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{"datasets_id": 476, "wiki_id": "Q4754238", "sp": 26, "sc": 599, "ep": 26, "ec": 1234} | 476 | Q4754238 | 26 | 599 | 26 | 1,234 | Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. | Dissent | spent in preparatory work. Under the de minimis rule, almost no workers had a claim.
Burton also argued that Congress had never intended to redefine the term "workweek" in the Act. Preparatory work was customarily not paid overtime but included in the rate of pay, Burton said. But the majority's ruling rested in a radical redefinition of the term "workweek," Burton claimed.
There is no evidence that Congress meant to redefine this common term and to set aside long established contracts or customs which had absorbed in the rate of pay of the respective jobs recognition of whatever preliminary activities might be |
{"datasets_id": 476, "wiki_id": "Q4754238", "sp": 26, "sc": 1234, "ep": 30, "ec": 153} | 476 | Q4754238 | 26 | 1,234 | 30 | 153 | Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. | Dissent & Aftermath | required of the worker by that particular job.... "Workweek" is a simple term used by Congress in accordance with the common understanding of it. For this Court to include in it items that have been customarily and generally absorbed in the rate of pay but excluded from measured working time is not justified in the absence of affirmative legislative action.
Burton would have affirmed the judgment of the court of appeals. Aftermath In 1947, Congress enacted the Portal to Portal Act of 1947 to amend the Fair Labor Standards Act in light of the court's ruling in Anderson v. Mt Clemens |
{"datasets_id": 476, "wiki_id": "Q4754238", "sp": 30, "sc": 153, "ep": 30, "ec": 793} | 476 | Q4754238 | 30 | 153 | 30 | 793 | Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. | Aftermath | Pottery Co. The word "portal" refers to the workplace door, so "Portal-to-Portal" could be interpreted to mean that all time spent within that door is work time. However, Section 4 of the 1947 Act required that the determination of whether time spent in preliminary or postliminary activities was "work" under the FLSA was to be based solely on contract, custom, or practice.
Unfortunately, the Portal-to-Portal Act was equally unclear as to what constituted contract, custom or practice. The Supreme Court attempted to clarify the issue in Steiner v. Mitchell, 350 U.S. 247 (1956), by ruling that activities which were "integral" |
{"datasets_id": 476, "wiki_id": "Q4754238", "sp": 30, "sc": 793, "ep": 30, "ec": 1445} | 476 | Q4754238 | 30 | 793 | 30 | 1,445 | Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. | Aftermath | to work (such as the donning of protective clothing) were compensable under the FLSA and Portal-to-Portal Act.
Nearly 50 years later, the Court again revisited the issue of what constituted "work." In IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez, the Court again engaged in a fact-specific analysis to conclude that time spent waiting while in protective gear, or time spent walking in protective gear, was compensable working time.
The Supreme Court reaffirmed Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery in its 2016 ruling in Tyson Foods v. Bouaphakeo, No. 14-1146 (March 22, 2016). Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the 6-to-2 majority, quoted from Anderson v. Mt. |
{"datasets_id": 476, "wiki_id": "Q4754238", "sp": 30, "sc": 1445, "ep": 30, "ec": 1646} | 476 | Q4754238 | 30 | 1,445 | 30 | 1,646 | Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. | Aftermath | Clemens Pottery in affirming the right of pork processing plant workers in using statistics to support their back-wage claims for time spent in donning protective clothing and equipment while at work. |
{"datasets_id": 477, "wiki_id": "Q4582044", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 132} | 477 | Q4582044 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 132 | Andino | Andino Andino was a small automobile manufacturer around 1967 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Andino built sports coupés using Renault engines. |
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{"datasets_id": 478, "wiki_id": "Q392104", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 563} | 478 | Q392104 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 563 | André Barsacq | Life and career | André Barsacq Life and career Barsacq was born in the city of Feodosiya in Crimea. His father was French and his mother was Russian. At the age of 15 he traveled to Paris to study at the School of Decorative Arts and lived in France from then on. In 1928 he was at the Théâtre de l'Atelier working with its director, Charles Dullin on productions which included Jules Romains's 1923 play Knock.
As director of the Théâtre de l'Atelier he introduced Parisian audiences to the plays of Ugo Betti, Félicien Marceau, Marcel Ayme, Françoise Sagan, René de Obaldia, and Friedrich Dürrenmatt. |
{"datasets_id": 478, "wiki_id": "Q392104", "sp": 6, "sc": 563, "ep": 6, "ec": 1140} | 478 | Q392104 | 6 | 563 | 6 | 1,140 | André Barsacq | Life and career | He successfully adapted the works of Chekhov, Dostoevsky, and Turgenev for the French stage. During his career he worked with Antonin Artaud, Jean-Louis Barrault, and Jacques Copeau.
Barsacq was a great admirer of Jean Anouilh and beginning with Le Bal des voleurs at Théâtre des Arts in 1938 produced almost all his plays, including, at some personal risk, the subversive Antigone in 1944 during the Nazi occupation.
André Barsacq also worked with many major filmmakers including Marcel L'Herbier, Pierre Chenal, Jean Grémillon, Max Ophüls, and Pierre Billon. |
{"datasets_id": 479, "wiki_id": "Q493363", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 601} | 479 | Q493363 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 601 | Andrea Balestri | Career | Andrea Balestri Career He is known as the Pinocchio in 1972 serial tv The Adventures of Pinocchio, directed by Luigi Comencini, next to actors like Nino Manfredi, Franco Franchi, Ciccio Ingrassia, Gina Lollobrigida and the great actor and director Vittorio De Sica as the Judge.
After the great success on TV, Balestri continued he acting career working on other movies as Torino nera, directed by Carlo Lizzani, with Bud Spencer and Domenico Santoro the Lucignoloin Pinocchio, the children movie Kid il monello del West, that won the Giffoni Film Festival as the best adaptation in 1976, and Furia nera, directed by |
{"datasets_id": 479, "wiki_id": "Q493363", "sp": 6, "sc": 601, "ep": 6, "ec": 1248} | 479 | Q493363 | 6 | 601 | 6 | 1,248 | Andrea Balestri | Career | Demofilo Fidani.
During last years he took part to several TV programs to tell his cinema experience and acted in two short films. He also took part in a cameo on movie Faccia di Picasso directed by Massimo Ceccherini, in which he played “the only real Pinocchio”.
He is very often guest around the schools or children festivals in which he tell his experience of "child-Pinocchio". curiosities and trivia behind the scenes, the special effects and tales regarding the various characters and the staff.
He is the author of book “Io, il Pinocchio di Comencini” 2008, introduced by Cristina Comencini, and Stefano Garavelli. |
{"datasets_id": 480, "wiki_id": "Q20807580", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 227} | 480 | Q20807580 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 227 | Andrea Garae | Andrea Garae Andrea Garae (born 28 June 1973) is a Vanuatuan athlete.
Garae competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics held in Barcelona, she entered the 800 metres where she finished 7th in her heat so did not qualify for the next round. |
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{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 594} | 481 | Q494353 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 594 | Andrea Mantovani | Torino | Andrea Mantovani Torino Mantovani started his career at Torino Calcio. He was the member of Allievi Nazionali Under-17 team in 2000–01 season. In 2002–03 season, he occasionally received first team call-up, and made his debut on 19 January 2003 against Como, which he replaced Gianluca Comotto at half-time. The match ended in 0–0 draw.
After Torino relegated in 2003, he was loaned to Serie B side Triestina. In 2004–05 season, Mantovani returned to Turin and played as one of the regular starter, he was awarded no.4 shirt. The team won promotion playoffs but then went bankrupt. FIGC allowed a new successor |
{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 6, "sc": 594, "ep": 10, "ec": 495} | 481 | Q494353 | 6 | 594 | 10 | 495 | Andrea Mantovani | Torino & Chievo | team admitted in 2005–06 Serie B but the players were also allowed to leave on free transfer. Chievo In August 2005, he was signed by Serie A side Chievo along with teammate Giovanni Marchese and on 30 August sold to Torino's rival Juventus in co-ownership for a nominal fees of €1,000. He was immediately loaned back to Chievo and played 4 league matches.
