13\u2014Intermezzo. Edison 80608-L (May 1921)\nMacDowell: Woodland Sketches, op. 51\u2014no. 1, \"To a Wild Rose\" (arr. Zoellner). Edison 80600-R (Oct. 1, 1920)\nSkilton: Two Indian Dances\u2014no. 2, \"War Dance.\" Edison 80692-L (March 1922)\nThern: Genius Loci. Columbia 37390; also issued as A-7534 (Nov. 1915)\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nExternal links\nA photograph of the Zoellner Quartet provided by Musica Viva.\nA photograph of the Zoellner Quartet with autographs of its members.\nA later postcard photograph of the Zoellner Quartet provided by the Claremont Colleges Digital Library."}}}} |
part_xec/zusha_river | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zusha_River","to":"Zusha River"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Zusha River","to":"Zusha"}],"pages":{"6183506":{"pageid":6183506,"ns":0,"title":"Zusha","extract":"The Zusha (Russian: \u0417\u0443\u0448\u0430) is a river in Tula and Oryol Oblast in Russia, a right tributary of the Oka. The length of the river is 234 km. The area of its basin is 6,950 km\u00b2. The Zusha freezes up in early December and stays icebound until late March. The Neruch is its biggest tributary. The Zusha is navigable from Mtsensk.\n\n\nNotes and references"}}}} |
part_xec/zoomontana | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"3361535":{"pageid":3361535,"ns":0,"title":"ZooMontana","extract":"ZooMontana is a 70-acre (28 ha) wildlife park located in Billings, Montana, U.S. and is Montana's only zoo and botanical park. It currently maintains nearly 100 animals, representing 58 species. These animals all live in habitats designed to imitate their natural habitats.\nThe zoo was incorporated and established as a non-profit 501 C (3) organization in 1982. It focuses on year-round wildlife native to Montana, the Rocky Mountains, and other cold temperature regions at or above the 45th Parallel. Indoor habitats include animals from around the world. The zoo hosts over 80,000 visitors per year. Canyon Creek runs through the center of the zoo's grounds, creating a natural and tranquil park-like setting. 2018 marked the establishment of the Yellowstone Arboretum located on the ZooMontana grounds, containing a large selection of native and non-native trees.\n\n\nAnimal exhibits\n\nZooMontana is divided into two main \"regions\" in addition to other exhibits. The Asia Region starts by the wolves and is a paved path through a cottonwood forest. The path splits at one point and one half becomes a nature trail. The other path splits again, one going towards the Siberian tiger, and the other going to the red panda.\nThe North America Region includes habitats for wolf, grizzly bear, river otter, beaver, bald eagle, and bighorn sheep.\nSeveral animals can be found indoors amongst the Living Wall habitats within the zoo's Discovery Center. These exhibits include animals from South America, Africa, and other parts of the world. These Living Wall Habitats include iguana, mink, chinchilla, western screech-owl, Madagascar hissing cockroaches, tiger salamander, ball python, box turtle, rubber boa, aracari, common degus, Columbian red tailed boa constrictor, savannah monitor, and several other snakes, lizards, turtles, amphibians, and arthropods.\nThe Barn is home to mostly domesticated animals, including Belgian draft horses, pygmy goats, peafowl, rabbits, and goats. During the warmer months, the turkey vulture may be found here as well.\nZoo guests also may visit the ponds and feed the koi for a small fee.\nBeginning in 2016, the zoo will have new exhibits featuring takin, wolverines, bison, and raptors.\n\n\nBotanical gardens\n\nThe one-acre Sensory Garden is planted with both native and exotic plants intended to stimulate all of your senses. It is a very popular site for weddings. The zoo also includes a Montana garden with native plants, and Dottie's Garden, which is home to plants that use very little water.\n\n\nZooSchool Preschool\nZooMontana is home to ZooSchool Preschool, an independent preschool which holds classes within the zoo.\n\n\nScience and Conservation Center\nThe Science and Conservation Center is an independent non-profit organization that is headquartered at the zoo. The center produces and distributes a wildlife contraceptive vaccine, and maintains records and data required by the Food and Drug Administration and Environmental Protection Agency. Working with the Contraception Advisory Group of the AZA at the Saint Louis Zoo, the center coordinates, and in some cases carries out, application of the contraceptive to wildlife.\n\n\nHistory\nIn March 2014, ZooMontana experienced flooding, and \"more than three feet of water covered some of the zoo\u2019s paths.\"\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nExternal links\n Media related to ZooMontana at Wikimedia Commons\nOfficial website"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_szabadka | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Szabadka","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Szabadka"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n Szabadka","to":"Brotli"}],"pages":{"43798513":{"pageid":43798513,"ns":0,"title":"Brotli","extract":"Brotli is a lossless data compression algorithm developed by Google. It uses a combination of the general-purpose LZ77 lossless compression algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd-order context modelling.\nBrotli is primarily used by web servers and content delivery networks to compress HTTP content, making internet websites load faster. A successor to gzip, it is supported by all major web browsers and has become increasingly popular, as it provides better compression than gzip.\n\n\nHistory\nGoogle employees Jyrki Alakuijala and Zolt\u00e1n Szabadka initially developed Brotli in 2013 to decrease the size of transmissions of WOFF web font. Alakuijala and Szabadka completed the Brotli specification during 2013\u20132016. The specification was accompanied with a reference implementation developed by two additional authors, Evgenii Kliuchnikov and Lode Vandevenne, who had previously developed Google's zopfli implementation of deflate and gzip compatible compression in 2013.:\u200a1\u200a Unlike zopfli, which was a reimplementation of an existing data format specification, Brotli was a new data format and allowed the authors to improve compression ratios even further. The Brotli specification was generalized in September 2015 for HTTP stream compression (content-encoding type \"br\").\nThe Internet Engineering Task Force approved the Brotli compressed data format specification as an informational request for comment (RFC 7932) in July 2016. The Brotli data format is an integral part of the 2nd iteration of the Web Open Font Format,:\u200a3\u200a which was recognized in a 2021 Technology & Engineering Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for font technology standardization at W3C.Brotli support has been added over the years to web browsers, with 96% of worldwide users using a browser that supports the format, as of July 2022.\n\n\nAbout\nBrotli was first released in 2013 for off-line compression of web fonts. Brotli was a continuation of the development of zopfli, which is a zlib-compatible implementation of the standard gzip and deflate specifications. Brotli allows a denser packing than gzip and deflate because of several algorithmic and format-level improvements: the use of context models for literals and copy distances, describing copy distances through past distances, use of move-to-front queue in entropy code selection, joint-entropy coding of literal and copy lengths, the use of graph algorithms in block splitting, and a larger backward reference window are example improvements.\nThe Brotli specification was generalized in September 2015 for HTTP stream compression (content-encoding type \"br\"). This generalized iteration also improved the compression ratio by using a predefined dictionary of frequently used words and phrases. The version of Brotli released in September 2015 by the Google software engineers contained enhancements in generic lossless data compression, with particular emphasis on use for HTTP compression. The encoder was partly rewritten, with the result that the compression ratio improved, both the encoder and the decoder have been sped up, the streaming API was improved, and more compression quality levels have been added. Additionally, the new release shows performance improvements across platforms, with decoding memory reduction.Unlike most general-purpose compression algorithms, Brotli uses a predefined dictionary, roughly 120 KiB in size, in addition to the dynamically populated (\"sliding window\") dictionary. The predefined dictionary contains over 13000 common words, phrases and other substrings derived from a large corpus of text and HTML documents. Using a predefined dictionary has been shown to increase compression where a file mostly contains commonly used words.Brotli's sliding window is limited to 16 MiB. This enables decoding on mobile phones with limited resources, but makes Brotli underperform on compression benchmarks having larger files. The constraints of the small window size can be alleviated by using Large Window Brotli, which is not compatible with RFC7932 (Brotli proper).\nStreams compressed with Brotli have the content encoding type \"br\".\nWhile Google's zopfli implementation of the deflate compression algorithm is named after z\u00f6pfli, the Swiss German word for a snack-sized braided buttery bread, brotli is named after br\u00f6tli, the Swiss German word for a bread roll. Google's own implementation of the Brotli specification was released under the terms of the permissive free software MIT license in 2016. A formal validation of the Brotli specification was independently implemented by Mark Adler,:\u200a126\u200a one of the co-authors of the zlib/gzip compression format and library. Adler's implementation was released under the terms of the similarly permissive Apache license. Other implementations of the specification also exist, including one in the source-to-source haxe language.\nBrotli is available as a port for Android in a terminal interface with its own shared library.Brotli compression is generally used as an alternative to gzip, as Brotli provides better overall compression. Compared to gzip compression, JavaScript files compressed with Brotli are roughly 15% smaller, HTML files are around 20% smaller, and CSS files are around 16% smaller.\n\n\nIndustry support\n\n\nBrowsers and other clients\nMozilla Firefox introduced support for the \"br\" content-encoding method in version 44 (released on 26 January 2016).\nGoogle Chrome has supported the \"br\" content-encoding method since version 50 (released on 20 April 2016).\nOpera has supported the \"br\" content-encoding method since version 38 (released 8 June 2016).\nMicrosoft Edge has supported the \"br\" content-encoding method since version 15 (released on 5 April 2017).\nSafari has supported the \"br\" content-encoding method since version 11 (released on 5 October 2017).\ncURL has a compile-time option to support the \"br\" content-encoding method using libbrotli as of version 7.57, released on 29 November 2017.\n7zip is available extended with Brotli by 7zip-zstd. \nPeaZip supports Brotli .BR format for compression and extraction \n\n\nWeb servers\nFor Apache HTTP Server, the \"br\" content-encoding method has been supported by the mod_brotli module since version 2.4.26.\nMicrosoft IIS has a [1] supported extension since May 2018 that adds support for the \"br\" content-encoding method.\nMicrosoft Azure Front Door can dynamically compress content on the edge using Brotli since its launch on April 17, 2019.\nnginx has a ngx_brotli module provided by Google since December 2016.\nNode.js features a built-in native en- and decoder since version 11.7.0, which can be used to support the \"br\" content-encoding.\nAmazon CloudFront can automatically compress cacheable responses at the edge using Brotli, as of September 2020.\nLiteSpeed Web Server has included the \"br\" content-encoding method for static files only since version 5.2 in July 2017.\nCloudflare CDN offers a brotli option to compress data between its edge node and the user.\nNaviServer added support in version 4.99.17b1\nCaddy (web server) Serves statically compressed .br files since version 0.9.4 from December 21st, 2016.\nlighttpd mod_deflate supports .br since 1.4.56 from November 2020.\n\n\nReferences\n\nNotes\n\n\nExternal links\nBrotli reference implementation at brotli on GitHub"}}}} |
part_xec/zundel_salant | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zundel_Salant","to":"Zundel Salant"}],"pages":{"5650174":{"pageid":5650174,"ns":0,"title":"Zundel Salant","extract":"Yosef Zundel of Salant (1786\u20131866) (also known as Zundel Salant) was an Ashkenazi rabbi and the primary teacher of Rabbi Yisrael Salanter.\n\n\nBiography\n\n\nEarly life and Family\nZundel was born on the first day of Rosh Hashana in 1786 in Salantai, Lithuania. Little is known of his early years. He descended from Rabbi Faivush Ashkenazi of Vilna (late 17th-early 18th century) and his father was Rabbi Benyamin Beinush, who was a shochet and hazzan in Salant.\nAs a young man, Zundel studied in the Volozhin Yeshiva under Rabbi Chaim Volozhin. Following Rabbi Chaim's death in 1821, Zundel would make trips to study with Rabbi Akiva Eiger.\nSalant's wife was Rochel Rivkah, and they had three children, two daughters, Tziviah and Heniah, and an only son, Aryeh Leib. Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant refused to accept any rabbinical positions. He ran a small business which produced only a meager living. He chose to spend much of his time immersed in Torah studies and musar.\n\n\nLater life and impact\nZundel provided the spiritual inspiration for his most famous student, Rabbi Yisrael Salanter, the founder of the Musar movement.\nDuring the early years of the Musar movement, Reb Zundel was seen in the marketplace on Friday afternoons reminding the merchants that the Jewish Sabbath was approaching so they had time to close their stalls and avoid its desecration.\nRabbi Yosef Zundel, who was a student of the Vilna Gaon in every sense of the word, longed to settle in the Land of Israel. Finally, in 1838\u201339, despite the hardships of such a trip due to the ongoing war between the Ottoman Empire and Egypt, Rabbi Zundel nevertheless took his family and traveled to Jerusalem. The Ashkenazi community in Jerusalem at that time was under the leadership and financial support of the Kollel Vilna, whose headquarters were in Amsterdam. It was led by a committee under a wealthy Dutch Jewish banker, Rabbi Avraham Zvi Hirsch Lehren (1784\u20131853). Rabbi Lehren had, in 1817, assumed the mantle of leadership of an organization founded in 1809 known as Pekidim and Amarkalim of Eretz Yisrael (\"Officials and Administrators of the Land of Israel\"). This charitable organization was in charge of the collection, administration, and disbursement of all the monies collected in Western Europe on behalf of the Ashkenazi Jewish community in the Land of Israel.\nAlthough Rabbi Zundel was an extremely unpretentious individual, Rabbi Lehren was keenly aware of his greatness and had tremendous respect for him. Rabbi Zundel's knowledge of Torah was extraordinary, and the entire scope of Torah was clearly engraved on his heart and mind. He was also a Tzadik extraordinaire. In 1837, Zundel settled in Jerusalem, where, at the urging of Rabbi Lehren, he served as the rabbi of the Ashkenazi community. For centuries, all halachic disputes and queries in Jerusalem were brought to the Sephardi rabbinical court, which adjudicated them. Due to the recent growth of the Ashkenazi community, Rabbi Lehren wanted Ashkenazim to have independence and to adjudicate disputes in their own rabbinical court. Rabbi Yosef Zundel agreed on the condition that he would not be paid a salary for his services. Throughout his life he had worked to support himself in a manner that did not cause him to benefit from Torah, and he wanted to maintain that practice. Furthermore, he had always shunned all positions of honor and distinction. He also stipulated that as soon as he would find a suitable replacement, he would relinquish his position to the other person. Rabbi Zundel opened the Beis Din, albeit as a temporary court. In time though, both the Ashkenazi and Sephardi communities in Jerusalem recognized Rabbi Zundel's greatness and brought him all their halachic questions and issues.\nIn 1841, when his son-in-law Rabbi Shmuel Salant arrived in Jerusalem, Rabbi Zundel asked him to join the Beis Din. Not long afterwards, Rabbi Zundel, realizing the vast greatness of his son-in-law, appointed him as the official head of the rabbinical court, a position that Rabbi Shmuel held for almost seventy years until his death in 1909. Rabbi Shmuel held the title of \"first Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem.\"\nRabbi Zundel lived in a small one-room apartment in the Hurva Synagogue complex in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City. Rabbi Zundel sustained himself and his family by selling vinegar, but spent most of the day and night in the Menachem Zion Synagogue, which was completed in 1837. Built by the Perushim (students of the Vilna Gaon), it was named after their leader Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Shklov. Rabbi Zundel lived an esoteric lifestyle and radiated spirituality to the entire community.\nRabbi Zundel was instrumental in the founding of the famed Etz Chaim Yeshiva, the Bikur Cholim Hospital and Hevrah Kadisha, and aided in the absorption of new immigrants in Jerusalem. Rabbi Zundel and Rabbi Shmuel worked together tirelessly for the benefit of the community. In 1860 they founded the Rabbi Meir Baal Haness charity, which became the foundation of support for the entire community at large, and saved it from sinking into a financial abyss. Unfortunately, Rabbi Zundel lived for only a few years after its establishment. However, during the final years of his life, he devoted himself wholly to bringing this monumental undertaking to fruition; upon his passing the Rabbi Meir Baal Haness charity had already become a lifeline for hundreds of poor and destitute families.\nDuring the 1860s, the water supply to Jerusalem was very poor, despite several attempts by the Ottoman authorities to repair the ancient conduit from A'yn Arrub and Solomon's Pools. The stone pipes were regularly sabotaged by the Arab farmers who earned a nice living selling water that they brought in unhygienic animal-skin bags from A'yn Rogel and the Gihon Spring through the Dung Gate. The water was sold at a high price, even though it was of poor taste, smelled foul and was dangerous to consume without boiling it first. This water supply depended mainly on the cisterns dug near or even under the houses, in which rainwater collected. In the 1860s there were almost a thousand of these. This water was only fit for drinking as long as it was not contaminated by sewage water. There was no sewage system in Jerusalem at the time, and sewage often ran in the street, seeping into the wells. The pollution of the drinking water brought about a severe plague, which claimed hundreds of victims, and led to the city being placed under quarantine for four months. Sir Moses Montefiore came to the aid of the inhabitants by contributing money for improving the water supply.\n\n\nDeath\nRabbi Yosef Zundel Salant died due to the plague on Friday, October 12, (3rd Cheshvan) 1866 and was buried on the Mount of Olives. Among the many instructions that Rabbi Zundel mentioned in his will was that no eulogies be held for him, and no titles should be added to his name on the tombstone. Rabbi Yisrael Salanter, the founder of the ethical Musar movement and prime student of Rabbi Zundel, is recorded as having said: \"I have not found a true servant of God like my mentor Rabbi Zundel!\".\n\n\nReferences\nMusar Movement - Dov Katz, 1945; English Edition translated by Leonard Oschry, Tel Aviv, Israel 1975. Pages 114\u2013115.\nToldot Rabbi Yosef Zundel from Salant - Eliezer Rivlin, Jerusalem 1927, reprinted 1983.\n\n\nExternal links\nFull biography of Rabbi Zundel Salant"}}}} |
