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3600 | List_of_largest_buildings_in_the_world_3 | [
[
"Type of building",
"Name",
"Country and territory",
"Place",
"Floor area"
],
[
"Department store",
"Shinsegae Centum City",
"South Korea",
"Busan",
"509,810 m ( 5,487,500 sq ft )"
],
[
"Industrial building",
"Boeing Everett Factory",
"United States",
"Everett , Washington",
"398,000 m ( 4.3 million sq ft )"
],
[
"Legislature building",
"Palace of the Parliament",
"Romania",
"Bucharest",
"365,000 m ( 3.93 million sq ft )"
],
[
"Bus depot",
"Millennium Park Bus Depot",
"India",
"Delhi",
"305,265 m ( 3.6 million sq ft )"
],
[
"Courthouse",
"Istanbul Çağlayan Justice Palace",
"Turkey",
"Istanbul",
"300,000 m ( 3.0 million sq ft )"
],
[
"Bus terminal",
"Tel Aviv Central Bus Station",
"Israel",
"Tel Aviv",
"230,000 m2 ( 2.5 million sq ft )"
],
[
"Museum",
"Louvre Museum",
"France",
"Paris",
"210,000 m ( 2,260,421 sq ft )"
],
[
"Current residence",
"Presidential Complex",
"Turkey",
"Ankara",
"200,020 m ( 2,152,997 sq ft )"
],
[
"Current royal residence",
"Istana Nurul Iman",
"Brunei",
"Bandar Seri Begawan",
"200,000 m ( 2,152,782 sq ft )"
],
[
"Royal palace",
"Royal Palace of Caserta",
"Italy",
"Caserta",
"235,000 m ( 2,529,519 sq ft )"
],
[
"Shipbuilding hall",
"Meyer Werft Dockhalle 2",
"Germany",
"Papenburg , Niedersachsen",
"63,000 m ( 678,000 sq ft )"
],
[
"Hemispherical building",
"Ericsson Globe",
"Sweden",
"Stockholm",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The tables in this article list buildings from around the world by usable space (volume), footprint (area), and floor space (area). Here, building refers to single structures that are suitable for continuous human occupancy. There are, however, some exceptions, including factories and warehouses. The Aerium near Berlin is the largest uninterrupted volume in the world, while Boeing's factory in Everett, Washington, United States is the world's largest building by volume. The AvtoVAZ main assembly building in Tolyatti, Russia is the largest building in area footprint. The Yiwu International Trade City in Yiwu, China is the largest building in terms of total floor area. Due to the incomplete nature of this list, buildings are not ranked.",
"section_text": "Ericsson Globe This list of special categories includes a variety of buildings which are the largest of their type .",
"section_title": "Special categories",
"title": "List of largest buildings",
"uid": "List_of_largest_buildings_in_the_world_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_buildings"
} | 3,600 |
3601 | NABC_Player_of_the_Year_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Player",
"School",
"State",
"Position",
"Class"
],
[
"1974-75",
"David Thompson",
"NC State",
"North Carolina",
"SG / SF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1975-76",
"Scott May",
"Indiana",
"Indiana",
"F",
"Senior"
],
[
"1976-77",
"Marques Johnson",
"UCLA",
"California",
"G / F",
"Senior"
],
[
"1977-78",
"Phil Ford",
"North Carolina",
"North Carolina",
"PG",
"Senior"
],
[
"1978-79",
"Larry Bird",
"Indiana State",
"Indiana",
"SF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1979-80",
"Michael Brooks",
"La Salle",
"Pennsylvania",
"F",
"Senior"
],
[
"1980-81",
"Danny Ainge",
"Brigham Young",
"Utah",
"SG",
"Senior"
],
[
"1981-82",
"Ralph Sampson",
"Virginia",
"Virginia",
"C",
"Junior"
],
[
"1982-83",
"Ralph Sampson ( 2 )",
"Virginia ( 2 )",
"Virginia",
"C",
"Senior"
],
[
"1983-84",
"Michael Jordan",
"North Carolina ( 2 )",
"North Carolina",
"SG",
"Junior"
],
[
"1984-85",
"Patrick Ewing",
"Georgetown",
"Washington , D.C",
"C",
"Senior"
],
[
"1985-86",
"Walter Berry",
"St. John 's",
"New York",
"PF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1986-87",
"David Robinson",
"Navy",
"Maryland",
"C",
"Senior"
],
[
"1987-88",
"Danny Manning",
"Kansas",
"Kansas",
"PF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1988-89",
"Sean Elliott",
"Arizona",
"Arizona",
"SF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1989-90",
"Lionel Simmons",
"La Salle ( 2 )",
"Pennsylvania",
"SF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1990-91",
"Larry Johnson",
"UNLV",
"Nevada",
"PF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1991-92",
"Christian Laettner",
"Duke",
"North Carolina",
"F",
"Senior"
],
[
"1992-93",
"Calbert Cheaney",
"Indiana ( 2 )",
"Indiana",
"SF",
"Senior"
],
[
"1993-94",
"Glenn Robinson",
"Purdue",
"Indiana",
"SF / PF",
"Sophomore"
]
] | {
"intro": "The NABC Player of the Year is an award given annually by the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) to recognize the top player in men's college basketball. The award has been given since the 1974-75 season to National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I basketball players. The association added awards for Division II and Division III players in 1983, and for National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and junior college players in 2008. The awards have previously been sponsored by State Farm Insurance. In Division I, Duke has the most all-time winners with six. Their rival, North Carolina, as well as Kansas are tied for second with four winners. There have been three ties for NABC Player of the Year (2002, 2004, 2006), and only two players have won the award multiple times (Jay Williams and Ralph Sampson). In Division II, Virginia Union has four winners, the most all-time, and is followed by Kentucky Wesleyan which has three. Only one tie has occurred (2006), while three players have won the award more than once (Stan Gouard, Earl Jones, John Smith). In Division III, Potsdam State has the most all-time winners with three, while six other schools are tied for second with two winners apiece. There have been two ties (2007, 2010) and four repeat winners (Leroy Witherspoon, Andrew Olson, Aaron Walton-Moss and Joey Flannery). At the NAIA level, there is a distinction between NAIA Division I and NAIA Division II winners.",
"section_text": "Patrick Ewing is the only winner from Georgetown . Antawn Jamison won in 1997–98 . Adam Morrison shared the award as a junior in 2005–06 .",
"section_title": "Division I Players of the Year",
"title": "NABC Player of the Year",
"uid": "NABC_Player_of_the_Year_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NABC_Player_of_the_Year"
} | 3,601 |
3602 | SI_derived_unit_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Symbol",
"Quantity",
"Expression in terms of SI base units"
],
[
"square metre",
"m",
"area",
"m"
],
[
"cubic metre",
"m",
"volume",
"m"
],
[
"newton second",
"N⋅s",
"momentum , impulse",
"m⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"newton metre second",
"N⋅m⋅s",
"angular momentum",
"m ⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"newton metre",
"N⋅m = J/rad",
"torque , moment of force",
"m ⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"newton per second",
"N/s",
"yank",
"m⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"reciprocal metre",
"m",
"wavenumber , optical power , curvature , spatial frequency",
"m"
],
[
"kilogram per square metre",
"kg/m",
"area density",
"m ⋅kg"
],
[
"kilogram per cubic metre",
"kg/m",
"density , mass density",
"m ⋅kg"
],
[
"cubic metre per kilogram",
"m /kg",
"specific volume",
"m ⋅kg"
],
[
"joule second",
"J⋅s",
"action",
"m ⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"joule per kilogram",
"J/kg",
"specific energy",
"m ⋅s"
],
[
"joule per cubic metre",
"J/m",
"energy density",
"m ⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"newton per metre",
"N/m = J/m",
"surface tension , stiffness",
"kg⋅s"
],
[
"watt per square metre",
"W/m",
"heat flux density , irradiance",
"kg⋅s"
],
[
"square metre per second",
"m /s",
"kinematic viscosity , thermal diffusivity , diffusion coefficient",
"m ⋅s"
],
[
"pascal second",
"Pa⋅s = N⋅s/m",
"dynamic viscosity",
"m ⋅kg⋅s"
],
[
"kilogram per metre",
"kg/m",
"linear mass density",
"m ⋅kg"
],
[
"kilogram per second",
"kg/s",
"mass flow rate",
"kg⋅s"
],
[
"watt per steradian square metre",
"W/ ( sr⋅m )",
"radiance",
"kg⋅s"
]
] | {
"intro": "SI derived units are units of measurement derived from the seven base units specified by the International System of Units (SI). They are either dimensionless or can be expressed as a product of one or more of the base units, possibly scaled by an appropriate power of exponentiation. The SI has special names for 22 of these derived units (for example, hertz, the SI unit of measurement of frequency), but the rest merely reflect their derivation: for example, the square metre (m2), the SI derived unit of area; and the kilogram per cubic metre (kg/m3 or kg⋅m−3), the SI derived unit of density. The names of SI derived units, when written in full, are always in lowercase. However, the symbols for units named after persons are written with an uppercase initial letter. For example, the symbol for hertz is Hz, but the symbol for metre is m.",
"section_text": "Kinematic SI derived units Name Symbol Quantity Expression in terms of SI base units metre per second m/s speed , velocity m⋅s metre per second squared m/s acceleration m⋅s metre per second cubed m/s jerk , jolt m⋅s metre per second to the fourth m/s snap , jounce m⋅s radian per second rad/s angular velocity s radian per second squared rad/s angular acceleration s hertz per second Hz/s frequency drift s cubic metre per second m/s volumetric flow m⋅s",
"section_title": "Examples of derived quantities and units",
"title": "SI derived unit",
"uid": "SI_derived_unit_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SI_derived_unit"
} | 3,602 |
3603 | Gotham_City_Police_Department_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Title",
"Medium",
"Note ( s )"
],
[
"David Cornwell",
"Police lieutenant , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Commander of the second ( night ) shift , successor of deceased Lt. Probson"
],
[
"Josh Azeveda",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Trey Hartley"
],
[
"Joely Joe Bartlett",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Vincent Del Arrazzio"
],
[
"Harvey Bullock",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Detective Comics",
"Restored to duty under severe scrutiny"
],
[
"Thomas Tommy Burke",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Dagmar Procjnow"
],
[
"Romy Chandler",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Takahata"
],
[
"Eric Cohen",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Andi Kasinsky"
],
[
"Nelson Crowe",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Jackson Davies"
],
[
"Jackson Sarge Davies",
"Detective sergeant , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Nelson Crowe"
],
[
"Vincent Del Arrazzio",
"Detective sergeant , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Joely Bartlett . Associate of the Huntress"
],
[
"Marcus Driver",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Josephine MacDonald"
],
[
"Nicholas St. Nick Gage",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"",
"Gotham PD 's newest recruit who has just transferred from Coast City Police Department . He is a supporting character of Batgirl VI"
],
[
"Trey Hartley",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Josh Azeveda"
],
[
"Andi Kasinsky",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Eric Cohen"
],
[
"Josephine Josie Mac MacDonald",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Marcus Driver . Possesses the psychic ability to find lost people and objects"
],
[
"Renee Montoya",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Detective Comics",
"Pre-Flashpoint , partnered with Crispus Allen and resigned after his death and became the Question . Retconned and re-introduced as Harvey Bullock 's new partner in the New 52"
],
[
"Dagmar Dag Procjnow",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Thomas Burke"
],
[
"Detective Takahata",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Gotham Central comics",
"Partnered with Romy Chandler"
],
[
"Roman Cavallo",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Red Robin comics",
"Partnered with Marcus Wise . Is corrupt"
],
[
"Marcus Wise",
"Detective , Major Crimes Unit",
"Red Robin comics",
"Partnered with Roman Cavallo . Is corrupt"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Gotham City Police Department (GCPD) is a fictional police department appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Led by Commissioner Gordon, the GCPD services Gotham City and is typically depicted in stories featuring the superhero Batman.",
"section_text": "Major Crimes Unit : Led by Capt . Maggie Sawyer , who previously served in Metropolis in a similar position with that city 's police , the MCU deals with the most serious crimes , often involving supervillains or politically sensitive cases . This division is the focus of the comic book series Gotham Central .",
"section_title": "Divisions and personnel -- Major Crimes Unit",
"title": "Gotham City Police Department",
"uid": "Gotham_City_Police_Department_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotham_City_Police_Department"
} | 3,603 |
3604 | Order_of_battle_for_Convoy_PQ_17_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Class",
"1st departure",
"2nd departure"
],
[
"Tirpitz",
"Bismarck -class battleship",
"2 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Admiral Hipper",
"Admiral Hipper -class cruiser",
"2 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z14 Friedrich Ihn",
"Type 1934A destroyer",
"2 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z10 Hans Lody",
"Type 1934A destroyer",
"2 July 1942",
"N/A"
],
[
"Z20 Karl Galster",
"Type 1936 destroyer",
"2 July 1942",
"N/A"
],
[
"Z06 Z6 Theodor Riedel",
"Type 1934A destroyer",
"2 July 1942",
"N/A"
],
[
"Z04 Z4 Richard Beitzen",
"Type 1934 destroyer",
"?",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"T07 T7",
"Type 35 torpedo boat",
"2 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"T15",
"Type 37 torpedo boat",
"2 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Lützow",
"Deutschland -class cruiser",
"3 July 1942",
"N/A"
],
[
"Admiral Scheer",
"Deutschland -class cruiser",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z24",
"Type 1936A destroyer",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z27",
"Type 1936A destroyer",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z28",
"Type 1936A destroyer",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z29",
"Type 1936A destroyer",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Z30",
"Type 1936A destroyer",
"3 July 1942",
"5 July 1942"
],
[
"Dithmarschen",
"Oiler",
"3 July 1942",
"N/A"
]
] | {
"intro": "Convoy PQ 17 was the penultimate of the PQ/QP series of arctic convoys, bound from British ports through the Arctic Ocean via Reykjavík to the White Sea ports of the Soviet Union, particularly Murmansk and Archangel. The convoy was heavily defended, but fearing an imminent attack by substantial German surface forces, the Admiralty made the decision to disperse the convoy. The convoy comprised 35 merchant ships and 6 naval auxiliaries (41 in all) and was defended by a close escort and two distant escort forces, 43 warships in total. It was opposed by a U-boat group, Eisteufel, of first 6, then 8 U-boats, and a surface attack force of 16 warships, in two battle groups. This operation was code-named Rösselsprung. These were assisted by the 234 aircraft of Luftflotte 5. Before the convoy dispersed, three ships had been lost. After it scattered each ship began its individual journey to the Russian ports. Some ships took refuge along the frozen coast of Novaya Zemlya, landing at Matochkin. The Soviet tanker Azerbaijan had lost her cargo of linseed oil, and much of SS Winston-Salem's cargo had also been jettisoned in Novaya Zemlya. Of the forty-one ships which left Iceland, three were forced to return, and twenty-four were sunk. Ten merchant ships (one British, six American, one Panamanian and two Russian) and four auxiliaries reached Archangel, and delivered 70,000 tons out of the 200,000 which had started from Iceland.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Axis forces -- Surface ships",
"title": "Order of battle for Convoy PQ 17",
"uid": "Order_of_battle_for_Convoy_PQ_17_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_battle_for_Convoy_PQ_17"
} | 3,604 |
3605 | Tiffany_Cross_Medal_of_Honor_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Service",
"Date of action",
"Combat",
"Action"
],
[
"Osmond K. Ingram †",
"Navy",
"15 October 1917",
"Yes",
"Ingram was killed while attempting to release depth charges in the face of an oncoming torpedo . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . His action meets the actual conflict criterion . Osmond K. Ingram 's Tiffany Cross medal , and other military decorations , are part of the collection of the Birmingham , AL Museum of Art"
],
[
"Alexander G. Lyle",
"Navy , Dental Corps",
"23 April 1918",
"Yes",
"Lyle exposed himself to hostile fire to treat a wounded man . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . He has a museum display , and meets the actual conflict criterion . There is a photo of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"Daniel A. J. Sullivan",
"Naval Reserve",
"21 May 1918",
"Yes",
"Sullivan secured a group of live depth charges . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . He meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"Edouard V. M. Izac",
"Navy",
"21 May 1918",
"Yes",
"Izac gathered intelligence while a prisoner of war ; he then escaped and brought the information to the Allies . There is a photograph of his medal 's engraving"
],
[
"Ernest A. Janson",
"Marine Corps",
"6 June 1918",
"Yes",
"Janson single-handedly attacked and dispersed a machine gun detachment . He meets the actual conflict criterion . Janson also received the Army version of the Medal of Honor for the same action . There is a photograph of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"Weedon E. Osborne †",
"Navy , Dental Corps",
"6 June 1918",
"Yes",
"Osborne was killed while rescuing wounded men from under heavy fire . There is a museum display of his medal . The Tiffany Cross medal recovered by the FBI is clearly a replica Tiffany Cross ( the casting is poor quality and the engraving is the incorrect style )"
],
[
"Orlando H. Petty",
"Naval Reserve , Medical Corps",
"11 June 1918",
"Yes",
"Petty tended the wounded despite artillery and gas attacks , even after his gas mask was rendered useless . There is a photograph of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"Louis Cukela",
"Marine Corps",
"18 July 1918",
"Yes",
"Cukela single-handedly attacked and captured a German strongpoint . There is a photograph of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"Matej Kocak †",
"Marine Corps",
"18 July 1918",
"Yes",
"Kocak single-handedly silenced a machine gun nest and led a successful attack on a second nest . He meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"Joel T. Boone",
"Navy , Medical Corps",
"19 July 1918",
"Yes",
"Boone exposed himself to intense fire in order to treat the wounded and bring in supplies . There is a photograph of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"Charles H. Hammann",
"Navy",
"21 August 1918",
"Yes",
"Hammann escued a fellow pilot who had been shot down . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . He meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"David E. Hayden",
"Navy",
"15 September 1918",
"Yes",
"Hayden reached a wounded man , treated him , and carried him to safety despite intense fire . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . There is a museum display of his medal , and he meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"John J. Kelly",
"Marine Corps",
"3 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Kelly single-handedly attacked a machine gun nest under an artillery barrage . There is a painting of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross , and there is a museum display of his medal"
],
[
"John H. Pruitt †",
"Marine Corps",
"3 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Pruitt single-handedly captured two machine guns and forty prisoners . There is a museum display of his medal , and he meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"James J. Madison",
"Naval Reserve",
"4 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Madison continued to lead his ship after being severely wounded during a U-boat attack . There is a photograph of the recipient wearing his Tiffany Cross"
],
[
"John H. Balch",
"Naval Reserve",
"5 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Balch exposed himself to intense fire in order to treat the wounded and establish a dressing station . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . He has a museum display of his medal , and he meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"Robert G. Robinson",
"Marine Corps",
"14 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Robinson continued to fire his weapon after being severely wounded in an aerial battle against twelve German planes . There is a photograph of his medal 's engraving , and museum display of the medal"
],
[
"Ralph Talbot †",
"Marine Corps",
"14 October 1918",
"Yes",
"Talbot , with gunner Robert G. Robinson , shot down one plane in an aerial battle against twelve German aircraft . He is one of thirteen recipients receiving the Tiffany Cross from a single Department of the Navy announcement issued 11 November 1920 , many of whom present photographic evidence . There is a museum display of his medal , and he meets the actual conflict criterion"
],
[
"John O. Siegel",
"Navy",
"1 November 1918",
"No",
"Seigel rescued two men from a burning vessel before being trapped and collapsing from the smoke . There is a museum display of his medal"
],
[
"Floyd Bennett",
"Navy",
"9 May 1926",
"No",
"Bennett 's award is for his part in what was thought to be the first successful heavier-than-air flight to the North Pole and back . There is a photograph of the recipient receiving his medal"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Tiffany Cross Medal of Honor arose immediately after World War I, as the US Navy decided to recognize via the Medal of Honor two manners of heroism, one in combat and one in the line of a sailor's profession. The original upside-down star was designated as the non-combat version and a new pattern of the medal pendant, in cross form, was designed by the Tiffany Company in 1919. It was to be presented to a sailor or Marine who in action involving actual conflict with the enemy, distinguish[es] himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty and without detriment to his mission. This pendant became the Tiffany Cross.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Recipients -- List",
"title": "Tiffany Cross Medal of Honor",
"uid": "Tiffany_Cross_Medal_of_Honor_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiffany_Cross_Medal_of_Honor"
} | 3,605 |
3606 | List_of_districts_of_Jammu_and_Kashmir_1 | [
[
"Name of District",
"Headquarters",
"Area ( km² )",
"Population 2001 Census",
"Population 2011 Census"
],
[
"Anantnag District",
"Anantnag",
"3,984",
"734,549",
"1,069,749"
],
[
"Bandipora District",
"Bandipora",
"398",
"316,436",
"385,099"
],
[
"Baramulla district",
"Baramulla",
"4,588",
"853,344",
"1,015,503"
],
[
"Budgam District",
"Budgam",
"1,371",
"629,309",
"755,331"
],
[
"Ganderbal District",
"Ganderbal",
"259",
"211,899",
"297,003"
],
[
"Kulgam District",
"Kulgam",
"1,067",
"437,885",
"423,181"
],
[
"Kupwara District",
"Kupwara",
"2,379",
"650,393",
"875,564"
],
[
"Pulwama District",
"Pulwama",
"1,398",
"441,275",
"570,060"
],
[
"Shopian District",
"Shopian",
"612.87",
"211,332",
"265,960"
],
[
"Srinagar District",
"Srinagar",
"294",
"1,027,670",
"1,236,829"
],
[
"Total",
"10",
"16,351",
"5,514,092",
"6,894,279"
]
] | {
"intro": "Jammu and Kashmir consists of two divisions: Jammu Division and Kashmir Division and is further divided into 20 districts:\n This excludes the Pakistani administered region of Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (13,297 km2). The remaining 42,241 km2 is administered by India.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Districts -- Kashmir Division",
"title": "List of districts of Jammu and Kashmir",
"uid": "List_of_districts_of_Jammu_and_Kashmir_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_districts_of_Jammu_and_Kashmir"
} | 3,606 |
3607 | 2013_Canadian_Soccer_League_season_0 | [
[
"Team",
"City",
"Stadium",
"Manager"
],
[
"Astros Vasas FC",
"Toronto , ON ( North York )",
"Esther Shiner Stadium",
"László Kiss"
],
[
"Brampton United",
"Brampton , ON ( Bramalea )",
"Victoria Park Stadium",
"Juan Barreto"
],
[
"Burlington SC",
"Burlington , ON",
"Nelson Stadium",
"William Etchu Tabi"
],
[
"Kingston FC",
"Kingston , ON",
"Queens West Field",
"Colm Muldoon"
],
[
"London City",
"London , ON ( Westmount )",
"Hellenic Com Centre",
"Tomo Dancetovic"
],
[
"Niagara United",
"Niagara Falls , ON",
"Kalar Sports Park",
"James McGillivray"
],
[
"SC Waterloo Region",
"Waterloo , ON",
"Warrior Field",
"Lazo Džepina"
],
[
"Serbian White Eagles",
"Toronto ( Etobicoke )",
"Centennial Park Stadium",
"Uroš Stamatović"
],
[
"St. Catharines Roma Wolves",
"St. Catharines ( Vansickle )",
"Club Roma Park",
"Carlo Arghittu"
],
[
"Toronto Croatia",
"Toronto ( Etobicoke )",
"Centennial Park Stadium",
"Velimir Crljen"
],
[
"Windsor Stars",
"Windsor , ON",
"Windsor Stadium",
"Steve Vagnini"
],
[
"York Region Shooters",
"Vaughan , ON ( Maple )",
"St. Joan of Arc Stadium",
"John Pacione"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Canadian Soccer League season was the 16th since its establishment where a total of 21 teams from Ontario took part in the league. The season began on May 3, 2013, and concluded on November 3, 2013. SC Waterloo captured their first championship in a 3-1 victory over regular season champions Kingston FC in the CSL Championship final at Kalar Sports Park in Niagara, Ontario. Waterloo became the first club to win both the First & Second Division championships in one season. While Toronto Croatia B won the second division regular season title. The 2013 season was a controversial year where the Canadian Soccer Association unexpectedly and immediately de-sanctioned the CSL, which was a member in good standing without due process just two months before the commencement of their season. The CSA`s stated reasons were in order to implement the James Easton Report (Rethink Management Group Report) for the adoption of a new semi-professional soccer structure. In response to the move conducted by the CSA the league appealed to the Sport Dispute Resolution Centre of Canada (SDRCC), where the sport arbitrator ruled that the CSA have the right to de-sanction the CSL, but ruled that the immediate decisions and actions conducted by the CSA were unreasonable and coercive. Which forced the governing body to reinstate sanctioning to the CSL until the next season in order for the CSA to work with all existing leagues to fairly implement the Easton Report. Another controversial moment occurred when before any official CSA or CSL news statement was released the CBC issued an article written by Ben Rycroft which contained only anonymous sources that the CSA decided to no longer sanction the CSL primarily based on the alleged reports of match fixing in the league. During the SDRCC hearing a notable admission was done by CSA president Victor Montagliani, where he stated that the decision to de-sanction the CSL was not made on any alleged grounds of match fixing in the CSL but strictly on the decision made by the CSA board of directors to adopt a new soccer structure in Canada. The aftermath of the sanctioning issue resulted in a decrease in teams in both the first & second divisions as the two MLS academy clubs along with Brantford Galaxy, Mississauga Eagles FC, and SC Toronto left the league after the confusion and damage done by the CSA in their immediate de-sanctioning of the CSL.",
"section_text": "Out of the 12 teams this season , 11 returned from the 2012 season . The only expansion team was Burlington SC . The academy clubs of Toronto FC and Montreal Impact , as well as SC Toronto , quit the league , while two teams - Mississauga Eagles FC and Brantford Galaxy - will skip the current season , but retained their membership and hope to rejoin the league in 2014 . [ 16 ] While North York Astros merged with Toronto Vasas to form Astros Vasas FC .",
"section_title": "First Division -- Teams",
"title": "2013 Canadian Soccer League season",
"uid": "2013_Canadian_Soccer_League_season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Canadian_Soccer_League_season"
} | 3,607 |
3608 | 1969_NFL_Draft_0 | [
[
"Original NFL team",
"Player",
"Pos",
"College",
"Conf"
],
[
"Atlanta Falcons",
"Nate Wright",
"CB",
"San Diego State",
"Ind"
],
[
"Buffalo Bills",
"Robert James",
"CB",
"Fisk",
"SIAC"
],
[
"Buffalo Bills",
"Angelo Loukas",
"G",
"Northwestern",
"Big Ten"
],
[
"Cincinnati Bengals",
"Bruce Coslet",
"TE",
"Pacific",
"Ind . ( Univ . )"
],
[
"Cincinnati Bengals",
"Horst Muhlmann",
"K",
"",
""
],
[
"Dallas Cowboys",
"Otto Brown",
"DB",
"Prairie View A & M",
"SWAC"
],
[
"Dallas Cowboys",
"Reggie Rucker",
"WR",
"Boston",
"Ind . ( Coll . )"
],
[
"Denver Broncos",
"George Burrell",
"S",
"Penn",
"Ivy"
],
[
"Denver Broncos",
"Ken Criter",
"LB",
"Wisconsin",
"Big Ten"
],
[
"Detroit Lions",
"Larry Watkins",
"RB",
"Alcorn State",
"SWAC"
],
[
"Houston Oilers",
"Paul Zaeske",
"WR",
"North Park",
"CCIW"
],
[
"New England Patriots",
"Ron Berger",
"DT / DE",
"Wayne State",
"Ind . ( Coll . )"
],
[
"New Orleans Saints",
"Tom Dempsey",
"K",
"Palomar",
"N/A"
],
[
"New Orleans Saints",
"Steve Preece",
"CB",
"Oregon State",
"Pac-8"
],
[
"Pittsburgh Steelers",
"Bob Adams",
"TE",
"Pacific",
"Ind . ( Univ . )"
],
[
"Pittsburgh Steelers",
"Ed O'Neill",
"DE",
"Youngstown State",
"Ind . ( Coll . )"
],
[
"San Francisco 49ers",
"Wayne Moore",
"OT",
"Lamar",
"Southland"
],
[
"Washington Redskins",
"Curt Knight",
"K",
"Texas",
"SWC"
],
[
"Washington Redskins",
"Ted Vactor",
"S",
"Nebraska",
"Big Eight"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1969 National Football League draft was part of the common draft, the third and final year in which the NFL and American Football League (AFL) held a joint draft of college players. The draft took place January 28-29, 1969. The draft began with first overall pick of O. J. Simpson, the Heisman Trophy-winning running back from USC, by the American Football League's Buffalo Bills; ending with, the twenty-sixth pick in Round 17, number 442 overall, of Fred Zirkie Defensive Tackle from Duke University by the AFL's NY Jets.",
"section_text": "† = Pro Bowler [ 5 ]",
"section_title": "Notable undrafted players",
"title": "1969 NFL/AFL draft",
"uid": "1969_NFL_Draft_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_NFL/AFL_draft"
} | 3,608 |
3609 | Washington_Wizards_draft_history_5 | [
[
"Year",
"Round",
"Pick",
"Name",
"From"
],
[
"1961",
"1",
"1",
"Walt Bellamy",
"Indiana University"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"18",
"Jack Turner",
"University of Louisville"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"19",
"Jerry Graves",
"Mississippi State University"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"20",
"York Larese",
"University of North Carolina"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"21",
"Don Kojis",
"Marquette University"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"22",
"Douglas Moe",
"University of North Carolina"
],
[
"1961",
"2",
"23",
"Jeff Cohen",
"College of William & Mary"
],
[
"1961",
"3",
"32",
"Bill Bridges",
"University of Kansas"
],
[
"1961",
"4",
"41",
"Roger Kaiser",
"Georgia Institute of Technology"
],
[
"1961",
"5",
"50",
"Howie Carl",
"DePaul University"
],
[
"1961",
"6",
"59",
"Dave Voss",
"University of Tulsa"
],
[
"1961",
"7",
"68",
"Ron Heller",
"Wichita State University"
],
[
"1961",
"8",
"76",
"John Wessels",
"University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign"
],
[
"1961",
"9",
"83",
"Steve Strange",
"Southern Methodist University"
],
[
"1961",
"10",
"91",
"Larry Comley",
"Kansas State University"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Washington Wizards (formerly known as the Chicago Packers, the Chicago Zephyrs, the Baltimore Bullets, the Capital Bullets, and the Washington Bullets) have selected the following players in the National Basketball Association Draft.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "As Chicago Packers ( 1961 )",
"title": "Washington Wizards draft history",
"uid": "Washington_Wizards_draft_history_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Wizards_draft_history"
} | 3,609 |
3610 | Guerra_de_Titanes_0 | [
[
"Event",
"Date",
"City",
"Venue",
"Main event"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 1997 )",
"December 13 , 1997",
"Madero , Mexico",
"Convention Center",
"Heavy Metal and Perro Aguayo vs. Picudo and Sangre Chicana - Steel Cage Match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 1998 )",
"December 13 , 1998",
"Chihuahua , Chihuahua , Mexico",
"Aguirre Gym",
"Octagón and Heavy Metal vs. Pentagón and Kick Boxer - Steel Cage Match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 1999 )",
"December 10 , 1999",
"Madero , Mexico",
"Convention Center",
"Octagón vs. Jaque Mate - Luchas de Apuestas mask vs. mask match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2000 )",
"December 8 , 2000",
"Madero , Mexico",
"Convention Center",
"Héctor Garza and Latin Lover vs . Heavy Metal and Perro Aguayo Jr. - Extreme Steel Cage Match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2001 )",
"November 23 , 2001",
"Mexico City , Mexico",
"Plaza de Toros",
"Heavy Metal vs. Perro Aguayo Jr. vs. Héctor Garza vs. Latin Lover - Luchas de Apuestas loser loses his hair elimination match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2002 )",
"November 15 , 2002",
"Veracruz , Mexico",
"El Toreo",
"El Alebrije , Máscara Sagráda , La Parka and Octagón vs. Abismo Negro , Cibernético , the Monsther and Leatherface"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2003 )",
"November 30 , 2003",
"Naucalpan , Mexico",
"El Toreo",