Partially due to 2006 Italian football scandal, Juventus terminated all ongoing co-ownership deal in June 2006, and Mantovani was sold back to Chievo for about €301,000. He played 3 out of 4 European matches of Chievo, which exited |
{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 10, "sc": 495, "ep": 10, "ec": 1092} | 481 | Q494353 | 10 | 495 | 10 | 1,092 | Andrea Mantovani | Chievo | in both UEFA Champions League 3rd qualifying round, and UEFA Cup first round.
Mantovani played 15 league start in 2006–07 season. Chievo was slipped from 4th (post-trail) or 7th (pre-trail) in 2005–06 to 18th that season, and Mantovani followed the team relegated to Serie B. At Serie B, Mantovani became an absolute starter, started 36 out of 42 matches, missed round 16 and round 22 due to suspension, 1 match as substitute and rested on last round (round 42).
In June 2008, he signed a new 4-year contract with club. Since returned to Serie A, he continued to play as a regular |
{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 10, "sc": 1092, "ep": 14, "ec": 250} | 481 | Q494353 | 10 | 1,092 | 14 | 250 | Andrea Mantovani | Chievo & Palermo | and helped the team survived in relegation battle. In 2009–10 season, he played as left-back or one of the 3 central defenders in 352 formation and helped the team remained in Serie A. He either ahead Bojan Jokić as left back or partnered with Jokić on the left flank: Jokić as wingback and Mantovani as left central defender. Palermo On 6 July 2011, after weeks of speculation surrounding his future, Mantovani agreed a four-year deal with Palermo with €3.5 million transfer fee, thus re-joining his former Chievo head coach Stefano Pioli to Sicily. He debuted with the rosanero on 28 |
{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 14, "sc": 250, "ep": 30, "ec": 235} | 481 | Q494353 | 14 | 250 | 30 | 235 | Andrea Mantovani | Palermo & Perugia & Vicenza & Novara & International career | July against Thun in Europa League.
He spent the 2013–14 season on loan to Bologna. He was subsequently released on mutual consent on 11 September 2014. Perugia He was signed by Perugia in 2015. Vicenza On 27 July 2015 he was signed by Vicenza Calcio. Novara On 30 January 2016 Mantovani was signed by Novara, with Francesco Signori moved to opposite direction. International career He was a part of the Italy national under-19 team which won the 2003 European Under-19 Championship, and played 16 games for the Italy national under-19 team.
He also played at 2001 UEFA European Under-16 Football Championship, |
{"datasets_id": 481, "wiki_id": "Q494353", "sp": 30, "sc": 235, "ep": 30, "ec": 340} | 481 | Q494353 | 30 | 235 | 30 | 340 | Andrea Mantovani | International career | 2006 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship and 2007 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship. |
{"datasets_id": 482, "wiki_id": "Q89318", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 581} | 482 | Q89318 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 581 | Andreas Salcher | Biography | Andreas Salcher Biography Andreas Salcher earned a PhD in business administration at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration in 1986 and completed the "Program for Senior Manager in Government" at Harvard University in 1989.
In 1985 Salcher started his political career as Chairman of the Youth Wing of the Vienna ÖVP. In 1987 he became the youngest member to be elected to the Vienna state parliament, whose member he remained over a period of 12 years. From 1992 to 1996 he was Vice Chairman of the Vienna ÖVP. During the term of Peter Marboe, City Councillor of Culture, he |
{"datasets_id": 482, "wiki_id": "Q89318", "sp": 6, "sc": 581, "ep": 6, "ec": 1219} | 482 | Q89318 | 6 | 581 | 6 | 1,219 | Andreas Salcher | Biography | served as Chairman of the Vienna City Culture Committee. In 2005 he left the Vienna state parliament.
After a meeting with Karl Popper in London, Salcher founded Austria’s first school for the highly gifted in 1998. Since then he has been Executive Vice President of the Association of the "Sir Karl Popper School", which regards itself as a learning system that makes mistakes, admits them, reflects on them, and endeavors to correct them along the lines of trial and error.
In 2007 Salcher launched the global education project "The Curriculum Project – Creating the Schools of Tomorrow". It aims to reinvent the school |
{"datasets_id": 482, "wiki_id": "Q89318", "sp": 6, "sc": 1219, "ep": 6, "ec": 1817} | 482 | Q89318 | 6 | 1,219 | 6 | 1,817 | Andreas Salcher | Biography | of tomorrow together with the world's brightest minds, with its focus on the essential right of children the world over to develop their talents. His first book on this theme, The Talented Kid and His Enemy, was awarded the "Golden Book" by the Austrian Publishers' and Booksellers' Association in September 2008. My Last Hour is the title of his most recent book. In 2009 his work The Talented Kid and His Enemy won him the Austrian literary award "Favorite Book 2009" and the title "Writer of the Year". The Austrian Public Relations Association presented Salcher with the award "Communicator of |
{"datasets_id": 482, "wiki_id": "Q89318", "sp": 6, "sc": 1817, "ep": 6, "ec": 2222} | 482 | Q89318 | 6 | 1,817 | 6 | 2,222 | Andreas Salcher | Biography | the Year".
All subsequent books, The Wounded Man, My Last Hour and I didn't know, were also No. 1 bestsellers, with the first two each exceeding sales numbers above 50,000 in Austria and therefore being awarded with the "Platinum Book" by the Austrian Publishers' and Booksellers' Association in May 2012. In September 2012, Salcher brought out his fifth book No Moore School - More and More Joy. |
{"datasets_id": 483, "wiki_id": "Q52832228", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 143} | 483 | Q52832228 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 143 | Andrei Biryukov | Club career | Andrei Biryukov Club career He made his debut in the Russian Professional Football League for FC Chelyabinsk on 10 April 2018 in a game against FC Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk. |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 381} | 484 | Q4755771 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 381 | Andrei Deputat | Personal life & Early career | Andrei Deputat Personal life Deputat was born on 20 December 1992 in Kiev, Ukraine. He moved to Moscow, Russia, in early 2010. He married Russian ice dancer Ekaterina Bobrova on 16 July 2016 in Moscow. Early career Deputat's mother, a recreational skater, introduced him to skating at age two years and eight months. He switched from singles to pair skating at age 15 and competed for two seasons with Vladyslava Rybka. They represented Ukraine and were coached by Galina Kukhar in Kiev. In the summer of 2009, they spent some time training in Ashburn, Virginia with Rashid Kadyrkaev and competed |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 10, "sc": 381, "ep": 18, "ec": 44} | 484 | Q4755771 | 10 | 381 | 18 | 44 | Andrei Deputat | Early career & Partnership with Davankova & 2011–12 season | at the Liberty Summer Competition in Aston, Pennsylvania where they won the silver medal. They were ineligible for the 2009–10 ISU Junior Grand Prix series because Rybka turned 12 at the end of July 2009 and they parted ways soon after.