part_xec/zydowskie | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"19034457":{"pageid":19034457,"ns":0,"title":"\u017bydowskie","extract":"\u017bydowskie [\u0290\u0268\u02c8d\u0254fsk\u02b2\u025b] (Rusyn: \u0416\u044b\u0434\u0456\u0432\u0441\u043a\u0454, Zh\u0177divskie) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Krempna, within Jas\u0142o County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Slovakia. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) south-west of Krempna, 32 km (20 mi) south of Jas\u0142o, and 74 km (46 mi) south-west of the regional capital Rzesz\u00f3w.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zona_franca_of_iquique | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zona_Franca_of_Iquique","to":"Zona Franca of Iquique"}],"pages":{"38397263":{"pageid":38397263,"ns":0,"title":"Zona Franca of Iquique","extract":"The Zona Franca de Iquique, known by the acronym Zofri (in English Free Zone of Iquique), is located in the coastal port city of Iquique, in Iquique Province of the Tarapac\u00e1 Region, northwestern Chile.\n\n\nHistory\nIt was created under the Military government of Chile (1973\u20131990) of Augusto Pinochet on June 25 of 1975, and zone by Ordonnance, in order to support the economic development of the area, as far as jobs and economic integration is about. \nIt has become an important center of trade in foreign countries in the region as Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Peru and Bolivia. Its strategic location allows it to be the entrance and exit to products that make trade between the Mercosur, Latin America, and Asia.\nThe ZOFRI administration, by law transfers the equivalent of 15% of its revenue to municipalities in the Tarapac\u00e1 Region and Arica y Parinacota Region.\n\n\nBusiness lines\nAmong its business lines include:\n\nLogistics service: receiving merchandise, documentation management, transportation, inventory and shipments.\nReal Estate Business: sale or lease of industrial land and lease space at the mall. This line of business represents 75% of revenues.\n\n\nAdministration\n\nZOFRI S.A. Is the management company and operator of the Zona Franca de Iquique, in concession for 40 years, signed with the State of Chile. Its property is in the hands of CORFO (over 70% of shares) and the rest in private investors. Its shares are traded on the Santiago Stock Exchange\nThe zone consists of a 240 ha enclosure built north of downtown Iquique known as the \u00abwalled enclosure\u00bb or \u00abindustrial district\u00bb. Inside a 1650 operating companies that trade goods free of duties and taxes, with annual sales of U.S. $ 2.1 billion (2006). Goods can be stored, processed, finished or sold without restriction. It also has a mall (Mall ZOFRI) of 30,000 m\u00b2 where more than 600 stores (known as \"modules\") offer various retail products, highlighting Perfume, appliance, electronics, equipment computing, cigarettes, liquor, toys and costumes.\nCurrently the ZOFRI has entered a new expansion that will include more than 1,000 new stores and a new station Fast Food.ZOFRI S.A. has other assets in the nearby commune Alto Hospicio, with 129 ha in area, and Arica, a city 310 km north of Iquique, 122 ha.\nThe 50% of its revenue comes from leasing and sale of commercial and industrial land. The other 50% is obtained the lease of commercial and service delivery.\nZOFRI has been the engine that has driven the economy of this city. Currently generates over 20,000 direct and indirect jobs. One attraction of the city is to go shopping at the Mall ZOFRI where visitors to the city can take up to U.S. $ 1,200 (or 900 \u20ac) in free merchandise from payment of customs duty of 6%, Alcohol Law and Tax tax 19%.\nSales mainly abroad are: Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay. Its imports are led by Asia (China, Hong Kong and Taiwan), representing 60% of purchases of ZOFRI. The main products are automobiles, machinery, equipment and apparel.\n\n\nTax and customs benefits\nCompanies operating in ZOFRI have the following franchises:\n\nExemption from payment of the First Category tax.\nExemption from payment of VAT (Value Added Tax) in operations conducted under the free zone regime.\nExemption from payment of VAT (Value Added Tax) for services provided within the enclosure Zofri.From a customs standpoint goods remain within the precincts of Zofri are considered as if they were abroad, therefore the goods leaving the premises ZOFRI to destinations abroad are not taxed. For sales within Chile, there is differentiated tax treatment for sales on the I region or the rest of the country.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n(in English)\u2014Official website of Zofri\u2014Zona Franca of Iquique\nInfographic about Zofri Trade Free Zone Chile\n(in Spanish)\u2014Soy Iquique"}}}} |
part_xec/zoila_ceballos | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoila_Ceballos","to":"Zoila Ceballos"}],"pages":{"49329192":{"pageid":49329192,"ns":0,"title":"Zoila Ceballos","extract":"Zoila Ceballos is a Dominican beauty pageant titleholder, professional model, and actress. She represented her country at Nuestra Belleza Latina.\nIn 2008, Ceballos became one of the 12 finalists of Nuestra Belleza Latina 2008 where she finished as 4th runner-up.\nIn 2016, Zoila give it another chance in Nuestra Belleza Latina 2016. She later became one of the 12 finalists in Nuestra Belleza Latina 2016. Despite being a favorite, She finished in 9th Place.\n\n\nCareer\nCeballos has worked with several companies, and has performed in TV shows Don Francisco, movies and video clips with Pitbull, Don Omar and others.\nAfter Nuestra Belleza Latina Ceballos moved to Miami, Florida to take some acting classes. Zoila had appeared in a novela Marido en Alquiler for Telemundo. Ceballos also had worked on Mortales la Serie a Hispanic television series.\n\n\nNuestra Belleza Latina 2008\nCeballos auditioned in New York to participate in the second year of Nuestra Belleza Latina. Ceballos then was chosen to travel to Miami and see if she could win the PASS to enter the mansion. In 2008 she became the 4th runner up of Nuestra Belleza Latina 2008.\n\n\nNBL VIP \"All\u2605Star\"- Nuestra Belleza Latina 2016\nZoila has been chosen by producers to compete in the first ever \"All\u2605Star\" season of Nuestra Belleza Latina. The season of Nuestra Belleza Latina 2016 premiered on Sunday February 28, 2016 where 25 girls from past seasons were selected to compete. After several elimination rounds she made it to the Top 12 girls, but on Sunday April 17, 2016 she was eliminated for not receiving enough votes to stay in the competition leaving her in 9th place.\n\n\nMovies/Videos\nZoila Ceballos featured in several videos and movies:\n\nLotto man 2\nMaestra Barraza\nRey Ungria the game\nEl Pelotudo\nDark Dreams by Wilton Reynoso\nDonde Quieras Que Vallas by Eduardo Luna\nLa fiesta ya empez\u00f3 by Yalitza Lora\nDon't Stop the Party by Pittbull\nEl Amor De Mi Vida by Anthony Mana\nI Swing Merengue Tipico\nHasta Abajo by Don Omar\n\n\nAwards\nShe received the Actress of the Year Award and Gruperos Latinos Show Awards 2014.\n\n\nReferences\n\nNuestra Belleza Latina\n[1] Nuestra Belleza Latina 2008\n[2] Android App\n\n\nExternal links\nNBL 2008 Official NBL Page"}}}} |
part_xec/zrinjevac_sport_hall | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zrinjevac_Sport_Hall","to":"Zrinjevac Sport Hall"}],"pages":{"36252010":{"pageid":36252010,"ns":0,"title":"Zrinjevac Sport Hall","extract":"Zrinjevac Sport Hall (Croatian: \u0160portska dvorana Zrinjevac) is an indoor arena in Osijek, Croatia. Besides for sports events it is also used for concerts.\nIt has capacity of 1,160 seats and it is one of bigger sport venues in Osijek (after Gradski vrt stadium and Gradski vrt Hall).\nThe hall was built in 1973 and opened on 26 December that year.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zorachus | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"redirects":[{"from":"Zorachus","to":"Mark E. Rogers"}],"pages":{"4017988":{"pageid":4017988,"ns":0,"title":"Mark E. Rogers","extract":"Mark E. Rogers (April 19, 1952 \u2013 February 2, 2014) was an American author and illustrator.\n\n\nBiography\nRogers, while a student at Pt. Pleasant Beach High School, wrote a short novel, The Runestone, which has since been adapted into Willard Carroll's 1990 film starring Peter Riegert and Joan Severance, although it remains unpublished.... except as a numbered, signed limited edition chapbook published by Burning Bush Press in 1979. At the University of Delaware he continued his interest in writing, graduating summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1974. He was elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa.\nHe thereafter became a professional writer. His published works include the Samurai Cat series; a number of novels, The Dead, Zorachus, and the latter's sequel, The Nightmare of God; a series of books known as Blood of the Lamb; and another series called Zancharthus. He has also published three art portfolios and a collection of his pin-up paintings, Nothing But A Smile.\n\n\nDeath\nRogers often had heart problems, he died from apparent heart failure while hiking with his family in California's Death Valley.\n\n\nBibliography\n\n\nSamurai Cat\n(1980) The Bridge of Catzad-Dum - chapbook, published by The Burning Bush Press, ltd. ed. of 500\n(1984) The Adventures of Samurai Cat\n(1986) More Adventures of Samurai Cat\n(1989) Samurai Cat in the Real World\n(1991) The Sword of Samurai Cat\n(1994) Samurai Cat Goes to the Movies\n(1998) Samurai Cat Goes to Hell\n\n\nZorachus\n(1986) Zorachus\n(1988) The Nightmare of God\n\n\nBlood of the Lamb\n(1991) The Expected One\n(1991) The Devouring Void\n(1992) The Riddled Man\n\n\nZancharthus\n(1998) Blood and Pearls\n(2000) Jagutai and Lilitu\n(2002) Night of the Long Knives\n\n\nNovels\n(1989) The Dead\n(2010) Lilitu\n(2010) Yark\n\n\nNonfiction\n(2003) Nothing But a Smile: The Pinup Art of Mark Rogers\n(2005) The Art of Fantasy\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website\nMark E. Rogers at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database"}}}} |
part_xec/zorana_todorovic | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zorana_Todorovi\u0107","to":"Zorana Todorovi\u0107"}],"pages":{"6037936":{"pageid":6037936,"ns":0,"title":"Zorana Todorovi\u0107","extract":"Zorana Todorovi\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0430 \u0422\u043e\u0434\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0438\u045b; born December 30, 1989) is a Serbian women's basketball player.Todorovi\u0107 in one interview made clear her fondness of her height and expressed her wish to grow taller than Poland's Margo Dydek and thus become the world's tallest female basketball player. She is one of the tallest women in Europe. Todorovic takes a size 50 European shoe (UK size 15).\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zygmunt_witymir_bienkowski | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Witymir_Bie\u0144kowski","to":"Zygmunt Witymir Bie\u0144kowski"}],"pages":{"2856634":{"pageid":2856634,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Witymir Bie\u0144kowski","extract":"Zygmunt Witymir Bie\u0144kowski (2 May 1913 Warsaw \u2013 15 August 1979) was a Polish pilot and a writer of many articles and poems. His 303 squadron diary is held in the Polish Museum and Sikorski Institute in London.\nZygmunt Witymir Bie\u0144kowski was the son of Leopold Bie\u0144kowski (1883\u20131942) and Zofia Braun (1891\u20131943). His father was a Polish Member of Parliament from 1922 to 1928. Both his parents died in Soviet Gulag camps.Trained as a pilot at Polish Air Force Academy in D\u0119blin, he did not fight in Poland in 1939, but was evacuated westwards, escaped to Romania, then to France and on 27 June 1940 arrived in England. During the Battle of Britain, he served with 55 OTU in Aston Down. In May 1941, he joined No. 245 Squadron. In July 1941, he was transferred to No. 303 Squadron, based at Northolt. On 6 November 1941, Bie\u0144kowski claimed a Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter shot down. On 12 April 1942, his aircraft was shot up by a Focke-Wulf Fw 190, and he had to force land with collapsed landing gear near the English coast.He served from 1 December 1942 until 4 July 1943 as Squadron Leader of No. 303 Squadron. At that time he was also flying with 315 (Polish) Squadron and on 13 May 1943 was involved in combat with enemy fighters between 11.30 and 13.05. After that, his Spitfire Mk.IX BS242 disappeared from the list and on 6 June 1943, after repairs, was delivered to 303 Squadron. During July 1943, No. 303 Squadron were stationed at RAF Kirton-in-Lindsey, where the newly arrived US Army Air Corps 94th Fighter Squadron had just been assigned. He befriended some of the American pilots, who gave him the affectionate nickname \"Bing Crosby\", a play on his family name.\nFrom January 1945 to 24 February 1945, he commanded 302. On 24 February, his Spitfire Mk. XVI (TB341, \"WX-B\") was shot down by flak over Germany near Wesel and he was taken prisoner.\nReleased by American forces, by the end of the war he was a wing commander. During the war, he flew 74 sorties, claiming one Bf 109 destroyed and a Fw 190 damaged.\nHe died on 15 August 1979 in London aged 66. He was buried in Gunnersbury Cemetery in West London.\nHis brother Jan Bie\u0144kowski, was also a pilot; he was shot down over Cherbourg in 1944.\n\n\nMilitary awards\n Virtuti Militari, Silver Cross Krzy\u017c Walecznych (Cross of Valour), 3 timesVliegerkruis (Airman's Cross) (Netherlands)\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zosterornis | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"14469659":{"pageid":14469659,"ns":0,"title":"Zosterornis","extract":"Zosterornis is a genus of passerine birds in the white-eye family Zosteropidae.\nThe five species in the genus are endemic to the Philippines.\n\n\nTaxonomy\nThe genus Zosterornis was introduced in 1894 by the Scottish ornithologist William Robert Ogilvie-Grant to accommodate his newly described species, the chestnut-faced babbler, which thus becomes the type species. The name combines the Ancient Greek z\u014dst\u0113r meaning \"belt\" with ornis meaning \"bird\".These species were formerly included in the genus Stachyris in the Old World babblers family Timaliidae. They were moved to their own genus Zosterornis in the white-eye family Zosteropidae based on molecular phylogenetic studies published in the first decade of the 21st century.The genus contains the following five species:\nChestnut-faced babbler, Zosterornis whiteheadi\nLuzon striped babbler, Zosterornis striatus\nPanay striped babbler, Zosterornis latistriatus\nNegros striped babbler, Zosterornis nigrorum\nPalawan striped babbler, Zosterornis hypogrammicus\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuiderzee | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"52910":{"pageid":52910,"ns":0,"title":"Zuiderzee","extract":"The Zuiderzee or Zuider Zee (Dutch: [\u02ccz\u0153yd\u0259r\u02c8ze\u02d0] (listen); old spelling Zuyderzee or Zuyder Zee) was a shallow bay of the North Sea in the northwest of the Netherlands, extending about 100 km (60 miles) inland and at most 50 km (30 miles) wide, with an overall depth of about 4 to 5 metres (13\u201316 feet) and a coastline of about 300 km (200 miles). It covered 5,000 km2 (1,900 sq mi). Its name is Dutch for \"southern sea\", indicating that the name originates in Friesland, to the north of the Zuiderzee (cf. North Sea). In the 20th century the majority of the Zuiderzee was closed off from the North Sea by the construction of the Afsluitdijk, leaving the mouth of the inlet to become part of the Wadden Sea. The salt water inlet changed into a fresh water lake now called the IJsselmeer (IJssel Lake) after the river that drains into it, and by means of drainage and polders, an area of some 1,500 km2 (580 sq mi) was reclaimed as land. This land eventually became the province of Flevoland, with a population of nearly 400,000 (2011).\n\n\nHistory and disasters\n\nIn classical times there was already a body of water in this location, called Lacus Flevo (Lake Flevo) by Roman authors. It was much smaller than its later forms and its connection to the main sea was much narrower; it may have been a complex of lakes and marshes and channels, rather than one lake.\n\nOver time these lakes gradually eroded their soft peat shores and spread (a process known as waterwolf). Some part of this area of water was later called the Vlie; it probably flowed into the sea through what is now the Vliestroom channel between the islands of Vlieland and Terschelling.\nThe Marsdiep was once a river (fluvium Maresdeop) which may have been a distributary of the Vlie. During the early Middle Ages this began to change as rising sea levels and storms started to eat away at the coastal areas which consisted mainly of peatlands. In this period the inlet was referred to as the Almere, indicating it was still more of a lake, but the mouth and size of the inlet were much widened in the 12th century and especially after a disastrous flood in 1282 broke through the barrier dunes near Texel. The disaster marked the rise of Amsterdam on the southwestern end of the bay, since the seagoing traffic of the Baltic trade could now visit.\nThe even more massive St. Lucia's flood occurred 14 December 1287, when the seawalls broke during a storm, killing approximately 50,000 to 80,000 people in the fifth largest flood in recorded history. The name \"Zuiderzee\" came into general usage around this period.\nThe size of this inland sea remained largely stable from the 15th century onwards due to improvements in dikes, but when storms pushed North Sea water into the inlet, the Zuiderzee became a volatile cauldron of water, frequently resulting in flooding and the loss of ships. For example, on 18 November 1421, a seawall at the Zuiderzee dike broke, which flooded 72 villages and killed about 10,000 people. This was the Second St. Elizabeth's flood.\nThe Netherlands was part of the First French Empire between 1810 and 1813. A d\u00e9partement was formed in 1811 and named as Zuyderz\u00e9e after the Zuiderzee, whose territory roughly corresponded to the present provinces of North Holland and Utrecht.\nIn 1928, the 6-meter and 8-meter sailing events for the Amsterdam Summer Olympics were held on the Zuiderzee.\n\n\nGeography and development\n\nAround the Zuiderzee many fishing villages grew up and several developed into walled towns with extensive trade connections, in particular Kampen, a town in Overijssel, and later also towns in Holland such as Amsterdam, Hoorn, and Enkhuizen. These towns traded at first with ports on the Baltic Sea, in England, and in the Hanseatic League, but later also with the rest of the world when the Netherlands established its colonial empire. When that lucrative trade diminished, most of the towns fell back on fishing and some industry until the 20th century when tourism became the major source of income.\nContained within the Zuiderzee were five small islands, the remains of what were once larger islands, peninsulas connected to the mainland, or in the case of Pampus, an artificial island. These were Wieringen, Urk, Schokland, Pampus and Marken. The inhabitants of these islands also subsisted mainly on fishing and related industries and still do in the case of Urk and Wieringen. All of these islands, except for Pampus, are now part of the mainland or connected to it.\nThe construction in the early 20th century of a large enclosing dam (the Afsluitdijk) tamed the Zuiderzee. The creation of this dam was a response to the flood of January 1916. Plans for closing the Zuiderzee had been made over thirty years earlier but had not yet passed in parliament. With the completion of the Afsluitdijk in 1932, the Zuiderzee became the IJsselmeer, and large areas of water could be reclaimed for farming and housing. These areas, known as polders, were respectively the Wieringermeer, the Noordoostpolder and Flevoland.\nThis enormous project under the direction of Cornelis Lely, called the Zuiderzee Works, ran from 1919 to 1986, culminating in the creation of the new province of Flevoland. The reclamation project was originally intended to also reclaim the former southwestern portion of the Zuiderzee, a polder that would have been called the Markerwaard, but this final stage of the reclamation project was indefinitely postponed in the 1980s.\n\n\nSee also\nAlmere (lake)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZuiderzee Museum, dedicated to the history and culture of the former Zuiderzee\nZuiderzee Cycle Route, long-distance cycle route around the former Zuiderzee\n\"Zuider Zee\" . Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911."}}}} |
