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4000 | 2011_CR_Vasco_da_Gama_season_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Number",
"Award",
"Category",
"Result"
],
[
"Fernando Prass",
"1",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"Best Goalkeeper",
"Nominated"
],
[
"Fagner",
"23",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"best Right ( wing ) back",
"Won"
],
[
"Dedé",
"26",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Right Centre back",
"Won"
],
[
"",
"",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"fans Favorite Player",
"Won"
],
[
"",
"",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"best Right Centre back",
"Won"
],
[
"Anderson Martins",
"25",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Left Centre back",
"Won"
],
[
"Rômulo",
"37",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Defensive midfielder",
"Nominated"
],
[
"",
"",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"best Defensive midfielder",
"Nominated"
],
[
"Felipe",
"6",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Center and Attacking midfielder",
"Won"
],
[
"Diego Souza",
"10",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"best Side and Attacking midfielder",
"Won"
],
[
"Bernardo",
"31",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca 2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Side and Attacking midfielder Revelation of the year",
"Nominated"
],
[
"Éder Luís",
"7",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Second striker and Winger",
"Nominated"
],
[
"Ricardo Gomes",
"",
"2011 Campeonato Carioca",
"best Head coach",
"Nominated"
],
[
"Ricardo Gomes and Cristóvão Borges",
"",
"2011 Prêmio Craque do Brasileirão",
"best Head coach",
"Won"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 season was Club de Regatas Vasco da Gama's 113th year in existence, the club's 96th season in existence of football, and the club's 40th season playing in the Brasileirão Série A, the top flight of Brazilian football, having been out only in 2009, after a relegation from top division in 2008, backing in 2010. Vasco da Gama finished Brasileirão Série A as runners-up, 2 points behind winners Corinthians, in a title decided in last round, when Corinthians draw 0-0 against Palmeiras and Vasco da Gama draw 1-1 against Flamengo. Vasco da Gama in Copa Sudamericana goes at semifinals, after a 1-3 aggregate loss against eventual winners Universidad de Chile. Vasco da Gama won their first Copa do Brasil title, after an epic finals against Coritiba, winning in away goals rule after a 3-3 aggregate draw. Vasco da Gama finished Rio de Janeiro State Championship in 6th place, after a fall in group stage of Taça Guanabara and a runners-up against Flamengo in Taça Rio in a 1-3 penalty loss after a 0-0 draw.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Honors -- Individuals",
"title": "2011 CR Vasco da Gama season",
"uid": "2011_CR_Vasco_da_Gama_season_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_CR_Vasco_da_Gama_season"
} | 4,000 |
4001 | EN_postcode_area_0 | [
[
"Postcode district",
"Post town",
"Coverage",
"Local authority area"
],
[
"EN1",
"ENFIELD",
"Bush Hill Park ; eastern parts of Bulls Cross , Enfield Town , Forty Hill , outskirts of Lower Edmonton",
"Enfield"
],
[
"EN2",
"ENFIELD",
"Botany Bay , Clay Hill , Crews Hill ; western parts of Bulls Cross , Enfield Chase , Enfield Town , Forty Hill , Gordon Hill",
"Enfield"
],
[
"EN3",
"ENFIELD",
"Enfield Highway , Enfield Island Village , Enfield Lock , Enfield Wash , Ponders End",
"Enfield"
],
[
"EN4",
"BARNET",
"Hadley Wood , Cockfosters , East Barnet , New Barnet",
"Barnet , Enfield"
],
[
"EN5",
"BARNET",
"High Barnet , Arkley",
"Barnet , Hertsmere"
],
[
"EN6",
"POTTERS BAR",
"Potters Bar , South Mimms , Cuffley , Northaw",
"Hertsmere , Welwyn Hatfield"
],
[
"EN7",
"WALTHAM CROSS",
"Cheshunt , Goffs Oak , Capel Manor College",
"Broxbourne , Enfield"
],
[
"EN8",
"WALTHAM CROSS",
"Waltham Cross , Cheshunt , Bullsmoor",
"Broxbourne , Enfield"
],
[
"EN9",
"WALTHAM ABBEY",
"Waltham Abbey , Nazeing , Upshire",
"Epping Forest"
],
[
"EN10",
"BROXBOURNE",
"Broxbourne , Wormley , Turnford",
"Broxbourne , Epping Forest"
],
[
"EN11",
"HODDESDON",
"Hoddesdon , Dobbs Weir",
"Broxbourne , Epping Forest"
]
] | {
"intro": "The EN postcode area, also known as the Enfield postcode area, is a group of eleven postcode districts in England, which are subdivisions of seven post towns. These postcode districts cover parts of northern Greater London (including Enfield and Barnet), southern Hertfordshire (including Potters Bar, Waltham Cross, Broxbourne and Hoddesdon) and western Essex (including Waltham Abbey).",
"section_text": "The approximate coverage of the postcode districts :",
"section_title": "Postal administration -- List of postcode districts",
"title": "EN postcode area",
"uid": "EN_postcode_area_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EN_postcode_area"
} | 4,001 |
4002 | Montenegrin_First_League_8 | [
[
"Year",
"Directly relegated",
"Directly promoted"
],
[
"2007",
"FK Berane",
"FK Lovćen"
],
[
"2008",
"OFK Titograd",
"FK Jezero"
],
[
"2009",
"FK Jedinstvo",
"FK Berane"
],
[
"2010",
"FK Kom",
"OFK Titograd"
],
[
"2011",
"OFK Bar",
"FK Bokelj"
],
[
"2012",
"FK Bokelj",
"FK Čelik"
],
[
"2013",
"FK Jedinstvo",
"FK Dečić"
],
[
"2014",
"FK Dečić",
"FK Bokelj"
],
[
"2015",
"FK Berane",
"FK Iskra"
],
[
"2016",
"FK Mornar",
"FK Jedinstvo"
],
[
"2017",
"FK Jedinstvo",
"FK Kom"
],
[
"2018",
"FK Dečić",
"FK Mornar"
],
[
"2019",
"FK Mornar",
"FK Podgorica"
]
] | {
"intro": "The First League of Montenegro (Montenegrin: Prva crnogorska fudbalska liga - Prva CFL - 1. CFL; pronounced [pr̂ːvaː t͡srnǒɡorskaː fûdbaːlskaː lǐːɡa]) is the top football league in Montenegro. Founded in 2006, competition is headed by the Football Association of Montenegro. 10 teams participate in this league. The winner of the Montenegrin First League starts the qualifications for the UEFA Champions League from the second round. The second and third placed team and Montenegrin Cup winner play in the qualifying rounds of the UEFA Europa League. The last placed team is directly relegated to the Montenegrin Second League, and the two others are playing in Montenegrin First League playoffs.",
"section_text": "See also : Montenegrin Second League Winners Below is the list of directly promoted and relegated teams by every single season . Relegated were last-placed teams in First League , while directly promoted teams were the champions of Montenegrin Second League .",
"section_title": "All time tables -- Relegation and promotion",
"title": "Montenegrin First League",
"uid": "Montenegrin_First_League_8",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montenegrin_First_League"
} | 4,002 |
4003 | State_Colleges_and_Universities_Athletic_Association_2 | [
[
"Institution",
"Nickname",
"Status",
"Founded",
"Location"
],
[
"Bulacan State University",
"BulSU Gold Gears",
"State",
"1904",
"Malolos , Bulacan"
],
[
"President Ramon Magsaysay State University",
"PRMSU Blue Jaguars",
"State",
"1910",
"Iba , Zambales"
],
[
"Philippine State College of Aeronautics",
"PhilSCA Iron Eagles",
"State",
"1967",
"Floridablanca , Pampanga"
],
[
"Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology",
"NEUST Phoenix",
"State",
"1929",
"Cabanatuan City , Nueva Ecija"
],
[
"Tarlac State University",
"TSU Firefox",
"State",
"1906",
"Tarlac City , Tarlac"
],
[
"Tarlac Agricultural University",
"TAU Jets",
"State",
"1945",
"Camiling , Tarlac"
],
[
"Pampanga State Agricultural University",
"PACers",
"State",
"1974",
"Magalang , Pampanga"
],
[
"Central Luzon State University",
"CLSU Green Cobras",
"State",
"1907",
"Muñoz , Nueva Ecija"
],
[
"Bataan Peninsula State University",
"BPSU Stallions",
"State",
"2007",
"Balanga , Bataan"
],
[
"Aurora State College of Technology",
"ASCoT Dolphins",
"State",
"1993",
"Baler , Aurora"
],
[
"Philippine Merchant Marine Academy",
"PMMA Marines",
"State",
"1820",
"San Narciso , Zambales"
],
[
"Don Honorio Ventura State University",
"DHVTSU Wildcats",
"State",
"1861",
"Bacolor , Pampanga"
],
[
"Bulacan Agricultural State College",
"BASC Reapers",
"State",
"1952",
"San Ildefonso , Bulacan"
]
] | {
"intro": "The State Colleges and Universities Athletic Association (SCUAA) is an association of 93 institutions, conferences, organizations, and individuals that organizes the athletic programs of different state colleges and universities in the Philippines. SCUAA is one of the inter-collegiate sports associations in the Philippines, the union of seven major state colleges and universities in Metro Manila.",
"section_text": "State Universities and Colleges Region III Olympics",
"section_title": "SUC Olympic III – Central Luzon",
"title": "State Colleges and Universities Athletic Association",
"uid": "State_Colleges_and_Universities_Athletic_Association_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_Colleges_and_Universities_Athletic_Association"
} | 4,003 |
4004 | Afro-Asian_Club_Championship_1 | [
[
"Nation",
"Winners",
"Runners-up"
],
[
"Egypt",
"3",
"1"
],
[
"South Korea",
"2",
"2"
],
[
"Morocco",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Tunisia",
"2",
"0"
],
[
"Thailand",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Algeria",
"1",
"0"
],
[
"Japan",
"0",
"2"
],
[
"Iran",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Qatar",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Saudi Arabia",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"South Africa",
"0",
"1"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Afro-Asian Club Championship, sometimes referred to as the Afro-Asian Cup, was a football competition endorsed by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) and Asian Football Confederation (AFC), contested between the winners of the African Champions' Cup and the Asian Club Championship, the two continents' top club competitions. The championship was modelled on the Intercontinental Cup (organised by Europe's UEFA and South America's CONMEBOL football federations and now replaced by the FIFA Club World Cup) and ran from 1987 to 1999.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Records and statistics -- Results by country",
"title": "Afro-Asian Club Championship",
"uid": "Afro-Asian_Club_Championship_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Asian_Club_Championship"
} | 4,004 |
4005 | List_of_Constituencies_of_the_Lok_Sabha_28 | [
[
"Constituency No",
"Constituency",
"Reserved for ( SC/ST/None )"
],
[
"1",
"Cooch Behar",
"SC"
],
[
"2",
"Alipurduars",
"ST"
],
[
"3",
"Jalpaiguri",
"SC"
],
[
"4",
"Darjeeling",
"None"
],
[
"5",
"Raiganj",
"None"
],
[
"6",
"Balurghat",
"None"
],
[
"7",
"Maldaha Uttar",
"None"
],
[
"8",
"Maldaha Dakshin",
"None"
],
[
"9",
"Jangipur",
"None"
],
[
"10",
"Baharampur",
"None"
],
[
"11",
"Murshidabad",
"None"
],
[
"12",
"Krishnanagar",
"None"
],
[
"13",
"Ranaghat",
"SC"
],
[
"14",
"Bangaon",
"SC"
],
[
"15",
"Barrackpur",
"None"
],
[
"16",
"Dum Dum",
"None"
],
[
"17",
"Barasat",
"None"
],
[
"18",
"Basirhat",
"None"
],
[
"19",
"Jaynagar",
"SC"
],
[
"20",
"Mathurapur",
"SC"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of India, is made up of Members of Parliament (MPs). Each MP, represents a single geographic constituency. There are currently 543 constituencies. The maximum size of the Lok Sabha as outlined in the Constitution of India is 550 members made up of up to 530 members representing people of the states of India and up to 20 members representing people from the Union Territories on the basis of their population.",
"section_text": "Constituencies of West Bengal",
"section_title": "West Bengal ( 42 )",
"title": "List of constituencies of the Lok Sabha",
"uid": "List_of_Constituencies_of_the_Lok_Sabha_28",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_constituencies_of_the_Lok_Sabha"
} | 4,005 |
4006 | 2013_Conference_USA_men's_soccer_season_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Charlotte 49ers",
"Charlotte , North Carolina",
"Transamerica Field",
"7,500"
],
[
"FIU Panthers",
"Miami , Florida",
"FIU Soccer Stadium",
"2,700"
],
[
"Florida Atlantic Owls",
"Boca Raton , Florida",
"FAU Soccer Stadium",
"300"
],
[
"Kentucky Wildcats",
"Lexington , Kentucky",
"UK Soccer Complex",
"3,000"
],
[
"Marshall Thundering Herd",
"Huntington , West Virginia",
"Veterans Memorial Soccer Complex",
"1,006"
],
[
"New Mexico Lobos",
"Albuquerque , New Mexico",
"Lobo Soccer/Track Complex",
"5,000"
],
[
"Old Dominion Monarchs",
"Norfolk , Virginia",
"Old Dominion Soccer Complex",
"2,500"
],
[
"South Carolina Gamecocks",
"Columbia , South Carolina",
"Stone Stadium",
"5,700"
],
[
"Tulsa Golden Hurricane",
"Tulsa , Oklahoma",
"HST Stadium",
"5,000"
],
[
"UAB Blazers",
"Birmingham , Alabama",
"West Campus Field",
"2,500"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Conference USA men's soccer season will be the 19th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. The season will mark the arrival of the Charlotte 49ers from the Atlantic 10 Conference, the Florida Atlantic Owls from the Mid-American Conference, the New Mexico Lobos from the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, and the Old Dominion Monarchs from the Colonial Athletic Association. It will also be the last C-USA season for the Tulsa Golden Hurricane, which will join the American Athletic Conference in July 2014. The 2013 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament will be held November 13-17 at Transamerica Field in Charlotte. The defending regular season champions are the SMU Mustangs, who left the conference to join The American. The defending tournament champions are the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams -- Stadia and locations",
"title": "2013 Conference USA men's soccer season",
"uid": "2013_Conference_USA_men's_soccer_season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Conference_USA_men's_soccer_season"
} | 4,006 |
4007 | Star_Awards_for_Best_Supporting_Actor_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Actor",
"Title ( role )",
"Nominees"
],
[
"1995",
"Xie Shaoguang 谢韶光",
"Larceny of Love 雌雄大盗 ( Jiang Zefu 江泽夫 )",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - Strange Encounters 奇缘之塞外胡笳 ( Cai Hong 蔡弘 ) Richard Low 刘谦益 - Coffee or Tea 是非屋 ( TBC ) Zhang Wenxiang 张汶祥 - Young Justice Bao 侠义包公 ( Zhan Zhao 展昭 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - Thunder Plot 惊天大阴谋 ( Ren Yonggang 任永刚 )"
],
[
"1996",
"Xie Shaoguang 谢韶光",
"The Golden Pillow 金枕头 ( Sai Wei 賽威 )",
"Ang Puay Heng 洪培兴 - Dr Justice 法医故事 ( TBC ) Zhang Wenxiang 张汶祥 - The Golden Pillow 金枕头 ( Zhou Hongsheng 周洪生 ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - Tofu Street 豆腐街 ( Wang A'xiong 王阿雄 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - The Teochew Family 潮州家族 ( Fu Guobing 符国炳 )"
],
[
"1997",
"Richard Low 刘谦益",
"The Silver Lining 骤雨骄阳 ( Huang Qinghe 黄庆和 )",
"Chen Guohua 陈国华 - The Price of Peace 和平的代价 ( Zhang A'da 张阿大 ) Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - The Price of Peace 和平的代价 ( Tan Kah Kee 陈嘉庚 ) Chen Tianwen 陈天文 - The Royal Monk 真命小和尚 ( Tie Tong 铁桶 ) Huang Yiliang 黄奕良 - Brave New World 新阿郎 ( Gao Hongfei 高鸿飞 )"
],
[
"1998",
"Chen Guohua 陈国华",
"Around People 's Park 珍珠街坊 ( Qing 阿青 )",
"Chunyu Shanshan 淳于珊珊 - Rising Expectations 长河 ( Zheng Zhijie Jack 郑志杰 ) Lin Yisheng 林益盛 - The New Adventures of Wisely 卫斯理传奇 ( Chen Changqing 陈长青 ) Richard Low 刘谦益 - Living in Geylang 芽笼芽笼 ( Wang A'pao 王阿炮 ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - The Return of the Condor Heroes 神雕侠侣 ( Jinlun Fawang 金轮法王 )"
],
[
"1999",
"Tay Ping Hui 郑斌辉",
"Stepping Out 出路 ( Liu Mei 刘妹 )",
"Chunyu Shanshan 淳于珊珊 - Stepping Out 出路 ( Lin Baotian 林保田 ) Brandon Wong 黄炯耀 - Wok of Life 福满人间 ( Wang Xia 汪虾 ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - Wok of Life 福满人间 ( Huang Xiaodong 黄小东 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - Wok of Life 福满人间 ( Zeng Nanhua 曾南华 )"
],
[
"2000",
"Chen Guohua 陈国华",
"My Home Affairs 家事 ( Zheng Dayong 郑大勇 )",
"Vincent Ng 翁清海 - Hainan Kopi Tales 琼园咖啡香 ( Long Yonglin 龙永霖 ) Ix Shen 沈倾掞 - Hero of the Times 新方世玉 ( Nalan Degang 纳兰德刚 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - Hainan Kopi Tales 琼园咖啡香 ( Long Yong'an 龙永安 ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - The Legendary Swordsman 笑傲江湖 ( Yue Buqun 岳不群 )"
],
[
"2001",
"Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆",
"Looking for Stars 星锁 ( Tequila )",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - Beyond the Axis of Truth 法医X档案 ( Wu Mingwei 伍名卫 ) Vincent Ng 翁清海 - Heroes in Black 我来也 ( Fan Yuan 范元 ) Nick Shen 沈炜竣 - Three Women and A Half 三个半女人 ( Jeffery ) Rayson Tan 陈泰铭 - Three Women and A Half 三个半女人 ( Ken )"
],
[
"2002",
"Huang Yiliang 黄奕良",
"The Vagrant 豹子胆 ( Huang Jinlang 黄金浪 )",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - The Wing of Desire 天使的诱惑 ( Hu Tie 胡铁 ) Huang Bingjie 黄炳杰 - The Wing of Desire 天使的诱惑 ( Lin Jiahao 林家豪 ) Nick Shen 沈炜竣 - The Reunion 顶天立地 ( San Wan 三万 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - Viva Le Famille 好儿好女 ( Sun Yutai 孙裕泰 )"
],
[
"2003",
"Huang Yiliang 黄奕良",
"Holland V 荷兰村 ( Tian Dahua 田大华 )",
"Huang Wenyong 黄文永 - Holland V 荷兰村 ( Lin Jingcai 林精彩 ) Andrew Seow 萧乙铭 - Love Is Beautiful 美丽家庭 ( Huang Leshan 黄乐善 ) Jeff Wang 王建復 - Holland V 荷兰村 ( Ying Tiancheng Edison 应天承 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - Holland V 荷兰村 ( Li A'ming 李阿明 )"
],
[
"2004",
"Andrew Seow 萧乙铭",
"Man at Forty 跑吧,男人! ( Tang Tang 糖糖 )",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - Room in My Heart 真心蜜语 ( Li Ashun 李阿顺 ) Nick Shen 沈炜竣 - Always on My Mind 无炎的爱 ( Tang Xinhai 汤心海 ) Jeff Wang 王建復 - Double Happiness I 喜临门I ( Luo Jiafu 罗家福 ) Zhang Wenxiang 张汶祥 - Timeless Gift 遗情未了 ( Wang Xi 王喜 )"
],
[
"2005",
"Cavin Soh 苏梽诚",
"Portrait of Home 同心圆 ( Zhou Daqiu 周大丘 )",
"Darren Lim 林明伦 - A New Life 有福 ( Lin Laifa 林来发 ) Andrew Seow 萧乙铭 - A New Life 有福 ( Zhang Hongyun 张鸿运 ) Alan Tern 唐育书 - Double Happiness II 喜临门II ( Lin Wenjie 林文杰 / Lin Wenxiong 林文雄 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - My Mighty-in-Laws 野蛮亲家 ( 911 )"
],
[
"2006",
"Huang Yiliang 黄奕良",
"Women of Times 至尊红颜 ( Kuang Qicai 邝奇才 )",
"Adam Chen 詹金泉 - The Shining Star 星闪闪 ( Ah B 阿B ) Shaun Chen 陈泓宇 - C.I.D . 刑警2人组 ( Lin Chenghui 林成辉 ) Rayson Tan 陈泰铭 - The Undisclosed 迷云二十天 ( Chong ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - The Shining Star 星闪闪 ( Huang Feilong 黄飞龙 )"
],
[
"2007",
"Darren Lim 林明伦",
"Kinship 手足 ( Xu Naifa 徐乃发 )",
"Nick Shen 沈炜竣 - Like Father , Like Daughter 宝贝父女兵 ( Gui 阿贵 ) Cavin Soh 苏梽诚 - Mars vs Venus 幸福双人床 ( Wu Guohan Hanns 吴国汉 ) Brandon Wong 黄炯耀 - The Homecoming 十三鞭 ( Lai Guoqiang 赖国强 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - Happily Ever After 凡间新仙人 ( Yang Jian 杨戬 )"
],
[
"2009",
"Chew Chor Meng 周初明",
"The Golden Path 黄金路 ( Huang Kaida 黄凯达 )",
"Zen Chong 章证翔 - The Little Nyonya 小娘惹 ( Robert Zhang 罗伯张 ) Dai Xiangyu 戴向宇 - The Little Nyonya 小娘惹 ( Yamamoto Yousuke 山本洋介 ) Darren Lim 林明伦 - The Little Nyonya 小娘惹 ( Huang Jincheng 黄金成 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - The Little Nyonya 小娘惹 ( Liu Yidao 刘一刀 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - The Defining Moment 沸腾冰点 ( Tang Weiye 唐伟业 )"
],
[
"2010",
"Zhu Houren 朱厚任",
"Reunion Dinner 团圆饭 ( Liang Zhigao 梁志高 )",
"Darren Lim 林明伦 - My School Daze 书包太重 ( Tang Andi 唐安迪 ) Jerry Yeo 杨伟烈 - The Ultimatum 双子星 ( Ye Rende 叶仁德 ) Zhang Zhenhuan 张振寰 - Together 当我们同在一起 ( Yao Wuji 姚无忌 ) Zheng Geping 郑各评 - Together 当我们同在一起 ( Qin Xianglin 秦相林 )"
],
[
"2011",
"Terence Cao 曹国辉",
"The Best Things In Life 五福到 ( Song Daming 宋达明 )",
"Andie Chen 陈邦鋆 - Precious Babes 三个女人一个宝 ( Fu Weide 傅炜德 ) Zen Chong 章证翔 - Unriddle 最火搭档 ( Yu Zhenbang 余振邦 ) Darren Lim 林明伦 - Breakout 破天网 ( Wang Lianzhou 汪连州 ) Yao Wenlong 姚彣隆 - The Family Court 走进走出 ( Huang Guanying 黄冠英 )"
],
[
"2012",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城",
"The Oath 行医 ( Wu Zhixiong 吴志雄 )",
"Chen Hanwei 陈汉玮 - A Song to Remember 星洲之夜 ( Xu Kun 许昆 ) Cavin Soh 苏梽诚 - Love Thy Neighbour 四个门牌一个梦 ( Dai Deliang 戴德良 ) Rayson Tan 陈泰铭 - A Song to Remember 星洲之夜 ( Black Snake 黑蛇 ) Brandon Wong 黄炯耀 - Love Thy Neighbour 四个门牌一个梦 ( Shen Jindao 沈金道 )"
],
[
"2013",
"Tay Ping Hui 郑斌辉",
"Unriddle 2 最火搭档2 ( Zhang Yuze 张雨泽 )",
"Huang Wenyong 黄文永 - Joys of Life 花样人间 ( Han Jianren 韩健仁 ) Rayson Tan 陈泰铭 - It Takes Two 对对碰 ( Zhang Yang 张扬 ) Romeo Tan 陈罗密欧 - Joys of Life 花样人间 ( Qian Erduo 钱二多 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - Pillow Talk 再见单人床 ( Zhang Qian 张谦 )"
],
[
"2014",
"Guo Liang 郭亮",
"The Dream Makers 志在四方 ( Yao Jianguo 姚建国 )",
"Shaun Chen 陈泓宇 - The Dream Makers 志在四方 ( Du Zhanpeng 杜展鹏 ) Dennis Chew 周崇庆 - The Dream Makers 志在四方 ( Fang Yuanren 方元仁 ) Jeffrey Xu 徐鸣杰 - Marry Me 我要嫁出去 ( Xu Xiaodong Dave 徐小东 ) Zhang Zhenhuan 张振寰 - Break Free 曙光 ( Ye Zhibin 叶志斌 )"
],
[
"2015",
"Chen Hanwei 陈汉玮",
"The Journey : Tumultuous Times 信约:动荡的年代 ( Hu Weiren 胡为人 )",
"Chen Shucheng 陈澍城 - Blessings 祖先保佑 ( Lian Mengyong 连梦勇 ) Aloysius Pang 冯伟衷 - Against the Tide 逆潮 ( Zhao Keji 赵克己 ) Zhang Zhenhuan 张振寰 - Against the Tide 逆潮 ( Zhuo Dingkang 卓定康 ) Zhu Houren 朱厚任 - In The Name Of Love 最爱是你 ( Wang Weiguo 王伟国 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Star Awards for Best Supporting Actor is an award presented annually at the Star Awards, a ceremony that was established in 1994. The category was introduced in 1995, at the 2nd Star Awards ceremony; Xie Shaoguang received the award for his role in Larceny of Love and it is given in honour of a Mediacorp actor who has delivered an outstanding performance in a supporting role. The nominees are determined by a team of judges employed by Mediacorp; winners are selected by a majority vote from the entire judging panel. Since its inception, the award has been given to 17 actors. Chen Shucheng is the most recent winner in this category for his role in A Million Dollar Dream. Since the ceremony held in 2006, Huang Yiliang remains as the only actor to win in this category thrice, surpassing Chen Guohua, Chen Hanwei, Chen Shucheng, Tay Ping Hui, and Xie who have two wins each. Chen Shucheng has been nominated on 10 occasions, more than any other actor. Zheng Geping holds the record for the most nominations without a win, with six.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Recipients",
"title": "Star Awards for Best Supporting Actor",
"uid": "Star_Awards_for_Best_Supporting_Actor_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Awards_for_Best_Supporting_Actor"
} | 4,007 |
4008 | List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records_1 | [
[
"Hits",
"Player",
"Team",
"Year",
"Years Record Stood"
],
[
"138",
"Ross Barnes",
"Chicago White Stockings",
"1876",
"7"
],
[
"146",
"Roger Connor",
"New York Gothams",
"1883",
"1"
],
[
"162",
"Ezra Sutton",
"Boston Beaneaters",
"1884",
"1"
],
[
"169",
"Roger Connor",
"New York Gothams",
"1885",
"1"
],
[
"187",
"Cap Anson",
"Chicago White Stockings",
"1886",
"1"
],
[
"225",
"Tip O'Neill",
"St. Louis Cardinals",
"1887",
"7"
],
[
"237",
"Hugh Duffy",
"Boston Braves",
"1894",
"5"
],
[
"238",
"Ed Delahanty",
"Philadelphia Phillies",
"1899",
"12"
],
[
"248",
"Ty Cobb",
"Detroit Tigers",
"1911",
"9"
],
[
"257",
"George Sisler",
"St. Louis Browns",
"1920",
"84"
],
[
"262",
"Ichiro Suzuki",
"Seattle Mariners",
"2004",
"14 ( current )"
]
] | {
"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": "240 hits in one season -- Evolution of the single season record for hits",
"title": "List of Major League Baseball hit records",
"uid": "List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_hit_records"
} | 4,008 |
4009 | MBO_Cinemas_2 | [
[
"Cinema",
"Total Halls",
"Seats",
"Location",
"State",
"Remarks"
],
[
"Era Square Mall",
"10",
"1,456",
"Seremban",
"Negeri Sembilan",
"Located on Level 3"
],
[
"Melaka Mall",
"7",
"1,212",
"Ayer Keroh",
"Melaka",
"Located on Level 2"
],
[
"Square One Shopping Centre",
"8",
"1,217",
"Batu Pahat",
"Johor",
"Located on Level 3 . Recently renovated with new look"
],
[
"U Mall",
"5",
"606",
"Skudai , Johor Bahru",
"Johor",
"Located on Level 1"
],
[
"Heritage Mall",
"7",
"1,036",
"Kota Tinggi",
"Johor",
"Located on Level 2"
],
[
"Kluang Mall",
"6",
"1,067",
"Kluang",
"Johor",
"Located on Level 2"
],
[
"Elements Mall",
"10",
"1,584",
"Bandar Hilir",
"Melaka",
"Located on Level 11 features BIG SCREEN"
],
[
"AEON Mall Bandar Dato ' Onn",
"5",
"663",
"Bandar Dato ' Onn",
"Johor",
"Located on Level 2 features BIG SCREEN , MX4D and KECIL"
]
] | {
"intro": "MCAT Box Office Sdn Bhd (trading as MBO Cinemas) is a chain of cinemas in Malaysia. It is the third largest cinema chain in the country after Golden Screen Cinemas and TGV Cinemas.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Cinemas -- Southern Region",
"title": "MBO Cinemas",
"uid": "MBO_Cinemas_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MBO_Cinemas"
} | 4,009 |
4010 | Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships_1 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Event",
"Championship"
],
[
"Gold",
"Vera Nikolić",
"800m",
"1966 Budapest"
],
[
"Gold",
"Vera Nikolić",
"800m",
"1971 Helsinki"
],
[
"Gold",
"Miloš Srejović",
"Triple jump",
"1978 Prague"
],
[
"Gold",
"Snežana Pajkić",
"1500 metres",
"1990 Split"
],
[
"Gold",
"Dragutin Topić",
"High jump",
"1990 Split"
],
[
"Silver",
"Olga Gere",
"High jump",
"1962 Belgrade"
],
[
"Silver",
"Nenad Stekić",
"Long jump",
"1974 Rome"
],
[
"Silver",
"Nenad Stekić",
"Long jump",