"Latin Lover and Michael Shane vs. David Young and Mr. Águila in the Televisa Tag Team Tournament final"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2004 )",
"December 5 , 2004",
"Naucalpan , Mexico",
"El Toreo",
"Cibernético and La Parka vs. La Legión Extranjera ( Konnan and Rikishi )"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2005 )",
"December 10 , 2005",
"Guadalajara , Jalisco , Mexico",
"Plaza de Toros Nuevo Progreso",
"Abismo Negro , Latin Lover and La Parka vs. La Secta Cibernetica ( Cibernético , Dark Cuervo and Dark Escoria )"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2006 )",
"December 8 , 2006",
"Madero , Mexico",
"Convention Center",
"Cibernético vs. Muerte Cibernetica with Konnan as special guest referee - extreme coffin match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2007 )",
"November 20 , 2007",
"Madero , Mexico",
"Convention Center",
"El Mesias vs. Cibernético vs. El Zorro for the AAA Mega Championship"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2008 )",
"December 6 , 2008",
"Orizaba , Mexico",
"Plaza de Toros La Concordia",
"Pirata Morgan vs. Electroshock vs. Super Fly vs. Brazo de Plata vs. El Brazo vs. El Elegido - Steel Cage Match Luchas de Apuestas"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2009 )",
"December 11 , 2009",
"Ciudad Madero , Tamaulipas",
"El Centro de Convenciones",
"Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. El Mesias - Domo De La Muerte cage match for the AAA Mega Championship"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2010 )",
"December 5 , 2010",
"Zapopan , Jalisco",
"Auditorio Benito Juárez",
"Los Perros del Mal ( Damián 666 , Halloween and X-Fly ) vs. Los Psycho Circus ( Psycho Clown , Monster Clown and Murder Clown ) - Steel cage weapons match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2011 )",
"December 16 , 2011",
"Puebla , Puebla",
"Estadio Hermanos Serdán",
"Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. L.A. Park for the AAA Latin American Championship"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2012 )",
"December 2 , 2012",
"Zapopan , Jalisco",
"Auditorio Benito Juárez",
"Chessman vs. Cibernético vs. Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. L.A. Park vs. El Hijo del Perro Aguayo vs. Vampiro - Steel cage Lucha de Apuestas hairs vs. masks match"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2013 )",
"December 8 , 2013",
"Tepic , Nayarit",
"Auditorio de la Gente",
"Daga , Jeff Jarrett , La Parka Negra and Psicosis vs. Cibernético , El Hijo del Perro Aguayo , El Mesías and La Parka"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2014 )",
"December 7 , 2014",
"Zapopan , Jalisco",
"Auditorio Benito Juarez",
"El Texano Jr. vs. El Patrón Alberto for the AAA Mega Championship"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2016 )",
"January 22 , 2016",
"Mexico City , Mexico",
"Gimnasio Juan de la Barrera",
"El Mesías and El Texano Jr. vs. Dr. Wagner Jr. and Psycho Clown"
],
[
"Guerra de Titanes ( 2017 )",
"January 20 , 2017",
"Mexico City , Mexico",
"Gimnasio Juan de la Barrera",
"Johnny Mundo ( c ) vs. Pentagón Jr. for the AAA Latin American Championship"
]
] | {
"intro": "Guerra de Titanes (Spanish for War of the Titans) is a major annual professional wrestling event in Mexico promoted by the Lucha Libre AAA World Wide (AAA) promotion. The show is the End of year show and is traditionally held in December with a few exceptions. The first show was held in 1997 and since then fifteen events have been held, the more recent ones presented on pay-per-view while the early shows were shown as television specials on the Televisa channel.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Dates , venues , and main events",
"title": "Guerra de Titanes",
"uid": "Guerra_de_Titanes_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerra_de_Titanes"
} | 3,610 |
3611 | 2012_Malaysia_Super_League_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Coach",
"Captain",
"Kit manufacturer",
"Shirt sponsor"
],
[
"Felda United",
"E. Elavarasan",
"Mohd Hamsani Ahmad",
"Kappa",
"FELDA Holdings"
],
[
"Johor FC",
"Sazali Saidon",
"Khairul Ismail",
"Promade",
"Kulim ( Malaysia ) Berhad"
],
[
"Kedah",
"Marijo Tot",
"Baddrol Bakhtiar",
"Line 7",
"PKNK"
],
[
"Kelantan",
"Bojan Hodak",
"Mohd Badri Mohd Radzi",
"Umbro",
"Happy Prepaid"
],
[
"Kuala Lumpur",
"Razip Ismail",
"Mohd Aslam Haja Najmudeen",
"Kronos",
"Kronos"
],
[
"Negeri Sembilan",
"Mohd Azraai Khor Abdullah",
"Muhammad Shukor Adan",
"Lotto",
"Negeri Roadstone Sdn Bhd"
],
[
"T-Team",
"Yunus Alif",
"Rosdi Talib",
"Admiral",
"Admiral"
],
[
"Perak",
"Jang Jung",
"Shahrulnizam Mustapa",
"Kika",
"Majlis Bandaraya Ipoh"
],
[
"PKNS",
"Abdul Rahman Ibrahim",
"Mohd Fadhil Mohd Hashim",
"Lotto",
"PKNS"
],
[
"Sabah",
"David McCreery",
"Hendrik Helmke",
"Adidas",
"Grace One"
],
[
"Sarawak",
"Robert Alberts",
"Guy Bwele",
"StarSport",
"Naim"
],
[
"Selangor",
"Irfan Bakti Abu Salim",
"Mohd Amri Yahyah",
"Kappa",
"Menteri Besar Incorporated"
],
[
"LionsXII",
"V. Sundramoorthy",
"Shahril Ishak",
"Nike",
"StarHub"
],
[
"Terengganu",
"Peter James Butler",
"Mohd Marzuki Yusof",
"SPECS",
"Top IT"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2012 Liga Super (English: 2012 Super League) also known as the Astro Liga Super for sponsorship reasons is the ninth season of the Liga Super, the top-tier professional football league in Malaysia. The season was held from 10 January and concluded in 14 July 2012. The Liga Super champions for 2012 was Kelantan.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Team summaries -- Personnel and sponsoring",
"title": "2012 Malaysia Super League",
"uid": "2012_Malaysia_Super_League_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Malaysia_Super_League"
} | 3,611 |
3612 | List_of_Benedictine_colleges_and_universities_0 | [
[
"School",
"City",
"State",
"Enrollment",
"Founded"
],
[
"Belmont Abbey College",
"Belmont",
"North Carolina",
"1,320",
"1876"
],
[
"Benedictine College",
"Atchison",
"Kansas",
"1,855",
"1858"
],
[
"Benedictine University",
"Lisle",
"Illinois",
"6,857",
"1887"
],
[
"Benedictine University at Mesa",
"Mesa",
"Arizona",
"300",
"2013"
],
[
"Benedictine University at Springfield",
"Springfield",
"Illinois",
"981",
"1929"
],
[
"Conception Seminary College",
"Conception",
"Missouri",
"108",
"1886"
],
[
"University of Mary",
"Bismarck",
"North Dakota",
"2,900",
"1959"
],
[
"Mount Marty College",
"Yankton",
"South Dakota",
"1,100",
"1936"
],
[
"Saint Anselm College",
"Goffstown",
"New Hampshire",
"2,000",
"1889"
],
[
"College of Saint Benedict",
"St. Joseph",
"Minnesota",
"2,042",
"1913"
],
[
"Saint Gregory 's University",
"Shawnee",
"Oklahoma",
"800",
"1875"
],
[
"Saint John 's University",
"Collegeville",
"Minnesota",
"1,886",
"1857"
],
[
"Saint Joseph Seminary College",
"Covington",
"Louisiana",
"171",
"1889"
],
[
"Saint Leo University",
"Saint Leo",
"Florida",
"1,628",
"1889"
],
[
"Saint Martin 's University",
"Lacey",
"Washington",
"1,650",
"1895"
],
[
"Saint Meinrad Seminary & School of Theology",
"St. Meinrad",
"Indiana",
"252",
"1854"
],
[
"College of St. Scholastica",
"Duluth",
"Minnesota",
"3,309",
"1912"
],
[
"Saint Vincent College",
"Latrobe",
"Pennsylvania",
"1,848",
"1846"
],
[
"Thomas More University",
"Crestview Hills",
"Kentucky",
"1,500",
"1921"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of colleges and universities founded or operated by the Order of Saint Benedict of the Roman Catholic Church within the United States. There are Orders of Saint Benedict in the Anglican Church and the Orthodox Church but neither operate colleges in the United States.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Institutions",
"title": "List of Benedictine colleges and universities",
"uid": "List_of_Benedictine_colleges_and_universities_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Benedictine_colleges_and_universities"
} | 3,612 |
3613 | List_of_U.S._Air_Force_Test_Pilot_School_alumni_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Service",
"Rank",
"Class",
"Notable events"
],
[
"James A. Abrahamson",
"USAF",
"O-09 Lt. General",
"1966-02 66B , MOL",
"Strategic Defense Initiative director"
],
[
"Spence M. Armstrong",
"USAF",
"O-09 Lt. General",
"1964-03 64C",
"Vice commander Air Force Systems Command , senior advisor to the NASA administrator"
],
[
"Eugene P. Deatrick",
"USAF",
"O-06 Colonel",
"1951-01 51A , 53C",
"TPS Commandant . Rescue of Navy Lt. Dieter Dengler"
],
[
"Gabby Gabreski",
"USAF",
"O-06 Colonel",
"1951-01 45G",
"Top American fighter ace in Europe during World War II"
],
[
"Robert T. Herres",
"USAF",
"O-10 General",
"1966-02 66B , MOL",
"Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff"
],
[
"Donald J. Kutyna",
"USAF",
"O-10 General",
"1965-03 65C",
"North American Aerospace Defense Command"
],
[
"John M. Loh",
"USAF",
"O-10 General",
"1967-02 67B",
"Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force"
],
[
"Ronald W. Yates",
"USAF",
"O-10 General",
"1966-02 66B",
"Air Force Materiel Command"
]
] | {
"intro": "The U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School (TPS) graduated the following notable alumni who made significant contributions to the aerospace field. The school's mission is to produce experimental test pilots, flight test engineers, and flight test navigators to lead and conduct test and evaluation of aerospace weapon systems. The school was established on September 9, 1944, as the Flight Test Training Unit at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (AFB) in Dayton, Ohio. To take advantage of the uncongested skies and superb flying weather, the school was moved on February 4, 1951, to its present location at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert of Southern California. Edwards AFB is the home of the Air Force Flight Test Center and has been an integral part of flight testing for over fifty years. Between 1962 and 1972, the Test Pilot School expanded its role to include astronaut training for military test pilots. Thirty-seven TPS graduates of this era were selected for the U.S. space program, and twenty-six went on to earn astronaut's wings by flying in the X-15, Gemini, Apollo, and Space Shuttle programs. Although the school no longer trains astronauts, many TPS graduates since 1972 have been selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for duties in space. The school encourages applications from civilians, personnel from other U.S. military services, and individuals from foreign countries. An exchange program allows selected students to attend other test pilot schools including the United States Naval Test Pilot School, the United Kingdom's Empire Test Pilots' School, and France's EPNER.",
"section_text": "Gen. Robert T. Herres , USAF , Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff",
"section_title": "Famous alumni -- Military commanders",
"title": "List of U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School alumni",
"uid": "List_of_U.S._Air_Force_Test_Pilot_School_alumni_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._Air_Force_Test_Pilot_School_alumni"
} | 3,613 |
3614 | Basketball_League_of_Serbia_B_0 | [
[
"Team",
"City",
"Arena",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Beovuk 72",
"Belgrade",
"SC Šumice",
"2,000"
],
[
"Fair Play",
"Niš",
"Dušan Radović School Hall",
""
],
[
"Konstantin",
"Niš",
"Čair Sports Center",
"4,000"
],
[
"Mladost SP",
"Smederevska Palanka",
"Vuk Karadžić School Hall",
"500"
],
[
"Pirot",
"Pirot",
"Pirot Kej Hall",
"835"
],
[
"Proleter Naftagas",
"Zrenjanin",
"Crystal Hall",
"3,000"
],
[
"Radnički Beograd",
"Belgrade",
"SC Šumice",
"1,000"
],
[
"Radnički Kragujevac",
"Kragujevac",
"Jezero Hall",
"3,750"
],
[
"Sloga",
"Kraljevo",
"Kraljevo Sports Hall",
"3,350"
],
[
"Spartak",
"Subotica",
"SC Dudova Šuma",
"3,000"
],
[
"Sveti Đorđe",
"Žitište",
"Nikola Tesla School Hall",
""
],
[
"Zdravlje",
"Leskovac",
"SRC Dubočica",
"3,600"
],
[
"Zemun Fitofarmacija",
"Belgrade",
"Pinki Hall",
"5,000"
],
[
"Železničar",
"Čačak",
"Borac Hall",
"4,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "Second Men's League of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: Друга мушка лига Србије), previously Basketball League of Serbia B, is the second-tier level men's professional basketball league in Serbia. It was founded in 2006.",
"section_text": "Main article : 2019–20 Second Men 's League of Serbia ( basketball ) BelgradeSpartakSv . ĐorđeProleterSlogaRadnički KGPirotŽelezničarMladostZdravljeFair PlayKonstantinBelgrade clubs : Beovuk 72ZemunRadnički BG Location of teams in the 2019–20 season",
"section_title": "Current clubs",
"title": "Basketball League of Serbia B",
"uid": "Basketball_League_of_Serbia_B_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball_League_of_Serbia_B"
} | 3,614 |
3615 | John_Cahill_Medal_1 | [
[
"Recipients",
"Medals",
"Seasons"
],
[
"Russell Ebert",
"6",
"1971 , 1972 , 1974 , 1976 , 1977 , 1981"
],
[
"John Cahill",
"4",
"1966 , 1968 , 1970 , 1973"
],
[
"Kane Cornes",
"4",
"2007 , 2008 , 2010 , 2012"
],
[
"Geof Motley",
"4",
"1958 , 1959 , 1963 , 1965"
],
[
"Harry Phillips",
"4",
"1888 , 1891 , 1892 , 1893"
],
[
"Jeff Potter",
"4",
"1961 , 1964 , 1967 , 1969"
],
[
"Bob Quinn",
"4",
"1937 , 1938 , 1945 , 1947"
],
[
"Warren Tredrea",
"4",
"2001 , 2004 , 2005 , 2009"
],
[
"Craig Bradley",
"3",
"1982 , 1984 , 1985"
],
[
"Stephen Clifford",
"3",
"1978 , 1980 , 1983"
],
[
"Les Dayman",
"3",
"1923 , 1924 , 1928"
],
[
"Robbie Gray",
"3",
"2014 , 2015 , 2016"
],
[
"Dick Russell",
"3",
"1948 , 1949 , 1951"
],
[
"Thomas Smith",
"3",
"1877 , 1888 , 1889"
],
[
"Charlie Adams",
"2",
"1920 , 1921"
],
[
"Jack Ashley",
"2",
"1914 , 1919"
],
[
"Travis Boak",
"2",
"2011 , 2019"
],
[
"Lewis Corston",
"2",
"1902 , 1904"
],
[
"Jack Dermody",
"2",
"1933 , 1935"
],
[
"Sinclair Dickson",
"2",
"1908 , 1909"
]
] | {
"intro": "The John Cahill Medal, named after the Port Adelaide Football Club's ten time premiership coach and inaugural AFL coach John Cahill, is awarded to the club player adjudged best and fairest for the season. The voting system as of the 2017 AFL season, consists of each member of the coaching committee giving each player a ranking from zero to five after each match.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Multiple winners",
"title": "John Cahill Medal",
"uid": "John_Cahill_Medal_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cahill_Medal"
} | 3,615 |
3616 | List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)_18 | [
[
"Call letters",
"Channel",
"Network ( s )",
"City and state",
"Meaning or notes"
],
[
"KSAN-TV",
"16 PSIP/cable 3",
"NBC",
"San Angelo , Texas",
"SAN Angelo"
],
[
"KSAS-TV",
"26 PSIP 24",
"Fox",
"Wichita , Kansas",
""
],
[
"KSAT-TV",
"12 PSIP 12",
"12.1 ABC 12.2 MeTV",
"San Antonio , Texas",
"S an A ntonio , T exas"
],
[
"KSAX",
"24 PSIP 42",
"ABC",
"Alexandria , Minnesota",
"From affiliated station KS TP ( of which station is satellite ) and A le x andria"
],
[
"KSAZ-TV",
"10 PSIP 10",
"Fox",
"Phoenix , Arizona",
"S pirit of A ri z ona ( former station slogan )"
],
[
"KSBI",
"23 PSIP 52",
"MyNetworkTV",
"Oklahoma City , Oklahoma",
""
],
[
"KSBW",
"8 PSIP 8",
"8.1 NBC 8.2 ABC",
"Salinas , California",
"S alad B owl of the W orld"
],
[
"KSBY",
"15 PSIP/cable 6",
"NBC",
"San Luis Obispo , California",
""
],
[
"KSCC",
"38 PSIP 38",
"Fox",
"Corpus Christi , Texas",
""
],
[
"KSCE",
"21 PSIP 38",
"religious",
"El Paso , Texas",
""
],
[
"KSCI",
"18 PSIP 18",
"ethnic/independent",
"Long Beach , California",
""
],
[
"KSCW-DT",
"12 PSIP 33",
"The CW",
"Wichita , Kansas",
"KS ( abbreviation for Kansas ) CW"
],
[
"KSDK",
"35 PSIP/cable 5",
"NBC",
"St. Louis , Missouri",
""
],
[
"KSEE",
"38 PSIP 24",
"NBC",
"Fresno , California",
"( pronounce K - see )"
],
[
"KSFY-TV",
"13 PSIP 13",
"13.1 ABC 13.2 The CW",
"Sioux Falls , South Dakota",
""
],
[
"KSGW-TV",
"13 PSIP 12",
"ABC",
"Sheridan , Wyoming",
"S heridan and G illette W yoming - Satellite of KHME Rapid City , South Dakota"
],
[
"KSHB-TV",
"36 PSIP 41",
"NBC",
"Kansas City , Missouri",
"S cripps H oward B roadcasting ( owner )"
],
[
"KSHV-TV",
"16 PSIP 45",
"MyNetworkTV",
"Shreveport , Louisiana",
"SH re v eport"
],
[
"KSIN-TV",
"28 PSIP 27",
"PBS",
"Sioux City , Iowa",
""
],
[
"KSIX-TV",
"25 PSIP 6",
"The Family Channel",
"Kailua Kona , Hawaii",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of full-power television stations in the United States having call signs beginning with the letter K. Low-power TV stations, those with designations such as KAGN-LP or K11XQ, have not been included in this list. See also the list of TV stations beginning with W and the list of TV stations beginning with X.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "KS",
"title": "List of television stations in the United States by call sign (initial letter K)",
"uid": "List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)_18",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)"
} | 3,616 |
3617 | Canada_at_the_2008_Summer_Olympics_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Carol Huynh",
"Wrestling",
"Women 's freestyle 48 kg"
],
[
"Gold",
"Andrew Byrnes Kyle Hamilton Malcolm Howard Adam Kreek Kevin Light Brian Price ( cox ) Ben Rutledge Dominic Sieterle Jake Wetzel",
"Rowing",
"Men 's eight"
],
[
"Gold",
"Eric Lamaze",
"Equestrian",
"Individual jumping"
],
[
"Silver",
"David Calder Scott Frandsen",
"Rowing",
"Men 's coxless pair"
],
[
"Silver",
"Karen Cockburn",
"Gymnastics",
"Women 's trampoline"
],
[
"Silver",
"Mac Cone Jill Henselwood Eric Lamaze Ian Millar",
"Equestrian",
"Team jumping"
],
[
"Silver",
"Simon Whitfield",
"Triathlon",
"Men 's event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Jason Burnett",
"Gymnastics",
"Men 's trampoline"
],
[
"Silver",
"Alexandre Despatie",
"Diving",
"Men 's 3 m springboard"
],
[
"Silver",
"Emilie Heymans",
"Diving",
"Women 's 10 m platform"
],
[
"Silver",
"Karine Sergerie",
"Taekwondo",
"Women 's 67 kg"
],
[
"Silver",
"Adam van Koeverden",
"Canoeing",
"Men 's K-1 500 m"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Tonya Verbeek",
"Wrestling",
"Women 's 55 kg"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Ryan Cochrane",
"Swimming",
"Men 's 1500 m freestyle"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Tracy Cameron Melanie Kok",
"Rowing",
"Women 's lightweight double sculls"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Iain Brambell Liam Parsons Jon Beare Mike Lewis",
"Rowing",
"Men 's lightweight coxless four"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Priscilla Lopes-Schliep",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 100 m hurdles"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Thomas Hall",
"Canoeing",
"Men 's C-1 1000 m"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Dylan Armstrong",
"Athletics",
"Men 's shot put"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Christine Girard",
"Weightlifting",
"Women 's 63 kg"
]
] | {
"intro": "Canada, which is represented by the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC), competed at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, People's Republic of China, from August 8 to 24, 2008. Canadian athletes have competed in every Summer Olympic Games since 1900, except the 1980 Summer Olympics which they boycotted. Canada sent 332 athletes in 25 sports, the seventh largest team at the games and Canada's largest since 1988. Canada did not send a team in handball, volleyball or basketball. Kayaker and 2004 Summer Olympics gold medalist Adam van Koeverden was the flag bearer at the opening ceremonies; Karen Cockburn bore the flag at the closing. The COC had set a goal of finishing in the top 16 in total medals; at the 2004 Summer Olympics, Canada finished 19th. Despite failing to win a single medal in the first week of the Games, Canada would rebound, winning a combined 18 medals in the next 9 days. This 9-day medal haul exceeded the 12 medals Canada won in Athens four years earlier. The country would wind up finishing 19th in gold medals and 14th in total medals in Beijing. Equestrian show jumper Ian Millar competed at his ninth Summer Olympics, tying the record set by Hubert Raudaschl. He has been named to ten straight Olympic teams, but did not compete at the 1980 Summer Olympics due to the Canadian boycott. For the first time, Canadian athletes were paid for medals earned.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Medalists",
"title": "Canada at the 2008 Summer Olympics",
"uid": "Canada_at_the_2008_Summer_Olympics_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_at_the_2008_Summer_Olympics"
} | 3,617 |
3618 | List_of_comic_book_sidekicks_0 | [
[
"Sidekick",
"Full name or Alter-ego",
"Hero",
"First appearance",
"Year"
],
[
"Aquagirl",
"Tula",
"Aquaman",
"Aquaman ( vol . 1 ) # 33 ( May-June 1967 )",
"1967"
],
[
"Aquagirl II",
"Lorena Marquez",
"Aquaman",
"Aquaman ( vol . 6 ) # 16 ( May 2004 )",
"2004"
],
[
"Aqualad",
"Garth",
"Aquaman",
"Adventure Comics # 269 ( February 1960 )",
"1960"
],
[
"Aqualad II",
"Jackson Hyde",
"Aquaman",
"Brightest Day # 4 ( June 2010 )",
"2010"
],
[
"Bat-Girl",
"Mary Elizabeth Bette Kane",
"Batwoman",
"Batman # 139 ( April 1961 )",
"1961"
],
[
"Batgirl II",
"Barbara Gordon",
"Batman",
"Detective Comics # 359 ( January 1967 )",
"1967"
],
[
"Batgirl III",
"Cassandra Cain",
"Batman",
"Legends of the Dark Knight # 120 ( August 1999 )",
"1999"
],
[
"Bluebird",
"Harper Row",
"Batman",
"Batman # 28 ( February 2014 )",
"2014"
],
[
"Snapper Carr",
"Lucas Carr",
"Justice League",
"The Brave and the Bold # 28 ( February-March 1960 )",
"1960"
],
[
"Dan the Dyna-Mite",
"Daniel Dunbar",
"TNT",
"Star-Spangled Comics # 7 ( April 1942 )",
"1942"
],
[
"Doiby Dickles",
"Charles Dickles",
"Green Lantern ( Alan Scott )",
"All-American Comics # 27 ( June 1941 )",
"1941"
],
[
"Fatman",
"Bob Daley",
"Mister America",
"Action Comics # 1 ( June 1938 )",
"1938"
],
[
"Kid Devil",
"Edward Alan Bloomberg",
"Blue Devil",
"Blue Devil # 14 ( July 1985 )",
"1985"
],
[
"Kid Flash",
"Wally West",
"Flash ( Barry Allen )",
"Flash ( vol . 1 ) # 110 ( 1959 )",
"1959"
],
[
"Kid Flash II",
"Bartholomew Bart Allen II",
"Flash ( Wally West )",
"Teen Titans ( vol . 3 ) # 4 ( December 2003 )",
"1994"
],
[
"Kid Flash III",
"Wally West II",
"Flash ( Barry Allen )",
"Flash ( vol . 4 ) Annual # 3 ( June 2014 )",
"2014"
],
[
"Signal",
"Duke Thomas",
"Batman",
"Batman ( vol . 2 ) # 21 ( August 2013 )",
"2016"
],
[
"Lieutenant Marvels",
"Lt . Tall Marvel ( Tall Billy Batson ) Lt . Fat Marvel ( Fat Billy Batson ) Lt. Hill Marvel ( Hill Billy Batson )",
"Captain Marvel ( DC )",
"Whiz Comics # 21 ( September 1941 )",
"1941"
],
[
"Newsboy Legion",
"Tommy Tompkins Big Words Gabby Scrapper",
"Guardian",
"Star Spangled Comics # 7 ( April 1942 )",
"1942"
],
[
"Jimmy Olsen",
"James Bartholomew Olsen",
"Superman",
"Superman # 13 ( November-December 1941 )",
"1941"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of comic book sidekicks - defined as a character who spends a significant amount of time as a superhero's junior partner, or was officially acknowledged as the hero's sidekick for some period of time. (For the purposes of this list, it does not include animal companions like Krypto or Sandman's owls, or supervillain henchmen like The Joker's Harley Quinn.)",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "DC",
"title": "List of comic book sidekicks",
"uid": "List_of_comic_book_sidekicks_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_comic_book_sidekicks"
} | 3,618 |
3619 | List_of_The_Avengers:_Earth's_Mightiest_Heroes_characters_0 | [
[
"Character",
"Voice",
"First appearance",
"Notes"
],
[
"Ant-Man / Giant Man / Yellowjacket / Hank Pym",
"Wally Wingert",
"As Ant-Man in The Man in the Ant Hill As Giant-Man in Breakout , Part 2 As Yellowjacket in Yellowjacket",
"Founding member . Left the team in Ultron-5 ; rejoined in Yellowjacket"
],
[
"Black Panther / T'Challa",
"James C. Mathis III",
"Welcome to Wakanda",
"Joined the team in Panther 's Quest . Left the team in Who Do You Trust ? ; rejoined in Behold ... The Vision . Apparently died in Operation Galactic Storm . Revealed to be alive and rejoined in Live Kree or Die"
],
[
"Captain America / Steve Rogers",
"Brian Bloom",
"Meet Captain America",
"Joined the team in Living Legend . Replaced by a Skrull infiltrator in A Day Unlike Any Other . Freed in Prisoner of War . Rejoined in Secret Invasion . Became team leader in Code Red"
],
[
"Hawkeye / Clint Barton",
"Chris Cox",
"Hulk Versus the World",
"Left S.H.I.E.L.D . in Beware the Widow 's Bite , joined the team in Gamma World , Part 2"
],
[
"Hulk / Bruce Banner",
"Fred Tatasciore ( Hulk ) Gabriel Mann ( Bruce Banner )",
"The Coming of the Hulk",
"Founding member . Banner , who acts as the Hulk 's conscience and gives him advice , agreed to allow the Hulk to remain physically in control of their body in exchange for the Hulk helping the Avengers . Left the team in Some Assembly Required ; rejoined in Gamma World , Part 2 . Arrested by the Hulkbusters in Nightmare in Red ; returned in The Deadliest Man Alive"
],
[
"Iron Man / Tony Stark",
"Eric Loomis",
"Iron Man is Born !",
"Founding member . Team leader . Left the team in Who Do You Trust ? ; rejoined in Secret Invasion ; Stepped down as team leader in Code Red"
],
[
"J.A.R.V.I.S",
"Phil LaMarr",
"Iron Man is Born !",
"Iron Man 's trusty A.I . system integrated into his various armors and the facilities of Stark Industries , as well as the Avengers Mansion"
],
[
"Ms. Marvel / Carol Danvers",
"Jennifer Hale",
"As Carol Danvers in 459 As Ms. Marvel in Welcome to the Kree Empire",
"Joined the team in Welcome to the Kree Empire . Also member of S.W.O.R.D . . Left the team in Who Do You Trust ? ; rejoined in Infiltration"
],
[
"Spider-Man / Peter Parker",
"Drake Bell",
"Along Came a Spider",
"Joined the team as a reserve member in New Avengers . Also founding member of the New Avengers . Josh Keaton , the voice of Spider-Man on The Spectacular Spider-Man , had recorded Spider-Man 's voice in the series , but was re-dubbed by Drake Bell ( who voiced the character in Ultimate Spider-Man )"
],
[
"Thor Odinson",
"Rick D. Wasserman",
"Thor the Mighty",
"Founding member . Separated from the team after A Day Unlike Any Other . Returned in Secret Invasion"
],
[
"Vision",
"Peter Jessop",
"Behold ... The Vision",
"Joined the team in Emperor Stark"
],
[
"Wasp / Janet Van Dyne",
"Colleen O'Shaughnessey",
"The Man in the Ant Hill",
"Founding member"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of characters appearing in the animated television series, The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes. The series itself is based on the fictional comic book superhero team the Avengers published by Marvel Comics.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Avengers",
"title": "List of The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes characters",
"uid": "List_of_The_Avengers:_Earth's_Mightiest_Heroes_characters_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Avengers:_Earth's_Mightiest_Heroes_characters"
} | 3,619 |
3620 | List_of_female_boxers_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Nationality",
"Style"
],
[
"Hanna Gabriel",
"Costa Rica",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Jeannine Garside",
"Canada",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Dawn George",
"USA",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Isra Girgrah",
"Yemen",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Deirdre Gogarty",
"Ireland",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Kavita Goyat",
"India",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Delia Gonzalez",
"USA",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Alesia Graf",
"Belarus",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Gina Guidi",
"USA",
"Boxing"
],
[
"Yenebier Guillen",
"DOM",
"Boxing"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable female boxers. For a list of notable male boxers, see List of male boxers.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "G",
"title": "List of female boxers",
"uid": "List_of_female_boxers_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_female_boxers"
} | 3,620 |
3621 | List_of_Marvelous_Entertainment_games_3 | [
[
"Title",
"Date",
"Developer",
"Region ( s )"
],
[
"Zoo Resort 3D",
"May 2011",
"AQ Interactive",
"JP"
],
[
"Fish Eyes 3D",
"June 2011",
"Marvelous Entertainment",
"JP"
],
[
"Senran Kagura : Shoujotachi no Shinei",
"September 2011",
"Tamsoft",
"JP"
],
[
"Bokujou Monogatari : Hajimari no Daichi / Harvest Moon 3D : A New Beginning",
"February 2012",
"Marvelous Entertainment",
"JP / NA / Pal"
],
[
"Rune Factory 4",
"July 2012",
"Neverland ( company )",
"JP / NA / Pal"
],
[
"Story of Seasons",
"February 2014",
"Marvelous Entertainment",
"JP / NA / Pal"
],
[
"Return to PopoloCrois : A Story of Seasons Fairytale",
"June 2015",
"Epics / Marvelous AQL",
"JP / NA / Pal"
],
[
"Story of Seasons : Trio of Towns",
"June 2016",
"Marvelous Entertainment",
"JP / NA / Pal"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of games by Marvelous Entertainment. This list pertains to games that were published March 31, 2003 onward, after the purchase of Victor Interactive Software was complete. Games published by the privately owned subsidiary Rising Star Games in Europe are also included on this list.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Nintendo 3DS",
"title": "List of Marvelous Entertainment games",
"uid": "List_of_Marvelous_Entertainment_games_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Marvelous_Entertainment_games"
} | 3,621 |
3622 | Payel_Sarkar_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Movie",
"Director",
"Co-stars"
],
[
"2004",
"Sudhu Tumi",
"Abhijit Guha , Sudeshna Roy",
"Prosenjit Chatterjee , Koel Mallick"
],
[
"2006",
"Bibar",
"Subrata Sen",
"Subrat Dutt , Tannistha Chatterjee"
],
[
"2007",
"I Love You",
"Ravi Kinagi",
"Dev"
],
[
"2007",
"F. M. ( Fun Aur Masti )",
"Sekhar Surya",
"R.K. , Satya"
],
[
"2009",
"Cross Connection",
"Abhijit Guha , Sudeshna Roy",
"Ritwik Chakraborty , Abir Chatterjee , Rimjhim Mitra"
],
[
"2009",
"Prem Aamar",
"Raj Chakraborty",
"Soham Chakraborty"
],
[
"2011",
"Le Chakka",
"Raj Chakraborty",
"Dev"
],
[
"2011",
"Jaani Dekha Hobe",
"Birsa Dasgupta",
"Parambrata Chatterjee , Anjan Dutt"
],
[
"2012",
"Le Halua Le",
"Raja Chanda",
"Soham Chakraborty , Hiran Chatterjee"
],
[
"2012",
"Bojhena Shey Bojhena",
"Raj Chakraborty",
"Abir Chatterjee , Soham Chakraborty"
],
[
"2012",
"Bawali Unlimited",
"Sujit Mondal",
"Joy , Sourav Nandi , Dev"
],
[
"2013",
"Golemale Pirit Koro Na",
"Anindya Banerjee",
"Jisshu Sengupta , Ritwick Chakraborty , Kanchan Mullick"
],
[
"2013",
"Asharay Golpo",
"Arindam Chakraborty",
"Abir Chatterjee , Sampurna Lahiri"
],
[
"2014",
"Bangali Babu English Mem",
"Ravi Kinnagi",
"Soham Chakraborty , Mimi Chakraborty"
],
[
"2014",
"Bachchan",
"Raja Chanda",
"Jeet , Aindrita Ray"
],
[
"2014",
"Chatushkon",
"Srijit Mukherji",
"Indrasish Roy , Parambrata Chatterjee , Aparna Sen"
],
[
"2015",
"Ebar Shabor",
"Arindam Sil",
"Abir Chatterjee , Swastika Mukherjee"
],
[
"2015",
"Lorai : Play to Live",
"Parambrata Chatterjee",
"Prosenjit Chatterjee , Indrasish Roy"
],
[
"2015",
"Amanush 2",
"Rajiv Kumar Biswas",
"Soham Chakraborty"
],
[
"2015",
"Jamai 420",
"Ravi Kinagi",
"Soham Chakraborty , Hiran Chatterjee , Ankush Hazra"
]
] | {
"intro": "Payel Sarkar (born 10 February 1981 in Kolkata, India) is an Indian actress who has appeared in Bengali films and Hindi television.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography",
"title": "Payel Sarkar",
"uid": "Payel_Sarkar_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payel_Sarkar"
} | 3,622 |
3623 | 2011_in_Canadian_music_1 | [
[
"Rank",
"Artist",
"Album",
"Peak position",
"Sales",
"Certification"
],
[
"1",
"Adele",
"21",
"1",
"1,270,000",
"Diamond"
],
[
"2",
"Coldplay",
"Mylo Xyloto",
"1",
"240,000",
"3x Platinum"
],
[
"3",
"Pink Floyd",
"Discovery",
"TBA",
"160,000",
"2x Platinum"
],
[
"4",
"Adele",
"Live at the Royal Albert Hall",
"TBA",
"100,000",
"Diamond"
],
[
"5",
"Florence and the Machine",
"Ceremonials",
"4",
"40,000",
"Gold"
],
[
"6",
"Radiohead",
"The King of Limbs",
"5",
"40,000",
"Gold"
],
[
"7",
"Susan Boyle",
"Someone to Watch Over Me",
"6",
"40,000",
"Gold"
],
[
"8",
"George Harrison",
"George Harrison : Living in the Material World",
"TBA",
"20,000",
"2x Platinum"
],
[
"9",
"Jeff Beck",
"Rock ' n ' Roll Party ( Honoring Les Paul )",
"TBA",
"10,000",
"Platinum"
],
[
"10",
"Amy Winehouse",
"Lioness : Hidden Treasures",
"5",
"TBA",
"TBA"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a summary of the year 2011 in the Canadian music industry.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Top hits on record -- Top 10 British albums",
"title": "2011 in Canadian music",
"uid": "2011_in_Canadian_music_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_in_Canadian_music"
} | 3,623 |
3624 | List_of_tallest_hotels_in_the_world_0 | [
[
"Name",
"City",
"Country",
"Height metres / feet",
"Floors",
"Built"
],
[
"Gevora Hotel",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"356.3 metres ( 1,169 ft )",
"75",
"2017"
],
[
"JW Marriott Marquis Dubai",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"355 metres ( 1,165 ft )",
"82",
"2012"
],
[
"Four Seasons Place Kuala Lumpur",
"Kuala Lumpur",
"Malaysia",
"343 metres ( 1,125 ft )",
"65",
"2018"
],
[
"SLS Dubai Hotel and Residences",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"336 metres ( 1,102 ft )",
"78",
"2020"
],
[
"Rose Rayhaan by Rotana",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"333 metres ( 1,093 ft )",
"72",
"2007"
],
[
"Ryugyong Hotel",
"Pyongyang",
"North Korea",
"330 meters ( 1,080 ft )",
"105",
"1990"
],
[
"Burj Al Arab",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"321 metres ( 1,053 ft )",
"60",
"1999"
],
[
"Jumeirah Emirates Towers Hotel",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"309 metres ( 1,014 ft )",
"56",
"2000"
],
[
"Baiyoke Tower II",
"Bangkok",
"Thailand",
"309 metres ( 1,014 ft )",
"84",
"1997"
],
[
"Wuxi Maoye City - Marriott Hotel",
"Wuxi",
"China",
"304 metres ( 997 ft )",
"68",
"2013"
],
[
"Millennium Plaza",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"294 metres ( 965 ft )",