part_xec/zuzana_tomcikova | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuzana_Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1","to":"Zuzana Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1"}],"pages":{"26084032":{"pageid":26084032,"ns":0,"title":"Zuzana Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1","extract":"Zuzana Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 (born 23 April 1988) is a Slovak retired ice hockey and ball hockey goaltender, currently working as a sports specialist with the Slovak Olympic and Sports Committee. She was a member of the Slovak women's national ice hockey team from age 12 to 26, and represented Slovakia in the 2010 Winter Olympics and at several IIHF Women's World Championships. As a member of the Slovak women's national ball hockey team, she won silver medals at the Ball Hockey World Championship in 2009 and 2013, bronze in 2015, and placed fourth in 2017.Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1's ice hockey club career was played with HC Slovan Bratislava of the Elite Women's Hockey League (EWHL), Link\u00f6ping HC Dam of the Swedish Riksserien, the Bemidji State Beavers of the NCAA Division I, HC Tornado of the Russian Women's Hockey League, and HC Petr\u017ealka of the Slovak Women's Extraliga, in addition to a season played in the men's European University Hockey League (EUHL) with the Paneuropa Kings of Pan-European University.\n\n\nPlaying career\nDuring some of her teen years, Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 attended Caronport High School, a private parochial school in Caronport, Saskatchewan, Canada. As a sophomore, she won the Regina League Championship (regional), the Provincial Championship, and the Western Shield with the Caronport women's ice hockey team. She also played with the boys Tier II team in the South Central Minor Hockey League (SCMHL).\n\n\nBemidji State\nTom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 was playing in the top women's league in Sweden, the Riksserien (renamed SDHL in 2015) before joining the Bemidji State Beavers in 2008. She inherited the starting goaltender position at Bemidji State from Emily Brookshaw, who had set career marks in almost every major goaltending category as a Beaver. As a freshman, she was named to the All-WCHA Second Team and All-WCHA Rookie Team. She played 1805:08 minutes and recorded a .917 save percentage and a 3.09 goals against average, becoming the second Beaver to eclipse the single-season quadruple-save plateau, with 1,025 saves. She tied the school record with three shutouts and became the first player in conference history to be named WCHA Defensive Player of the Week on three straight occasions (10 December, 17 December and 7 January). At season's end, she became the first Beaver to earn All-WCHA Second Team honors. On 28 January 2012, the Wisconsin Badgers hosted a record crowd of 12,402 attended the Kohl Center as Wisconsin swept the Bemidji State Beavers. Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 made 32 saves in front of the record breaking crowd, while her Badgers rival, Alex Rigsby, earned her sixth shutout of the season. After her senior season, she was a member of the four-year class with the most wins in Beaver history, which included with fellow seniors Kimberly Lieder, Alana McElhinney, Montana Vichorek, Marlee Wheelhouse and Lauren Williams.\n\n\nInternational play\nTom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 made her first appearance with the senior Slovak national team at the 2003 Women's Ice Hockey World Championships \u2013 Division II, where the 15 year old earned a .958 save percentage and 1.20 goals against average across three games played.\nTom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 was in net as Canada defeated Slovakia at the 2010 Winter Olympics by an 18\u20130 mark. She was upset after the match, as she had never allowed so many goals in her career. Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 faced a career-high 67 shots in the game against Canada. In a statement, she said she was really happy her team didn't quit on her and the team was cheering her on after every single goal.Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 represented Slovakia in the ice hockey tournament at the 2011 Winter Universiade, earning a bronze medal as she made 26 saves in a 3\u20131 victory over the United States.\nTom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 represented Slovakia at the 2011 IIHF Women's World Championship. She was named Slovakia's Player of the Game for two games in the tournament, against the United States and Russia. Slovakia's coaches selected her as one of the team's Top Three players for the tournament. Tom\u010d\u00edkov\u00e1 played in all five of Slovakia's games during the tournament, facing 250 shots in total, making 237 saves. She finished with a save percentage of 0.948, and a goals against average of 2.56. She had one win, and one shutout. She was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player, and her play was largely responsible for keeping Slovakia in the top division of women's IIHF play.\n\n\nIce hockey career statistics\n\n\nRegular season and playoffs\nSources: US College Hockey Online, Elite Prospects\n\n\nInternational\n\n\nAwards and honors\n\n\nNCAA\n2008\u201309 All-WCHA Second Team\nWCHA Defensive Player of the Week (Week of 12 October 2009)\nWCHA Defensive Player of the Week (Week of 9 November 2009)\nWCHA Co-Defensive Player of the Week (Week of 20 January 2010)\n2010 Patty Kazmaier Award nominee\n2010 Co-WCHA Player of the Year\n2010 WCHA All-Academic Team\nWCHA Defensive Player of the Week (Week of 5 October 2010)\nWCHA Defensive Player of the Week (Week of 4 October 2011)\n2011 All-WCHA Second Team\n2011\u201312 CCM/ACHC Hockey Women's Division I All-American, Second Team\n2011\u201312 Bemidji State Female Student-Athlete of the Year\n\n\nInternational ice hockey\n2011 IIHF Women's World Championship Media All-Star team\n2011 IIHF Women's World Championship Most Valuable Player\n\n\nInternational ball hockey\n2013 Ball Hockey World Championship All-Star Team\n2017 Ball Hockey World Championship Best Goaltender\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_horusitzky | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Horusitzky","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Horusitzky"}],"pages":{"48146361":{"pageid":48146361,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Horusitzky","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Horusitzky (18 July 1903 in P\u00e1pa \u2013 25 April 1985 in Budapest) was a Hungarian composer. A pupil of Kod\u00e1ly, from 1938 Horusitzky was editor of A zene, a journal promoting the Magyar Korus movement.\n\n\nRecordings\nZolt\u00e1n Horusitzky: North - chamber cantata, Op. 70 ; Four Songs, Op. 8 ; New Songs, Op. 59 ; The Power of Music, Op. 73 ; Three Songs, Op. 7 ; Cello Sonata, Op. 71 ; Attila F\u00fcl\u00f6p (tenor), Jutta Bokor (mezzo-soprano), Kolos Kov\u00e1ts (bass), Tam\u00e1s Salg\u00f3 (piano), Zolt\u00e1n Horusitzky (piano), Erika Lux (piano) Chorus of the Hungarian State Folk Ensemble, Chorus Vox Humana, V\u00e1c, Gergely M\u00e9nesi Hungaroton - HCD32263\nHorusitzky: Piano Sonata, Op. 45 'La Montagne', Chinese Songs, Op. 13 ; Three Sonnets by Shakespeare ; French Songs Op. 58 ; Sonata for Two Pianos, Op. 51 1940, piano piece, Op. 12 No. 2 ; Margit L\u00e1szl\u00f3 (soprano), Boldizs\u00e1r Ke\u00f6nch (tenor), Zolt\u00e1n Horusitzky, Imre Rohmann, Ferenc R\u00f5czey Sr., Ferenc R\u00f5czey Jr. (pianos) Hungaroton - HCD31670\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zun_than_sin | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zun_Than_Sin","to":"Zun Than Sin"}],"pages":{"53031860":{"pageid":53031860,"ns":0,"title":"Zun Than Sin","extract":"Zun Than Sin (Burmese: \u1007\u103d\u1014\u103a\u101e\u1036\u1005\u1009\u103a; born 26 June 1995) is a Burmese model, musician, and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss Universe Myanmar 2017 and represented Myanmar at the Miss Universe 2017 pageant.\n\n\nEarly life\nZun was born and raised in Yangon to an ethnic Rakhine family. Her father is a head doctor from Yangon Ear Nose & Throat Hospital, while her mother is a housewife. \n\n\nEducation\nZun graduated with double degrees in Burmese Literature and Dramatic Arts from National University of Arts and Culture in Yangon.\n\n\nPageantry\n\n\nMiss Universe Myanmar\nHaving previously competed in beauty pageants before, she was crowned as Miss Universe Myanmar 2017 on October 6, 2016, by outgoing titleholder Htet Htet Htun. She represented Myanmar at Miss Universe 2017.\n\n\nMiss Universe 2017\nShe competed at Miss Universe 2017 but Unplaced.\n\n\nFilmography\n\n\nTelevision series\nYadanarbon (2017)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nmissuniversemyanmar.com"}}}} |
part_xec/zwei_arzte_sind_einer_zu_viel | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zwei_\u00c4rzte_sind_einer_zu_viel","to":"Zwei \u00c4rzte sind einer zu viel"}],"pages":{"33137320":{"pageid":33137320,"ns":0,"title":"Zwei \u00c4rzte sind einer zu viel","extract":"Zwei \u00c4rzte sind einer zu viel is a German television series.\n\n\nSee also\nList of German television series\n\n\nExternal links\nZwei \u00c4rzte sind einer zu viel at IMDb"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_pali | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoltan_Pali","to":"Zoltan Pali"}],"pages":{"44823191":{"pageid":44823191,"ns":0,"title":"Zoltan Pali","extract":"Zoltan Pali (born 1960) is an architect from Los Angeles, California.\n\n\nEarly life\nZoltan Pali was born May 28, 1960 at the French Hospital in Chinatown, Los Angeles, California to Emery Pali and Maria [Szalacsy] Pali. His parents were immigrants from Budapest just after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. His father taught him the basics of drawing - particularly mechanical drafting - and by the time Zoltan was 15 years old he was able to work summers in various engineering and architectural offices as a draftsperson. He grew up in Los Angeles, Encino, and Tarzana. He attended William Howard Taft High School in Woodland Hills from 1975 to 1978. He completed his design degree at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1983.\n\n\nCareer\nHis professional career started in Santa Monica where he worked for Wexco, VCA, and Solberg + Lowe Architects. In 1986 he started working independently. He met Judit Meda Fekete in 1989 and the two forged a partnership. However, with virtually no commissions, they both found employment with various architectural practices in Los Angeles. During this period Zoltan met Jerrold E. Lomax, FAIA and began a professional and mentor/student friendship that lasted until Lomax's death in May 2014. The collaboration with Lomax included the completion of the Benjamin Residence and the J. Robert Scott Showroom. By 1995, Lomax had moved his practice to Carmel Valley, California while Zoltan and Judit formed what is now their architectural practice - Studio Pali Fekete architects [aka SPF:a].Zoltan achieved architectural licensure in the State of California in 1989. He became a member of the American Institute of Architects in 1993.\n\nIn 2001, Zoltan completed the renovations to the Pantages Theatre in Hollywood. In the very same year he started work as the executive architect for the Getty Villa with the design architects, Machado-Slivetti Associates. The Getty Villa was completed in 2006. In 2005 he completed restoration and renovations at the Greek Theatre in Griffith Park. In 2006 he was hired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to renovate the LACMA West building - of which only a portion of the work was completed. With his partner Judy, they built the MODAA building in Culver City, California which is a 30,000 square foot building with retail, gallery, office and live work spaces completing it in 2006. The MODAA building also houses their studio.\nIn 2005, Zoltan was inducted into the American Institute of Architects College of Fellows. He was also commissioned to teach a topic studio at USC by the late Dean Robert Timme as a visiting professor. Also in 2005, he was named an Emerging Voice by the New York Architectural League. That very same year, he won an American Institute of Architects Honor Award for Architecture for the Somis Hay Barn.\nResidential Architect named Zoltan and his partner, Judit Fekete as a Top 50 firm in 2010.In a Los Angeles Times article in January 2013, Christopher Hawthorne, LA Times Architecture Critic wrote that \u201cThe founder and design principal of L.A.\u2019s SPF:architects is poised for a banner 2013. His collaboration with Renzo Piano on a forthcoming film museum for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences at the old May Co. building, on the western edge of the LACMA campus, is picking up speed. And fall will bring the opening of the firm\u2019s Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, an extension and re-imagining of a 1933 post office in Beverly Hills.\u201dZoltan has been featured twice in L.A. Confidential magazine.In late 2011 competition design work began on the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures for the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. By spring of 2012 the project had expanded and it became a collaboration with Renzo Piano and the Renzo Piano Building Workshop. During this time, architectural writer Fred A. Bernstein wrote in an Architectural Record article titled \u2018Piano, Pali to Convert Moderne Landmark into Movie Museum, \u201cThe project is a breakthrough for Pali, who had already been working on a plan for the May Company building for LACMA before Piano was hired. Pali has renovated several important performance venues in California and worked with Machado and Silvetti on the restoration of the Getty Villa in Malibu, for which he served as executive architect. This time, Pali will be a full collaborator. \u201cWe\u2019ve joined forces,\u201d Piano said. \u201cIf Zoltan did not exist, he should be invented. Design is like playing ping-pong.\u201d In April 2014, Zoltan and his firm exited the project.Zoltan\u2019s design for the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, California was completed in mid-2014 although opening night was actually October 2013. The project is more commonly called the Wallis and Pali\u2019s design work started back in 2006. It was honored by the California Preservation Foundation as part of the project includes the re-vitalization of a 1930s Post Office originally designed by Ralph C. Flewelling.\n\n\nPersonal life\nHe is married to his partner Judy and they are the parents of two boys, Renzo and Ezra.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zyryanka_airport | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zyryanka_Airport","to":"Zyryanka Airport"}],"pages":{"40162382":{"pageid":40162382,"ns":0,"title":"Zyryanka Airport","extract":"Zyryanka Airport (IATA: ZKP, ICAO: UESU) is the main airport serving the locality of Zyryanka, Verkhnekolymsky District in the Sakha Republic of Russia. When it cannot be used, the Zyryanka West Airport complements it.\nGoogle Earth Images of June, 2017 show the runway covered by floodwaters, possibly destroyed.\n\n\nAirlines and destinations\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zoe_derham | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoe_Derham","to":"Zoe Derham"}],"pages":{"12293228":{"pageid":12293228,"ns":0,"title":"Zoe Derham","extract":"Zoe Lianne Derham (born 24 November 1980 in Bristol) is a female hammer thrower from England. Her personal best throw is 68.63 metres, achieved in July 2008 in Loughborough. This places her fourth on the British all-time list, behind Lorraine Shaw, who is also her coach.\n\n\nInternational competitions\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoe Derham at World Athletics\nZoe Derham at Team GB \nZoe Derham at the International Olympic Committee\nZoe Derham at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)\nOfficial web site at the Wayback Machine (archived 20 April 2012)\nZoe Lianne DERHAM at the 2006 Commonwealth Games at archive.today (archived 30 December 2012)"}}}} |
part_xec/zoran_arsenic | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Arseni\u0107","to":"Zoran Arseni\u0107"}],"pages":{"47609369":{"pageid":47609369,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Arseni\u0107","extract":"Zoran Arseni\u0107 (born 2 June 1994) is a Croatian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Rak\u00f3w Cz\u0119stochowa.\n\n\nClub career\nComing from the NK Osijek academy, Arseni\u0107 was ceded to NK Vi\u0161njevac during his first U19 year, where he gathered a couple of senior caps in the Tre\u0107a HNL Istok. Returning to Osijek, he made his first team debut on 22 June 2013, as a starter in a 1\u20132 home loss against NK Lokomotiva. Not long afterwards, he was sent on loan to Druga HNL side HNK Segesta, where he spent most of the 2013\u201314 season, and the following season to NK Sesvete, playing in the same tier. He settled as a regular at NK Osijek at the start of the 2015\u201316 season.\nOn 4 January 2017 he signed a contract with Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w valid from 1 July 2017.On 17 May 2018 he signed a contract extension that tied him to Wis\u0142a until 2022. However, due to Wis\u0142a's regulatory difficulties his contract was dissolved by mutual consent in January 2019.\nOn 16 January 2019 he signed a three-and-half year contract with Jagiellonia Bia\u0142ystok.\n\n\nCareer statistics\nAs of 26 August 2022\n\n\nHonours\n\n\nClub\nRak\u00f3w Cz\u0119stochowa\n\nPolish Cup: 2020\u201321, 2021\u201322\nPolish Super Cup: 2021, 2022\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZoran Arseni\u0107 at Soccerway\nZoran Arseni\u0107 at the Croatian Football Federation\nZoran Arseni\u0107 at 90minut.pl (in Polish)"}}}} |