"1978 Prague"
],
[
"Silver",
"Biljana Petrović",
"High jump",
"1990 Split"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Vera Nikolić",
"800m",
"1969 Athens"
]
] | {
"intro": "Serbia officially has competed at the European Athletics Championships since 2006. Before Serbia has competed as part of SFR Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Outdoor -- List of Medalists",
"title": "Serbia at the European Athletics Championships",
"uid": "Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships"
} | 4,010 |
4011 | List_of_alumni_of_Jesus_College,_Oxford_7 | [
[
"Name",
"M",
"G",
"Degree",
"Notes"
],
[
"John Adair",
"1969 ?",
"1971",
"BLitt",
"Author and academic on leadership studies ; Professor of Leadership Studies at the University of Surrey ( 1979-1984 ) ; visiting professor at the University of Exeter ( 1990-2000 ) ; Honorary Professor of Leadership at the China Executive Leadership Academy in Pudong since 2006"
],
[
"Henry Bould ( F )",
"1621",
"1624",
"BA ( 1621 ) , MA ( 1624 )",
"Named as one of the founding scholars in the college 's charter ( 1622 ) ; Fellow ( 1623-1628 )"
],
[
"Joseph Clearihue",
"1911",
"1914",
"BA Jurisprudence ( 2nd , 1913 ) , BCL ( 3rd , 1914 )",
"Canadian Rhodes scholar , who later became a member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia and a county court judge ; also chairman of the council of Victoria College , British Columbia ( which became the University of Victoria under his leadership )"
],
[
"Sir Goronwy Daniel ( HF )",
"1937",
"1940",
"DPhil",
"Permanent Under-Secretary of the Welsh Office ( 1964-1969 ) , Principal of University of Wales , Aberystwyth ( 1969-1979 )"
],
[
"Walter Jenkin Evans",
"1875 ?",
"1878",
"BA",
"Principal of Carmarthen Presbyterian College ( 1888-1927 )"
],
[
"Robert Gentilis",
"-",
"1603",
"BA",
"Academic and translator who matriculated from Christ Church at the age of eight , graduated at the age of twelve and became a Fellow of All Souls at seventeen ; eldest son of Alberico Gentili , the Italian jurist and Regius Professor of Civil Law"
],
[
"Lewis Gilbertson ( F )",
"1833",
"1839",
"BA Literae Humaniores ( 3rd , 1836 ) , MA ( 1839 ) , BD ( 1847 )",
"Vicar in parishes in Cardiganshire , and also served as Vice-Principal"
],
[
"Joseph Hoare ( F/P )",
"1727",
"1733",
"BA ( 1730 ) , MA",
"Prebend of Westminster Abbey ; died after being scratched by his cat"
],
[
"David Hughes ( F/P )",
"1770",
"1776",
"BA ( 1773 ) , MA ( 1776 ) , BD ( 1783 ) , DD ( 1790 )",
"Principal ( 1802-1817 )"
],
[
"Henry Foulkes ( F/P )",
"1790",
"1797",
"BA ( 1794 ) , MA ( 1797 ) , BD ( 1804 ) , DD ( 1817 )",
"Principal for 40 years ( 1817-1857 )"
],
[
"Francis Heiser",
"1903 ?",
"1907",
"BA Theology ( 2nd )",
"Principal of Fourah Bay College , Sierra Leone ( 1920-1922 ) , Principal of St Aidan 's Theological College , Birkenhead ( 1929-1950 )"
],
[
"Wilfred Hinton",
"1908 ?",
"1910 ?",
"BA",
"Professor of Political Economy at the University of Hong Kong ( 1913-1929 ) , Director of Studies for the Institute of Bankers ( 1929-1949 ) , and an expert in Far Eastern international affairs"
],
[
"George Howells",
"1895 ?",
"1898 ?",
"BLitt",
"Principal of Serampore College , India ( 1907-1932 )"
],
[
"Gwilliam Iwan Jones",
"1923",
"1926",
"BA Modern History ( 2nd )",
"Colonial civil servant who photographed life in Nigeria in the 1930s , later becoming an anthropologist and Fellow of Jesus College , Cambridge"
],
[
"Maurice Jones ( F/HF )",
"1882",
"1886",
"BA Divinity ( 1st , 1886 ) , BD ( 1907 ) , DD ( 1914 )",
"Welsh clergyman and principal of St David 's College , Lampeter ( 1923-1938 )"
],
[
"Thomas Jones",
"1827",
"1832",
"BA",
"Librarian of Chetham 's Library , Manchester ( 1845-1875 )"
],
[
"William Jones ( F/P )",
"1694",
"1700",
"BA ( 1697 ) , MA ( 1700 ) , BD ( 1708 ) , DD ( 1720 )",
"Principal ( 1720-1725 )"
],
[
"Deepak Lal",
"1960",
"1965",
"BA PPE ( 1962 ) , BPhil ( Economics , 1965 )",
"Development economist ; James S. Coleman Professor of International Development Studies at the University of California , Los Angeles since 1991"
],
[
"Llewelyn Lewellin",
"1818",
"1827",
"BA Literae Humaniores ( 1st , 1822 ) , MA ( 1824 ) , BCL ( 1827 ) , DCL ( 1829 )",
"First Principal of St David 's College , Lampeter ( 1828-1878 ) , also Dean of St David 's ( 1843-1878 )"
],
[
"Harold Loukes",
"1930",
"1934",
"BA English ( 1st )",
"Taught at the University of Delhi before spending 30 years in the Department of Education at Oxford , most of them as Reader in Education"
]
] | {
"intro": "Jesus College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. Its alumni include politicians, lawyers, bishops, poets, and academics. Some went on to become fellows of the college; 14 students later became principal of the college. It was founded in 1571 by Queen Elizabeth I, at the request of a Welsh clergyman, Hugh Price, who was Treasurer of St David's Cathedral in Pembrokeshire. The college still has strong links with Wales, and about 15% of students are Welsh. There are 340 undergraduates and 190 students carrying out postgraduate studies. Old members of Jesus College are sometimes known as Jesubites. From the world of politics, the college's alumni include two Prime Ministers (Harold Wilson of Britain and Norman Manley of Jamaica), one Speaker of the House of Commons (Sir William Williams), a co-founder of Plaid Cymru (D. J. Williams) and a co-founder of the African National Congress (Pixley ka Isaka Seme). Members of Parliament from the three main political parties in the United Kingdom have attended the college, as have politicians from Australia (Neal Blewett), New Zealand (Harold Rushworth), Sri Lanka (Lalith Athulathmudali) and the United States (Heather Wilson). The list of lawyers include one Lord Chancellor (Lord Sankey) and one Law Lord (Lord du Parcq). The list of clergy includes three Archbishops of Wales (A. G. Edwards, Glyn Simon and Gwilym Williams). Celticists associated with the college include Sir John Morris-Jones, Sir Thomas (T. H.) Parry-Williams and William John Gruffydd, whilst the list of historians includes the college's first graduate, David Powel, who published the first printed history of Wales in 1584, and the Victorian historian John Richard Green.",
"section_text": "The memorial stone to Henry Foulkes in the college chapel The memorial stone to Francis Mansell in the college chapel Thomas Pardo , Principal of Jesus College ( 1727–1763 ) , and also Chancellor of St David 's Cathedral ( 1749–1753 ) John Tudno Williams",
"section_title": "Alumni -- Other academics",
"title": "List of alumni of Jesus College, Oxford",
"uid": "List_of_alumni_of_Jesus_College,_Oxford_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_alumni_of_Jesus_College,_Oxford"
} | 4,011 |
4012 | National_Basketball_Association_Nielsen_ratings_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Network",
"Rating"
],
[
"2018-19",
"ABC",
"2.2"
],
[
"2017-18",
"ABC",
"2.2"
],
[
"2016-17",
"ABC",
"1.9"
],
[
"2015-16",
"ABC",
"2.3"
],
[
"2014-15",
"ABC",
"2.2"
],
[
"2013-14",
"ABC",
"2.3"
],
[
"2012-13",
"ABC",
"2.9"
],
[
"2011-12 ( lockout shortened )",
"ABC",
"3.3"
],
[
"2010-11",
"ABC",
"3.0"
],
[
"2009-10",
"ABC",
"2.3"
],
[
"2008-09",
"ABC",
"2.3"
],
[
"2007-08",
"ABC",
"2.2"
],
[
"2006-07",
"ABC",
"2.0"
],
[
"2005-06",
"ABC",
"2.2"
],
[
"2004-05",
"ABC",
"2.3"
],
[
"2003-04",
"ABC",
"2.4"
],
[
"2002-03",
"ABC",
"2.6"
],
[
"2001-02",
"NBC",
"2.9"
],
[
"2000-01",
"NBC",
"3.0"
],
[
"1999-2000",
"NBC",
"3.3"
]
] | {
"intro": "The National Basketball Association is shown on national television on broadcast channel ABC, cable networks ESPN and TNT. The NBA is also shown on multiple regional sports networks. Currently, ESPN shows doubleheaders on Wednesday and Friday nights, while TNT shows doubleheaders on Thursday and Tuesday nights. In the second half of the season, ABC shows a single game on Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons. Games are shown almost every night on NBA TV. There are some exceptions to this schedule, including Tip-off Week, Christmas Day, and Martin Luther King Jr. Day. More games may be shown as the end of the regular season approaches, particularly games with playoff significance. During the playoffs, the first round are split between TNT, ESPN, NBA TV, and ABC on mostly weekends the second round are split between ESPN,TNT and ABC on weekends . The conference finals are split between ESPN and TNT; the two networks alternate which complete series they will carry from year to year. The entire NBA Finals is shown nationally on ABC. The NBA Finals is one of the few sporting events to be shown on a national broadcast network on a weeknight.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Regular season",
"title": "National Basketball Association on television",
"uid": "National_Basketball_Association_Nielsen_ratings_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Basketball_Association_on_television"
} | 4,012 |
4013 | 2004_NFL_Draft_1 | [
[
"Original NFL team",
"Player",
"Pos",
"College",
"Conf"
],
[
"Baltimore Ravens",
"Don Muhlbach",
"LS",
"Texas A & M",
"Big 12"
],
[
"Baltimore Ravens",
"B.J . Sams",
"WR",
"McNeese State",
"Southland"
],
[
"Baltimore Ravens",
"Lance Frazier",
"CB",
"West Virginia",
"Big East"
],
[
"Buffalo Bills",
"Jabari Greer",
"CB",
"Tennessee",
"SEC"
],
[
"Buffalo Bills",
"Jason Peters",
"TE / OT",
"Arkansas",
"SEC"
],
[
"Carolina Panthers",
"Jordan Carstens",
"DT",
"Iowa State",
"Big 12"
],
[
"Chicago Bears",
"Jeremy Cain",
"LS",
"Massachusetts",
"A-10"
],
[
"Cincinnati Bengals",
"Kyle Larson",
"P",
"Nebraska",
"Big 12"
],
[
"Dallas Cowboys",
"Terrance Copper",
"WR",
"East Carolina",
"C-USA"
],
[
"Dallas Cowboys",
"Ryan Fowler",
"LB",
"Duke",
"ACC"
],
[
"Dallas Cowboys",
"Lousaka Polite",
"FB",
"Pittsburgh",
"Big East"
],
[
"Denver Broncos",
"Tyson Clabo",
"OT",
"Wake Forest",
"ACC"
],
[
"Detroit Lions",
"George Wilson",
"S",
"Arkansas",
"SEC"
],
[
"Green Bay Packers",
"Vonta Leach",
"FB",
"East Carolina",
"C-USA"
],
[
"Indianapolis Colts",
"Ben Utecht",
"TE",
"Minnesota",
"Big Ten"
],
[
"Kansas City Chiefs",
"Ryan Lilja",
"G",
"Kansas State",
"Big 12"
],
[
"Kansas City Chiefs",
"Benny Sapp",
"CB",
"Northern Iowa",
"Gateway"
],
[
"Minnesota Vikings",
"Anthony Herrera",
"G",
"Tennessee",
"SEC"
],
[
"Minnesota Vikings",
"Spencer Johnson",
"DT",
"Auburn",
"SEC"
],
[
"New England Patriots",
"Eric Alexander",
"LB",
"LSU",
"SEC"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2004 NFL draft was the procedure by which National Football League teams selected amateur college football players. It is officially known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting. The draft was held April 24-25, 2004 at the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. No teams chose to claim any players in the supplemental draft that year. The draft was shown on ESPN both days and eventually moved to ESPN2 both days. The draft began with the San Diego Chargers selecting Mississippi quarterback Eli Manning with the first overall selection. Manning was later traded to the New York Giants for their first selection, fourth overall pick Philip Rivers of NC State. There were 32 compensatory selections distributed among 16 teams, with the Eagles, Rams, and Jets each receiving 4 compensatory picks. The draft set several records, including the most wide receivers selected in the first round, with seven. Another record set by the draft was the most trades in the first round, with twenty-eight trades. The University of Miami set an NFL record for the most first rounders drafted with 6. Ohio State set an NFL draft record having 14 total players selected through all rounds.",
"section_text": "† = Pro Bowler [ 5 ]",
"section_title": "Notable undrafted players",
"title": "2004 NFL Draft",
"uid": "2004_NFL_Draft_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_NFL_Draft"
} | 4,013 |
4014 | List_of_Irish-American_Medal_of_Honor_recipients_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Service",
"Rank",
"Place of action",
"Date of action",
"Notes"
],
[
"James Allen",
"Army",
"Private",
"South Mountain , Maryland",
"September 14 , 1862",
"Single-handed and slightly wounded he accosted a squad of 14 Confederate soldiers bearing the colors of the 16th Georgia Infantry ( C.S.A . )"
],
[
"Robert Anderson",
"Navy",
"Quartermaster",
"On board USS Crusader and USS Keokuk",
"1863",
"Served on board USS Crusader and USS Keokuk during various actions of those vessels"
],
[
"Augustus Barry",
"Army",
"Sergeant Major",
"Unknown",
"1863 - 1865",
"Gallantry in various actions during the rebellion"
],
[
"David L. Bass",
"Navy",
"Seaman",
"Fort Fisher , North Carolina",
"January 15 , 1865",
"On board USS Minnesota in action during the assault on Fort Fisher , 15 January 1865"
],
[
"William R. D. Blackwood",
"Army",
"Surgeon",
"Petersburg , Virginia",
"April 2 , 1865",
"Removed severely wounded officers and soldiers from the field while under a heavy fire from the enemy , exposing himself beyond the call of duty , thus furnishing an example of most distinguished gallantry"
],
[
"John Gregory Bourke",
"Army",
"Private",
"Murfreesboro , Tennessee",
"December 31 , 1862 - January 2 , 1863",
"Gallantry in action"
],
[
"James Brady",
"Army",
"E-01 Private",
"Battle of Chaffin 's Farm , Virginia",
"Sep 29 , 1864",
"Capture of flag"
],
[
"Felix Brannigan",
"Army",
"E-01 Private",
"Battle of Chancellorsville , Virginia",
"May 2 , 1863",
"Volunteered on a dangerous service and brought in valuable information"
],
[
"John Brosnan",
"Army",
"Sergeant",
"Second Battle of Petersburg , Virginia",
"Jun 17 , 1864",
"Rescued a wounded comrade who lay exposed to the enemy 's fire , receiving a severe wound in the effort"
],
[
"Denis Buckley",
"Army",
"E-01 Private",
"Battle of Peachtree Creek , Ga",
"Jul 20 , 1864",
"Capture of flag of 31st Mississippi ( C.S.A . )"
],
[
"John C. Buckley",
"Army",
"Sergeant",
"Battle of Vicksburg , Miss",
"May 22 , 1863",
"Gallantry in the charge of the volunteer storming party"
],
[
"E. Michael Burk",
"Army",
"E-01 Private",
"Battle of Spotsylvania Court House , Virginia",
"May 12 , 1864",
"Capture of flag , seizing it as his regiment advanced over the enemy 's works . He received a bullet wound in the chest while capturing flag"
],
[
"Thomas Burk",
"Army",
"Sergeant",
"Battle of Wilderness",
"May 6 , 1864",
"At the risk of his own life went back while the rebels were still firing and , finding Col. Wheelock unable to move , alone and unaided , carried him off the field of battle"
],
[
"Daniel W. Burke",
"Army",
"First Sergeant",
"Battle of Shepherdstown , Virginia",
"Sep 20 , 1862",
"Voluntarily attempted to spike a gun in the face of the enemy"
],
[
"John H. Callahan",
"Army",
"E-01 Private",
"Battle of Fort Blakely , Ala",
"Apr 9 , 1865",
"Capture of flag"
],
[
"William Campbell",
"Army",
"Private",
"Vicksburg , Mississippi",
"May 22 , 1863",
"Gallantry in the charge of the volunteer storming party"
],
[
"Hugh Carey",
"Army",
"Sergeant",
"Battle of Gettysburg , Pa",
"Jul 2 , 1863",
"Captured the flag of the 7th Virginia Infantry ( C.S.A . ) , being twice wounded in the effort"
],
[
"Patrick Colbert",
"Navy",
"Coxswain",
"Aboard USS Commodore Hull",
"October 31 , 1864",
"Served on board USS Commodore Hull at the capture of Plymouth , 31 October 1864"
],
[
"Charles H. T. Collis",
"Army",
"Colonel",
"Petersburg , Virginia",
"December 13 , 1862",
"Gallantly led his regiment in battle at a critical moment"
],
[
"Dennis Conlan",
"Navy",
"Seaman",
"Aboard USS Agawam , First Battle of Fort Fisher",
"December 23 , 1864",
"Conlan served on board USS Agawam , as one of a volunteer crew of a powder boat which was exploded near Fort Fisher , 23 December 1864"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of Irish-American soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines who were awarded the American military's highest decoration - the Medal of Honor. The Medal of Honor is bestowed for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life, above and beyond the call of duty, in actual combat against an armed enemy force. The medal is awarded by the President of the United States on behalf of the Congress. Of the 3,464 Medals of Honor awarded as of September 17, 2009, an estimated 2,021 have been awarded to Irish-American recipients, more than twice the number awarded any other ethnic group; 257 Irish-born Americans have received the Medal of Honor which represents more than half of foreign-born MOH recipients. A monument to these Irish-born Medal of Honor recipients is located at Valley Forge's Medal of Honor Grove; erected by the Ancient Order of Hibernians. The first Irish American to receive the Medal was Michael Madden, who received it for his actions in the American Civil War (Note that the earliest action for which the Medal of Honor was awarded was to Irish American U.S. Army Assistant Surgeon Bernard J.D. Irwin for the engagement at Apache Pass, February 1861. The award was made three decades after the event and after Madden's award).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Civil War",
"title": "List of Irish-American Medal of Honor recipients",
"uid": "List_of_Irish-American_Medal_of_Honor_recipients_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Irish-American_Medal_of_Honor_recipients"
} | 4,014 |
4015 | Macedonian_First_League_(basketball)_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Home City",
"Arena",
"Coach"
],
[
"Akademija FMP",
"Skopje",
"Nezavisna Makedonija",
"Igor Gacov"
],
[
"EuroNickel 2005",
"Kavadarci",
"Jasmin",
"Goran Samardziev"
],
[
"Gostivar 2015",
"Gostivar",
"Mladost Gostivar",
"Marjan Srbinovski"
],
[
"Kožuv",
"Gevgelija",
"26-ti April",
"Aleksandar Jončevski"
],
[
"Kumanovo 2009",
"Kumanovo",
"Sports Hall Kumanovo",
"Aleksandar Petrović"
],
[
"MZT Skopje",
"Skopje",
"Jane Sandanski Arena",
"Gjorgji Kočov"
],
[
"MZT Skopje UNI Banka",
"Skopje",
"Jane Sandanski Arena",
"Goran Krstevski"
],
[
"Pelister",
"Bitola",
"Sports Hall Mladost",
"Zoran Todorović"
],
[
"Rabotnički",
"Skopje",
"Gradski Park",
"Dimitar Mirakovski"
],
[
"Vardar",
"Skopje",
"Kale",
"Darko Radulović"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Macedonian First League (Macedonian: Македонска прва лига, Makedonska prva liga) is the top-tier basketball competition in the Republic of North Macedonia. Prior to Macedonian independence in 1991, before that Macedonian teams competed in Macedonian Republic League and Macedonian top basketball teams competed in the Yugoslav First Federal Basketball League, organized by the Basketball Federation of Yugoslavia. Macedonian First league was made on the base of the Macedonian Republic League, and teams from the higher level federal Leagues (MZT and Rabotnički) joined the newly made and renamed League competition that become the First League.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Current clubs",
"title": "Macedonian First League (basketball)",
"uid": "Macedonian_First_League_(basketball)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_First_League_(basketball)"
} | 4,015 |
4016 | List_of_GM-EMD_locomotives_6 | [
[
"Model designation",
"Build year",
"Total produced",
"AAR wheel arrangement",
"Prime mover",
"Power output"
],
[
"GP7",
"1949-1954",
"2,729 A units 5 B units",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567B",
"1,500 hp ( 1.1 MW )"
],
[
"GP9",
"1954-1963",
"4,112 A units 165 B units",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567C",
"1,750 hp ( 1.3 MW )"
],
[
"GP15-1",
"1976-1982",
"310",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E",
"1,500 hp ( 1,119 kW )"
],
[
"GP15AC",
"1982",
"34",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E",
"1,500 hp ( 1,119 kW )"
],
[
"GP15T",
"1982-1983",
"28",
"B-B",
"EMD 8-645E3",
"1,500 hp ( 1.1 MW )"
],
[
"GP18",
"1959-1963",
"405",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567D1",
"1,800 hp ( 1.3 MW )"
],
[
"GP20",
"1959-1962",
"260",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567D2",
"2,000 hp ( 1.5 MW )"
],
[
"GP28",
"1964-1965",
"31",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567D1",
"1,800 hp ( 1.3 MW )"
],
[
"GP30",
"1961-1963",
"908 A units 40 B units",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567D3",
"2,250 hp ( 1.6 MW )"
],
[
"GP35",
"1963-1966",
"1,334",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-567D3A",
"2,500 hp ( 1.9 MW )"
],
[
"GP38",
"1966-1971",
"706",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E",
"2,000 hp ( 1.5 MW )"
],
[
"GP38AC",
"1970-1971",
"261",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E",
""
],
[
"GP38-2",
"1972-1986",
"2,162",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E",
"2,000 hp ( 1.5 MW )"
],
[
"GP38-2L",
"",
"",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E",
"2,000 hp ( 1.5 MW )"
],
[
"GP38-2W",
"1973-1974",
"51",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E",
"2,000 hp ( 1.5 MW )"
],
[
"GP39",
"1969-1970",
"23",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E3",
"2,300 hp ( 1.7 MW )"
],
[
"GP39DC",
"1970",
"2",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E3",
"2,300 hp ( 1.7 MW )"
],
[
"GP39X",
"1980",
"6",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E3",
"2,600 hp ( 2.0 MW )"
],
[
"GP39-2",
"1974-1984",
"239",
"B-B",
"EMD 12-645E3",
"2,300 hp ( 1.7 MW )"
],
[
"GP40",
"1965-1971",
"1,221",
"B-B",
"EMD 16-645E3",
"3,000 hp ( 2.2 MW )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of locomotives produced by the Electro-Motive Corporation (EMC), and its successors General Motors Electro-Motive Division (GM-EMD) and Electro-Motive Diesel (EMD).",
"section_text": "`` Geeps '' redirects here . For other uses , see Geeps ( disambiguation ) . In a very real sense , yesterday 's General Purpose has become today 's Special Purpose ( `` time '' freight and other time-sensitive lading ) . True GPs were discontinued after the completion of the last GP60 in 1994 . However , many earlier model GPs , most particularly GP40s , GP39s and GP38s , have been rebuilt to Dash 2 standards for another 30 to 40 years of reliable service .",
"section_title": "Four-axle roadswitchers or General Purpose Locomotives ( GP )",
"title": "List of GM-EMD locomotives",
"uid": "List_of_GM-EMD_locomotives_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_GM-EMD_locomotives"
} | 4,016 |
4017 | 1952_College_Football_All-America_Team_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Position",
"School",
"Number",
"Official",
"Other"
],
[
"Jack Scarbath",
"Quarterback",
"Maryland",
"8/8",
"AAB , AFCA , AP , FWAA , INS , NEA , SN , UP",
"Look"
],
[
"Johnny Lattner",
"Halfback",
"Notre Dame",
"8/8",
"AAB , AFCA , AP , FWAA , INS , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Billy Vessels",
"Halfback",
"Oklahoma",
"7/8",
"AAB , AP , FWAA , INS , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"John Michels",
"Guard",
"Tennessee",
"6/8",
"AAB , AP , FWAA , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Frank McPhee",
"End",
"Princeton",
"5/8",
"AAB , INS , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Dick Modzelewski",
"Tackle",
"Maryland",
"5/8",
"AFCA , AAB , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Donn Moomaw",
"Center",
"UCLA",
"5/8",
"AFCA , AP , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Bernie Flowers",
"End",
"Purdue",
"5/8",
"AAB , FWAA , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Elmer Willhoite",
"Guard",
"USC",
"5/8",
"AFCA , FWAA INS , NEA , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Tom Catlin",
"Center",
"Oklahoma",
"5/8",
"AAB , FWAA , INS , NEA , SN",
"--"
],
[
"Hal Miller",
"Tackle",
"Georgia Tech",
"4/8",
"FWAA , NEA , SN , UP",
"WC"
],
[
"Jim Sears",
"Halfback",
"USC",
"3/8",
"AP , INS , NEA",
"WC"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1952 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1952. The eight selectors recognized by the NCAA as official for the 1952 season are (1) the Associated Press, (2) the United Press, (3) the All-America Board, (4) the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), (5) the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), (6) the International News Service (INS), (7) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and (8) the Sporting News. Maryland quarterback Jack Scarbath and Notre Dame halfback Johnny Lattner were the only two players to be unanimously named first-team All-Americans by all eight official selectors. Lattner was awarded the 1952 Heisman Trophy.",
"section_text": "For the year 1952 , the NCAA recognizes eight published All-American teams as `` official '' designations for purposes of its consensus determinations . The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received .",
"section_title": "Consensus All-Americans",
"title": "1952 College Football All-America Team",
"uid": "1952_College_Football_All-America_Team_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1952_College_Football_All-America_Team"
} | 4,017 |
4018 | IRB_Sevens_World_Series_6 | [
[
"Season",
"Rounds",
"Most points",
"Most tries",
"Player of the Year"
],
[
"1999-00",
"10",
"",
"Vilimoni Delasau ( 83 )",
"No Award"
],
[
"2000-01",
"9",
"",
"Karl Te Nana ( 42 )",
"No Award"
],
[
"2001-02",
"11",
"",
"Brent Russell ( 46 )",
"No Award"
],
[
"2002-03",
"7",
"",
"Nasoni Roko ( 39 )",
"No Award"
],
[
"2003-04",
"8",
"",
"Fabian Juries & Rob Thirlby ( 39 )",
"Simon Amor"
],
[