Unable to find him a suitable partner in Ukraine, Kukhar recommended that Deputat move to Moscow. Arriving in Russia in early 2010, Deputat joined Sergei Dobroskokov's group and had a brief partnership with Polina Safronova. Partnership with Davankova Deputat and Vasilisa Davankova skated in the same group before teaming up in May 2011. 2011–12 season In December 2011, Davankova/Deputat competed |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 18, "sc": 44, "ep": 22, "ec": 79} | 484 | Q4755771 | 18 | 44 | 22 | 79 | Andrei Deputat | 2011–12 season & 2012–13 season | on the senior level at the 2012 Russian Championships. They were seventh in the short program but finished fifth overall, receiving the highest TES in the free skate ahead of the gold medalists Vera Bazarova / Yuri Larionov. In February 2012, they won the gold medal at the 2012 Russian Junior Championships after placing first in both the short and free segments. Deputat was released by Ukraine to represent Russia. Davankova/Deputat won the bronze medal in their international debut at the 2012 World Junior Championships. 2012–13 season Davankova/Deputat won silver at their first JGP event in Lake Placid, New York. |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 22, "sc": 79, "ep": 26, "ec": 18} | 484 | Q4755771 | 22 | 79 | 26 | 18 | Andrei Deputat | 2012–13 season & 2013–14 season | At their second event, in Zagreb, Croatia, they took the bronze and qualified for the JGP Final in Sochi, Russia, where they won the silver medal behind Lina Fedorova / Maxim Miroshkin. By that time, Davankova had grown to 1.55 m. Davankova/Deputat finished seventh in their second appearance at the 2013 Russian Championships. In January 2013, Davankova injured her leg at a training session, resulting in the pair withdrawing from the 2013 Russian Junior Championships. She was on crutches for two weeks. In late March, Deputat injured his right leg and decided to undergo a meniscus operation. 2013–14 season Davankova/Deputat |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 26, "sc": 17, "ep": 26, "ec": 629} | 484 | Q4755771 | 26 | 17 | 26 | 629 | Andrei Deputat | 2013–14 season | began their season by winning bronze at the 2013 JGP Belarus. A silver medal at the 2013 JGP Estonia qualified them to the JGP Final in Fukuoka, Japan. At the final, Davankova/Deputat placed fifth in both segments and overall. At the Russian Championships, the pair finished fifth on the senior level and then won the bronze medal on the junior level. Davankova/Deputat were assigned to the 2014 World Junior Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria, where they finished fourth after placing third in the short program and fifth in the free skate. Their partnership ended because Deputat was struggling with elements as |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 26, "sc": 629, "ep": 34, "ec": 191} | 484 | Q4755771 | 26 | 629 | 34 | 191 | Andrei Deputat | 2013–14 season & Partnership with Bazarova & 2014–15 season | Davankova grew taller. Partnership with Bazarova On 9 April 2014, Russian media reported that Deputat and Vera Bazarova would skate together, coached by Oleg Vasiliev. On 16 April, Deputat said their partnership was officially approved by the Russian Figure Skating Federation and they would begin training in Saint Petersburg under Vasiliev. In May, Vasiliev said they would relocate to Moscow and Saransk because of better funding. 2014–15 season Bazarova/Deputat were awarded the bronze medal at the 2014 CS Lombardia Trophy and silver at the International Cup of Nice. They received two Grand Prix assignments, the 2014 Cup of China and |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 34, "sc": 191, "ep": 42, "ec": 187} | 484 | Q4755771 | 34 | 191 | 42 | 187 | Andrei Deputat | 2014–15 season & 2015–16 season & 2016–17 season | 2014 NHK Trophy, and placed 4th at both. The pair finished 5th at the 2015 Russian Championships. 2015–16 season Competing in the 2015–16 Grand Prix series, Bazarova/Deputat finished 5th at the 2015 Skate Canada International finishing 5th and 4th at the 2015 NHK Trophy. In December 2015, the pair placed 6th at the 2016 Russian Championships. In March 2016, they won gold at the inaugural Cup of Tyrol in Innsbruck, Austria. 2016–17 season Bazarova/Deputat withdrew from their 2016–17 Grand Prix assignment, the 2016 Skate Canada International. On 17 November 2016, their coach announced that the partnership had ended and that |
{"datasets_id": 484, "wiki_id": "Q4755771", "sp": 42, "sc": 187, "ep": 42, "ec": 265} | 484 | Q4755771 | 42 | 187 | 42 | 265 | Andrei Deputat | 2016–17 season | Deputat was doing tryouts with various skaters, including Alexandra Proklova. |
{"datasets_id": 485, "wiki_id": "Q4756420", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 629} | 485 | Q4756420 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 629 | Andrew Bridge (basketball) | Biography | Andrew Bridge (basketball) Biography The 6 ft 3in shooting guard started his career with Mansfield Express in 1999 in the English Basketball League, before stepping up to Professional Basketball with the Sheffield Sharks in 2000. In 2002, the England and Great Britain International moved further North to play for the Newcastle Eagles.
Andrew was part of the Bronze Medal winning England Basketball Team at the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Australia and completed a successful season with the Newcastle Eagles "clean sweep" of Championships in 2006.
"A shooting guard, he can also handle the ball competently and is best known for his solid |
{"datasets_id": 485, "wiki_id": "Q4756420", "sp": 6, "sc": 629, "ep": 6, "ec": 950} | 485 | Q4756420 | 6 | 629 | 6 | 950 | Andrew Bridge (basketball) | Biography | defence and smart basketball brain. A real all-rounder and rapidly becoming the glue that helps hold the team together".
As of 27 March 2011 the official British Basketball League website shows Bridge has played 324 games, with averages of 7.47 Points Per Game, 2.97 Rebounds Per Game and 0.97 Assists Per Game. |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 575} | 486 | Q839237 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 575 | Andrew Caldecott | Early years | Andrew Caldecott Early years Andrew Caldecott was born on 26 October 1884 in Boxley, Kent, United Kingdom. He was the eldest child of Rev Andrew Caldecott and Isobel Mary Johnson. His mother was the daughter of Rev Stenning Johnson. Lieutenant John Leslie Caldecott (1886 – 9 September 1914), Andrew's younger brother, had served in the Royal Garrison Artillery, who later served as the aide-de-camp to the Governor of Nyasaland. John participated in World War I and died on 9 September 1914 in Nyasaland, Africa (present-day Malawi) at the age of 28, with his remains buried at the Karonga War Cemetery. |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 8, "sc": 0, "ep": 14, "ec": 136} | 486 | Q839237 | 8 | 0 | 14 | 136 | Andrew Caldecott | Education & Malayan career | Education Andrew Caldecott studied at Uppingham School in Rutland and was awarded scholarships, enabling him to be admitted to Exeter College of the University of Oxford. He achieved outstanding academic results while in college and had been awarded scholarships. He gained a third class in Classical Honour Moderations and subsequently graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Classics (second-class honours) in 1907. In 1948, he was conferred as an Honorary Fellow by Exeter College. Malayan career Upon his graduation from college in 1907, Caldecott joined the Colonial Office in November of the same year and was posted to Malaya. He |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 14, "sc": 136, "ep": 14, "ec": 721} | 486 | Q839237 | 14 | 136 | 14 | 721 | Andrew Caldecott | Malayan career | initially worked in Negeri Sembilan as a Cadet of the Federated Malay States (FMS). He served as Acting District Officer (DO) of Jelebu from 1909 to 1911. In 1911, he was appointed as Acting DO of Kuala Pilah, and was transferred back to Jelebu to serve as DO in the same year. He was re-appointed Acting DO of Kuala Pilah in the following year. In 1913, Caldecott was transferred to the Federal Secretariat in Kuala Lumpur and assumed the office of Deputy Controller of Labour. He subsequently held various positions, including Assistant Secretary (AS) to the Chief Secretary (1914 – |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 14, "sc": 721, "ep": 14, "ec": 1331} | 486 | Q839237 | 14 | 721 | 14 | 1,331 | Andrew Caldecott | Malayan career | 1916), 2nd AS to the Federal Secretary (1916 – 1920) and Acting AS to the colonial government (1920 – 1922). Caldecott went on leave from September 1922; he took up the ad hoc appointment as Malayan Commissioner at the British Empire Exhibition held at Wembley Park in the United Kingdom in 1924 and 1925. During the exhibition, he was in charge of the coordination of the Malaya Pavilion. Thereafter, he was conferred CBE by the British Government.