part_xec/zvi_ofer | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvi_Ofer","to":"Zvi Ofer"}],"pages":{"32999541":{"pageid":32999541,"ns":0,"title":"Zvi Ofer","extract":"Zvi \"Zvika\" Ofer (Hebrew: \u05e6\u05d1\u05d9 \u05e2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e8; 1932\u20131968) was an Israeli soldier and the commander of the Israel Defense Forces Haruv Reconnaissance Unit, and recipient of the Israeli Medal of Valor for the 1962 Nuqeib operation in Syria. In 1967, he served as the military commander of Hebron and Nablus.\n\n\nEarly life and the 1948 war\nOne was born in Petah Tikva to parents who had moved to British Mandatory Palestine during the Third Aliyah. His parents were among the founders of the settlement Kfar Azar. As a youth, Ofer joined the Haganah. He initially delivered Haganah newspapers to its subscribers, hung pro-Haganah posters in the middle of the night and oiled the guns belonging to the settlement. At sixteen, he left school and joined the Palmach, the elite strike force of the Haganah. He fought in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, and participated in Operation Danny in which the Arab occupied towns of Lod and Ramle fell to Jewish forces. His military talents did not go unnoticed and he was handpicked for officer\u2019s training. In the midst of his training, he learned that his Palmach unit was gearing up for Operation Yoav, an offensive in the Negev region. He left officer\u2019s school to join his unit in time for the offensive. By the end of the war, he attained the rank of sergeant while his classmates had not yet enlisted in the army.\nOfer was married and had four children.\n\n\nBorder wars, the Suez war and the Six-Day War\nFollowing the 1948 Arab\u2013Israeli War, he returned to civilian life but reenlisted in 1952. He was first assigned to a unit that tracked down Arab guerilla infiltrators. Later, he joined the paratroops and partook in many reprisal operations of the 1950s. During Operation Kadesh, Ofer commanded a paratroop platoon that took part in the Battle for the Mitla Pass. Later, forces under his command took part in the taking of the Sharm el-Sheikh military base, thus clearing the way for Israeli shipping to pass through the Gulf of Aqaba, which had hitherto been blocked by Egyptian cannon.\nIn the early 1960s, he was given a command position within Sayeret Golani. His unit became known as \"The Flying Tiger\". In 1962, Syrian artillery on the Golan Heights bombarded Israeli civilian targets, including fishermen on the Sea of Galilee. The Israel Defense Forces felt that retaliation was warranted and chose a Syrian military target near the village of Nuqeib. Ofer\u2019s unit played a central role in operation Snunit (Swallow) which resulted in the destruction of the chosen targets. During the operation, Ofer charged the Syrian pillboxes while firing his machinegun and throwing grenades. He yelled at them, \u201csurrender; you don\u2019t stand a chance,\u201d before silencing them with antitank fire. During the Six-Day War, his was one of the few battalions that did not see combat as his assigned objectives, Bethlehem and Hebron, fell without a shot. Following the Six-Day War, Ofer was appointed military governor of Hebron and Shechem and was lauded for his performance in those roles.\n\n\nLast battle and death\nOfer wanted to rejoin a combat unit and after a request, was assigned command of the Haruv Reconnaissance Unit. The unit's primary responsibility was to conduct special reconnaissance and scout along Israel's border with Jordan in order to combat Arab guerrilla infiltration in the Jordan Valley. In 1968, Ofer was killed in action in Wadi Qelt, west of Jericho, while in pursuit of militants who had crossed the Jordan River. The Arab guerrillas were on their way to attack civilian targets and the force led by Ofer intercepted them before they could reach their target. Ofer was the sole Israeli fatality in the engagement, which also resulted in the killing of two guerrillas and the capture of six others along with a large weapons cache.At his graveside, the Commanding Officer of the Central Command, General Rehavam Ze'evi said of Zvi Ofer, \"the figure Zvika, the country boy, the youth in the Palmach, the scout, the commander, and the instructor, will remain engraved in our hearts\".The IDF Camp Ofer and Ofer Prison, founded in December 1968, are named after him.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zungri | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"6389147":{"pageid":6389147,"ns":0,"title":"Zungri","extract":"Zungri (Calabrian: Zzung\u00e0ri) is a comune and town in Calabria, in southern Italy, in the province of Vibo Valentia.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuidschermer | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"4758146":{"pageid":4758146,"ns":0,"title":"Zuidschermer","extract":"Zuidschermer is a village in the Dutch province of North Holland. It is a part of the municipality of Alkmaar, and lies about 7 km south of the city of Alkmaar.\n\n\nHistory\nThe village was first mentioned in 1867 as \"Zd Schemer (Zwarte kerkje)\" and means \"southern (part) of the Schermer (polder)\". Zuidschermer developed after the Schermer was poldered in 1635 at the intersection of the Zuidervaart with the Driehuizerweg. It started to grow after 1930.The Dutch Reformed church is better known as Zwarte Kerkje (Little black church). It was constructed out of tarred wood in 1662. In 1831, it was connected with the school. In 1834, the walls were rebuilt in stone. The Catholic St Michaels Church is a three aisled basilica-like church with a needle spire in expressionist style. It was constructed between 1930 and 1931.The wind mill Poldermolen K is a polder mill from 1635. It was moved to its current location in 1645. Until 1929, it drained the K part of the polder. In 1983, it was restored. In 1987, a little paaltjasker was built near the farm Blockerhoeck.Zuidschermer was home to 377 people in 1840.\n\n\nGallery\n\n\t\t\n\t\t\n\t\t\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zombie_chronicles | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zombie_Chronicles","to":"Zombie Chronicles"}],"pages":{"11381456":{"pageid":11381456,"ns":0,"title":"Zombie Chronicles","extract":"Zombie Chronicles, also known as The Zombie Chronicles and Zombie Chronicles: 3D, is a 2001 horror film directed by Brad Sykes. It follows Tara Woodley, a reporter who visits an old desert town to research her article on the ghost town legends from around there. On the way she picks up the hitchhiker, Ebenezer Jackson, who takes her to an abandoned building where she interviews him via tape recorder.\n\n\nPremise\nZombies rise and attack the living. Tara interviews a hitchhiker in an abandoned building. He tells her a story. Ebenezer then proceeds to tell her another story.\n\n\nCast\nEmmy Smith as Tara Woodley\nJoe Haggerty as Ebenezer Jackson\nGarret Clancy as Sgt. Ben Draper\nGreg Brown as Pvt. Wilson\nMike Coen as Jason\nJohn Kyle Grady as Buzz\nJanet Tracy Keijser as Melinda\nBeverly Lynne as Marsh\nJarrod Robbins as Geeter\n\n\nHome media\nZombie Chronicles was released on DVD. One DVD release includes the film in both regular 2D and in stereoscopic 3D.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nBibliography\nDendle, Peter (2012). The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, Volume 2: 2000\u20132010 (Contributions to Zombie Studies). McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0786461639.\n\n\nExternal links\nThe Zombie Chronicles at IMDb"}}}} |
part_xec/zywiec_landscape_park | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"\u017bywiec_Landscape_Park","to":"\u017bywiec Landscape Park"}],"pages":{"17746647":{"pageid":17746647,"ns":0,"title":"\u017bywiec Landscape Park","extract":"\u017bywiec Landscape Park (\u017bywiecki Park Krajobrazowy) is a protected area (Landscape Park) in southern Poland. It was established in 1986 and covers an area of 359 square kilometres (139 sq mi).\nThe Park lies within Silesian Voivodeship and is named after the town of \u017bywiec."}}}} |
part_xec/zoe_cramond | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoe_Cramond","to":"Zoe Cramond"}],"pages":{"46393350":{"pageid":46393350,"ns":0,"title":"Zoe Cramond","extract":"Zoe Cramond (born 8 October 1984) is a New Zealand actress. After graduating from Unitec Institute of Technology, Cramond appeared in various theatre productions and television commercials. She made appearances in Outrageous Fortune and Shortland Street, before deciding to give up her acting career to study graphic design. She returned to acting after being cast in the television film Panic at Rock Island and Go Girls.\nIn 2011, Cramond joined the cast of comedy-drama Packed to the Rafters as Emma Mackey, marking her first major role. She relocated to Sydney for filming. Cramond competed in the 12th Season of Dancing with the Stars in 2012. She and her dance partner Aric Yegudkin came in third place. The following year, Cramond filmed a guest appearance in Fat Tony & Co.. From 2015 until 2020, she played Amy Williams in Neighbours, reprising the role in 2022 for the soap's finale.\n\n\nEarly and personal life\nZoe Cramond is from Papamoa, New Zealand. Her parents are both artists, who encouraged her to partake in community theatre, ballet and contemporary dance. Cramond attended Unitec Institute of Technology, where she studied performing arts.Cramond is a keen surfer. She learned how to surf at Waihi Beach from the age of 14.\n\n\nCareer\nAfter graduating from Unitec, Cramond worked for an underground music station and appeared in several theatre productions and television commercials. She made guest appearances in Outrageous Fortune (2008) and Shortland Street (2009). After struggling to find acting work, Cramond quit to study graphic design. A week later she learned that she had been cast in the television film Panic at Rock Island and had an audition for the New Zealand comedy-drama Go Girls. Cramond joined Go Girls as Amanda, a love interest and eventual wife of main character Kevin (Jay Ryan).Cramond joined the cast of comedy-drama Packed to the Rafters as Emma Mackey for the fourth season in 2011. Cramond relocated to Sydney for filming. Her character, Emma, was introduced to the show as a potential love interest for Ben Rafter (played by Hugh Sheridan). Cramond remained with the show until its cancellation in 2013.In 2012, Cramond competed in the 12th Season of Dancing with the Stars. She was partnered with Russian dancer Aric Yegudkin and represented the Spinal Cord Injury Network. During a dance routine, Cramond fractured four ribs, but continued in the competition. Despite being named the favourites to win, Cramond and Yegudkin came in third place.Cramond appeared as lawyer Zarah Garde-Wilson in Fat Tony & Co. in 2014. She joined the cast of Neighbours the following year, as series regular Amy Williams. Her departure from the serial aired on 1 January 2020.\n\n\nFilmography\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZoe Cramond at IMDb"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_tagscherer | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Tagscherer","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Tagscherer"}],"pages":{"26654818":{"pageid":26654818,"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Tagscherer","extract":"Zolt\u00e1n Tagscherer (born May 13, 1976) is a Hungarian cross-country skier, born in Budapest, who has competed since 2001. Competing in three Winter Olympics, he finished 39th in the individual sprint at Salt Lake City in 2002.\nTagscherer's best finish at the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships was 16th in the team sprint event at Sapporo in 2007 while his best individual finish was 39th in an individual sprint event at Lahti in 2001.\nHis best World Cup finish was 30th in a 15 km event at China in 2007.\n\n\nReferences\nZoltan Tagscherer at the International Ski Federation"}}}} |
part_xec/zvonko_lipovac | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zvonko_Lipovac","to":"Zvonko Lipovac"}],"pages":{"32136797":{"pageid":32136797,"ns":0,"title":"Zvonko Lipovac","extract":"Zvonko Lipovac (born 9 October 1964) is a former Croatian association footballer.\n\n\nClub career\nLipovac played for Borac Banja Luka and Dinamo Zagreb in the Yugoslav First League. While playing for this club, in 1988, he won Yugoslav Cup.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZvonko Lipovac at WorldFootball.net\nhttps://web.archive.org/web/20110728033630/http://www.boracbl.net/intervju/f_lipovaczvonko.html"}}}} |
part_xec/zombie_high | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zombie_High","to":"Zombie High"}],"pages":{"3412203":{"pageid":3412203,"ns":0,"title":"Zombie High","extract":"Zombie High (also known as The School That Ate My Brain) is a 1987 American comedy horror film directed by Ron Link. The film was released theatrically on October 2, 1987, and stars Virginia Madsen as a beautiful young teenager who must fight against a boarding school that is intent on turning everyone into a Stepford-esque \"perfect\" student.\n\n\nPlot\nAndrea (Virginia Madsen) is a teenage girl that has won a scholarship to Ettinger, a formerly all-male boarding school. She leaves behind her boyfriend Barry (James Wilder) in the hopes of scholastic achievement, but soon discovers that things are not as they seem at Ettinger. Andrea finds that her friends are slowly changing from regular teenagers into personality-less drones. Some investigation shows that the school's faculty has been harvesting life-sustaining chemicals from the student body, which results in them becoming seemingly perfect students that are only focused on doing well in school and obeying rules. Andrea is spared from this fate by one of her professors, Philo (Richard Cox), who takes pity on her due to her resemblance to a former lover. Along with her boyfriend, Andrea discovers that the staff uses classical music as a way of stabilizing the students. Philo gives her a tape to play over the loudspeaker system that he claims will stop the faculty and students from capturing her and turning her into a zombie, only for her to lose it while she is chased by the school's students. With nothing to lose, Barry plays a tape of rock music in its place, which accomplishes the desired task of stopping the students and saving their lives.\n\n\nCast\nVirginia Madsen as Andrea\nPaul Feig as Emerson\nSherilyn Fenn as Suzi\nClare Carey as Mary Beth\nScott Coffey as Felner\nRichard Cox as Philo\nKay E. Kuter as Dean Beauregard Eisner\nHenry Sutton as Bell\nWalter Addison as Chief Hillis\nChristopher Peters as Phillip\nChristopher Crews as Biff\nJames Wilder as Barry\nJohn Sack as Senator Felner\nPaul Williams as Ignatius\nSusan Barnes as Mom\nJeff Morgan as Zombie student\nTease (Music Band, with Kipper Jones, Derek Organ and Tommy Organ) as themself\n\n\nReception\nLana Cooper of Brutal as Hell wrote, \"For unintentional humor and as an \u201880s genre horror timepiece, Zombie High cannot be beat. Just don\u2019t expect to be scared.\" The Chicago Tribune panned the film in a 1988 review, expressing surprise that Madsen would star in Zombie High, as they viewed it as a step down from her previous acting work. Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times called it \"a student project gone awry\". Glenn Kay, who wrote Zombie Movies: The Ultimate Guide, called the film a \"nondescript, forgettable flick\". Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle said, \"The movie plays the concept more seriously than the title lets on, and, in fact, winds up dragging quite a bit.\"\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZombie High at IMDb\nZombie High at Rotten Tomatoes\nZombie High at Box Office Mojo\nZombie High at AllMovie"}}}} |
part_xec/zoran_jelikic | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Jeliki\u0107","to":"Zoran Jeliki\u0107"}],"pages":{"19301492":{"pageid":19301492,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Jeliki\u0107","extract":"Zoran Jeliki\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d \u0408\u0435\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438\u045b; born August 4, 1954) is a former Serbian football player. He capped 8 times for Yugoslavia.\n\n\nExternal links\nProfile at Serbian federation official site"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_paulinyi | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoltan_Paulinyi","to":"Zoltan Paulinyi"}],"pages":{"-1":{"ns":0,"title":"Zoltan Paulinyi","missing":""}}}} |
part_xec/zumsteinspitze | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"11418930":{"pageid":11418930,"ns":0,"title":"Zumsteinspitze","extract":"The Zumsteinspitze (Punta Zumstein in Italian) (4,563 m) is a peak in the Pennine Alps on the border between Italy and Switzerland. It is a subpeak of Monte Rosa.\nThe summit lies between the Dufourspitze (to which it is joined by the Grenzsattel) and the Signalkuppe (to which it is joined by the Colle Gnifetti).\n\n\nClimbing\nOn 1 August 1820 the mountain was ascended by the brothers Joseph and Johann Niklaus Vincent, Joseph Zumstein, Molinatti, Castel and some unknown porters. During the expedition they thought they had climbed the highest peak of the Monte Rosa massif, but when they reached the summit they found out there was another \"highest peak\": the Dufourspitze. \nThe Vincent brothers and Zumstein agreed to name the successfully climbed mountain \"Cima de la belle Alliance\", but Zumstein, forest inspector and member of the Royal Society of Science in Turin, managed to name the mountain after himself.\nThe first winter ascent was by E. Allegra and guides on 30 March 1902.\n\n\nSee also\n\nList of Alpine four-thousanders\nList of mountains of Switzerland named after people\n\n\nReferences\nRobin G. Collomb, (ed.), Pennine Alps Central, London: Alpine Club, 1975\nHelmut Dumler and Willi P. Burkhardt, The High Mountains of the Alps, London: Diadem, 1994\nJulius Kugy, Im g\u00f6ttlichen L\u00e4cheln des Monte Rosa, Graz: Leykam-Verlag, 1940\n\n\nExternal links\nThe Zumsteinspitze on SummitPost\n360\u00b0 panorama from Zumsteinspitze"}}}} |