"2004-05",
"7",
"",
"David Lemi ( 46 )",
"Orene Ai ' i"
],
[
"2005-06",
"8",
"Ben Gollings ( 343 )",
"Timoteo Iosua ( 40 )",
"Uale Mai"
],
[
"2006-07",
"8",
"William Ryder ( 416 )",
"Mikaele Pesamino ( 43 )",
"Afeleke Pelenise"
],
[
"2007-08",
"8",
"Tomasi Cama Jr. ( 319 )",
"Fabian Juries ( 41 )",
"DJ Forbes"
],
[
"2008-09",
"8",
"Ben Gollings ( 260 )",
"Collins Injera ( 42 )",
"Ollie Phillips"
],
[
"2009-10",
"8",
"Ben Gollings ( 332 )",
"Mikaele Pesamino ( 56 )",
"Mikaele Pesamino"
],
[
"2010-11",
"8",
"Cecil Afrika ( 381 )",
"Cecil Afrika ( 40 )",
"Cecil Afrika"
],
[
"2011-12",
"9",
"Tomasi Cama Jr. ( 390 )",
"Matt Turner ( 38 )",
"Tomasi Cama Jr"
],
[
"2012-13",
"9",
"Dan Norton ( 264 )",
"Dan Norton ( 52 )",
"Tim Mikkelson"
],
[
"2013-14",
"9",
"Tom Mitchell ( 358 )",
"Samisoni Viriviri ( 52 )",
"Samisoni Viriviri"
],
[
"2014-15",
"9",
"Osea Kolinisau ( 312 )",
"Seabelo Senatla ( 47 )",
"Werner Kok"
],
[
"2015-16",
"10",
"Madison Hughes ( 331 )",
"Seabelo Senatla ( 66 )",
"Seabelo Senatla"
],
[
"2016-17",
"10",
"Perry Baker ( 285 )",
"Perry Baker ( 57 )",
"Perry Baker"
],
[
"2017-18",
"10",
"Nathan Hirayama ( 334 )",
"Carlin Isles ( 49 )",
"Perry Baker"
],
[
"2018-19",
"10",
"Andrew Knewstubb ( 307 )",
"Carlin Isles ( 52 )",
"Jerry Tuwai"
]
] | {
"intro": "The World Rugby Sevens Series is an annual series of international rugby sevens tournaments run by World Rugby featuring national sevens teams. Organised for the first time in the 1999-2000 season as the IRB World Sevens Series, the competition was formed to promote an elite-level of international rugby sevens and develop the game into a viable commercial product. The competition has been sponsored by banking group HSBC since 2014. The season's circuit consists of 10 tournaments that generally begin in November or December and last until May. The venues are held across 10 countries, and visits five of the six populated continents. The United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore, France and England each host one event. Each tournament has 16 teams - 15 core teams that participate in each tournament and one regional qualifier. Teams compete for the World Rugby Series title by accumulating points based on their finishing position in each tournament. The lowest placed core team at the end of the season is dropped, and replaced by the winner of the Hong Kong Sevens. New Zealand had originally dominated the Series, winning each of the first six seasons from 1999-2000 to 2004-05, but since then, Fiji, South Africa and Samoa have each won season titles. England, Australia and the United States have placed in the top three for several seasons but have not won the series title. The International Olympic Committee's decision in 2009 to add rugby sevens to the Summer Olympics beginning in 2016 has added a boost to rugby sevens and to the World Sevens Series; this boost has led to increased exposure and revenues, leading several of the core teams to field fully professional squads.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Player awards by season",
"title": "World Rugby Sevens Series",
"uid": "IRB_Sevens_World_Series_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Rugby_Sevens_Series"
} | 4,018 |
4019 | List_of_NHL_franchise_post-season_droughts_9 | [
[
"City/Region",
"Seasons waiting",
"Stanley Cup Finals appearances",
"Current NHL team"
],
[
"Buffalo",
"48 0",
"1974-75 , 1998-99",
"Buffalo Sabres"
],
[
"Minneapolis-Saint Paul",
"44",
"1980-81 , 1990-91",
"Minnesota Wild"
],
[
"San Francisco Bay Area",
"36",
"2015-16",
"San Jose Sharks"
],
[
"South Florida",
"25 0",
"1995-96",
"Florida Panthers"
],
[
"Phoenix",
"22 0",
"Never",
"Arizona Coyotes"
],
[
"Columbus , Ohio",
"20",
"Never",
"Columbus Blue Jackets"
],
[
"Nashville",
"20 0",
"2016-17",
"Nashville Predators"
],
[
"Las Vegas",
"2",
"2017-18",
"Vegas Golden Knights"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article is a list of the active and all-time National Hockey League (NHL) franchise post-season appearance, post-season series win, Stanley Cup Finals and Stanley Cup droughts up to and including the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs. Those teams which have never made it in franchise history are listed by the season that they entered the league, either as a new franchise or when they merged into the NHL from the defunct World Hockey Association (WHA) league. Note: These lists do not include the cancelled 2004-05 NHL season. Among the current 31 NHL teams, 11 have never won the Stanley Cup. Additionally, one of the Original Six franchises - the Toronto Maple Leafs - has a Stanley Cup drought that includes the entire expansion era (51 seasons and counting). With the Vegas Golden Knights winning the Western Conference in 2018, there are only four franchises that have never reached the Stanley Cup Finals. Of those four, the oldest is the Arizona Coyotes (previously the Winnipeg Jets) (38 seasons), while the Maple Leafs have an even longer drought (51 seasons). The longest Stanley Cup championship drought in history was that of the New York Rangers, broken in 1994 after 53 seasons. The Maple Leafs have the current longest active Stanley Cup championship drought at 51 seasons and counting. In 2010, the Chicago Blackhawks ended what was the second-longest ever Stanley Cup championship drought at 47 seasons (now the sixth-longest). The end of that drought was the first of three consecutive years in which one of the eleven longest such droughts was broken (Chicago Blackhawks in 2010, Boston Bruins in 2011, and Los Angeles Kings in 2012). The Florida Panthers have the longest active win drought (22 seasons).",
"section_text": "This list only includes cities/regions currently hosting an NHL franchise .",
"section_title": "Cities/regions awaiting first Stanley Cup",
"title": "List of NHL franchise post-season droughts",
"uid": "List_of_NHL_franchise_post-season_droughts_9",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NHL_franchise_post-season_droughts"
} | 4,019 |
4020 | Kings_Dominion_2 | [
[
"Ride",
"Opening year",
"Manufacturer",
"Description"
],
[
"Americana",
"2009",
"",
"A ferris wheel that previously operated at Geauga Lake from 1999 until 2007"
],
[
"Apple Zapple",
"2002",
"Mack Rides",
"A wild mouse roller coaster . Named Ricochet from 2002 to 2017"
],
[
"Bad Apple",
"2002",
"HUSS",
"HUSS Troika . Formerly known as Triple Spin from 2002 to 2013"
],
[
"Carousel",
"1975",
"Philadelphia Toboggan Company",
"A historic 1917 wooden carousel , PTC # 44 . Originally from Roger Williams Park in Providence , Rhode Island"
],
[
"Delirium",
"2016",
"Mondial",
"A 115-foot-tall ( 35 m ) spinning pendulum flat ride"
],
[
"Dodgem",
"1975",
"",
"Bumper cars"
],
[
"Drop Tower : Scream Zone",
"2003",
"Intamin",
"A Gyro drop tower"
],
[
"Candy Apple Grove Stage",
"2018",
"",
"Performance stage scheduled to host Timbers Jam Band show in 2018"
],
[
"Racer 75",
"1975",
"Philadelphia Toboggan Company",
"A racing dual-tracked wooden roller coaster . Named Rebel Yell from 1975 to 2017"
],
[
"Twisted Timbers",
"2018",
"Rocky Mountain Construction",
"A steel hybrid coaster ; replaced Hurler which operated from 1994 to 2015"
],
[
"Wave Swinger",
"1975",
"Zierer",
"A suspended swing ride that rotates with a wave motion lifting riders more than 30 feet ( 9.1 m ) in the air"
],
[
"WindSeeker",
"2012",
"Mondial",
"A tower swinger ride featuring two-person swings that slowly rotate and ascend the 301-foot ( 92 m ) tower until reaching the top where speeds increase up to 30 miles per hour ( 48 km/h )"
],
[
"Xtreme Skyflyer",
"1996",
"Skycoaster",
"Pay-per-ride double skycoaster"
]
] | {
"intro": "Kings Dominion is an amusement park located in Doswell, Virginia, 20 miles (30 km) north of Richmond and 75 miles (120 km) south of Washington, D.C. Owned and operated by Cedar Fair, the 400-acre (1.6 km2) park opened to the public on May 3, 1975, and features over 60 rides, shows and attractions including 12 roller coasters and a 20-acre (81,000 m2) water park. Its name is derived from the name of its sister park, Kings Island, and the nickname for the state of Virginia, Old Dominion.",
"section_text": "Candy Apple Grove was known as Coney Island when the park first opened in 1975 . It was renamed Candy Apple Grove in 1976 . The area is Kings Dominion 's largest section in the park , and in its early years , it featured an orchard theme that included three apple-themed rides : Apple Turnover , [ 38 ] Bad Apple , and Adam 's Apple . Much of the apple-related themes were removed over the years , and the area became known as simply The Grove when it merged with the former Wayne 's World area in 2001 . [ citation needed ] As part of Kings Dominion 's 40th-anniversary celebration in 2014 , The Grove was restored to its original orchard theme , and the name was changed back to Candy Apple Grove . The animatronic Singing Mushrooms , popular decades ago , was redeveloped with newer technology and placed back on display . [ 39 ] Other features that made a return to the area include a fully restored floral clock near the Carousel , oversized candy apples , and the popular blue ice cream that existed in the park for decades . [ 40 ] The westernmost corner of Candy Apple Grove , distinct from the rest of the area , is themed to the 1950s . Some of the area 's more notable rides include WindSeeker , a 301-foot-tall ( 92 m ) swing ride that opened in 2012 , and Delirium , a type of pendulum amusement ride that opened in place of stand-up roller coaster Shockwave in 2016 . Candy Apple Grove 's newest ride , steel coaster Twisted Timbers , opened in 2018 replacing Hurler and reusing some of the previous support structure . In addition to rides , the area features an arcade , carnival games , fast-food restaurants , and a gift shop .",
"section_title": "Areas and attractions -- Candy Apple Grove",
"title": "Kings Dominion",
"uid": "Kings_Dominion_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kings_Dominion"
} | 4,020 |
4021 | Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_13 | [
[
"Year",
"Name",
"Show"
],
[
"2001",
"Pradeep Muley",
"The Great Warrior Chhatrapati Shivaji"
],
[
"2002",
"Mala Dey",
"Amrapali ( DD National )"
],
[
"2003",
"Pradeep Muley",
"The Great Warrior Chhatrapati Shivaji"
],
[
"2004",
"Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Hatim"
],
[
"2005",
"Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Hatim"
],
[
"2006",
"Tara Desai , Nisha Sagar , Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Dharti Ka Veer Yodha Prithviraj Chauhan"
],
[
"2007",
"Sheela Sagar and Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Dharti Ka Veer Yodha Prithviraj Chauhan"
],
[
"2008",
"Sheela Sagar",
"Jai Shri Krishna"
],
[
"2009",
"Neeta Lulla",
"Chittod Ki Rani Padmini Ka Johur"
],
[
"2010",
"Winnie Malhotra & Neelu Shroff",
"Balika Vadhu"
],
[
"2011",
"Nidhi Yasha",
"Shobha Somnath Ki"
],
[
"2012",
"Winnie Malhotra & Neelu Shroff",
"Balika Vadhu"
],
[
"2013",
"Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Bharat Ka Veer Putra - Maharana Pratap"
],
[
"2014",
"Jerry D'souza",
"Nach Baliye 6"
],
[
"2016",
"Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Siya Ke Ram"
],
[
"2017",
"Nikhat Mariyam Neerushaa",
"Prem Ya Paheli - Chandrakanta"
],
[
"2018",
"Ketki Dalal",
"Porus"
]
] | {
"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 -- Technical Awards",
"title": "Indian Television Academy Awards",
"uid": "Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_13",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Television_Academy_Awards"
} | 4,021 |
4022 | Live!_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(Season_24)_4 | [
[
"Date",
"Guest Co-Host",
"Guests/Segments"
],
[
"December 1",
"Neil Patrick Harris",
"Marcia Cross , Science Bob"
],
[
"December 2",
"Neil Patrick Harris",
"Maya Rudolph , Matt Czuchry"
],
[
"December 5",
"Derek Hough",
"Jeffrey Donovan , Elizabeth Olsen , LIVE 's Holiday Feast Week"
],
[
"December 6",
"Jonah Hill",
"Sarah Jessica Parker , Emily VanCamp , LIVE 's Holiday Feast Week"
],
[
"December 7",
"Josh Groban",
"Zac Efron , LIVE 's Holiday Feast Week"
],
[
"December 8",
"Josh Groban",
"Jessica Biel , LIVE 's Holiday Feast Week"
],
[
"December 9",
"Josh Groban",
"Charlize Theron , Abigail Breslin , Cody Simpson , LIVE 's Holiday Feast Week"
],
[
"December 12",
"Taye Diggs",
"David Hyde Pierce , The Amazing Race Winners , Holiday Gift Guide - Chris Byrne"
],
[
"December 13",
"Kevin Jonas",
"Michelle Pfeiffer , Anthony Hamilton , Holiday Gift Guide - Matt Bean"
],
[
"December 14",
"Bryant Gumbel",
"Jude Law , The Biggest Loser Winner , Rachel Crow , Holiday Gift Guide - Lawrence Zarian"
],
[
"December 15",
"Michael Bublé",
"Robert Downey , Jr. , Lady Antebellum , Holiday Gift Guide - David Pogue"
],
[
"December 16",
"Michael Bublé",
"Daniel Craig , Holiday Gift Guide - Kelly"
],
[
"December 19",
"Mark Consuelos",
"Rooney Mara , Disney on Ice , Lady Antebellum"
],
[
"December 20",
"Mark Consuelos",
"LIVE 's Home for the Holidays Special , Scarlett Johansson , Radio City Rockettes , Joaquin Consuelos , Voca People"
],
[
"December 23",
"Mark Consuelos",
"LIVE 's Holiday Memories Special"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Live! with Regis and Kelly and Live! with Kelly episodes which were broadcast during the show's 24th 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 an Inbox segment.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "LIVE ! with Kelly ( 2011-2012 ) -- December 2011",
"title": "Live! with Regis and Kelly (season 24)",
"uid": "Live!_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(Season_24)_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live!_with_Regis_and_Kelly_(season_24)"
} | 4,022 |
4023 | Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_6 | [
[
"Riding",
"Candidate 's Name",
"Notes",
"Gender",
"Residence"
],
[
"Brandon - Souris",
"Wes Penner",
"",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Charleswood - St. James - Assiniboia",
"Rob Clement",
"",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Churchill",
"Sydney Garrioch",
"Former Grand Chief of the Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak",
"M",
"Cross Lake"
],
[
"Dauphin - Swan River - Marquette",
"Wendy Menzies",
"",
"F",
"Neepawa"
],
[
"Elmwood - Transcona",
"Ilona Niemczyk",
"",
"F",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Kildonan - St. Paul",
"Victor Andres",
"",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Portage - Lisgar",
"Martha Jo Willard",
"2008 Candidate in Brandon - Souris",
"F",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Provencher",
"Terry Hayward",
"Retired Civil Servant , Agriculture Canada",
"M",
"Anola"
],
[
"Saint Boniface",
"Raymond Simard",
"Former Member of Parliament",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Selkirk - Interlake",
"Duncan Geisler",
"",
"M",
"Ashern"
],
[
"Winnipeg Centre",
"Allan Wise",
"Staff member : Community Education Development Association ( CEDA )",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Winnipeg North",
"Kevin Lamoureux",
"incumbent MP",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Winnipeg South",
"Terry Duguid",
"Winnipeg City councilor , candidate for Kildonan-St. Paul in 2004 and 2006",
"M",
"Winnipeg"
],
[
"Winnipeg South Centre",
"Anita Neville",
"incumbent MP ,",
"F",
"Winnipeg"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of nominated candidates for the Liberal Party of Canada in the federal election held May 2, 2011.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Manitoba - 14 Seats",
"title": "Liberal Party of Canada candidates in the 2011 Canadian federal election",
"uid": "Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates_in_the_2011_Canadian_federal_election"
} | 4,023 |
4024 | 1500_metres_world_record_progression_1 | [
[
"Time",
"Athlete",
"Date",
"Place"
],
[
"3:55.8",
"Abel Kiviat ( USA )",
"1912-06-08",
"Cambridge , Massachusetts , United States"
],
[
"3:54.7",
"John Zander ( SWE )",
"1917-08-05",
"Stockholm , Sweden"
],
[
"3:52.6",
"Paavo Nurmi ( FIN )",
"1924-06-19",
"Helsinki , Finland"
],
[
"3:51.0",
"Otto Peltzer ( GER )",
"1926-09-11",
"Berlin , Germany"
],
[
"3:49.2",
"Jules Ladoumegue ( FRA )",
"1930-10-05",
"Paris , France"
],
[
"3:49.2",
"Luigi Beccali ( ITA )",
"1933-09-09",
"Turin , Italy"
],
[
"3:49.0",
"Luigi Beccali ( ITA )",
"1933-09-17",
"Milan , Italy"
],
[
"3:48.8",
"Bill Bonthron ( USA )",
"1934-06-30",
"Milwaukee , United States"
],
[
"3:47.8",
"Jack Lovelock ( NZL )",
"1936-08-06",
"Berlin , Germany"
],
[
"3:47.6",
"Gunder Hägg ( SWE )",
"1941-08-10",
"Stockholm , Sweden"
],
[
"3:45.8",
"Gunder Hägg ( SWE )",
"1942-07-17",
"Stockholm , Sweden"
],
[
"3:45.0",
"Arne Andersson ( SWE )",
"1943-08-17",
"Gothenburg , Sweden"
],
[
"3:43.0",
"Gunder Hägg ( SWE )",
"1944-07-07",
"Gothenburg , Sweden"
],
[
"3:43.0",
"Lennart Strand ( SWE )",
"1947-07-15",
"Malmö , Sweden"
],
[
"3:43.0",
"Werner Lueg ( FRG )",
"1952-06-29",
"Berlin , Germany"
],
[
"3:42.8+",
"Wes Santee ( USA )",
"1954-06-04",
"Compton , United States"
],
[
"3:41.8+",
"John Landy ( AUS )",
"1954-06-21",
"Turku , Finland"
],
[
"3:40.8",
"Sándor Iharos ( HUN )",
"1955-07-28",
"Helsinki , Finland"
],
[
"3:40.8",
"László Tábori ( HUN )",
"1955-09-06",
"Oslo , Norway"
],
[
"3:40.8",
"Gunnar Nielsen ( DEN )",
"1955-09-06",
"Oslo , Norway"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1500-metre run became a standard racing distance in Europe in the late 19th century, perhaps as a metric version of the mile, a popular running distance since at least the 1850s in English-speaking countries. A distance of 1500 m sometimes is called the metric mile. The French had the first important races over the distance, holding their initial championship in 1888. When the Olympic games were revived in 1896, metric distances were run, including the 1500. However, most of the best milers in the world were absent, and the winning time of 4:33 1/5 by Australian Edwin Flack was almost 18 seconds slower than the amateur mile record, despite the fact the mile is 109 metres longer than the 1500 metres. The 1900 Olympics and 1904 Olympics showed improvements in times run, but it was not until the 1908 Olympics that a meeting of the top milers over the distance took place, and not until the 1912 Olympics that a true world-class race over the distance was run. The distance has now almost completely replaced the mile in major track meets.",
"section_text": "The first world record in the 1500 m for men ( athletics ) was recognized by the International Amateur Athletics Federation , now known as the International Association of Athletics Federations , in 1912 . To July 17 , 2015 , the IAAF has ratified 38 world records in the event . [ 3 ]",
"section_title": "Men ( outdoors ) -- IAAF era",
"title": "1500 metres world record progression",
"uid": "1500_metres_world_record_progression_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1500_metres_world_record_progression"
} | 4,024 |
4025 | Child's_Play_(film_series)_0 | [
[
"Film",
"Rotten Tomatoes",
"Metacritic"
],
[
"Child 's Play",
"68% ( 37 reviews )",
"58 ( 18 reviews )"
],
[
"Child 's Play 2",
"44% ( 16 reviews )",
"37 ( 16 reviews )"
],
[
"Child 's Play 3",
"29% ( 14 reviews )",
"27 ( 13 reviews )"
],
[
"Bride of Chucky",
"46% ( 37 reviews )",
"48 ( 17 reviews )"
],
[
"Seed of Chucky",
"33% ( 76 reviews )",
"46 ( 17 reviews )"
],
[
"Curse of Chucky",
"76% ( 21 reviews )",
"58 ( 5 reviews )"
],
[
"Cult of Chucky",
"78% ( 23 reviews )",
"69 ( 5 reviews )"
],
[
"Child 's Play",
"63% ( 192 reviews )",
"48 ( 34 reviews )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Child's Play (also called Chucky) is an American horror franchise that comprises eight slasher films created by Don Mancini. The films mainly focus on Chucky (voiced by Brad Dourif in the original films and Mark Hamill in the reboot), a notorious serial killer who frequently escapes death by performing a voodoo ritual to transfer his soul into a Good Guys doll. The original film, Child's Play, was released on November 9, 1988. The film has spawned six sequels, a remake, comic books, a video game, tie-in merchandise, and an upcoming television series. The first, second, and fourth films were box office successes with all of the films earning over $182 million worldwide. Including revenues from sales of videos, DVDs, VOD and merchandise, the franchise has generated over $250 million. It also won a Saturn Award for Best Horror Franchise. The film series originally started out as straight horror with the first installment Child's Play, which appears to have more psychological horror elements, while the next two installments are straightforward slasher films with elements of dark humor. As the films progressed, they became satirical and campy, until the series briefly became a horror comedy, with 1998's Bride of Chucky and 2004's Seed of Chucky. In 2012, it was confirmed that a new film would be made under the title Curse of Chucky and be released direct-to-video. Unlike Bride and Seed, Curse of Chucky is a full-fledged horror film much like the original three installments. However, it does maintain the campy humor to a small degree.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Reception -- Critical and public response",
"title": "Child's Play (franchise)",
"uid": "Child's_Play_(film_series)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child's_Play_(franchise)"
} | 4,025 |
4026 | List_of_covered_bridges_in_Columbia_County,_Pennsylvania_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Date built",
"Length",
"Type",
"Stream crossed"
],
[
"Creasyville Covered Bridge",
"1881",
"44.5 feet ( 13.6 m )",
"Queen post truss",
"Little Fishing Creek"
],
[
"Davis Covered Bridge",
"1875",
"87 feet ( 27 m )",
"Burr Arch",
"Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Esther Furnace Covered Bridge",
"1881",
"101 feet ( 31 m )",
"Queen post",
"Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Fowlersville Covered Bridge",
"1886",
"40 feet ( 12 m )",
"Queen post",
"West Branch Briar Creek ( later moved )"
],
[
"Hollingshead Covered Bridge No . 40",
"1851",
"116 feet ( 35 m )",
"Burr Arch",
"Catawissa Creek"
],
[
"Johnson Covered Bridge No . 28",
"1882",
"61 feet ( 19 m )",
"Queen truss",
"Mugser Run"
],
[
"Josiah Hess Covered Bridge No . 122",
"1875",
"110 feet ( 34 m )",
"Burr arch truss",
"Huntington Creek"
],
[
"Jud Christie Covered Bridge No . 95",
"1876",
"63 feet ( 19 m )",
"Queen post truss",
"Little Fishing Creek"
],
[
"Lawrence L. Knoebel Covered Bridge",
"1881",
"41 feet ( 12 m )",
"Queen truss",
"West Creek ( later moved )"
],
[
"Kramer Covered Bridge No . 113",
"1881",
"50 feet ( 15 m )",
"Queen post",
"Mud Run"
],
[
"Kreigbaum Covered Bridge",
"1876",
"62 feet ( 19 m )",
"Queen post",
"South Branch Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Parr 's Mill Covered Bridge No . 10",
"1866",
"84 feet ( 26 m )",
"Burr Arch",
"Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Patterson Covered Bridge No . 112",
"1875",
"82 feet ( 25 m )",
"Burr truss",
"Green Creek"
],
[
"Richards Covered Bridge",
"1880",
"64 feet ( 20 m )",
"Modified multiple kingpost",
"South Branch Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Rupert Covered Bridge No . 56",
"1847",
"185 feet ( 56 m )",
"Burr Arch truss",
"Fishing Creek"
],
[
"Sam Eckman Covered Bridge No . 92",
"1876",
"66 feet ( 20 m )",
"Queen post truss",
"Little Fishing Creek"
],
[
"Shoemaker Covered Bridge",
"1881",
"49 feet ( 15 m )",
"Queen post truss",
"West Branch Run"
],
[
"Snyder Covered Bridge No . 17",
"1876",
"60.2 feet ( 18.3 m )",
"Burr Arch truss or Queen post truss",
"Roaring Creek"
],
[
"Stillwater Covered Bridge No . 134",
"1849",
"151 feet ( 46 m )",
"Burr arch",
"Fishing Creek"
],
[
"Twin Bridges-East Paden Covered Bridge No . 120",
"1884",
"112 feet ( 34 m ) and 75 feet ( 23 m )",
"Queen post and Burr arch",
"Huntington Creek"
]
] | {
"intro": "As of 2007, there are a total of 21 covered bridges in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The number of covered bridges in Columbia County is the third highest number of covered bridges in any one county in Pennsylvania, behind Washington County and Lancaster County. Columbia County is also home to one of two sets of twin covered bridges in the United States. By 1962, a large number of the covered bridges in Columbia County were experiencing weathering. During this year, Columbia County began working on the preservation of the damaged bridges. There is an organization known as the Columbia County Covered Bridges Association that has existed since 1991 and supports the presence of covered bridges in the county. The county commissioner of Columbia County, Chris Young, is also a supporter of Columbia County's covered bridges, stating that When you stand on a covered bridge, you're actually going back in time. 18 of the covered bridges are open to vehicle traffic, as of 2002, and these are maintained by officials of Columbia County. The remainder of the bridges are maintained by the Columbia County Covered Bridges Association. A number of the covered bridges are attractions for local and regional tourism. They are also used for picnics and fishing. A number of the covered bridges were damaged during Tropical Storm Lee in 2011.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Table",
"title": "List of covered bridges in Columbia County, Pennsylvania",