After the exhibition, Caldecott returned to Malaya in March 1926 and worked as Town Planning Administrator and State Valuer of Ipoh; he was transferred |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 14, "sc": 1331, "ep": 14, "ec": 1935} | 486 | Q839237 | 14 | 1,331 | 14 | 1,935 | Andrew Caldecott | Malayan career | to the Housing and Public Works Department Enquiry Committees as Chairman in December 1926. He was appointed Deputy Controller of Labour and Acting Under-Secretary to the Straits Settlements in July 1927, until 1928, when he was promoted to Secretary for Postal Affairs of the Straits Settlements and FMS as Officer, Class 1A. Since then, Caldecott had been assigned to serve in local authorities; he became Acting Resident of Negeri Sembilan in 1929 and Acting Resident of Perak from 1930 to 1931. He was appointed to serve as Resident of Selangor, until March 1932, when he was transferred back to the |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 14, "sc": 1935, "ep": 14, "ec": 2607} | 486 | Q839237 | 14 | 1,935 | 14 | 2,607 | Andrew Caldecott | Malayan career | central government of FMS as Chief Secretary. He served as Colonial Secretary of the Straits Settlements from May 1933 to February 1934. On 17 February 1934, Caldecott worked as Acting Governor of the Straits Settlements and High Commissioner of FMS, when Sir Cecil Clementi, the then-Governor of the Straits Settlements retired due to illness. During his tenure as Acting Governor, Caldecott upheld Clementi's policy of decentralisation. He was re-appointed Colonial Secretary when Sir Shenton Thomas took office in 9 November 1934.
During his time in Malaya, Caldecott earned a reputation for his ability to settle disputes between different ethnic groups which |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 14, "sc": 2607, "ep": 18, "ec": 375} | 486 | Q839237 | 14 | 2,607 | 18 | 375 | Andrew Caldecott | Malayan career & Governor of Hong Kong | made him popular with all races, a rare feat for a colonial administrator given the diversity of the Straits Settlements population. He also served as the first president of the Football Association of Malaysia. Governor of Hong Kong In 1935, Caldecott was appointed governor of Hong Kong. His tenure was the shortest in Hong Kong colonial history, for he was appointed the second last Governor of Ceylon a little more than a year later to handle the threat to the British administration caused by the overwhelming national liberation movement in Ceylon. When arriving in Hong Kong to assume the Governorship, |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 18, "sc": 375, "ep": 18, "ec": 984} | 486 | Q839237 | 18 | 375 | 18 | 984 | Andrew Caldecott | Governor of Hong Kong | Caldecott, unusually, elected to wear civilian dress, something that would not happen again until the arrival, in 1992, of the last colonial Governor, Chris Patten. His departure to Ceylon was met with dismay by the community as he had become a respected figure. Locals had petitioned to Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden for him to remain but to no avail.
It was during Caldecott's tenure that Hong Kong's Kai Tak Airport received its first regular arrival, the "Dorado" and the Queen Mary Hospital opened as an adjunct hospital to the Hong Kong University (the hospital is now under the control of the |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 18, "sc": 984, "ep": 22, "ec": 245} | 486 | Q839237 | 18 | 984 | 22 | 245 | Andrew Caldecott | Governor of Hong Kong & Governor of Ceylon | Hong Kong Hospital Authority). Caldecott called the promotion of Chinese civil servants to replace the European ones, a policy not realized until the signage of Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1984. His tenure also saw the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, with more than 100,000 refugees from the Chinese Mainland flooding into Hong Kong to escape the conflict. Governor of Ceylon He was sent to Ceylon (Sri Lanka) to examine the situation in the island closely and report on issues such as the governing structure, the representation of the minority communities, the franchise etc. His observations regarding these issues had |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 22, "sc": 245, "ep": 26, "ec": 306} | 486 | Q839237 | 22 | 245 | 26 | 306 | Andrew Caldecott | Governor of Ceylon & Personal life | an important impact on the evolution of the Ceylon constitution.
Caldecott was governor during the second world war. During his governance First diesel train ran to Galle in 1938, Bank of Ceylon opened in 1939 and the University of Ceylon established. Personal life Caldecott married Olive Mary Innes, daughter of J. R. Innes, CMG in 1918. He knew his wife while she served as a civil servant in Malaya. She died of illness in Ceylon in 1943. Following her death, Caldecott married Evelyn May Palmer, daughter of Dr J. Robertson and H. Palmer in 1946. Olive bore him a son |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 26, "sc": 306, "ep": 30, "ec": 127} | 486 | Q839237 | 26 | 306 | 30 | 127 | Andrew Caldecott | Personal life & Places named after Andrew Caldecott | and a daughter, namely John Andrew Caldecott, CBE (25 February 1924– 14 July 1990) and Joan Caldecott. His son was the Chairman of M&G Group.
Caldecott had a wide range of hobbies. He had published many articles with regards to the affairs of Malaya, and had written books about Malayan history in his early years. In his late years, he published two ghost novels. Besides writing, his other hobbies include drawing, playing the piano, tennis and golf. Places named after Andrew Caldecott In Hong Kong, Caldecott Road, a road in New Kowloon, is named after him.
In Singapore, Caldecott Hill, Caldecott Close, |
{"datasets_id": 486, "wiki_id": "Q839237", "sp": 30, "sc": 127, "ep": 30, "ec": 232} | 486 | Q839237 | 30 | 127 | 30 | 232 | Andrew Caldecott | Places named after Andrew Caldecott | Caldecott MRT Station and Andrew Road are named after him, and Olive Road is named after his first wife. |
{"datasets_id": 487, "wiki_id": "Q4756770", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 549} | 487 | Q4756770 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 549 | Andrew Davies (darts player) | Professional career | Andrew Davies (darts player) Professional career Davies played in the 2003 UK Open, losing in the last 64 stage to Henry O'Neill. Davies then qualified for the 2003 Las Vegas Desert Classic, narrowly losing both group games to Wayne Mardle and Roland Scholten. Davies reached the 64 stage of the 2005 UK Open, winning two matches before losing 8-0 to Mark Holden. Since then though, Davies has not been able to qualify for a major event, his last big event came in the 2007 US Open, reaching the third round before losing to Scholten.
Davies announced his retirement from professional darts |
{"datasets_id": 487, "wiki_id": "Q4756770", "sp": 6, "sc": 549, "ep": 10, "ec": 130} | 487 | Q4756770 | 6 | 549 | 10 | 130 | Andrew Davies (darts player) | Professional career & Personal life | in May 2009.
Now Davies works for the PDC as Scoring Official. Personal life Andrew currently lives with a Miss A Brumby in a house, near Carmarthen. He has a mother Sharon, brother Matthew and sister Hanna. |
{"datasets_id": 488, "wiki_id": "Q4758263", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 666} | 488 | Q4758263 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 666 | Andrew Pettigrew | Andrew Pettigrew Andrew Marshall Pettigrew OBE (born 11 June 1944) is Professor of Strategy and Organisation at the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford. A British professor, he was formerly dean of the University of Bath School of Management. He received his training in sociology and anthropology at Liverpool University and received his Ph.D. from Manchester Business School in 1970. He has held academic appointments at Yale University, Harvard University, London Business School and Warwick Business School.
Pettigrew has published many academic papers and books that consider the human, political, and social aspects of organisations and their strategies in |
|
{"datasets_id": 488, "wiki_id": "Q4758263", "sp": 4, "sc": 666, "ep": 8, "ec": 261} | 488 | Q4758263 | 4 | 666 | 8 | 261 | Andrew Pettigrew | Early life | contrast to the purely economic view in which the main unit of analysis is the firm or industry as typified by Michael Porter. This is known as the strategy process school as opposed to the strategy content school.
He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2009 New Year Honours. Early life Just before leaving Corby Grammar School, he joined a Brathay Exploration Group funded by the BBC and the Royal Geographical Society to Uganda, where he and 12 other boys worked with local archaeologists and social anthropologists. His own tasks were to survey |
{"datasets_id": 488, "wiki_id": "Q4758263", "sp": 8, "sc": 261, "ep": 8, "ec": 903} | 488 | Q4758263 | 8 | 261 | 8 | 903 | Andrew Pettigrew | Early life | the distribution of flat houses, particular to the northern slopes of Mount Elgon, and then to survey the spread of conical-roofed houses, as an indicator of the break-up or continuity of the existing culture. He later said of this trip that the "themes can be seen to resonate throughout much of my academic work".
He followed this work with a degree in sociology at Liverpool University and a PhD in industry sociology supervised by Enid Mumford at Manchester Business School followed by two years at Yale University at their Administrative Science Department.