"66",
"2011"
],
[
"The Bahia Grand Panama",
"Panama City",
"Panama",
"284 metres ( 932 ft )",
"70",
"2011"
],
[
"The Cullinan South Tower",
"Hong Kong",
"China",
"270 metres ( 890 ft )",
"68",
"2008"
],
[
"Four Seasons Hotel Manama",
"Manama",
"Bahrain",
"270 metres ( 890 ft )",
"50",
"2014"
],
[
"Radisson Royal Dubai",
"Dubai",
"United Arab Emirates",
"269 metres ( 883 ft )",
"60",
"2010"
],
[
"Grand Lisboa",
"Macau",
"China",
"258 metres ( 846 ft )",
"52",
"2008"
],
[
"Raffles Hotel Jakarta",
"Jakarta",
"Indonesia",
"257 metres ( 843 ft )",
"49",
"2013"
],
[
"Grand Hyatt Kuala Lumpur",
"Kuala Lumpur",
"Malaysia",
"243 metres ( 797 ft )",
"37",
"2012"
],
[
"Sail Tower",
"Jeddah",
"Saudi Arabia",
"240 metres ( 790 ft )",
"64",
"2020"
],
[
"Centara Grand Hotel",
"Bangkok",
"Thailand",
"235 metres ( 771 ft )",
"57",
"2008"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the tallest buildings in the world that are wholly used as hotel. Some tall buildings are multi-use and have a hotel occupying the building's uppermost floors, such hotels are known as the highest hotels in the world. The world's highest hotel is the Rosewood Guangzhou located on the top floors of the 108-story Guangzhou CTF Finance Centre in China, soaring to 530 meters at its highest point.",
"section_text": "This list ranks both completed as well as topped out hotel buildings that stand at least 150 m ( 492 ft ) tall , based on standard height measurement . Gevora Hotel in Dubai , UAE Burj Al Arab , in Dubai , UAE Baiyoke Tower II in Bangkok , Thailand The Cullinan , in Kowloon , Hong Kong Swissôtel The Stamford , in Singapore Grand Lisboa in Macao State Tower in Bangkok , Thailand Centara Grand and Bangkok Convention Centre , in Bangkok , Thailand Westin Peachtree Plaza , Atlanta , Georgia , United States Renaissance Center in Detroit , Michigan , United States",
"section_title": "Completed or topped out",
"title": "List of tallest hotels",
"uid": "List_of_tallest_hotels_in_the_world_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_hotels"
} | 3,624 |
3625 | Orson_Scott_Card_bibliography_14 | [
[
"Title",
"Year",
"Notes"
],
[
"Notes from a Guardian Angel",
"1982",
"LDS fiction"
],
[
"Eye for Eye / Tunesmith",
"1990",
"Tor double novel with Lloyd Biggle , Jr"
],
[
"Magic Mirror",
"1999",
"Children 's book"
],
[
"Robota",
"2003",
"Illustrated book"
],
[
"An Open Book",
"2004",
"Collection of poems"
],
[
"Ultimate Iron Man",
"2005",
"Comic book series"
],
[
"Red Prophet : The Tales Of Alvin Maker",
"2006",
"Comic book series"
],
[
"Wyrms",
"2006",
"Comic book series"
],
[
"The Space Boy",
"2007",
"Young adult novel"
],
[
"Bully and the Beast",
"Planned",
"Young adult novel"
],
[
"Hamlet 's Father",
"2011",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the works of Orson Scott Card. This list does not include criticisms, reviews, or related material written by Card. Orson Scott Card is the author of The Ender saga and Homecoming Saga among many other works.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Other works",
"title": "Orson Scott Card bibliography",
"uid": "Orson_Scott_Card_bibliography_14",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orson_Scott_Card_bibliography"
} | 3,625 |
3626 | American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Horse",
"Trainer",
"Owner"
],
[
"1935",
"Forever Yours",
"Robert McGarvey",
"Milky Way Farm"
],
[
"1934",
"Nellie Flag",
"Bert B. Williams",
"Calumet Farm"
],
[
"1933",
"Mata Hari",
"Clyde Van Dusen",
"Dixiana Farm"
],
[
"1933",
"Bazaar",
"Herbert J. Thompson",
"Edward R. Bradley"
],
[
"1932",
"Happy Gal",
"James Fitzsimmons",
"Belair Stud"
],
[
"1931",
"Top Flight",
"Thomas J. Healey",
"C. V. Whitney"
],
[
"1930",
"Baba Kenny",
"Herbert J. Thompson",
"Edward R. Bradley"
],
[
"1929",
"Alcibiades",
"Walter W. Taylor",
"Hal Price Headley"
],
[
"1928",
"Current",
"Jack Baker",
"Robert Sterling Clark"
],
[
"1927",
"Anita Peabody",
"Bert S. Michell",
"Fannie Hertz"
],
[
"1926",
"Fair Star",
"Carl Utz",
"William duPont Jr"
],
[
"1925",
"Friar 's Carse",
"Gwyn R. Tompkins",
"Glen Riddle Farm"
],
[
"1924",
"Mother Goose",
"Fred Hopkins",
"Harry Payne Whitney"
],
[
"1924",
"Maud Muller",
"Fred Hopkins",
"Harry Payne Whitney"
],
[
"1923",
"Fluvanna",
"Max Hirsch",
"Cary T. Grayson"
],
[
"1922",
"Sally 's Alley",
"Eugene Wayland",
"Willis Sharpe Kilmer"
],
[
"1921",
"Startle",
"John I. Smith",
"Herbert H. Hewitt"
],
[
"1920",
"Careful",
"Eugene Wayland",
"Walter J. Salmon Sr"
],
[
"1920",
"Prudery",
"James G. Rowe Sr",
"Harry Payne Whitney"
],
[
"1919",
"Constancy",
"H. Guy Bedwell",
"J. K. L. Ross"
]
] | {
"intro": "The American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly is an American Thoroughbred horse racing honor awarded annually to a female horse in Thoroughbred flat racing. It became part of the Eclipse Awards program in 1971. The award originated in 1936 when both the Daily Racing Form (DRF) and Turf and Sports Digest (TSD) magazine began naming an annual champion. Starting in 1950, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations (TRA) began naming its own champion. The following list provides the name of the horses chosen by both of these organizations. There were several disagreements, with more than one champion being recognized on seven occasions. The Daily Racing Form, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations, and the National Turf Writers Association all joined forces in 1971 to create the Eclipse Award. In 1978, the voting resulted in a tie between two fillies. Champions from 1887 through 1935 were selected retrospectively by a panel of experts as published by The Blood-Horse magazine.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Honorees -- The Blood-Horse retrospective champions",
"title": "American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly",
"uid": "American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly"
} | 3,626 |
3627 | Charles_Gwathmey_0 | [
[
"Building/Project",
"Location",
"Country",
"Date"
],
[
"Robert Gwathmey Residence",
"Amagansett , New York",
"United States",
"1965"
],
[
"Straus Residence",
"Purchase , New York",
"United States",
"1966"
],
[
"Joseph Sedacca Residence",
"Northwest Harbor , New York",
"United States",
"1968"
],
[
"The Jack D. and Barbara Weiss Goldberg Residence",
"Manchester , CT",
"United States",
"1969"
],
[
"Cooper Residence",
"Orleans , MA",
"United States",
"1969"
],
[
"Dunaway Residence",
"New York , New York",
"United States",
"1970"
],
[
"The Loring Mandel House",
"Huntington Bay , New York",
"United States",
"1970"
],
[
"The Paul and Kay Breslow Apartment",
"New York , New York",
"United States",
"1973"
],
[
"The Maurice and Marilyn Cohn Residence",
"Amagansett , New York",
"United States",
"1973"
],
[
"The Buettner Residence",
"Sloatsburg , New York",
"United States",
"1977"
],
[
"The Richard and Thea Benenson House",
"Rye , New York",
"United States",
"1977"
],
[
"The David Geffen Apartment",
"New York , New York",
"United States",
"1979"
],
[
"The Lloyd Taft House",
"Cincinnati , Ohio",
"United States",
"1979"
],
[
"de Menil Residence",
"Amagansett , New York",
"United States",
"1982"
],
[
"Sycamore Place Senior Housing",
"Columbus , Indiana",
"United States",
"1982"
],
[
"Pence Place Family Housing",
"Columbus , Indiana",
"United States",
"1984"
],
[
"The Steven Spielberg Apartment",
"New York , New York",
"United States",
"1985"
],
[
"American Museum of the Moving Image",
"Queens , New York",
"United States",
"1988"
],
[
"The Morgan Stanley Building",
"New York City , New York",
"United States",
"1990"
],
[
"Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum addition",
"New York City , New York",
"United States",
"1992"
]
] | {
"intro": "Charles Gwathmey (June 19, 1938 - August 3, 2009) was an American architect. He was a principal at Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects, as well as one of the five architects identified as The New York Five in 1969. One of Gwathmey's most famous designs is the 1992 renovation of Frank Lloyd Wright's\nGuggenheim Museum in New York City. Born in Charlotte, North Carolina, he was the son of the American painter Robert Gwathmey and photographer Rosalie Gwathmey. He attended the High School of Music and Art in New York City, graduating in 1956. Charles Gwathmey attended the University of Pennsylvania and received his Master of Architecture degree in 1962 from Yale School of Architecture, where he won both the William Wirt Winchester Fellowship as the outstanding graduate and a Fulbright Grant. While at Yale, he studied under Paul Rudolph. Gwathmey served as President of the Board of Trustees for The Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies and was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 1981.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Completed Projects List",
"title": "Charles Gwathmey",
"uid": "Charles_Gwathmey_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Gwathmey"
} | 3,627 |
3628 | List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Class year ( s )",
"Degree ( s )",
"Notability"
],
[
"Nolan Bushnell",
"",
"",
"Founded Atari Inc. and the Chuck E. Cheese 's chain"
],
[
"Gregory C. Carr",
"1982",
"B.S . History",
"Entrepreneur ; founded the company that first developed voice mail ; chaired Prodigy , an early global ISP"
],
[
"Charlie Denson",
"1978",
"B.S . Marketing",
"President of Nike Brand"
],
[
"John Forzani",
"1971",
"B.S . Physical Education",
"Founder of Forzani Group , Canada 's largest sporting goods retailer with 215 company-owned stores under the names Coast Mountain Sports , Sport Chek and Sport Mart"
],
[
"Jason Lindsey",
"1995",
"B.A . M.A",
"Co-founder and President of Overstock.com"
],
[
"Dick Motta",
"1953",
"B.S . Physical Education",
"Owner of the Bluebird Inn in Logan and the Bluebird Inn Bed and Breakfast in Bear Lake , Utah ; former NBA coach and color commentator ; coach of Chicago Bulls , Washington Bullets and Dallas Mavericks ; NBA Coach of the Year in 1971 ; won an NBA Championship while coaching the Washington Bullets"
],
[
"Ward Parkinson",
"1969",
"B.S . Electrical Engineering",
"Founder of Micron Technology ; VP of Commercial Development of Ovonyx , Inc"
],
[
"Gary E. Stevenson",
"1979",
"B.A",
"Co-founder of ICON Health & Fitness"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of Utah State University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Utah State University (USU), a public, land-grant, research university located in Logan, Utah. This list does not contain the names of presidents or faculty of the university, unless they happen also to be alumni. Founded in 1888 under the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act as the Agricultural College of Utah, USU has grown to more than 28,000 students. Although it is headquartered in Logan, USU operates throughout the state of Utah through five regional campuses and more than 20 distance education sites. On June 13, 1899, graduates of the Agricultural College of Utah met to create the Alumni Association. Today, the Alumni Association is located in the historic David B. Haight Alumni Center, which was dedicated July 11, 1991. Alumni chapters exist in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Washington DC. USU boasts more than 180,000 alumni, who are found in every U.S. state and more than 100 countries.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Business",
"title": "List of Utah State University alumni",
"uid": "List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni"
} | 3,628 |
3629 | 2010_Armenian_Premier_League_0 | [
[
"Club",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Banants",
"Yerevan",
"Republican Stadium",
"14,403"
],
[
"Gandzasar",
"Kapan",
"Gandzasar Stadium",
"3,500"
],
[
"Impuls",
"Dilijan",
"Dilijan City Stadium",
"2,200"
],
[
"Kilikia",
"Yerevan",
"Hrazdan Stadium",
"54,208"
],
[
"Mika",
"Yerevan",
"Mika Stadium",
"7,250"
],
[
"Pyunik",
"Yerevan",
"Republican Stadium",
"14,403"
],
[
"Shirak",
"Gyumri",
"Gyumri City Stadium",
"2,844"
],
[
"Ulisses",
"Yerevan",
"Hrazdan Stadium",
"54,208"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2010 Armenian Premier League season was the nineteenth since its establishment. The season began in March 2010 and ended in November 2010. FC Pyunik were the defending champions, having won their twelfth championship last season.",
"section_text": "Ararat Yerevan finished in last place last season and were relegated to the Armenian First League . Taking their place this year is Impuls FC Dilijan , who finished first in the 2009 Armenian First League . YerevanShirakImpulsGandzasarYerevan teams : BanantsKilikiaMikaPyunikUlisses Location of teams in the 2010 Armenian Premier League",
"section_title": "Participating teams",
"title": "2010 Armenian Premier League",
"uid": "2010_Armenian_Premier_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Armenian_Premier_League"
} | 3,629 |
3630 | The_Thorn_Birds_(TV_miniseries)_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Association",
"Category",
"Nominee ( s )",
"Result"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Achievement in Makeup",
"Del Acevedo",
"Won"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Art Direction for a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Robert MacKichan , Jerry Adams",
"Won"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Film Editing for a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Carroll Timothy O'Meara",
"Won"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Richard Chamberlain",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Barbara Stanwyck",
"Won"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Miniseries or Movie",
"The Thorn Birds",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Bryan Brown",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Richard Kiley",
"Won"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Christopher Plummer",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Piper Laurie",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1983",
"Primetime Emmy Awards",
"Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie",
"Jean Simmons",
"Won"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Actor - Miniseries or Television Film",
"Richard Chamberlain",
"Won"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Actress - Miniseries or Television Film",
"Rachel Ward",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Miniseries or Television Film",
"The Thorn Birds",
"Won"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Supporting Actor - Series , Miniseries or Television Film",
"Bryan Brown",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Supporting Actor - Series , Miniseries or Television Film",
"Richard Kiley",
"Won"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Supporting Actress - Series , Miniseries or Television Film",
"Piper Laurie",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Supporting Actress - Series , Miniseries or Television Film",
"Jean Simmons",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1984",
"Golden Globe Awards",
"Best Supporting Actress - Series , Miniseries or Television",
"Barbara Stanwyck",
"Won"
],
[
"1984",
"People 's Choice Awards",
"Best TV Miniseries",
"The Thorn Birds",
"Won"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Thorn Birds is an American television miniseries broadcast on ABC from March 27 to 30, 1983. It starred Richard Chamberlain, Rachel Ward, Barbara Stanwyck, Christopher Plummer, Piper Laurie, Jean Simmons, Richard Kiley, Bryan Brown, Mare Winningham and Philip Anglim. It was directed by Daryl Duke and based on a novel of the same name by Colleen McCullough. The series was enormously successful and became the United States' second highest-rated miniseries of all time behind Roots; both series were produced by television veteran David L. Wolper.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Awards and nominations",
"title": "The Thorn Birds (miniseries)",
"uid": "The_Thorn_Birds_(TV_miniseries)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thorn_Birds_(miniseries)"
} | 3,630 |
3631 | Joint_Task_Force_1 | [
[
"Joint task force",
"Abbrev",
"Who"
],
[
"Joint Task Force-Alaska",
"JTF-AK",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force-Armed Forces Inaugural Committee",
"JTF-AFIC",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Aztec Silence",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Bravo",
"JTF-B",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Caring Response",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Central",
"",
"CAN"
],
[
"Joint Task Force-Civil Support",
"JTF-CS",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force East",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force for Elimination",
"JTF-E",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Full Accounting",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Gator",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force-Global Network Operations",
"JTF-GNO",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Gold",
"JTF Gold",
"AUS"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Guantanamo",
"JTF-GTMO",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Haiti",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force-Homeland Defense",
"JTF-HD",
"US"
],
[
"Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa",
"CJTF-HOA",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Katrina",
"",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Lebanon",
"JTF-L",
"US"
],
[
"Joint Task Force Liberia",
"JTF Liberia",
"US"
]
] | {
"intro": "A Joint Task Force is a joint (multi-service) ad hoc military formation. The task force concept originated with the United States Navy in the 1920s and 1930s. Combined is the British-American military term for multi-national formations.",
"section_text": "Joint Task Force Shining Hope ; Joint Task Force Eagle Vista ( 1998 Presidential African visit )",
"section_title": "Named joint task forces",
"title": "Joint task force",
"uid": "Joint_Task_Force_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_task_force"
} | 3,631 |
3632 | Deloitte_Football_Money_League_18 | [
[
"Rank",
"Club",
"Income ( € million )",
"Country"
],
[
"1",
"Manchester United",
"229.5",
"England"
],
[
"2",
"Juventus",
"177.9",
"Italy"
],
[
"3",
"Bayern Munich",
"176.8",
"Germany"
],
[
"4",
"Milan",
"159.1",
"Italy"
],
[
"5",
"Liverpool",
"154.6",
"England"
],
[
"6",
"Real Madrid",
"152.2",
"Spain"
],
[
"7",
"Chelsea",
"143.4",
"England"
],
[
"8",
"Arsenal",
"141.4",
"England"
],
[
"9",
"Barcelona",
"139.8",
"Spain"
],
[
"10",
"Roma",
"136.8",
"Italy"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Deloitte Football Money League is a ranking of football clubs by revenue generated from football operations. It is produced annually by the accountancy firm Deloitte and released in early February of each year, describing the season most recently finished.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Rankings by season -- 2003",
"title": "Deloitte Football Money League",
"uid": "Deloitte_Football_Money_League_18",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deloitte_Football_Money_League"
} | 3,632 |
3633 | List_of_Lutheran_churches_1 | [
[
"Church",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"All Saints Church of Eben Ezer",
"1916 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"40°15′15″N 103°38′38″W / 40.25417°N 103.64389°W / 40.25417 ; -103.64389 ( All Saints Church of Eben Ezer )",
"Brush , Colorado",
""
],
[
"First Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1890 built 1993 NRHP-listed",
"39°38′44″N 106°57′08″W / 39.64556°N 106.95222°W / 39.64556 ; -106.95222 ( First Evangelical Lutheran Church )",
"Gypsum , Colorado",
"Gothic revival"
],
[
"Ryssby Church",
"1882 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"40°08′23″N 105°12′20″W / 40.13972°N 105.20556°W / 40.13972 ; -105.20556 ( Ryssby Church )",
"Longmont , Colorado",
""
],
[
"St. Stephen 's Lutheran Church",
"1964 built 2019 NRHP-listed",
"39°53′34″N 104°57′04″W / 39.89278°N 104.95111°W / 39.89278 ; -104.95111 ( St. Stephen 's Lutheran Church )",
"Northglenn , Colorado",
"Neo-expressionism"
],
[
"Zion 's German Lutheran Church",
"1890 built 2006 NRHP-listed",
"37°10′24″N 104°30′49″W / 37.17333°N 104.51361°W / 37.17333 ; -104.51361 ( Ryssby Church )",
"Trinidad , Colorado",
"Victorian gothic"
],
[
"Hope Lutheran Church",
"1917 built 1978 NRHP-listed",
"38°07′57″N 105°28′02″W / 38.13250°N 105.46722°W / 38.13250 ; -105.46722 ( Hope Lutheran Church )",
"Westcliffe , Colorado",
""
],
[
"Cordelia Lutheran Church",
"built NRHP-listed",
"",
"Moscow , Idaho",
""
],
[
"Danish Lutheran Church",
"1887 built 2011 NRHP-listed",
"42°40′18″N 95°18′16″W / 42.67167°N 95.30444°W / 42.67167 ; -95.30444 ( Danish Lutheran Church ( Alta , Iowa ) )",
"Alta , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Our Savior 's Kvindherred Lutheran Church",
"1861/1877 built 2000 NRHP-listed",
"2589 190th Ave. 41°48′26″N 90°43′26″W / 41.80722°N 90.72389°W / 41.80722 ; -90.72389 ( Our Savior 's Kvindherred Lutheran Church )",
"Calamus , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"St. Peters United Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1858 built 1976 NRHP-listed",
"42°49′21″N 91°11′15″W / 42.82250°N 91.18750°W / 42.82250 ; -91.18750 ( St. Peters United Evangelical Lutheran Church )",
"Ceres , Iowa",
""
],
[
"Waterloo Ridge Lutheran Church",
"1913 built 2015 NRHP-listed",
"43°29′07.7″N 91°36′01.4″W / 43.485472°N 91.600389°W / 43.485472 ; -91.600389 ( Waterloo Ridge Lutheran Church )",
"Dorchester , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"New Sweden Chapel",
"1860 built 1977 NRHP-listed",
"41°01′27″N 91°46′48″W / 41.02417°N 91.78000°W / 41.02417 ; -91.78000 ( New Sweden Chapel )",
"East of Fairfield , Iowa",
""
],
[
"St. John 's Lutheran Church",
"1889/1899 built 2015 NRHP-listed",
"42°43′10″N 93°20′24″W / 42.71944°N 93.34000°W / 42.71944 ; -93.34000 ( St. John 's Lutheran Church ( Hampton , Iowa ) )",
"Hampton , Iowa",
"Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals"
],
[
"Bethany Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1898 built 1991 NRHP-listed",
"41°39′8″N 95°3′11″W / 41.65222°N 95.05306°W / 41.65222 ; -95.05306 ( Bethany Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church )",
"Kimballton , Iowa",
""
],
[
"Immanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1904 built 1991 NRHP-listed",
"41°37′45.75″N 95°4′28.25″W / 41.6293750°N 95.0745139°W / 41.6293750 ; -95.0745139 ( Immanuel Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church )",
"Kimballton , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival/Queen Anne"
],
[
"Ingemann Danish Lutheran Church",
"1884 built 2012 NRHP-listed",
"41°56′18.7″N 95°55′36.5″W / 41.938528°N 95.926806°W / 41.938528 ; -95.926806 ( Ingemann Danish Lutheran Church )",
"Moorhead , Iowa",
""
],
[
"First Lutheran Church",
"1868 built 1976 NRHP-listed",
"43°22′48″N 92°55′32″W / 43.38000°N 92.92556°W / 43.38000 ; -92.92556 ( First Lutheran Church ( St. Ansgar , Iowa ) )",
"St. Ansgar , Iowa",
"Vernacular Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Sheldahl First Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1883 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"41°51′58″N 93°41′42″W / 41.86611°N 93.69500°W / 41.86611 ; -93.69500 ( Sheldahl First Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church )",
"Sheldahl , Iowa",
""
],
[
"Augustana Lutheran Church",
"1890 built 2006 NRHP-listed",
"42°29′47.7″N 96°23′45.9″W / 42.496583°N 96.396083°W / 42.496583 ; -96.396083 ( Augustana Lutheran Church ( Sioux City , Iowa ) )",
"Sioux City , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church",
"1928 built 1999 NRHP-listed",
"41°6′19″N 91°32′43″W / 41.10528°N 91.54528°W / 41.10528 ; -91.54528 ( Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church ( Swedesburg , Iowa ) )",
"Swedesburg , Iowa",
"Gothic Revival"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Lutheran churches that are notable either as congregations or as buildings.",
"section_text": "There are numerous Lutheran church buildings in the U.S. that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places or that are otherwise notable .",
"section_title": "United States",
"title": "List of Lutheran churches",
"uid": "List_of_Lutheran_churches_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Lutheran_churches"
} | 3,633 |
3634 | List_of_newspapers_in_Australia_by_circulation_1 | [
[
"Newspaper",
"City",
"State/ Territory",
"Circulation",
"Owner"
],
[
"Herald Sun",
"Melbourne",
"Victoria",
"515,500",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Daily Telegraph",
"Sydney",
"New South Wales",
"374,395",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Courier-Mail",
"Brisbane",
"Queensland",
"216,638",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Sydney Morning Herald",
"Sydney",
"New South Wales",
"207,013",
"Nine Entertainment"
],
[
"The West Australian",
"Perth",
"Western Australia",
"203,304",
"Seven West Media"
],
[
"The Age",
"Melbourne",
"Victoria",
"197,500",
"Nine Entertainment"
],
[
"The Advertiser",
"Adelaide",
"South Australia",
"180,091",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Australian",
"Sydney",
"New South Wales",
"135,115",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Australian Financial Review",
"Melbourne",
"Victoria",
"77,046",
"Nine Entertainment"
],
[
"The Herald",
"Newcastle",
"New South Wales",
"49,300",
"Australian Community Media"
],
[
"The Mercury",
"Hobart",
"Tasmania",
"45,339",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Gold Coast Bulletin",
"Gold Coast",
"Queensland",
"38,728",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Canberra Times",
"Canberra",
"Australian Capital Territory",
"32,706",
"Australian Community Media"
],
[
"The Examiner",
"Launceston",
"Tasmania",
"31,947",
"Australian Community Media"
],
[
"Illawarra Mercury",
"Wollongong",
"New South Wales",
"27,057",
"Australian Community Media"
],
[
"Townsville Bulletin",
"Townsville",
"Queensland",
"26,395",
"News Corp"
],
[
"Geelong Advertiser",
"Geelong",
"Victoria",
"25,955",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Cairns Post",
"Cairns",
"Queensland",
"25,758",
"News Corp"
],
[
"The Border Mail",
"Albury / Wodonga",
"Victoria",
"24,729",
"Australian Community Media"
],
[
"The Advocate",
"Burnie",
"Tasmania",
"23,488",
"Australian Community Media"
]
] | {
"intro": "There are several measures of circulation of newspapers. The Australian Bureau of Circulations (ABC) Paid Media Audit Data provides independent verification of paid media distribution in Australia. Measures are also divided by electronic and print versions. The trend shown over the years is continuously declining for the print newspapers and surging for electronic newspapers since the 21st century.",
"section_text": "This is a list of the top 25 newspapers in the Australia by Monday–Friday or Monday–Saturday circulation for the three-month period ending 30 June 2010 . [ 5 ] These figures were released by The Newspaper Works , a trade organization .",
"section_title": "Top 25 newspapers in the Australia",
"title": "List of newspapers in Australia by circulation",
"uid": "List_of_newspapers_in_Australia_by_circulation_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_Australia_by_circulation"
} | 3,634 |
3635 | Tim_Daly_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"1982",
"Diner",
"William Billy Howard"
],
[
"1984",
"Just the Way You Are",
"Frank Bantam"
],
[
"1987",
"Made in Heaven",
"Tom Donnelly"
],
[
"1988",
"Spellbinder",
"Jeff Mills"
],
[
"1990",
"Love or Money",
"Chris Murdoch"
],
[
"1989",
"The More You Know",
"Himself"
],
[
"1992",
"Year of the Comet",
"Oliver Plexico"
],
[
"1994",
"Caroline at Midnight",
"Detective Ray Dillon"
],
[
"1995",
"Denise Calls Up",
"Frank Oliver"
],
[
"1995",
"Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde",
"Doctor Richard Jacks"
],
[
"1996",
"The Associate",
"Frank Peterson"
],
[
"1998",
"The Object of My Affection",
"Dr. Robert Joley"
],
[
"1998",
"The Batman/Superman Movie",
"Clark Kent / Superman"
],
[
"1999",
"Seven Girlfriends",
"Jesse Campbell"
],
[
"2003",
"Basic",
"Colonel Bill Styles"
],
[
"2004",
"Against the Ropes",
"Gavin Reese"
],
[
"2004",
"Bereft",
"Uncle 'Happy '"
],
[
"2004",
"Return to Sender",
"Martin North"
],
[
"2005",
"My Neighbor Totoro ( Tonari no Totoro )",
"Professor Tatsuo Kusakabe ( father )"
],
[
"2006",
"Superman : Brainiac Attacks",
"Clark Kent / Superman"
]
] | {
"intro": "James Timothy Daly (born March 1, 1956) is an American actor and producer. He is known for his role as Joe Hackett on the NBC sitcom Wings and his voice role as Clark Kent/Superman in Superman: The Animated Series, as well as his recurring role as the drug-addicted screenwriter J.T. Dolan on The Sopranos (for which he was nominated for an Emmy Award). He starred as Pete Wilder on Private Practice from 2007 to 2012. From 2014 until 2019, he portrayed Henry McCord, husband of the titular character, on the CBS drama Madam Secretary.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Film",
"title": "Tim Daly",
"uid": "Tim_Daly_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Daly"
} | 3,635 |
3636 | 2006_Santos_FC_season_2 | [
[
"P",
"Name",
"Age",
"Moving to",
"Type"
],
[
"GK",
"Mauro",
"29",
"Noroeste",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"FW",
"Frontini",
"24",
"Marília",
"Loan expiration"
],
[
"MF",
"Fabinho",
"29",
"Internacional",
"End of contract"
],
[
"DF",
"Flávio",
"25",
"Unattached",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"MF",
"Ricardo Bóvio",
"23",
"Málaga",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"GK",
"Henao",
"34",
"Unattached",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"MF",
"Zé Elias",
"29",
"Metalurh Donetsk",
"Transferred"
],
[
"FW",
"Basílio",
"33",
"Tokyo Verdy",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"FW",
"William",
"22",
"Boavista",
"End of contract"
],
[
"MF",
"Élton",
"25",
"Alavés",
"Transferred"
],
[
"MF",
"Ricardinho",
"29",
"Corinthians",
"End of contract"
],
[
"FW",
"Cláudio Pitbull",
"24",
"Unattached",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"FW",
"Luizão",
"30",
"Unattached",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"MF",
"Giovanni",
"33",
"Al-Hilal",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"DF",
"Fabinho",
"26",
"Toulouse",
"Transferred"
],
[
"FW",
"Diego",
"22",
"Internacional",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"DF",
"Neto",
"25",
"Fluminense",
"Loaned"
],
[
"MF",
"Wendel",
"24",
"Bordeaux",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"MF",
"Gilmar",
"22",
"Unattached",
"Contract terminated"
],
[
"MF",
"Léo Lima",
"26",
"Grêmio",
"Contract terminated"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2006 season was Santos Futebol Clube's ninety-fourth season in existence and the club's forty-seventh consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football. This season, Santos announced the return of the manager Vanderlei Luxemburgo, who had left the club in the last season and failed at Real Madrid. On 9 April 2006, Santos won the Campeonato Paulista for sixteenth time in history, by beating Portuguesa 2-0 in the last match. On 31 August, they signed Brazilian midfielder Zé Roberto who was free agent since he left FC Bayern Munich, until June 2007. In the Campeonato Brasileiro, Santos ended in the 4th place, securing a place in the 2007 Copa Libertadores. In the Copa do Brasil, Santos were knocked out by Ipatinga in the quarter-finals. Santos also competed in the Copa Sudamericana, being eliminated in the round of 16 after a 1-3 loss on aggregate to San Lorenzo.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Transfers -- Out",
"title": "2006 Santos FC season",
"uid": "2006_Santos_FC_season_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Santos_FC_season"
} | 3,636 |
3637 | Community_Broadcasters,_LLC_1 | [
[
"Frequency",
"Callsign",
"City of License"
],
[
"1310 kHz",
"WDKD",
"Kingstree , South Carolina"
],
[
"1240 kHz",
"WDXY",
"Sumter , South Carolina"
],
[
"95.3 MHz",
"WFRK",
"Quinby , South Carolina"
],
[
"105.3 MHz",
"WGFG",
"Branchville , South Carolina"
],
[
"1260 kHz",
"WHYM",
"Lake City , South Carolina"
],
[
"95.5 MHz",
"WIBZ",
"Wedgefield , South Carolina"
],
[
"1230 kHz",
"WOLH",
"Florence , South Carolina"
],
[
"102.9 MHz",
"WQKI-FM",
"Orangeburg , South Carolina"
],
[
"93.7 MHz",
"WSIM",
"Lamar , South Carolina"
],
[
"94.7 MHz",
"WWBD",
"Sumter , South Carolina"
],
[
"1290 kHz",
"WWHM",
"Sumter , South Carolina"
],
[
"99.3 MHz",
"WWKT-FM",
"Kingstree , South Carolina"
],
[
"98.3 MHz",
"WLJI",
"Summerton , South Carolina"
],
[
"105.1 MHz",
"WPDT",
"Coward , South Carolina"
],
[
"94.5 MHz",
"WSPX",
"Bowman , South Carolina"
],
[
"1490 kHz",
"WTQS",
"Cameron , South Carolina"
]
] | {
"intro": "Community Broadcasters, LLC is a Watertown, New York based radio holding group that owns radio stations in its own market and surrounding areas. It was founded by media executives Bruce Mittman and Jim Leven, and started out in 2006 by buying stations owned by Clancy-Mance Communications, Inc.",
"section_text": "All in the state of New York : Frequency Callsign City of License Market Format 1240 kHz WATN Watertown , New York Watertown News/Talk 106.7 MHz WBDR Copenhagen , New York Watertown Top 40 100.7 MHz WEFX Henderson , New York Watertown Country 95.3 MHz WLFK Gouverneur , New York Gouverneur Country 94.1 MHz WOTT Calcium , New York Watertown Modern Rock 92.7 MHz WQTK Ogdensburg , New York Ogdensburg News/Talk 1400 kHz WSLB Ogdensburg , New York Ogdensburg Sports/Talk 103.1 MHz WTOJ Carthage , New York Watertown Adult Contemporary In South Carolina :",
"section_title": "Station list",
"title": "Community Broadcasters",
"uid": "Community_Broadcasters,_LLC_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Broadcasters"
} | 3,637 |
3638 | List_of_University_of_Oxford_people_in_British_public_life_12 | [
[
"Name",
"College",
"Notes"
],
[
"Lieutenant General Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart , VC , KBE , CB , CMG , DSO",
"Balliol",
""
],
[
"Captain Dr Noel Godfrey Chavasse VC , Medal bar , Military Cross",