part_xec/zohan_rural_district | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zohan_Rural_District","to":"Zohan Rural District"}],"pages":{"35938045":{"pageid":35938045,"ns":0,"title":"Zohan Rural District","extract":"Zohan Rural District (Persian: \u062f\u0647\u0633\u062a\u0627\u0646 \u0632\u0647\u0627\u0646) is a rural district (dehestan) in Zohan District, Zirkuh County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,908, in 1,505 families. The rural district has 16 villages, such as Boznabad-e Jadid.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zofiowka_sanatorium | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zofi\u00f3wka_Sanatorium","to":"Zofi\u00f3wka Sanatorium"}],"pages":{"39694122":{"pageid":39694122,"ns":0,"title":"Zofi\u00f3wka Sanatorium","extract":"Zofi\u00f3wka Sanatorium is a defunct mental health facility in the town of Otwock in Poland, built at the beginning of the 20th century. In the Second Polish Republic, the sanatorium complex was expanded with more buildings and staff. Zofi\u00f3wka initially had 95 beds, but this number had increased to 275 by 1935. The Jewish history of Zofi\u00f3wka came to its end in the course of the Holocaust following the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany.\n\n\nConstruction\nThe history of the old Jewish sanatorium starts at the beginning of the 20th century. Back then, the institutionalized treatment of mental disorders was in its infancy. In 1906, Polish-Jewish neurologists Adam Wizel, Samuel Goldflam, Ludwik Bregman and Adolf Weisblat formed the \"Society for Poor Jews with Nervous and Mental Illnesses\" (Polish: Towarzystwo Opieki nad Ubogimi, Nerwowo i Umys\u0142owo Chorymi \u017bydami). The sanatorium's director was Dr. Stefan Miller. A year later, a donation by the philanthropist Sophia Endelman enabled the purchase of 17 hectares of land and in 1908 the first building of a new sanatorium was built by the association there. An important part of the treatment was restoring patients to society by enabling them to practice employment. Adela Tuwim, the mother of famous Polish poet Julian Tuwim, was admitted before World War II to the sanatorium's isolation ward, which houses its most difficult patients.\n\n\nHolocaust history\nIn late 1940, the asylum fell within the so-called \u2018medical zone\u2019 formed by the Germans in the newly established Jewish ghetto of Otwock. The institution was still working during the early stages of the occupation of Poland, but the conditions dramatically worsened. Almost 400 patients were sentenced to a slow and torturous death by starvation as part of the Nazi extermination Aktionen. Zofi\u00f3wka ended its existence at the same time as the ghetto in Otwock.\nOn the morning of 19 August 1942, the Ukrainian Trawnikis, supervised by the Germans, gathered the patients and hospital staff into the first pavilion, after which some 100\u2060\u2013140 victims were shot on the spot. The rest were put on the Holocaust train to Treblinka along with Otwock\u2019s Jewish population of 7,000. Only a few doctors, who managed to escape to Warsaw by ambulance, survived. Some staff chose to commit suicide.\nIn 1943, Zofi\u00f3wka served Germans as Lebensborn, becoming a charitable care institution. The facility also dealt with the forced Germanization of Polish children, tending to them until their adoption by German families.\n\n\nAfter World War II\nZofi\u00f3wka returned to its original medical purposes after the Soviet takeover, but the patients were mainly children and youths. Between 1985 and the mid-1990s, the facilities were used to treat neuropsychiatric disorders associated with drug addiction. This continued until the decision was made to finally close it.\nIn 2015, the viral video known as 11B-X-1371 was found filmed in the abandoned facility, but who did so and when, exactly, was not known until an individual named Parker Warner Wright claimed to have created the video. He told The Daily Dot that it was supposed to be an art project, and he later released a sequel video entitled 11B-3-1369.\n\n\nBibliography\nMary V. Seeman: The Jewish psychiatric hospital, Zofi\u00f3wka, in Otwock, Poland, 2014, in History of Psychiatry, March 2015\nRael Strous: Extermination of the Jewish Mentally-Ill during the Nazi Era \u2013 The \u201eDoubly Cursed\u201c, 2008, Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci Vol 45 No 4, p. 247\u2013256.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/z-test | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"332213":{"pageid":332213,"ns":0,"title":"Z-test","extract":"A Z-test is any statistical test for which the distribution of the test statistic under the null hypothesis can be approximated by a normal distribution. Z-tests test the mean of a distribution. For each significance level in the confidence interval, the Z-test has a single critical value (for example, 1.96 for 5% two tailed) which makes it more convenient than the Student's t-test whose critical values are defined by the sample size (through the corresponding degrees of freedom). Both the Z test and Student's t-test have similarities in that they both help determine the significance of a set of data. However, the z-test is rarely used in practice because the population deviation is difficult to determine.\n\n\nApplicability\nBecause of the central limit theorem, many test statistics are approximately normally distributed for large samples. Therefore, many statistical tests can be conveniently performed as approximate Z-tests if the sample size is large or the population variance is known. If the population variance is unknown (and therefore has to be estimated from the sample itself) and the sample size is not large (n < 30), the Student's t-test may be more appropriate. \n\n\nProcedure\nHow to perform a Z test when T is a statistic that is approximately normally distributed under the null hypothesis is as follows: \nFirst, estimate the expected value \u03bc of T under the null hypothesis, and obtain an estimate s of the standard deviation of T.\nSecond, determine the properties of T : one tailed or two tailed.\nFor Null hypothesis H0: \u03bc\u2265\u03bc0 vs alternative hypothesis H1: \u03bc<\u03bc0 , it is lower/left-tailed (one tailed).\nFor Null hypothesis H0: \u03bc\u2264\u03bc0 vs alternative hypothesis H1: \u03bc>\u03bc0 , it is upper/right-tailed (one tailed). \nFor Null hypothesis H0: \u03bc=\u03bc0 vs alternative hypothesis H1: \u03bc\u2260\u03bc0 , it is two-tailed. \nThird, calculate the standard score: which one-tailed and two-tailed p-values can be calculated as \u03a6(Z)(for lower/left-tailed tests), \u03a6(\u2212Z) (for upper/right-tailed tests) and 2\u03a6(\u2212|Z|) (for two-tailed tests) where \u03a6 is the standard normal cumulative distribution function.\n\n\nUse in location testing\nThe term \"Z-test\" is often used to refer specifically to the one-sample location test comparing the mean of a set of measurements to a given constant when the sample variance is known. For example, if the observed data X1, ..., Xn are (i) independent, (ii) have a common mean \u03bc, and (iii) have a common variance \u03c32, then the sample average X has mean \u03bc and variance \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \u03c3\n \n 2\n \n \n n\n \n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle {\\frac {\\sigma ^{2}}{n}}}\n .\nThe null hypothesis is that the mean value of X is a given number \u03bc0. We can use X as a test-statistic, rejecting the null hypothesis if X \u2212 \u03bc0 is large.\nTo calculate the standardized statistic \n \n \n \n Z\n =\n \n \n \n (\n \n \n \n X\n \u00af\n \n \n \n \u2212\n \n \u03bc\n \n 0\n \n \n )\n \n s\n \n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle Z={\\frac {({\\bar {X}}-\\mu _{0})}{s}}}\n , we need to either know or have an approximate value for \u03c32, from which we can calculate \n \n \n \n \n s\n \n 2\n \n \n =\n \n \n \n \u03c3\n \n 2\n \n \n n\n \n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle s^{2}={\\frac {\\sigma ^{2}}{n}}}\n . In some applications, \u03c32 is known, but this is uncommon.\nIf the sample size is moderate or large, we can substitute the sample variance for \u03c32, giving a plug-in test. The resulting test will not be an exact Z-test since the uncertainty in the sample variance is not accounted for\u2014however, it will be a good approximation unless the sample size is small.\nA t-test can be used to account for the uncertainty in the sample variance when the data are exactly normal.\nDifference between Z-test and t-test: Z-test is used when sample size is large (n>50), or the population variance is known. t-test is used when sample size is small (n<50) and population variance is unknown.\nThere is no universal constant at which the sample size is generally considered large enough to justify use of the plug-in test. Typical rules of thumb: the sample size should be 50 observations or more.\nFor large sample sizes, the t-test procedure gives almost identical p-values as the Z-test procedure.\nOther location tests that can be performed as Z-tests are the two-sample location test and the paired difference test.\n\n\nConditions\nFor the Z-test to be applicable, certain conditions must be met.\n\nNuisance parameters should be known, or estimated with high accuracy (an example of a nuisance parameter would be the standard deviation in a one-sample location test). Z-tests focus on a single parameter, and treat all other unknown parameters as being fixed at their true values. In practice, due to Slutsky's theorem, \"plugging in\" consistent estimates of nuisance parameters can be justified. However if the sample size is not large enough for these estimates to be reasonably accurate, the Z-test may not perform well.\nThe test statistic should follow a normal distribution. Generally, one appeals to the central limit theorem to justify assuming that a test statistic varies normally. There is a great deal of statistical research on the question of when a test statistic varies approximately normally. If the variation of the test statistic is strongly non-normal, a Z-test should not be used.If estimates of nuisance parameters are plugged in as discussed above, it is important to use estimates appropriate for the way the data were sampled. In the special case of Z-tests for the one or two sample location problem, the usual sample standard deviation is only appropriate if the data were collected as an independent sample.\nIn some situations, it is possible to devise a test that properly accounts for the variation in plug-in estimates of nuisance parameters. In the case of one and two sample location problems, a t-test does this.\n\n\nExample\nSuppose that in a particular geographic region, the mean and standard deviation of scores on a reading test are 100 points, and 12 points, respectively. Our interest is in the scores of 55 students in a particular school who received a mean score of 96. We can ask whether this mean score is significantly lower than the regional mean\u2014that is, are the students in this school comparable to a simple random sample of 55 students from the region as a whole, or are their scores surprisingly low?\nFirst calculate the standard error of the mean:\n\n \n \n \n \n S\n E\n \n =\n \n \n \u03c3\n \n n\n \n \n \n =\n \n \n 12\n \n 55\n \n \n \n =\n \n \n 12\n 7.42\n \n \n =\n 1.62\n \n \n {\\displaystyle \\mathrm {SE} ={\\frac {\\sigma }{\\sqrt {n}}}={\\frac {12}{\\sqrt {55}}}={\\frac {12}{7.42}}=1.62}\n where \n \n \n \n \n \u03c3\n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle {\\sigma }}\n is the population standard deviation.\nNext calculate the z-score, which is the distance from the sample mean to the population mean in units of the standard error:\n\n \n \n \n z\n =\n \n \n \n M\n \u2212\n \u03bc\n \n \n S\n E\n \n \n \n =\n \n \n \n 96\n \u2212\n 100\n \n 1.62\n \n \n =\n \u2212\n 2.47\n \n \n {\\displaystyle z={\\frac {M-\\mu }{\\mathrm {SE} }}={\\frac {96-100}{1.62}}=-2.47}\n In this example, we treat the population mean and variance as known, which would be appropriate if all students in the region were tested. When population parameters are unknown, a Student's t-test should be conducted instead.\nThe classroom mean score is 96, which is \u22122.47 standard error units from the population mean of 100. Looking up the z-score in a table of the standard normal distribution cumulative probability, we find that the probability of observing a standard normal value below \u22122.47 is approximately 0.5 \u2212 0.4932 = 0.0068. This is the one-sided p-value for the null hypothesis that the 55 students are comparable to a simple random sample from the population of all test-takers. The two-sided p-value is approximately 0.014 (twice the one-sided p-value).\nAnother way of stating things is that with probability 1 \u2212 0.014 = 0.986, a simple random sample of 55 students would have a mean test score within 4 units of the population mean. We could also say that with 98.6% confidence we reject the null hypothesis that the 55 test takers are comparable to a simple random sample from the population of test-takers.\nThe Z-test tells us that the 55 students of interest have an unusually low mean test score compared to most simple random samples of similar size from the population of test-takers. A deficiency of this analysis is that it does not consider whether the effect size of 4 points is meaningful. If instead of a classroom, we considered a subregion containing 900 students whose mean score was 99, nearly the same z-score and p-value would be observed. This shows that if the sample size is large enough, very small differences from the null value can be highly statistically significant. See statistical hypothesis testing for further discussion of this issue.\n\n\nZ-tests other than location tests\nLocation tests are the most familiar Z-tests. Another class of Z-tests arises in maximum likelihood estimation of the parameters in a parametric statistical model. Maximum likelihood estimates are approximately normal under certain conditions, and their asymptotic variance can be calculated in terms of the Fisher information. The maximum likelihood estimate divided by its standard error can be used as a test statistic for the null hypothesis that the population value of the parameter equals zero. More generally, if \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \u03b8\n ^\n \n \n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle {\\hat {\\theta }}}\n is the maximum likelihood estimate of a parameter \u03b8, and \u03b80 is the value of \u03b8 under the null hypothesis,\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \u03b8\n ^\n \n \n \n \u2212\n \n \u03b8\n \n 0\n \n \n \n \n \n \n S\n E\n \n \n (\n \n \n \n \u03b8\n ^\n \n \n \n )\n \n \n \n \n \n {\\displaystyle {\\frac {{\\hat {\\theta }}-\\theta _{0}}{{\\rm {SE}}({\\hat {\\theta }})}}}\n can be used as a Z-test statistic.\nWhen using a Z-test for maximum likelihood estimates, it is important to be aware that the normal approximation may be poor if the sample size is not sufficiently large. Although there is no simple, universal rule stating how large the sample size must be to use a Z-test, simulation can give a good idea as to whether a Z-test is appropriate in a given situation.\nZ-tests are employed whenever it can be argued that a test statistic follows a normal distribution under the null hypothesis of interest. Many non-parametric test statistics, such as U statistics, are approximately normal for large enough sample sizes, and hence are often performed as Z-tests.\n\n\nSee also\nNormal distribution\nStandard normal table\nStandard score\nStudent's t-test\n\n\nReferences\nSprinthall, R. C. (2011). Basic Statistical Analysis (9th ed.). Pearson Education. ISBN 978-0-205-05217-2.\nCasella, G., Berger, R. L. (2002). Statistical Inference. Duxbury Press. ISBN 0-534-24312-6.\nDouglas C.Montgomery, George C.Runger.(2014). Applied Statistics And Probability For Engineers.(6th ed.). John Wiley & Sons, inc. ISBN 9781118539712, 9781118645062."}}}} |
part_xec/zvenigovo | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"5714675":{"pageid":5714675,"ns":0,"title":"Zvenigovo","extract":"Zvenigovo (Russian: \u0417\u0432\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0301\u0433\u043e\u0432\u043e; Meadow Mari: \u041f\u0440\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0439, Provoj) is a town and the administrative center of Zvenigovsky District of the Mari El Republic, Russia, located on the left bank of the Volga River, 90 kilometers (56 mi) south of Yoshkar-Ola, the capital of the republic. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 11,946.\n\n\nHistory\nIt was founded in 1860 and granted urban-type settlement status in 1927 and town status in 1974.\n\n\nAdministrative and municipal status\nWithin the framework of administrative divisions, Zvenigovo serves as the administrative center of Zvenigovsky District. As an administrative division, it is, together with one rural locality (the village of Chuvash-Otary), incorporated within Zvenigovsky District as the town of district significance of Zvenigovo. As a municipal division, the town of district significance of Zvenigovo is incorporated within Zvenigovsky Municipal District as Zvenigovo Urban Settlement.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nNotes\n\n\nSources\n\u0413\u043e\u0441\u0443\u0434\u0430\u0440\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0435 \u0421\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d \u211622-\u0417 \u043e\u0442 3 \u043c\u0430\u044f 2006 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u043f\u043e\u0440\u044f\u0434\u043a\u0435 \u0440\u0435\u0448\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0432\u043e\u043f\u0440\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432 \u0430\u0434\u043c\u0438\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e-\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0440\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0443\u0441\u0442\u0440\u043e\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0430 (\u0434\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f) \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\u00bb, \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0434. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u211650-\u0417 \u043e\u0442 31 \u043e\u043a\u0442\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044f 2014 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u043d\u0435\u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u0437\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u043e\u0434\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0430\u043a\u0442\u044b \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\u00bb. \u0412\u0441\u0442\u0443\u043f\u0438\u043b \u0432 \u0441\u0438\u043b\u0443 \u0441\u043e \u0434\u043d\u044f \u043e\u0444\u0438\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f. \u041e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d: \"\u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0430\u044f \u043f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0434\u0430\", \u211681, 6 \u043c\u0430\u044f 2006 \u0433. (State Assembly of the Mari El Republic. Law #22-Z of May 3, 2006 On the Procedures of the Administrative-Territorial Structure (Division) of the Mari El Republic, as amended by the Law #50-Z of October 31, 2014 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Mari El Republic. Effective as of the official publication date.).\n\u041f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0438\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u0442\u0432\u043e \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b. \u041f\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u21169 \u043e\u0442 18 \u044f\u043d\u0432\u0430\u0440\u044f 2008 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0440\u0435\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0435 \u0430\u0434\u043c\u0438\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e-\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0440\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0443\u0441\u0442\u0440\u043e\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0430 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\u00bb, \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0434. \u041f\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u2116555 \u043e\u0442 24 \u043e\u043a\u0442\u044f\u0431\u0440\u044f 2014 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0432 \u041f\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u041f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0438\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0430 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b \u043e\u0442 18 \u044f\u043d\u0432\u0430\u0440\u044f 2008 \u0433. \u21169\u00bb. \u041e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d: \"\u0421\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0437\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u043e\u0434\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0430 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\", \u21162, \u0441\u0442. 108, 26 \u0444\u0435\u0432\u0440\u0430\u043b\u044f 2008 \u0433. (Government of the Mari El Republic. Resolution #9 of January 18, 2008 On the Registry of the Administrative-Territorial Structure of the Mari El Republic, as amended by the Resolution #555 of October 24, 2014 On Amending Resolution #9 by the Government of the Mari El Republic of January 18, 2008. ).\n\u0413\u043e\u0441\u0443\u0434\u0430\u0440\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0421\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d \u211662-\u0417 \u043e\u0442 28 \u0434\u0435\u043a\u0430\u0431\u0440\u044f 2004 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0441\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0430\u0432\u0435 \u0438 \u0433\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0430\u0445 \u0441\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445, \u0433\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0434\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u043f\u043e\u0441\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0435 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\u00bb, \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0434. \u0417\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0430 \u211634-\u0417 \u043e\u0442 18 \u0430\u0432\u0433\u0443\u0441\u0442\u0430 2014 \u0433. \u00ab\u041e \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u043d\u0435\u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u0437\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043d\u043e\u0434\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0430\u043a\u0442\u044b \u0420\u0435\u0441\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u042d\u043b\u00bb. \u0412\u0441\u0442\u0443\u043f\u0438\u043b \u0432 \u0441\u0438\u043b\u0443 \u043f\u043e \u0438\u0441\u0442\u0435\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0434\u0435\u0441\u044f\u0442\u0438 \u0434\u043d\u0435\u0439 \u0441\u043e \u0434\u043d\u044f \u043e\u0444\u0438\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f. \u041e\u043f\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d: \"\u041c\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u0430\u044f \u043f\u0440\u0430\u0432\u0434\u0430\", \u21167, 19 \u044f\u043d\u0432\u0430\u0440\u044f 2005 \u0433. (State Council of the Mari El Republic. Law #62-Z of December 28, 2004 On the Composition and Borders of the Rural, Urban Settlement in the Mari El Republic, as amended by the Law #34-Z of August 18, 2014 On Amending Various Legislative Acts of the Mari El Republic. Effective as of the day which is ten days after the day of the official publication have passed.).\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website of Zvenigovo (in Russian)\nZvenigovo Business Directory (in Russian)"}}}} |