He established and directed the Centre for Corporate Strategy |
{"datasets_id": 488, "wiki_id": "Q4758263", "sp": 8, "sc": 903, "ep": 8, "ec": 1105} | 488 | Q4758263 | 8 | 903 | 8 | 1,105 | Andrew Pettigrew | Early life | and Change at Warwick Business School from the mid-1980s to mid-1990s. In 2002 he became the first non North American scholar to receive the Distinguished Scholar of the US Academy of Management award. |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 174} | 489 | Q16727320 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 174 | Andrew Prokos | Early life & Work | Andrew Prokos Early life Prokos was born to Greek parents who migrated to the United States after World War II, settling in Chicago. At an early age Prokos's family moved to Florida, where he grew up and attended the University of Florida, where he graduated with a degree in Political Science. He first started taking photographs after moving to New York City at the age of 20. Work During the mid 1990s Prokos spent two years living in Italy and Greece and traveling through Europe and Turkey. Prokos returned to New York City in 1996, and began working in |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 10, "sc": 174, "ep": 10, "ec": 900} | 489 | Q16727320 | 10 | 174 | 10 | 900 | Andrew Prokos | Work | interactive advertising. Prokos turned to photography full-time in 2002, and received commissions from a variety of clients, including architects, property developers, interior designers, ad agencies, and corporate clients. His photography has been published in numerous magazines, newspapers, and websites, including: ArchDaily, Casa Vogue, Communication Arts, DesignBoom Magazine, Dezeen Magazine, Manhattan Magazine, Metropolis, New York City Monthly, PDN Edu, and others. His photography has also been used in advertising campaigns for numerous companies such as Lloyds Bank, Morgan Stanley, E&J Gallo, Abbott Labs, Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, and Evraz. Prokos is a member of the New York Chapter of the American Society |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 10, "sc": 900, "ep": 10, "ec": 1625} | 489 | Q16727320 | 10 | 900 | 10 | 1,625 | Andrew Prokos | Work | of Media Photographers.
In 2012 and 2013 Prokos traveled to Brazil and produced several award-winning series of photographs, including Niemeyer's Brasilia. Niemeyer's Brasilia captured the surreal Modernist architecture of Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer in Brasilia utilizing stark compositions and long exposure times. The series was published in a full page article in Correio Braziliense, the main newspaper of the capital city of Brasilia in November, 2013. The photographs from Niemeyer's Brasilia received worldwide acclaim and went on to be published in twelve countries in seven languages, including: United States, Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Greece, Spain, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Israel, New Zealand, |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 10, "sc": 1625, "ep": 14, "ec": 289} | 489 | Q16727320 | 10 | 1,625 | 14 | 289 | Andrew Prokos | Work & Awards | Japan, China, and Malaysia. In July 2014 Prokos was one of 23 prominent Greek-Americans profiled in a documentary video series entitled Greeks Gone West, produced by the Embassy of the United States, Athens and Kathimerini newspaper. The video was shot on location at Prokos's exhibition at Banco do Brasil in New York. Awards Prokos has won numerous awards for his photography, most recently for his fine art series "Night & Day" which utilizes multiple exposures captured over time to document the transition from day to night in various locations around the world. The series was selected for American Photography |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 14, "sc": 289, "ep": 14, "ec": 996} | 489 | Q16727320 | 14 | 289 | 14 | 996 | Andrew Prokos | Awards | 31 and was awarded two first-place finishes at the 2015 Prix de la Photographie People's Choice Awards.
"Night & Day" was previously awarded a silver medal at the 2014 Neutral Density Photography Awards., and was awarded two Honorable Mentions at the 2014 International Photography Awards (Lucies).
Prokos's series of fine-art architectural photographs based on the works of architect Frank Gehry, entitled Gehry's Children, was awarded a silver medal at the 2014 Prix de la Photographie, Paris (Px3) for his and Honorable Mention at the 2014 International Photography Awards (Lucies).
Prokos's series of photographs of the Brazilian capital at night, entitled Niemeyer's Brasilia, |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 14, "sc": 996, "ep": 18, "ec": 94} | 489 | Q16727320 | 14 | 996 | 18 | 94 | Andrew Prokos | Awards & Collections | was selected in 2014 by a panel of judges for the Latin American Fotografia 3 collection, and in 2013 was awarded a silver medal at the International Photography Awards (Lucie Awards). Prokos has been awarded with numerous medals in recent years at the Epson International Pano Awards for his panoramic photography of cityscapes and landscapes and has also won numerous Honorable Mentions for his photography from the International Photography Awards, the Prix de la Photographie, Paris, the International Color Awards, and the London International Creative Competition. Collections Prokos's photographs have been included in numerous corporate and private fine art collections |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 18, "sc": 94, "ep": 22, "ec": 452} | 489 | Q16727320 | 18 | 94 | 22 | 452 | Andrew Prokos | Collections & Exhibitions | throughout the USA and Europe, including: Anheuser-Busch, Booz Allen Hamilton, Capital One Bank, Cisco Systems, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Hyatt Hotels, Kimpton Hotels, Moody's Corporation, and Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. Exhibitions In early 2019 Prokos opened his own photography gallery at 368 Broadway in New York's Tribeca neighborhood. The gallery showcases his large-scale photographs of cityscapes, landscapes, and architecture.
In 2015-2016 Prokos's fine art architectural photographs relating to the work of architect Frank Gehry were exhibited in "Architect Frank Gehry - I Have an Idea" at 21 21 Design Sight museum in Tokyo, Japan.
In 2014, his photographs |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 22, "sc": 452, "ep": 22, "ec": 1009} | 489 | Q16727320 | 22 | 452 | 22 | 1,009 | Andrew Prokos | Exhibitions | of Brazil were displayed in a solo exhibition at Banco do Brasil in New York entitled Brazil: Night & Day - Photographs by Andrew Prokos. The exhibition was held in conjunction with the Year of Brazil at Queens College, City University of New York. It was the first time that Banco do Brasil had exhibited works by a non-Brazilian artist in New York. Brazil: Night & Day - Photographs by Andrew Prokos was also exhibited at the Consulate General of Brazil in New York from May 5 - August 10, 2014 to coincide with the Brazil 2014 FIFA World Cup.
In |
{"datasets_id": 489, "wiki_id": "Q16727320", "sp": 22, "sc": 1009, "ep": 22, "ec": 1359} | 489 | Q16727320 | 22 | 1,009 | 22 | 1,359 | Andrew Prokos | Exhibitions | both 2012 and 2013 Prokos's photographs were selected by a jury panel to be exhibited in the ASMP gallery at the American Institute of Architects national convention. Prokos's night photographs of Coney Island, Brooklyn were exhibited in 2006 at the Museum of the City of New York in an exhibition entitled Transformed by Light - The New York Night. |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 577} | 490 | Q4758358 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 577 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Personal history | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope Personal history Don-Wauchope was born in Bridgeton, Glasgow in 1861 to Sir John Don-Wauchope, 8th Baronet of Newton and Bethia Hamilton Buchanan. He was the second son of the Baronet, and the title passed onto his elder brother John Douglas when their father died in 1893. Don-Wauchope was educated at Fettes College before graduating to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1880. He graduated from Cambridge with a BA in 1884, and whilst at university he won sporting Blues in rugby and in athletics for hurdling. Don-Wauchope became a stock-broker by profession and in 1903 he married Emma Margaret |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 6, "sc": 577, "ep": 10, "ec": 468} | 490 | Q4758358 | 6 | 577 | 10 | 468 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Personal history & Rugby career | Salmond, daughter of Sir William Salmond. By 1941 he had taken up residency in Saint-Briac-sur-Mer in France, and died in 1948 in Paris. Rugby career Don-Wauchope first came to note as a rugby player while studying at Cambridge. He won two sporting Blues for rugby in 1880 and 1881, and captained the Cambridge University team. Whilst still at University, Don-Wauchope and A.R. Paterson of Loretto School organised the first meeting of the Fettesian-Lorettonian Club, until then a loose collection of former school pupils that had played cricket together the previous season. The Club was founded in 1881, and by March |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 10, "sc": 468, "ep": 10, "ec": 1121} | 490 | Q4758358 | 10 | 468 | 10 | 1,121 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Rugby career | of that year Don-Wauchope as captain of Fettesian-Lorettonian was chosen to represent Scotland in the 1881 international friendly with England. The game ended in a draw, and although not present for Scotland's next encounter, against Ireland, he was again playing at half-back for the next match to England. The game was played at Manchester, with Scotland winning by two tries to nil, the first time Scotland had beaten the English on their own soil.