"Trinity College , Oxford",
"The only person to be awarded the Victoria Cross twice in World War I ; the only man to be awarded both the VC and a bar in WWI - one of three men to have ever achieved it ; also an Olympian and Medical Doctor . Graduated with First-class honours . With 16 War memorial s , he is believed to be the most commemorated in the United Kingdom . Died in battle"
],
[
"Group Captain Leonard Cheshire , Baron Cheshire , VC , OM , DSO and two bars , DFC , RAF",
"Merton",
""
],
[
"Captain John Liddell , VC , MC , Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders , RFC",
"Balliol",
""
],
[
"Captain Robert Nairac , GC , Grenadier Guards",
"Lincoln",
""
],
[
"Colonel Sir Geoffrey Vickers , VC",
"Merton",
""
],
[
"Captain Garth Neville Walford , VC , Royal Regiment of Artillery",
"Balliol",
""
],
[
"Trevor Bigham",
"Magdalen",
"Deputy Commissioner of The Metropolitan Police 1931-1935"
],
[
"Ian Blair",
"Christ Church",
"Commissioner of The Metropolitan Police 2005 onwards"
],
[
"Paul Condon , Baron Condon",
"St Peter 's",
"Commissioner of The Metropolitan Police 1993-2000"
],
[
"David Craig , Baron Craig of Radley",
"Lincoln",
"Chief of the Defence Staff 1988-1991 , Convenor of Crossbenchers 1999-2004"
],
[
"Cressida Dick",
"Balliol",
"Deputy Assistant Commissioner , Metropolitan Police 2006 onwards"
],
[
"Drury Curzon Drury-Lowe",
"Corpus Christi",
"Lt-Gen British Army 1890-1908 , Colonel of the 17th Lancers 1892-1895"
],
[
"Colin McColl",
"The Queen 's",
"Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1989-1994"
],
[
"Eliza Manningham-Buller",
"Lady Margaret Hall",
"Director-General of the Security Service 2002-2007"
],
[
"Brian Paddick",
"The Queen 's",
"deputy assistant commissioner , Metropolitan Police 2003 onwards"
],
[
"John Rennie",
"Balliol",
"Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1968-1973"
],
[
"John Scarlett",
"Magdalen",
"Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 2004 onwards"
],
[
"David Spedding",
"Hertford",
"Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1994-1999"
],
[
"David Westwood",
"Lady Margaret Hall",
"Chief Constable of Humberside Police 1999-2005"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of University of Oxford people in British public life. Many were students at one (or more) of the colleges of the University, and others held fellowships at a college. This list forms part of a series of lists of people associated with the University of Oxford - for other lists, please see the main article List of University of Oxford people.",
"section_text": "Victoria Cross or George Cross recipients listed first .",
"section_title": "Military , security , and police personnel",
"title": "List of University of Oxford people in British public life",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_Oxford_people_in_British_public_life_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_Oxford_people_in_British_public_life"
} | 3,638 |
3639 | List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States_23 | [
[
"Church",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"Church of St. Adrian",
"1900 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"Main & Church Streets 43°37′51″N 95°55′58″W / 43.63083°N 95.93278°W / 43.63083 ; -95.93278 ( Church of St. Adrian ( Adrian , Minnesota ) )",
"Adrian , Minnesota",
"Romanesque"
],
[
"St. Augustine 's Church",
"1896 built",
"405 4th St NW 43°40′12.2″N 92°58′47.6″W / 43.670056°N 92.979889°W / 43.670056 ; -92.979889 ( St. Augustine 's Church ( Austin , Minnesota ) )",
"Austin , Minnesota",
"Gothic revival"
],
[
"Church of St. Francis Xavier",
"1917 built 1985 NRHP-listed",
"508 13th Street N. 45°19′6″N 95°35′52″W / 45.31833°N 95.59778°W / 45.31833 ; -95.59778 ( Church of St. Francis Xavier ( Benson , Minnesota ) )",
"Benson , Minnesota",
"One of west-central Minnesota 's most architecturally sophisticated churches , designed in Renaissance Revival style by Emmanuel Louis Masqueray"
],
[
"Church of St. Joseph",
"1908 built 1985 NRHP-listed",
"720 N. Main Street 46°5′12″N 94°52′4″W / 46.08667°N 94.86778°W / 46.08667 ; -94.86778 ( Church of St. Joseph ( Browerville , Minnesota ) )",
"Browerville , Minnesota",
"Baroque Revival church anchoring a Polish American community"
],
[
"Church of St. Hubertus",
"1887 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"Great Plains Boulevard & West 78th Street 44°51′43″N 93°31′51″W / 44.86194°N 93.53083°W / 44.86194 ; -93.53083 ( Church of St. Hubertus ( Chanhassen , Minnesota ) )",
"Chanhassen , Minnesota",
""
],
[
"Sts . Peter and Paul Church",
"1916 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"530 Central Avenue 47°29′1″N 92°52′43″W / 47.48361°N 92.87861°W / 47.48361 ; -92.87861 ( Saints Peter and Paul Church ( Chisholm , Minnesota ) )",
"Chisholm , Minnesota",
"Anchored a Ukrainian American community on the Iron Range"
],
[
"Church of Sts . Joseph and Mary",
"1884 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"Mission Road 46°41′2.57″N 92°38′12.28″W / 46.6840472°N 92.6367444°W / 46.6840472 ; -92.6367444 ( Church of Sts . Joseph and Mary ( Cloquet , Minnesota ) )",
"Cloquet , Minnesota",
"Native American , Log"
],
[
"Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception",
"1990 built",
"702 Summit Avenue 47°46′30″N 96°35′25″W / 47.77500°N 96.59028°W / 47.77500 ; -96.59028 ( Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception ( Crookston , Minnesota ) )",
"Crookston , Minnesota",
"Seat of the Diocese of Crookston"
],
[
"Former Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception",
"1912 built 1998 NRHP-listed",
"N. Ash St. at 2nd Ave. 47°46′27″N 96°36′15″W / 47.77417°N 96.60417°W / 47.77417 ; -96.60417 ( Former Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception ( Crookston , Minnesota ) )",
"Crookston , Minnesota",
"Gothic Revival . A local organization has plans to develop the building as an arts and community center"
],
[
"Church of St. Bridget",
"1901 built 1985 NRHP-listed",
"501 3rd Street South 45°15′33″N 95°28′8″W / 45.25917°N 95.46889°W / 45.25917 ; -95.46889 ( Church of St. Bridget ( De Graff , Minnesota ) )",
"De Graff , Minnesota",
"Built in the first parish established during Archbishop John Ireland 's late-19th-century efforts to resettle Catholics in western Minnesota"
],
[
"Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary",
"1957 built",
"2801 East 4th Street 46°48′58″N 92°4′6″W / 46.81611°N 92.06833°W / 46.81611 ; -92.06833 ( Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary ( Duluth , Minnesota ) )",
"Duluth , Minnesota",
"Seat of the Diocese of Duluth"
],
[
"Church of St. Joseph",
"1913 built 2002 NRHP-listed",
"7897 Elmer Road 47°5′1″N 92°46′37″W / 47.08361°N 92.77694°W / 47.08361 ; -92.77694 ( Church of St. Joseph ( Elmer , Minnesota ) )",
"Elmer , Minnesota",
"Built for settlers recruited to farm a railroad company 's surplus land once it had been cleared of valuable timber"
],
[
"Church of the Holy Family",
"1909 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"307 Adams Avenue 47°27′45″N 92°32′18″W / 47.46250°N 92.53833°W / 47.46250 ; -92.53833 ( Church of the Holy Family ( Eveleth , Minnesota ) )",
"Eveleth , Minnesota",
"Built to anchor a city 's sizeable Slovene American population"
],
[
"Church of the Sacred Heart",
"1905 built 1991 NRHP-listed",
"110 3rd Avenue Northeast 45°39′46″N 94°41′10″W / 45.66278°N 94.68611°W / 45.66278 ; -94.68611 ( Church of the Sacred Heart ( Freeport , Minnesota ) )",
"Freeport , Minnesota",
"Built for a German American community settled in 1876"
],
[
"Church of St. Peter",
"1915 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"25823 185th Avenue Southwest 47°47′32″N 96°26′54″W / 47.79222°N 96.44833°W / 47.79222 ; -96.44833 ( Church of St. Peter ( Gentilly , Minnesota ) )",
"Gentilly , Minnesota",
"Neo-Gothic"
],
[
"Church of Sts . Peter and Paul",
"1930 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"State Street 45°44′11″N 93°56′43″W / 45.73639°N 93.94528°W / 45.73639 ; -93.94528 ( Church of Sts . Peter and Paul ( Gilman , Minnesota ) )",
"Gilman , Minnesota",
"Beaux Arts"
],
[
"Church of St. Francis Xavier",
"1895 built 1985 NRHP-listed",
"13th Street North & Montana Avenue 47°45′29″N 90°18′43″W / 47.75806°N 90.31194°W / 47.75806 ; -90.31194 ( Church of St. Francis Xavier ( Grand Marais , Minnesota ) )",
"Grand Marais , Minnesota",
"Now a Cook County Historical Society museum"
],
[
"Church of the Sacred Heart",
"1921 built 1989 NRHP-listed",
"9th Street & 4th Avenue 43°47′41″N 95°19′2″W / 43.79472°N 95.31722°W / 43.79472 ; -95.31722 ( Church of the Sacred Heart ( Heron Lake , Minnesota ) )",
"Heron Lake , Minnesota",
"Neo-Baroque , Other"
],
[
"St. Mary 's Church of the Purification",
"1882 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"15850 Marystown Road 44°43′13″N 93°32′31″W / 44.72028°N 93.54194°W / 44.72028 ; -93.54194 ( St. Mary 's Church of the Purification ( Marystown , Minnesota ) )",
"Marystown , Minnesota",
"Romanesque"
],
[
"Church of St. Mary",
"1899 built 1993 NRHP-listed",
"203 South 5th Avenue East 45°40′21″N 94°48′28″W / 45.67250°N 94.80778°W / 45.67250 ; -94.80778 ( Church of St. Mary ( Melrose , Minnesota ) )",
"Melrose , Minnesota",
"Formerly the Church of St. Boniface . Built for a rural German American congregation . Gutted by a fire in March 2016"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable Catholic churches and cathedrals in the United States.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Minnesota",
"title": "List of Catholic churches in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States_23",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States"
} | 3,639 |
3640 | List_of_airports_in_New_South_Wales_0 | [
[
"Community",
"Airport name",
"Type",
"ICAO",
"IATA"
],
[
"Albury",
"Albury Airport",
"Public",
"YMAY",
"ABX"
],
[
"Armidale",
"Armidale Airport",
"Public",
"YARM",
"ARM"
],
[
"Ballina",
"Ballina Byron Gateway Airport",
"Public",
"YBNA",
"BNK"
],
[
"Balranald",
"Balranald Airport",
"Public",
"YBRN",
"BZD"
],
[
"Bankstown , Sydney",
"Bankstown Airport",
"Airschool",
"YSBK",
"BWU"
],
[
"Bathurst",
"Bathurst Airport",
"Public",
"YBTH",
"BHS"
],
[
"Bourke",
"Bourke Airport",
"Public",
"YBKE",
"BRK"
],
[
"Brewarrina",
"Brewarrina Airport",
"Public",
"YBRW",
"BWQ"
],
[
"Broken Hill",
"Broken Hill Airport",
"Public",
"YBHI",
"BHQ"
],
[
"Camden",
"Camden Airport",
"Public",
"YSCN",
"CDU"
],
[
"Cessnock",
"Cessnock Airport",
"Public",
"YCNK",
"CES"
],
[
"Cobar",
"Cobar Airport",
"Public",
"YCBA",
"CAZ"
],
[
"Coffs Harbour",
"Coffs Harbour Airport",
"Public",
"YCFS",
"CFS"
],
[
"Collarenebri",
"Collarenebri Airport",
"Public",
"YCBR",
"CRB"
],
[
"Condobolin",
"Condobolin Airport",
"Public",
"YCDO",
"CBX"
],
[
"Coolah",
"Coolah Airport",
"Public",
"YCAH",
""
],
[
"Cooma",
"Cooma - Polo Flat Airport",
"Public",
"YPFT",
""
],
[
"Cooma",
"Cooma - Snowy Mountains Airport",
"Public",
"YCOM",
"OOM"
],
[
"Coonabarabran",
"Coonabarabran Airport",
"Public",
"YCBB",
"COJ"
],
[
"Coonamble",
"Coonamble Airport",
"Public",
"YCNM",
"CNB"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is an incomplete list of airports in the Australian state of New South Wales.",
"section_text": "The list is sorted by the name of the community served , click the sort buttons in the table header to switch listing order . Cities in bold are international airports .",
"section_title": "List of airports",
"title": "List of airports in New South Wales",
"uid": "List_of_airports_in_New_South_Wales_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airports_in_New_South_Wales"
} | 3,640 |
3641 | List_of_Holocaust_films_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Country",
"Title",
"Director"
],
[
"1970",
"Italy West Germany",
"The Garden of the Finzi-Continis",
"Vittorio De Sica"
],
[
"1970",
"Yugoslavia",
"Hranjenik",
"Vatroslav Mimica"
],
[
"1972",
"United States",
"The Day the Clown Cried",
"Jerry Lewis"
],
[
"1974",
"United Kingdom",
"QB VII",
"Tom Gries"
],
[
"1974",
"Italy",
"The Night Porter",
"Liliana Cavani"
],
[
"1974",
"United Kingdom West Germany",
"The Odessa File",
"Ronald Neame"
],
[
"1975",
"East Germany",
"Jacob the Liar",
"Frank Beyer"
],
[
"1975",
"United States",
"The Hiding Place",
"James F. Collier"
],
[
"1975",
"Italy",
"Seven Beauties",
"Lina Wertmüller"
],
[
"1975",
"United States",
"The Man in the Glass Booth",
"Arthur Hiller"
],
[
"1976",
"United States",
"Marathon Man",
"John Schlesinger"
],
[
"1976",
"Spain",
"Voyage of the Damned",
"Stuart Rosenberg"
],
[
"1977",
"Italy",
"L'ultima orgia del III Reich",
"Cesare Canevari"
],
[
"1978",
"United States",
"Holocaust",
"Marvin J. Chomsky"
],
[
"1978",
"Yugoslavia",
"Okupacija u 26 slika",
"Lordan Zafranovic"
],
[
"1979",
"West Germany",
"Baranski",
"Werner Masten"
],
[
"1979",
"West Germany",
"David",
"Peter Lilienthal"
],
[
"1979",
"United States",
"The House on Garibaldi Street",
"Peter Collinson"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is an index of films that deal with the Holocaust in Europe. Films dealing with the subject of the Holocaust include both documentary and narrative films. These films were produced from the early 1940s before the extent of the Holocaust was widely known and have continued to be made since then. The films span multiple genres, with documentary films including footage filmed both by the Germans for their propaganda purposes and by the Allies, compilations, survivor testimonies and docudramas, and narrative films including war films, action films, love stories, psychological dramas, and even comedies.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "1970s",
"title": "List of Holocaust films",
"uid": "List_of_Holocaust_films_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Holocaust_films"
} | 3,641 |
3642 | List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(Japan)_1 | [
[
"Title",
"Publisher",
"Release Date",
"CERO"
],
[
"Akumajō Dracula",
"Konami",
"December 2 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"F-Zero",
"Nintendo",
"December 2 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Street Fighter II : The World Warrior",
"Capcom",
"December 2 , 2006",
"B"
],
[
"Super Mario World",
"Nintendo",
"December 2 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Zelda no Densetsu : Kamigami no Triforce",
"Nintendo",
"December 2 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Super Donkey Kong ( not available from December 7 , 2012 to November 26 , 2014 )",
"Nintendo",
"December 12 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Mario no Super Picross",
"Nintendo",
"December 19 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Fire Emblem : Monshō no Nazo",
"Nintendo",
"December 26 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"R-Type III : The Third Lightning ( delisted on March 30 , 2012 )",
"Irem",
"December 26 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"SimCity",
"Nintendo",
"December 26 , 2006",
"A"
],
[
"Contra Spirits",
"Konami",
"January 16 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Fire Emblem : Seisen no Keifu",
"Nintendo",
"January 30 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Kamaitachi no Yoru",
"Chunsoft",
"February 13 , 2007",
"D"
],
[
"Shin Megami Tensei",
"Atlus",
"February 13 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Chou Makaimura",
"Capcom",
"February 20 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Sangokushi IV",
"Koei",
"February 20 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Ganbare Goemon : Yukihime Kyūshutsu Emaki",
"Konami",
"March 13 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"ActRaiser",
"Square Enix",
"March 20 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Heracles no Eikō III : Kamigami no Chinmoku",
"Paon",
"April 6 , 2007",
"A"
],
[
"Final Fight",
"Capcom",
"April 17 , 2007",
"B"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is the complete list of the 659 Virtual Console titles that were available for the Wii in Japan sorted by system and release dates. English translations are highlighted between parenthesis. The final update was on April 9, 2013 as the service has been discontinued in all regions while games are currently being added to the Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console and Wii U Virtual Console services. Nintendo plans to discontinue the Wii Shop Channel. Purchasing of Wii Points for new games ended on March 26, 2018. In addition, the ability to purchase new software ended on January 31, 2019. Re-downloading purchased software is available, however Nintendo announced it will shut that facility down at a later date.",
"section_text": "There were 102 games available .",
"section_title": "Available titles -- Super Famicom",
"title": "List of Virtual Console games for Wii (Japan)",
"uid": "List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(Japan)_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(Japan)"
} | 3,642 |
3643 | List_of_universities_and_colleges_in_Thailand_0 | [
[
"University",
"Initialism",
"Founded",
"Main campus",
"Website"
],
[
"Kalasin University",
"KSU",
"2015",
"Kalasin",
"[ 1 ]"
],
[
"Mahasarakham University",
"MSU",
"1994",
"Maha Sarakham",
"[ 2 ]"
],
[
"Nakhon Phanom University",
"NPU",
"2005",
"Nakhon Phanom",
"[ 3 ]"
],
[
"Naresuan University",
"NU",
"1990",
"Phitsanulok",
"[ 4 ]"
],
[
"National Institute of Development Administration ( NIDA )",
"NIDA",
"1966",
"Bangkok",
"[ 5 ]"
],
[
"Pathumwan Institute of Technology",
"PTWIT",
"1999",
"Bangkok",
"[ 6 ]"
],
[
"Praboromarajchanok Institute",
"PI",
"1993",
"Bangkok",
"[ 7 ]"
],
[
"Princess of Naradhiwas University",
"PNU",
"2005",
"Narathiwat",
"[ 8 ]"
],
[
"Ramkhamhaeng University",
"RU",
"1971",
"Bangkok",
"[ 9 ]"
],
[
"Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University",
"STOU",
"1978",
"Bangkok",
"[ 10 ]"
],
[
"Thailand National Sports University",
"TNSU",
"2019",
"Bangkok",
"[ 11 ]"
],
[
"Ubon Ratchathani University",
"UBU",
"1990",
"Ubon Ratchathani",
"[ 12 ]"
]
] | {
"intro": "As of 2018[update], Thailand had 310 colleges, universities, and tertiary academic institutes. This is a categorized listing of institutions of higher learning in Thailand.",
"section_text": "Public universities were formerly called `` government universities '' and were fully supported by the government . Currently they are independent as government-supported public universities . However , their staff are no longer civil servants . Application is by annual nationwide competitive admission examination or occasionally by special direct application . Mor Nor Niwet , Naresuan University",
"section_title": "Public universities and colleges",
"title": "List of universities and colleges in Thailand",
"uid": "List_of_universities_and_colleges_in_Thailand_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_universities_and_colleges_in_Thailand"
} | 3,643 |
3644 | Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Show",
"Channel"
],
[
"2005",
"Fame Gurukul",
"Sony TV"
],
[
"2006",
"Shabaash India",
"Zee TV"
],
[
"2007",
"Bigg Boss",
"Sony tv"
],
[
"2008",
"Fear Factor : Khatron Ke Khiladi",
"Colors TV"
],
[
"2009",
"Aap Ki Kachehri",
"Star Plus"
],
[
"2010",
"Stunt Mania",
""
],
[
"2011",
"Just dance",
"Star Plus"
],
[
"2012",
"Survivor India - The Ultimate Battle",
"Star Plus"
],
[
"2013",
"DID Supermoms",
"Zee TV"
],
[
"2014",
"Fear Factor : Khatron Ke Khiladi 5",
"Colors TV"
],
[
"2015",
"Bigg Boss 8",
"Colors TV"
],
[
"2016",
"Dance Plus ( season 2 )",
"Star Plus"
],
[
"2017",
"Fear Factor : Khatron Ke Khiladi 8",
"Colors TV"
],
[
"2018",
"Super Dancer 2",
"Sony TV"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Indian Television Academy Awards, also known as the ITA Awards, is an annual event organised by the Indian Television Academy to honour excellence of Indian Television.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Categories -- Other Awards",
"title": "Indian Television Academy Awards",
"uid": "Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Television_Academy_Awards"
} | 3,644 |
3645 | 2014_Malaysia_Super_League_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Team Based",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"ATM",
"Selayang",
"Selayang Stadium",
"20,000"
],
[
"Johor Darul Ta'zim",
"Johor Bahru",
"Larkin Stadium",
"30,000"
],
[
"Kelantan",
"Kota Bharu",
"Sultan Mohammad IV Stadium",
"22,000"
],
[
"LionsXII",
"Singapore",
"Jalan Besar Stadium",
"8,000"
],
[
"Pahang",
"Kuantan",
"Darul Makmur Stadium",
"40,000"
],
[
"Perak",
"Ipoh",
"Perak Stadium",
"60,000"
],
[
"PKNS",
"Petaling Jaya",
"MBPJ Stadium",
"25,000"
],
[
"Sarawak",
"Kuching",
"Sarawak State Stadium",
"26,000"
],
[
"Selangor",
"Shah Alam",
"Shah Alam Stadium",
"80,372"
],
[
"Sime Darby",
"Kuala Lumpur",
"Selayang Stadium",
"20,000"
],
[
"T-Team",
"Kuala Terengganu",
"Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium",
"15,000"
],
[
"Terengganu",
"Kuala Terengganu",
"Sultan Ismail Nasiruddin Shah Stadium",
"15,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2014 Liga Super (English: 2014 Super League) also known as the Astro Liga Super for sponsorship reasons is the 11th season of the Liga Super, the top-tier professional football league in Malaysia. The season was held from 17 January and concluded on 25 June 2014. The Liga Super champions for 2014 was Johor Darul Ta'zim.",
"section_text": "A total of 12 teams compete in the 2014 season which includes the top 10 teams that participated in the 2013 season and champions and runners-up of the 2013 Liga Premier . Felda United and Negeri Sembilan were relegated at the end of the 2013 Liga Super season after finishing in the bottom place of the league table . 2012 Liga Premier unbeaten champions Sarawak and runners-up Sime Darby secured direct promotion to the Liga Super .",
"section_title": "Teams",
"title": "2014 Malaysia Super League",
"uid": "2014_Malaysia_Super_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Malaysia_Super_League"
} | 3,645 |
3646 | List_of_University_of_Oregon_alumni_19 | [
[
"Name",
"Degree ( s )",
"Year ( s )",
"Notability"
],
[
"Evan Baylis",
"",
"",
"NFL tight end"
],
[
"Bob Berry",
"",
"1964",
"Former Pro Bowl NFL quarterback"
],
[
"Josh Bidwell",
"B.A",
"1998",
"Pro Bowl NFL punter with the Washington Redskins"
],
[
"Jairus Byrd",
"attended",
"2008",
"Pro Bowl NFL safety for the Carolina Panthers"
],
[
"Patrick Chung",
"B.S",
"2008",
"Safety for the New England Patriots"
],
[
"Kellen Clemens",
"B.S",
"2006",
"NFL quarterback with the San Diego Chargers"
],
[
"Gunther Cunningham",
"B.S",
"1969",
"Former head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs"
],
[
"Dennis Dixon",
"B.S",
"2007",
"NFL quarterback with the Philadelphia Eagles"
],
[
"Reuben Droughns",
"",
"2000",
"NFL running back with the New York Giants"
],
[
"A.J . Feeley",
"",
"2000",
"NFL quarterback with the St. Louis Rams"
],
[
"Dan Fouts",
"B.S",
"1977",
"Pro Football Hall of Fame member ; former six-time Pro Bowl NFL quarterback ; ABC television sports announcer"
],
[
"Russ Francis",
"",
"1975",
"Former three-time Pro Bowl NFL tight end"
],
[
"Mike Gaechter",
"B.S",
"1962",
"Former NFL safety for the Dallas Cowboys"
],
[
"Roy Gagnon",
"",
"",
"NFL guard for the Detroit Lions"
],
[
"Dave Grayson",
"B.S",
"1960",
"Former AFL / NFL safety for the Kansas City Chiefs and Oakland Raiders"
],
[
"Tony Hargain",
"",
"",
"Former NFL wide receiver for the San Francisco 49ers"
],
[
"Joey Harrington",
"B.S",
"2002",
"Former NFL quarterback with the Detroit Lions , Miami Dolphins , Atlanta Falcons and New Orleans Saints"
],
[
"Josh Huff",
"B.S",
"2013",
"NFL wide receiver with the Philadelphia Eagles"
],
[
"Shy Huntington",
"B.S",
"1924",
"Former football , basketball , and baseball head coach for the Oregon Ducks"
],
[
"Dick James",
"",
"1956",
"Former Pro Bowl NFL running back"
]
] | {
"intro": "This List of University of Oregon alumni includes graduates and current students of the University of Oregon as well as former students who studied at the university but did not obtain a formal degree. The university opened in 1876 and the first class contained only five members, graduating in 1878. The university has over 195,000 alumni, 10 of whom are Pulitzer Prize winners, and 2 of whom are Nobel laureates.",
"section_text": "Full list of former University of Oregon players who have played football professionally Full list of former University of Oregon players who are currently playing in the NFL",
"section_title": "Sports -- Football",
"title": "List of University of Oregon alumni",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_Oregon_alumni_19",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_Oregon_alumni"
} | 3,646 |
3647 | Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history_40 | [
[
"Round",
"Pick #",
"Overall",
"Name",
"Position",
"College"
],
[
"1",
"27",
"27",
"Michael Bennett",
"Running back",
"Wisconsin"
],
[
"2",
"26",
"57",
"Willie Howard",
"Defensive end",
"Stanford"
],
[
"3",
"7",
"69",
"Eric Kelly",
"Cornerback",
"Kentucky"
],
[
"4",
"35",
"130",
"Shawn Worthen",
"Defensive tackle",
"Texas Christian"
],
[
"4",
"36",
"131",
"Cedric James",
"Wide receiver",
"Texas Christian"
],
[
"5",
"26",
"157",
"Patrick Chukwurah",
"Defensive end",
"Wyoming"
],
[
"6",
"26",
"189",
"Carey Scott",
"Cornerback",
"Kentucky State"
],
[
"7",
"25",
"225",
"Brian Crawford",
"Offensive tackle",
"Western Oregon"
]
] | {
"intro": "This page is a list of the Minnesota Vikings NFL Draft selections. The first draft the Vikings participated in was the 1961 NFL Draft, in which they made Tommy Mason of Tulane their first ever selection.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2001 NFL Draft",
"title": "Minnesota Vikings draft history",
"uid": "Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history_40",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history"
} | 3,647 |
3648 | List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_faculty_4 | [
[
"Name",
"Department",
"Service",
"Notability",
"Alumnus"
],
[
"Willis Adcock",
"Electrical Engineering",
"1986-1993",
"Assisted with invention of the silicon transistor and integrated circuit ; Fellow of AAAS and IEEE ; US National Academy of Engineering",
"No"
],
[
"Alan Bovik",
"Electrical Engineering",
"1984-present",
"Invented picture quality measurement tools used throughout global television , cinematic , and social media industries ; Primetime Emmy Award ; RPS Progress Medal ; IEEE Fourier Award ; Edwin H. Land Medal",
"No"
],
[
"Edith Clarke",
"Electrical Engineering",
"1947-1957",
"First woman faculty member of electrical engineering in the US ; power engineer ; inventor of Clarke Calculator and method of symmetrical components ; Fellow of IEEE ; Society of Women Engineers Achievement Award",
"No"
],
[
"Donglei Fan",
"Mechanical Engineering",
"2010-present",
"Principal investigator of the Nanomaterial Innovation Lab ; developed techniques for moving nanosctructures ; built fast nanomotors",
"No"
],
[
"John B. Goodenough",
"Mechanical Engineering and Electrical Engineering",
"1986-present",
"Research led to the first lithium ion battery ; US National Academy of Engineering ; Japan Prize ; National Medal of Science ; Nobel Prize in Chemistry",
"No"
],
[
"Moriba K. Jah",
"Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics",
"2017-present",
"Disruptive research in Space Situational Awareness , Astrodynamics , Space Traffic Management , and Space Security ; Director of Computational Astronautical Sciences and Technologies ; Distinguished Scholar at the Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law ; International Academy of Astronautics",
"No"
],
[
"Robert M. Metcalfe",
"Electrical Engineering",
"2011-present",
"Inventor of Ethernet ; founded 3Com Corporation ; recipient of ACM Grace Hopper Award in 1980 , IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Medal in 1988 , IEEE Medal of Honor in 1996 , National Medal of Technology in 2005 ; inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2007 ; Fellow Award from the Computer History Museum in 2008 ; US National Academy of Engineering",
"No"
],
[
"Yale Patt",
"Electrical Engineering",
"1999-present",
"Breakthroughs in computer architecture to make faster processors ; inventor of the WOS module ; the first complex logic gate implemented on a single piece of silicon ; Fellow of ACM and IEEE ; US National Academy of Engineering",
"No"
],
[
"Nicholas A. Peppas",
"Chemical Engineering",
"? -present",
"Pioneer in drug delivery , biomaterials , hydrogels and nanobiotechnology ; US National Academy of Engineering",
"No"
],
[
"Michael Webber",
"Mechanical Engineering",
"2006-present",
"Deputy Director of the university 's Energy Institute ; host of PBS 's Energy at the Movies",
"Yes"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of University of Texas at Austin faculty includes current and former instructors and administrators of the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), a major research university located in Austin, Texas that is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. Founded in 1883, the university has had the fifth largest single-campus enrollment in the nation as of Fall 2006 (and had the largest enrollment in the country from 1997 to 2003), with over 50,000 undergraduate and graduate students and 16,500 faculty and staff. It currently holds the largest enrollment of all colleges in the state of Texas.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Cockrell School of Engineering",
"title": "List of University of Texas at Austin faculty",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_faculty_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_faculty"
} | 3,648 |
3649 | Soviet_Union_at_the_1960_Winter_Olympics_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Maria Gusakova",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Women 's 10 km"
],
[
"Gold",
"Yevgeny Grishin",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 500 m"
],
[
"Gold",
"Yevgeny Grishin",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 1500 m"
],
[
"Gold",
"Viktor Kosichkin",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 5000 m"
],
[
"Gold",
"Klara Nesterova-Guseva",
"Speed skating",
"Women 's 1000 m"
],
[
"Gold",
"Lidiya Skoblikova",
"Speed skating",
"Women 's 1500 m"
],
[
"Gold",
"Lidiya Skoblikova",
"Speed skating",
"Women 's 3000 m"
],
[
"Silver",
"Lyubov Baranova",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Women 's 10 km"
],
[
"Silver",
"Radya Yeroshina Maria Gusakova Lyubov Baranova",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Women 's 3 x 5 km relay"
],
[
"Silver",
"Viktor Kosichkin",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 10000 m"
],
[
"Silver",
"Natalya Donchenko",
"Speed skating",
"Women 's 500 m"
],
[
"Silver",
"Valentina Stenina",
"Speed skating",
"Women 's 3000 m"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Aleksandr Privalov",
"Biathlon",
"Men 's 20 km"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Nikolay Anikin",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Men 's 30 km"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Anatoly Shelyukhin Gennady Vaganov Aleksey Kuznetsov Nikolay Anikin",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Men 's 4 × 10 km relay"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Radya Yeroshina",
"Cross-country skiing",
"Women 's 10 km"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Soviet Union men 's national ice hockey team Nikolai Puchkov Yevgeny Yerkin Nikolai Sologubov Yury Baulin Nikolay Karpov Genrikh Sidorenkov Alfred Kuchevsky Veniamin Alexandrov Aleksandr Almetov Konstantin Loktev Mikhail Bychkov Vladimir Grebennikov Yury Tsitsinov Viktor Yakushev Yevgeny Groshev Stanislav Petukhov Viktor Pryazhnikov",
"Ice hockey",
"Men 's competition"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Nikolay Gusakov",
"Nordic combined",
"Men 's individual ( 15 km )"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Rafael Grach",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 500 m"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Boris Stenin",
"Speed skating",
"Men 's 1500 m"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Soviet Union (USSR) competed at the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, United States.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Medalists",
"title": "Soviet Union at the 1960 Winter Olympics",
"uid": "Soviet_Union_at_the_1960_Winter_Olympics_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Union_at_the_1960_Winter_Olympics"
} | 3,649 |
3650 | Brittany_(administrative_region)_0 | [
[
"Town",
"Breton name",
"Population ( 2007 )",
"Department"
],
[
"Rennes",
"Roazhon",
"211,373",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
],
[
"Brest",
"Brest",
"142,722",
"Finistère"
],
[
"Quimper",
"Kemper",
"63,961",
"Finistère"
],
[
"Lorient",
"An Oriant",
"58,135",
"Morbihan"
],
[
"Vannes",
"Gwened",
"52,984",
"Morbihan"
],
[
"Saint-Malo",
"Sant-Maloù",
"48,563",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
],
[
"Saint-Brieuc",
"Sant-Brieg",
"46,178",
"Côtes-d'Armor"
],
[
"Lanester",
"Lannarstêr",
"22,598",
"Morbihan"
],
[
"Fougères",
"Felger",
"20,678",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
],
[
"Concarneau",
"Konk Kerne",
"20,280",
"Finistère"
],
[
"Lannion",
"Lannuon",
"19,773",
"Côtes-d'Armor"
],
[
"Plœmeur",
"Plañvour",
"18,509",
"Morbihan"
],
[
"Vitré",
"Gwitreg",
"16,691",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
],
[
"Morlaix",
"Montroulez",
"15,605",
"Finistère"
],
[
"Douarnenez",
"Douarnenez",
"15,436",
"Finistère"
],
[
"Cesson-Sévigné",
"Saozon-Sevigneg",
"15,261",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
],
[
"Bruz",
"Bruz",
"15,031",
"Ille-et-Vilaine"
]
] | {
"intro": "Brittany (Breton: Breizh, [ˈbrɛjs]; French: Bretagne, IPA: [bʁətaɲ] (listen)) is the farthest west of the 13 regions of France. It is named after the historic and geographic region of Brittany, of which it constitutes 80%. The capital is Rennes. It is a peninsular region bathed by the English Channel to the north and the Bay of Biscay to the south, and its neighboring regions are Normandy to the northeast and Pays de la Loire to the southeast. Bro Gozh ma Zadoù is the anthem of Brittany. It is sung to the same tune as that of the national anthem of Wales, Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau, and has similar words. As a region of France, Brittany has a Regional Council, which was most recently elected in 2015.",