part_xec/zoutelande | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"2953123":{"pageid":2953123,"ns":0,"title":"Zoutelande","extract":"Zoutelande (Zeelandic: Z\u00f3etelande) is a village in the southwestern Netherlands. It is located in the municipality of Veere, Zeeland, between Dishoek and Westkapelle on the former island Walcheren. On 1 January 2005 it had 1,556 inhabitants. Originally, Zoutelande was mainly an agricultural village. The village's character changed slowly into a tourist resort as the demand for beach recreation rose from about the middle of the 19th century.\nZoutelande was a separate municipality until 1966, when it became a part of the new municipality Valkenisse.Nowadays, tourism is Zoutelande's most important source of existence. Zoutelande, together with the beach of Dishoek and Westkapelle, are often called \"Zeeland's Rivi\u00e8ra\", after the famous south-coast of France. It is one of Zeeland's most-visited coasts, and one of the few places in the Netherlands where the beach faces south. Plenty of rooms, studios, bungalows and apartments are available to thousands of visitors every summer; most of the tourists are of German origin, although other nationalities are also widely represented. The remaining agriculture in the area benefits of the demand for accommodation in the form of mini-campings. Bicycle-rental, beachfront establishments, hotels, B&Bs, shops and a boulevard are all to be found in and around the village.\nLike Domburg, Zoutelande was a favorite among Dutch painters, like Ferdinand Hart Nibbrig, Piet Mondriaan and Jan Toorop who praised its sky. It is said that the reflection of the sun on the water colors the sky more brilliantly and transparently than anywhere else.Zoutelande was the subject of a 2017 song of the same name by Dutch rock band BL\u00d8F featuring Belgian singer Geike Arnaert; the song's popularity brought some increased interest in the village.\n\n\nMonuments\n\nZoutelande has several monuments, among them the Dutch Reformed Church with a tower in which fragments of late 13th century brick gothic can be found. In about 1500 the church was formed into a hall church. In 1573 the church was returned to its original state through war damage during the Eighty Years' War. It is estimated that the tower and church got their present shape in about 1738. In 1950 a restoration took place. The parish of the church is connected through legend with Saint Willibrord.\nUnfortunately an old monument, the Willibrord Well, was lost due to the building of the present sea dyke. The well, created by Willibrord and dating from the sixteenth century, according to the legend contained healing water. Because of the building of a new dyke in the 1960s, slightly further inland than the old row of dunes, part of the town had to be demolished. This is the reason why the church, which originally stood in the center of the village, is now almost at the foot of the dyke. In 1984 a new well was built to remember the legend.\nZoutelande also has a windmill. It is a round, brick-built corn mill that originates from 1722.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n\nZoutelande Tourist Information"}}}} |
part_xec/zrin_castle | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zrin_Castle","to":"Zrin Castle"}],"pages":{"18227318":{"pageid":18227318,"ns":0,"title":"Zrin Castle","extract":"Zrin Castle (Gradina Zrin) is a ruined castle located in the village of Zrin, south of the town of Sisak in Dvor municipality, central Croatia.\n\n\nHistory\nThe castle was first mentioned in the 13th century as a fortress ruled by the Baboni\u0107 clan. Between 1328 and 1347, it was possessed by the members of Ilo\u010dki family. In 1347, King Louis I the Great bestowed the fortress to the noble \u0160ubi\u0107 family who then changed their family name after it, becoming the Zrinski. It remained in their possession until the Ottoman invasion and conquest of the region, which led to the fortress falling to them on 20 October 1577. It was not until 1718 that the castle was retaken from the Ottomans.\n\n\nNotable people\nNikola IV Zrinski (1507/1508 \u2013 1566), a Croatian nobleman of the Zrinski family and general.\n\n\nGallery\n\n\t\t\n\n\nSee also\nZrin\nHouse of Zrinski\nHouse of Ilok\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zyron | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"34754337":{"pageid":34754337,"ns":0,"title":"Zyron","extract":"Zyron is a registered trademark for specialty gases marketed to the global electronics industry by DuPont.\n\n\nHistory\nFreon was used as the original brand name for electronic gases produced and marketed by DuPont. With the depletion of the ozone layer and the subsequent phase-out of chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) gas compounds, the company rebranded this product line to differentiate from refrigerant gases that had been using the same Freon brand name.\nThe name was developed in October 1991 by DuPont employees Paul Bechly and Dr. Nicholas Nazarenko, was first used in commerce on June 12, 1992, and became a registered trademark of DuPont in 1993.\n\n\nNaming System\nThe Zyron product naming system was also developed by Bechly and Nazarenko in October 1991. The system is based upon the historical industry numbering system for fluorinated alkanes to identify the chemical compound, followed by an (N) suffix component that specified product purity. The naming system was intentionally not trademarked to allow for industrial adoption.\nAs example for Zyron 116 N5: the 116 represents the compound hexafluoroethane, and N5 represents \"5 nines\" or 99.999% purity.\nAs example for Zyron 23 N3 the 23 represents the compound trifluoromethane, and N3 represents \"3 nine\" or 99.99% purity.\n\n\nProducts\nZyron 116 N5 (hexafluoroethane)\nZyron 318 N4 (octafluorocyclobutane)\nZyron 23 N5 (trifluoromethane)\nZyron 23 N3 (trifluoromethane)\nHistorical products included: Zyron 14 (tetrafluoromethane), Zyron 32 (difluoromethane), Zyron 125 (pentafluoroethane), and Zyron NF3 (nitrogen trifluoride).\n\n\nApplications\nThe primary applications of these gases for the electronics industry are for etching of silicon wafer, and cleaning of chemical vapor deposition chamber tools. These are all plasma-based product applications where the product is essentially destroyed in use.\nAlternative products to the Zyron line for various application in electronics include the chemical compounds HCl, BCl3, CF4, ClF3, CH2F2, GeH4, C4F6, NF3, C5F8, PH3, C3H6, SiH4, and WF6.\n\n\nIn the news\nZyron expansion announcement (1999)\nZyron 2nd expansion announcement (2001)\nZyron NF3 announcement (2002)\nZyron team award announcement (2007)\nSemicon Taiwan announcement (2010)\n\n\nSee also\nSemiconductor device fabrication\nFluorocarbons\nPerfluorinated compound\nGreenhouse gas\nGlobal warming\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nDuPont Zyron website\nSemiconductor Industry Association\nUnited Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change\nPaul L Bechly papers (Accession 2723), Hagley Museum and Library"}}}} |
part_xec/zulfiyya_khanbabayeva | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulfiyya_Khanbabayeva","to":"Zulfiyya Khanbabayeva"}],"pages":{"23218094":{"pageid":23218094,"ns":0,"title":"Zulfiyya Khanbabayeva","extract":"Zulfiyya Khanbabayeva (Azerbaijani: Z\u00fclfiyy\u0259 Xanbabayeva, born 16 October 1967) is an Azerbaijani singer and performer.\n\n\nBiography\n\n\nChildhood - \u201cBak\u0131 Pay\u0131z\u0131\u201d\nZulfiyya Khanbabayeva was born on 16 October 1967 in Baku city. They were three child in family: two girls, one boy. From the child years she had an interest for music, and she loved to sing for her grandparents, she had some little concerts.\nZulfiyya studied at school #161. In school years she was singing in Afsar Javanshirov chorus. First time when newspapers wrote about her she was only 12, that time for the poem \"Shabi Hicran\" (\u015e\u0259bi-Hicran) by the greatest Azeri poet Fuz\u00fbl\u00ee in Uzeyir Hajibeyov home-museum. Zulfiyya learned from her mother Azeri national folk music. And she decided to be singer or actress, although her father wished to see her as a student of Foreign Languages Institute. After school she entered Theater Director faculty. In student years she directed some plays and played a little roles. The same years she became a friend with - Nigar, and today Nigar Hajizadeh is Zulfiyya's producer. In 1987 Nigar acquainted her with Brilliant Dadashova. And Brilliant listened to her, liked her singing. She told to great Azeri composer Javanshir Guliev to listen to Zulfiyya. Javanshir Guliev saw her talent, and so began to work with Zulfiyya xanim. In 1989 Zulfiyya participated in Bak\u0131 Pay\u0131z\u0131 88 song contest with the Vagif Gerayzadeh song \u201cS\u0259ni Xat\u0131rlayark\u0259n\u201d (Remembering You) and entered final.\n\n\nAypara - Zulfiyya today\nIn 1994 Zulfiyya sang in Vagif Gerayzadeh group Aypara. After leaving group Zulfiyya started solo career as singer. Her first album released in 2000 year named Gec\u0259 (Night) and became best-selling album of the year in Azerbaijan. She released 2 music videos from this album. In 2002 she released her second studio album S\u0259n Ged\u0259n G\u00fcnd\u0259n (Since You've Been Gone) with 3 music videos. Her third studio album Q\u0259lbin\u0259 Yol (The Way To Your Soul) released in 2003 year. Music video for title song was the most expensive music video of all times for Azeri show business. From this album were released 1 music video. And the fourth studio album...named S\u0259nsiz (Without You) released in December 2004, but was given to stores on 2\u20135 January 2005. She released 4 music videos from this album and all became #1 in all national charts. In 2005 she gave 6 concert-programms in the frame of her \"Can\u0131m M\u0259ml\u0259k\u0259tim\" tour (My Dear Land) in 6 cities of Azerbaijan. She named Deserve Artist of Azerbaijan Republic in November 2003. On 17 September 2008 she named National Artist of Azerbaijan Republic by President of Azerbaijan Republic. Married. On 26 October 2007 was born Deniz, Zulfiyya's daughter. First photos of Zulfiyya Khanbabayeva and her daughter were published by OK Azerbaijan magazine.\n\n\nMusic career\n\n\nStudio albums\n2000 - \u201cGec\u0259\u201d (The Night)\n2002 - \u201cS\u0259n Ged\u0259n G\u00fcnd\u0259n\u201d (Since You've Been Gone)\n2003 - \u201cQ\u0259lbin\u0259 Yol\u201d (The Way To Your Heart)\n2004 - \u201cS\u0259nsiz\u201d (Without You)\n2009 - \u201cD\u0259niz\u201d (The Sea)\n\n\nMusic Videos\n1999 - \u201cDemir\u0259m\u201d\n1999 - \u201cGecikm\u0259yin Sevm\u0259y\u0259\u201d\n2000 - \u201cAl\u0259m Oyans\u0131n\u201d\n2001 - \u201cS\u0259n Ged\u0259n G\u00fcnd\u0259n\u201d\n2002 - \u201cSon Gec\u0259\u201d\n2003 - \u201cS\u0259nsiz\u201d\n2003 - \u201cQ\u0259lbin\u0259 Yol\u201d\n2004 - \u201cS\u0259ninl\u0259\u201d\n2004 - \u201cAz\u0259rbaycan\u201d\n2005 - \u201cAyr\u0131l\u0131\u011fa D\u00f6z\u0259r\u0259m\u201d\n2006 - \u201cG\u00f6z\u00fcm\u00fcn Qaras\u0131\u201d\n2006 - \u201cXat\u0131rla M\u0259ni\u201d\n2007 - \u201cM\u0259nims\u0259n\u201d\n2010 - \u201cUnut Getsin\u201d\n2010 - \u201cN\u0259 Faydas\u0131\u201d\n2013 - \u201cS\u0259n Az\u0259rbaycanl\u0131san\u201d\n2014 - \u201c\u0130ki Do\u011fma \u0130nsan\u201d\n2017 - \u201cMelancholia\u201d\n2017 - \u201cEtiraf\u201d\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zsuzsi_gartner | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsuzsi_Gartner","to":"Zsuzsi Gartner"}],"pages":{"1864225":{"pageid":1864225,"ns":0,"title":"Zsuzsi Gartner","extract":"Zsuzsi Gartner is a Canadian author and journalist.\n\n\nBiography\nGartner was born in Winnipeg and moved to Calgary in early childhood. She earned a BA in political science at the University of Calgary, later receiving an honours degree in journalism from Carleton University in Ottawa and an MFA from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, where she currently resides.\nGartner started her career as a newspaper and magazine journalist for a number of publications, including the Vancouver Sun, The Globe and Mail, Saturday Night, Quill and Quire, The Georgia Straight, Western Living and Canadian Business. Her work has brought her three Western Magazine Awards, including a Gold Award in 2003 for feature writing. In 2005 she won the Canadian National Magazine Awards' Silver award for Fiction. She has worked as a senior editor at Saturday Night and books editor for The Georgia Straight. Her 2011 collection of short stories Better Living Through Plastic Explosives was a shortlisted nominee for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize.She is also a writer of short stories, which have appeared in a number of publications. She published a collection of these stories, All the Anxious Girls on Earth in 1999. And her 2011 collection of short stories Better Living Through Plastic Explosives was a shortlisted nominee for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize.Gartner has been writer-in-residence at the University of British Columbia and a member of the faculty at Banff Centre's Writing Studios.\nGartner defended Mordecai Richler's novel Barney's Version on the CBC's Canada Reads 2004.\nHer 2020 novel The Beguiling was shortlisted for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize.\n\n\nBibliography\nAll the Anxious Girls on Earth (1999)\nDarwin's Bastards (2009) \u2013 editor\nBetter Living Through Plastic Explosives (2011)\nThe Beguiling (2020)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nBio at Northwest Passages\nAuthor page at Random House"}}}} |
part_xec/zombielicious | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"21019821":{"pageid":21019821,"ns":0,"title":"Zombielicious","extract":"Zombielicious is the fourth studio album of Zombie Nation. It was written and produced by the German techno and electro DJ Florian Senfter. The artwork was designed by Designliga and features an outside Jewelcase screen print.\n\n\nTrack listing\n\n\nSingles\nForza (October 2008, UKW Records), remixes by Housmeister and Fukkk Offf\nWorth It (March 2009, UKW Records)\nZombielicious remixed (June 2009, Turbo Records)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website\nOfficial Website of UKW Records\nDiscogs page\nZombie Nation on Last.fm\nhttp://www.designliga.de"}}}} |
part_xec/zongo_junction | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zongo_Junction","to":"Zongo Junction"}],"pages":{"38966748":{"pageid":38966748,"ns":0,"title":"Zongo Junction","extract":"Zongo Junction is a nine-piece instrumental Afrobeat band based in Brooklyn, New York. The band was formed by Charles Ferguson after he spent six months in Ghana, West Africa. The members of Zongo Junction stretch the Afrobeat style to fit their musical interests, combining elements of Sun Ra, The Talking Heads, and Fela Kuti to create their own version of afrobeat. Zongo Junction released their five-song debut EP Thieves! in 2010.The band may have adopted the name Zongo Junction from a bus stop of the same name in Madina, a suburb of Ghana's capital, Accra.\n\n\nThe band\nCharlie Ferguson - Drums\nMorgan Greenstreet - Percussion\nJordan Hyde - Guitar\nDavid Lizmi - Bass\nRoss Edwards - Keyboards\nAdam Schatz - Tenor saxophone\nMatt Nelson - Tenor saxophone\nJonah Parzen-Johnson - Baritone saxophone\nKevin Moehringer - Trombone\nAaron Rockers - Trumpet\n\n\nDiscography\nBig Sir - Single (2015)\nNo Discount (Electric Cowbell Records, 2014)\nThe Van That Got Away - Single (Primary Records, 2012)\nThieves! (2010)\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zygmunt_jaloszynski | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygmunt_Ja\u0142oszy\u0144ski","to":"Zygmunt Ja\u0142oszy\u0144ski"}],"pages":{"14607110":{"pageid":14607110,"ns":0,"title":"Zygmunt Ja\u0142oszy\u0144ski","extract":"Zygmunt Ja\u0142oszy\u0144ski (born 18 June 1946 in \u0141\u0105ki Markowe) is a Polish athlete, who competed in the javelin throw. He represented Poland at the European Championships 1971 where he got to final round. In 1970 he took a bronze medal in 1970 Summer Universiade in Torino (won by Miklos Nemeth). He was representative sports club Legia Warsaw. He was one of the top Polish sportsman in the 1970s decade. Personal best: 85.00 m (25 July 1970 in \u0141\u00f3d\u017a).\n\n\nBibliography\nJanusz Rozum, Jerzy Szymonek - \"Osi\u0105gni\u0119cia Polskiej Lekkiej Atletyki w 40-leciu PRL: Rzut Oszczepem M\u0119\u017cczyzn\" - Komisja Statystyczna PZLA Warszawa 1984"}}}} |
part_xec/zoran_vorotovic | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zoran_Vorotovi\u0107","to":"Zoran Vorotovi\u0107"}],"pages":{"30077410":{"pageid":30077410,"ns":0,"title":"Zoran Vorotovi\u0107","extract":"Zoran Vorotovi\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \u0417\u043e\u0440\u0430\u043d \u0412\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0432\u0438\u045b, born 12 August 1958) is a former Montenegrin football player who played left-back for clubs in the former Yugoslavia and Turkey.\n\n\nClub career\nBorn in Herceg Novi, SR Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia, Vorotovi\u0107 began playing football for local side FK Sutjeska Nik\u0161i\u0107. Later, he would play in the Yugoslav First League for FK Budu\u0107nost Titograd and FK Spartak Subotica.In 1987, he moved to Turkey where he would make 68 S\u00fcper Lig appearances in a three-year spell with Sar\u0131yer G.K.\n\n\nPersonal life\nHe was seriously injured in a traffic accident in 2001.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nEX YU Fudbalska Statistika po godinama\nZoran Vorotovi\u0107 at Mackolik.com (in Turkish)"}}}} |
part_xec/zwartowo_railway_station | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zwartowo_railway_station","to":"Zwartowo railway station"}],"pages":{"4445568":{"pageid":4445568,"ns":0,"title":"Zwartowo railway station","extract":"Zwartowo is a non-operational PKP railway station on the disused PKP rail line 230 in Zwartowo (Pomeranian Voivodeship), Poland.\n\n\nLines crossing the station\n\n\nReferences\nZwartowo article at Polish Stations Database, URL accessed at 19 March 2006"}}}} |