"uid": "List_of_covered_bridges_in_Columbia_County,_Pennsylvania_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_covered_bridges_in_Columbia_County,_Pennsylvania"
} | 4,026 |
4027 | Crane_vessel_0 | [
[
"Vessel name",
"Company",
"Built",
"Lifting capacity ( t )",
"Type",
"Identifier"
],
[
"Sleipnir",
"Heerema Marine Contractors",
"2019",
"20,000 ( 10,000 + 10,000 tandem , revolving )",
"Semi-submersible",
"IMO number : 9781425"
],
[
"Thialf",
"Heerema Marine Contractors",
"1985",
"14,200 ( 7,100 + 7,100 tandem , revolving )",
"Semi-submersible",
"IMO number : 8757740"
],
[
"Saipem 7000",
"Saipem",
"1987",
"14,000 ( 7,000 + 7,000 tandem , revolving )",
"Semi-submersible",
"IMO number : 8501567"
],
[
"Hyundai-10000",
"Hyundai Heavy Industries",
"2015",
"10,000",
"Sheerleg Monohull",
"MMSI number : 440680000"
],
[
"Svanen",
"Van Oord",
"1991",
"8,700",
"Catamaran",
"IMO number : 9007453"
],
[
"Hermod",
"Heerema Marine Contractors",
"1978",
"8,100 ( 4,500 + 3,600 tandem ; 4,500 + 2,700 revolving )",
"Semi-submersible ( scrapped )",
"IMO number : 7710214"
],
[
"Lanjing",
"CNOOC",
"1990",
"7,500 ( 4,000 revolving )",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 8907527"
],
[
"VB-10,000",
"Versabar Inc",
"2010",
"6,800",
"Catamaran",
"MMSI number : 367490050"
],
[
"Balder",
"Heerema Marine Contractors",
"1978",
"6,300 ( 3,600 + 2,700 tandem ; 3,000 + 2,000 revolving )",
"Semi-submersible",
"IMO number : 7710226"
],
[
"Pioneering Spirit",
"Allseas",
"2014",
"5,000 ( tub crane only )",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 9593505"
],
[
"Orion",
"DEME Offshore",
"2019",
"5,000",
"Monohull",
""
],
[
"Asian Hercules III",
"Asian Lift ( Keppel Fels / Smit International JV )",
"2015",
"5,000",
"Sheerleg Monohull",
"IMO number : 9660396"
],
[
"Seven Borealis",
"Subsea 7",
"2012",
"5,000",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 9452787"
],
[
"Oleg Strashnov",
"Seaway Heavy Lifting",
"2011",
"5,000",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 9452701"
],
[
"HL 5000",
"Deep Offshore Technology",
"?",
"4,500",
"Sheerleg Barge",
""
],
[
"Oceanic 5000",
"Oceanic Marine Contractors",
"2011",
"4,400",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 9559145"
],
[
"Kaisho ( 海翔 )",
"Yorigami Maritime Construction Co. , Ltd",
"?",
"4,100",
"Sheerleg Barge",
""
],
[
"Aegir",
"Heerema Marine Contractors",
"2012",
"4,000",
"Monohull",
"IMO number : 9605396"
],
[
"Gulliver",
"Scaldis",
"2018",
"4,000 ( 2,000 + 2,000 tandem )",
"Sheerleg Barge",
"IMO number : 9774094"
],
[
"Yosho ( 洋翔 )",
"Yorigami Maritime Construction Co. , Ltd",
"?",
"4,000",
"Sheerleg Barge",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "A crane vessel, crane ship or floating crane is a ship with a crane specialized in lifting heavy loads. The largest crane vessels are used for offshore construction. Conventional monohulls are used, but the largest crane vessels are often catamaran or semi-submersible types as they have increased stability. On a sheerleg crane, the crane is fixed and cannot rotate, and the vessel therefore is manoeuvered to place loads. As of 2019, the largest crane vessel in the world is the CNOOC Limited owned Lanjing, having 3 cranes of capacities 7500 tonnes, 4000 tonnes and 1600 tonnes.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Heavy lift vessels",
"title": "Crane vessel",
"uid": "Crane_vessel_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crane_vessel"
} | 4,027 |
4028 | Naiste_Meistriliiga_1 | [
[
"Season",
"Champions",
"Runners-up",
"Third place",
"Top scorer",
"Goals"
],
[
"1994",
"Central Sport",
"Tulevik",
"Nõmme Chickens",
"",
""
],
[
"1994-95",
"Pärnu",
"Central Jõmm",
"Tulevik",
"",
""
],
[
"1995-96",
"Central Sport ( 2 )",
"Pärnu",
"Tulevik",
"",
""
],
[
"1996-97",
"Central Sport ( 3 )",
"Pärnu",
"TKSK Arsenal",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Narvane / TKSK Arsenal )",
"13"
],
[
"1997-98",
"TKSK Arsenal",
"Pärnu",
"Wiiking",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( TKSK Arsenal )",
"47"
],
[
"1998",
"TKSK Arsenal ( 2 )",
"Pärnu",
"Flora",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( TKSK Arsenal )",
"29"
],
[
"1999",
"TKSK ( 3 )",
"Pärnu",
"Flora",
"Andra Karpin ( Pärnu )",
"31"
],
[
"2000",
"TKSK ( 4 )",
"Pärnu",
"Flora",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"28"
],
[
"2001",
"TKSK Visa ( 5 )",
"Eesti Näitused",
"Pärnu",
"",
""
],
[
"2002",
"TKSK Visa ( 6 )",
"Pärnu",
"Estel",
"Ave Pajo ( Estel )",
"33"
],
[
"2003",
"Pärnu ( 2 )",
"TKSK Visa",
"Estel",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"46"
],
[
"2004",
"Pärnu ( 3 )",
"TKSK Visa",
"Ajax TLMK",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"58"
],
[
"2005",
"Pärnu ( 4 )",
"TKSK Visa",
"Tallinna Kalev",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"63"
],
[
"2006",
"Pärnu ( 5 )",
"Levadia",
"Tallinna Kalev",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"61"
],
[
"2007",
"Levadia ( 7 )",
"Pärnu",
"Flora",
"Katrin Loo ( Flora )",
"30"
],
[
"2008",
"Levadia ( 8 )",
"Pärnu",
"Flora",
"Ave Pajo ( Tallinna Kalev )",
"47"
],
[
"2009",
"Levadia ( 9 )",
"Flora",
"Pärnu",
"Ave Pajo ( Levadia )",
"59"
],
[
"2010",
"Pärnu ( 6 )",
"Flora",
"Levadia",
"Ave Pajo ( Levadia )",
"33"
],
[
"2011",
"Pärnu ( 7 )",
"Flora",
"Levadia",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"36"
],
[
"2012",
"Pärnu ( 8 )",
"Flora",
"Levadia",
"Anastassia Morkovkina ( Pärnu )",
"37"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Naiste Meistriliiga (English: Women's Champions League) is the highest league of women's association football in Estonia. It is run by the Estonian Football Association and was founded in 1994. The league currently consists of eight teams. The league champion qualifies for the UEFA Women's Champions League.",
"section_text": "This section lists all champions since the league 's inception and the previous Estonian league champions . [ 1 ] [ 10 ] [ 11 ]",
"section_title": "Champions -- By season",
"title": "Naiste Meistriliiga",
"uid": "Naiste_Meistriliiga_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naiste_Meistriliiga"
} | 4,028 |
4029 | Madhavi_(actress)_2 | [
[
"Year",
"Film",
"Role",
"Cast",
"Direction"
],
[
"1980",
"Lava",
"Seetha",
"Prem Nazir , K. P. Ummer",
"Hariharan"
],
[
"1981",
"Valarthu Mrugangal",
"Janu",
"Sukumaran , Ratheesh",
"Hariharan"
],
[
"1981",
"Garjanam",
"Geetha",
"Rajinikanth",
"C. V. Rajendran"
],
[
"1981",
"Poochasanyasi",
"Sandhya",
"",
""
],
[
"1982",
"Anuraagakkodathi",
"Anuradha",
"Shankar Panicker",
"Hariharan"
],
[
"1982",
"Ormakkayi",
"Susanna",
"Adoor Bhasi , Bharath Gopi , Nedumudi Venu",
"Bharathan"
],
[
"1982",
"Kurukkante Kalyanam",
"Saritha",
"Sukumaran , Jagathy , Mohanlal , Bahadoor",
"Sathyan Anthikkad"
],
[
"1982",
"John Jaffer Janardhanan",
"Nancy",
"Mammootty , Ratheesh , Ravindran",
"I. V. Sasi"
],
[
"1982",
"Novemberinte Nashtam",
"Meera",
"Prathap Pothan",
"Padmarajan"
],
[
"1982",
"Sindoora Sandhyakku Mounam",
"Siji",
"Mohanlal",
""
],
[
"1983",
"Prem Nazirine Kanmanilla",
"Herself",
"Prem Nazir , Sreenivasan , Maniyanpilla Raju , Vijay Menon",
"Lenin Rajendran"
],
[
"1983",
"Hello Madras Girl",
"Saritha",
"Shankar , Poornima Jayaram , Mohanlal , Kuthiravattam Pappu , Urvashi",
"J. Williams"
],
[
"1983",
"Changatham",
"Annie",
"Mohanlal , Mammootty , Jagathy , Paravoor Bharathan , Captain Raju , Sankaradi , Prathapachandran",
"Bhadran"
],
[
"1984",
"Akkare",
"Padmavathi",
"",
""
],
[
"1984",
"Vikadakavi",
"Santhi",
"",
""
],
[
"1984",
"Mangalam Nerunnu",
"Rajani",
"",
""
],
[
"1984",
"Kurishuyudham",
"Susy , Daisy",
"",
""
],
[
"1985",
"Oru Kudakeezhil",
"Vijayalakshmi",
"Nedumudi Venu , Lalu Alex",
"Joshiy"
],
[
"1985",
"Adhyayam Onnu Muthal",
"Seetha",
"Mohanlal , Venu Nagavalli",
"Sathyan Anthikkad"
]
] | {
"intro": "Madhavi is an Indian film actress known for her works in Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi and Oriya cinema. In a career spanning seventeen years, she has acted in around three hundred films. She was one of the top actresses from 1976 to 1996 in Telugu & Tamil films.",
"section_text": "Complete list of Madhavi 's Malayalam Movies are available from the MSI Database . [ 11 ]",
"section_title": "Selected filmography -- Malayalam",
"title": "Madhavi (actress)",
"uid": "Madhavi_(actress)_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madhavi_(actress)"
} | 4,029 |
4030 | List_of_lakes_in_New_Zealand_7 | [
[
"Lake",
"Location",
"Notes"
],
[
"Lake Dive",
"Egmont N.P",
""
],
[
"Lake Herengawe",
"South Taranaki District",
"South of Waverley"
],
[
"Lake Mangamahoe",
"New Plymouth District",
"Between New Plymouth and Inglewood"
],
[
"Lake Mangawhio",
"South Taranaki District",
""
],
[
"Lake Moumahaki",
"South Taranaki District",
""
],
[
"Lake Okoia",
"South Taranaki District",
"Southeast of Waverley"
],
[
"Lake Oturi",
"South Taranaki District",
"South of Waverley"
],
[
"Lake Ratapiko",
"New Plymouth District",
"South of Ratapiko"
],
[
"Lake Rotokare",
"South Taranaki District",
"Not to be confused with Rotokare/Barrett Lagoon"
],
[
"Lake Rotokohu",
"South Taranaki District",
""
],
[
"Lake Rotomanu",
"New Plymouth",
"Close to the mouth of the Waiwhakaiho River"
],
[
"Lake Rotorangi",
"South Taranaki District",
"Artificial lake ( hydroelectric ) behind the Patea Dam on the Patea River"
],
[
"Lake Waiau",
"South Taranaki District",
"Southeast of Waverley"
],
[
"Lake Waikare",
"South Taranaki District",
""
],
[
"Lake Waikato",
"South Taranaki District",
""
],
[
"Murphys Lake",
"Egmont N.P",
""
],
[
"Rotokare/Barrett Lagoon",
"New Plymouth",
"South of the New Plymouth urban area . Not to be confused with Lake Rotokare"
],
[
"Tapuarau Lagoon",
"South Taranaki District",
"Close to the mouth of the Waitotara River"
],
[
"Waipu Lagoons",
"New Plymouth District",
"Near Bell Block"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of lakes in New Zealand. A lake's location is identified by the region and either the territorial authority or national park (N.P.). There are:",
"section_text": "The following lakes are located in the Taranaki Region .",
"section_title": "North Island -- Taranaki",
"title": "List of lakes of New Zealand",
"uid": "List_of_lakes_in_New_Zealand_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lakes_of_New_Zealand"
} | 4,030 |
4031 | Claudia_Black_2 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"2002",
"Farscape : The Game",
"Aeryn Sun"
],
[
"2003",
"Lords of EverQuest",
"Lady Briana"
],
[
"2005",
"God of War",
"Artemis"
],
[
"2005",
"Neopets : The Darkest Faerie",
"Fauna"
],
[
"2006",
"Project Sylpheed",
"Narrator"
],
[
"2007",
"Conan",
"A'Kanna"
],
[
"2007",
"Crysis",
"Helena"
],
[
"2009",
"Uncharted 2 : Among Thieves",
"Chloe Frazer"
],
[
"2009",
"Dragon Age : Origins",
"Morrigan"
],
[
"2010",
"Mass Effect 2",
"Admiral Daro'Xen vas Moreh , Matriarch Aethyta"
],
[
"2010",
"Final Fantasy XIV",
"Narrator"
],
[
"2011",
"TERA : The Exiled Realm of Arborea",
"Elf Commander Fraya"
],
[
"2011",
"Gears of War 3",
"Samantha Byrne"
],
[
"2011",
"Rage",
"Mel , Sally"
],
[
"2011",
"Uncharted 3 : Drake 's Deception",
"Chloe Frazer"
],
[
"2012",
"Mass Effect 3",
"Admiral Daro'Xen vas Moreh , Matriarch Aethyta"
],
[
"2012",
"Diablo III",
"Cydaea , Mistress of Pain"
],
[
"2012",
"The Amazing Spider-Man",
"Whitney Chang"
],
[
"2014",
"Diablo III : Reaper of Souls",
"Cydaea , Mistress of Pain"
],
[
"2014",
"Destiny",
"Tess Everis"
]
] | {
"intro": "Claudia Lee Black (born 11 October 1972) is an Australian actress and voice actress, best known for her portrayals of Aeryn Sun in Farscape, Vala Mal Doran in Stargate SG-1 and Sharon Shazza Montgomery in the film Pitch Black. She has had prominent roles in video games, such as Chloe Frazer in Uncharted, Morrigan in Dragon Age, Admiral Daro'Xen and Matriarch Aethyta in Mass Effect and Samantha Byrne in Gears of War 3, Gears of War 4 , & Gears of War 5. She also had a recurring role as Dahlia in The Originals and starred as Dr. Sabine Lommers in The CW's Containment.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Video games",
"title": "Claudia Black",
"uid": "Claudia_Black_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudia_Black"
} | 4,031 |
4032 | Venues_of_the_2004_Summer_Olympics_6 | [
[
"Venue",
"Sports",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Agios Kosmas Olympic Sailing Centre",
"Sailing",
"8,000"
],
[
"Ano Liosia Olympic Hall",
"Judo , Wrestling",
"10,000"
],
[
"Galatsi Olympic Hall",
"Gymnastics ( rhythmic ) , Table tennis",
"Not listed"
],
[
"Kotzia Square",
"Cycling ( individual road race )",
"3,150"
],
[
"Marathon ( city )",
"Athletics ( marathon start )",
"Not listed"
],
[
"Nikaia Olympic Weightlifting Hall",
"Weightlifting",
"Not listed"
],
[
"Panathenaic Stadium",
"Archery , Athletics ( marathon finish )",
"7,500 ( archery ) 34,500 ( athletics marathon finish )"
],
[
"Parnitha Olympic Mountain Bike Venue",
"Cycling ( mountain biking )",
"Not listed"
],
[
"Peristeri Olympic Boxing Hall",
"Boxing",
"5,600"
],
[
"Schinias Olympic Rowing and Canoeing Centre",
"Canoeing ( sprint ) , Rowing",
"14,000"
],
[
"Stadium at Olympia",
"Athletics ( shot put )",
"Not listed"
],
[
"Vouliagmeni Olympic Centre",
"Cycling ( individual time trial ) , Triathlon",
"Not listed"
]
] | {
"intro": "For the 2004 Summer Olympics, a total of thirty-five sports venues were used. Athens hosted the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 that included venues such as Panathinaiko Stadium and the city of Marathon for whom the long-distance race would be named for. From the end of the 1896 Games until the late 1970s, Greece underwent numerous political changes that included the Balkan Wars, two World Wars, a civil war, and a military coup that resulted in a junta that lasted from 1967 to 1974. A change in democracy in 1975 resulted in Greece's admission into the European Economic Community (European Union since 1993) in 1979. Athens first bid for the 1996 Summer Olympics as part of the 100th anniversary of the Modern Olympics, but was upset by Atlanta, Georgia in the United States for the Games in 1990. Seven years later, Athens won the right to host the 2004 Summer Olympics. At the time of the award, 75% of competition and 92% of training venues were available though a massive construction and renovation program was taken to get the venues ready for the games. Accessibility and environmental issues were taken into account in venue design and construction. The marathon course used was the same one used for the 1896 Games though it was 2.195 km (1.36 mi) longer to the marathon not being standardized until 1924. Canoe slalom's venue at Ellinikon was the first using saltwater, having it pumped in from the Aegean Sea. After the Olympics, Markopoulo Olympic Shooting Centre was converted into a police training center while two other venues were converted into entertainment centers.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Venues -- Other venues",
"title": "Venues of the 2004 Summer Olympics",
"uid": "Venues_of_the_2004_Summer_Olympics_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venues_of_the_2004_Summer_Olympics"
} | 4,032 |
4033 | List_of_legislative_assembly_buildings_3 | [
[
"Country",
"Building",
"Built",
"Notes"
],
[
"Albania",
"Albanian Parliament Building",
"1924",
"A new building is currently planned for the Albanian Parliament"
],
[
"Andorra",
"New Parliament of Andorra",
"2014",
""
],
[
"Austria",
"Austrian Parliament Building",
"1883",
""
],
[
"Belarus",
"House of Government",
"1934",
""
],
[
"Belgium",
"Palace of the Nation",
"1783",
"Belgian Federal Parliament ( Chamber of Representatives and Senate )"
],
[
"Bosnia-Herzegovina",
"Parliament Building",
"1982",
""
],
[
"Bulgaria",
"National Assembly",
"1886",
""
],
[
"Croatia",
"Parliament Palace",
"1911",
"Sabor"
],
[
"Czech Republic",
"Thun Palace , Malá Strana",
"1726",
"Chamber of Deputies"
],
[
"Czech Republic",
"Wallenstein Palace",
"1630",
"Senate"
],
[
"Denmark",
"Christiansborg Palace",
"1928",
"Folketing"
],
[
"Estonia",
"Toompea Castle",
"1922",
"Riigikogu ; the oldest parts of Toompea Castle were built in the early 13th century and the newest parts in 1935 . The Riigikogu hall building itself was added in 1922"
],
[
"Finland",
"Parliament House",
"1931",
"Parliament of Finland"
],
[
"France",
"Palais Bourbon",
"1728",
"National Assembly"
],
[
"France",
"Luxembourg Palace",
"1615",
"Senate"
],
[
"Germany",
"Reichstag building",
"1894",
"Bundestag"
],
[
"Germany",
"House of Lords of Prussia",
"1904",
"Bundesrat"
],
[
"Greece",
"Old Royal Palace",
"1843",
"Hellenic Parliament"
],
[
"Hungary",
"Hungarian Parliament Building",
"1904",
""
],
[
"Iceland",
"Alþingishúsið",
"1881",
"Althing"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of buildings in which legislatures sit.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "National -- Europe",
"title": "List of legislative buildings",
"uid": "List_of_legislative_assembly_buildings_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_legislative_buildings"
} | 4,033 |
4034 | List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_5 | [
[
"#",
"Artist",
"Artist 's nationality",
"Title"
],
[
"1",
"Schnappi",
"Germany",
"Schnappi , das kleine Krokodil"
],
[
"2",
"Tokio Hotel",
"Germany",
"Durch den Monsun"
],
[
"3",
"Akon",
"United States",
"Lonely"
],
[
"4",
"K.Maro",
"Lebanon / Canada",
"Femme Like U"
],
[
"5",
"Söhne Mannheims",
"Germany",
"Und wenn ein Lied"
],
[
"6",
"Juanes",
"Colombia",
"La Camisa Negra"
],
[
"7",
"50 Cent featuring Olivia",
"United States",
"Candy Shop"
],
[
"8",
"Pussycat Dolls featuring Busta Rhymes",
"United States",
"Do n't Cha"
],
[
"9",
"Die Firma",
"Germany",
"Die Eine 2005"
],
[
"10",
"Ch ! pz",
"Netherlands",
"Ch ! pz in Black"
],
[
"11",
"Fettes Brot",
"Germany",
"Emanuela"
],
[
"12",
"Melanie C",
"United Kingdom",
"First Day of My Life"
],
[
"13",
"Linkin Park featuring Jay-Z",
"United States",
"Numb/Encore"
],
[
"14",
"Nena",
"Germany",
"Liebe ist"
],
[
"15",
"Sarah Connor",
"Germany",
"From Zero to Hero"
],
[
"16",
"James Blunt",
"United Kingdom",
"You 're Beautiful"
],
[
"17",
"Robbie Williams",
"United Kingdom",
"Tripping"
],
[
"18",
"Madonna",
"United States",
"Hung Up"
],
[
"19",
"Sugababes",
"United Kingdom",
"Push The Button"
],
[
"20",
"Joana Zimmer",
"Germany",
"I Believe ( Give a Little Bit ... )"
]
] | {
"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": "2005",
"title": "List of best-selling singles by year (Germany)",
"uid": "List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)"
} | 4,034 |
4035 | O-Lan_Jones_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"1978",
"A Death in Canaan",
"Carla Pitts"
],
[
"1980",
"Die Laughing",
"Judge"
],
[
"1982",
"Deadly Drifter",
"Nixie / Dinah"
],
[
"1982",
"Shoot the Moon",
"Counter Girl"
],
[
"1983",
"The Right Stuff",
"Pretty Girl"
],
[
"1988",
"Married to the Mob",
"Phyllis"
],
[
"1988",
"Miracle Mile",
"Waitress"
],
[
"1988",
"Wildfire",
"Mrs. Johnson"
],
[
"1989",
"Lonesome Dove",
"Sally Skull"
],
[
"1989",
"How I Got into College",
"Sally O'Connor"
],
[
"1990",
"Edward Scissorhands",
"Esmeralda"
],
[
"1990",
"Pacific Heights",
"Hotel Maid"
],
[
"1992",
"Seinfeld",
"Waitress"
],
[
"1993",
"Shelf Life",
"Tina"
],
[
"1993-1994",
"Harts of the West",
"Rose McLaughlin"
],
[
"1994",
"Natural Born Killers",
"Mabel"
],
[
"1996",
"The X-Files",
"Rebecca Waite"
],
[
"1996",
"Mars Attacks !",
"Sue-Ann Norris"
],
[
"1998",
"The Truman Show",
"Bar Waitress"
],
[
"2000",
"American Virgin",
"Kim"
]
] | {
"intro": "O-Lan Jones is an American actress, composer, and theater producer. She played the eccentric religious fanatic woman Esmeralda in Edward Scissorhands.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Selected filmography",
"title": "O-Lan Jones",
"uid": "O-Lan_Jones_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O-Lan_Jones"
} | 4,035 |
4036 | United_Nations_0 | [
[
"No",
"Acronym",
"Agency",
"Headquarters",
"Head",
"Established in"
],
[
"1",
"FAO",
"Food and Agriculture Organization",
"Rome , Italy",
"José Graziano da Silva",
"1945"
],
[
"2",
"IAEA",
"International Atomic Energy Agency",
"Vienna , Austria",
"Yukiya Amano",
"1957"
],
[
"3",
"ICAO",
"International Civil Aviation Organization",
"Montreal , Quebec , Canada",
"Fang Liu",
"1947"
],
[
"4",
"IFAD",
"International Fund for Agricultural Development",
"Rome , Italy",
"Kanayo F. Nwanze",
"1977"
],
[
"5",
"ILO",
"International Labour Organization",
"Geneva , Switzerland",
"Guy Ryder",
"1946 ( 1919 )"
],
[
"6",
"IMO",
"International Maritime Organization",
"London , United Kingdom",
"Kitack Lim",
"1948"
],
[
"7",
"IMF",
"International Monetary Fund",
"Washington , D.C. , United States",
"Christine Lagarde",
"1945 ( 1944 )"
],
[
"8",
"ITU",
"International Telecommunication Union",
"Geneva , Switzerland",
"Houlin Zhao",
"1947 ( 1865 )"
],
[
"9",
"UNESCO",
"United Nations Educational , Scientific and Cultural Organization",
"Paris , France",
"Audrey Azoulay",
"1946"
],
[
"10",
"UNIDO",
"United Nations Industrial Development Organization",
"Vienna , Austria",
"Li Yong",
"1967"
],
[
"11",
"UNWTO",
"World Tourism Organization",
"Madrid , Spain",
"Taleb Rifai",
"1974"
],
[
"12",
"UPU",
"Universal Postal Union",
"Bern , Switzerland",
"Bishar Abdirahman Hussein",
"1947 ( 1874 )"
],
[
"13",
"WBG",
"World Bank Group",
"Washington , D.C. , United States",
"David Malpass ( President ) Kristalina Georgieva ( CEO )",
"1945 ( 1944 )"
],
[
"14",
"WFP",
"World Food Programme",
"Rome , Italy",
"David Beasley",
"1963"
],
[
"15",
"WHO",
"World Health Organization",
"Geneva , Switzerland",
"Tedros Adhanom",
"1948"
],
[
"16",
"WIPO",
"World Intellectual Property Organization",
"Geneva , Switzerland",
"Francis Gurry",
"1974"
],
[
"17",
"WMO",
"World Meteorological Organization",
"Geneva , Switzerland",
"Petteri Taalas ( Secretary-General ) Michel Jarraud ( President )",
"1950 ( 1873 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The United Nations (UN) is an intergovernmental organization that aims to maintain international peace and security, develop friendly relations among nations, achieve international cooperation, and be a center for harmonizing the actions of nations. It is the largest, most familiar, most internationally represented and most powerful intergovernmental organization in the world. The UN is headquartered on international territory in New York City; other main offices are in Geneva, Nairobi, Vienna and The Hague. The UN was established after World War II with the aim of preventing future wars, succeeding the ineffective League of Nations. On 25 April 1945, 50 governments met in San Francisco for a conference and started drafting the UN Charter, which was adopted on 25 June 1945 and took effect on 24 October 1945, when the UN began operations. Pursuant to the Charter, the organization's objectives include maintaining international peace and security, protecting human rights, delivering humanitarian aid, promoting sustainable development, and upholding international law. At its founding, the UN had 51 member states; this number grew to 193 in 2011, representing the vast majority of the world's sovereign states. The organization's mission to preserve world peace was complicated in its early decades by the Cold War between the United States and Soviet Union and their respective allies. Its missions have consisted primarily of unarmed military observers and lightly armed troops with primarily monitoring, reporting and confidence-building roles. UN membership grew significantly following widespread decolonization beginning in the 1960s. Since then, 80 former colonies have gained independence, including 11 trust territories that had been monitored by the Trusteeship Council. By the 1970s, the UN's budget for economic and social development programmes far outstripped its spending on peacekeeping.",
"section_text": "Main article : List of specialized agencies of the United Nations The UN Charter stipulates that each primary organ of the United Nations can establish various specialized agencies to fulfil its duties . [ 113 ] Some best-known agencies are the International Atomic Energy Agency , the Food and Agriculture Organization , UNESCO ( United Nations Educational , Scientific and Cultural Organization ) , the World Bank , and the World Health Organization ( WHO ) . The UN performs most of its humanitarian work through these agencies . Examples include mass vaccination programmes ( through WHO ) , the avoidance of famine and malnutrition ( through the work of the WFP ) , and the protection of vulnerable and displaced people ( for example , by UNHCR ) . [ 114 ]",
"section_title": "Structure -- Specialized agencies",
"title": "United Nations",
"uid": "United_Nations_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations"
} | 4,036 |
4037 | La_Fabrica_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Nationality",
"Position",
"Years in La Fábrica",
"Club Titles Won as Real Madrid player"
],
[
"Achraf Hakimi",
"Morocco",
"DF",
"2006-2017",
"1 UEFA Champions League , 1 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Agustín",
"Spain",
"GK",
"1975-1980",
"4 La Liga , 2 Copa del Rey , 2 Supercopa de España , 1 Copa de la Liga , 1 UEFA Cup"
],
[
"Alberto Rivera",
"Spain",
"MF",
"1995-1999",
"2 La Liga"
],
[
"Alfonso Pérez",
"Spain",
"FW",
"1986-1992",
"1 La Liga , 1 Copa del Rey , 1 Supercopa de España"
],
[
"Álvaro Arbeloa",
"Spain",