"section_text": "The following table is the list of towns in Brittany with a population over 15,000 inhabitants . Rennes is situated in the east of Brittany , being the capital of the region , the capital of the Ille-et-Vilaine department , as well as the most populous metropolitan area in Brittany with 700,000 inhabitants ( 2013 ) .",
"section_title": "Geography -- Major communities",
"title": "Brittany (administrative region)",
"uid": "Brittany_(administrative_region)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brittany_(administrative_region)"
} | 3,650 |
3651 | List_of_castles_and_manor_houses_in_Sweden_4 | [
[
"Name",
"Swedish name",
"Location",
"Date",
"Condition"
],
[
"Malmö Castle",
"Malmöhus slott",
"Scania",
"1530",
"Museum"
],
[
"Mälsåker House",
"Mälsåkers slott",
"Södermanland",
"1660s",
"Museum"
],
[
"Maltesholm Castle",
"Maltesholms slott",
"Scania",
"1635",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Månstorp Gables",
"Månstorps slottsruin",
"Scania",
"1547",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Mariedal Castle",
"Mariedals slott",
"Västergötland",
"1660s",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Marsvinsholm Castle",
"Marsvinsholms slott",
"Scania",
"1648",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Mem Castle",
"Mems slott",
"Östergötland",
"15th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Nääs Castle",
"Nääs slott",
"Västergötland",
"1835",
"Museum"
],
[
"Näs Castle",
"Näs slott",
"Småland",
"12th century",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Näsby Castle",
"Näsby slott",
"Stockholm",
"14th century",
"Hotel"
],
[
"Näsbyholm Castle",
"Näsbyholms slott",
"Scania",
"15th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Noor Palace",
"Nors slott ( traditional spelling : Noor )",
"Uppland",
"14th century",
"Hotel"
],
[
"Nyköping Castle",
"Nyköpingshus",
"Södermanland",
"12th century",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Nynäs Castle",
"Nynäs slott",
"Södermanland",
"1650s",
"Museum"
],
[
"Osbyholm Castle",
"Osbyholms slott",
"Scania",
"1405",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Ovesholm Castle",
"Ovesholms slott",
"Scania",
"1804",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Pålsjö Castle",
"Pålsjö slott",
"Scania",
"1679",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Penningby castle",
"Penningby slott",
"Uppland",
"1330s",
"Museum"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of castles and palaces in Sweden. In the Swedish language the word slott is used for both castles, châteaus and palaces; this article lists all of them as well as fortresses.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "M-P",
"title": "List of castles and palaces in Sweden",
"uid": "List_of_castles_and_manor_houses_in_Sweden_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_castles_and_palaces_in_Sweden"
} | 3,651 |
3652 | List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_19 | [
[
"#",
"Artist",
"Artist 's nationality",
"Title"
],
[
"1",
"Lil Nas X",
"United States",
"Old Town Road"
],
[
"2",
"Tones and I",
"Australia",
"Dance Monkey"
],
[
"3",
"Apache 207",
"Germany",
"Roller"
],
[
"4",
"Juju featuring Henning May",
"Germany",
"Vermissen"
],
[
"5",
"Ava Max",
"United States",
"Sweet but Psycho"
],
[
"6",
"Billie Eilish",
"United States",
"Bad Guy"
],
[
"7",
"Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello",
"Canada Cuba",
"Señorita"
],
[
"8",
"Ed Sheeran and Justin Bieber",
"United Kingdom Canada",
"I Do n't Care"
],
[
"9",
"Capital Bra and Samra",
"Germany",
"Tilidin"
],
[
"10",
"Samra and Capital Bra",
"Germany",
"Wieder Lila"
],
[
"11",
"Daddy Yankee featuring Snow",
"Puerto Rico Canada",
"Con Calma"
],
[
"12",
"Lewis Capaldi",
"United Kingdom",
"Someone You Loved"
],
[
"13",
"Meduza and Goodboys",
"Italy United Kingdom",
"Piece of Your Heart"
],
[
"14",
"Capital Bra , Samra and Lea",
"Germany",
"110"
],
[
"15",
"Sarah Connor",
"Germany",
"Vincent"
],
[
"16",
"Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper",
"United States",
"Shallow"
],
[
"17",
"Bonez MC & RAF Camora",
"Germany",
"500 PS"
],
[
"18",
"Mabel",
"United Kingdom",
"Do n't Call Me Up"
],
[
"19",
"Dynoro and Gigi D'Agostino",
"Lithuania Italy",
"In My Mind"
],
[
"20",
"Rammstein",
"Germany",
"Deutschland"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the twenty best-selling singles on the Media Control Charts in Germany from 2000 to 2018. The data was found out by Media Control and is based on the singles sold.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2019",
"title": "List of best-selling singles by year (Germany)",
"uid": "List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_19",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)"
} | 3,652 |
3653 | List_of_Billboard_number-one_singles_of_1940_2 | [
[
"Weeks at number one",
"Song",
"Artist ( s )"
],
[
"13",
"Frenesi",
"Artie Shaw"
],
[
"13",
"I 've Heard That Song Before",
"Harry James"
],
[
"12",
"Heartaches",
"Ted Weems"
],
[
"12",
"Near You",
"Francis Craig"
],
[
"12",
"Paper Doll",
"Mills Brothers"
],
[
"12",
"I 'll Never Smile Again",
"Tommy Dorsey"
],
[
"11",
"Riders In The Sky",
"Vaughn Monroe"
],
[
"11",
"White Christmas",
"Bing Crosby"
],
[
"10",
"Amapola",
"Jimmy Dorsey"
],
[
"10",
"Moonlight Cocktail",
"Glenn Miller"
],
[
"10",
"The Gypsy",
"The Ink Spots"
],
[
"10",
"Ballerina",
"Vaughn Monroe"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article is about the US number-one songs chart held during the 1940s. Billboard number-one singles chart (which preceded the Billboard Hot 100 chart), which was updated weekly by the Billboard magazine, was the main singles chart of the American music industry since 1940 and until the Billboard Hot 100 chart was established in 1958. Before the Billboard Hot 100 chart was established in August 1958, which was based on a formula combining sales data of commercially available singles and airplay on American radio stations, the Billboard used to publish several song popularity charts weekly. Throughout most of the 1940s the magazine published the following three charts:",
"section_text": "The following songs were featured in top of the chart for the highest total number of weeks during 1940–1949 .",
"section_title": "Statistics by decade -- Songs by total number of weeks at number-one",
"title": "List of Billboard number-one singles of the 1940s",
"uid": "List_of_Billboard_number-one_singles_of_1940_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Billboard_number-one_singles_of_the_1940s"
} | 3,653 |
3654 | NCAA_Division_I_conference_realignment_18 | [
[
"School",
"Sport ( s )",
"Former Conference",
"New Conference"
],
[
"Central Florida Golden Knights",
"Football",
"Division I-A Independent",
"MAC"
],
[
"Findlay Oilers",
"Women 's ice hockey",
"Great Lakes Women 's Hockey Association",
"CHA"
],
[
"FIU Golden Panthers",
"Football",
"Started football",
"Division I-AA Independent"
],
[
"Howard Bison",
"Baseball",
"MEAC",
"Dropped baseball"
],
[
"Mercyhurst Lakers",
"Women 's ice hockey",
"Great Lakes Women 's Hockey Association",
"CHA"
],
[
"Niagara Purple Eagles",
"Women 's ice hockey",
"ECAC",
"CHA"
],
[
"Sacramento State Hornets",
"Baseball",
"Big West",
"Independent"
],
[
"St. John 's Red Storm",
"Football",
"Northeast",
"Division I-AA Independent"
],
[
"Wayne State Warriors",
"Women 's ice hockey",
"Great Lakes Women 's Hockey Association",
"CHA"
]
] | {
"intro": "N/A",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "History -- 2002–2003",
"title": "List of NCAA Division I conference realignments (2000–present)",
"uid": "NCAA_Division_I_conference_realignment_18",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NCAA_Division_I_conference_realignments_(2000–present)"
} | 3,654 |
3655 | List_of_NCCAA_institutions_0 | [
[
"School",
"City",
"State",
"Other Affiliations"
],
[
"Central Christian College of Kansas",
"McPherson",
"Kansas",
"Sooner Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
],
[
"College of the Ozarks",
"Pointlookout",
"Missouri",
"Independent ( NAIA )"
],
[
"Dallas Baptist University",
"Dallas",
"Texas",
"Heartland Conference ( NCAA Division II )"
],
[
"Ecclesia College",
"Springdale",
"Arkansas",
""
],
[
"McMurry University",
"Abilene",
"Texas",
"American Southwest Conference ( NCAA Division III )"
],
[
"Mid-America Christian University",
"Oklahoma City",
"Oklahoma",
"Sooner Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
],
[
"Nebraska Christian College",
"Papillion",
"Nebraska",
""
],
[
"Oklahoma Wesleyan University",
"Bartlesville",
"Oklahoma",
"Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
],
[
"Southwestern Assemblies of God University",
"Waxahachie",
"Texas",
"Sooner Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
],
[
"Southwestern Christian University",
"Bethany",
"Oklahoma",
"Sooner Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
],
[
"York College",
"York",
"Nebraska",
"Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference ( NAIA )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of institutions that compete in the National Christian College Athletic Association. There are currently 89 programs in the organization as of 2019.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Central Region -- Division I",
"title": "List of NCCAA institutions",
"uid": "List_of_NCCAA_institutions_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NCCAA_institutions"
} | 3,655 |
3656 | Colonial_Athletic_Association_5 | [
[
"Year",
"CAA Champions",
"Score",
"Runner-Up",
"Tournament MVP",
"Venue"
],
[
"1980",
"Old Dominion",
"62-51",
"Navy",
"Mark West , Old Dominion",
"Hampton Coliseum ( Hampton , Virginia )"
],
[
"1981",
"James Madison",
"69-60",
"Richmond",
"Charles Fisher , James Madison",
"Hampton Coliseum ( Hampton , Virginia )"
],
[
"1982",
"Old Dominion",
"58-57",
"James Madison",
"Mark West ( 2 ) , Old Dominion",
"Norfolk Scope ( Norfolk , Virginia )"
],
[
"1983",
"James Madison",
"41-38",
"William & Mary",
"Derek Steele , James Madison",
"Robins Center ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1984",
"Richmond",
"74-55",
"Navy",
"Johnny Newman , Richmond",
"Convocation Center ( Harrisonburg , Virginia )"
],
[
"1985",
"Navy",
"85-76",
"Richmond",
"Vernon Butler , Navy",
"William & Mary Hall ( Williamsburg , Virginia )"
],
[
"1986",
"Navy",
"72-61",
"George Mason",
"David Robinson , Navy",
"Patriot Center ( Fairfax , Virginia )"
],
[
"1987",
"Navy",
"53-50",
"James Madison",
"David Robinson ( 2 ) , Navy",
"Hampton Coliseum ( Hampton , Virginia )"
],
[
"1988",
"Richmond",
"73-70",
"George Mason",
"Peter Wollfolk , Richmond",
"Hampton Coliseum ( Hampton , Virginia )"
],
[
"1989",
"George Mason",
"78-72",
"UNC Wilmington",
"Kenny Sanders , George Mason",
"Hampton Coliseum ( Hampton , Virginia )"
],
[
"1990",
"Richmond",
"77-72",
"James Madison",
"Kenny Atkinson , Richmond",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1991",
"Richmond",
"81-78",
"George Mason",
"Jim Shields , Richmond",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1992",
"Old Dominion",
"78-73",
"James Madison",
"Ricardo Leonard , Old Dominion",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1993",
"East Carolina",
"54-49",
"James Madison",
"Lester Lyons , East Carolina",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1994",
"James Madison",
"77-76",
"Old Dominion",
"Odell Hodge , Old Dominion",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1995",
"Old Dominion",
"80-75",
"James Madison",
"Petey Sessoms , Old Dominion",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1996",
"VCU",
"46-43",
"UNC Wilmington",
"Bernard Hopkins , VCU",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1997",
"Old Dominion",
"62-58",
"James Madison",
"Odell Hodge ( 2 ) , Old Dominion",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1998",
"Richmond",
"79-64",
"UNC Wilmington",
"Daryl Oliver , Richmond",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
],
[
"1999",
"George Mason",
"63-58",
"Old Dominion",
"George Evans , George Mason",
"Richmond Coliseum ( Richmond , Virginia )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) is a collegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA's Division I whose full members are located in East Coast states from Massachusetts to South Carolina. Most of its members are public universities, and the conference is headquartered in Richmond. The CAA was historically a Southern conference until the addition of four schools in the Northeast (of five that joined from rival conference America East) after the turn of the 21st century, which added balance to the conference. The CAA was founded in 1979 as the ECAC South basketball league. It was renamed the Colonial Athletic Association in 1985 when it added championships in other sports (although a number of members maintain ECAC affiliation in some sports). As of 2006, it organizes championships in 21 men's and women's sports. The addition of Northeastern University in 2005 gave the conference the NCAA minimum of six football programs needed to sponsor football. For the 2007 football season, all of the Atlantic 10 Conference's football programs joined the CAA football conference, as agreed in May 2005.",
"section_text": "See also : Colonial Athletic Association Men 's Basketball Tournament",
"section_title": "Men 's basketball -- History of the Tournament Final",
"title": "Colonial Athletic Association",
"uid": "Colonial_Athletic_Association_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonial_Athletic_Association"
} | 3,656 |
3657 | List_of_county_routes_in_Wayne_County,_New_York_1 | [
[
"Route",
"Length ( mi )",
"Length ( km )",
"From",
"Via",
"To"
],
[
"CR 200",
"2.97",
"4.78",
"CR 201 / CR 202 in Walworth",
"North Lincoln Road",
"NY 104 in Ontario"
],
[
"CR 201",
"4.36",
"7.02",
"Monroe County line ( becomes CR 11 )",
"Plank Road in Walworth",
"NY 350"
],
[
"CR 202",
"1.40",
"2.25",
"NY 286 / CR 203 / CR 204",
"South Lincoln Road in Walworth",
"CR 200 / CR 201"
],
[
"CR 203",
"4.33",
"6.97",
"Monroe County line",
"Atlantic Avenue in Walworth",
"NY 350"
],
[
"CR 204 ( 1 )",
"3.45",
"5.55",
"CR 206A in Macedon",
"West Walworth Road",
"NY 441 in Walworth"
],
[
"CR 204 ( 2 )",
"2.03",
"3.27",
"NY 441",
"West Walworth Road in Walworth",
"NY 286 / CR 202 / CR 203"
],
[
"CR 205",
"1.00",
"1.61",
"NY 350 / NY 441",
"Penfield-Walworth Road in Walworth",
"CR 207 / CR 208"
],
[
"CR 205A",
"3.65",
"5.87",
"NY 441 in Walworth",
"Gananda Parkway",
"Eddy Road in Macedon"
],
[
"CR 206",
"1.50",
"2.41",
"NY 31 / CR 306",
"North Wayneport Road in Macedon",
"CR 206A"
],
[
"CR 206A",
"0.50",
"0.80",
"CR 206",
"Quaker Road in Macedon",
"CR 204"
],
[
"CR 207",
"4.40",
"7.08",
"CR 205 / CR 208 in Walworth",
"Walworth-Marion Road and Buffalo Street",
"CR 216 in Marion"
],
[
"CR 208",
"5.69",
"9.16",
"NY 31 in Macedon",
"Walworth Road",
"CR 205 / CR 207 in Walworth"
],
[
"CR 209",
"3.22",
"5.18",
"NY 350 in Macedon",
"Macedon Center Road",
"CR 210 in Palmyra"
],
[
"CR 210",
"5.29",
"8.51",
"Palmyra village line in Palmyra",
"Maple Avenue",
"CR 207 in Marion"
],
[
"CR 212",
"5.19",
"8.35",
"CR 214 in Marion",
"Ridge Chapel Road",
"CR 103 in Williamson"
],
[
"CR 214",
"1.30",
"2.09",
"CR 207",
"Dean Road in Marion",
"CR 212"
],
[
"CR 215",
"2.35",
"3.78",
"CR 218 in Marion",
"Owls Nest Road",
"CR 228 / CR 229 in Sodus"
],
[
"CR 216",
"1.63",
"2.62",
"NY 21",
"Main Street in Marion",
"NY 21"
],
[
"CR 217",
"2.52",
"4.06",
"CR 218 in Marion",
"Skinner Road",
"CR 228 in Arcadia"
],
[
"CR 218",
"6.55",
"10.54",
"CR 216 in Marion",
"Marion-East Williamson Road",
"CR 103 / CR 118 in Williamson"
]
] | {
"intro": "County routes in Wayne County, New York, are only posted on street blade signs. Each route number is the product of two different numbering systems, both county-wide in nature. The last two digits of the route number serve as a road's base designation and are assigned sequentially from the Monroe County line in the west to the Cayuga County line in the east and from the Lake Ontario shoreline in the north to the Ontario and Seneca county lines in the south. The first digit of each route's designation indicates where the route is located: routes numbered in the 100s are north of Ridge Road; routes in the 200s are south of Ridge Road and north of New York State Route 31 (NY 31); and routes in the 300s are south of NY 31. If a road crosses either of those highways, the first digit of the route's number changes to reflect the road's location in the latter numbering grid. Routes ending in an even number run from north to south; routes with an odd designation travel from east to west.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Routes 200–299",
"title": "List of county routes in Wayne County, New York",
"uid": "List_of_county_routes_in_Wayne_County,_New_York_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_county_routes_in_Wayne_County,_New_York"
} | 3,657 |
3658 | Cornwall_League_1_5 | [
[
"Team",
"Ground",
"Town/Village",
"Previous season"
],
[
"Camborne School of Mines",
"Memorial Park , Kernick Road",
"Penryn",
"3rd"
],
[
"Helston",
"King George V Playing Field",
"Helston",
"6th"
],
[
"Illogan Park",
"Paynters Lane Playing Field",
"Illogan",
"promoted from Tribute Cornwall 2"
],
[
"Newquay Hornets",
"Newquay Sports Ground",
"Newquay",
"relegated from Tribute Cornwall/Devon League"
],
[
"Perranporth",
"Ponsmere Valley",
"Perranporth",
"4th"
],
[
"Roseland",
"Philleigh Rugby Field",
"Philleigh",
"7th"
],
[
"Stithians",
"Playing Field",
"Stithians",
"5th"
],
[
"Veor",
"Wheal Gerry",
"Camborne",
"relegated from Tribute Cornwall/Devon League"
]
] | {
"intro": "Cornwall 1, known as Tribute Cornwall 1 for sponsorship reasons, is an English level nine rugby union league for clubs based in Cornwall. It has been running continually since 1987-88. The champions are promoted to the Tribute Cornwall/Devon league, and the runner-up plays the second team in Tribute Devon 1, with the winning team gaining promotion. One or two teams are usually relegated to Tribute Cornwall 2. Saltash are the most successful team having won the league on five occasions and have been runner-up three times; they currently play in Tribute Cornwall/Devon. From the 2016-17 season Cornwall 1 and Cornwall 2 were amalgamated to create the Tribute Cornwall League with fifteen teams playing each other once in a first phase. After Christmas the teams split into two leagues with the top eight playing in Cornwall One and the remainder playing in Cornwall Two. Hayle won both phase one and phase two, winning the title with two matches to play. They are promoted to the Cornwall/Devon league, following their relegation from that league in 2015-16. Newquay Hornets finished in second place and were due to play their counterparts from Devon, Torrington for the second promotion spot. Newquay did not want promotion and declined to play the match. For the 2018-19 season Cornwall 1 and Cornwall 2 would revert to being two separate divisions.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2014–15 -- Participating clubs",
"title": "Cornwall League 1",
"uid": "Cornwall_League_1_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornwall_League_1"
} | 3,658 |
3659 | 2013_MLS_Supplemental_Draft_2 | [
[
"Pick #",
"MLS team",
"Player",
"Position",
"Affiliation"
],
[
"39",
"Toronto FC",
"Nik Robson",
"Midfielder",
"New Mexico"
],
[
"40",
"Chivas USA",
"PASS",
"",
""
],
[
"41",
"Portland Timbers",
"PASS",
"",
""
],
[
"42",
"New England Revolution",
"Alex DeJohn",
"Defender",
"Old Dominion Central Jersey Spartans"
],
[
"43",
"Philadelphia Union",
"Jake Keegan",
"Forward",
"Binghamton Jersey Express"
],
[
"44",
"Colorado Rapids",
"Machael David",
"Midfielder",
"UCSB"
],
[
"45",
"FC Dallas",
"Cam Wilder",
"Midfielder",
"Kentucky"
],
[
"46",
"Montreal Impact",
"Luciano Delbono",
"Midfielder",
"Wake Forest Carolina Dynamo"
],
[
"47",
"Montreal Impact",
"Juan Arbelaez",
"Midfielder",
"VCU"
],
[
"48",
"Vancouver Whitecaps FC",
"Joshua Patterson",
"Forward",
"Duquesne"
],
[
"49",
"Chicago Fire",
"James Belshaw",
"Goalkeeper",
"Duke"
],
[
"50",
"Real Salt Lake",
"Brock Granger",
"Defender",
"Louisville Portland Timbers U23s"
],
[
"51",
"New York Red Bulls",
"Stephane Diop",
"Forward",
"UConn"
],
[
"52",
"Sporting Kansas City",
"Brian Fekete",
"Defender",
"Tampa GPS Portland Phoenix"
],
[
"53",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"Colin Mitchell",
"Defender",
"Oregon State"
],
[
"54",
"Seattle Sounders FC",
"Lebogang Moloto",
"Midfielder",
"Lindsey Wilson"
],
[
"55",
"D.C. United",
"PASS",
"",
""
],
[
"56",
"Houston Dynamo",
"Nic Ryan",
"Midfielder",
"UCSB"
],
[
"57",
"Los Angeles Galaxy",
"PASS",
"",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft was a secondary draft that was held by Major League Soccer via conference call on January 22, 2013. The draft was four rounds with all 19 MLS clubs participating.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Selection order -- Round 3",
"title": "2013 MLS Supplemental Draft",
"uid": "2013_MLS_Supplemental_Draft_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_MLS_Supplemental_Draft"
} | 3,659 |
3660 | List_of_Bolton_Wanderers_F.C._records_and_statistics_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Nationality",
"World Cup"
],
[
"Nat Lofthouse",
"England",
"1954"
],
[
"Eddie Hopkinson",
"England",
"1958"
],
[
"Tommy Banks",
"England",
"1958"
],
[
"Jason McAteer",
"Ireland",
"1994"
],
[
"Per Frandsen",
"Denmark",
"1998"
],
[
"Mark Fish",
"South Africa",
"1998"
],
[
"Stig Tøfting",
"Denmark",
"2002"
],
[
"Youri Djorkaeff",
"France",
"2002"
],
[
"Jared Borgetti",
"Mexico",
"2006"
],
[
"Radhi Jaïdi",
"Tunisia",
"2006"
],
[
"Hidetoshi Nakata",
"Japan",
"2006"
],
[
"Lee Chung-Yong",
"South Korea",
"2010 2014"
],
[
"Danny Shittu",
"Nigeria",
"2010"
],
[
"Vladimír Weiss",
"Slovakia",
"2010"
],
[
"Stuart Holden",
"United States",
"2010"
]
] | {
"intro": "Bolton Wanderers F.C. is an English professional association football club based in Horwich, Bolton. The club was founded as Christ Church F.C. in 1874, making them one of the oldest football clubs in England, and turned professional in 1877, before joining the Football League as founder members in 1888. Bolton Wanderers currently play in League One, the third tier of English football. They were relegated from the top tier (where they had been since 2001) in 2012 but in their time as a professional club have played in all four professional English leagues. This list encompasses the major honours won by Bolton Wanderers and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Bolton Wanderers players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club. The club's attendance records, both at The Reebok Stadium, their home since 1997, and Burnden Park, their home between 1895 and 1997, are also included in the list. The club have won the FA Cup four times, but not since 1958, and have spent the majority of their history in the top flight of English football. Bolton also hold the record for the most years in the top flight of English football without winning the title, 72 years in total.",
"section_text": "This section lists all players who have played in a World Cup Finals game whilst playing for Bolton Wanderers F.C .",
"section_title": "Players -- World Cup participants",
"title": "List of Bolton Wanderers F.C. records and statistics",
"uid": "List_of_Bolton_Wanderers_F.C._records_and_statistics_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bolton_Wanderers_F.C._records_and_statistics"
} | 3,660 |
3661 | Malaysia_Yearly_Box_Office_9 | [
[
"Rank",
"Release Date",
"Film Title",
"Studio",
"Gross ( RM )"
],
[
"1",
"28 Apr",
"Captain America : Civil War",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"43,381,100"
],
[
"2",
"24 Mar",
"Batman v Superman : Dawn of Justice",
"Warner Bros",
"30,450,300"
],
[
"3",
"11 Feb",
"The Mermaid",
"Sony Pictures Entertainment",
"28,214,290"
],
[
"4",
"27 Oct",
"Doctor Strange",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"24,195,400"
],
[
"5",
"7 Apr",
"The Jungle Book",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"23,081,100"
],
[
"6",
"11 Feb",
"Deadpool",
"20th Century Fox",
"21,842,600"
],
[
"7",
"4 Feb",
"From Vegas to Macau III",
"Golden Screen Cinemas",
"16,005,200"
],
[
"8",
"15 Dec",
"Rogue One : A Star Wars Story",
"Walt Disney Pictures",
"15,068,200"
],
[
"9",
"29 Dec",
"The Great Wall",
"20th Century Fox",
"14,714,500"
],
[
"10",
"10 Mar",
"Kung Fu Panda 3",
"20th Century Fox",
"14,407,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The statistics on international films' Box Office in Malaysia has started in 2008. Box Office Mojo is the only website that provides the box office numbers for international films released in Malaysia. However, this does not include the numbers for local films. For top local films gross, please view Cinema of Malaysia. Box Office - Yahoo! Malaysia and Cinema Online Malaysia are two current websites that show the ranking of films weekly inclusive of local films, but not providing any box office number. Golden Screen Cinemas (GSC) also provide only the ranking of both local and international films weekly, based on the popularity at its own cinema. The ranking can be accessed at the right bottom corner of GSC's website.",
"section_text": "As of 26 January 2019 .",
"section_title": "Year to year international films box office in Malaysia -- Year 2016",
"title": "List of highest-grossing films in Malaysia",
"uid": "Malaysia_Yearly_Box_Office_9",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_highest-grossing_films_in_Malaysia"
} | 3,661 |
3662 | Home_Run_Derby_(Major_League_Baseball)_0 | [
[
"Player",
"Team",
"Round 1",
"Semis",
"Finals",
"Totals"
],
[
"Luis Gonzalez",
"Diamondbacks",
"5",
"5",
"6",
"16"
],
[
"Sammy Sosa",
"Cubs",
"3",
"8",
"2",
"13"
],
[
"Jason Giambi",
"Athletics",
"14",
"6",
"-",
"20"
],
[
"Barry Bonds",
"Giants",
"7",
"3",
"-",
"10"
],
[
"Bret Boone",
"Mariners",
"3",
"-",
"-",
"3"
],
[
"Todd Helton",
"Rockies",
"2",
"-",
"-",
"2"
],
[
"Alex Rodriguez",
"Rangers",
"2",
"-",
"-",
"2"
],
[
"Troy Glaus",
"Angels",
"0",
"-",
"-",
"0"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Home Run Derby is an annual home run hitting competition in Major League Baseball (MLB) customarily held the day before the MLB All-Star Game, which places the contest on a Monday in July. Since the inaugural derby in 1985, the event has seen several rule changes, evolving from a short outs-based competition, to multiple rounds, and eventually a bracket-style timed event.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Complete scoreboard -- 2000s",
"title": "Home Run Derby",
"uid": "Home_Run_Derby_(Major_League_Baseball)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Run_Derby"
} | 3,662 |
3663 | List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_25 | [
[
"Team",
"Home city/suburb",
"Court"
],
[
"Academic Futsal",
"Dublin",
""
],
[
"B & H United Futsal",
"Dublin",
""
],
[
"Blue Magic Futsal",
"Clondalkin",
"Collinstown Park Community College"
],
[
"Crumlin United Futsal",
"Crumlin , Dublin",
""
],
[
"Puskas & Hagi Futsal",
"Dublin",
""
],
[
"St Ita 's Futsal",
"Donabate / Portrane",
"Donabate and Portrane Community and Leisure Centre"
],
[
"Saints & Scholars Futsal",
"Whitechurch , County Dublin",
"St Columba 's College"
],
[
"Transylvania Futsal",
"Blanchardstown",
"IT Blanchardstown"
]
] | {
"intro": "Traditionally, association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland have been classified as either senior, intermediate or junior. These classifications effectively categorise clubs who compete in national, provincial and county leagues respectively.",
"section_text": "2014–15",
"section_title": "Futsal -- Emerald Futsal League",
"title": "List of association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland",
"uid": "List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_25",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland"
} | 3,663 |
3664 | List_of_corruption_scandals_in_Romania_0 | [
[
"People involved ( office held/occupation )",
"Date",
"Details",
"Conviction date"
],
[
"Liviu Dragnea ( President of the Chamber of Deputies , President of Social Democratic Party )",
"2006-2013",
"Sentenced to 3 and a half years imprisonment for instigating to abuse of power",
"27 May 2019"
],
[
"Radu Mazăre ( former mayor of Constanța ) Cristi Borcea [ ro ] ( businessman ) Nicușor Constantinescu [ ro ] ( former chairman of the Constanța County Council )",
"2004",
"Mazăre was sentenced to 9 years imprisonment for abuse of power in a case related to a sale of a 15,000 sqm-plot of land in the Mamaia resort . Cristi Borcea and Nicușor Constantinescu received a 5-year imprisonment sentence",
"8 February 2019"
],
[
"Dan Șova ( former senator and minister in several Ponta cabinets )",
"2011-2014",
"Sentenced to 3 years imprisonment and €100,000 forfeiture for influence peddling",
"20 June 2018"
],
[
"Elena Udrea ( former Minister of Regional Development and Tourism in all Boc cabinets )",
"2011",
"Sentenced to 6 years imprisonment and to an asset forfeiture of €2.6 million for bribery and abuse of power in the Bute Gala case The six-year sentence in the Bute Gala trial was suspended by the High Court of Cassation and Justice on 21 December 2018 following the Constitutional Court 's ruling that all high courts judge panels had not been formed legally",
"5 June 2018"
],
[
"Alina Bica [ ro ] ( Former Chief Prosecutor of the Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism ( DIICOT ) )",
"2014",
"Convicted for the crime of favouring the offender , whereby Alina Bica accepted a bribe from a local businessman , Horia Simu , in order to shelf a pending case against him . Sentenced to 3 and a half years imprisonment . Horia Simu received 4 years imprisonment , whilst the intermediary , former Tax Authority Chief Şerban Pop , received 5 years imprisonment",
"26 January 2017"
],
[
"Adrian Severin ( Member of the European Parliament ( MEP ) )",
"2010-2011",
"Convicted for bribery and influence-peddling in the 2011 cash for influence scandal . Sentenced to 4 years imprisonment",
"16 November 2016"
],
[
"Dorin Cocoș [ ro ] ( Businessman ) Gabriel Sandu ( Minister of Communications between 2008 and 2010 ) Gheorghe Ștefan ( former Mayor of Piatra Neamț ) Nicolae Dumitru ( ro ) ( Businessman )",
"2008-2010",
"Microsoft licensing corruption scandal : Dorin Cocoș , businessman and former spouse of Elena Udrea , was sentenced to 2 years 4 months imprisonment ( in March 2016 sentenced to 2 years imprisonment ) for influence peddling and money laundering , and to an asset forfeiture of €9 million ( previously to €3 million ) . Gabriel Sandu was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment ( previously to 2 years imprisonment ) for bribery and money laundering , and to an asset forfeiture of over €2 million . Gheorghe Ștefan was sentenced to 6 years imprisonment ( previously 3 years imprisonment ) for influence peddling and to an asset forfeiture of over €3 million . Nicolae Dumitru was convicted to 2 years 4 months imprisonment ( previously 1 and a half years suspended sentence ) , $ 2,050,000 and €1 million forfeiture ( previously €1 million forfeiture and 90 days community service )",
"3 October 2016"
],
[
"Nicușor Constantinescu [ ro ] ( former chairman of the Constanța County Council )",
"2009-2013",
"Sentenced to five years imprisonment ( before the appeal to 3 and a half years ) for abuse of power in a case related to the underfunding of the Zonal Military Center in Constanța",
"29 June 2016"
],
[
"Mircea Băsescu [ ro ] ( Businessman )",
"2011 -2016",
"Sentenced to 4 years imprisonment for influence-peddling by taking bribes from a Roma clan in return for promising to secure the early release of the clan 's convicted boss , Sandu Anghel aka Bercea Mondialu ' . Mircea Băsescu is the younger brother of Traian Băsescu , the former president of Romania , as well as the godfather of Sandu Anghel 's granddaughter",
"16 June 2016"
],
[
"Veronica Cîrstoiu ( Judge at the Bucharest Court of Appeal )",
"2012",
"Convicted for receiving a bribe of approximately €630,000 and using her influence to reach a favourable judgement for a defendant in a criminal case . Sentenced to 7 years imprisonment",
"2 June 2016"
],
[
"Liviu Dragnea ( Member of Parliament ; Leader of the Social Democratic Party ; former Deputy Prime-Minister )",
"2012",
"Convicted for using his political influence to mastermind a campaign in swinging a referendum ( impeachment ) vote against former president Traian Băsescu in 2012 , through the use of bribes and forged ballot papers . He was handed a suspended sentence of 2 years",
"22 April 2016"
],
[
"Gheorghe Hânsă ( Mayor of Cernavodă )",
"2005-2008",
"Sentenced to 3 years 8 months for official misconduct by concluding contracts detrimental to the town 's finances . His son , Tiberiu Marius Hânsă , was sentenced to 3 years 2 months for complicity in the crime perpetrated by his father",
"13 April 2016"
],
[
"Florin Aurelian Popescu [ ro ] ( Member of Parliament , former President of the Dâmbovița County Council )",
"2012",
"Sentenced to 2 years imprisonment for official misconduct . Using his position as leader of the local Democratic Liberal Party organization and President of the Dâmbovița County Council , Florin Popescu requested a local entrepreneur that 60,992 kilos grilled chicken be delivered to him . Subsequently , Florin Popescu distributed the chicken to the potential voters during the electoral campaign for the 2012 local elections",
"14 March 2016"
],
[
"Alin Trășculescu [ ro ] ( Member of Parliament )",
"2010-2012",
"Sentenced to 3 years in prison for influence-peddling , instigation to money laundering , embezzlement and forgery",
"4 March 2016"
],
[
"Constantin Boșcodeală ( Mayor of Buzău )",
"2002-2008",
"Sentenced to 3 years probation for official misconduct and banned from running for the mayor office for 5 years",
"1 March 2016"
],
[
"Codruț Șereș ( Minister of Economy )",
"2002-2004",