part_xec/zow-e_bala | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zow-e_Bala","to":"Zow-e Bala"}],"pages":{"36275024":{"pageid":36275024,"ns":0,"title":"Zow-e Bala","extract":"Zow-e Bala (Persian: \u0632\u0648\u0628\u0627\u0644\u0627, also Romanized as Zow-e B\u0101l\u0101) is a village in Hezarmasjed Rural District, in the Central District of Kalat County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 10, in 4 families.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zverinek | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"23583023":{"pageid":23583023,"ns":0,"title":"Zv\u011b\u0159\u00ednek","extract":"Zv\u011b\u0159\u00ednek is a municipality and village in Nymburk District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 300 inhabitants.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zychowo | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"19900659":{"pageid":19900659,"ns":0,"title":"\u017bychowo","extract":"\u017bychowo [\u0290\u0268\u02c8x\u0254v\u0254] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Raci\u0105\u017c, within P\u0142o\u0144sk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-east of Raci\u0105\u017c, 26 km (16 mi) north-west of P\u0142o\u0144sk, and 88 km (55 mi) north-west of Warsaw.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zulu_music | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulu_music","to":"Zulu music"}],"pages":{"1937458":{"pageid":1937458,"ns":0,"title":"Zulu music","extract":"The Zulu people are a South African ethnic group. Many Zulu musicians have become a major part of South African music, creating a huge influence in the music industry. A number of Zulu-folk derived styles have become well known across South Africa and abroad. Zulu music has dominated many genres in South Africa, especially House music, Folk music, Acapella, Choral music and gospel. In fact, some of the most popular songs from South Africa are in Zulu.\n\n\nKwaito\nKwaito is a music genre that emerged in Johannesburg, South Africa, during the 1990s. It is a variant of house music featuring the use of African sounds and samples. Typically at a slower tempo range than other styles of house music, Kwaito often contains catchy melodic and percussive loop samples, deep bass lines, and vocals. Despite its similarities to hip hop music, Kwaito has a distinctive manner in which the lyrics are sung, rapped and shouted. American producer Diplo has described Kwaito as \"slowed-down garage music,\" most popular among the black youth of South Africa.\n\n\nMaskandi\nMaskanda (or Maskandi) is a kind of Zulu folk music that is evolving with South African society. Ethekwini Online describes it as \"The music played by the man on the move, the modern minstrel, today\u2019s troubadour. It is the music of the man walking the long miles to court a bride, or to meet with his Chief; a means of transport. It is the music of the man who sings of his real life experiences, his daily joys and sorrows, his observations of the world. It\u2019s the music of the man who\u2019s got the Zulu blues.\"\nNowadays this is untrue in as much as it is no longer just the domain of men. African women - notably Busi Mhlongo - are also making Maskandi music. Maskandi music is largely popular and mostly consumed in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province, given its rich Zulu heritage and significance to the Zulu tribe. Looking at the genre from a record sales point of view...Maskandi happens to be the 2nd top selling genre in South Africa, after Gospel music. Although Maskandi music can be heard in more urban cities such as Johannesburg and Cape Town, it is important to note that it is largely the played by migrants who come to the big cities to seek a better quality of life and better employment opportunities. This music is typically considered backward and irrelevant by most city dwellers, given that the roots of the music are deeply entrenched in rural Kwa-Zulu Natal, and feature heavy elements of Zulu culture. Due to this, the music typically fails to connect with a wider audience and this is largely due to a lack of overall understanding of the genre, which subsequently leads to a lack of interest from listeners.\nAlthough the genre has been in existence for many years, after the 90's there seemed to be no real interest shown in the music by youths and young musicians. Due to the large influences by western and pop culture, these days most musicians choose to learn and perform western genres of music such as Hip-Hop, RnB and Turn up and the likes and this leads to the problem of having very few young Maskandi musicians to carry the genre forward, putting the future of the genre at risk. However Maskandi bands still exist with bands such as The Bunny Chows Carrots who are youth activists for the genre, and have dedicated their music to the preservation and appreciation of Maskandi music, as well as traditional forms of music as a whole. The band advocates for youth and future generations to learn from and co-innovate with their more experienced counterparts, in order to ensure the secrets and intricate nuances of Maskandi are properly and correctly preserved for future generations.\nMaskandi is well received and liked by the international community because of its originality, uniqueness and its difficulty to replicate. Between the 60s and early 90s Maskandi acts such as Johnston Zibokwakhe Mnyandu \"Phuzekhemisi\", Bhodloza Nzimande, Amatshitshi Amhlophe, Izingane Zoma, Bhekumuzi Luthuli (late) and Mfaz'Omnyama (late) contributed largely to exposing Maskandi to the international market.\nStarted of as Kwaito back in the 90's. Most South African rappers were influenced by Tupac. Skwatta Kamp, H20, Pro were the first to be known nationally as Tsotsi Taal rappers, in 2006 F-eezy and Molly dropped their debut albums which made the youth listen to local hip hop a lot. We also had PRO's prodigee Red Button blow up. Kwesta also came by with Sharp Fede. Deep soweto also came with Siya Shezi, King flo, Emdee, Chaka dolla etc. The full clip on yfm gave a platform to many known kasi rappers such as Axe-Ray, Blaq P, Froz, MaseVen, Noks Matchbox, Sfilikwane etc.\n\n\nRawkat\n\n\nGqomu\nGqom is a style of music that emerged a decade into the 21st century from the city of Durban in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. The style features wavy and bass beats produced with software such as FL Studio, and has gained prominence in London. The word gqom, sometimes expressed as qgom, igqom, gqomu or variants thereof, derives from an onomatopoeic combination of click consonants from the Zulu language that represents a hitting drum. Music connoisseurs who were actively and rigorously involved in influencing the masses to accept and embrace the new, shift-shaping sound included the likes of South African rapper,\nOkmalumkoolkat, Italian record label Gqom Oh owner, Malumz Kole, Afrotainment record label owner, DJ Tira as well as music taste-maker and personal public relations liaison, Cherish LaLa Mankai. Related artists are DJ Lag, DJ Bongz, Lord The Dj, MasterT, Dj Noffoh, Dj Nkaa, Rudeboyz, Distruction Boyz & AudioBoyz.\n\n\nMbube and Isicathamiya\n\nMbube is both a song, originally released in the 1940s by Solomon Linda, and a genre of South African popular music that was inspired by it. \"Mbube\" was recorded in 1939 and became a major hit in the country. The song was in a traditional Zulu choral style, which soon came to the attention of American musicologist Alan Lomax, who brought to the song to folk singer Pete Seeger, then of The Weavers. They made the song a Top 15 American hit in 1952 (as \"Wimoweh\"), though creator Solomon Linda was not credited; later, the Kingston Trio released a cover of it. Later still, The Tokens turned the song into \"The Lion Sleeps Tonight\", and it became a #1 American hit. The Durban-based Ladysmith Black Mambazo, formed by Joseph Shabalala in 1960, sings, among other styles, music in the mbube tradition.\n\n\nModern Zulu\nThe 1970s duo Juluka, consisting of a white man, Johnny Clegg, and a Zulu, Sipho Mchunu produced a blend of rock and Zulu folk music called maskanda, which has since evolved into an urban style called mbaqanga.\n\n\nReferences\n\n[1]\n[2]Latest Zulu Music Platform"}}}} |
part_xec/zwarte_achtegrond | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zwarte_Achtegrond","to":"Zwarte Achtegrond"}],"pages":{"37597680":{"pageid":37597680,"ns":0,"title":"Zwarte Achtegrond","extract":"Zwarte Achtegrond is the first studio album by Lab Waste, an American hip hop duo consisting of Thavius Beck and Subtitle. It was released on Temporary Whatever in 2005.\n\n\nTrack listing\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZwarte Achtegrond at Discogs (list of releases)"}}}} |
part_xec/zsolt_pava | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_P\u00e1va","to":"Zsolt P\u00e1va"}],"pages":{"33943173":{"pageid":33943173,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt P\u00e1va","extract":"Zsolt P\u00e1va (born 30 October 1955) is a Hungarian politician. P\u00e1va is a member of Fidesz and mayor of P\u00e9cs from 2009 to 2019. He also served as mayor of his hometown between 1994 and 1998.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website"}}}} |
part_xec/zubaida_al-meeki | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zubaida_al-Meeki","to":"Zubaida al-Meeki"}],"pages":{"44928250":{"pageid":44928250,"ns":0,"title":"Zubaida al-Meeki","extract":"Zubaida al-Meeki (Arabic: \u0632\u0628\u064a\u062f\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u064a\u0642\u064a) is an Alawite Free Syrian Army colonel, who defected from the Syrian Army to the FSA in 2012 during clashes in the town of Babbila. She became the first female officer to publicly announce her defection from the Army. Before her defection, she worked in the army's recruitment division in Babbila. After her defection, she stayed in Syria for two months where she trained 40-50 fighters of the Soldiers of God Battalion, before fleeing to Turkey.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zygaena_purpuralis | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygaena_purpuralis","to":"Zygaena purpuralis"}],"pages":{"25668090":{"pageid":25668090,"ns":0,"title":"Zygaena purpuralis","extract":"Zygaena purpuralis, the transparent burnet, is a moth of the family Zygaenidae.\n\n\nDescription\nZygaena purpuralis is a medium-sized moth with a wingspan reaching 30\u201334 millimetres (1.2\u20131.3 in). Usually the forewings show three bright red longitudinal streaks quite variable in shape, with almost transparent greyish-bluish edges. Hindwings are more extensively or almost completely bright red. Head and thorax are black, while the abdomen is dark blue. Larva are yellow, with some lines of small black spots. \n\n\nTechnical description and variation (Seitz)\n\nZ. purpuralis Brunnich (= pilosellae Esp.; minos Fuessl.). In this species the hindmargin of the forewing (base included) is all black, while the red wedge-spots situated before it may be shaped entirely as in erythrus Hbn. An aberration with light yellow instead of red markings, already recorded by Ochsenheimer, has more lately been named by Ruhl ab. grossmanni (= lutescens Tutt). It is said to have been observed as a constant or at least prevalent form in certain very limited localities. In ab. obscura Tutt the entire wings, inclusive of the red colour, is darkened. \u2014 sareptensis Stgr.-Reb. [ now Zygaena minos ssp. sareptensis Rebel, 1901 ] is a large, somewhat paler, lighter red form from South Russia. \u2014 diaphana Stgr.[now Zygaena minos ssp. diaphana Staudinger, 1887 ] , from Tauria, has thinly scaled, strongly transparent wings, the central wedge-spot being distally strongly widened. \u2014 nubigena Led. [ subspecies ] is also a very thinly scaled form from the high mountains of Europe and Asia, having moreover (like many mountain-forms) a very shaggy body, like Zygaena exulans, with which it occurs occasionally together. \u2014 In the rather large form smirnovi Christ.[ now Zygaena minos ssp. smirnovi Christoph, 1884 ], from Turkestan, the distal wedge-spot is constricted before its dilated apex. \u2014 pluto O. (= pythia Hbn.) [synonym of Z.purpuralis] has a black apex to the hindwing and the central streak of forewing is entirely of even width, not in the least being dilated distally; in South Europe, as far north as Austria. \u2014 In polygalae Esp. [now Zygaena filipendulae ssp. polygalae Esper, 1783 ] the black interspaces between the red streaks have entirely disappeared the red being so extended (especially in females) that the forewing is only edged with black, differing from Zygaena rubicundus in the hindmargin of forewing being black (though sometimes only narrowly); in the South, especially Northern Italy. \u2014 In heringi Zell.[ synonym of purpuralis ], from North Germany, the antenna is thinner and the central wedge-spot of the somewhat broader forewing extends to near the distal edge. \u2014 In ab. interrupta Stgr. [synonym for Zygaena minos ssp. pimpinellae ] the central streak is broadly interrupted and the posterior one often constricted in middle; more in the North of the area, among the name-typical form. \u2014 If all three streaks are interrupted, the red is separated into 6 spots, recalling the pattern of other Zygaenas; this form is ab. sexmaculata Burgeff. \u2014 Finally, there occur also specimens which have a red abdominal belt: ab. cingulata Burgeff \u2014 Larva bluish white or light yellow; a subdorsal row of heavy black dots; head, pectoral legs and stigmata black. \n\n\nBiology\nAdult moths are on wing from late May until August, depending on location. They fly during the day, especially with warm and sunny weather, feeding on nectar of various flowers.\nThe larva feed on wild thyme (Thymus polytrichus, Thymus serpyllum, etc.). They occur from August to May and overwinter once or twice.\n\n\nDistribution\nThis species can be is found in most of western, central and southern Europe, from Ireland to France through to Asia Minor, the Caucasus, Russia and across the Palearctic to the Altai Mountains.\n\n\nHabitat\nZygaena purpuralis prefers sunny and grassy slopes, under cliffs and dry grassland.\n\n\nSubspecies\nThere are several distinct sub-species:\n\nZygaena purpuralis purpuralis\nZygaena purpuralis austronubigena Verity 1946\nZygaena purpuralis caledonensis Reiss, 1931 (Hebridean islands of Skye, Lismore, Kerrera, Mull, Ulva, Eigg, Canna, and R\u00f9m and in a few localities on the Scottish mainland in Kintyre and parts of western Argyllshire)\nZygaena purpuralis dojranica Burgeff, 1926\nZygaena purpuralis fiorii Costantini, 1916\nZygaena purpuralis isarca Verity, 1922\nZygaena purpuralis lathyri Boisduval, 1828\nZygaena purpuralis magnalpina Verity, 1922\nZygaena purpuralis mirabilis Verity, 1922\nZygaena purpuralis nubigena Lederer, 1853\nZygaena purpuralis sabulosa Tremewan, 1976 (western Ireland in the Burren, Counties Galway and Mayo and on Inishmore, in the Aran Islands)\nZygaena purpuralis segontii Tremewan, 1958 (occurred on sea-cliffs of the Ll\u0177n Peninsula, Caernarvonshire. It has not been reported since 1962 and might be extinct)\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\n Data related to Zygaena purpuralis at Wikispecies\n Media related to Zygaena purpuralis at Wikimedia Commons\nTransparent burnet on UKmoths\nButterfly Conservation\nFauna Europaea\nLepiforum.de\nSchmetterling-raupe.de"}}}} |
part_xec/zoltan_puskas | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolt\u00e1n_Pusk\u00e1s","to":"Zolt\u00e1n Pusk\u00e1s"}],"pages":{"-1":{"ns":0,"title":"Zolt\u00e1n Pusk\u00e1s","missing":""}}}} |
part_xec/zorilispe_sumatrana | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zorilispe_sumatrana","to":"Zorilispe sumatrana"}],"pages":{"46467773":{"pageid":46467773,"ns":0,"title":"Zorilispe sumatrana","extract":"Zorilispe sumatrana is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae. It was described by Breuning in 1939. It is known from Sumatra.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuher_al-tbaiti | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuher_al-Tbaiti","to":"Zuher al-Tbaiti"}],"pages":{"2387034":{"pageid":2387034,"ns":0,"title":"Zuher al-Tbaiti","extract":"Zuher al-Tbaiti (Arabic: \u0632\u0647\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0628\u0627\u064a\u062a\u064a) is a Saudi Arabian who was arrested in Morocco in May 2002 as the suspected ringleader of the al-Qaeda plot to bomb American and British vessels transiting the Strait of Gibraltar. He was sentenced to ten years in prison along with two other Saudis, Abdullah al-Ghamdi and Hilal al-Assiri.Al-Tbaiti served as a military commander in Afghanistan before joining the Bosnian mujahideen as an artillery expert during the Bosnian War in the 1990s. Along with al-Ghamdi and al-Assiri, he escaped Afghanistan in 2001 during the Battle of Tora Bora, and arrived in Morocco.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nInside an al-Qaeda Bust\nTHE REACH OF WAR; U.S. Said to Overstate Value Of Guant\u00e1namo Detainees"}}}} |
part_xec/zuun | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"-1":{"ns":0,"title":"Zuun","missing":""}}}} |
part_xec/zylog_systems | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zylog_Systems","to":"Zylog Systems"}],"pages":{"34590477":{"pageid":34590477,"ns":0,"title":"Zylog Systems","extract":"Zylog Systems Limited (ZSL) is an international information technology company publicly listed on the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) & Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). Zylog is headquartered in Chennai, India and Edison, New Jersey, United States. \n\n\nHistory\nZylog was established in 1995 by Sudarshan Venkatraman and Ramanujam Sesharathnam. Zylog is a CMMI certified provider of onshore, offshore & near-shore technology solutions and services to enterprises & technology companies. Zylog is a Public Limited Company, listed in the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE: 532883) and National Stock Exchange (NSE: ZYLOG) in India.\nZSL is a global Systems integrator, VAR & leading ISV. ZSL has a presence in the US, UK, Canada, France, Switzerland, Germany, India, Singapore, Malaysia and Middle East. ZSL employs 4,500 employees. ZSL's market focus is small to mid-sized businesses (SMBs) and enterprises in a wide range of industries including Banking, Insurance, Finance, Manufacturing, Telecom, Wholesale, Retail, Media & Entertainment, Business Services, Pharma & Life Sciences and Healthcare.\nZSL's portfolio includes IT Outsourcing services, QA & Testing, Business Solutions (CRM & ERP), Enterprise Intelligence, Enterprise Computing, Mobile computing, cloud computing, IT Virtualization & VDI, Managed Services, SAP Services, Waste Management/Recycle Software and Industry Solutions for various verticals including Banking, Insurance, Telecom, Healthcare and Field Service.\nZSL provided product lifecycle management services, ranging with new product development, product migration, re-engineering, sustenance and support.\n\n1995 \u2013 Zylog Systems Limited established in Chennai, TN, India\n1996 \u2013 Opens Sales & Marketing office in Edison, NJ, USA\n2004 \u2013 Zylog Europe incorporated\n2004 \u2013 Acquires IMPECsoft and JDAN Systems\n2006 \u2013 Established IDEA Lab, the Research & Development Division\n2007 \u2013 Acquires EWOK Soft\n2007 \u2013 Acquires Anodas Software Ltd in UK 2007 \u2013 Releases IPO through BSE & NSE\n2008 \u2013 Acquires Ducont FZ, LLC headquartered in Dubai Internet City, UAE\n2008 \u2013 Opens a new Global Software Development & Research Centre in Chennai, India\n2009 \u2013 Launches Wi5 broadband services in India\n2010 \u2013 Acquires Brainhunter, Canada\n2011 \u2013 Achieves IBM Premier Partner Status for US & India Location\n2012 \u2013 Joins Microsoft Platform Modernization Alliance\n2012 \u2013 Joins Oracle Modernization Alliance (OMA)Zylog Canada to participate in the Big Bike Fundraising for Heart & Stroke Foundation.Zylog Systems (Canada) Ltd (\"Zylog Canada\") will ride the Big Bike for the Heart&Stroke Foundation and raise donations for research and promotion of cardiovascular health\nZylog Canada Announces a New Collaboration with CompTIA for Troops to Tech. Zylog Canada is a leading provider of IT, Engineering and Professional recruiting services and solutions with global delivery capability.\nZylog Canada is Now a Member of the Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance (CATA).\nCanadian Advanced Technology Alliance (\"CATA\") Launches a New Dedicated Career Site with Zylog Canada.