"DF",
"2001-2006",
"1 La Liga , 2 Copa del Rey , 1 Supercopa de España , 2 UEFA Champions League , 1 UEFA Super Cup , 1 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Álvaro Domínguez",
"Spain",
"DF",
"1999-2001",
""
],
[
"Álvaro Medrán",
"Spain",
"MF",
"2011-2015",
"1 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Álvaro Mejía",
"Spain",
"DF",
"1998-2004",
"1 La Liga"
],
[
"Álvaro Morata",
"Spain",
"FW",
"2008-2013",
"2 La Liga , 2 Copa del Rey , 2 UEFA Champions League , 1 UEFA Super Cup , 1 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Antonio Adán",
"Spain",
"GK",
"1997-2010",
"1 La Liga , 1 Copa del Rey , 1 Supercopa de España"
],
[
"Borja Mayoral",
"Spain",
"FW",
"2007-2016",
"1 UEFA Champions League , 1 UEFA Super Cup , 1 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Borja Valero",
"Spain",
"MF",
"1995-2007",
""
],
[
"Chendo",
"Spain",
"DF",
"1977-1983",
"7 La Liga , 2 Copa del Rey , 5 Supercopa de España , 1 Copa de la Liga , 1 UEFA Champions League , 2 UEFA Cup , 1 Copa Iberoamericana"
],
[
"Dani Carvajal",
"Spain",
"DF",
"2002-2012",
"1 La Liga , 1 Copa del Rey , 1 Supercopa de España , 4 UEFA Champions League , 3 UEFA Super Cup , 3 FIFA Club World Cup"
],
[
"Dani Parejo",
"Spain",
"MF",
"2003-2008",
""
],
[
"Denis Cheryshev",
"Russia",
"FW",
"2002-2013",
""
],
[
"Diego Llorente",
"Spain",
"DF",
"2002-2015",
""
],
[
"Diego López",
"Spain",
"GK",
"2000-2005",
"1 La Liga , 1 Copa del Rey , 1 UEFA Champions League"
],
[
"Emilio Butragueño",
"Spain",
"FW",
"1981-1984",
"6 La Liga , 2 Copa del Rey , 4 Supercopa de España , 1 Copa de la Liga , 2 UEFA Cup , 1 Copa Iberoamericana"
],
[
"Enrique Mateos",
"Spain",
"FW",
"1951-1953",
"5 La Liga , 5 UEFA Champions League , 1 Intercontinental Cup"
]
] | {
"intro": "N/A",
"section_text": "Below is a sortable list of notable La Fábrica alumni throughout history . The information listed below is current as of the 2017–18 football season . Currently active player in Real Madrid may have different title and appearance . Unless explicitly cited , all of the following information was obtained through the Wikipedia pages corresponding to the respective players .",
"section_title": "Notable alumni",
"title": "La Fábrica",
"uid": "La_Fabrica_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Fábrica"
} | 4,037 |
4038 | Hobey_Baker_Award_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner",
"Position",
"School",
"Born"
],
[
"1981",
"Neal Broten",
"Center",
"Minnesota",
"Roseau , Minnesota"
],
[
"1982",
"George McPhee",
"Left Wing",
"Bowling Green",
"Guelph , Ontario"
],
[
"1983",
"Mark Fusco",
"Defense",
"Harvard",
"Burlington , Massachusetts"
],
[
"1984",
"Tom Kurvers",
"Defense",
"Minnesota-Duluth",
"Minneapolis , Minnesota"
],
[
"1985",
"Bill Watson",
"Right Wing",
"Minnesota-Duluth",
"Pine Falls , Manitoba"
],
[
"1986",
"Scott Fusco",
"Center",
"Harvard",
"Burlington , Massachusetts"
],
[
"1987",
"Tony Hrkac",
"Center",
"North Dakota",
"Thunder Bay , Ontario"
],
[
"1988",
"Robb Stauber",
"Goaltender",
"Minnesota",
"Duluth , Minnesota"
],
[
"1989",
"Lane MacDonald",
"Left Wing",
"Harvard",
"Tulsa , Oklahoma"
],
[
"1990",
"Kip Miller",
"Center",
"Michigan State",
"Lansing , Michigan"
],
[
"1991",
"David Emma",
"Center",
"Boston College",
"Cranston , Rhode Island"
],
[
"1992",
"Scott Pellerin",
"Left Wing",
"Maine",
"Shediac , New Brunswick"
],
[
"1993",
"Paul Kariya",
"Left Wing",
"Maine",
"Vancouver , British Columbia"
],
[
"1994",
"Chris Marinucci",
"Left Wing",
"Minnesota-Duluth",
"Grand Rapids , Minnesota"
],
[
"1995",
"Brian Holzinger",
"Center",
"Bowling Green",
"Parma , Ohio"
],
[
"1996",
"Brian Bonin",
"Center",
"Minnesota",
"White Bear Lake , Minnesota"
],
[
"1997",
"Brendan Morrison",
"Center",
"Michigan",
"Pitt Meadows , British Columbia"
],
[
"1998",
"Chris Drury",
"Left Wing",
"Boston University",
"Trumbull , Connecticut"
],
[
"1999",
"Jason Krog",
"Center",
"New Hampshire",
"Fernie , British Columbia"
],
[
"2000",
"Mike Mottau",
"Defense",
"Boston College",
"Boston , Massachusetts"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Hobey Baker Award is an annual award given to the top National Collegiate Athletic Association men's ice hockey player. It has been awarded 38 times. It is named for Hall of Famer Hobey Baker, who played college hockey at Princeton University and died in World War I. The original statue for the award was commissioned and awarded by the Decathlon Athletic Club (now defunct) in Bloomington, Minnesota. The model for the award trophy was Steve Christoff, who played for the University of Minnesota and in the National Hockey League.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Award winners",
"title": "Hobey Baker Award",
"uid": "Hobey_Baker_Award_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobey_Baker_Award"
} | 4,038 |
4039 | 1950_United_States_Census_0 | [
[
"Rank",
"State",
"Population"
],
[
"1",
"New York",
"14,830,192"
],
[
"2",
"California",
"10,586,223"
],
[
"3",
"Pennsylvania",
"10,498,012"
],
[
"4",
"Illinois",
"8,712,176"
],
[
"5",
"Ohio",
"7,946,627"
],
[
"6",
"Texas",
"7,748,000"
],
[
"7",
"Michigan",
"6,421,000"
],
[
"8",
"New Jersey",
"4,860,000"
],
[
"9",
"Massachusetts",
"4,690,000"
],
[
"10",
"North Carolina",
"4,060,000"
],
[
"11",
"Indiana",
"3,952,000"
],
[
"12",
"Missouri",
"3,946,000"
],
[
"13",
"Georgia",
"3,451,000"
],
[
"14",
"Wisconsin",
"3,449,000"
],
[
"15",
"Tennessee",
"3,304,000"
],
[
"16",
"Virginia",
"3,262,000"
],
[
"17",
"Alabama",
"3,060,000"
],
[
"18",
"Minnesota",
"2,995,000"
],
[
"19",
"Kentucky",
"2,957,000"
],
[
"20",
"Florida",
"2,821,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The United States Census of 1950, conducted by the Census Bureau, determined the resident population of the United States to be 150,697,361, an increase of 14.5 percent over the 131,669,275 persons enumerated during the 1940 Census. This was the first census in which:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "State rankings",
"title": "1950 United States Census",
"uid": "1950_United_States_Census_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950_United_States_Census"
} | 4,039 |
4040 | 2013_Swedish_football_Division_1_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Stadium capacity"
],
[
"FC Trollhättan",
"Trollhättan",
"Edsborgs IP",
"5,100"
],
[
"Husqvarna FF",
"Huskvarna",
"Vapenvallen",
"4,000"
],
[
"IF Limhamn Bunkeflo",
"Malmö",
"Limhamns IP",
"2,800"
],
[
"IF Sylvia",
"Norrköping",
"Idrottsparken",
"17,200"
],
[
"IK Oddevold",
"Uddevalla",
"Rimnersvallen",
"10,600"
],
[
"IS Halmia",
"Halmstad",
"Örjans Vall",
"15,500"
],
[
"Karlstad BK",
"Karlstad",
"Tingvalla IP",
"10,000"
],
[
"Kristianstads FF",
"Kristianstad",
"Kristianstads IP",
"6,000"
],
[
"Lunds BK",
"Lund",
"Klostergårdens IP",
"8,560"
],
[
"Qviding FIF",
"Gothenburg",
"Valhalla IP",
"4,000"
],
[
"Skövde AIK",
"Skövde",
"Södermalms IP",
"4,646"
],
[
"Torslanda IK",
"Torslanda",
"Torslandavallen",
"1,500"
],
[
"Trelleborgs FF",
"Trelleborg",
"Vångavallen",
"10,000"
],
[
"Utsiktens BK",
"Gothenburg",
"Ruddalens IP",
"5,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Division 1, part of the 2013 Swedish football season, was the 8th season of Sweden's third-tier football league in its current format. The 2013 fixtures were released in December 2012. The season started on 14 April 2013 and ended on 27 October 2013.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams -- Stadia and locations",
"title": "2013 Division 1 (Swedish football)",
"uid": "2013_Swedish_football_Division_1_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Division_1_(Swedish_football)"
} | 4,040 |
4041 | List_of_2011_Indian_Premier_League_personnel_changes_0 | [
[
"Player",
"Team",
"Winning bid",
"Base price"
],
[
"Gautam Gambhir",
"Kolkata Knight Riders",
"$ 2,400,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Yusuf Pathan",
"Kolkata Knight Riders",
"$ 2,100,000",
"$ 300,000"
],
[
"Robin Uthappa",
"Pune Warriors India",
"$ 2,100,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Rohit Sharma",
"Mumbai Indians",
"$ 2,000,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Irfan Pathan",
"Delhi Daredevils",
"$ 1,900,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Yuvraj Singh",
"Pune Warriors India",
"$ 1,800,000",
"$ 400,000"
],
[
"Saurabh Tiwary",
"Royal Challengers Bangalore",
"$ 1,600,000",
"$ 100,000"
],
[
"Mahela Jayawardene",
"Kochi Tuskers Kerala",
"$ 1,500,000",
"$ 400,000"
],
[
"David Hussey",
"Kings XI Punjab",
"$ 1,400,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Dale Steyn",
"Deccan Chargers",
"$ 1,200,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Muttiah Muralitharan",
"Kochi Tuskers Kerala",
"$ 1,100,000",
"$ 300,000"
],
[
"Cameron White",
"Deccan Chargers",
"$ 1,100,000",
"$ 300,000"
],
[
"Jacques Kallis",
"Kolkata Knight Riders",
"$ 1,100,000",
"$ 300,000"
],
[
"AB de Villiers",
"Royal Challengers Bangalore",
"$ 1,100,000",
"$ 400,000"
],
[
"Ross Taylor",
"Rajasthan Royals",
"$ 1,000,000",
"$ 400,000"
],
[
"Angelo Mathews",
"Pune Warriors India",
"$ 950,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Ravindra Jadeja",
"Kochi Tuskers Kerala",
"$ 950,000",
"$ 100,000"
],
[
"Johan Botha",
"Rajasthan Royals",
"$ 950,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Dinesh Karthik",
"Kings XI Punjab",
"$ 900,000",
"$ 200,000"
],
[
"Piyush Chawla",
"Kings XI Punjab",
"$ 900,000",
"$ 100,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of all personnel changes for the 2011 Indian Premier League.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Auction -- Sold players",
"title": "List of 2011 Indian Premier League personnel changes",
"uid": "List_of_2011_Indian_Premier_League_personnel_changes_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_2011_Indian_Premier_League_personnel_changes"
} | 4,041 |
4042 | 1920_International_Cross_Country_Championships_0 | [
[
"Rank",
"Athlete",
"Nationality",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Jim Wilson",
"Scotland",
"55:06"
],
[
"2",
"Christopher Vose",
"England",
"55:33"
],
[
"3",
"Wally Freeman",
"England",
"55:52"
],
[
"4",
"Charles Clibbon",
"England",
"56:26"
],
[
"5",
"Larry Cummins",
"Ireland",
"56:27"
],
[
"6",
"Bobby Mills",
"England",
"56:40"
],
[
"7",
"Lucien Duquesne",
"France",
"57:05"
],
[
"8",
"Tim Crowe",
"Ireland",
"57:11"
],
[
"9",
"Percy Hodge",
"England",
"57:15"
],
[
"10",
"J. Moran",
"Ireland",
"57:18"
],
[
"11",
"Louis Bouchard",
"France",
"57:25"
],
[
"12",
"Anton Hegarty",
"Ireland",
"57:30"
],
[
"13",
"Louis Corlet",
"France",
"57:31"
],
[
"14",
"James Hatton",
"England",
"57:35"
],
[
"15",
"Alf Pepper",
"England",
"57:37"
],
[
"16",
"John Martin",
"Ireland",
"57:41"
],
[
"17",
"Joe Blewitt",
"England",
"57:43"
],
[
"18",
"Angus Kerr",
"Scotland",
"57:44"
],
[
"19",
"J. Beattie",
"Ireland",
"57:47"
],
[
"20",
"Archie Craig Sr",
"Scotland",
"57:49"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1920 International Cross Country Championships was held in Belfast, Ireland, at the Belvoir Park on April 3, 1920. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald. Complete results, medallists, \n and the results of British athletes were published.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Individual Race Results -- Men 's ( 10 mi / 16.1 km )",
"title": "1920 International Cross Country Championships",
"uid": "1920_International_Cross_Country_Championships_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1920_International_Cross_Country_Championships"
} | 4,042 |
4043 | List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States_5 | [
[
"Church",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church ( Canon City , Colorado )",
"1900 built 1983 NRHP-listed",
"Macon and 7th Sts . 38°26′35″N 105°14′18″W / 38.44306°N 105.23833°W / 38.44306 ; -105.23833 ( First Presbyterian Church ( Canon City , Colorado ) )",
"Canon City , Colorado",
"Late Victorian"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church of Eckert",
"1921 built 2006 NRHP-listed",
"13011 and 13025 CO 65 38°49′42″N 107°58′14″W / 38.82833°N 107.97056°W / 38.82833 ; -107.97056 ( First Presbyterian Church of Eckert )",
"Eckert , Colorado",
"Bungalow/Craftsman , Rustic , Other"
],
[
"St. Mark United Presbyterian Church",
"1880 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"225 Main St. 39°13′13″N 104°32′14″W / 39.22028°N 104.53722°W / 39.22028 ; -104.53722 ( St. Mark United Presbyterian Church )",
"Elbert , Colorado",
""
],
[
"South Park Community Church",
"1874 built 1977 NRHP-listed",
"6th and Hathaway streets 39°13′29″N 105°59′57″W / 39.22472°N 105.99917°W / 39.22472 ; -105.99917 ( South Park Community Church )",
"Fairplay , Colorado",
"Carpenter Gothic"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church of Golden",
"1872 built 1991 NRHP-listed",
"809 15th Street 39°45′9″N 105°13′7″W / 39.75250°N 105.21861°W / 39.75250 ; -105.21861 ( First Presbyterian Church of Golden )",
"Golden , Colorado",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church of Ramah",
"1916 built 1988 NRHP-listed",
"113 S. Commercial St. 39°7′13″N 104°10′2″W / 39.12028°N 104.16722°W / 39.12028 ; -104.16722 ( First Presbyterian Church of Ramah )",
"Ramah , Colorado",
"Mission/Spanish Revival , Spanish Colonial Revival , other architecture"
],
[
"Rankin Presbyterian Church",
"1907 built 2007 NRHP-listed",
"420 Clayton St. 40°15′30″N 103°37′23″W / 40.25833°N 103.62306°W / 40.25833 ; -103.62306 ( Rankin Presbyterian Church )",
"Brush , Colorado",
"Late Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Emmanuel Presbyterian Church ( Colorado Springs , Colorado )",
"1903 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"419 Mesa Rd . 38°50′45″N 104°49′54″W / 38.84583°N 104.83167°W / 38.84583 ; -104.83167 ( Emmanuel Presbyterian Church )",
"Colorado Springs , Colorado",
""
],
[
"Central Presbyterian Church ( Denver , Colorado )",
"1891 built 1974 NRHP-listed",
"1660 Sherman St. 39°44′35″N 104°59′2″W / 39.74306°N 104.98389°W / 39.74306 ; -104.98389 ( Central Presbyterian Church ( Denver , Colorado ) )",
"Denver , Colorado",
"Richardsonian Romanesque , Other"
],
[
"Montview Boulevard Presbyterian Church",
"1910 built 2004 NRHP-listed",
"1980 Dahlia St. 39°44′49″N 104°55′52″W / 39.74694°N 104.93111°W / 39.74694 ; -104.93111 ( Montview Boulevard Presbyterian Church )",
"Denver , Colorado",
"Romanesque , Gothic Revival"
],
[
"First United Presbyterian Church ( Loveland , Colorado )",
"1906 built 2004 NRHP-listed",
"400 E. 4th St. 40°23′43″N 105°4′16″W / 40.39528°N 105.07111°W / 40.39528 ; -105.07111 ( First United Presbyterian Church ( Loveland , Colorado ) )",
"Loveland , Colorado",
"Montezuma Fuller -designed , Romanesque"
],
[
"First United Presbyterian Church ( Sterling , Colorado )",
"1919 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"130 S. 4th St. 40°37′25″N 103°12′37″W / 40.62361°N 103.21028°W / 40.62361 ; -103.21028 ( First United Presbyterian Church ( Sterling , Colorado ) )",
"Sterling , Colorado",
"Classical 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": "Colorado",
"title": "List of Presbyterian churches in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Presbyterian_churches_in_the_United_States"
} | 4,043 |
4044 | Provinces_of_the_Netherlands_1 | [
[
"English name",
"Dutch name",
"Capital",
"Territory contained"
],
[
"Department of the Ems",
"Departement van de Eems",
"Leeuwarden",
"Northern Friesland , Groningen"
],
[
"Department of the Old IJssel",
"Departement van de Oude IJssel",
"Zwolle",
"Southern Friesland , Drenthe , Overijssel , Northern Gelderland"
],
[
"Department of the Rhine",
"Departement van de Rijn",
"Arnhem",
"Central Gelderland , Eastern Utrecht"
],
[
"Department of the Amstel",
"Departement van de Amstel",
"Amsterdam",
"Area around Amsterdam"
],
[
"Department of Texel",
"Departement van Texel",
"Alkmaar",
"Northern Holland minus Amsterdam , Northwestern Utrecht"
],
[
"Department of the Delft",
"Departement van de Delft",
"Delft",
"Southern Holland up to the Meuse , Southwestern Utrecht"
],
[
"Department of the Dommel",
"Departement van de Dommel",
"'s-Hertogenbosch",
"Eastern Batavian Brabant , Southern Gelderland"
],
[
"Department of the Scheldt and Meuse",
"Departement van de Schelde en Maas",
"Middelburg",
"Zeeland , Southern Holland under the Meuse and Western Batavian Brabant"
]
] | {
"intro": "There are twelve provinces of the Netherlands (Dutch: provincies van Nederland), representing the administrative layer between the national government and the local municipalities, with responsibility for matters of subnational or regional importance. The most populous province is South Holland, with just over 3.7 million inhabitants as of November 2019, and also the most densely populated province with 1,317/km2. With 383,689 inhabitants, Zeeland has the smallest population. However Drenthe is the least densely populated province with 188/km2. In terms of area, Friesland is the largest province with a total area of 5,749 km2 (2,220 sq mi). If water is excluded, Gelderland is the largest province in terms of area at 4,967 km2 (1,918 sq mi). The province of Utrecht is the smallest in land area at 1,380 km2 (530 sq mi). In total about 10,000 people were employed by the provincial administrations in 2018. The provinces of the Netherlands are joined in the Association of Provinces of the Netherlands (IPO). This organisation promotes the common interests of the provinces in the national government of the Netherlands in The Hague.",
"section_text": "During the Batavian Republic , the Netherlands was from 1798 to 1801 completely reorganised into eight new departments , most named after rivers , inspired by the French revolutionary example , in an attempt to do away with the old semi-autonomous status of the provinces . They are listed below , with their capitals and the territory of the former provinces that they mostly incorporated :",
"section_title": "History -- French period",
"title": "Provinces of the Netherlands",
"uid": "Provinces_of_the_Netherlands_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provinces_of_the_Netherlands"
} | 4,044 |
4045 | Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_4 | [
[
"Riding",
"Candidate 's Name",
"Gender"
],
[
"Abitibi - Baie-James - Nunavik - Eeyou",
"Léandre Gervais",
"M"
],
[
"Abitibi - Témiscamingue",
"Suzie Grenon",
"F"
],
[
"Ahuntsic",
"Noushig Eloyan",
"F"
],
[
"Alfred-Pellan",
"Angelo G. Iacono",
"M"
],
[
"Argenteuil - Papineau - Mirabel",
"Daniel Fox",
"M"
],
[
"Bas-Richelieu - Nicolet - Bécancour",
"Rhéal Blais",
"M"
],
[
"Beauce",
"Claude Morin",
"M"
],
[
"Beauharnois - Salaberry",
"François Deslandres",
"M"
],
[
"Beauport - Limoilou",
"Lorraine Chartier",
"F"
],
[
"Berthier - Maskinongé",
"Francine Gaudet",
"F"
],
[
"Bourassa",
"Denis Coderre",
"M"
],
[
"Brome - Missisquoi",
"Denis Paradis",
"M"
],
[
"Brossard - La Prairie",
"Alexandra Mendès",
"F"
],
[
"Chambly - Borduas",
"Bernard Delorme",
"M"
],
[
"Charlesbourg - Haute-Saint-Charles",
"Martine Gaudreault",
"F"
],
[
"Châteauguay - Saint-Constant",
"Linda Schwey",
"F"
],
[
"Chicoutimi - Le Fjord",
"Marc Pettersen",
"M"
],
[
"Compton - Stanstead",
"William Hogg",
"M"
],
[
"Drummond",
"Pierre Côté",
"M"
],
[
"Gaspésie - Îles-de-la-Madeleine",
"Jules Duguay",
"M"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of nominated candidates for the Liberal Party of Canada in the federal election held May 2, 2011.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Quebec - 75 seats",
"title": "Liberal Party of Canada candidates in the 2011 Canadian federal election",
"uid": "Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberal_Party_of_Canada_candidates_in_the_2011_Canadian_federal_election"
} | 4,045 |
4046 | Mischa_Barton_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"1995",
"Polio Water",
"Diane"
],
[
"1997",
"Lawn Dogs",
"Devon Stockard"
],
[
"1999",
"Pups",
"Rocky"
],
[
"1999",
"Notting Hill",
"12-Year-Old Actress"
],
[
"1999",
"The Sixth Sense",
"Kyra Collins"
],
[
"2000",
"Paranoid",
"Theresa"
],
[
"2000",
"Skipped Parts",
"Maurey Pierce"
],
[
"2001",
"Lost and Delirious",
"Mary 'Mouse ' Bedford"
],
[
"2001",
"Julie Johnson",
"Lisa Johnson"
],
[
"2001",
"Tart",
"Grace Bailey"
],
[
"2003",
"Octane",
"Natasha 'Nat ' Wilson"
],
[
"2006",
"The Oh in Ohio",
"Kristen Taylor"
],
[
"2007",
"Closing the Ring",
"Young Ethel Ann"
],
[
"2007",
"St Trinian 's",
"JJ French"
],
[
"2007",
"Virgin Territory",
"Pampinea"
],
[
"2008",
"Assassination of a High School President",
"Francesca Fachini"
],
[
"2009",
"Walled In",
"Sam Walczak"
],
[
"2009",
"Homecoming",
"Shelby Mercer"
],
[
"2010",
"Do n't Fade Away",
"Kat"
],
[
"2011",
"You and I",
"Lana"
]
] | {
"intro": "Mischa Barton (born 24 January 1986) is a British-Irish-American film, television, and stage actress. She began her career on the stage, appearing in Tony Kushner's Slavs! and took the lead in James Lapine's Twelve Dreams at New York City's Lincoln Center. She made her screen debut with a guest appearance on the American soap opera All My Children (1996), and voicing a character on the Nickelodeon cartoon series KaBlam! (1996-97). Her first major film role was as the protagonist of Lawn Dogs (1997), a drama co-starring Sam Rockwell. She appeared in major pictures such as the romantic comedy Notting Hill (1999) and M. Night Shyamalan's psychological thriller The Sixth Sense (1999). She also starred in the indie crime drama Pups (1999). Barton later appeared in the independent drama Lost and Delirious (2001) and guest-starred as Evan Rachel Wood's girlfriend on ABC's Once and Again (2001-02). She played Marissa Cooper in the Fox television series The O.C. (2003-06), for which she received two Teen Choice Awards. The role brought Barton into mainstream fame, and Entertainment Weekly named her the It Girl of 2003.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Film",
"title": "Mischa Barton",
"uid": "Mischa_Barton_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mischa_Barton"
} | 4,046 |
4047 | Vice_President_of_the_European_Parliament_1 | [
[
"",
"Members",
"Group",
"State",
"Votes"
],
[
"1",
"Rodi Kratsa-Tsagaropoulou",
"EPP-ED",
"Greece",
"322"
],
[
"2",
"Alejo Vidal-Quadras",
"EPP-ED",
"Spain",
"300"
],
[
"3",
"Gérard Onesta",
"Greens/EFA",
"France",
"285"
],
[
"4",
"Edward McMillan-Scott",
"EPP-ED",
"United Kingdom",
"274"
],
[
"5",
"Mario Mauro",
"EPP-ED",
"Italy",
"262"
],
[
"6",
"Miguel Angel Martínez Martínez",
"PES",
"Spain",
"260"
],
[
"7",
"Luigi Cocilovo",
"ALDE",
"Italy",
"234"
],
[
"8",
"Mechtild Rothe",
"PES",
"Germany",
"217"
],
[
"9",
"Luisa Morgantini",
"GUE/NGL",
"Italy",
"207"
],
[
"10",
"Pierre Moscovici",
"PES",
"France",
"207"
],
[
"11",
"Manuel António Dos Santos",
"PES",
"Portugal",
"193"
],
[
"12",
"Diana Wallis",
"ALDE",
"United Kingdom",
"192"
],
[
"13",
"Marek Siwiec",
"PES",
"Poland",
"180"
],
[
"14",
"Adam Bielan",
"UEN",
"Poland",
"128"
]
] | {
"intro": "There are fourteen Vice-Presidents of the European Parliament who sit in for the President in presiding over the plenary of the European Parliament.",
"section_text": "Further information : 6th European Parliament Vice-presidents elected by country in 2004 Three Two One None 30 July 2004 to 16 January 2007 Elected ( unopposed ) in order of precedence ; Members Group State 1 Alejo Vidal-Quadras Roca EPP-ED Spain 2 Antonios Trakatellis EPP-ED Greece 3 Dagmar Roth-Behrendt PES Germany 4 Edward McMillan-Scott EPP-ED United Kingdom 5 Ingo Friedrich EPP-ED Germany 6 Mario Mauro EPP-ED Italy 7 António Costa PES Portugal 8 Luigi Cocilovo ALDE Italy 9 Jacek Saryusz-Wolski EPP-ED Poland 10 Pierre Moscovici PES France 11 Miroslav Ouzký EPP-ED Czech Republic 12 Janusz Onyszkiewicz ALDE Poland 13 Gérard Onesta Greens/EFA France 14 Sylvia-Yvonne Kaufmann EUL/NGL Germany Vice-presidents elected by country in 2007 Three Two One None 16 January 2007 to 14 July 2009 Elected ( unopposed ) in order of precedence ; [ 3 ]",
"section_title": "6th parliament",
"title": "Vice-President of the European Parliament",
"uid": "Vice_President_of_the_European_Parliament_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vice-President_of_the_European_Parliament"
} | 4,047 |
4048 | 10th_United_States_Congress_1 | [
[
"District",
"Vacator",
"Reason for change",
"Successor",
"Date of successor 's formal installation"
],
[
"South Carolina 6th",
"Vacant",
"Levi Casey ( DR ) died before the end of the preceding Congress",
"Joseph Calhoun ( DR )",
"Seated June 2 , 1807"
],
[
"Delaware At-large",
"Vacant",
"James M. Broom ( F ) resigned before the beginning of this Congress",
"Nicholas Van Dyke ( F )",
"Seated October 6 , 1807"
],
[
"Massachusetts 12th",
"Barnabas Bidwell ( DR )",
"Resigned July 13 , 1807 , after becoming Attorney General of Massachusetts",
"Ezekiel Bacon ( DR )",
"Seated September 16 , 1807"
],
[
"North Carolina 7th",
"John Culpepper ( F )",
"Seat declared vacant January 2 , 1808",
"John Culpepper ( F )",
"Seated February 23 , 1808"
],
[
"New Jersey At-large",
"Ezra Darby ( DR )",
"Died January 27 , 1808",
"Adam Boyd ( DR )",
"Seated March 8 , 1808"
],
[
"Indiana Territory At-large",
"Benjamin Parke",
"Resigned March 1 , 1808",
"Jesse B. Thomas",
"October 22 , 1808"
],
[
"Pennsylvania 1st",
"Joseph Clay ( DR )",
"Resigned March 28 , 1808",
"Benjamin Say ( DR )",
"Seated November 16 , 1808"
],
[
"Massachusetts 2nd",
"Jacob Crowninshield ( DR )",
"Died April 15 , 1808",
"Joseph Story ( DR )",
"Seated May 23 , 1808"