"Sentenced to 4 years imprisonment for embezzlement of funds belonging to the Hidroelectrica company",
"29 February 2016"
],
[
"Gruia Stoica [ ro ] ( Founder and President of the Grampet Group ; CEO of Grup Feroviar Român , the largest private rail cargo company in Romania )",
"2013",
"Sentenced to 2 and a half years probation and 90 days community service for influence buying",
"23 February 2016"
],
[
"Marian Neacșu [ ro ] ( Member of Parliament , Secretary-General of the Social Democratic Party )",
"2009",
"Sentenced to 6 months probation for conflict of interest after illegally hiring his own daughter at his MP office",
"23 February 2016"
],
[
"Marian Ghiveciu [ ro ] ( Member of Parliament )",
"2005-2006",
"Sentenced to 3 years probation for instigation to official misconduct in a case related to illegal retrocession of land plots in the Merei commune , Buzău County",
"23 February 2016"
],
[
"Adrian Grăjdan ( Head of the State Inspectorate for Constructions ( ISC ) )",
"2012",
"Convicted for the crime of favouring the perpetrator ( obstruction of justice ) when four days after he was appointed Head of the ISC , he withdrew all the graft claims of the ISC against convicted former prime minister Năstase , despite the fact that the ISC suffered damages amounting to €1.5 million . Sentenced to 3 and a half years probation",
"22 February 2016"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable corruption scandals in Romania.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Investigations resulting in final sentences",
"title": "List of corruption scandals in Romania",
"uid": "List_of_corruption_scandals_in_Romania_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_corruption_scandals_in_Romania"
} | 3,664 |
3665 | 1998_in_film_0 | [
[
"Rank",
"Title",
"Distributor",
"Worldwide gross"
],
[
"1",
"Armageddon",
"Disney",
"$ 553,709,788"
],
[
"2",
"Saving Private Ryan",
"Paramount",
"$ 481,840,909"
],
[
"3",
"Godzilla",
"Sony",
"$ 379,014,294"
],
[
"4",
"There 's Something About Mary",
"20th Century Fox",
"$ 369,884,651"
],
[
"5",
"A Bug 's Life",
"Disney",
"$ 363,398,565"
],
[
"6",
"Deep Impact",
"Paramount",
"$ 349,464,664"
],
[
"7",
"Mulan",
"Disney",
"$ 304,320,254"
],
[
"8",
"Dr. Dolittle",
"20th Century Fox",
"$ 294,456,605"
],
[
"9",
"Shakespeare in Love",
"Miramax",
"$ 289,317,794"
],
[
"10",
"Lethal Weapon 4",
"Warner Bros",
"$ 285,444,603"
]
] | {
"intro": "The year 1998 in film involved many significant films including; Shakespeare in Love (which won the Academy Award for Best Picture), Saving Private Ryan, American History X, The Truman Show, Primary Colors, Rushmore, Rush Hour, There's Something About Mary, The Big Lebowski, and Terrence Malick's directorial return in The Thin Red Line. Animated releases included Antz, A Bug's Life, Mulan, The Prince of Egypt and The Rugrats Movie. Warner Bros. Pictures celebrated its 75th anniversary in 1998.",
"section_text": "See also : List of 1998 box office number-one films in the United States The top ten films released in 1998 by worldwide gross are as follows :",
"section_title": "Highest-grossing films",
"title": "1998 in film",
"uid": "1998_in_film_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_in_film"
} | 3,665 |
3666 | 2003_AFL_Draft_2 | [
[
"Pick",
"Player",
"Recruited from",
"Recruited to"
],
[
"1",
"Jade Rawlings",
"Hawthorn",
"Western Bulldogs"
],
[
"2",
"Nick Stevens",
"Port Adelaide",
"Carlton"
],
[
"3",
"Phillip Read",
"West Coast Eagles",
"Melbourne"
],
[
"4",
"Ben Marsh",
"Adelaide Crows",
"Richmond"
],
[
"5",
"Paul Koulouriotis",
"Port Adelaide",
"Geelong"
],
[
"6",
"Shane Harvey",
"Essendon",
"Kangaroos"
],
[
"7",
"Doug Scott",
"Box Hill Hawks",
"Hawthorn"
],
[
"8",
"Michael Johnson",
"Perth Football Club",
"Fremantle"
],
[
"9",
"Pass",
"",
"Adelaide Crows"
],
[
"10",
"Jacob Surjan",
"South Fremantle Football Club",
"Port Adelaide"
],
[
"11",
"Luke Weller",
"Brisbane Lions",
"Richmond"
],
[
"12",
"Josh Mahoney",
"Williamstown Football Club",
"Port Adelaide"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2003 AFL draft was the 2003 instance of the AFL draft, the annual draft of talented players by Australian rules football teams that participate in the main competition of that sport, the Australian Football League. The 2003 draft consisted of a trade period, the national, pre-season and rookie drafts and the elevation of previously drafted rookies to the senior list. There were 83 draft selections between the 16 teams in the national draft. The Western Bulldogs received the first pick in the national draft after finishing on the bottom of the ladder during the 2003 AFL season. The Bulldogs and Melbourne both received a priority selection for having earned 20 premiership points of less during the preceding season. Carlton also received a priority selection, despite being banned from the first two rounds of this year's draft, owing to salary cap breaches discovered the previous year. This draft is considered one of the weaker drafts, with almost half of the 16 club's first picks delisted within the following 4 years. It has produced one Brownlow Medallist, Adam Cooney, who is the first and, as of 2018, only number one draft pick to win the award. The main trades that occurred involved Nathan Brown switching from the Bulldogs to Richmond and Trent Croad returning to Hawthorn after spending two years with Fremantle. The trading period also contained The Veale Deal, where unknown youngster Lochlan Veale was traded by Hawthorn to the Western Bulldogs in a lopsided three-way deal involving Essendon. In the deal Hawthorn gained Danny Jacobs, Essendon gained Mark Alvey and the number six selection in the draft and the Bulldogs officially only received Veale, and had an understanding Hawthorn that they would not trade Jade Rawlings to any other club, allowing the Bulldogs to select him with the first selection in the pre-season draft.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2004 pre-season draft",
"title": "2003 AFL draft",
"uid": "2003_AFL_Draft_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003_AFL_draft"
} | 3,666 |
3667 | 2000_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_3 | [
[
"Rank",
"Country",
"Team",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Romania",
"Lidia Simon Mihaela Botezan Cristina Pomacu",
"3:34:22"
],
[
"2",
"Japan",
"Mizuki Noguchi Yukiko Okamoto Yasuko Hashimoto",
"3:36:25"
],
[
"3",
"Russia",
"Lidiya Grigoryeva Galina Aleksandrova Zinaida Semyonova",
"3:45:41"
],
[
"4",
"Ethiopia",
"Aster Demissie Abebe Tola Meseret Kotu",
"3:48:20"
],
[
"5",
"United States",
"Milena Glusac Kristin Beaney Shelly Steely",
"3:49:03"
],
[
"6",
"Great Britain",
"Paula Radcliffe Sarah Wilkinson Andrea Green",
"3:49:55"
],
[
"7",
"South Africa",
"Carlien Cornelissen Theresa du Toit Sibongile Ngcongwane",
"3:55:26"
],
[
"8",
"Mexico",
"Margaríta Tapía Dulce María Rodríguez Liliana Merlo",
"3:56:55"
],
[
"9",
"Guatemala",
"Elsa Monterroso Angelina Cornelio Herlinda Xol",
"4:33:36"
],
[
"10",
"Croatia",
"Kristinka Marković Tijana Pavičić Slavica Brčić",
"4:41:29"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 9th IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held on November 12, 2000 in the city of Veracruz, Mexico. A total of 182 athletes, 121 men and 61 women, from 52 countries took part. Detailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results was given. Complete results were published.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Team Results -- Women 's",
"title": "2000 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships",
"uid": "2000_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships"
} | 3,667 |
3668 | List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Maine_0 | [
[
"School",
"Location ( s )",
"Control",
"Type",
"Enrollment ( 2016 )",
"Founded"
],
[
"Bates College",
"Lewiston",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"1,903",
"1855"
],
[
"Beal College",
"Bangor",
"Private ( for-profit )",
"Associates college",
"600",
"1891"
],
[
"Bowdoin College",
"Brunswick",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"1,952",
"1794"
],
[
"Central Maine Community College",
"Auburn",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"3,978",
"1963"
],
[
"Colby College",
"Waterville",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"2,055",
"1813"
],
[
"College of the Atlantic",
"Bar Harbor",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"424",
"1969"
],
[
"Eastern Maine Community College",
"Bangor",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"4,051",
"1966"
],
[
"Husson University",
"Bangor and South Portland",
"Private",
"Masters university",
"3,860",
"1898"
],
[
"Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts",
"Portland",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"79",
"2007"
],
[
"Kennebec Valley Community College",
"Fairfield",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"3,284",
"1969"
],
[
"Maine College of Art",
"Portland",
"Private",
"School of art",
"495",
"1882"
],
[
"Maine Maritime Academy",
"Castine",
"Public",
"Baccalaureate college",
"1,037",
"1941"
],
[
"Maine College of Health Professions",
"Lewiston",
"Private",
"Associates college",
"216",
"1891"
],
[
"Northern Maine Community College",
"Presque Isle",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"1,285",
"1961"
],
[
"Saint Joseph 's College of Maine",
"Standish",
"Private",
"Masters university",
"4,465",
"1912"
],
[
"Southern Maine Community College",
"South Portland",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"8,648",
"1946"
],
[
"Thomas College",
"Waterville",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"1,918",
"1894"
],
[
"Unity College",
"Unity",
"Private",
"Baccalaureate college",
"766",
"1965"
],
[
"University of Maine",
"Orono",
"Public",
"Research university",
"12,488",
"1865"
],
[
"University of Maine at Augusta",
"Augusta",
"Public",
"Baccalaureate college",
"6,193",
"1965"
]
] | {
"intro": "The U.S. state of Maine has twenty-eight accredited, degree-granting institutions of higher learning. The state's land-grant university and only research university is the University of Maine in Orono. It is the flagship of the University of Maine System, which also has branch campuses in Augusta, Portland/Gorham/Lewiston, Farmington, Fort Kent, Machias, and Presque Isle. The state's three oldest institutions of higher education are Bowdoin College (founded in 1794), Colby College (1813), and Bates College (1855). The three colleges collectively form the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Consortium and are ranked among the best colleges in the United States; often placing in the top 10 percent of all liberal arts colleges. The largest institution is the University of Maine, with 12,488 students, and the smallest is the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts, with a total of 79 students. UMaine is home to the state's only NCAA Division I athletic program, the Maine Black Bears. The collegiate system of Maine also includes numerous baccalaureate colleges such as College of the Atlantic, the Maine Maritime Academy, Unity College, and Thomas College. There is only one medical school in the state, the University of New England's College of Osteopathic Medicine, and only one law school, the University of Maine School of Law.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Open institutions",
"title": "List of colleges and universities in Maine",
"uid": "List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Maine_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Maine"
} | 3,668 |
3669 | List_of_honorary_British_knights_and_dames_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Nationality",
"Honour",
"Year",
"Category",
"Notes"
],
[
"Daniel Barenboim",
"Argentina / Israel",
"KBE",
"2011",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Pianist and conductor"
],
[
"Jorge Luis Borges",
"Argentina",
"KBE",
"tbd",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Poet and writer"
],
[
"Alfred Brendel",
"Austria",
"KBE",
"1989",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Pianist"
],
[
"Julien Cain",
"France",
"KBE",
"1952",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Administrator-general of the Bibliothèque nationale de France for services to British cultural issues . see also fr : Julien Cain"
],
[
"Ralf Dahrendorf",
"Germany",
"KBE",
"1982",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Became a British national in 1988"
],
[
"Christian Conrad Sophus , Count Danneskiold-Samsøe",
"Denmark",
"KCVO",
"1904",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Anna Morpurgo Davies",
"Italy",
"DBE",
"2000",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Plácido Domingo",
"Spain",
"KBE",
"2002",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Opera singer ; awarded for contributions to music and charity work"
],
[
"Antal Doráti",
"Hungary",
"KBE",
"1983",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Maurice Druon",
"France",
"KBE",
"1999",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Previously appointed Honorary CBE in 1988"
],
[
"Douglas Fairbanks Jr",
"United States",
"KBE",
"1949",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"In recognition of his work on behalf of Anglo-American amity , particularly as chairman in the United States of the Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe"
],
[
"Naum Gabo",
"Soviet Union",
"KBE",
"1973",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Mark Getty",
"United States",
"KBE",
"2015",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Bernard Haitink",
"Netherlands",
"CH",
"2002",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Musical director of the Royal Opera House"
],
[
"Bernard Haitink",
"Netherlands",
"KBE",
"1977",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Principal Conductor , London Philharmonic Orchestra for his enormous contribution to the artistic life of this country"
],
[
"Bob Hope",
"United States",
"KBE",
"1998",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Entertainer , for contribution to Anglo-American friendship He had lost British nationality in 1920"
],
[
"Magnus Magnusson",
"Iceland",
"KBE",
"1989",
"Arts/Entertainment",
""
],
[
"Ferdinand Meldahl",
"Denmark",
"GCVO",
"1904",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Chamberlain to the King of Denmark and Vice President of the Royal Academy of Arts , Copenhagen"
],
[
"Yehudi Menuhin",
"United States / Switzerland",
"KBE",
"1965",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Became a British national in 1985 . Appointed a substantive Member of the Order of Merit in 1987"
],
[
"Spike Milligan",
"Ireland",
"KBE",
"2001",
"Arts/Entertainment",
"Comedian , awarded for services to entertainment"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is an incomplete list of people who have been created honorary Knights or Dames by the British crown, as well as those who have been raised to the two comparable Orders of Chivalry (Order of Merit and Order of the Companions of Honour) and the Royal Victorian Chain, which do not carry pre-nominal styles. Use of pre-nominal styles and post-nominal initials. An honorary award is one made to a person who is not a citizen of a Commonwealth realm. He or she cannot use the pre-nominal style of 'Sir' or 'Dame', but can use the post-nominal letters (after their names), subject to the prevailing conventions in his or her own country. If such a person later acquires citizenship of a Commonwealth realm, then any honorary awards usually become substantive, and in the case of knights and dames they can begin to use the pre-nominal styles. However this is not automatic. The person must be dubbed by the Queen or Her Majesty's delegate in order to be entitled to use the pre-nominal style. If the knighthood is in an order which has a special class for honorary knighthoods, a change to a regular class of knighthoods is also required. Loss of citizenship of a British realm. Citizens of a country which was a full part of the British Empire or Commonwealth when they received the honour (i.e. who were British subjects at the time), were substantive knights or dames, not honorary. The knighthood does not become honorary, and the person may choose to use his or her title(s), after their country becomes a republic.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Arts and entertainment",
"title": "List of honorary British knights and dames",
"uid": "List_of_honorary_British_knights_and_dames_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_honorary_British_knights_and_dames"
} | 3,669 |
3670 | List_of_long_tunnels_by_type_2 | [
[
"Name",
"System",
"Stations",
"Length in km ( mi )",
"Year Completed"
],
[
"Line 3",
"Guangzhou Metro",
"Airport South - Panyu Square",
"60.4 ( 37.5 ) ( longest branch )",
"2005-2010"
],
[
"Line 10",
"Beijing Subway",
"Xiju - Shoujingmao",
"57.1 ( 35.5 )",
"2008-2012"
],
[
"Seoul Subway Line 5",
"Seoul Metropolitan Rapid Transit Corporation",
"Banghwa - Macheon",
"47.6 ( 29.6 ) ( longest branch )",
"1995-1996"
],
[
"Downtown Line",
"Mass Rapid Transit ( Singapore )",
"Bukit Panjang to Expo",
"44.2 ( 27.5 mi ) ( +2.2 km in 2024 )",
"2017"
],
[
"Serpukhovsko-Timiryazevskaya Line",
"Moscow Metro",
"Altufyevo - Bulvar Dmitriya Donskogo",
"41.5 ( 25.7 )",
"1983-2002"
],
[
"Metro Madrid L-12 : ( Metro Sur )",
"Madrid Metro , Spain",
"circle route",
"40.96 ( 25.5 )",
"2003"
],
[
"Toei Oedo Line",
"TMBT Subway , Japan",
"Hikarigaoka to Shiodome to Tocho-mae",
"40.7 ( 25.3 )",
"1991-2000"
],
[
"Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya Line",
"Moscow Metro",
"Medvedkovo to Novoyasenevskaya",
"37.8 ( 23.5 )",
"1958-1990"
],
[
"Circle Line",
"Mass Rapid Transit ( Singapore )",
"Dhoby Ghaut to HarbourFront",
"35.7 ( 22.2 ) ( +4 km in 2024 )",
"2009-2011"
],
[
"Busan Subway Line 2",
"Busan Transportation Corporation",
"Jangsan - Dongwon",
"35.5 km ( 22.1 mi )",
"1991-1999"
],
[
"Seoul Subway Line 6",
"Seoul Metropolitan Rapid Transit Corporation",
"Eungam Loop - Bonghwasan",
"35.1 km ( 21.8 mi )",
"1995-2001"
]
] | {
"intro": "This page presents the same tunnels as in list of tunnels by length in separate lists according to the different tunnel types.",
"section_text": "Main article : List of longest subway tunnel sections Only continuous tunnel sections should be included , at least 35 km long , excluding branches from the longest tunnel .",
"section_title": "Subway",
"title": "List of long tunnels by type",
"uid": "List_of_long_tunnels_by_type_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_long_tunnels_by_type"
} | 3,670 |
3671 | Birkebeinerrennet_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Name",
"Club/Nation",
"Time"
],
[
"1932",
"Trygve Beisvåg",
"Norway",
"4:51.04"
],
[
"1933",
"Arne Rustadstuen",
"Norway",
"4:24.12"
],
[
"1934",
"Arne Rustadstuen ( 2 )",
"Norway",
"5:41.25"
],
[
"1935",
"Olaf Hoffsbakken",
"Norway",
"4:10.35"
],
[
"1936",
"Oscar Gjøslien",
"Norway",
"5:16.05"
],
[
"1937",
"Gunnar Hansveen",
"Norway",
"4:44.45"
],
[
"1938",
"Olaf Hoffsbakken ( 2 )",
"Norway",
"3:56.34"
],
[
"1939",
"Hallvard Eggset",
"Norway",
"4:09.05"
],
[
"1940",
"Gunnar Hansveen ( 2 )",
"Norway",
"4:30.09"
],
[
"1946",
"Leif Haugen",
"Norway",
"3:54.59"
],
[
"1947",
"Gunnar Hermansen",
"Norway",
"4:38.24"
],
[
"1949",
"Olav Kveberg",
"Norway",
"4:13.55"
],
[
"1950",
"Gunnar Hermansen ( 2 )",
"Norway",
"4:28.15"
],
[
"1951",
"Thorfinn Staff Eid",
"Norway",
"4:12.01"
],
[
"1952",
"Odd Nyborg",
"Norway",
"4:17.50"
],
[
"1953",
"Johs . Woxen",
"Norway",
"4:20.25"
],
[
"1954",
"Johan Østvang",
"Norway",
"4:30.18"
],
[
"1955",
"Oddmund Jensen",
"Norway",
"3:57.31"
],
[
"1956",
"Einar Skaaren",
"Norway",
"4:03.33"
],
[
"1957",
"Oddmund Jensen ( 2 )",
"Norway",
"3:48.46"
]
] | {
"intro": "Birkebeinerrennet (lit. The Birkebeiner race) is a long-distance cross-country ski marathon held annually in Norway. It debuted in 1932 and has been a part of Worldloppet as long as Worldloppet has been around. The Birkebeinerrennet is one of three races held under the Birkebeiner moniker, the other two being Birkebeinerrittet (bicycling) and Birkebeinerløpet (cross-country running). Researchers at the Manchester Metropolitan University found that the metabolic cost for modern ski models is about 2.5 J/kg*m as compared to about 5 J/kg*m for ski models dated 542 AD. They also estimated maximum cross country speed for the 542 AD ski to 5 m/s, compared to about 12 m/s for modern cross country skis; for long distance skiing (several hours) results were 3 and 7 m/s respectively. This corresponds to about 5 hours for the original 1206 AD Birkebeiner flight.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Men",
"title": "Birkebeinerrennet",
"uid": "Birkebeinerrennet_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birkebeinerrennet"
} | 3,671 |
3672 | List_of_number-one_hits_of_2004_(France)_0 | [
[
"Pos",
"Artist",
"Title",
"Sales*"
],
[
"1",
"O-Zone",
"Dragostea din tei",
"1,101,000"
],
[
"2",
"K'Maro",
"Femme Like U",
"482,000"
],
[
"3",
"Aventura",
"Obsesión",
"565,000"
],
[
"4",
"Kareen Antonn & Bonnie Tyler",
"Si demain ... ( Turn Around )",
"473,000"
],
[
"5",
"Star Academy 4",
"Laissez-moi danser",
"495,000"
],
[
"6",
"The Black Eyed Peas",
"Shut Up",
"No Info"
],
[
"7",
"Leslie & Amine",
"Sobri ( notre destin )",
"365,000"
],
[
"8",
"T-Rio",
"Choopeta ( Mamae eu quero )",
"408,000"
],
[
"9",
"Le 6-9",
"Le Poulailler",
"No Info"
],
[
"10",
"Garou & Michel Sardou",
"La Rivière de notre enfance",
"425,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the French SNEP Top 100 Singles & Top 150 albums number-ones of 2004.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Top ten best sales -- Singles",
"title": "List of number-one singles of 2004 (France)",
"uid": "List_of_number-one_hits_of_2004_(France)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_number-one_singles_of_2004_(France)"
} | 3,672 |
3673 | North_Carolina_Tar_Heels_baseball_2 | [
[
"Player",
"Position",
"Number",
"Team",
"MLB Organization"
],
[
"Daniel Bard",
"P",
"",
"St. Lucie Mets",
"New York Mets"
],
[
"Colin Bates",
"P",
"36",
"Harrisburg Senators",
"Washington Nationals"
],
[
"A.J . Bogucki",
"P",
"28",
"Hagerstown Suns",
"Washington Nationals"
],
[
"Skye Bolt",
"CF",
"13",
"Stockton Ports",
"Oakland A 's"
],
[
"Taylore Cherry",
"P",
"39",
"Winston-Salem Dash",
"Chicago White Sox"
],
[
"Joe Dudek",
"1B",
"26",
"Lexington Legends",
"Kansas City Royals"
],
[
"Kent Emanuel",
"P",
"35",
"Fresno Grizzlies",
"Houston Astros"
],
[
"Tim Federowicz",
"C",
"18",
"Sacramento River Cats",
"San Francisco Giants"
],
[
"Zac Gallen",
"P",
"3",
"Springfield Cardinals",
"St. Louis Cardinals"
],
[
"Reilly Hovis",
"P",
"41",
"Greensboro Grasshoppers",
"Miami Marlins"
],
[
"Trevor Kelley",
"P",
"35",
"Portland Sea Dogs",
"Boston Red Sox"
],
[
"Mason McCullough",
"P",
"44",
"Jackson Generals",
"Arizona Diamondbacks"
],
[
"Levi Michael",
"2B",
"9",
"Chattanooga Lookouts",
"Minnesota Twins"
],
[
"Brian Moran",
"P",
"25",
"Tulsa Drillers",
"Los Angeles Dodgers"
],
[
"Benton Moss",
"P",
"30",
"Montgomery Biscuits",
"Tampa Bay Rays"
],
[
"R.C . Orlan",
"P",
"26",
"Potomac Nationals",
"Washington Nationals"
],
[
"Tyler Ramirez",
"RF",
"33",
"Midland RockHounds",
"Oakland A 's"
],
[
"Zach Rice",
"P",
"45",
"Danville Braves",
"Atlanta Braves"
],
[
"Michael Russell",
"SS",
"12",
"Montgomery Biscuits",
"Tampa Bay Rays"
],
[
"Ryder Ryan",
"P",
"15",
"Lake County Captains",
"Cleveland Indians"
]
] | {
"intro": "The North Carolina Tar Heels baseball team, commonly referred to as Carolina, represents the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in NCAA Division I college baseball. They compete in the Coastal Division of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Tar Heels play their home games on campus at Boshamer Stadium, and are currently coached by Mike Fox.",
"section_text": "Former Tar Heels on current Minor League Baseball rosters as of August 1 , 2017 . [ 5 ]",
"section_title": "Notable alumni -- Current Minor League roster",
"title": "North Carolina Tar Heels baseball",
"uid": "North_Carolina_Tar_Heels_baseball_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Carolina_Tar_Heels_baseball"
} | 3,673 |
3674 | Dynasty_Warriors_8_0 | [
[
"Wei",
"Wu",
"Shu",
"Jin",
"Other"
],
[
"Cai Wenji",
"Daqiao",
"Bao Sanniang",
"Deng Ai",
"Chen Gong **"
],
[
"Cao Cao",
"Ding Feng",
"Fa Zheng **",
"Guo Huai",
"Diaochan"
],
[
"Cao Pi",
"Gan Ning",
"Guan Ping",
"Jia Chong *",
"Dong Zhuo"
],
[
"Cao Ren",
"Han Dang *",
"Guan Suo",
"Sima Shi",
"Lu Bu"
],
[
"Dian Wei",
"Huang Gai",
"Guan Xing *",
"Sima Yi",
"Lu Lingqi **"
],
[
"Guo Jia",
"Lianshi",
"Guan Yinping *",
"Sima Zhao",
"Meng Huo"
],
[
"Jia Xu",
"Ling Tong",
"Guan Yu",
"Wang Yuanji",
"Yuan Shao"
],
[
"Li Dian *",
"Lu Meng",
"Huang Zhong",
"Wen Yang *",
"Zhang Jiao"
],
[
"Pang De",
"Lu Su *",
"Jiang Wei",
"Xiahou Ba",
"Zhurong"
],
[
"Wang Yi",
"Lu Xun",
"Liu Bei",
"Zhang Chunhua *",
"Zuo Ci"
],
[
"Xiahou Dun",
"Sun Ce",
"Liu Shan",
"Zhong Hui",
""
],
[
"Xiahou Yuan",
"Sun Jian",
"Ma Chao",
"Zhuge Dan",
""
],
[
"Xu Huang",
"Sun Quan",
"Ma Dai",
"",
""
],
[
"Xu Zhu",
"Sun Shangxiang",
"Pang Tong",
"",
""
],
[
"Xun Yu ***",
"Taishi Ci",
"Wei Yan",
"",
""
],
[
"Yu Jin **",
"Xiaoqiao",
"Xingcai",
"",
""
],
[
"Yue Jin *",
"Zhou Tai",
"Xu Shu",
"",
""
],
[
"Zhang He",
"Zhou Yu",
"Yueying",
"",
""
],
[
"Zhang Liao",
"Zhu Ran **",
"Zhang Bao *",
"",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "Dynasty Warriors 8 (真・三國無双7, Shin Sangokumusō 7, known in Japan as Shin Sangokumusou 7) is a hack and slash video game and the eighth official installment of the Dynasty Warriors series. It is developed by Omega Force and published by Tecmo Koei. The story is based on the 14th-century Chinese historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms. Having more than 82 characters featured in the game, the game largely based its system on Dynasty Warriors 7 and focused on adding more content for replayability while also making several tweaks to the combat system. The game was unveiled on October 30, 2012 via Jump Magazine and released on February 28, 2013 for the PlayStation 3 in Japan. On April 3, 2013, it was confirmed by Tecmo Koei that there would be an overseas release for both North America and Europe in July 2013. It was released on both PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 for both physical and digital release. The option of English and Japanese voice overs also return, where there is also an option to change the subtitles to English, French or German. The game is followed by two expansions. The first, Dynasty Warriors 8: Xtreme Legends was released for PlayStation 3 on November 28, 2013 in Japan and in 2014 in North America and Europe. Versions for PlayStation Vita and PlayStation 4 are developed as well, both of which package the expansion with the original version and are released under the title of Dynasty Warriors 8: Xtreme Legends - Complete Edition. The PlayStation Vita version was released on the same day as PlayStation 3, while the PlayStation 4 version was released as a launch title for the console in Japan, on March 25, 2014 in North America, and on April 4, 2014 for Europe.",
"section_text": "The following is a list of the 83 playable characters in the game . Characters available by default are the ones who are selectable in the first stage of each kingdom stories ; other characters are unlocked by unlocking the first stage they are made playable in Story Mode . Players who import saved data from the base game to Xtreme Legends will have the new characters unlocked for use in Story Mode and Free Mode by default , in addition to the characters that were previously unlocked in the base game . In Xtreme Legends , if the character is defeated as an ally in Ambition Mode or if they are released to strengthen another officer , they will be unavailable until they are defeated and recruited again .",
"section_title": "Character List",
"title": "Dynasty Warriors 8",
"uid": "Dynasty_Warriors_8_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynasty_Warriors_8"
} | 3,674 |
3675 | 2011_1._deild_karla_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Stadium capacity"
],
[
"BÍ/Bolungarvík",
"Ísafjörður",
"Torfnesvöllur",
"800"
],
[
"Fjölnir",
"Reykjavík",
"Fjölnisvöllur",
"1,098"
],
[
"Grótta",
"Seltjarnarnes",
"Gróttuvöllur",
"1,500"
],
[
"Haukar",
"Hafnarfjörður",
"Ásvellir",
"1,400"
],
[
"HK",
"Kópavogur",
"Kópavogsvöllur",
"5,501"
],
[
"ÍA",
"Akranes",
"Akranesvöllur",
"2,780"
],
[
"ÍR",
"Reykjavík",
"ÍR-Völlur",
"800"
],
[
"KA",
"Akureyri",
"Akureyrarvöllur",
"1,770"
],
[
"Leiknir R",
"Reykjavík",
"Leiknisvöllur",
"1,300"
],
[
"Selfoss",
"Selfoss",
"Selfossvöllur",
"2,000"
],
[
"Víkingur Ó",
"Ólafsvík",
"Ólafsvíkurvöllur",
"800"
],
[
"Þróttur R",
"Reykjavík",
"Valbjarnarvöllur",
"2,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 season of 1. deild karla was the 57th season of second-tier football in Iceland.",
"section_text": "ReykjavíkReykjavíkGróttaÞróttur R.FjölnirHKLeiknir R.ÍRHaukarKAVíkingur Ó.ÍABÍ/BolungarvíkSelfoss Location of teams in the 1. deild karla 2011",
"section_title": "Stadia and locations",
"title": "2011 1. deild karla",
"uid": "2011_1._deild_karla_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_1._deild_karla"
} | 3,675 |
3676 | List_of_sports_films_10 | [
[
"Title",
"Year",
"Genre",
"Notes"
],
[
"Corbett and Courtney Before the Kinetograph",
"1894",
"Documentary",
"Silent film"
],
[
"Boxing Match ; or , Glove Contest",
"1896",
"Documentary",
"Silent film"
],
[
"The Corbett-Fitzsimmons Fight",
"1897",
"Documentary",
"A full-length version of 19th Century title bout"
],
[
"The Gordon Sisters Boxing",
"1901",
"Documentary",
"Silent film"
],
[
"The Joe Gans - Battling Nelson Fight",
"1906",
"Archival Footage",
"Silent footage of most of the championship bout that lasted an astounding 48 rounds . The film company ran out of money - and film - in the 38th round and had to stop shooting"
],
[
"The Johnson-Jeffries Fight",
"1910",
"Documentary",
"Footage from bout between heavyweights Jack Johnson and James J. Jeffries"
],
[
"The Knockout",
"1914",
"Short , comedy",
"To show his girl how brave he is , Pug ( Roscoe Arbuckle ) challenges a champion"
],
[
"The Third String",
"1914",
"Comedy",
"A man poses as a boxer to impress a barmaid and is forced to fight the champion"
],
[
"The Champion",
"1915",
"Short , comedy",
"Charlie Chaplin puts a good luck horseshoe into his boxing glove and wins"
],
[
"The White Hope",
"1915",
"Drama",
"An Earl 's sister returns to a boxer in time to help him win"
],
[
"Twenty-One",
"1918",
"Comedy",
"A young man trades places with a lookalike boxer and learns to fight for what he wants"
],
[
"The World 's Champion",
"1922",
"Drama",
"To impress a British noblewoman , a man goes to America to put up his dukes"
],
[
"The Leather Pushers",
"1922",
"Serial",
"After his father goes broke , a young man ( Reginald Denny ) fights for money"
],
[
"Hogan 's Alley",
"1925",
"Comedy",
"A knockout earns Lefty ( Monte Blue ) the title , but nearly costs him his girl"
],
[
"Battling Butler",
"1926",
"Comedy",
"Silent film directed by and starring Buster Keaton"
],
[
"One-Punch O'Day",
"1926",
"Comedy",
"A whole town 's money is riding on Jimmy O'Day ( Billy Sullivan )"
],
[
"The Shock Punch",
"1926",
"Drama",
"Randall Savage floors a boxing champ , then a construction boss to win a girl"
],
[
"The Ring",
"1927",
"Drama",
"Alfred Hitchcock silent film about a pugilist known as One-Round Jack"
],
[
"Knockout Reilly",
"1927",
"Drama",
"Falsely convicted of a crime , Reilly ( Richard Dix ) fights the guy who framed him"
],
[
"Night Parade",
"1929",
"Drama",
"A father tries to persuade his middleweight-champ son not to take a dive"
]
] | {
"intro": "This compilation of films covers all sports activities. Sports films have been made since the era of silent films, such as the 1915 film The Champion starring Charlie Chaplin. Films in this genre can range from serious (Raging Bull) to silly (Horse Feathers). A classic theme for sports films is the triumph of an individual or team who prevail despite the difficulties, standard elements of melodrama.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Boxing",
"title": "List of sports films",
"uid": "List_of_sports_films_10",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sports_films"
} | 3,676 |
3677 | National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Johnson_County,_Arkansas_0 | [
[
"",
"Name on the Register",
"Date listed",
"Location",
"City or town"
],
[
"1",
"Big Piney Creek Bridge",
"April 9 , 1990 ( # 90000506 )",
"Highway 123 over Big Piney Creek 35°40′37″N 93°14′10″W / 35.676944°N 93.236111°W / 35.676944 ; -93.236111 ( Big Piney Creek Bridge )",
"Hagarville"
],
[
"2",
"Bunch-Walton Post # 22 American Legion Hut",
"January 24 , 2007 ( # 06001269 )",
"201 Legion St. 35°28′17″N 93°27′29″W / 35.471389°N 93.458056°W / 35.471389 ; -93.458056 ( Bunch-Walton Post # 22 American Legion Hut )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"3",
"Clarksville Commercial Historic District",
"March 30 , 2009 ( # 08000816 )",
"Roughly bounded by McConnell Street on the south , Cherry Street on the north , Johnson Street on the west , and Spadra Creek on the east 35°28′16″N 93°27′59″W / 35.4712°N 93.4663°W / 35.4712 ; -93.4663 ( Clarksville Commercial Historic District )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"4",
"Clarksville Confederate Monument",
"June 25 , 1999 ( # 99000709 )",
"Oakland Memorial Cemetery , west of Montgomery Ave. 35°28′04″N 93°28′39″W / 35.467778°N 93.4775°W / 35.467778 ; -93.4775 ( Clarksville Confederate Monument )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"5",
"Clarksville High School Building No . 1",
"September 10 , 1992 ( # 92001202 )",
"Main St. 35°28′17″N 93°28′20″W / 35.471389°N 93.472222°W / 35.471389 ; -93.472222 ( Clarksville High School Building No . 1 )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"6",
"Clarksville National Guard Armory",
"January 24 , 2007 ( # 06001270 )",
"309 College St. 35°28′27″N 93°28′00″W / 35.474273°N 93.466586°W / 35.474273 ; -93.466586 ( Clarksville National Guard Armory )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"7",
"Davis House",