While at Cambridge, Don-Wauchope took his Fettesian-Lorettonian team, firstly on tours of Scotland, and then venturing into North England. After playing several games against more well founded |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 10, "sc": 1121, "ep": 10, "ec": 1774} | 490 | Q4758358 | 10 | 1,121 | 10 | 1,774 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Rugby career | Scottish teams, such as West of Scotland and Edinburgh Wanderers, the club faced English teams, Manchester and Huddrsfield. Although losing my narrow score lines in Scotland, the Fettesian-Lorettonian team won both matches in England, which saw the Athletics News report "...persons who saw the doings of the Fettes-Loretto boys in Huddersfield and Manchester are willing to swear that a better team never existed, and a general wish has been expressed that Don-Wauchope should bring his grand team into the North of England once more."
After playing in the very first Scotland match against Wales in early 1883, scoring his first international |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 10, "sc": 1774, "ep": 10, "ec": 2378} | 490 | Q4758358 | 10 | 1,774 | 10 | 2,378 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Rugby career | try in the game, Don-Wauchope was incapacitated for the rest of the season with a knee injury. He regained his place for all three matches of the 1884 Home Nations Championship, paired at half back with Oxford University rival Augustus Grant-Asher. After victories over Wales and Ireland, where he scored another try, this time against Ireland; the Scottish team were beaten by England in a contentious game at Blackheath. The next season saw Scotland draw to Wales, beat Ireland, and refuse to face England. Don-Wauchope played in both games of the 1885 Championship and in the home clash with Ireland, |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 10, "sc": 2378, "ep": 10, "ec": 2993} | 490 | Q4758358 | 10 | 2,378 | 10 | 2,993 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Rugby career | not only scored his third international try, but was also joined at half-back with his younger brother Patrick Hamilton Don-Wauchope. This was Patrick's first international game, and he would go on to win five more caps for Scotland.
The 1886 Championship saw Scotland win the tournament trophy for the first time, with wins over Wales and Ireland, and a draw against England. Don-Wauchope scored a try in the encounter with Wales and two in a massive victory over the Irish. Although missing all of the 1887 international matches, Don-Wauchope played one final game for his country in 1888. Played at home |
{"datasets_id": 490, "wiki_id": "Q4758358", "sp": 10, "sc": 2993, "ep": 10, "ec": 3576} | 490 | Q4758358 | 10 | 2,993 | 10 | 3,576 | Andrew Ramsay Don-Wauchope | Rugby career | against Ireland, he was given the honour of the Scotland captaincy, leading his team out to a final victory.
After his retirement from playing international rugby, Don-Wauchope kept his connections with the sport when he became a referee. He first officiated an international match in 1889 when he took charge of the Home Nations Championship encounter between Wales and Ireland. It had been a busy day for Don-Wauchope, as he had spent the morning chairing a meeting of the International Rugby Board. He went on to referee another two international games, in 1890 and 1893. |
{"datasets_id": 491, "wiki_id": "Q26924210", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 365} | 491 | Q26924210 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 365 | Andrew Small | Personal history & Athletics career | Andrew Small Personal history Small was born in England in 1993. Small suffered nerve damage which affects him both neurologically and physically. He lives in Nantwich, Cheshire. He attended Brine Leas School and subsequently South Cheshire College. Athletics career Small was inspired to take up athletics after watching the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London. From 2013 he began competing at national meets mainly competing in 100 and 200 metres sprints. The following year he competed at his first overseas IPC Grand Prix, in Nottwil in Switzerland. In 2016 he took part in the European Championships at Grosseto, entering the 100 |
{"datasets_id": 491, "wiki_id": "Q26924210", "sp": 10, "sc": 365, "ep": 10, "ec": 743} | 491 | Q26924210 | 10 | 365 | 10 | 743 | Andrew Small | Athletics career | metres (T33). Despite finishing third behind Great Britain team mates Toby Gold and Dan Bramall, he was not awarded a bronze due to a lack of other competitors.
In July 2016 Small was announced as a member of the Great Britain team to compete at the Rio Paralympics. He took part in the 100 metres (T33) sprint, finishing third in a personal best time of 17.96 seconds. |
{"datasets_id": 492, "wiki_id": "Q4758740", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 526} | 492 | Q4758740 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 526 | Andrew Tite | History | Andrew Tite History As a child, Tite lived in the city of Toronto and the town of Markham until the age of 9. For several years he had his first taste of the entertainment industry as a male child model for an agency called Parker.
In the early 1990s, Tite was raised in the rural area of a small town called Mount Albert and later Newmarket. In 1997 he left home at the young age of 16 becoming homeless and a squeegee kid on the streets of downtown Toronto. After returning to Newmarket, still homeless, he started making some money for |
{"datasets_id": 492, "wiki_id": "Q4758740", "sp": 6, "sc": 526, "ep": 6, "ec": 1162} | 492 | Q4758740 | 6 | 526 | 6 | 1,162 | Andrew Tite | History | food and shelter with his squeegee. The local newspaper picked up on this story and proclaimed him Newmarket's First Squeegee Kid on the front page of their publication (The Era-Banner, June 15, 1997). Several letters to the editor were received and printed. Some calling Andrew Tite a menace from Toronto, some calling Andrew Tite "Very much a part of York Region." (The Era-Banner, June 17, 1997).
After Tite reached his 20s, he discovered performing in local theatre productions and student films. He now performs on television, film, and various theatre productions in Toronto and Vancouver. He also performs at live events |
{"datasets_id": 492, "wiki_id": "Q4758740", "sp": 6, "sc": 1162, "ep": 6, "ec": 1449} | 492 | Q4758740 | 6 | 1,162 | 6 | 1,449 | Andrew Tite | History | as a mascot or scare actor for employers such as Air Transat, Just For Laughs, Canada's Wonderland, and Screemers.
Andrew Tite was featured in an article in the Toronto and Vancouver editions of Metro News (Aug. 25, 2008) regarding his work as a Mascot Performer in both cities. |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 567} | 493 | Q511817 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 567 | Andris Nelsons | Early life | Andris Nelsons Early life Nelsons was born in Riga. His mother founded the first early music ensemble in Latvia, and his father was a choral conductor, cellist, and teacher. At age five, his mother and stepfather (a choir conductor) took him to a performance of Wagner's Tannhäuser, which Nelsons refers to as a profoundly formative experience: "...it had a hypnotic effect on me. I was overwhelmed by the music. I cried when Tannhäuser died. I still think this was the biggest thing that happened in my childhood."
As a youth, Nelsons studied piano, and took up the trumpet at age 12. |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 6, "sc": 567, "ep": 10, "ec": 374} | 493 | Q511817 | 6 | 567 | 10 | 374 | Andris Nelsons | Early life & Conducting career | He also sang bass-baritone, with a special interest in early music, in his mother's ensemble. He studied for one summer at the Dartington International Summer School with Evelyn Tubb. He served as a trumpeter with the orchestra of the Latvian National Opera. Conducting career Nelsons studied conducting with Alexander Titov in Saint Petersburg, Russia and participated in conducting master classes with Neeme Järvi, Roberto Carnevale and Jorma Panula. He came to the attention of Mariss Jansons when he emergency-substituted with the Oslo Philharmonic in their trumpet section during an orchestra tour. Nelsons counts Jansons as a mentor and has been |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 10, "sc": 374, "ep": 10, "ec": 1032} | 493 | Q511817 | 10 | 374 | 10 | 1,032 | Andris Nelsons | Conducting career | a conducting student with him since 2002.