],
[
"New York 12th",
"David Thomas ( DR )",
"Resigned May 1 , 1808 , after becoming New York State Treasurer",
"Nathan Wilson ( DR )",
"November 7 , 1808"
],
[
"Vermont 1st",
"James Witherell ( DR )",
"Resigned May 1 , 1808 , after becoming judge of Supreme Court for Michigan Territory",
"Samuel Shaw ( DR )",
"Seated September 6 , 1808"
],
[
"Rhode Island At-large",
"Nehemiah Knight ( DR )",
"Died June 13 , 1808",
"Richard Jackson , Jr. ( F )",
"Seated November 11 , 1808"
],
[
"Virginia 17th",
"John Claiborne ( DR )",
"Died October 9 , 1808",
"Thomas Gholson , Jr. ( DR )",
"Seated November 7 , 1808"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Tenth United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C. from March 4, 1807, to March 4, 1809, during the seventh and eighth years of Thomas Jefferson's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Second Census of the United States in 1800. Both chambers had an overwhelming Democratic-Republican majority.",
"section_text": "Of the voting members , there were 4 resignations , 4 deaths , and 2 vacancies from the beginning of this Congress . Democratic-Republicans had no net change and Federalists picked up 2 seats . Main article : List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives",
"section_title": "Changes in membership -- House of Representatives",
"title": "10th United States Congress",
"uid": "10th_United_States_Congress_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10th_United_States_Congress"
} | 4,048 |
4049 | Bram_Snepvangers_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Event type",
"Location",
"Format",
"Date",
"Rank"
],
[
"1998-99",
"Grand Prix",
"Amsterdam",
"Limited",
"15-16 May 1999",
"5"
],
[
"1999-00",
"Grand Prix",
"Cannes",
"Team Limited",
"26-27 February 2000",
"2"
],
[
"2000-01",
"Grand Prix",
"Florence",
"Extended",
"25-26 November 2000",
"2"
],
[
"2000-01",
"Grand Prix",
"Turin",
"Team Limited",
"26-27 May 2001",
"3"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Pro Tour",
"Nice",
"Extended",
"2-5 May 2002",
"2"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Grand Prix",
"London",
"Block Constructed",
"31 August-1 September 2002",
"3"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Pro Tour",
"Chicago",
"Rochester Draft",
"17-19 January 2003",
"7"
],
[
"2006",
"Grand Prix",
"Cardiff",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"25-26 March 2006",
"6"
],
[
"2006",
"Grand Prix",
"Turin",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"3-4 June 2006",
"3"
],
[
"2006",
"Pro Tour",
"Kobe",
"Booster Draft",
"20-20 October 2006",
"6"
],
[
"2009",
"Worlds",
"Rome",
"Special",
"19-22 November 2009",
"4"
],
[
"2010",
"Grand Prix",
"Lyon",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"8-9 May 2010",
"4"
]
] | {
"intro": "Bram Snepvangers (born 1976) is a Dutch Magic: The Gathering player. He is now considered retired, but has been on and off the Pro Tour for twelve years. In addition to his success playing Magic, he is known as a community builder both as a judge and a tournament organiser. Each year he hosts an invitational tournament for Dutch players called Bramvitational. Along with Willam Huey Jensen and Brad Nelson, Snepvangers is one of only three players to have eliminated Kai Budde in the knock-rounds of a Pro Tour. He qualified for every Pro Tour event held in the decade of the 2000s, and participated in all but one of them. He is second only to Raphaël Lévy on the list of players with the most Pro Tour appearances. In 2010, Snepvangers was voted into the Hall of Fame, alongside Gabriel Nassif and Brian Kibler. The Dutchman passed the 40% threshold necessary to become a Hall of Famer by a single vote. Snepvangers was not originally announced as an inductee, but it was later discovered that Wizards of the Coast had not used the proper formula to calculate his voting total.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Achievements",
"title": "Bram Snepvangers",
"uid": "Bram_Snepvangers_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bram_Snepvangers"
} | 4,049 |
4050 | Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain_election_results_13 | [
[
"Constituency",
"Candidate",
"Votes",
"%",
"Position"
],
[
"Dundee West",
"Dave Bowman",
"1,508",
"2.7",
"3"
],
[
"East Dunbartonshire",
"Arnold Henderson",
"2,158",
"4.1",
"3"
],
[
"Glasgow Gorbals",
"Peter Kerrigan",
"2,553",
"6.2",
"3"
],
[
"Hackney South",
"John Betteridge",
"1,744",
"3.0",
"3"
],
[
"Lewisham South",
"John Mahon",
"578",
"1.2",
"3"
],
[
"Rhondda East",
"Idris Cox",
"2,948",
"8.6",
"3"
],
[
"Sheffield Brightside",
"Howard Hill",
"1,116",
"2.5",
"3"
],
[
"Stepney",
"Ted Bramley",
"3,436",
"7.3",
"3"
],
[
"West Fife",
"William Lauchlan",
"4,728",
"10.5",
"3"
],
[
"Woodford",
"John Ross Campbell",
"871",
"1.3",
"3"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article lists the Communist Party of Great Britain's election results in UK parliamentary elections.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Election results -- 1951 general election",
"title": "Communist Party of Great Britain election results",
"uid": "Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain_election_results_13",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_Party_of_Great_Britain_election_results"
} | 4,050 |
4051 | List_of_Jewish_actors_12 | [
[
"Name",
"Years",
"Nationality/profession"
],
[
"Jacob Pavlovitch Adler",
"1855-1926",
"Russian-born ( later American ) actor , a star of the Yiddish theatre"
],
[
"Sarah Bernhardt",
"1844-1923",
"French stage actress"
],
[
"Anna Held",
"1872-1918",
"Polish-born stage performer"
],
[
"Harry Houdini",
"1874-1926",
"Hungarian-born actor and illusionist"
],
[
"Adah Isaacs Menken",
"1835-1868",
"American actress and poet"
],
[
"Alla Nazimova",
"1879-1945",
"American theater and film actress , scriptwriter , and producer"
],
[
"Henriette Nissen-Saloman",
"1819-1879",
"Swedish singer and actress"
],
[
"Rachel",
"1820-1858",
"French stage actress"
],
[
"Rudolph Schildkraut",
"1862-1930",
"Austrian-American theater and film actor"
],
[
"Al Shean",
"1868-1949",
"German-American actor and comedian"
],
[
"Boris Thomashefsky",
"1868-1939",
"Ukrainian-born ( later American ) singer and actor"
],
[
"Rudolph Marks",
"circa 1867-1930",
"Ukrainian-born ( later American ) actor , comedian and playwright"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable Jewish actors and actresses.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Born in the mid-19th century",
"title": "List of Jewish actors",
"uid": "List_of_Jewish_actors_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_actors"
} | 4,051 |
4052 | List_of_Lost_characters_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Actor",
"Main character crossover ( s )",
"Season ( s )"
],
[
"Sam Austen",
"Lindsey Ginter",
"Kate 's stepfather , Sayid 's captor",
"2"
],
[
"Tom Brennan",
"Mackenzie Astin ( adult ) Tanner Maguire ( child )",
"Kate 's childhood sweetheart",
"1 , 5"
],
[
"Dr. Douglas Brooks",
"Bruce Davison",
"Hurley 's doctor",
"2 , 6"
],
[
"Rachel Carlson",
"Robin Weigert ( adult ) Savannah Lathem ( child )",
"Juliet 's sister",
"3 , 5"
],
[
"Teresa Cortez",
"Rachel Ticotin",
"Ana Lucia 's mother and boss",
"2"
],
[
"Chrissy",
"Meilinda Soerjoko",
"Some crash survivors ' ticket agent",
"1 , 2"
],
[
"JD",
"John Dixon",
"Flight attendant in the Oceanic 815",
"1"
],
[
"Charlie Hume",
"Marvin DeFreitas",
"Desmond and Penny 's son",
"5"
],
[
"Wayne Janssen",
"James Horan",
"Kate 's biological father",
"2"
],
[
"Omer Jarrah",
"Cas Anvar ( adult ) Xavier Raabe-Manupule ( child )",
"Sayid 's brother",
"5 , 6"
],
[
"Mary Jo",
"Brittany Perrineau",
"Sawyer 's girlfriend , Hurley 's lottery vendor",
"1"
],
[
"Mr. Kwon",
"John Shin",
"Jin 's father , Sun 's father-in-law",
"1 , 3"
],
[
"Nurse Susie Lazenby",
"Grisel Toledo",
"Hurley 's nurse",
"2 , 4 , 5 , 6"
],
[
"Carole Littleton",
"Susan Duerden",
"Claire 's mother , Aaron 's grandmother",
"3 , 4 , 5"
],
[
"Lindsey Littleton",
"Gabrielle Fitzpatrick",
"Claire 's aunt",
"2 , 3"
],
[
"Susan Lloyd",
"Tamara Taylor",
"Michael 's girlfriend , Walt 's mother",
"1 , 2"
],
[
"Emily Annabeth Locke",
"Swoosie Kurtz ( adult ) Holland Roden ( teenager )",
"Locke 's mother",
"1 , 4"
],
[
"Richard Malkin",
"Nick Jameson",
"Claire 's psychic , Mr. Eko 's acquaintance",
"1 , 2"
],
[
"Jason McCormack",
"Aaron Gold",
"Ana Lucia 's attacker and later victim",
"2"
],
[
"Michael 's mother",
"Starletta DuPois",
"Michael 's mother , Walt 's grandmother",
"4"
]
] | {
"intro": "The characters from the American drama television series Lost were created by Damon Lindelof and J. J. Abrams. The series follows the lives of plane crash survivors on a mysterious tropical island, after a commercial passenger jet from the fictional Oceanic Airlines crashes somewhere in the South Pacific. Each episode typically features a primary storyline on the island as well as a secondary storyline, a flashback from another point in a character's life. Out of the 324 people on board Oceanic Flight 815, there are 71 initial survivors (70 humans and one dog) spread across the three sections of the plane crash.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Supporting characters -- Minor recurring off-island characters",
"title": "List of Lost characters",
"uid": "List_of_Lost_characters_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Lost_characters"
} | 4,052 |
4053 | List_of_original_programs_distributed_by_Netflix_16 | [
[
"Title",
"Genre",
"Premiere"
],
[
"Ghost in the Shell : SAC_2045",
"Anime",
"April 2020"
],
[
"Crazy Delicious ( co-production with Channel 4 )",
"Cooking competition",
"Early 2020"
],
[
"EDEN",
"Anime",
"Fall 2020"
],
[
"50M2",
"Turkish language dark comedy",
"2020"
],
[
"Age of Samurai : Battle for Japan",
"Historical drama docuseries",
"2020"
],
[
"Alice in Borderland",
"Japanese language fantasy",
"2020"
],
[
"Alma",
"Spanish language supernatural drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Arsène Lupin",
"French language drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Behind Her Eyes",
"Psychological thriller miniseries",
"2020"
],
[
"Blood and Water",
"Teen drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Boca a Boca",
"Portuguese language comedy",
"2020"
],
[
"Bridgerton",
"Romance",
"2020"
],
[
"Cursed",
"Fantasy drama",
"2020"
],
[
"El desorden que dejas",
"Spanish language drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Emily 's Wonder Lab",
"Educational",
"2020"
],
[
"Fate : The Winx Saga",
"Teen drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Gabby 's Dollhouse",
"Animation",
"2020"
],
[
"Ginny & Georgia",
"Coming of age drama",
"2020"
],
[
"Go , Dog , Go !",
"Animation",
"2020"
],
[
"Grand Army",
"Drama",
"2020"
]
] | {
"intro": "Netflix is an American global Internet streaming-on-demand media provider that has distributed a number of original programs, including original series, specials (including stand-up comedy specials), miniseries and documentaries and films. Netflix's original productions also include continuations of canceled series from other networks, as well as licensing or co-producing content from international broadcasters for exclusive broadcast in other territories, which is also branded in those regions as Netflix original content. Netflix previously produced content through Red Envelope Entertainment. Netflix's first original content series was House of Cards, released in 2013 and the company has since increased its original content. All programming is in English unless stated otherwise, is organized by its primary genre or format and is sorted by premiere date.",
"section_text": "The following projects have all been announced as being in development , but do not have a specific release date known at this time .",
"section_title": "Upcoming original programming",
"title": "List of original programs distributed by Netflix",
"uid": "List_of_original_programs_distributed_by_Netflix_16",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_original_programs_distributed_by_Netflix"
} | 4,053 |
4054 | 2014_Sporting_Kansas_City_season_1 | [
[
"Pos",
"Player",
"New Club",
"Fee/Notes",
"Date"
],
[
"GK",
"Jimmy Nielsen",
"Oklahoma City Energy FC Coach",
"Retired from playing",
"December 9 , 2013"
],
[
"DF",
"Kyle Miller",
"Oklahoma City Energy FC",
"Waived",
"December 12 , 2013"
],
[
"DF",
"Brendan Ruiz",
"",
"Waived",
"December 12 , 2013"
],
[
"DF",
"Federico Bessone",
"Millwall",
"Released ( Out of contract )",
"January 2 , 2014"
],
[
"FW",
"Teal Bunbury",
"New England Revolution",
"Trade for first round 2015 MLS SuperDraft pick and allocation money",
"February 19 , 2013"
],
[
"DF",
"Josh Gardner",
"",
"Waived",
"March 25 , 2014"
],
[
"DF",
"Mechack Jerome",
"Montreal Impact",
"Waived",
"March 31 , 2014"
],
[
"MF",
"Oriol Rosell",
"Sporting Clube de Portugal",
"Fee",
"June 3 , 2014"
],
[
"MF",
"Alex Martinez",
"Orange County Blues FC",
"Waived",
"June 30 , 2014"
],
[
"MF",
"Peterson Joseph",
"",
"Mutually Terminated",
"August 11 , 2014"
],
[
"GK",
"Tim Melia",
"Sporting Kansas City",
"League Pool Call-up Ended",
"September 3 , 2014"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2014 Sporting Kansas City season was the nineteenth season of the team's existence in Major League Soccer and the fourth year played under the Sporting Kansas City moniker. Sporting Kansas City entered the season in the 2013-14 CONCACAF Champions League championship stage for the first time in franchise history. Sporting Kansas City also entered the season as the defending MLS Cup champion, after beating Real Salt Lake in PKs in the MLS Cup 2013.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Player movement -- Out",
"title": "2014 Sporting Kansas City season",
"uid": "2014_Sporting_Kansas_City_season_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Sporting_Kansas_City_season"
} | 4,054 |
4055 | List_of_masked_wrestlers_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Promotion",
"Years Active",
"Country"
],
[
"Abismo Negro",
"AAA , Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre",
"1997-2009",
"Mexico"
],
[
"Abyss",
"Total Nonstop Action Wrestling",
"2002-",
"United States"
],
[
"Agent Orange",
"Independent circuit",
"1983",
"Canada"
],
[
"Aldo Montoya",
"World Wrestling Federation",
"1994-1997",
"United States"
],
[
"American Dragon",
"New Japan Pro Wrestling",
"2003-2004",
"United States"
],
[
"The Apocalypse",
"Philippine Wrestling Revolution",
"2014-",
"Philippines"
],
[
"Arachnaman",
"World Championship Wrestling",
"1991-1992",
"United States"
],
[
"Australian Suicide",
"Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide",
"2013-",
"Australia"
],
[
"Atlantis",
"Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre",
"1983-",
"Mexico"
],
[
"Avatar",
"World Wrestling Federation",
"1995",
"United States"
],
[
"The Avenger ( original )",
"Jim Crockett Promotions",
"1968-1980",
"Canada"
],
[
"The Avenger",
"Stampede Wrestling",
"1986",
"Canada"
],
[
"Badstreet",
"World Championship Wrestling",
"1991",
"United States"
],
[
"Battle Kat",
"World Wrestling Federation",
"1990",
"United States"
],
[
"Battman",
"World Wide Wrestling Federation",
"1966-1970",
"United States"
],
[
"Beetlejuice",
"Pacific Northwest Wrestling , World Championship Wrestling",
"1988-1990",
"United States"
],
[
"Big Van Vader",
"All Japan Pro Wrestling , New Japan Pro Wrestling , World Championship Wrestling , World Wrestling Federation",
"1987-2006",
"United States"
],
[
"Black Blood",
"World Championship Wrestling",
"1991",
"United States"
],
[
"Blitzkrieg",
"All Pro Wrestling , World Championship Wrestling",
"1994-2004",
"United States"
],
[
"Blue Blazer",
"World Wrestling Federation",
"1988-1991 ; 1998-1999",
"Canada"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of masked wrestlers. The earliest known masked wrestler in the United States was The Masked Marvel who famously crashed the international tournament, which featured many of the top stars of the Farmer Burns-Frank Gotch era, held at the Manhattan Opera House in 1915. In North America, many professional wrestlers have traditionally worn masks after they had been used in an area, or territory, that their popularity and drawing ability diminished, it would be an easy way for a wrestler to begin working in a new area as a fresh face. Sometimes workers wore masks in one territory and unmasked in another territory in order to keep their two identities separate. Several wrestlers used one or two personas for their entire career such as The Destroyer (1962-1984), Mr. Wrestling (1965-1983) and Masked Superstar (1976-1986). Wrestling masks also have a significant cultural importance in lucha libre, and puroresu to a lesser extent; famed luchadores such as Blue Demon, Mil Máscaras and El Santo have achieved an almost iconic status in Mexico. In Japan, masked wrestlers are also very popular. Many are heavily influenced by anime and manga characters such as Tiger Mask and Black Tiger during the 1980s, and Jushin Thunder Liger in the 90s. Many of these stars would appear in World Championship Wrestling during the Monday Night Wars period. In recent years, World Wrestling Entertainment has re-used masked characters for comedic purposes. Edge and Christian donned the masks worn by the WWF's original Los Conquistadores in their feud with World Tag Team Champions The Hardy Boyz in 2000. Under the guise of El Gran Luchadore, Paul London, Shannon Moore, Eddie Guerrero and Kurt Angle each challenged JBL for the WWE Championship in 2004.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List -- Single wrestlers",
"title": "List of masked wrestlers",
"uid": "List_of_masked_wrestlers_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_masked_wrestlers"
} | 4,055 |
4056 | Usha_Uthup_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Song",
"Movie",
"Composer",
"Language"
],
[
"1970",
"Jogan Pritam Ki",
"Devi",
"Laxmikant Pyarelal",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1971",
"Hare Rama Hare Krishna",
"Hare Rama Hare Krishna",
"R D Burman",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1974",
"I am in love",
"Kanyakumari",
"M B Sreenivasan",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1974",
"Love Is Just Around The Corner",
"Chattakkari",
"G. Devarajan",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1975",
"Love is beautiful",
"Melnaattu Marumagal",
"Kunnakudi Vaidyanathan",
"Tamil"
],
[
"1977",
"Peethambara",
"Siva Thandavum",
"M B Sreenivasan",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1978",
"Ek Do Cha Cha Cha",
"Shalimar",
"R D Burman",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1978",
"Where there is",
"Randu Penkuttikal",
"M S Vishwanathan",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1980",
"Hari Om Hari",
"Pyaara Dushman",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1980",
"Doston Se Pyar Kiya",
"Shaan",
"R D Burman",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1980",
"Shaan Se",
"Shaan",
"R D Burman",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1981",
"Ramba",
"Armaan",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1981",
"Tu Mujhe Jaan Se Bhi Pyara Hai",
"Wardat",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1982",
"Koi Yahan Aha Nache Nache",
"Disco Dancer",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1984",
"Oh my darling",
"Oru Sumangaliyude Kadha",
"Herself",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1988",
"Sidhartha",
"Sidhartha",
"Shyam",
"Malayalam"
],
[
"1990",
"Naaka Bandi",
"Naaka Bandi",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1991",
"Uri Uri Baba",
"Dushman Devta",
"Bappi Lahiri",
"Hindi"
],
[
"1991",
"Vegam Vegam Pogum Pogum",
"Anjali",
"Ilaiyaraaja",
"Tamil"
],
[
"1991",
"Keechurallu",
"Keechurallu",
"Ilaiyaraaja",
"Telugu"
]
] | {
"intro": "Usha Uthup ( 7 November 1947) is an Indian pop, filmi, jazz, and playback singer who sang songs in the late 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Darling, which she recorded with Rekha Bhardwaj for the film 7 Khoon Maaf, won the Filmfare Award for Best Female Playback Singer in 2012.",
"section_text": "Some of her famous songs for movies ( and associated music directors ) include : Main article : List of songs recorded by Usha Uthup",
"section_title": "Filmography",
"title": "Usha Uthup",
"uid": "Usha_Uthup_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usha_Uthup"
} | 4,056 |
4057 | 2012_in_Australian_television_2 | [
[
"Film Studio",
"Network",
"Digital Channels",
"Pay TV"
],
[
"DreamWorks",
"Nine Network , Network Ten",
"GO ! , GEM , Eleven , One",
"Showtime movie channels ( New Films ) / Movie Network ( Old Films )"
],
[
"Fox Searchlight Pictures",
"Network Ten",
"Eleven , One",
"Showtime movie channels"
],
[
"Lions Gate",
"Nine Network",
"GO ! , GEM",
"Showtime movie channels"
],
[
"Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer",
"Seven Network",
"ABC2 , 7Two , GO ! , GEM , Eleven",
"Movie Network"
],
[
"Miramax Films",
"Seven Network , Nine Network",
"7Two , 7mate , GO ! , GEM",
"Movie Network"
],
[
"MTV Films",
"Nine Network , Network Ten",
"7mate , GO ! , Eleven",
"Showtime movie channels"
],
[
"New Line Cinemas",
"Nine Network",
"GO ! , GEM",
"Movie Network"
],
[
"Regency Enterprises",
"Nine Network",
"GO ! , GEM",
"Showtime movie channels"
],
[
"Summit Entertainment",
"Network Ten",
"Eleven , One",
"Showtime movie channels"
],
[
"Touchstone Pictures",
"Seven Network",
"7Two , 7mate , GO !",
"Movie Network"
],
[
"United Artists",
"Seven Network",
"7Two , ABC2 , GO ! , GEM",
"Movie Network"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Australian television events and premieres which occurred, or are scheduled to occur, in 2012, the 57th year of continuous operation of television in Australia.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Film and television productions -- Other film productions",
"title": "2012 in Australian television",
"uid": "2012_in_Australian_television_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_in_Australian_television"
} | 4,057 |
4058 | List_of_Cuban_submissions_for_the_Academy_Award_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film_0 | [
[
"Year ( Ceremony )",
"English title",
"Spanish title",
"Director",
"Result"
],
[
"1978 ( 51st )",
"Viva el Presidente",
"El Recurso del método",
"Miguel Littín",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1987 ( 60th )",
"A Successful Man",
"Un hombre de éxito",
"Humberto Solás",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1988 ( 61st )",
"Letters from the Park",
"Cartas del parque",
"Tomás Gutiérrez Alea",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1989 ( 62nd )",
"Supporting Roles",
"Papeles secundarios",
"Orlando Rojas",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1990 ( 63rd )",
"The Beauty of the Alhambra",
"La bella del Alhambra",
"Enrique Pineda Barnet",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1991 ( 64th )",
"Hello Hemingway",
"Hello Hemingway",
"Fernando Perez",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1992 ( 65th )",
"Adorable Lies",
"Adorables mentiras",
"Gerardo Chijona",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1994 ( 67th )",
"Strawberry and Chocolate",
"Fresa y chocolate",
"Tomás Gutiérrez Alea , Juan Carlos Tabío",
"Nominated"
],
[
"1996 ( 69th )",
"Think of Me",
"Pon tu pensamiento en mí",
"Arturo Sotto Díaz",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"1997 ( 70th )",
"Vertical Love",
"Amor vertical",
"Arturo Sotto Díaz",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2002 ( 75th )",
"Nothing More",
"Nada",
"Juan Carlos Cremata",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2003 ( 76th )",
"Suite Habana",
"Suite Habana",
"Fernando Perez",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2005 : ( 78th )",
"Viva Cuba",
"Viva Cuba",
"Juan Carlos Cremata",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2006 ( 79th )",
"El Benny",
"El Benny",
"Jorge Luis Sánchez",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2007 ( 80th )",
"The Silly Age",
"La edad de la peseta",
"Pavel Giroud",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2009 ( 82nd )",
"Fallen Gods",
"Los dioses Rotos",
"Ernesto Daranas",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2011 ( 84th )",
"Habanastation",
"Habanastation",
"Ian Padrón",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2014 ( 87th )",
"Behavior",
"Conducta",
"Ernesto Daranas",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2016 ( 89th )",
"The Companion",
"El acompañante",
"Pavel Giroud",
"Not Nominated"
],
[
"2018 ( 91st )",
"Sergio and Sergei",
"Sergio & Sergei",
"Ernesto Daranas",
"Not on the final list"
]
] | {
"intro": "Cuba has submitted films for consideration in the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film[nb 1] category at the Oscars since 1978. The award is handed out annually by the United States Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to a feature-length motion picture produced outside the United States that contains primarily non-English dialogue. As of 2019[update], Cuba has submitted twenty-one films. Cuba received their first and only Oscar nomination for their 1994 submission, Strawberry and Chocolate, a gay-themed comedy-drama. The Cuban nominee is selected annually by the Cuban Film Institute, also known by its Spanish acronym, ICAIC (Instituto Cubano del Arte y la Industria Cinematográficos).",