"December 22 , 1982 ( # 82000854 )",
"212 Fulton St. 35°28′01″N 93°27′57″W / 35.466944°N 93.465833°W / 35.466944 ; -93.465833 ( Davis House )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"8",
"N.E . Dickerson Store",
"September 22 , 1995 ( # 95001124 )",
"East of Highway 215 35°41′21″N 93°34′23″W / 35.689167°N 93.573056°W / 35.689167 ; -93.573056 ( N.E . Dickerson Store )",
"Oark"
],
[
"9",
"Dover to Clarksville Road-Hickeytown Road Segment",
"May 26 , 2005 ( # 05000464 )",
"Hickeytown Rd. , east of U.S. Route 64 35°26′06″N 93°22′53″W / 35.435°N 93.381389°W / 35.435 ; -93.381389 ( Dover to Clarksville Road-Hickeytown Road Segment )",
"Lamar"
],
[
"10",
"Dunlap House",
"December 22 , 1982 ( # 82000855 )",
"101 Grandview 35°28′15″N 93°27′37″W / 35.470833°N 93.460278°W / 35.470833 ; -93.460278 ( Dunlap House )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"11",
"First Presbyterian Church",
"May 13 , 1991 ( # 91000588 )",
"212 College Ave. 35°28′21″N 93°27′57″W / 35.4725°N 93.465833°W / 35.4725 ; -93.465833 ( First Presbyterian Church )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"12",
"Harmony Presbyterian Church",
"December 1 , 1994 ( # 94001411 )",
"Northern side of Highway 103 , approximately 8 miles north of Clarksville 35°33′02″N 93°34′13″W / 35.550556°N 93.570278°W / 35.550556 ; -93.570278 ( Harmony Presbyterian Church )",
"Harmony"
],
[
"13",
"Taylor Hill Hotel",
"October 21 , 2008 ( # 08001007 )",
"409 Alabama St. 35°26′11″N 93°40′15″W / 35.436261°N 93.670767°W / 35.436261 ; -93.670767 ( Taylor Hill Hotel )",
"Coal Hill"
],
[
"14",
"Johnson County Courthouse",
"June 14 , 1991 ( # 91000680 )",
"Junction of Main and Fulton Sts . 35°28′15″N 93°27′53″W / 35.470833°N 93.464722°W / 35.470833 ; -93.464722 ( Johnson County Courthouse )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"15",
"King 's Canyon Petroglyphs",
"May 4 , 1982 ( # 82002119 )",
"Address Restricted",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"16",
"MacLean Hall",
"June 5 , 2017 ( # 100001008 )",
"415 N. College Ave. 35°28′33″N 93°27′59″W / 35.475928°N 93.466306°W / 35.475928 ; -93.466306 ( MacLean Hall )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"17",
"Edward Taylor McConnell House",
"May 10 , 2001 ( # 01000485 )",
"302 S. Fulton St. 35°28′09″N 93°27′57″W / 35.469167°N 93.465833°W / 35.469167 ; -93.465833 ( Edward Taylor McConnell House )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"18",
"McKennon House",
"December 22 , 1982 ( # 82000856 )",
"115 Grandview 35°28′12″N 93°27′37″W / 35.47°N 93.460278°W / 35.47 ; -93.460278 ( McKennon House )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"19",
"Capt . Archibald S. McKennon House",
"January 2 , 1976 ( # 76000424 )",
"215 N. Central 35°28′22″N 93°27′55″W / 35.472778°N 93.465278°W / 35.472778 ; -93.465278 ( Capt . Archibald S. McKennon House )",
"Clarksville"
],
[
"20",
"Missouri-Pacific Depot-Clarksville",
"June 11 , 1992 ( # 92000604 )",
"West of College St. between Cherry and Main Sts . 35°28′18″N 93°28′07″W / 35.471667°N 93.468611°W / 35.471667 ; -93.468611 ( Missouri-Pacific Depot-Clarksville )",
"Clarksville"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Johnson County, Arkansas. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Johnson County, Arkansas, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map. There are 33 properties listed on the National Register in the county.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Current listings",
"title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Johnson County, Arkansas",
"uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Johnson_County,_Arkansas_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Johnson_County,_Arkansas"
} | 3,677 |
3678 | List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)_0 | [
[
"Call letters",
"Channel",
"Network ( s )",
"City and state",
"Meaning or notes"
],
[
"KAAH-TV",
"27 PSIP 26",
"TBN",
"Honolulu , Hawaii",
"K A ll A merican TV H onolulu"
],
[
"KAAL",
"36 PSIP 6",
"6.1 ABC 33.2 This TV",
"Austin , Minnesota",
"A ustin- A lbert L ea"
],
[
"KAAS-TV",
"17 PSIP 18",
"Fox",
"Salina , Kansas",
"Satellite of KSAS-TV Wichita"
],
[
"KABB",
"30 PSIP 29",
"Fox",
"San Antonio , Texas",
"A lamo BB roadcasting"
],
[
"KABC-TV",
"7 PSIP 7",
"7.1 ABC 7.2ABC7+ ( LWN )",
"Los Angeles , California",
"A merican B roadcasting C ompany"
],
[
"KACV-TV",
"9 PSIP/cable 2",
"PBS",
"Amarillo , Texas",
"A marillo C ollege V oice"
],
[
"KADN-TV",
"16 PSIP 15",
"15.1 Fox 46.2 KLAF-LD",
"Lafayette , Louisiana",
"A cadi AN"
],
[
"KAEF-TV",
"22 PSIP 23",
"ABC",
"Arcata , California",
"A rcata- E ureka - F ortuna . Semisatellite of KRCR Redding"
],
[
"KAET",
"8 PSIP 8",
"PBS",
"Phoenix , Arizona",
"A rizona E ducational T elevision"
],
[
"KAFT",
"9 PSIP 13",
"PBS",
"Fayetteville , Arkansas",
"A rkansas F ayetteville T elevision"
],
[
"KAID",
"21 PSIP/cable 4",
"PBS",
"Boise , Idaho",
"A da County , Id aho"
],
[
"KAII-TV",
"7 PSIP 7",
"Fox",
"Wailuku , Hawaii",
"Haw AII"
],
[
"KAIL",
"7 PSIP 53",
"7.1 MyNetworkTV 7.2 Cozi TV",
"Fresno , California",
"Also branded by its cable channel assignment on 13"
],
[
"KAIT",
"8 PSIP 8",
"ABC",
"Jonesboro , Arkansas",
"Sounds like eight ( AIT : Arkansas Independent Television , originally an independent before joining ABC in 1965 )"
],
[
"KAJB",
"36 PSIP 54",
"Telefutura",
"Calipatria , California",
""
],
[
"KAKE",
"10 PSIP 10",
"10.1 ABC 10.2 MeTV",
"Wichita , Kansas",
"Sounds like cake"
],
[
"KAKM",
"8 PSIP 7",
"PBS",
"Anchorage , Alaska",
"A las k a M"
],
[
"KAKW-DT",
"13 PSIP 62",
"Univision",
"Killeen , Texas",
"A ustin/ K illeen/ W aco"
],
[
"KALB-TV",
"35 PSIP 5",
"5.1 NBC 35.2 CBS",
"Alexandria , Louisiana",
"K now Al exandria B etter ; Digital subchannel 35.2 branded as cable channel 2 and under call sign NALB-TV"
],
[
"KALO",
"38 PSIP 38",
"religious",
"Honolulu , Hawaii",
"Named after the kalo ( taro ) plant , traditionally a staple of Hawaiian life and nourishment"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of full-power television stations in the United States having call signs beginning with the letter K. Low-power TV stations, those with designations such as KAGN-LP or K11XQ, have not been included in this list. See also the list of TV stations beginning with W and the list of TV stations beginning with X.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "KA",
"title": "List of television stations in the United States by call sign (initial letter K)",
"uid": "List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_television_stations_in_the_United_States_by_call_sign_(initial_letter_K)"
} | 3,678 |
3679 | Cthulhu_Mythos_in_popular_culture_2 | [
[
"Game Title",
"Publisher/Developer",
"Year",
"Notes"
],
[
"Arcane Mystery Serial",
"Sarbakan , PC",
"2002",
"Online serial game pitting human investigators against the creatures of the Mythos"
],
[
"Alone in the Dark",
"Infogrames , PC",
"1992",
"Survival horror game based on the works of H. P. Lovecraft"
],
[
"Anchorhead",
"Michael Gentry",
"1998",
"Text adventure game inspired by the works of H. P. Lovecraft"
],
[
"Ayumi : Enhanced Edition",
"Lord Rutsah",
"2016",
"The whole game is heavily based on the Yellow Mythos of Hastur , with multiple references to other Great Old Ones . Byakhees , Nagas , Mi-Gos and other Mythos entities make frequent appearances , while the player is tormented by the voice of the King in Yellow"
],
[
"Bloodborne",
"From Software",
"2015",
"An Action role-playing game on the PlayStation 4 that is heavily influenced by the Cthulhu Mythos featuring characters and supernatural beings directly based on those found in the works of H. P. Lovecraft"
],
[
"Call of Chtulhu ( 2018 video game )",
"Cyanide",
"2019",
"Survival horror role-playing game inspired by the short story and the 1981 role-playing game of the same title"
],
[
"Call of Cthulhu : Dark Corners of the Earth",
"Bethesda Softworks / 2K Games , Xbox / Microsoft Windows",
"2005",
"Loosely based on The Shadow Over Innsmouth , with references to other Mythos works"
],
[
"Call of Duty : Black Ops III",
"Treyarch",
"2015",
"The Shadow Man , a character in the Shadows of Evil campaign , is revealed to be a manifestation of Cthulhu . The setting and gameplay itself is inspired by the Mythos"
],
[
"Cthulhu Chronicles",
"MetaArcade",
"2018",
"A campaign of several interactive fiction adventures for mobile platforms , based on Call of Cthulhu ( role-playing game )"
],
[
"Cthulhu Saves the World",
"Zeboyd Games",
"2010",
"A 2D role-playing video game where Cthulhu must become a hero to recover his dark powers"
],
[
"Civilization VI",
"Firaxis Games",
"2016",
"One of the achievements in Civilization VI is called Armies of Cthulhu . It is achieved by levying the military of the city-state Nan Madol"
],
[
"Crusader Kings II",
"Paradox Interactive",
"2012",
"A chain of events in Crusader Kings II describes the player 's character helping to summon Cthulhu . The player can choose to either sacrifice his character , or slay Cthulhu after summoning it"
],
[
"Darkest Dungeon",
"Red Hook Studios",
"2015",
"A Roguelike dungeon crawler where the player manages a group of heroes reclaiming an estate where a heavily Cthulhu-themed Old One has awakened and drove the residents mad . The player must not only make sure his group survives but also take care of their sanity and stress levels"
],
[
"Destiny : The Taken King",
"Bungie",
"2015",
"Two of the raid bosses , Golgoroth and Oryx , are loosely based upon the Mythos characters Gol-Goroth and Orryx , respectively"
],
[
"The Elder Scrolls series",
"Bethesda",
"1994 - Current",
"Hermaeus Mora has some Lovecraftian elements to him and can be argued that he shares a similar appearance to Yog-Sothoth"
],
[
"Eternal Darkness : Sanity 's Requiem",
"Silicon Knights",
"2002",
"A Nintendo Gamecube game inspired by Lovecraft 's writings . The game is set in Rhode Island where the main character finds a tome with stories of Cthulhu-like 'ancients ' . The game won the honorary Day of the Tentacle ( Cthulhu ) Award at GameSpy 's Game of the Year Awards"
],
[
"Fallen London",
"Failbetter Games",
"2009",
"A browser based role playing game set in a subterranean world influenced by Lovecraftian themes"
],
[
"Etrian Odyssey III : The Drowned City",
"Atlus",
"2010",
"A dungeon-crawler role-playing game that draws heavily on the Cthulhu Mythos . The optional final boss , the Abyssal God , bears a heavy resemblance to Cthulhu , and its minions are known as the Deep Ones"
],
[
"Fate/Grand Order",
"DELiGHTWORKS",
"2015",
"A role-playing mobile game that features characters influenced by the Mythos . The characters under the Foreigner class channel the powers of Outer/Elder Gods , currently including Abigail Williams ( Yog-Sothoth ) and Katsushika Hokusai ( Cthulhu )"
],
[
"Flappy Monsters of Lovecraft",
"Serial MMF Software",
"2016",
"Game based on Flappy style games . The main character is Cthulhu and it is available for Android"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article provides a list of cultural references to the work of author H. P. Lovecraft. These references are collectively known as the Cthulhu Mythos. For works that are stylistically Lovecraftian, including comics and film adaptations influenced by Lovecraft, see Lovecraftian horror.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Video games",
"title": "Cthulhu Mythos in popular culture",
"uid": "Cthulhu_Mythos_in_popular_culture_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu_Mythos_in_popular_culture"
} | 3,679 |
3680 | Live_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(Season_17)_4 | [
[
"Date",
"Co-Hosts",
"Guests/Segments"
],
[
"January 10",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Kevin Bacon , Jamie Lynn Spears"
],
[
"January 11",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Susan Lucci"
],
[
"January 12",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Taye Diggs"
],
[
"January 13",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Billy Crystal , Topher Grace , Rachel Bilson"
],
[
"January 14",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Marg Helgenberger , Ryan Seacrest"
],
[
"January 17",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"John Leguizamo"
],
[
"January 18",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Laurence Fishburne , Ted McGinley"
],
[
"January 19",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Donald Trump , Jeff Probst , Ice Cube"
],
[
"January 20",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Richard Marx"
],
[
"January 21",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Nicole Richie , Robert Downey Jr"
],
[
"January 24",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Ethan Hawke , Aisha Tyler"
],
[
"January 25",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Chad Michael Murray , LeAnn Rimes , Claudia Cohen"
],
[
"January 26",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Jeff Gordon , Emma Bunton"
],
[
"January 27",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Drea de Matteo , Jeff Gordon"
],
[
"January 28",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Jimmy Kimmel"
],
[
"January 31",
"Regis Philbin & Kelly Ripa",
"Billy Crystal"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Live with Regis and Kelly episodes which were broadcast during the show's 17th season. The list is ordered by air date. Although the co-hosts may have read a couple of emails during the broadcast, it does not necessarily count as a Regis and Kelly Inbox segment.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "January 2005",
"title": "Live with Regis and Kelly (season 17)",
"uid": "Live_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(Season_17)_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(season_17)"
} | 3,680 |
3681 | 2007_Major_League_Baseball_Draft_0 | [
[
"Pick",
"Player",
"Team",
"Position",
"School"
],
[
"1",
"David Price",
"Tampa Bay Devil Rays",
"Left-handed pitcher",
"Vanderbilt"
],
[
"2",
"Mike Moustakas",
"Kansas City Royals",
"Shortstop",
"Chatsworth High School ( CA )"
],
[
"3",
"Josh Vitters",
"Chicago Cubs",
"Third baseman",
"Cypress High School ( CA )"
],
[
"4",
"Daniel Moskos",
"Pittsburgh Pirates",
"Left-handed pitcher",
"Clemson"
],
[
"5",
"Matt Wieters",
"Baltimore Orioles",
"Catcher",
"Georgia Tech"
],
[
"6",
"Ross Detwiler",
"Washington Nationals",
"Left-handed pitcher",
"Missouri State"
],
[
"7",
"Matt LaPorta",
"Milwaukee Brewers",
"Outfielder",
"Florida"
],
[
"8",
"Casey Weathers",
"Colorado Rockies",
"Right-handed pitcher",
"Vanderbilt"
],
[
"9",
"Jarrod Parker",
"Arizona Diamondbacks",
"Right-handed pitcher",
"Norwell High School ( IN )"
],
[
"10",
"Madison Bumgarner",
"San Francisco Giants",
"Left-handed pitcher",
"South Caldwell High School ( NC )"
],
[
"11",
"Phillippe Aumont",
"Seattle Mariners",
"Right-handed pitcher",
"École secondaire du Versant ( Canada )"
],
[
"12",
"Matt Dominguez",
"Florida Marlins",
"Third baseman",
"Chatsworth High School ( CA )"
],
[
"13",
"Beau Mills",
"Cleveland Indians",
"First baseman",
"Lewis-Clark State ( ID )"
],
[
"14",
"Jason Heyward",
"Atlanta Braves",
"Outfielder",
"Henry County High School ( GA )"
],
[
"15",
"Devin Mesoraco",
"Cincinnati Reds",
"Catcher",
"Punxsutawney High School ( PA )"
],
[
"16",
"Kevin Ahrens",
"Toronto Blue Jays",
"Shortstop",
"Memorial High School ( TX )"
],
[
"17",
"Blake Beavan",
"Texas Rangers",
"Right-handed pitcher",
"Irving High School ( TX )"
],
[
"18",
"Peter Kozma",
"St. Louis Cardinals",
"Shortstop",
"Owasso High School ( OK )"
],
[
"19",
"Joe Savery",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"Left-handed pitcher",
"Rice"
],
[
"20",
"Chris Withrow",
"Los Angeles Dodgers",
"Right-handed pitcher",
"Midland Christian High School ( TX )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2007 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft was Major League Baseball's annual amateur draft of high school and college baseball players and was held on June 7, 2007 and June 8, 2007. The first day session of the draft included the first 25 rounds and was scheduled to be broadcast live from Orlando, Florida on television for the first time, on ESPN2 from 2:00pm to 6:00pm Eastern Daylight Time (1800-2200 UTC). Previously the conference call format draft was broadcast live, along with commentary, on both draft days exclusively from the MLB.com website as streaming audio. In total, the draft featured 50 rounds and 1453 selections.",
"section_text": "= All-Star = Never played in the Major Leagues",
"section_title": "First Round Selections",
"title": "2007 Major League Baseball draft",
"uid": "2007_Major_League_Baseball_Draft_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Major_League_Baseball_draft"
} | 3,681 |
3682 | 2001_BC_Lions_season_0 | [
[
"Rd",
"Pick",
"Player",
"Position",
"School"
],
[
"1",
"2",
"Ian Williams",
"LB",
"Memphis"
],
[
"1",
"3",
"Lyle Green",
"FB",
"Toledo"
],
[
"1",
"8",
"Leif Thorsen",
"G",
"Montana"
],
[
"2",
"16",
"Jamie Boreham",
"K / WR",
"Saskatchewan"
],
[
"3",
"24",
"Scott Robinson",
"WR",
"Simon Fraser"
],
[
"4",
"32",
"Kelly Bates",
"OL",
"Saskatchewan"
],
[
"5",
"40",
"Dave Tucker",
"LB",
"Manitoba"
],
[
"6",
"48",
"Eric Collings",
"OL",
"British Columbia"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2001 BC Lions finished in third place in the West Division with an 8-10 record. They appeared in the West-Semi Final.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Offseason -- CFL Draft",
"title": "2001 BC Lions season",
"uid": "2001_BC_Lions_season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_BC_Lions_season"
} | 3,682 |
3683 | List_of_United_States_Air_Force_installations_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"MAJOR COMMAND",
"Unit Designation",
"Notes/Mission"
],
[
"Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling ( Bolling Air Force Base )",
"Washington , D.C",
"AFGSC",
"",
"Under United States Navy jurisdiction . Merger of USAF Bolling AFB and USN Naval Support Facility Anacostia . Non-flying facility . USAF components under Air Force District of Washington , 11th Wing . Mission is to support administrative requirements of USAF Pentagon personnel and other Air Force offices in the Department of Defense"
],
[
"Joint Base Andrews ( Andrews Air Force Base )",
"Camp Springs , Maryland",
"AMC",
"11th Wing 89th Airlift Wing 459th Air Refueling Wing ( AFRC )",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Air Force District of Washington . Merger of USAF Andrews AFB and USN Naval Air Facility Washington Primary USAF mission at Andrews is the Air Mobility Command 89th Airlift Wing Special Air Mission , logistics and communications support for the president , Vice president and other U.S. senior leaders . Air Force One is assigned to the 89th AW . 459th ARW ( AFRC ) KC-135 Stratotanker"
],
[
"Joint Base Charleston ( Charleston Air Force Base )",
"Charleston , South Carolina",
"AMC",
"628th Air Base Wing 437th Airlift Wing 315th Airlift Wing ( AFRC )",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Air Mobility Command . Merger of USAF Charleston AFB and USN Naval Support Activity Charleston USAF components : 437th Airlift Wing operates C-17 Globemaster III heavy airlift aircraft on a worldwide basis . Supports AFRC operations of the integrated 315th Airlift Wing"
],
[
"Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson ( Elmendorf Air Force Base )",
"Anchorage , Alaska",
"PACAF",
"673d Air Base Wing 3d Wing 176th Wing ( AK ANG )",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Pacific Air Forces . Merger of USAF Elmendorf AFB and USA Fort Richardson USAF components : 3d Wing F-22 Raptor air superiority fighter supports and defends U.S. interests in the Asia Pacific region and around the world . AK ANG 176th Wing operates eight C-130H Hercules aircraft . Also HQ of PACAF Eleventh Air Force , DOD Alaskan Command ( ALCOM ) , Alaska NORAD Region"
],
[
"Joint Base Langley-Eustis ( Langley Air Force Base )",
"Hampton , Virginia",
"ACC",
"633d Air Base Wing 1st Fighter Wing 480th ISR Wing 192d Fighter Wing ( VA ANG )",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Air Combat Command . Merger of USAF Langley AFB and USA Fort Eustis USAF components : 1st Fighter Wing F-22 Raptor air superiority fighter supports and defends U.S. interests around the world . 480th ISR Wing operates Sentinel weapon system , conducting imagery , cryptologic , and measurement and signatures intelligence activities . Also HQ of Air Combat Command ( ACC )"
],
[
"Joint Base Lewis-McChord ( McChord Field )",
"Tacoma , Washington",
"AMC",
"627th Air Base Group 62d Airlift Wing 446th Airlift Wing ( AFRC ) Western Air Defense Sector ( WA ANG )",
"Under United States Army jurisdiction . Merger of USA Fort Lewis and USAF McChord AFB USAF components under Air Mobility Command . 62d Airlift Wing C-17 Globemaster III airlifters fly around the world , conducting airdrop training ; it also carries out the Antarctic resupply missions . Washington Air National Guard operates Western Air Defense Sector NORAD CONR-AFNORTH Ground Control Interceptor Base"
],
[
"Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst ( McGuire Air Force Base )",
"Trenton , New Jersey",
"AMC",
"87th Air Base Wing 108th Air Refueling Wing ( NJ ANG ) 305th Air Mobility Wing 514th Air Mobility Wing ( AFRC ) 621st Contingency Response Wing",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Air Mobility Command . USAF components : 305th Air Mobility Wing 514th Air Mobility Wing C-17 Globemaster III conducts global strategic airlift and air refueling missions . In addition to aircraft and aircrew generation , the 305th Air Mobility Wing controls one of the Air Force 's busiest aerial ports , and the air operations at both McGuire and Lakehurst Fields . Also 621st Contingency Response Wing and 108th Air Refueling Wing ( NJ ANG )"
],
[
"Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam ( Hickam Air Force Base )",
"Honolulu , Hawaii",
"PACAF",
"15th Wing 154th Wing ( HI ANG )",
"Under United States Navy jurisdiction . Merger of USAF Hickam AFB , and USN Naval Base Pearl Harbor USAF components under Pacific Air Forces . 15th Wing F-22 Raptor air superiority fighter projects peace and power in the Pacific and beyond . Also 15th Wing ( HI ANG ) , HQ Pacific Air Forces and Thirteenth Air Force"
],
[
"Joint Base San Antonio ( Lackland Air Force Base , Randolph Air Force Base )",
"San Antonio , Texas",
"AETC",
"67th Network Warfare Wing 502d Air Base Wing 340th Flying Training Group ( AFRC ) 433d Airlift Wing ( AFRC ) 149th Fighter Wing ( TX ANG ) 624th Operations Center 688th Information Operations Wing",
"Under USAF jurisdiction ; Air Education and Training Command . Merger of USAF Lackland AFB , Randolph AFB and USA Fort Sam Houston Randolph AFB 12th Flying Training Wing provides specialized undergraduate pilot training ( UPT ) . Aircraft include T-6 Texan II , T-1 Jayhawk , T-38 Talon . Lackland AFB provides USAF Basic Training to new Airmen and supports Texas Air National Guard 149th FW F-16 and Air Force Reserve 433d AW C-5 flight operations at Kelly Field Annex ( Formerly Kelly AFB )"
],
[
"Joint Region Marianas ( Andersen Air Force Base )",
"Guam",
"PACAF",
"36th Wing",
"Under United States Navy jurisdiction Merger of USN Naval Base Guam and USAF Andersen Air Force Base USAF Pacific Air Forces 36th Wing at Andersen AFB . Supports transient aircraft using Andersen for training operations . ( No permanent aircraft assigned )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of United States Air Force installations.",
"section_text": "Department of Defense Joint Bases were established in accordance with congressional legislation implementing the recommendations of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission . The legislation ordered the consolidation of separate military installations into a single joint base as a result of the law . Jurisdiction was designated by the DoD . Most of the facilities were geographically adjoining ; others were within the same area . [ 1 ] [ 63 ]",
"section_title": "DoD Joint Bases ( USAF units )",
"title": "List of United States Air Force installations",
"uid": "List_of_United_States_Air_Force_installations_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Air_Force_installations"
} | 3,683 |
3684 | 2004_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_2 | [
[
"Rank",
"Country",
"Team",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Kenya",
"Paul Kirui John Cheruiyot Korir Wilson Kiprotich Kebenei",
"3:07:55"
],
[
"2",
"Ethiopia",
"Solomon Tsige Alene Emere Berhanu Addane",
"3:08:37"
],
[
"3",
"Uganda",
"Wilson Busienei Martin Toroitich Joseph Nsubuga",
"3:13:48"
],
[
"4",
"Eritrea",
"Yonas Kifle Samson Kiflemariam Tesfayohannes Mesfen",
"3:15:04"
],
[
"5",
"Japan",
"Yukinobu Nakazaki Yoshinori Oda Terumasa Okamura",
"3:15:10"
],
[
"6",
"Qatar",
"Ahmed Hassan Abdullah Jumah Al-Noor Foaad Abubaker",
"3:17:31"
],
[
"7",
"Tanzania",
"Fabiano Joseph Stephen Rogart Dhako Naftali",
"3:17:53"
],
[
"8",
"France",
"Moulay Ali Ouadih Larbi Zéroual Mohamed Serbouti",
"3:19:24"
],
[
"9",
"Russia",
"Yevgeniy Rybakov Leonid Shvetsov Aleksandr Vasilyev",
"3:20:05"
],
[
"10",
"United States",
"Justin Young Josh Cox Teddy Mitchell",
"3:22:50"
],
[
"11",
"Botswana",
"Gabalebe Moloko Kabo Gabaseme Kaelo Mosalagae",
"3:25:14"
],
[
"12",
"India",
"Ram Bahadur Subha Muresh Kumar Yadav Ajith Singh",
"3:34:31"
],
[
"13",
"Nepal",
"Uttam Khatri Arjun Prasad Dhakal Nara Bahadur Khatri",
"3:51:17"
],
[
"-",
"Morocco",
"Aziz Driouche Rachid El-Ghanmouni Abdelhadi Habassa",
"DNF"
],
[
"-",
"Spain",
"Fernando Rey Víctor Morente Javier Cortés",
"DNF"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 13th IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held on October 3, 2004 in New Delhi, India. A total of 152 athletes, 91 men and 61 women, from 55 countries took part. Detailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results were given both\nfor the men's race and for the women's race. Complete results were published for the men's race, for the women's race, for men's team, and for women's team. The competition also incorporated the 1st Asian Half Marathon Championships. Abdullah Ahmed Hassan of Qatar and Sun Yingjie of China were the inaugural winners. The tournament has not been held since, however.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Team results -- Men 's",
"title": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships",
"uid": "2004_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships"
} | 3,684 |
3685 | List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records_0 | [
[
"Statistic",
"Player",
"Record",
"Phillies career"
],
[
"Wins",
"Steve Carlton",
"241",
"1972 - 1986"
],
[
"Losses",
"Robin Roberts",
"199",
"1948 - 1961"
],
[
"Win-loss percentage",
"Grover Cleveland Alexander",
".676",
"1911 - 1917 , 1930"
],
[
"ERA",
"George McQuillan",
"1.79",
"1907 - 1911 1915 - 1916"
],
[
"Saves",
"Jonathan Papelbon",
"123",
"2012 - 2015"
],
[
"Strikeouts",
"Steve Carlton",
"3,031",
"1972 - 1986"
],
[
"Shutouts",
"Grover Cleveland Alexander",
"61",
"1911 - 1917 , 1930"
],
[
"Games",
"Robin Roberts",
"529",
"1948 - 1961"
],
[
"Innings",
"Robin Roberts",
"3,739⅓",
"1948 - 1961"
],
[
"Games started",
"Steve Carlton",
"499",
"1972 - 1986"
],
[
"Complete games",
"Robin Roberts",
"272",
"1948 - 1961"
],
[
"Walks",
"Steve Carlton",
"1,252",
"1972 - 1986"
],
[
"Hits allowed",
"Robin Roberts",
"3,661",
"1948 - 1961"
],
[
"Wild pitches",
"Steve Carlton",
"120",
"1972 - 1986"
],
[
"Hit batsmen",
"Bill Duggleby",
"81",
"1898 , 1901 - 1907"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Philadelphia Phillies have participated in 127 seasons in Major League Baseball since their inception in 1883. Through 2009, they have played 19,035 games, winning 9,035 and losing 10,162, for a winning their tenure as members of Major League Baseball's National League. Chuck Klein, the franchise's only batting Triple Crown winner, holds the most franchise records as of the end of the 2009 season, with eight, including career slugging percentage, career on-base plus slugging (OPS), and single-season extra-base hits. He is followed by Billy Hamilton, who holds seven records, including career batting average and the single-season runs record. Several Phillies hold National League and major league records. Pitcher/outfielder John Coleman is the most decorated in this category, holding three major league records, all from the franchise's inaugural season. Coleman set records for losses, earned runs allowed, and hits allowed, all in 1883 when he also set three additional franchise pitching records. Shortstop Jimmy Rollins broke Willie Wilson's record for at-bats in a single season with 716 in 2007, and first baseman Ryan Howard also set the major league record for strikeouts in a single season that same year with 199, before it was broken by Mark Reynolds of the Arizona Diamondbacks the following year. The 1930 Phillies, who went 52-102, set two more National League records, allowing 1,993 hits and 1,193 runs in the regular season.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Individual career records -- Career pitching",
"title": "List of Philadelphia Phillies team records",
"uid": "List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records"
} | 3,685 |
3686 | League_of_Ireland_Premier_Division_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Club",
"Appointed"
],
[
"Ollie Horgan",
"Finn Harps",
"1 March 2014"
],
[
"Keith Long",
"Bohemians",
"30 October 2014"
],
[
"Stephen Bradley",
"Shamrock Rovers",
"1 November 2016"
],
[
"Alan Reynolds",
"Waterford",
"2 January 2017"
],
[
"Liam Buckley",
"Sligo Rovers",
"6 October 2018"
],
[
"Ian Morris",
"Shelbourne",
"6 November 2018"
],
[
"Declan Devine",
"Derry City",
"12 November 2018"
],
[
"Vinny Perth",
"Dundalk",
"1 January 2019"
],
[
"Neale Fenn",
"Cork City",
"26 August 2019"
],
[
"Stephen O'Donnell",
"St Patrick 's Athletic",
"31 August 2019"
]
] | {
"intro": "The League of Ireland Premier Division (Irish: Príomhroinn Sraith na hÉireann), also known as the SSE Airtricity League Premier Division, is the top level division in both the League of Ireland and the Republic of Ireland football league system. The division was formed in 1985 following a reorganisation of the League of Ireland. St. Patrick's Athletic and Bohemians are the only current League of Ireland clubs never to have been relegated from the Premier Division. Since 2003 the Premier Division has operated as a summer league.",
"section_text": "The Premier Division 's longest current reigning manager is Ollie Horgan , who has remained in his position at Finn Harps since March 2014 .",
"section_title": "Managers -- Current managers",
"title": "League of Ireland Premier Division",
"uid": "League_of_Ireland_Premier_Division_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Ireland_Premier_Division"
} | 3,686 |
3687 | List_of_microcars_by_country_of_origin:_J_0 | [
[
"Country",
"Automobile Name",
"Manufacturer",
"Engine Make/Capacity",
"Seats",
"Year"
],
[
"Japan",
"Auto Sandal",
"Japan Auto Sandal Motors , Tokyo ,",
"Mitsubishi 349 cc",
"2",
"1954"
],
[
"Japan",
"Cony 360 Coach",
"Aichi Machine Industry Co Ltd , Nagoya",
"354 cc",
"",
"1952-1967"
],
[
"Japan",
"Cony Guppy",
"Aichi Machine Industry Co Ltd , Nagoya",
"199 cc",
"2",
"1952-1967"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Bee",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu 540 cc",
"",
"1951-"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Fellow",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu 356 cc",
"",
"1967-1977"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Fellow Max",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu 547 cc",
"",
"1977-1989"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Mira",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu 660 cc",
"",
"1980-"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Midget I",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu ZA 250 cc",
"1",
"1957-"
],
[
"Japan",
"Daihatsu Midget II",
"Daihatsu Kogyo Co Ltd , Ikeda , Osaka",
"Daihatsu EF 660 cc",
"1",
"1996-"
],
[
"Japan",
"Flying Feather",
"Suminoe Seisakusho , Kyoto",
"350 cc",
"2",
"1955"
],
[
"Japan",
"Fuji Cabin",
"Fuji Motors Corp , Tokyo",
"Gasuden 125 cc 5.5 hp ( 4 kW )",
"2",
"1957-1958"
],
[
"Japan",
"Honda S360",
"Honda",
"356 cc",
"2",
"1962"
],
[
"Japan",
"Honda S500",
"Honda",
"531 cc",
"2",
"1963"
],
[
"Japan",
"Honda S600",
"Honda",
"606 cc",
"2",
"1964"
],
[
"Japan",
"Honda N360",
"Honda",
"354 cc",
"4",
"1967"
],
[
"Japan",
"Honda T360",
"Honda",
"356 cc 30Ps",
"2",
"1963"
],
[
"Japan",
"Mazda R360",
"Mazda",
"356 cc",
"2",
"1961"
],
[
"Japan",
"Mazda Carol",
"Mazda",
"water-cooled OHV 358 cc",
"4",
"1962"
],
[
"Japan",
"Mitsuoka BuBu",
"Mitsuoka Toyama",
"50 cc",
"1",
"1982"
],
[
"Japan",
"Mitsuoka K-1 ( MC-1 )",
"Mitsuoka Toyama",
"50 cc",
"1",
"1998"
]
] | {
"intro": "N/A",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List",
"title": "List of microcars by country of origin: J",
"uid": "List_of_microcars_by_country_of_origin:_J_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_microcars_by_country_of_origin:_J"
} | 3,687 |
3688 | Etymologies_of_place_names_in_Hudson_County,_New_Jersey_2 | [
[
"Place",
"Municipality",
"Origin of Name",
"Comments"
],
[
"Barrow Street",
"JC",
"Dr William Barrow",
"Prominent early 19th century resident of Van Vorst Barrow Mansion"
],
[
"Bartholdi Avenue",
"JC",
"Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi",
"French sculptor and designer of the Statue of Liberty"
],
[
"Bedloe 's Island",
"JC",
"Issac Bedloo",
"original name of Liberty Island"
],
[
"Bentley Avenue",
"JC",
"Peter Bentley , Sr",
"Fifth Mayor of Jersey City"
],
[
"Black Tom",
"JC",
"Black Tom",
"resident of the island"
],
[
"Bloomfield Avenue",
"Hbkn",
"Joseph Bloomfield",
"Twice Governor of New Jersey"
],
[
"Bonn Place",
"Whkn",
"John H. Bonn",
"Founder of North Hudson County Railway"
],
[
"Boyle Plaza",
"JC",
"John F. Boyle",
"Director interstate commission which built Holland Tunnel"
],
[
"North Hudson -James J. Braddock Park",
"NB",
"James J. Braddock",
"World heavyweight champion"
],
[
"Burr Place",
"Whkn",
"Aaron Burr",
"Third Vice President of the United States"