\nZylog Systems Ltd (ZSL) is presenting at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM).\nZylog Systems was investigated for a fraud. [1][2]\nIn 2019, Zylog Systems closed its operations.\n\n\nOffices\nZSL has offices in North America (Canada, US), Europe (UK, Switzerland, France, Germany), Asia (Singapore) and a Middle East office in Dubai, UAE and is listed in NSEI(National Stock Exchange India)\nIn USA, Zylog Systems Ltd has subsidiary named ZSL Inc.\nZylog Systems Limited subsidiaries are:\nVishwa Vikas Services Limited\nZylog Systems (Europe) Limited\nZylog System (India) Limited\nZylog Systems Asia Pacific Pte Limited\nZylog BV Limited\nMatrix Primus Partners Inc, USA\nAlgorithm Solutions Private Limited\nZylog Systems (Canada) Limited\n\n\nAcquisitions\nIn 2004 ZSL acquired IMPECsoft and JDAN Systems. In 2007 it acquired EWOK Soft. In 2007 it acquired UK based insurance software provider, Anodas Software. In 2008 it acquired Ducont FZ, a mobile and wireless solutions provider based in Dubai, for $7.5 million. In 2010 it acquired Brainhunter, a Canadian IT consulting and engineering staffing services company for $33 million.\n\n\nAwards\nVAR Business awarded ZSL for green computing in 2008\".ZSL Announced as Finalist under Cloud Innovation & Impact Best of Show Categories at IBM Impact 2012ZSL's Powercube DaaS (virtual desktop) Won Runner-up Award for Green IT's Virtualization Product of the Year 2012Zylog Systems Ltd (ZSL) listed as Fastest Growing Mid-Sized Enterprises for the Year 2011 by India Inc 500ZSL Received 2011 Cloud Computing Excellence AwardZSL's SmartPrice Cloud Manager Won NJTC's Cool Products Competition Runner-up Award for the Year 2011ZSL's SmartPrice Social CRM Won CRN Technology Award 2011 in the Software Productivity CategoryZSL Won Runner-up Award for the Mobile Technology Project of the Year 2011 Award from DM Magazine, UKZSL Listed as the Top Cloud Computing Service Provider by Talkin' Cloud TC 50 Award\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zulu_serotine | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulu_serotine","to":"Zulu serotine"}],"pages":{"12169975":{"pageid":12169975,"ns":0,"title":"Zulu serotine","extract":"The Zulu serotine (Neoromicia zuluensis), also called the Zulu pipistrelle, aloe bat, or aloe serotine, is a species of vesper bat found in Angola, Botswana, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Namibia, South Africa, South Sudan, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Its natural habitats are dry savanna, moist savanna, and hot deserts.\n\n\nDescription\nThe Zulu serotine is a very small microbat, with a head-and body length of about 75 mm (3 in), a forearm length of about 30 mm (1.2 in), a wingspan of about 225 mm (9 in) and a weight of between 3 and 6 g (0.1 and 0.2 oz). The fur is soft and dense, and longer on the rump than elsewhere. The dorsal surface is medium brown, the hairs having brownish-black shafts and medium to pale brown tips, while the ventral surface is a paler, greyish-brown, the hairs having dark grey shafts with paler, greyish-brown tips. The wing membranes are dark, usually without a rear white border, and the tail is totally enclosed in the interfemoral membrane.\n\n\nDistribution and habitat\nThis bat has a widespread distribution in eastern and southern Africa. Its range consists of a northern population in Ethiopia, South Sudan, Uganda and Kenya, and a southern population extending from Zambia and the south Democratic Republic of the Congo to Angola, Namibia, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and South Africa. In its northern range, it inhabits semi-desert shrubland and grassland, including light woodland and thickets with Acacia and Commiphora. In its southern range, it inhabits wooded savanna, including miombo woodland, and in the drier southwestern part of its range, bushland and shrubland. Its altitudinal range is from 500 to 2,650 m (1,640 to 8,694 ft).\n\n\nBehaviour\nThe flight speed of this bat is moderately fast with high manoeuvrability, and it can bank, twist and stall. It is also able to scramble across the ground and take off from it. It feeds by hawking for insects, using echolocation to locate its prey, primarily feeding on moths and beetles. It hunts in glades and around trees, flying between the trunks and among the branches. It has been observed flying over water, but whether it was feeding or sipping water is unclear. It can produce highly concentrated urine and in captivity can survive for several days without water. Breeding seems to take place early in the wet season, with litters of one or two young being produced. It is unknown where this species roosts in the daytime.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zohaib_shera | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zohaib_Shera","to":"Zohaib Shera"}],"pages":{"48642591":{"pageid":48642591,"ns":0,"title":"Zohaib Shera","extract":"Zohaib Shera (born 18 August 1990) is a Pakistani first-class cricketer who plays for Port Qasim Authority. He made his Twenty20 cricket debut for Karachi Blues in the 2016\u201317 National T20 Cup on 6 September 2016.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nZohaib Shera at ESPNcricinfo"}}}} |
part_xec/zuniga_glacier | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuniga_Glacier","to":"Zuniga Glacier"}],"pages":{"7755346":{"pageid":7755346,"ns":0,"title":"Zuniga Glacier","extract":"Zuniga Glacier is a glacier flowing west-northwest into Dotson Ice Shelf between Jeffrey Head and Mount Bodziony on the west side of Bear Peninsula, Walgreen Coast, Marie Byrd Land. Mapped by United States Geological Survey (USGS) from aerial photographs taken by U.S. Navy Operation Highjump in 1947 and U.S. Navy in 1966, it was named by Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) after Mike \"Iron Mike\" Zuniga, Chief Aviation Storekeeper, U.S. Navy, who made seven Deep Freeze deployments between 1960 and 1978.\n\n\nReferences\n\n This article incorporates public domain material from \"Zuniga Glacier\". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey."}}}} |
part_xec/zsolt_kerekes | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zsolt_Kerekes","to":"Zsolt Kerekes"}],"pages":{"49079593":{"pageid":49079593,"ns":0,"title":"Zsolt Kerekes","extract":"Zsolt Kerekes (born 1973) is a Hungarian figure skating coach and former competitor. He is the 1994 Ondrej Nepela Memorial champion, a two-time Karl Sch\u00e4fer Memorial silver medalist, and a two-time Hungarian national champion.\n\n\nCareer\nOn the ice from the age of five, Kerekes was coached by M\u00e1ria Bogy\u00f3-L\u00f6ffler from 1977 to 1984 and then by Cornel Munteanu through 1992. He was a member of Budapesti Korcsoly\u00e1z\u00f3 Egylet (Budapest Skating Club).Kerekes was coached by the Czakos in the 1993\u201394 season. After obtaining silver medals at the 1993 Karl Sch\u00e4fer Memorial and Ondrej Nepela Memorial, he won his first senior national title and was named in Hungary's team to the 1994 European Championships. He placed 6th in qualifying group A, 8th in the short program, 16th in the free skate, and 13th overall at the event in Copenhagen, Denmark. At his next major assignment, the 1994 World Championships in Chiba, Japan, he finished 10th in qualifying group B, 17th in the short program, 15th in the free skate, and 16th overall.\nL\u00e1szl\u00f3 Vajda was his coach in the 1994\u201395 season. Kerekes placed 6th at the 1994 Skate Canada International and 5th at the 1994 Troph\u00e9e de France. He won silver at the 1994 Karl Sch\u00e4fer Memorial, gold at the Ondrej Nepela Memorial, and gold at the Hungarian Championships. He concluded his competitive career in March 1995 at the World Championships in Birmingham, England; ranked 9th in the short and 11th in the free, he finished 10th overall.\nAfter retiring from competition, Kerekes performed in ice shows and became a coach. He coached Manouk Gijsman, a three-time Dutch champion, in Zoetermeer, Netherlands; and Zahra Lari, the first skater to represent the United Arab Emirates in an International Skating Union competition, at the Zayed Sports City ice rink in Abu Dhabi.\n\n\nCompetitive highlights\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOfficial website"}}}} |
part_xec/zygia_lehmannii | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zygia_lehmannii","to":"Zygia lehmannii"}],"pages":{"12179493":{"pageid":12179493,"ns":0,"title":"Zygia lehmannii","extract":"Zygia lehmannii is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae. It is found only in Colombia.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zola_taylor | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zola_Taylor","to":"Zola Taylor"}],"pages":{"8614384":{"pageid":8614384,"ns":0,"title":"Zola Taylor","extract":"Zoletta Lynn Taylor (March 17, 1938 \u2013 April 30, 2007) was an American singer. She was the original female member of The Platters from 1954 to 1962, when the group produced most of their popular singles.\n\n\nLitigation\nZola Taylor was a member of The Platters until 1962, when she was replaced by singer Barbara Randolph. Taylor was the second of Frankie Lymon's three wives. In 1984, on behalf of Emira Lymon, a lawyer and artists' agent sued to wrest the copyright of Frankie's hit song \"Why Do Fools Fall in Love\" away from the current owner. The case became confused when it looked like Lymon had a second and possibly a third widow. Elizabeth Waters claimed to have married Lymon in 1964 in Virginia. However, it turned out she had been married to someone else at the time. As Waters' claim went to court, Taylor claimed that she had been sexually active with Lymon as early as the \"Biggest Rock \"n\" Roll Show of 1956\" tour. She claimed to have married Lymon in Mexicali, Mexico around 1965, but could not produce a marriage license. The first hearing, held in Philadelphia, was decided in favor of Waters being Lymon's first wife. Emira Eagle, his third wife, appealed and won a reversal based on her claim that she was Lymon's first wife.\n\n\nAccomplishments, death and legacy\nTaylor appeared with The Platters in the first rock'n'roll film, Rock Around the Clock. In 1990, Taylor was elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of The Platters. Zola Taylor died in Riverside, California at age 69, from pneumonia, following a series of strokes. Zola Taylor was portrayed by Halle Berry in the 1998 film Why Do Fools Fall in Love.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nLinks\nZola Taylor at IMDb\nZola Taylor at Find a Grave"}}}} |
part_xec/zu_heiss | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zu_hei\u00df","to":"Zu hei\u00df"}],"pages":{"37107252":{"pageid":37107252,"ns":0,"title":"Zu hei\u00df","extract":"\"Zu hei\u00df\" (Too hot) is a song by Farin Urlaub Racing Team. It's the fourth and final single and the second track from the second CD \"Kleines Album (Ponyhof)\" from the album Die Wahrheit \u00fcbers L\u00fcgen.\nThe single also includes the song \"Der Frauenfl\u00fcsterer\", a live version of the song \"Karten\" and a video documentation about the touring of the band.\n\n\nTrack listing\n\"Zu hei\u00df (Radio Edit)\" (Too hot) \u2013 4:00\n\"Der Frauenfl\u00fcsterer\" (The Woman Whisperer) \u2013 4:04\n\"Karten (Live-Version)\" (Cards) \u2013 5:02\n\"Zu hei\u00df\" (Video) \u2013 21:07\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zolotonoshka_river | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zolotonoshka_River","to":"Zolotonoshka River"}],"redirects":[{"from":"Zolotonoshka River","to":"Zolotonoshka (river)"}],"pages":{"30131961":{"pageid":30131961,"ns":0,"title":"Zolotonoshka (river)","extract":"The Zolotonoshka is a small river in south-central Ukraine. The Zolotonoshka is a left tributary of the Dnieper (Dnipro). The length of the river is 88 kilometers. The drainage basin is 1260 km2.\nThe name is derived from a legend that Ukrainian cossacks were hiding gold (from Ukrainian: \u0437\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0442\u043e (zoloto - gold) in the river. Scientists explain that the sand on the bottom of the river was shining in the sunlight, making people believe that there was gold. It is located near and chiefly serves the needs of the city of Zolotonosha. Since about 2011, the sewage from the city has been drained directly into the river without any processing, destroying the eco-system of the river.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuluiceras | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"pages":{"9907817":{"pageid":9907817,"ns":0,"title":"Zuluiceras","extract":"Zuluiceras is an extinct genus of cephalopods belonging to the Ammonite subclass.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zululand_dwarf_chameleon | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zululand_dwarf_chameleon","to":"Zululand dwarf chameleon"}],"pages":{"12504559":{"pageid":12504559,"ns":0,"title":"Zululand dwarf chameleon","extract":"The Zululand dwarf chameleon (Bradypodion nemorale) is a species of lizard in the family Chamaeleonidae. It is also known as the Qudeni dwarf chameleon.\nIt is endemic to South Africa.\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nSources\n\n\nExternal links\nSearch for Distribution of Bradypodion nemorale"}}}} |
part_xec/zophodia_epischnioides | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zophodia_epischnioides","to":"Zophodia epischnioides"}],"pages":{"34567502":{"pageid":34567502,"ns":0,"title":"Zophodia epischnioides","extract":"Zophodia epischnioides is a species of snout moth in the genus Zophodia. It was described by George Duryea Hulst in 1900. It is found in North America. It is probably a synonym of another Zophodia species or a species of a related genus, but the type is lost and it is thus not possible to determine the status of this species.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuzana_sulajova | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuzana_\u0160ulajov\u00e1","to":"Zuzana \u0160ulajov\u00e1"}],"pages":{"23664808":{"pageid":23664808,"ns":0,"title":"Zuzana \u0160ulajov\u00e1","extract":"Zuzana \u0160ulajov\u00e1 (or Zuzana \u0160ulaj, pronunciation: shoo-lah-yo-vah) (born 14 July 1978, Martin, Czechoslovakia) is a Slovak stage, television and film actress.\n\n\nBiography\nZuzana \u0160ulajov\u00e1 is a daughter of writer and pedagogue Ond\u0159ej \u0160ulaj and actress Anna \u0160ulajov\u00e1. She is a photographer and actress. She studied Photography at the Academy of Art and Industrial Design (UMPRUM) in Prague. Her sister Katar\u00edna \u0160ulajov\u00e1 is a director.\n\n\nFilmography\nWrong Side Up / P\u0159\u00edb\u011bhy oby\u010dejn\u00e9ho \u0161\u00edlen\u0161tv\u00ed (2005) .... Jana\nO dve slabiky pozadu (2004) .... Zuzana\nZpr\u00e1va o putov\u00e1n\u00ed student\u016f Petra a Jakuba (2000) .... Eva\nPowers (2000)\nThe Garden (1995) .... Helena - Czech Lion award - nomination\nTich\u00e1 rados\u0165 (1985) .... Katka Galov\u00e1\n\n\nVideoclips and commercials\nHex by Juraj \u010cern\u00fd (1995)\nSupport Lesbiens (2004)\nEurotel Easy (2002) directed by Vlado Struh\u00e1r\nKofola Citrus (2004) directed by Michal Baumbrucken\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/z-ro_discography | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Z-Ro_discography","to":"Z-Ro discography"}],"pages":{"11200528":{"pageid":11200528,"ns":0,"title":"Z-Ro discography","extract":"This is the discography of rapper Z-Ro.\n\n\nAlbums\n\n\nStudio albums\n\n\nCollaborative albums\n\n\nCompilation albums\n\n\nMixtapes\n2003: A Bad Azz Mix Tape\n2003: Gangstafied\n2004: Underground Railroad, Vol. 1: Street Life (Hulled & Chopped)\n2004: Underground Railroad, Vol. 2: Thug Luv\n2005: Z-Ro and Friends\n2006: Underground Railroad, Vol. 3: Paper Stacks Hulled\n2009: No Nutt No Glory\n2009: Rodeine\n2009: My Favorite Mixtape\n2009: Relvis Presley\n2011: Mo City Playaz\n2011: The 5200 Mixtape\n2013: Tripolar EP (Released under The Mo City Don)\n\n\nSingles\n\n\nFeatured performer singles\n\n\nPromotional singles\n\n\nGuest appearances\n\n\nMusic videos\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zulfairuuz_rudy | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zulfairuuz_Rudy","to":"Zulfairuuz Rudy"}],"pages":{"53008281":{"pageid":53008281,"ns":0,"title":"Zulfairuuz Rudy","extract":"Zulfairuuz Rudy is a Singaporean football player. He plays currently for Tampines Rovers in the S.League .\n\n\nClub career\n\n\nYoung Lions\nHe start his career with the Young Lions FC and played 1 game for them.\n\n\nHome United\nAfter leaving the Young Lions, he moved to the Home United Academy and was promoted to the 1st team in 2015. He started playing regularly in 2016 in the Cups Games.\n\n\nHougang United\nIn 2017, he joined his former coach, Philippe Aw in Hougang United. He will be Hougang United's third goalkeeper.\n\n\nInternational career\nIn March 2015, he was called up to the Singapore U22 squad that travelled to Laos to compete in the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U23 Championship 2016 Qualifiers, and impressed in the 0-0 opener against Laos U22 .\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zumbastico_fantastico | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zumbastico_Fant\u00e1stico","to":"Zumbastico Fant\u00e1stico"}],"pages":{"37651686":{"pageid":37651686,"ns":0,"title":"Zumbastico Fant\u00e1stico","extract":"Zumbastico Fantastico is a Chilean animation series broadcast by TVN and Cartoon Network Latin America. A showcase style show (as Cartoon Network's What A Cartoon Show), it contains different original animated shorts in every episode. Created and developed by S\u00f3lo por las Ni\u00f1as (now Zumbastico Studios), co-produced with TVN and directed by Alvaro Ceppi. The series premiered on Cartoon Network Latin America from November 1, 2011.\n5 different shows (with 6 shorts each) were showcase in the series:\n\n\"Piggy-Doggy\" (\"Chanchiperri\"), created by Bernardita Ojeda: It is about a cross between a pig and a dog that lives in the town of Goodness together with his assistant Perrichan, they will try to end the love of their town.\n\"The League of Semi-Heroes\" (\"La liga de los semi-heroes\"), created by Claudio \"Guayi\" Mas: A group of three pre-adolescents who seek to be superheroes, follow the orders of General Cochijunti, who always gives them simple and not dangerous missions.\n\"Edgar's Amazing Navel\" (\"El sorprendente ombligo de Edgar\"), created by Pablo Castillo: Edgar, a boy who by not washing his navel has created a strange world within himself.\n\"Telonio and his Demons\" (\"Telonio y sus demonios\"), created by Sol D\u00edaz: Telonio is a boy who is good at playing Jazz, he is in love with his partner Melodia and the demons that live in his head commonly lower his self-esteem.\n\"Pepe, a square in a round world\" (\"Pepe, un cuadrado en un mundo redondo\"), created by Alvaro Ceppi: Pepe is a square who lives in a circular city, so he has to deal with the circle people.\n\n\nReferences"}}}} |
part_xec/zuwarah_airport | /tmp/hf-datasets-cache/medium/datasets/85588519093439-config-parquet-and-info-bene-ges-wikipedia_en-11aafb40/downloads/4c298d70c6fa9381887d06b1385e2d79b6adb482ff3f936f70124e6bfacfb379 | {"batchcomplete":"","query":{"normalized":[{"from":"Zuwarah_Airport","to":"Zuwarah Airport"}],"pages":{"48003846":{"pageid":48003846,"ns":0,"title":"Zuwarah Airport","extract":"Zuwarah Airport (IATA: WAX, ICAO: HLZW) is an airport serving the Mediterranean coastal city of Zuwarah in Libya. The airport is 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) west of the city.\nThe Zawia VOR-DME (Ident: ZAW) is located 33.5 nautical miles (62.0 km) east-southeast of the airport. The Zwara non-directional beacon (Ident: ZAR) is located on the field.\n\n\nSee also\nTransport in Libya\nList of airports in Libya\n\n\nReferences\n\n\nExternal links\nOpenStreetMap - Zwara\nOurAirports - Zwara Airport\nAccident history for Zwara Airport at Aviation Safety Network\nGoogle Earth"}}}} |