"section_text": "Every year , each country is invited by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to submit its best film for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film . The Foreign Language Film Award Committee oversees the process and reviews all the submitted films . Following this , they vote via secret ballot to determine the five nominees for the award . [ 3 ] The following is a list of the films submitted by Cuba in the Best Foreign Language Film category at the Academy Awards . All films were produced in Spanish .",
"section_title": "Submissions",
"title": "List of Cuban submissions for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film",
"uid": "List_of_Cuban_submissions_for_the_Academy_Award_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cuban_submissions_for_the_Academy_Award_for_Best_International_Feature_Film"
} | 4,058 |
4059 | List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people_9 | [
[
"Name",
"Class year",
"Term in Office",
"Notes"
],
[
"Christie Benet",
"1902",
"1918",
"also coach of the Gamecock football team"
],
[
"Coleman Livingston Blease",
"",
"1925-1931",
"expelled for plagiarism in 1888 , did not graduate ; also Governor of South Carolina"
],
[
"Andrew Butler",
"1817",
"1846-1857",
"also an author of the Kansas-Nebraska Act"
],
[
"Matthew Butler",
"",
"1877-1895",
"attended in the late 1850s ; did not graduate"
],
[
"Franklin H. Elmore",
"1819",
"1850",
"also United States Representative"
],
[
"Josiah J. Evans",
"1808",
"1853-1858",
""
],
[
"Lindsey Graham",
"1977",
"2003 - present",
"also United States Representative"
],
[
"James Henry Hammond",
"1825",
"1857-1860",
"also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative"
],
[
"Wade Hampton III",
"1836",
"1879-1891",
"also Governor of South Carolina"
],
[
"William Harper",
"1808",
"1826",
"also a jurist and social and political theorist"
],
[
"Ernest Hollings",
"1947",
"1966-2005",
"also Governor of South Carolina"
],
[
"John W. Johnston",
"1836",
"1870-1883",
"also served in Virginia State Senate"
],
[
"Olin D. Johnston",
"1924",
"1945-1965",
"also Governor of South Carolina"
],
[
"Alva M. Lumpkin",
"1908",
"1941",
""
],
[
"George McDuffie",
"1813",
"1842-1846",
"also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative"
],
[
"Stephen Decatur Miller",
"1808",
"1831-1833",
"also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative"
],
[
"William P. Pollock",
"1891",
"1918-1919",
""
],
[
"William C. Preston",
"1812",
"1833-1842",
""
],
[
"Thomas J. Robertson",
"1843",
"1868-1877",
""
],
[
"Donald S. Russell",
"1925",
"1965-1966",
"also Governor of South Carolina , United States assistant secretary of state for Administration , and president of the University of South Carolina"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of University of South Carolina people includes alumni that are graduates or non-matriculating students, and former professors and administrators of the University of South Carolina, with its primary campus located in the American city of Columbia, South Carolina.",
"section_text": "Andrew Butler Lindsey Graham Ernest Hollings",
"section_title": "Alumni -- Government , law , and politics",
"title": "List of University of South Carolina people",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people_9",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people"
} | 4,059 |
4060 | 2006_NBA_Development_League_Draft_1 | [
[
"Pick",
"Player",
"Position",
"Nationality",
"Team",
"College/From"
],
[
"13",
"Jamaal Thomas",
"SF-PF",
"United States",
"New Mexico Thunderbirds",
"Angelo State"
],
[
"14",
"Tony Bobbitt",
"SG-SF",
"United States",
"Bakersfield Jam",
"Air Avellino ( Italy )"
],
[
"15",
"B. J . Elder",
"SF",
"United States",
"Austin Toros",
"Giessen 46ers ( Germany )"
],
[
"16",
"Eddie Robinson",
"SG-SF",
"United States",
"Idaho Stampede",
"Chicago Bulls"
],
[
"17",
"Nate Williams",
"PF-C",
"United States",
"Tulsa 66ers",
"Georgia State"
],
[
"18",
"Aloysius Anagonye",
"SF/PF",
"United States Nigeria",
"Los Angeles D-Fenders",
"DKV Joventut"
],
[
"19",
"Badou Gaye",
"C",
"Senegal",
"Arkansas RimRockers",
"Liege ( Belgium )"
],
[
"20",
"Quemont Greer",
"SG-SF",
"United States",
"Dakota Wizards",
"DePaul"
],
[
"21",
"Jeremy Richardson",
"SG-SF",
"United States",
"Fort Worth Flyers",
"Delta State"
],
[
"22",
"Von Wafer",
"SG",
"United States",
"Colorado 14ers",
"Los Angeles Lakers"
],
[
"23",
"DeSean Hadley",
"G",
"United States",
"Sioux Falls Skyforce",
"Eastern Michigan"
],
[
"24",
"Andre Owens",
"SG",
"United States",
"Anaheim Arsenal",
"Utah Jazz"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2006 NBA Development League Draft was the sixth annual draft by the NBA Development League. It was held on November 2, 2006.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Draft -- Round 2",
"title": "2006 NBA Development League draft",
"uid": "2006_NBA_Development_League_Draft_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_NBA_Development_League_draft"
} | 4,060 |
4061 | List_of_ABC_television_affiliates_(table)_1 | [
[
"City of license/Market",
"Station",
"Channel TV ( DT )",
"Year of affiliation",
"Ownership"
],
[
"Aberdeen , South Dakota",
"KABY-TV",
"9 ( 9 )",
"1983",
"Gray Television"
],
[
"Ada , OK - Sherman , TX",
"KTEN-DT3",
"10.3 ( 26.3 )",
"2010",
"Lockwood Broadcast Group"
],
[
"Albany , Georgia",
"WALB-DT2",
"10.2 ( 10.2 )",
"2011",
"Gray Television"
],
[
"Albany - Schenectady - Troy , NY",
"WTEN",
"10 ( 24 )",
"1977",
"Nexstar Media Group"
],
[
"Albuquerque - Santa Fe",
"KOAT-TV",
"7 ( 7 )",
"1953",
"Hearst Television"
],
[
"Alexandria , Louisiana",
"KLAX-TV",
"31 ( 31 )",
"1985",
"Northwest Broadcasting"
],
[
"Alexandria , Minnesota",
"KSAX",
"42 ( 24 )",
"1987",
"Hubbard Broadcasting"
],
[
"Alpena , Michigan",
"WBKB-DT3",
"11.3 ( 11.3 )",
"2013",
"Stephan Marks"
],
[
"Altoona - Johnstown , PA",
"WATM-TV",
"23 ( 24 )",
"1988",
"Palm Television ( managed by Horseshoe Curve Communications )"
],
[
"Amarillo , Texas",
"KVII-TV",
"7 ( 7 )",
"1957",
"Sinclair Broadcast Group"
],
[
"Ames - Des Moines , IA",
"WOI-TV",
"5 ( 5 )",
"1955",
"Tegna"
],
[
"Anchorage , Alaska",
"KYUR",
"13 ( 12 )",
"1971",
"Vision Alaska , LLC"
],
[
"Arcata - Eureka , CA",
"KAEF",
"23 ( 22 )",
"1989",
"Sinclair Broadcast Group"
],
[
"Asheville - Greenville - Spartanburg",
"WLOS",
"13 ( 13 )",
"1954",
"Sinclair Broadcast Group"
],
[
"Atlanta",
"WSB-TV",
"2 ( 32 )",
"1980",
"Cox Media Group"
],
[
"Augusta , Georgia",
"WJBF",
"6 ( 28 )",
"1974",
"Nexstar Media Group"
],
[
"Austin - Rochester , MN",
"KAAL",
"6 ( 36 )",
"1954",
"Hubbard Broadcasting"
],
[
"Austin , Texas",
"KVUE",
"24 ( 33 )",
"1971",
"Tegna"
],
[
"Bakersfield , California",
"KERO-TV",
"23 ( 10 )",
"1996",
"E. W. Scripps Company"
],
[
"Baltimore",
"WMAR-TV",
"2 ( 38 )",
"1995",
"E. W. Scripps Company"
]
] | {
"intro": "The ABC Television Network is an American television network. The network currently has eight owned-and-operated stations and current affiliation agreements with 236 other television stations. This is a table listing of ABC's affiliates, with ABC-owned stations separated from privately-owned affiliates, and arranged in alphabetical order by the station's city of license. There are links to and articles on each of the stations, describing their local programming, hosts and technical information, such as broadcast frequencies\n The station's virtual (PSIP) channel number follows the call letters. The number in parentheses that follows is the station's actual digital channel number.",
"section_text": "Stations are arranged in alphabetical order by city of license . Affiliates broadcasting on digital subchannels are italicized .",
"section_title": "Affiliate stations",
"title": "List of ABC television affiliates (table)",
"uid": "List_of_ABC_television_affiliates_(table)_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ABC_television_affiliates_(table)"
} | 4,061 |
4062 | 2011_Malaysia_Premier_League_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Coach",
"Captain",
"Kit manufacturer",
"Shirt sponsor"
],
[
"ATM",
"Zahid Hashim",
"Fatrurazi Rozi",
"Kappa",
""
],
[
"Johor",
"Azmi Mohamed",
"Mohd Affandy Adimel",
"Joma",
"Kulim Berhad"
],
[
"Harimau Muda B",
"Ismail Ibrahim",
"Mohd Syafiq Shalihin Mohd Noor",
"Nike",
""
],
[
"Sime Darby",
"Ismail Zakaria",
"Mohd Nor Ismail",
"",
"Sime Darby"
],
[
"MP Muar",
"Jacob Joseph",
"Zainurin Abdul Kadir",
"Kronos",
"Interpacific"
],
[
"PDRM",
"K. Thaiyanathan",
"Mohd Saiful Rusly",
"",
""
],
[
"PKNS",
"Abdul Rahman Ibrahim",
"Mohd Fadhil Mohd Hashim",
"Kappa",
"PKNS"
],
[
"Pos Malaysia",
"Mat Zan Mat Aris",
"Manopsak Kram",
"Kika",
"Pos Malaysia"
],
[
"Penang",
"Ahmad Yusof",
"Megat Amir Faisal Al Khalidi Ibrahim",
"Eutag",
""
],
[
"Sarawak",
"Robert Alberts",
"Zamri Morshidi",
"StarSport",
"Naim Homes"
],
[
"SDMS Kepala Batas",
"Mohammad Adam Abdullah",
"Shahrulnizam Mohd",
"",
""
],
[
"USM",
"S. Veloo",
"Mohd Fariss Azlan Mat Isa",
"Joma",
"USM & Asmana"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 Liga Premier (English: 2011 Premier League) is the eighth season of the Liga Premier, the second-tier professional football league in Malaysia. The season was held from 31 January and concluded in 29 July 2011. PKNS clinched the 2011 Liga Premier title on 20 May 2011, and first promotion spot to Liga Super, with a 2-0 win over Johor. The win gave them a 12-point unassailable lead over their nearest challenger, Sarawak with 3 games remaining. Sarawak themselves secured the second promotion spot after the 4-1 win over USM on 23 May 2011, gaining an 8-point unassailable difference over nearest rivals Sime Darby with 2 games remaining. At the other end of the table, 2 Penang teams SDMS Kepala Batas and Penang confirms their status as two last-placed teams in Liga Premier, which relegates them to 2012 Liga FAM competition, subject to confirmation from FAM. The Liga Premier champions for 2011 season was PKNS. The champions and runners-up were both promoted to 2012 Liga Super.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams -- Team summaries",
"title": "2011 Malaysia Premier League",
"uid": "2011_Malaysia_Premier_League_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Malaysia_Premier_League"
} | 4,062 |
4063 | Cordillera_Central_(Puerto_Rico)_0 | [
[
"Rank",
"Mountain Peak",
"Municipality and ( Barrio )",
"Elevation"
],
[
"1",
"Cerro de Punta",
"Ponce ( Anón )",
"4,357 ft ( 1,328 m )"
],
[
"2",
"Monte Jayuya",
"Jayuya ( Saliente )",
"4,252 ft ( 1,296 m )"
],
[
"3",
"Cerro Rosa",
"Ciales ( Toro Negro ) & Jayuya ( Saliente )",
"4,144 ft ( 1,263 m )"
],
[
"4",
"Piedra Blanca",
"Jayuya ( Veguitas )",
"4,042 ft ( 1,232 m )"
],
[
"5",
"Cerro Maravilla",
"Ponce ( Anón )",
"3,960 ft ( 1,207 m )"
],
[
"6",
"Monte Guilarte",
"Adjuntas ( Guilarte )",
"3,934 ft ( 1,199 m )"
],
[
"7",
"Los Tres Picachos",
"Ciales and Jayuya ( Coabey )",
"3,894 ft ( 1,187 m )"
],
[
"8",
"Cerro Saliente",
"Jayuya ( Saliente )",
"3,845 ft ( 1,172 m )"
],
[
"9",
"Monte Membrillo",
"Yauco ( Río Prieto )",
"3,579 ft ( 1,091 m )"
],
[
"10",
"Cerro El Bolo",
"Villalba ( Villalba Arriba )",
"3,527 ft ( 1,075 m )"
],
[
"11",
"El Toro",
"Las Piedras ( El Río ) & Río Grande ( Guzmán Arriba )",
"3,474 ft ( 1,059 m )"
],
[
"12",
"Cerro Doña Juana",
"Orocovis ( Ala de la Piedra )",
"3,471 ft ( 1,058 m )"
],
[
"49",
"Cerro Las Tetas",
"Salinas ( Lapas )",
"2,759 ft ( 841 m )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Cordillera Central (English: Central Mountains range), is the main mountain range in Puerto Rico. The range crosses the island from west to east and divides the island into northern and southern coastal plains. Cordillera Central runs eastward from Maricao in the west to Aibonito in the central eastern Puerto Rico region and on to the outskirts of the Sierra de Cayey. Sierra de Cayey is an extension of Cordillera Central that begins in the town of Cayey and runs eastwardly to Humacao. The Sierra de Cayey extension ends in a fork with two lower ranges: Sierra Guardarraya and Cuchillas de Panduras which run eastward to Yabucoa and Patillas respectively.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Mountains in the Cordillera Central range",
"title": "Cordillera Central (Puerto Rico)",
"uid": "Cordillera_Central_(Puerto_Rico)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordillera_Central_(Puerto_Rico)"
} | 4,063 |
4064 | Serbian_First_League_2 | [
[
"Team",
"City",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Bačka",
"Bačka Palanka",
"Stadion Slavko Maletin Vava",
"4,000"
],
[
"Budućnost Dobanovci",
"Belgrade",
"Stadion FK Budućnost",
"1,000"
],
[
"Dinamo Vranje",
"Vranje",
"Surdulica City Stadium",
"3,312"
],
[
"Grafičar",
"Belgrade",
"Topčiderska zvezda",
"1,000"
],
[
"Kabel",
"Novi Sad",
"Stadion FK Kabel",
"2,000"
],
[
"Kolubara",
"Lazarevac",
"Stadion FK Kolubara",
"2,500"
],
[
"Metalac",
"Gornji Milanovac",
"Stadion FK Metalac",
"4,400"
],
[
"Novi Pazar",
"Novi Pazar",
"Gradski Stadion",
"13,000"
],
[
"Radnički 1923",
"Kragujevac",
"Čika Dača",
"15,100"
],
[
"Radnički Pirot",
"Pirot",
"Stadion Dragan Nikolić",
"13,816"
],
[
"Sinđelić",
"Belgrade",
"Stadion FK Sinđelić",
"1,500"
],
[
"Smederevo 1924",
"Smederevo",
"Smederevo Stadium",
"17,200"
],
[
"Trayal",
"Kruševac",
"Stadion FK Trayal",
"1,500"
],
[
"Žarkovo",
"Belgrade",
"Stadion FK Žarkovo",
"610"
],
[
"Zemun",
"Belgrade",
"Zemun Stadium",
"9,588"
],
[
"Zlatibor",
"Čajetina",
"Stadion Švajcarija",
"1,040"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Serbian First League (Serbian: Прва лига Србије / Prva liga Srbije), commonly known by the abbreviation PLS and stylized as PrvaLiga, is the name for the second tier in professional Serbia's football league. The league was formed in 2004, following a reshuffle of the second tier Serbo-Montenegrin divisions. It is operated by the Football Association of Serbia.",
"section_text": "BelgradeBačkaDinamoKabelKolubaraMetalacNovi PazarRadnički 1923Radnički PirotSmederevo 1924TrayalZlatiborBelgrade clubs : BudućnostGrafičarSinđelićŽarkovoZemun Location of teams in the 2018–19 Serbian First league BudućnostGrafičarSinđelićŽarkovoZemun Locations of the 2019–20 Serbian SuperLiga teams from Belgrade",
"section_title": "2019–20 teams",
"title": "Serbian First League",
"uid": "Serbian_First_League_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_First_League"
} | 4,064 |
4065 | Copenhagen_Marathon_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Athlete",
"Country",
"Time"
],
[
"1980",
"Arne Stigsen",
"Denmark",
"2:19:27"
],
[
"1981",
"Ove Larsen",
"Denmark",
"2:24:10"
],
[
"1982",
"Henrik Jørgensen",
"Denmark",
"2:22:19"
],
[
"1983",
"Henrik Jørgensen",
"Denmark",
"2:16:41"
],
[
"1984",
"Philippe Adams",
"Belgium",
"2:22:18"
],
[
"1985",
"Ole Jacobsen",
"Denmark",
"2:22:18"
],
[
"1986",
"Svend Erik Kristensen",
"Denmark",
"2:15:04"
],
[
"1987",
"Svend Erik Kristensen",
"Denmark",
"2:14:16"
],
[
"1988",
"Allan Zachariasen",
"Denmark",
"2:21:19"
],
[
"1989",
"Beat Imhof",
"Switzerland",
"2:29:22"
],
[
"1990",
"Alexander Schatz",
"Denmark",
"2:23:17"
],
[
"1991",
"Stanislaw Cembrzynski",
"Poland",
"2:21:59"
],
[
"1992",
"Alexander Kouftyrev",
"Russia",
"2:24:07"
],
[
"1993",
"Stanislaw Cembrzynski",
"Poland",
"2:22:58"
],
[
"1994",
"Joel Kipchumba",
"Kenya",
"2:20:20"
],
[
"1995",
"Stanislaw Cembrzynski",
"Poland",
"2:20:09"
],
[
"1996",
"Palle Madsen",
"Denmark",
"2:24:43"
],
[
"1997",
"Søren Rasmussen",
"Denmark",
"2:21:28"
],
[
"1998",
"Januz Sarnicki",
"Poland",
"2:24:12"
],
[
"1999",
"Wislaw Göra",
"Denmark",
"2:21:05"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Copenhagen Marathon is an annual marathon that takes place on the streets of Copenhagen, Denmark. Established in 1980, it is held in May and has around 10,000 participants.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Men",
"title": "Copenhagen Marathon",
"uid": "Copenhagen_Marathon_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen_Marathon"
} | 4,065 |
4066 | List_of_German_dishes_8 | [
[
"Name",
"Type",
"Description"
],
[
"Erdbeerkuchen",
"Dessert",
"A German strawberry pie consisting of strawberries and sometimes whipped cream"
],
[
"Knackwurst",
"Snack",
"A sausage type of northern German origin from the mid-16th century . The manifold available varieties depend on the geographical region of their production"
],
[
"Hamburger Speck",
"Dessert",
"A type of candy made out of foamed sugar with various coatings . The colors of the candy are often the same as the colors of Hamburg 's flag ( red and white ) , with a white central square and two red outer squares"
],
[
"Labskaus",
"Main course or snack",
"A dish made from corned beef , herring , mashed potatoes , and beetroot , served with a fried egg and a pickled cucumber . See also under Bremen and Lower Saxony"
],
[
"Marmorkuchen",
"Cake",
"A cake with a streaked or mottled appearance ( like marble ) achieved by very lightly blending light and dark batter"
],
[
"Birnen , Bohnen und Speck",
"Main course",
"A dish composed of pears , beans , and bacon , invariably accompanied by potatoes"
],
[
"Hamburger Aalsuppe [ de ]",
"Soup",
"A sweet and sour soup of eel , meat broth , dried fruits , vegetables , and herbs"
],
[
"Franzbrötchen",
"Pastry",
"A pastry made from Phyllo dough , covered with sugar and powdered cinnamon that is usually eaten for breakfast . It literally means Frenchman 's roll and is only rarely found outside of Hamburg , Germany"
],
[
"Frikadelle",
"Main course or snack",
"A type of flat meatball composed of pork , beef and onions commonly eaten with pasta salad , potatoes or simply in a bread roll with mustard or other condiments"
],
[
"Hamburger Hummersuppe",
"Soup",
"A creamy lobster soup served with a small amount of whipped cream and garnished with dill"
],
[
"Hamburger Krabbensuppe",
"Soup",
"A creamy shrimp soup served with a small amount of whipped cream and garnished with dill"
],
[
"Heißewecken [ de ]",
"Main course or snack",
"A traditional pastry that has been proven in German-speaking since the late Middle Ages and was eaten in north and northwest Germany before the beginning of the pre-Easter Lent , especially from Rose Monday to Ash Wednesday"
],
[
"Krabbentoast",
"Main course or snack",
"A bread dish that is made with vegetables and shrimp"
],
[
"Rote Grütze",
"Dessert",
"A jelly/jam-like dessert or summer dish made from berries especially currants that can be eaten pure , but is often accompanied by milk or vanilla sauce"
]
] | {
"intro": "Below is a list of dishes found in German cuisine.",
"section_text": "See also : Cuisine of Hamburg and Hamburg",
"section_title": "Famous dishes -- Hamburg",
"title": "List of German dishes",
"uid": "List_of_German_dishes_8",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_German_dishes"
} | 4,066 |
4067 | Warren_County,_Indiana_0 | [
[
"Township",
"Established year",
"Area mi²",
"Area km²",
"Population 2010",
"Places ( incorporated in bold )"
],
[
"Adams",
"1848",
"27.03",
"70.01",
"512",
"Pine Village"
],
[
"Jordan",
"1850",
"40.53",
"104.98",
"247",
"Hedrick , Pence , Stewart"
],
[
"Kent",
"1864",
"14.10",
"36.51",
"428",
"State Line City"
],
[
"Liberty",
"1843",
"44.00",
"113.95",
"896",
"Carbondale , Judyville , Kramer"
],
[
"Medina",
"1827",
"27.15",
"70.33",
"457",
"Green Hill"
],
[
"Mound",
"1827",
"16.79",
"43.48",
"418",
"Foster"
],
[
"Pike",
"1827",
"17.57",
"45.51",
"1,221",
"West Lebanon"
],
[
"Pine",
"1830",
"36.09",
"93.48",
"481",
"Rainsville"
],
[
"Prairie",
"1864",
"47.80",
"123.81",
"257",
"Tab"
],
[
"Steuben",
"1834",
"39.60",
"102.57",
"487",
"Johnsonville , Marshfield"
],
[
"Warren",
"1827",
"36.42",
"94.33",
"806",
"Independence , Winthrop"
],
[
"Washington",
"1830",
"19.51",
"50.53",
"2,298",
"Williamsport"
],
[
"Warren County",
"1827",
"366.60",
"949.49",
"8,508",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "Warren County lies in western Indiana between the Illinois state line and the Wabash River in the United States. According to the 2010 census, the population was 8,508. The county seat is Williamsport. Before the arrival of non-indigenous settlers in the early 19th century, the area was inhabited by several Native American tribes. The county was officially established in 1827 and was the 55th county to be formed in Indiana. It is one of the most rural counties in the state, with the third-smallest population and the lowest population density at about 23 inhabitants per square mile (8.9/km2). The county has four incorporated towns with a total population of about 3,100, as well as many small unincorporated communities. The county is divided into 12 townships which provide local services. Much of the land in the county is given over to agriculture, especially on the open prairie in the northern and western parts; the county's farmland is among the most productive in the state. Nearer the river along the southeastern border, the land has many hills, valleys, and tributary streams and is more heavily wooded. Agriculture, manufacturing, government, education, and health care each provide substantial portions of the jobs in the county. Four Indiana state roads cross the county, as do two U.S.",
"section_text": "Map of Warren County , showing townships and settlements The Wabash River , coming out of Tippecanoe County to the east , defines the southeastern border of the county ; the terrain here is hilly and wooded areas are common . Fountain County lies across the river . By contrast , the northwest region consists mainly of flat prairie farmland ; this continues in Benton County to the north . Along the western side of the county is the border with Vermilion County , Illinois . The small southern border is shared with the north end of the similarly named Indiana county of Vermillion . The state capital of Indianapolis lies about 70 miles ( 110 km ) to the southeast . [ 41 ] Williamsport Falls According to the 2010 census , the county has a total area of 366.40 square miles ( 949.0 km2 ) , of which 364.68 square miles ( 944.5 km2 ) ( or 99.53% ) is land and 1.72 square miles ( 4.5 km2 ) ( or 0.47% ) is water . [ 3 ] Elevations in the county range from 480 feet ( 150 m ) above sea level where the Wabash River enters Vermillion County to 830 feet ( 250 m ) in northeastern Prairie Township . [ 47 ] The landscape consists mostly of flat or gently sloping moraine overlaying silty and loamy glacial till , except along the Wabash River where sand , gravel , sandstone and shale are exposed . [ 48 ] Various forms of silt loam constitute most of the county 's soil [ 48 ] and are conducive to agriculture . [ 7 ] Forests cover about 14% of the county , [ 49 ] mainly around major waterways , [ 50 ] and consist principally of deciduous hardwoods among which maple–beech and oak–hickory forests are the most common . [ 51 ] The only coal mines in the county are located in the southeastern part of Steuben Township , near the Wabash River . [ 52 ] When the county was formed in 1827 , it was divided into four townships : Medina , Warren , Pike and Mound . Over the following decades , many changes were made to the township borders and eight new townships were created . Pine and Washington were the first of these , in March 1830 ; [ 53 ] Steuben followed in 1834 . Liberty was formed in 1843 , Adams in 1848 , then Jordan in 1850 . Kent and Prairie were the last to be created , in 1864 . [ 54 ] [ 55 ] As of 2010 [ update ] , Prairie Township , at 5.4 inhabitants per square mile ( 2.1/km2 ) , has the lowest population density ; it covers more area than any of the other townships—nearly 50 square miles ( 130 km2 ) —and contains no incorporated towns . The highest density is in Washington Township , which has 120 inhabitants per square mile ( 46/km2 ) ; it includes Williamsport , the county 's largest town , and covers only about 20 square miles ( 52 km2 ) . [ 4 ] There are four incorporated towns in the county . The largest is Williamsport , which is on the western banks of the Wabash River in the eastern part of the county , just downstream of Attica ( which is on the east side of the river in Fountain County ) ; in 2010 , its population was 1,898—nearly one-fourth of the county 's total . [ 56 ] West Lebanon is about 5 miles ( 8.0 km ) west of Williamsport on State Road 28 , with a population of 723 . [ 57 ] The town of Pine Village lies about 11 miles ( 18 km ) to the north of Williamsport where State Road 55 intersects State Road 26 , near the northern edge of the county ; 217 people live in Pine Village . [ 58 ] State Line City is in the southwestern part of the county and shares its western border with the Illinois state line . A small Illinois community named Illiana lies immediately on the west side of the county road which runs along the state border ( and which is also a street between the two communities ) . State Line City is the smallest of the towns , with a population of 143 . [ 59 ] Railroad crossing sign at Sloan In addition to the incorporated towns , there are over a dozen small unincorporated communities in Warren County [ 60 ] that are historical centers of activity . Now they consist mostly of dwellings , though several have churches and some still have small businesses . The small settlements of Hedrick , Pence and Stewart are in Jordan Township ; Stewart consists of a grain processing facility and a single residence . In Steuben Township , Johnsonville has a church and a handful of residences . Marshfield has an automotive body repair shop , a grain elevator and a church . Independence , platted in 1832 , is located on the site of a trading post set up by Zachariah Cicott . He is buried in a cemetery in Warren Township , just north of town . The township included the small settlement of Winthrop . Liberty Township has three unincorporated communities : Carbondale , Judyville and Kramer ( near the site of the Mudlavia Hotel ) . Several townships contain only a single settlement . Foster is the only one in Mound Township and has a motel and several houses . In the northeast corner of the county , Green Hill is Medina Township 's only settlement . Tab is the only settlement in Prairie Township ; most of this township is agricultural , and a large grain processing facility is Tab 's only remaining business . Pine Township 's only community is Rainsville . [ 61 ] Some settlements did not survive . The river town of Baltimore thrived and was a major center of trade until the river was overshadowed by the railroad for purposes of trade and transportation ; a single house , built long after the town 's heyday , is all that remains . [ 62 ] Warrenton had a promising start as the first county seat , but it began to wane after the seat moved , and today no trace is left . [ 63 ] Chesapeake was the first settlement in Steuben Township , but it faded away so early that even an 1883 county history has little to say on the subject . [ 64 ] Brisco was never large , though it did have a school house from the 1850s through the 1920s . It likewise disappeared by the end of the 20th century . Chatterton had a school , a store and a post office , but it has disappeared even though the name continues to appear on maps . [ 65 ] Other communities were planned but did not develop . Dresser was never much more than a collection of houses , though it did have a post office for a few years around the turn of the 20th century . The settlements of Kickapoo , Locust Grove , Sloan and Walnut Grove were similar in this respect . Point Pleasant never developed much beyond the founder 's residence and a liquor store , and was later described as a `` paper town '' . [ 66 ]",