],
[
"Bulls Ferry",
"NB , WNY",
"Bull family",
"18th century ferry operators"
],
[
"Clinton Street",
"Hbkn",
"De Witt Clinton",
""
],
[
"Colden Street",
"JC",
"Cadwallader D. Colden",
"Mayor of New York & President of the Morris Canal Company"
],
[
"Colgate Street",
"JC",
"William Colgate",
"Colgate-Palmolive long a fixture in Paulus Hook"
],
[
"Cornelison Avenue",
"JC",
"John M. Cornelison",
"Director of the Hudson and Bergen Plank Road Company Sixth Governor of New York"
],
[
"Celia Cruz Plaza",
"UC",
"Celia Cruz",
"Singer and performer"
],
[
"Curries Woods",
"JC , Bynne",
"James Currie",
"Early settler and prominent citizen of Greenville"
],
[
"Danforth Avenue",
"JC",
"",
"HBLR station"
],
[
"Pietro di Donato Square",
"UC",
"Pietro di Donato",
"Italian-American writer"
],
[
"Dixon Mills",
"JC",
"Joseph Dixon",
"Inventor and manufacturer"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of locales in Hudson County, New Jersey categorized by origin of their name.",
"section_text": "Places bearing eponymous names . ( Streets with names of US presidents , more than half of whom are honored , are not included . ) [ 20 ]",
"section_title": "Odonyms",
"title": "List of Hudson County, New Jersey placename etymologies",
"uid": "Etymologies_of_place_names_in_Hudson_County,_New_Jersey_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hudson_County,_New_Jersey_placename_etymologies"
} | 3,688 |
3689 | Belgium_at_the_World_Games_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Games",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Nora Haveneers Dominique De Nolf",
"1985 London",
"Bowling",
"Mixed ten-pin bowling"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"1985 London",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"1989 Karlsruhe",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"1993 The Hague",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Gery Verbruggen",
"1997 Lahti",
"Bowling",
"Men 's ten-pin bowling"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"1997 Lahti",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"2001 Akita",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Petra Comoth",
"2005 Duisburg",
"Bowling",
"Women 's nine-pin bowling"
],
[
"Silver",
"Gery Verbruggen",
"2005 Duisburg",
"Bowling",
"Men 's ten-pin bowling"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"2005 Duisburg",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"2009 Kaohsiung",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Bart Swings",
"2013 Cali",
"Inline road skating",
"Men 's 20,000 metres ( elimination )"
],
[
"Gold",
"Bart Swings",
"2013 Cali",
"Inline speed skating",
"Men 's 10,000 metres ( point elimination )"
],
[
"Silver",
"Eddy Merckx",
"2013 Cali",
"Billiard sports",
"Men 's carom three cushion"
],
[
"Silver",
"Bart Swings",
"2013 Cali",
"Inline speed skating",
"Men 's 1,000 metres ( sprint )"
],
[
"Silver",
"Korfball team",
"2013 Cali",
"Korfball",
"Mixed event"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Bart Swings",
"2013 Cali",
"Inline road skating",
"Men 's 10,000 metres ( point race )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Belgium has competed at most editions of the World Games after making its first appearance at the 1981 Games.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List of medalists -- Official sports",
"title": "Belgium at the World Games",
"uid": "Belgium_at_the_World_Games_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgium_at_the_World_Games"
} | 3,689 |
3690 | Connecting_Communities:_Expanding_Access_to_the_Rail_Network_0 | [
[
"Scheme name",
"Proposed services",
"Estimated capital cost",
"Number of proposed stations",
"Proposed stations"
],
[
"Aldridge",
"Birmingham New Street - Walsall Sutton Park Line",
"6",
"1",
"Aldridge"
],
[
"Ashington and Blyth",
"Newcastle / MetroCentre - Ashington Blyth and Tyne Railway",
"34",
"3",
"Seaton Delaval ( See Seaton Delaval ) Bedlington ( See Bedlington ) Newsham ( for Blyth ) Ashington ( original site or new location )"
],
[
"Bordon",
"Aldershot - Bordon Bordon Light Railway",
"50",
"1",
"Bordon ( half mile closer to Bordon than the former Bordon station )"
],
[
"Brixham",
"To Exmouth to Churston ( for Brixham ) via Exeter Paignton and Dartmouth Steam Railway and Avocet Line",
"0",
"2",
"Goodrington Sands Churston ( for Brixham )"
],
[
"Brownhills",
"Walsall to Lichfield via Brownhills South Staffordshire Line",
"122",
"2",
"Pelsall Brownhills"
],
[
"Cranleigh",
"Extension of London Waterloo - Guildford stopping service Cranleigh Line",
"63",
"2",
"Cranleigh Bramley"
],
[
"Fleetwood",
"Preston - Fleetwood Fleetwood Branch Line",
"14",
"2",
"Thornton Fleetwood"
],
[
"Hythe",
"Hythe to Southampton , Southampton Airport and Romsey Fawley Branch Line",
"3",
"1",
"Hythe ( See Hythe , Hampshire )"
],
[
"Leicester - Burton",
"Leicester - Burton or Derby Leicester and Swannington Railway",
"49",
"6",
"Kirby Muxloe Bagworth ( see Bagworth ) Coalville Ashby de la Zouch Moira ( see Moira , Leicestershire ) Gresley ( for Swadlincote ) ( See Swadlincote )"
],
[
"Rawtenstall",
"Manchester Victoria to Rawtenstall via Heywood East Lancashire Railway",
"50",
"6",
"Heywood Bury ( Bolton Street ) Summerseat Ramsbottom Irwell Vale Rawtenstall"
],
[
"Ringwood",
"to London Waterloo or London Victoria",
"70",
"1",
"Ringwood"
],
[
"Skelmersdale",
"Ormskirk to Skelmersdale railway station via Skelmersdale Branch",
"31",
"1 ( +1 )",
"Skelmersdale Westhead ( possible , not evaluated )"
],
[
"Washington",
"Newcastle - Manchester Airport Leamside Line",
"86",
"1",
"Washington"
],
[
"Wisbech",
"Wisbech - March - Peterborough Wisbech and March Bramley Line",
"12",
"2",
"Wisbech Town ( See Wisbech ) Wisbech Parkway"
]
] | {
"intro": "Connecting Communities: Expanding Access to the Rail Network is a 2009 report by the Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC) identifying potential expansion of the National Rail passenger railway network in England, primarily through the construction or re-opening of railway lines for passenger services, and the construction or re-opening of up to 40 new passenger railway stations. The report was published on 15 June 2009, and identified 14 commercially viable schemes involving new passenger lines, requiring the definite re-opening or construction of at least 30 new stations. These schemes would be using a mixture of historically closed lines, recently closed or currently operating freight only lines, or sharing heritage railway tracks with permission from their owners. The report also identified seven commercially viable sites for new Park and Ride stations (a.k.a. Parkway stations) to be built on existing lines. The report also identified seven potential new passenger 'link lines' on the existing rail network, opening up new passenger routes but without new stations. The report covered relatively low cost short term localised schemes, with lead times from initiation to completion ranging from 2 years 9 months to 6 years, complementing larger schemes already in place for completion past 2014. For the schemes to reach completion, the proposals would need to be taken forward by the respective local and regional governments, Network Rail (the infrastructure owner) and the Department for Transport. The schemes would complement development to the national rail network already undertaken since 1995, comprising the completion of 27 new lines (totalling 199 track miles) and 68 stations, with 65 new station sites identified by Network Rail or government for possible construction. However the great majority of these new lines and stations are in Scotland, Wales and London. The report examine schemes in England only, due to fact rail development in Scotland and Wales was already being organised by Transport Scotland and the Welsh Assembly.",
"section_text": "Of the 14 schemes with a BCR above 1 , six are on existing freight or heritage railway lines , three are on recently closed freight only lines and the remaining five use part of the permanent way of lines closed in the past . The Heritage Railways involved include the Paignton and Dartmouth Steam Railway and the East Lancashire Railway . Eight of these 14 schemes involve the extension or diversion of existing passenger services . The remaining six would require new services to be integrated into the existing capacity on the main lines they connect to . Three of the schemes also link currently separate parts of the network , Leicester – Burton , Washington ( Leamside Line ) and Brownhills ( Walsall – Lichfield line ) , bringing possible additional benefits for freight traffic and provision of diversionary routes . The 14 schemes with a BCR greater than 1 were as follows :",
"section_title": "New rail and station schemes",
"title": "Connecting Communities",
"uid": "Connecting_Communities:_Expanding_Access_to_the_Rail_Network_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecting_Communities"
} | 3,690 |
3691 | List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States_39 | [
[
"Church",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Abilene , Texas )",
"1924 built 1992 NRHP-listed",
"402 Orange St. 32°27′12″N 99°44′15″W / 32.45333°N 99.73750°W / 32.45333 ; -99.73750 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Abilene , Texas ) )",
"Abilene , Texas",
"Late Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Central Presbyterian Church ( Amarillo , Texas )",
"1991 NRHP-listed",
"1100 Harrison St. 35°12′10″N 101°50′26″W / 35.20278°N 101.84056°W / 35.20278 ; -101.84056 ( Central Presbyterian Church ( Amarillo , Texas ) )",
"Amarillo , Texas",
"Late Gothic Revival , Tudor Revival"
],
[
"Hyde Park Presbyterian Church",
"1896 built 1990 NRHP-listed",
"3915 Ave. B 30°18′13″N 97°44′4″W / 30.30361°N 97.73444°W / 30.30361 ; -97.73444 ( Hyde Park Presbyterian Church )",
"Austin , Texas",
"Vernacular Ecclesiastical"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Brownwood , Texas )",
"founded built",
"",
"Brownwood , Texas",
""
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church of Dallas",
"1856 founded 1913 built",
"408 Park Avenue 32°46′45″N 96°47′36″W / 32.77917°N 96.79333°W / 32.77917 ; -96.79333 ( First Presbyterian Church of Dallas )",
"Dallas , Texas",
"Neoclassical"
],
[
"Texana Presbyterian Church",
"1860 built 1979 NRHP-listed",
"Apollo Dr. and Country Club Lane 28°57′53″N 96°39′20″W / 28.96472°N 96.65556°W / 28.96472 ; -96.65556 ( Texana Presbyterian Church )",
"Edna , Texas",
"Greek Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Galveston , Texas )",
"1872 built 1979 NRHP-listed",
"1903 Church St. 29°18′15″N 94°47′19″W / 29.30417°N 94.78861°W / 29.30417 ; -94.78861 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Galveston , Texas ) )",
"Galveston , Texas",
"Romanesque , Norman Romanesque"
],
[
"Presbyterian Manse",
"1839 built 1969 NRHP-listed",
"NE corner of Alley and Delta Sts . 32°45′27″N 94°21′3″W / 32.75750°N 94.35083°W / 32.75750 ; -94.35083 ( Presbyterian Manse )",
"Jefferson , Texas",
"Greek Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Mineral Wells , Texas )",
"1909 built 1979 NRHP-listed",
"410 NW 2nd St. 32°48′41″N 98°6′56″W / 32.81139°N 98.11556°W / 32.81139 ; -98.11556 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Mineral Wells , Texas ) )",
"Mineral Wells , Texas",
"Classical Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Palestine , Texas )",
"1887 built 1998 NRHP-listed",
"410 Avenue A 31°45′45″N 95°37′44″W / 31.76250°N 95.62889°W / 31.76250 ; -95.62889 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Palestine , Texas ) )",
"Palestine , Texas",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Paris , Texas )",
"1892 built 1988 NRHP-listed",
"410 W. Kaufman 33°39′35″N 95°33′37″W / 33.65972°N 95.56028°W / 33.65972 ; -95.56028 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Paris , Texas ) )",
"Paris , Texas",
"Romanesque , Richardsonian Romanesque"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( San Angelo , Texas )",
"1906 built 1988 NRHP-listed",
"32 N. Irving 31°27′51″N 100°26′30″W / 31.46417°N 100.44167°W / 31.46417 ; -100.44167 ( First Presbyterian Church ( San Angelo , Texas ) )",
"San Angelo , Texas",
"Eclectic"
],
[
"Fort Street Presbyterian Church",
"1901 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"516 W. Hopkins St. 29°52′55″N 97°56′48″W / 29.88194°N 97.94667°W / 29.88194 ; -97.94667 ( Fort Street Presbyterian Church )",
"San Marcos , Texas",
"Late Gothic Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Van Horn , Texas )",
"1901 built 1978 NRHP-listed",
"Fannin and 3rd Sts . 31°2′33″N 104°50′4″W / 31.04250°N 104.83444°W / 31.04250 ; -104.83444 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Van Horn , Texas ) )",
"Van Horn , Texas",
"Carpenter Gothic"
],
[
"Highland Park Presbyterian Church ( Dallas , Texas )",
"1926 founded , 1928 completed",
"3821 University Boulevard ,",
"University Park , Texas",
"Gothic revival , member of ECO : A Covenant Order of Evangelical Presbyterians"
],
[
"Presbyterian Iglesia Nicea",
"1910 built 1992 NRHP-listed",
"401 S. DeLeon 28°47′43″N 97°0′16″W / 28.79528°N 97.00444°W / 28.79528 ; -97.00444 ( Presbyterian Iglesia Nicea )",
"Victoria , Texas",
"Jules Leffland -designed ; Late Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Central Presbyterian Church ( Waxahachie , Texas )",
"1917 built 1987 NRHP-listed",
"402 N. College 32°23′20″N 96°50′40″W / 32.38889°N 96.84444°W / 32.38889 ; -96.84444 ( Central Presbyterian Church ( Waxahachie , Texas ) )",
"Waxahachie , Texas",
"Late Gothic Revival"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable Presbyterian churches in the United States, where a church is notable either as a congregation or as a building. In the United States, numerous churches are listed on the National Register of Historic Places or are noted on state or local historic registers. Also more than 300 Presbyterian historic sites have been listed by the Presbyterian Historical Society onto the American Presbyterian/Reformed Historic Sites Registry (APRHS); those sites which are churches are . in progress . being added here.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Texas",
"title": "List of Presbyterian churches in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States_39",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States"
} | 3,691 |
3692 | Amber_Tamblyn_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1995-2001",
"General Hospital",
"Emily Quartermaine",
"Role held : January 20 , 1995 - July 11 , 2001"
],
[
"2001",
"Buffy the Vampire Slayer",
"Janice Penshaw",
"Episode : All the Way"
],
[
"2002",
"Boston Public",
"Melissa Campbell",
"Episode : Chapter Thirty-Two"
],
[
"2002",
"The Twilight Zone",
"Jenna Winslow",
"Episode : Evergreen"
],
[
"2002",
"CSI : Miami",
"Senior Cadet Valerie Barreiro",
"Episode : Camp Fear"
],
[
"2003",
"Without a Trace",
"Clare Metcalfe",
"Episode : Clare de Lune"
],
[
"2003-2005",
"Joan of Arcadia",
"Joan Girardi",
"Lead role ( 45 episodes )"
],
[
"2007",
"Babylon Fields",
"Janine Wunch",
"Pilot"
],
[
"2008",
"The Russell Girl",
"Sarah Russell",
"Movie"
],
[
"2009",
"The Unusuals",
"Detective Casey Shraeger",
"10 episodes"
],
[
"2010-2012 , 2016",
"The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret",
"Stephanie Daley",
"6 episodes"
],
[
"2010-2012",
"House",
"Martha M. Masters",
"15 episodes"
],
[
"2012",
"Portlandia",
"Bookstore intern",
"Episode : Cat Nap"
],
[
"2012",
"Metalocalypse",
"Trindle ( voice )",
"Episode : Fanklok"
],
[
"2013",
"The Heart , She Holler",
"Hurlette Headhe",
"Episode : The Dearranged Marriage"
],
[
"2013-2016",
"Inside Amy Schumer",
"Various roles",
"5 episodes"
],
[
"2013-2015",
"Two and a Half Men",
"Jenny",
"24 episodes"
],
[
"2014",
"Community",
"Thought Jacker co-star",
"Episode : Basic Sandwich ; uncredited"
],
[
"2014",
"Comedy Bang ! Bang !",
"Herself",
"Episode : Amber Tamblyn Wears a Leather Jacket & Black Booties"
],
[
"2016",
"Lip Sync Battle",
"Herself",
"Episode : America Ferrera vs. Amber Tamblyn"
]
] | {
"intro": "Amber Rose Tamblyn (born May 14, 1983) is an American actress, writer, and director. She first came to national attention in her role on the soap opera General Hospital as Emily Quartermaine, followed by a starring role on the prime-time series Joan of Arcadia, portraying the title character, Joan Girardi, for which she received Primetime Emmy and Golden Globe nominations. Her feature film work includes roles such as Tibby Rollins from the first two The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants films (2005-2008), as well as Katie Embry in The Ring (2002), Aubrey Davis in The Grudge 2 (2006) and Megan McBride in 127 Hours (2010); she had an extended arc as Martha M. Masters in the medical drama series House. She also had a starring role as Jenny on seasons eleven and twelve of the CBS sitcom Two and a Half Men.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Amber Tamblyn",
"uid": "Amber_Tamblyn_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amber_Tamblyn"
} | 3,692 |
3693 | Independent_Labour_Party_election_results_11 | [
[
"Constituency",
"Candidate",
"Votes",
"%",
"Position"
],
[
"Aberdare",
"T. E. Nicholas",
"6,229",
"21.4",
"2"
],
[
"Accrington",
"Charles Roden Buxton",
"6,369",
"21.7",
"3"
],
[
"Ayr Burghs",
"Campbell Stephen",
"4,534",
"23.2",
"3"
],
[
"Bermondsey West",
"Alfred Salter",
"1,956",
"18.6",
"3"
],
[
"Birmingham Ladywood",
"John Kneeshaw",
"2,572",
"19.0",
"2"
],
[
"Blackburn",
"Philip Snowden",
"15,274",
"19.7",
"3"
],
[
"Bosworth",
"Thomas Richardson",
"6,344",
"33.6",
"2"
],
[
"Bradford Central",
"William Leach",
"7,636",
"31.3",
"2"
],
[
"Bradford East",
"Frederick William Jowett",
"8,637",
"37.9",
"2"
],
[
"Brigg",
"David Quibell",
"4,789",
"27.3",
"2"
],
[
"Bristol East",
"Luke Bateman",
"8,135",
"42.8",
"2"
],
[
"Camberwell North",
"Charles Ammon",
"2,175",
"21.0",
"3"
],
[
"Cardiff Central",
"James Ewart Edmunds",
"4,663",
"22.4",
"2"
],
[
"Chorley",
"Elijah Sandham",
"6,222",
"32.3",
"2"
],
[
"Colne Valley",
"Wilfrid Whiteley",
"9,473",
"41.2",
"2"
],
[
"Coventry",
"Richard Collingham Wallhead",
"10,298",
"32.4",
"2"
],
[
"Dewsbury",
"Benjamin Riley",
"5,596",
"30.1",
"2"
],
[
"Dunbartonshire",
"William Henry Porteous Martin",
"7,072",
"30.9",
"2"
],
[
"Edinburgh Central",
"William Graham",
"7,161",
"51.3",
"1"
],
[
"Glasgow Bridgeton",
"James Maxton",
"7,860",
"39.8",
"2"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article lists the Independent Labour Party's election results in UK parliamentary elections.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Election results -- 1918 general election",
"title": "Independent Labour Party election results",
"uid": "Independent_Labour_Party_election_results_11",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_Labour_Party_election_results"
} | 3,693 |
3694 | List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Overall",
"Player",
"Position",
"Nationality",
"Club team"
],
[
"1992",
"2",
"Alexei Yashin",
"Centre",
"Russia",
"HC Dynamo Moscow ( Russia )"
],
[
"1993",
"1",
"Alexandre Daigle",
"Right Wing",
"Canada",
"Victoriaville Tigres ( QMJHL )"
],
[
"1994",
"3",
"Radek Bonk",
"Centre",
"Czechoslovakia",
"Las Vegas Thunder ( IHL )"
],
[
"1995",
"1",
"Bryan Berard",
"Defence",
"United States",
"Detroit Jr. Red Wings ( OHL )"
],
[
"1996",
"1",
"Chris Phillips",
"Defence",
"Canada",
"Prince Albert Raiders ( WHL )"
],
[
"1997",
"12",
"Marian Hossa",
"Right Wing",
"Slovakia",
"HC Dukla Trenčín ( Slovakia )"
],
[
"1998",
"15",
"Mathieu Chouinard",
"Goalie",
"Canada",
"Shawinigan Cataractes ( QMJHL )"
],
[
"1999",
"26",
"Martin Havlat",
"Right Wing",
"Czech Republic",
"Trinec Ocelari ( Czech . )"
],
[
"2000",
"21",
"Anton Volchenkov",
"Defence",
"Russia",
"Krylja Sovetov ( Russia )"
],
[
"2001",
"2 ( from NYI )",
"Jason Spezza",
"Centre",
"Canada",
"Windsor Spitfires ( OHL )"
],
[
"2001",
"23",
"Tim Gleason",
"Defence",
"United States",
"Windsor Spitfires ( OHL )"
],
[
"2002",
"16",
"Jakub Klepis",
"Centre",
"Czech Republic",
"Portland Winterhawks ( WHL )"
],
[
"2003",
"29",
"Patrick Eaves",
"Right Wing",
"United States",
"Boston College ( NCAA )"
],
[
"2004",
"23",
"Andrej Meszaros",
"Defence",
"Slovakia",
"HC Dukla Trenčín ( Slovakia )"
],
[
"2005",
"9",
"Brian Lee",
"Defence",
"United States",
"Lincoln Stars ( USHL )"
],
[
"2006",
"28",
"Nick Foligno",
"Left Wing",
"United States",
"Sudbury Wolves ( OHL )"
],
[
"2007",
"29",
"Jim O'Brien",
"Centre",
"United States",
"University of Minnesota ( NCAA )"
],
[
"2008",
"15",
"Erik Karlsson",
"Defence",
"Sweden",
"Frölunda HC ( Sweden )"
],
[
"2009",
"9",
"Jared Cowen",
"Defence",
"Canada",
"Spokane Chiefs ( WHL )"
],
[
"2011",
"6",
"Mika Zibanejad",
"Centre",
"Sweden",
"Djurgårdens IF Hockey ( SEL )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The complete list of players drafted by the Ottawa Senators (1992-) of the National Hockey League (NHL) at the NHL Entry Draft. The Senators were approved as franchise partners of the NHL in December 1990, and participated in their first entry draft in 1992. That year, the team also participated in the 1992 NHL Expansion Draft.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "First round picks",
"title": "List of Ottawa Senators draft picks",
"uid": "List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks"
} | 3,694 |
3695 | List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records_14 | [
[
"Hits",
"Team",
"Season"
],
[
"1,783",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"1930"
],
[
"1,769",
"New York Giants",
"1930"
],
[
"1,732",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"1894"
],
[
"1,732",
"St. Louis Cardinals",
"1930"
],
[
"1,723",
"Detroit Tigers",
"1921"
],
[
"1,722",
"Chicago Cubs",
"1930"
],
[
"1,715",
"Cleveland Indians",
"1936"
],
[
"1,698",
"Pittsburgh Pirates",
"1922"
],
[
"1,693",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"1929"
],
[
"1,684",
"St. Louis Browns",
"1922"
],
[
"1,684",
"Boston Red Sox",
"1997"
],
[
"1,683",
"New York Yankees",
"1930"
],
[
"1,676",
"New York Yankees",
"1936"
],
[
"1,672",
"Detroit Tigers",
"1929"
],
[
"1,667",
"Boston Red Sox",
"2003"
],
[
"1,667",
"New York Yankees",
"1931"
],
[
"1,665",
"Boston Red Sox",
"1950"
],
[
"1,665",
"Cleveland Indians",
"1996"
],
[
"1,664",
"Colorado Rockies",
"2000"
],
[
"1,664",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"1895"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Major League Baseball hit records. Bolded names mean the player is still active and playing.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "1,660 hits by a team in one season",
"title": "List of Major League Baseball hit records",
"uid": "List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records_14",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records"
} | 3,695 |
3696 | Preston_&_Barbieri_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Country",
"Park",
"Model",
"Opened",
"Status"
],
[
"Air Jumbo",
"United States",
"Six Flags Great Adventure",
"Flying Elephants",
"2005",
"Operating"
],
[
"Arthur & Fanny",
"Italy",
"Mirabilandia",
"Flying Elephants",
"2006",
"Operating"
],
[
"Banana Battle",
"Belgium",
"Bobbejaanland",
"Splash Battle",
"2008",
"Operating"
],
[
"Battaglia Navale",
"Italy",
"Rainbow Magicland",
"Splash Battle",
"2013",
"Operating"
],
[
"Bongo",
"Greece",
"Allou ! Fun Park",
"Flying Elephants",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"Boom Boom",
"Greece",
"Allou ! Fun Park",
"Mini bumper cars",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"Carousel",
"Greece",
"Allou ! Fun Park",
"Carousel",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"Crazy Barn",
"United States",
"Story Land",
"Crazy House",
"2003",
"Operating"
],
[
"Dodgem Cars",
"Australia",
"Warner Bros. Movie World",
"Bumper cars",
"2007",
"Operating"
],
[
"Doras Big River Adventure",
"Germany",
"Movie Park Germany",
"Flume Ride",
"2008",
"Operating"
],
[
"Flying Arturo",
"Italy",
"Mirabilandia",
"Flying Elephants",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"Flying Jumbos",
"United Kingdom",
"Chessington World of Adventures",
"Flying Elephants",
"1987",
"Operating"
],
[
"Jumbo",
"United States",
"Great Escape",
"Flying Elephants",
"",
"Closed in 2004"
],
[
"Jungle Water Fight",
"China",
"Happy Valley , Shenzhen",
"Splash Battle ( trackless )",
"2008",
"Operating"
],
[
"Legend",
"Greece",
"Allou ! Fun Park",
"Music Express",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"The Magic Carousel",
"India",
"Adlabs Imagica",
"Carousel",
"April 18 , 2013",
"Operating"
],
[
"Mira Express",
"Italy",
"Mirabilandia",
"Monorail",
"1999",
"Operating"
],
[
"New York",
"Greece",
"Allou ! Fun Park",
"Bumper cars",
"",
"Operating"
],
[
"Raratonga",
"Italy",
"Mirabilandia",
"Splash Battle",
"2007",
"Operating"
],
[
"Tuk Tuk Turmoil",
"United Kingdom",
"Chessington World of Adventures",
"Bumper cars",
"2000",
"Operating"
]
] | {
"intro": "Preston & Barbieri is an amusement ride manufacturing company based in Reggio Emilia, Italy. The company was founded in 2000 as a merger of the Preston and Barbieri Rides companies. The company manufactures a wide range of flat rides, water rides and roller coasters out of its 70,000-square-metre (750,000 sq ft) property in Italy.",
"section_text": "Mira Express at Mirabilandia SpongeBob SplashBash at Movie Park Germany",
"section_title": "List of other attractions",
"title": "Preston & Barbieri",
"uid": "Preston_&_Barbieri_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preston_&_Barbieri"
} | 3,696 |
3697 | Terrence_Howard_2 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1993",
"Tall Hopes",
"Chester Harris",
"6 episodes"
],
[
"1994",
"Family Matters",
"John",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1994",
"Living Single",
"Brendan King",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1994",
"Coach",
"Johnny Williams",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1994",
"Getting By",
"Herbert",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1994",
"Picket Fences",
"Malik",
"2 episodes"
],
[
"1995",
"New York Undercover",
"Buster",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1996-1998",
"Sparks",
"Greg Sparks",
"Main role"
],
[
"1998-1999",
"NYPD Blue",
"A.J . Foreman / Lonnie",
"2 episodes"
],
[
"2002-2003",
"Soul Food",
"Benny Jones",
"2 episodes"
],
[
"2003",
"Street Time",
"Lucius Mosley",
"13 episodes"
],
[
"2010-2011",
"Law & Order : LA",
"Senior D.D.A . Jonah Joe Dekker",
"Series regular"
],
[
"2011",
"Law & Order : Special Victims Unit",
"Senior D.D.A . Jonah Joe Dekker",
"Episode : Reparations"
],
[
"2012",
"Hawaii Five-0",
"Billy",
"Episode : I Ka Wa Mamua"
],
[
"2015-present",
"Empire",
"Lucious Lyon",
"Series regular Won - BET Award for Best Actor Nominated - Teen Choice Award for Choice Drama TV Actor Nominated - Teen Choice Award for Choice TV Villain Nominated - Teen Choice Awards for Choice TV Chemistry Nominated - People 's Choice Awards , Favorite Dramatic TV Actor ( 2016 ) Nominated - People 's Choice Awards , Favorite Dramatic TV Actor ( 2017 )"
],
[
"2015",
"Lip Sync Battle",
"Himself",
"Episodes : Terrence Howard vs. Taraji P. Henson pts . 1 & 2"
],
[
"2015-2016",
"Wayward Pines",
"Sheriff Arnold Pope",
"Series regular ( season 1 ) Recurring ( season 2 )"
],
[
"2017",
"Philip K. Dick 's Electric Dreams",
"George",
"Episode : Real Life"
]
] | {
"intro": "Terrence Dashon Howard (born March 11, 1969) is an American actor, rapper, singer-songwriter, and record producer. Having his first major roles in the 1995 films Dead Presidents and Mr. Holland's Opus, Howard broke into the mainstream with a succession of television and cinema roles between 2004 and 2006. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role in Hustle & Flow. Howard has had prominent roles in many other movies, including Winnie, Ray, Lackawanna Blues, Crash, Four Brothers, Big Momma's House, Get Rich or Die Tryin', Idlewild, Biker Boyz, August Rush, The Brave One, and Prisoners. Howard played James Rhodes in Iron Man and its video game adaptation, but he was replaced by Don Cheadle for the sequels. He stars as the lead character Lucious Lyon in the television series Empire. His debut album, Shine Through It, was released in September 2008. In September 2019, Howard announced that he had retired from acting as he was tired of pretending.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Terrence Howard",
"uid": "Terrence_Howard_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrence_Howard"
} | 3,697 |
3698 | Parables_of_Jesus_1 | [
[
"#",
"Parable",
"Matthew",
"Luke",
"Other parallels"
],
[
"1",
"Parable of the Sower",
"Matthew 13:1-23",
"Luke 08:04-18",
"Thomas 9 1 Clement 24:5"
],
[
"2",
"Parable of the Tares",
"Matthew 13:24-53",
"",
"Thomas 57"
],
[
"3",
"Parable of the Growing Seed",
"",
"",
"Thomas 21"
],
[
"4",
"Parable of the Hidden Treasure",
"Matthew 13:44",
"",
"Thomas 109"
],
[
"5",
"Parable of the Pearl",
"Matthew 13:45",
"",
"Thomas 76"
],
[
"6",
"Parable of Drawing in the Net",
"Matthew 13:47-53",
"",
"Thomas 8"
],
[
"7",
"Parable of the Rich Fool",
"",
"Luke 12:16-21",
"Thomas 63"
],
[
"8",
"Parable of the Faithful Servant",
"Matthew 24:42-51",
"Luke 12:35-48",
"Thomas 103 Didache 16:1a"
],
[
"9",
"Parable of the Mustard Seed",
"Matthew 13:31-32",
"Luke 13:18-19",
"Thomas 20"
],
[
"10",
"Parable of the Leaven",
"Matthew 13:33",
"Luke 13:20-21",
"Thomas 96"
],
[
"11",
"Parable of the Lost Sheep",
"Matthew 18:12-14",
"Luke 15:01-7",
"Thomas 107 Gospel of Truth 31-32"
],
[
"12",
"Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen",
"Matthew 21:33-46",
"Luke 20:9-19",
"Thomas 65"
],
[
"13",
"Parable of the talents or minas",
"Matthew 25:14-30",
"Luke 19:13-24",
"Nazoraeans 18"
],
[
"14",
"Parable of the great banquet",
"Matthew 22:1-14",
"Luke 14:15-24",
"Thomas 64"
],
[
"15",
"Parable of the strong man",
"Matthew 12:29-29",
"Luke 11:21-22",
"Thomas 35"
]
] | {
"intro": "The parables of Jesus are found in the Synoptic Gospels and some of the non-canonical gospels. They form approximately one third of his recorded teachings. Christians place great emphasis on these parables; which they generally regard as the words of Jesus. Jesus's parables are seemingly simple and memorable stories, often with imagery, and all convey messages. Scholars have commented that although these parables seem simple, the messages they convey are deep, and central to the teachings of Jesus. Christian authors view them not as mere similitudes which serve the purpose of illustration, but as internal analogies in which nature becomes a witness for the spiritual world. Many of Jesus's parables refer to simple everyday things, such as a woman baking bread (the parable of the Leaven), a man knocking on his neighbor's door at night (the parable of the Friend at Night), or the aftermath of a roadside mugging (the parable of the Good Samaritan); yet they deal with major religious themes, such as the growth of the Kingdom of God, the importance of prayer, and the meaning of love. In Western civilization, these parables formed the prototype for the term parable and in the modern age, even among those who know little of the Bible, the parables of Jesus remain some of the best-known stories in the world.",
"section_text": "A number of parables have parallels in non-canonical gospels , the Didache , and the letters of Apostolic Fathers . However , given that the non-canonical gospels generally have no time sequence , this table is not a Gospel harmony .",
"section_title": "Harmony of parables -- Parallels outside the canonical gospels",
"title": "Parables of Jesus",
"uid": "Parables_of_Jesus_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parables_of_Jesus"
} | 3,698 |
3699 | List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni_7 | [
[
"Name",
"Class year ( s )",
"Degree ( s )",
"Notability"
],
[
"Nathan Baldwin",
"",
"",
"Inventor of headphones"
],
[
"Mary L. Cleave",
"1975 1980",
"M.S . Biology Ph.D. Civil and Environmental Engineering",
"NASA astronaut"
],
[
"Richard F. Daines",
"1974",
"B.S",
"Commissioner of Health for New York State ; head of the New York Department of Health"
],
[
"Julia F. Knight",
"1964",
"B.S . Mathematics",
"Mathematician in model theory and computability theory at the University of Notre Dame , Fellow of the American Mathematical Society"
],
[
"George Piranian",
"1937",
"B.S . Agriculture , M.S . Botany",
"Mathematician in complex analysis ; founded the Michigan Mathematical Journal with Paul Erdős , Fritz Herzog and Arthur J. Lohwater"
],
[
"Archimedes Plutonium",
"1979",
"MEd",
"As Ludwig van Ludvig , notable Usenet personality"
],
[
"Gene P. Weckler",
"1958",
"B.S . Electrical Engineering",
"President of Rad-icon Imaging Corporation"
],
[
"Shang Fa Yang",
"1963",
"Ph.D",
"Research unlocked key to prolonging freshness in fruits and flowers ; 1991 Wolf Prize in Agriculture , considered the Nobel Prize of Agriculture"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of Utah State University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Utah State University (USU), a public, land-grant, research university located in Logan, Utah. This list does not contain the names of presidents or faculty of the university, unless they happen also to be alumni. Founded in 1888 under the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act as the Agricultural College of Utah, USU has grown to more than 28,000 students. Although it is headquartered in Logan, USU operates throughout the state of Utah through five regional campuses and more than 20 distance education sites. On June 13, 1899, graduates of the Agricultural College of Utah met to create the Alumni Association. Today, the Alumni Association is located in the historic David B. Haight Alumni Center, which was dedicated July 11, 1991. Alumni chapters exist in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Washington DC. USU boasts more than 180,000 alumni, who are found in every U.S. state and more than 100 countries.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Science",
"title": "List of Utah State University alumni",
"uid": "List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Utah_State_University_alumni"
} | 3,699 |
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