In 2003, Nelsons became principal conductor of the Latvian National Opera. He concluded his tenure there after four years in 2007. In 2006, Nelsons became chief conductor of the Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie of Herford, Germany, a post he held until the end of the 2008/09 season. His first conducting appearance at the Metropolitan Opera was in October 2009, a production of Turandot. In July 2010, Nelsons made his debut at the Bayreuth Festival, conducting a new production of Wagner's Lohengrin at the opening performance of the festival.
In November 2017, The Boston Globe reported that Nelsons |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 10, "sc": 1032, "ep": 14, "ec": 176} | 493 | Q511817 | 10 | 1,032 | 14 | 176 | Andris Nelsons | Conducting career & City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra | told Jim Braude and Margery Eagan of Boston Public Radio that sexual harassment is not – nor has it ever been – an issue in the classical music world. In a subsequent statement to the paper, Nelsons clarified his position saying that he has "not seen overt examples of sexual misconduct" but admitted that it "takes place in all fields, including, of course, the classical music industry." City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra In the UK, Nelsons's early work included studio concerts with the BBC Philharmonic in Manchester, and his first BBC Philharmonic concert at the Bridgewater Hall was in November |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 14, "sc": 176, "ep": 14, "ec": 783} | 493 | Q511817 | 14 | 176 | 14 | 783 | Andris Nelsons | City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra | 2007. In October 2007, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (CBSO) named Nelsons as its 12th principal conductor and music director, effective with the 2008/09 season, with an initial contract for three years. The appointment was unusual in that Nelsons had conducted the CBSO only in a private concert and in a recording session, without a public concert engagement, prior to being named to the post. His first public conducting appearance with the CBSO was on 11 November 2007 in a matinee concert, and his first subscription concert appearance with the CBSO was in March 2008. In July 2009, Nelsons |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 14, "sc": 783, "ep": 18, "ec": 219} | 493 | Q511817 | 14 | 783 | 18 | 219 | Andris Nelsons | City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra & Boston Symphony Orchestra | extended his CBSO contract for an additional three years, through the 2013/14 season. In August 2012, the CBSO announced the extension of his CBSO contract formally through the 2014/15 season, and then for subsequent seasons on the basis of an annual rolling renewal. In October 2013, the CBSO announced the conclusion of Nelsons's tenure as music director after the end of the 2014/15 season. Boston Symphony Orchestra In the US, Nelsons made his first guest-conducting appearance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO) in March 2011, as an emergency substitute for James Levine at Carnegie Hall. He subsequently guest-conducted the BSO |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 18, "sc": 219, "ep": 18, "ec": 810} | 493 | Q511817 | 18 | 219 | 18 | 810 | Andris Nelsons | Boston Symphony Orchestra | at the Tanglewood Music Festival in July 2012, and made his first appearance with the BSO at Symphony Hall, Boston in January 2013. In May 2013, the BSO named Nelsons as its 15th music director effective the 2014/15 season. His initial contract was for 5 years and stipulated 8 to 10 weeks of scheduled appearances in the first year of the contract and 12 weeks in subsequent years.
Nelsons held the title of Music Director Designate in the 2013/14 season. In August 2015, the BSO announced the extension of Nelsons's contract as music director through the 2021/22 season with a new |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 18, "sc": 810, "ep": 26, "ec": 341} | 493 | Q511817 | 18 | 810 | 26 | 341 | Andris Nelsons | Boston Symphony Orchestra & Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra & Concerts and operas | contract, for eight years, that replaced the initial five-year contract, and also contained an evergreen clause for automatic renewal. Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra Nelsons first guest-conducted the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in 2011. Since February 2018 Nelsons is the 21st Gewandhauskapellmeister (music director). The orchestra announced the appointment with the initial contract for 5 seasons. Concerts and operas In the 2016/17 season, Nelsons continued his collaborations with Berliner Philharmoniker, Wiener Philharmoniker, Het Koninklijk Concertgebouworkest and Philharmonia Orchestra.
In December 2016, he returned to the Royal Opera House conducting Der Rosenkavalier in a new production directed by Robert Carsen. Nelsons is a regular guest |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 26, "sc": 341, "ep": 30, "ec": 423} | 493 | Q511817 | 26 | 341 | 30 | 423 | Andris Nelsons | Concerts and operas & Recording history | at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, the Bayreuth Festival and is Artist-in-Residence at the Konzerthaus Dortmund.
In January 2019 the Vienna Philharmonic announced that Nelsons will conduct its 2020 Vienna New Year's Concert. Recording history With the CBSO, Nelsons has recorded music of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Richard Strauss, and Igor Stravinsky for the Orfeo label. Separately from the CBSO, Nelsons has also recorded for the BR-Klassik label. Nelsons has also recorded commercially with the Boston Symphony Orchestra for Deutsche Grammophon, where their album Under Stalin's Shadow, of the Symphony No 10 of Shostakovich, received a 2015 Grammy Award for best |
{"datasets_id": 493, "wiki_id": "Q511817", "sp": 30, "sc": 423, "ep": 34, "ec": 370} | 493 | Q511817 | 30 | 423 | 34 | 370 | Andris Nelsons | Recording history & Personal life | orchestral performance. This DG album is part of an intended long-term contract between the Boston Symphony, Nelsons and DG, as extended in May 2016. Personal life Nelsons was married to the Latvian soprano Kristīne Opolais. They met during Nelsons's tenure at Latvian National Opera, when she was a member of the Latvian National Opera chorus, and later became a solo singer with the company. The couple married in 2011. Their daughter, Adriana Anna, was born on 28 December 2011. The couple announced their divorce on 27 March 2018. |
{"datasets_id": 494, "wiki_id": "Q769088", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 588} | 494 | Q769088 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 588 | Andy Mikita | Career | Andy Mikita Career Andy Mikita began his television career on the 1987 series 21 Jump Street where he worked as a second assistant director. He worked on many other television series from 1989 to 1996, until he joined Stargate SG-1's crew as a first assistant director in 1997 and in 1999 he made his directing debut on the episode "Foothold".
Mikita made his acting debut as brief cameo on Stargate SG-1 in the episode "Wormhole X-Treme!", he appeared again as a wedding guest in the episode "200".
In early 2009, Mikita was slated to direct a direct-to-DVD Stargate Atlantis movie with the |
{"datasets_id": 494, "wiki_id": "Q769088", "sp": 6, "sc": 588, "ep": 6, "ec": 669} | 494 | Q769088 | 6 | 588 | 6 | 669 | Andy Mikita | Career | working title of Stargate: Extinction. The production was shelved later in 2009. |
{"datasets_id": 495, "wiki_id": "Q16215046", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 595} | 495 | Q16215046 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 595 | Andy Partner | Career | Andy Partner Career Born in Colchester, Partner is son to former Colchester United trainee Neil Partner and step-son to former club chief executive Marie Partner. He joined the U's during the club's brief stint outside of the Football League, making his debut on 16 December 1991 in 6–2 home defeat by Wycombe Wanderers. The competition was not favoured by manager Roy McDonough, opting for a weakened team to fully concentrate on the league and pile more fixtures on league rivals Wycombe. Ultimately, the U's gained promotion back to the Football League at the end of the season.
Partner made two Football |
{"datasets_id": 495, "wiki_id": "Q16215046", "sp": 6, "sc": 595, "ep": 6, "ec": 1179} | 495 | Q16215046 | 6 | 595 | 6 | 1,179 | Andy Partner | Career | League appearances for Colchester, and in his final appearance during a 1–0 away defeat to Exeter City on 30 August 1994 he suffered a broken knee cap. This was the last time that he would play professional football or feature in the Colchester first-team.
Partner's injury kept him out of action for two-and-a-half years, returning to action with the United reserves in March 1997 and featured in a number of reserve games until the end of the 1996–97 season, when he severed his ties with the club after six years. He joined Heybridge Swifts in the summer of 1997 and later |
{"datasets_id": 495, "wiki_id": "Q16215046", "sp": 6, "sc": 1179, "ep": 6, "ec": 1246} | 495 | Q16215046 | 6 | 1,179 | 6 | 1,246 | Andy Partner | Career | had spells at Wivenhoe Town, Clacton Town and Harwich & Parkeston. |
{"datasets_id": 496, "wiki_id": "Q30069805", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 259} | 496 | Q30069805 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 259 | Andy Setyo | International career | Andy Setyo International career He made his international debut for the Indonesia u-23 team on 22 August 2017 in the 2017 Southeast Asian Games, against Vietnam u-23. He made his official debut for senior team on 25 November in a friendly match against Guyana, where he came as a substitute. |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 583} | 497 | Q2741080 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 583 | Angélica Vale | Acting career | Angélica Vale Acting career Vale was born in Mexico City, Mexico. As a child, in the movie El Gran Triunfo in 1981, Vale portrayed the daughter of Mexican superstar Rigo Tovar. From 1982–1986 her family was banned from Televisa due to the launch of the independent production "LUPITA" on the rival TV Azteca network in which she played the title role. All the family members were blacklisted until 1986, year in which Ernesto Alonso intervened on their behalf. He was instrumental in getting the ban lifted, allowing the family to return to work on Televisa's productions.
In 1998, she portrayed Julieta |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 6, "sc": 583, "ep": 6, "ec": 1141} | 497 | Q2741080 | 6 | 583 | 6 | 1,141 | Angélica Vale | Acting career | in Soñadoras and in 2001, she portrayed Wendy Nayeli Pérez in Amigas y rivales, both major roles which won acclaim for the actress. However, the soap opera La Fea Más Bella was her first starring role in any Mexican telenovela, though she had appeared in a number of Spanish language programs. As a comedian, Vale was one of the main celebrity impersonators in the comedy show La Parodia, from 2000 to 2005, but she chose to leave the show because she wanted to take some weeks off. From 2005 to 2006, she performed in El Privilegio de Mandar (The Privilege |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 6, "sc": 1141, "ep": 6, "ec": 1733} | 497 | Q2741080 | 6 | 1,141 | 6 | 1,733 | Angélica Vale | Acting career | to Command), which was a parody of an earlier soap opera starring Adela Noriega and was titled El Privilegio de Amar (The Privilege to Love).
Because telenovelas are wildly popular throughout the Hispanic world, they are very profitable, even when they do not rate so well, so when as of 2006, La Fea Más Bella became the number one Univision TV program according to 2006 Nielsen ratings, Vale was looked upon by many producers as a "sure thing," and it was speculated that this success would open the door for greater things to come.
Vale was one of eight people featured on |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 6, "sc": 1733, "ep": 6, "ec": 2333} | 497 | Q2741080 | 6 | 1,733 | 6 | 2,333 | Angélica Vale | Acting career | the cover of People en Español's "Los 50 Más Bellos" 2007 yearly issue and was featured alone on the July 2007 cover of the magazine, reportedly more because of her recent popularity than because of her overall lengthy career (as many people in the business had stated that she was finally getting the international attention that she had come to deserve after laboring her talents so long and having very little ethical and commercial success).
In April 2007, People en Español announced that Vale would make a special guest appearance on Ugly Betty, in which she'd reprise her Lety role in |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 6, "sc": 2333, "ep": 10, "ec": 154} | 497 | Q2741080 | 6 | 2,333 | 10 | 154 | Angélica Vale | Acting career & Singing career | the episode "A Tree Grows in Guadalajara," but instead she played a Lety look-alike named Angélica, who was a dental assistant, in the season finale. Although her mother officially left Televisa after both actresses appeared on Mujeres Asesinas in 2009, Vale is still with Televisa, having most recently appeared on Parodiando.
On October 15, 2019, Vale will make her foray into American radio as a midday host at KLLI Los Angeles. Singing career Like her mother, Vale is also a singer and has performed on the soundtrack for La fea más bella. She did several notable impersonations of another singer, |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 154, "ep": 10, "ec": 710} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 154 | 10 | 710 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | Verónica Castro on La Parodia doing parodies of Castro's show, Mala noche... no!. Vale is also listed in that program's credits as a singer of its theme song. She has also done many impressions of singers Shakira, Thalía, and Laura León among others while she worked on Soñadoras and Amigas y rivales; she also used some of these once more in La Parodia.
In 2007, after the finale of La Fea Más Bella, she sang one of the theme songs for the hit soap opera during an appearance on El Show de Cristina. During 2008, she made the music album Navidad |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 710, "ep": 10, "ec": 1280} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 710 | 10 | 1,280 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | con Amigos with Ricardo Montaner. Angélica Vale has been heavily pursued by paparazzi since the early 1990s, with a special focus on her love life. In the early stages of her life, she was rumored and confirmed as the girlfriend of actor Alejandro Ibarra, with whom it was also rumored that she was engaged to and would soon marry.
However this was not the case, and they split around the time that she was cast for the role of Margarita in Bendita Mentira. This attention did not surprise Vale, who as a young girl had seen the toll that paparazzi's attentions |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 1280, "ep": 10, "ec": 1863} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 1,280 | 10 | 1,863 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | had taken on her mother and father's marriage when, according to tabloids, her father had led a double life with a woman in Texas.
In 2005, after the death of her father, this attention bothered her because she was constantly pestered by questions about her late father's will and testament and concerns about what the will said her father's young 'spouse' would receive after his death. She was overwhelmed to the point that she called for a meeting with all major television stations in Mexico and had them ask all the questions they wanted to ask, saying that if they did |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 1863, "ep": 10, "ec": 2436} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 1,863 | 10 | 2,436 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | not ask then, they would never get answers because she planned on closing that chapter in her life because it was very painful to talk about something so private.
Later on, Vale was also linked to singer Jose Luis Figueroa, son of singer Joan Sebastian, during a time when he was still involved with Ninel Conde, (considered the hottest woman in the world by the Latin American press), but Angélica Vale denied these reports. Soon after, Ninel and Jose Luis broke up, and he stated it was because Ninel was too "thin" for his liking. Vale was also targeted much by |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 2436, "ep": 10, "ec": 3044} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 2,436 | 10 | 3,044 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | claims that she liked to get involved with married men, and a story was published in 2006 about her having caused the separation of a family, because her then-current boyfriend had filed for divorce and his children had to live with seeing their father with another woman in public.
She also denied these allegations by claiming that the divorce had been filed one year prior to their relationship, and that his marriage was childless. Other rumors that have followed concerning her love life have been curiously sparked by a family friend, Cristina Saralegui, host of El Show de Cristina, who, when |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 3044, "ep": 10, "ec": 3645} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 3,044 | 10 | 3,645 | Angélica Vale | Singing career | interviewing the cast of La Fea Más Bella, stated that she thought that 'Don Fernando' (Jaime Camil) and 'Doña Lety' (Angélica Vale) had really fallen in love, but she was cut off by Angélica María, also present, who changed the subject.
Angélica María also sparked rumors about her daughter because, she had made a habit of saying that she was waiting impatiently for her only child to make her a grandmother. Despite the constant intrusion into her life by paparazzi, Angélica Vale has managed to keep much of her life private, causing paparazzi to fabricate stories about her. She also had |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 10, "sc": 3645, "ep": 14, "ec": 537} | 497 | Q2741080 | 10 | 3,645 | 14 | 537 | Angélica Vale | Singing career & Family | breast reduction around the time she finished La Fea Más Bella. Family Vale's father was Venezuelan while her mother is half American and half Mexican who was born in Louisiana; she has a Jewish grandfather. Vale speaks English and Spanish fluently, and holds her own in French.
She and her mother, Angélica María, are among the very few daughter – mother entertainers to be inducted into the Paseo de las Luminarias at the Plaza de las Estrellas. Vale was inducted for her work in television and regarding her contribution to the recording industry.
Vale and her parents are featured in the |
{"datasets_id": 497, "wiki_id": "Q2741080", "sp": 14, "sc": 537, "ep": 18, "ec": 48} | 497 | Q2741080 | 14 | 537 | 18 | 48 | Angélica Vale | Family & Citizenship | 2007 book Televisa Presenta, which was published during the culmination of the Network's golden anniversary. Citizenship In 2016, Vale became a naturalized U.S. citizen. |
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