"section_title": "Geography",
"title": "Warren County, Indiana",
"uid": "Warren_County,_Indiana_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_County,_Indiana"
} | 4,067 |
4068 | Languages_of_Niger_0 | [
[
"Language",
"Family",
"Approx%",
"Main region",
"Notes"
],
[
"Hausa",
"Afro-Asiatic / Chadic",
"55.4%",
"South , central",
"Main trade language"
],
[
"Songhai",
"Songhay languages",
"21%",
"Southwest",
"Zarma and Kaado Songhay are considered together"
],
[
"Tamasheq",
"Afro-Asiatic / Berber",
"9.3%",
"North",
""
],
[
"Fulfulde",
"Niger-Congo / Atlantic",
"8.5%",
"All",
"Fulfulde of Western Niger & Central-Eastern Niger are considered together"
],
[
"Kanuri",
"Nilo-Saharan",
"4.7%",
"Southeast",
""
],
[
"Arabic",
"Afro-Asiatic / Semitic",
"0.4%",
"Southeast",
"Particularly spoken by the Diffa Arabs mainly in the Diffa Region"
],
[
"Gourmanchéma",
"Niger-Congo / Gur",
"0.4%",
"Southwest corner",
"Spoken mainly by the Gurma people of southwest Niger"
],
[
"Tebu",
"Nilo-Saharan",
"0.4%",
"East",
"Spoken mainly by the Toubou people of Eastern Niger"
],
[
"Other",
"N/A",
"0.1%",
"Throughout",
"Any other languages"
]
] | {
"intro": "Niger has 11 official languages, with French being the official language and Hausa the most spoken language. Depending on how they are counted, Niger has between 8 and 20 indigenous languages. The discrepancy comes from the fact that several are closely related, and can be grouped together or considered apart.",
"section_text": "French , inherited from the colonial period , is the official language . It is spoken mainly as a second language by people who have received an education ( 20% of Nigeriens are literate in French , and even 47% in cities , growing quickly as literacy improves [ 1 ] ) . Although educated Nigeriens still constitute a relatively small percentage of the population , the French language is the language used by the official administration ( courts , government , etc . ) , the media and the business community . See also : African French Niger has ten official national languages , namely Arabic , Buduma , Fulfulde , Gourmanchéma , Hausa , Kanuri , Zarma & Songhai , Tamasheq , Tassawaq , Tebu . [ 2 ] These ten national languages , their language families , the approximate percentage of the population that speak them , their approximate home regions , and additional information are as follows :",
"section_title": "Official Languages",
"title": "Languages of Niger",
"uid": "Languages_of_Niger_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Niger"
} | 4,068 |
4069 | 1999_S.League_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Stadium",
"Capacity",
"Location"
],
[
"Balestier Central",
"Toa Payoh Stadium",
"3,900",
"Toa Payoh"
],
[
"Geylang United",
"Bedok Stadium",
"3,900",
"Bedok"
],
[
"Gombak United",
"Bukit Gombak Stadium",
"3,000",
"Bukit Batok"
],
[
"Clementi Khalsa",
"Clementi Stadium",
"4,000",
"Clementi"
],
[
"Jurong",
"Jurong East Stadium",
"2,700",
"Jurong East"
],
[
"Home United",
"Bishan Stadium",
"4,000",
"Bishan"
],
[
"Marine Castle",
"Hougang Stadium",
"3,000",
"Hougang"
],
[
"Singapore Armed Forces",
"Jurong Stadium",
"6,000",
"Jurong"
],
[
"Sembawang Rangers",
"Yishun Stadium",
"3,400",
"Yishun"
],
[
"Tampines Rovers",
"Tampines Stadium",
"3,600",
"Tampines"
],
[
"Tanjong Pagar United",
"Queenstown Stadium",
"3,800",
"Queenstown"
],
[
"Woodlands Wellington",
"Woodlands Stadium",
"4,300",
"Woodlands"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1999 S.League was the fourth season of the S.League, the top professional football league in Singapore. Teams played each other once both home and away, in a 22-match season. The 1999 S.League was won by Home United, their first S.League title.",
"section_text": "The league expanded again to 12 teams with the addition of a newly formed team , Clementi Khalsa who were based in Clementi and played their home games at the Clementi Stadium . Clementi Khalsa were formed in order to give an S.League representation to the Singaporean Sikh community . Balestier CentralClementi KhalsaGeylang UtdGombak UtdHome UtdJurongMarine CastleSembawang RangersSAFFCTampines R.Tanjong Pagar UtdWoodlands Wellington Location of teams in 1999 S.League",
"section_title": "Teams",
"title": "1999 S.League",
"uid": "1999_S.League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_S.League"
} | 4,069 |
4070 | List_of_Maltese_football_transfers_summer_2009_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Moving from",
"Moving to"
],
[
"Antonio Vieira",
"Floriana",
"released"
],
[
"Paul Zammit",
"Valletta",
"released"
],
[
"Ton Caanen",
"free agent",
"Valletta"
],
[
"John Buttigieg",
"Birkirkara",
"released"
],
[
"Paul Zammit",
"free agent",
"Birkirkara"
],
[
"Roddy Collins",
"free agent",
"Floriana"
],
[
"Gorg Faure",
"Vittoriosa Stars",
"released"
],
[
"Winston Muscat",
"St. Patrick",
"Vittoriosa Stars"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Maltese football transfers for the 2009-10 summer transfer window by club. Only transfers of clubs in the Maltese Premier League are included. However, this includes those clubs that may be moved to a different division during the season. The summer transfer window will open on 1 July 2009, although a few transfers may take place prior to that date. The window will close at midnight on 31 August 2009. Players without a club may join one at any time, either during or in between transfer windows.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Manager transfers",
"title": "List of Maltese football transfers summer 2009",
"uid": "List_of_Maltese_football_transfers_summer_2009_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Maltese_football_transfers_summer_2009"
} | 4,070 |
4071 | Southeastern_Conference_Baseball_Tournament_0 | [
[
"School",
"Appearances",
"Championships"
],
[
"Mississippi State",
"8",
"6"
],
[
"Ole Miss",
"9",
"5"
],
[
"Alabama",
"7",
"4"
],
[
"Florida",
"6",
"3"
],
[
"Auburn",
"7",
"2"
],
[
"Georgia",
"4",
"2"
],
[
"Vanderbilt",
"4",
"2"
],
[
"LSU",
"2",
"2"
],
[
"Georgia Tech",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Kentucky",
"3",
"0"
],
[
"Tennessee",
"2",
"0"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament (sometimes known simply as the SEC Tournament) is the conference tournament in baseball for the Southeastern Conference (SEC). It is a double-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The SEC Tournament champion is separate from the conference champion. The conference championship is determined solely by regular season record.",
"section_text": "Updated as of 2018 season",
"section_title": "SEC Championship Series Winners ( 1948–1976 ) -- By School",
"title": "Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament",
"uid": "Southeastern_Conference_Baseball_Tournament_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeastern_Conference_Baseball_Tournament"
} | 4,071 |
4072 | 2013_Orlando_City_S.C._season_0 | [
[
"No",
"Position",
"Player",
"Nation"
],
[
"1",
"Goalkeeper",
"Miguel Gallardo",
"Mexico"
],
[
"3",
"Midfielder",
"Jonathan Mendoza",
"United States"
],
[
"4",
"Midfielder",
"Ian Fuller ( captain )",
"United States"
],
[
"5",
"Defender",
"Kieron Bernard ( Retired as of May 30 )",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"6",
"Midfielder",
"Anthony Pulis",
"Wales"
],
[
"7",
"Midfielder",
"Bryan Burke",
"United States"
],
[
"8",
"Defender",
"Erik Ustruck",
"United States"
],
[
"10",
"Midfielder",
"Adama Mbengue",
"Senegal"
],
[
"12",
"Midfielder",
"Christian Duke",
"United States"
],
[
"13",
"Defender",
"Justin Clark",
"United States"
],
[
"14",
"Midfielder",
"Luke Boden",
"England"
],
[
"15",
"Forward",
"Dennis Chin",
"United States"
],
[
"16",
"Midfielder",
"Freddie Braun",
"United States"
],
[
"17",
"Midfielder",
"James O'Connor",
"Ireland"
],
[
"18",
"Midfielder",
"Kevin Molino",
"Trinidad and Tobago"
],
[
"20",
"Midfielder",
"Jean Alexandre",
"Haiti"
],
[
"21",
"Goalkeeper",
"Jon Kempin",
"United States"
],
[
"22",
"Defender",
"Rob Valentino",
"United States"
],
[
"23",
"Forward",
"Long Tan",
"China"
],
[
"24",
"Defender",
"Brian Fekete",
"United States"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Orlando City Soccer Club season was the club's third season of existence in Orlando. Orlando finished second in the overall regular-season table. They were declared 2013 USL Pro Champions after beating Charlotte Eagles 7-4 in front of 20,886 fans at the Fifth Third Bank Field at the Citrus Bowl.",
"section_text": "Players which have been announced as re-signed with Orlando or for which Orlando exercised an option to retain . [ 12 ] [ 13 ]",
"section_title": "Club -- Roster",
"title": "2013 Orlando City SC season",
"uid": "2013_Orlando_City_S.C._season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Orlando_City_SC_season"
} | 4,072 |
4073 | 2012_Carolina_RailHawks_FC_season_0 | [
[
"No",
"Position",
"Player",
"Nation"
],
[
"0",
"Midfielder",
"Floyd Franks",
"United States"
],
[
"1",
"Goalkeeper",
"Akira Fitzgerald",
"United States"
],
[
"2",
"Defender",
"Greg Shields",
"Scotland"
],
[
"3",
"Defender",
"Kupono Low",
"United States"
],
[
"4",
"Midfielder",
"Tommy Drake",
"United States"
],
[
"5",
"Midfielder",
"Amir Lowery",
"United States"
],
[
"6",
"Defender",
"James Scott",
"Costa Rica"
],
[
"6",
"Midfielder",
"Konrad Warzycha",
"Poland"
],
[
"7",
"Midfielder",
"Austin da Luz",
"United States"
],
[
"8",
"Midfielder",
"Luke Sassano",
"United States"
],
[
"9",
"Forward",
"Jason Garey",
"United States"
],
[
"10",
"Midfielder",
"Mike Palacio",
"United States"
],
[
"11",
"Midfielder",
"Ty Shipalane",
"South Africa"
],
[
"12",
"Goalkeeper",
"Nicolas Platter",
"United States"
],
[
"13",
"Forward",
"Brian Ackley",
"United States"
],
[
"14",
"Midfielder",
"Nick Millington",
"Guyana"
],
[
"15",
"Defender",
"Austen King",
"United States"
],
[
"16",
"Defender",
"Jamie Finch",
"United States"
],
[
"17",
"Defender",
"Gale Agbossoumonde",
"Togo"
],
[
"18",
"Goalkeeper",
"Ray Burse",
"United States"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2012 Carolina RailHawks FC season was the sixth season of the club's existence. The RailHawks FC, played in the North American Soccer League, the second tier of the American soccer pyramid. The RailHawks are the defending NASL Regular Season Champions.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Club -- Roster",
"title": "2012 Carolina RailHawks FC season",
"uid": "2012_Carolina_RailHawks_FC_season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Carolina_RailHawks_FC_season"
} | 4,073 |
4074 | Debra_Messing_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1994-95",
"NYPD Blue",
"Dana Abandando",
"3 episodes"
],
[
"1995",
"Partners",
"Stacey",
"1 episode"
],
[
"1995-97",
"Ned & Stacey",
"Stacey Colbert",
"46 episodes"
],
[
"1996-97",
"Seinfeld",
"Beth Lookner",
"2 episodes"
],
[
"1998",
"Prey",
"Dr. Sloan Parker",
"13 episodes"
],
[
"1998-2006 , 2017-present",
"Will & Grace",
"Grace Adler",
"Main role ; 200 episodes"
],
[
"2002",
"King of the Hill",
"Mrs. Hilgren-Bronson",
"1 episode"
],
[
"2006 , 2012",
"Project Runway",
"Herself/Guest judge",
"Season 2 , Episode : Finale - Part 2 Season 10 , Episode : I Get a Kick Out of Fashion"
],
[
"2007-08",
"The Starter Wife",
"Molly Kagan",
"10 episodes"
],
[
"2009",
"Sesame Street",
"Herself",
"1 episode"
],
[
"2011",
"Law & Order : Special Victims Unit",
"Alicia Harding",
"1 episode Pursuit"
],
[
"2012-13",
"Smash",
"Julia Houston",
"32 episodes"
],
[
"2014 , 2016 , 2019",
"Project Runway All Stars",
"Herself/Guest judge",
"Season 4 Episode : Designing for the Duchess Season 5 , Episode : New York State of Mind Season 7 , Episode : All Stars Goes Global"
],
[
"2014-16",
"The Mysteries of Laura",
"Detective Laura Diamond",
"Lead role , 38 episodes"
],
[
"2015",
"Jeopardy !",
"Herself",
"4 episodes"
],
[
"2016",
"Match Game",
"Herself",
"1 episode"
],
[
"2016",
"Nightcap",
"Herself",
"1 episode"
],
[
"2017",
"Dirty Dancing",
"Marjorie Houseman",
"Television film"
]
] | {
"intro": "Debra Lynn Messing (born August 15, 1968) is an American actress. After graduating from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, Messing received short-lived roles on television series such as Ned and Stacey on Fox (1995-1997) and Prey on ABC (1998). She achieved her breakthrough role as Grace Adler, an interior designer, on the NBC sitcom Will & Grace (1998-2006, 2017-2020), for which she was critically acclaimed, receiving six Golden Globe Award nominations and five Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, winning once in 2003. From 2007 to 2008, Messing starred as Molly Kagan, the ex-wife of a Hollywood film mogul, on the television miniseries The Starter Wife, for which she received two Golden Globe nominations, a Primetime Emmy Award nomination and a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for her performance. Thereafter, she appeared as Broadway playwright Julia Houston on the NBC musical drama Smash (2012-2013) and as homicide detective Laura Diamond on the NBC police-procedural comedy The Mysteries of Laura (2014-2016). Since 2017, Messing has been reprising her role as Grace Adler on NBC's revival of Will & Grace, garnering a ninth Golden Globe nomination for her performance. Messing's film work includes A Walk in the Clouds (1995), Jesus (1999), The Mothman Prophecies (2002), Hollywood Ending (2002), Along Came Polly (2004), The Wedding Date (2005), Lucky You (2007), The Women (2008), Nothing like the Holidays (2008), and Searching (2018). She has also lent her voice to animated films such as Garfield (2004) and Open Season (2006).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Debra Messing",
"uid": "Debra_Messing_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debra_Messing"
} | 4,074 |
4075 | 1971_International_Cross_Country_Championships_1 | [
[
"Rank",
"Athlete",
"Nationality",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Nick Rose",
"England",
"23:12.4"
],
[
"2",
"Ray Smedley",
"England",
"23:17.4"
],
[
"3",
"Jim Brown",
"Scotland",
"24:02"
],
[
"4",
"Steve Kenyon",
"England",
"24:16.2"
],
[
"5",
"Kamel Guemar",
"Algeria",
"24:30.4"
],
[
"6",
"Franco Fava",
"Italy",
"24:33.6"
],
[
"7",
"Ramon Sanchez",
"Spain",
"24:35.5"
],
[
"8",
"Aldo Tomasini",
"Italy",
"24:40"
],
[
"9",
"Peter Adams",
"England",
"24:42"
],
[
"10",
"Eddy Van Mullem",
"Belgium",
"24:44.4"
],
[
"11",
"Eric De Beck",
"Belgium",
"24:45.8"
],
[
"12",
"Ricardo Ortega",
"Spain",
"24:46.6"
],
[
"13",
"Ian Gilmour",
"Scotland",
"24:49"
],
[
"14",
"Ron MacDonald",
"Scotland",
"24:51.2"
],
[
"15",
"Alain Grandfils",
"France",
"24:52.2"
],
[
"16",
"Greg Hannon",
"Northern Ireland",
"24:53.4"
],
[
"17",
"Eddie Leddy",
"Ireland",
"24:55.6"
],
[
"18",
"Eamonn Coghlan",
"Ireland",
"24:58"
],
[
"19",
"Gerry Hannon",
"Northern Ireland",
"25:01"
],
[
"20",
"William Burns",
"Scotland",
"25:02.4"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1971 International Cross Country Championships was held in San Sebastián, Spain, at the Lasarte Hippodrome on March 20, 1971. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald. Complete results for men, junior men, women, medallists, \n and the results of British athletes were published.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Individual Race Results -- Junior Men 's ( 4.35 mi / 7.0 km )",
"title": "1971 International Cross Country Championships",
"uid": "1971_International_Cross_Country_Championships_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971_International_Cross_Country_Championships"
} | 4,075 |
4076 | List_of_Miss_Teen_USA_titleholders_3 | [
[
"Year",
"1st runner-up",
"State Represented",
"Hometown",
"Age"
],
[
"1983",
"Tina Marrocco",
"Virginia",
"McLean",
"16"
],
[
"1984",
"Malia Yamamura",
"Hawaii",
"Honolulu",
"16"
],
[
"1985",
"Emily Ernst",
"Wyoming",
"Gillette",
"17"
],
[
"1986",
"Becky Pestana",
"Texas",
"San Antonio",
"17"
],
[
"1987",
"Peggy Blackwell",
"North Carolina",
"Fayetteville",
"17"
],
[
"1988",
"Jessica Collins",
"New York",
"Amsterdam",
"17"
],
[
"1989",
"Kristie Dawn Hicks",
"Kentucky",
"Bardstown",
"17"
],
[
"1990",
"Marla Johnson",
"Alaska",
"Anchorage",
"18"
],
[
"1991",
"Meredith Young",
"Georgia",
"Cairo",
"18"
],
[
"1992",
"Angela Logan",
"Oklahoma",
"Oklahoma City",
"18"
],
[
"1993",
"Kelly Lloyd",
"Indiana",
"Indianapolis",
"16"
],
[
"1994",
"Whitney Fuller",
"Georgia",
"Sautee Nacoochee",
"16"
],
[
"1995",
"Katie Aselton",
"Maine",
"Milbridge",
"16"
],
[
"1996",
"Patricia Campbell",
"Pennsylvania",
"Philadelphia",
"18"
],
[
"1997",
"Autumn Waterbury",
"Illinois",
"Marion",
"18"
],
[
"1998",
"Bridgett Jordan",
"Tennessee",
"Collierville",
"18"
],
[
"1999",
"Sarah Thornhill",
"Louisiana",
"Slidell",
"18"
],
[
"2000",
"Nicole O'Brian",
"Texas",
"Friendswood",
"17"
],
[
"2001",
"Gloria Almonte",
"New York",
"Bronx",
"18"
],
[
"2002",
"Jennifer Morgan",
"California",
"Alpine",
"17"
]
] | {
"intro": "Miss Teen USA is a beauty pageant run by the Miss Universe Organization for girls aged 14-19. Unlike its sister pageants Miss Universe and Miss USA, which are broadcast on Fox, this pageant is webcast on the Miss Teen USA website and simulcast on mobile devices and video game consoles. The pageant was first held in 1983 and has been broadcast live on CBS until 2002 and then on NBC from 2003-2007. In March 2007, it was announced that the broadcast of the Miss Teen USA pageant on NBC had not been renewed, and that Miss Teen USA 2007 would be the final televised event. From 2008-15, the pageant was held at the Atlantis Paradise Island Resort, located in Nassau, Bahamas. Notable pageant winners include actresses Kelly Hu (1985, Hawaii), Bridgette Wilson (1990, Oregon), Charlotte Lopez-Ayanna (1993, Vermont), Vanessa Minnillo (1998, South Carolina) and Shelley Hennig (2004, Louisiana). The current titleholder is Kaliegh Garris of Connecticut who was crowned on April 28, 2019 at Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nevada.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List of Miss Teen USA runners-up -- 1st runners-up",
"title": "Miss Teen USA",
"uid": "List_of_Miss_Teen_USA_titleholders_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Teen_USA"
} | 4,076 |
4077 | James_Wattana_0 | [
[
"Outcome",
"No",
"Year",
"Championship",
"Opponent in the final",
"Score"
],
[
"Runner-up",
"1",
"1989",
"Asian Open",
"Stephen Hendry",
"6-9"
],
[
"Winner",
"1",
"1992",
"Strachan Open",
"John Parrott",
"9-5"
],
[
"Runner-up",
"2",
"1992",
"British Open",
"Jimmy White",
"7-10"
],
[
"Runner-up",
"3",
"1993",
"British Open ( 2 )",
"Steve Davis",
"2-10"
],
[
"Runner-up",
"4",
"1994",
"International Open",
"John Parrott",
"4-9"
],
[
"Winner",
"2",
"1994",
"Thailand Open",
"Steve Davis",
"9-7"
],
[
"Runner-up",
"5",
"1994",
"British Open ( 3 )",
"Ronnie O'Sullivan",
"4-9"
],
[
"Winner",
"3",
"1995",
"Thailand Open ( 2 )",
"Ronnie O'Sullivan",
"9-6"
]
] | {
"intro": "James Wattana (Thai: เจมส์ วัฒนา; born January 17, 1970, as วัฒนา ภู่โอบอ้อม Wattana Pu-Ob-Orm, then renamed รัชพล ภู่โอบอ้อม Ratchapol Pu-Ob-Orm in 2003) is a Thai professional snooker player who now competes in ranking tournaments with an invitational tour card. A professional between 1989 and 2008, and again since 2009, Wattana reached his highest ranking position - world number 3 - for the 1994/1995 season. He has won three ranking tournaments, the 1992 Strachan Open and the Thailand Open in 1994 and 1995, and has finished as the runner-up in a further five ranking events. He twice reached the semi-finals of the World Snooker Championship, in 1993 and 1997. When he was defeated in the semi-finals in 1993 by Jimmy White, it was only Wattana's second appearance in the final televised stages at the Crucible Theatre, his first being the previous year when he lost in the second round to the eventual winner Stephen Hendry.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Career finals -- Ranking finals : 8 ( 3 titles , 5 runner-ups )",
"title": "James Wattana",
"uid": "James_Wattana_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Wattana"
} | 4,077 |
4078 | Mary-Louise_Parker_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"1989",
"Signs of Life",
"Charlotte"
],
[
"1989",
"Longtime Companion",
"Lisa"
],
[
"1991",
"Fried Green Tomatoes",
"Ruth Jamison"
],
[
"1991",
"Grand Canyon",
"Dee"
],
[
"1993",
"Mr . Wonderful",
"Rita"
],
[
"1993",
"Naked in New York",
"Joanne White"
],
[
"1994",
"Bullets over Broadway",
"Ellen"
],
[
"1994",
"The Client",
"Dianne Sway"
],
[
"1995",
"Reckless",
"Pooty"
],
[
"1995",
"Boys on the Side",
"Robin Nickerson"
],
[
"1996",
"The Portrait of a Lady",
"Henrietta Stackpole"
],
[
"1997",
"Murder in Mind",
"Caroline Walker"
],
[
"1997",
"The Maker",
"Officer Emily Peck"
],
[
"1998",
"Goodbye Lover",
"Peggy Blane"
],
[
"1999",
"Let the Devil Wear Black",
"Julia Hirsch"
],
[
"1999",
"The Five Senses",
"Rona"
],
[
"2002",
"Red Dragon",
"Molly Graham"
],
[
"2002",
"The Quality of Mercy",
"Sarah Richardson"
],
[
"2002",
"Pipe Dream",
"Toni Edelman"
],
[
"2004",
"Saved !",
"Lillian Cummings"
]
] | {
"intro": "Mary-Louise Parker (born August 2, 1964) is an American actress and writer. After making her stage debut as Rita in a Broadway production of Craig Lucas's Prelude to a Kiss in 1990 (for which she received a Tony Award nomination), Parker came to prominence for film roles in Grand Canyon (1991), Fried Green Tomatoes (1991), The Client (1994), Bullets over Broadway (1994), Boys on the Side (1995), The Portrait of a Lady (1996), and The Maker (1997). Among stage and independent film appearances thereafter, Parker received the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for her portrayal of Catherine Llewellyn in David Auburn's Proof in 2001, among other accolades. Between 2001 and 2006, she recurred as Amy Gardner on the NBC television series The West Wing, for which she was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series in 2002. She received both the Golden Globe and Primetime Emmy Awards for her portrayal of Harper Pitt on the acclaimed HBO television miniseries Angels in America in 2003. Parker went on to enjoy large success as Nancy Botwin, the lead role on the television series Weeds, which ran from 2005 to 2012 and for which she received three nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series between 2007 and 2009 and received the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Television Series Musical or Comedy in 2006. Her later film appearances include roles in The Spiderwick Chronicles (2008), Red (2010), R.I.P.D. (2013), and Red 2 (2013). Since 2007, Parker has contributed articles to Esquire magazine and published her memoir, Dear Mr. You, in 2015. In 2017, she starred as Roma Guy on the ABC television miniseries When We Rise. In 2018, she appeared as a political consultant in the show Billions on Showtime.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Film",
"title": "Mary-Louise Parker",
"uid": "Mary-Louise_Parker_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary-Louise_Parker"
} | 4,078 |
4079 | List_of_games_containing_time_travel_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Year",
"Platform ( s )",
"Description"
],
[
"Achron",
"2011",
"Linux , Mac OS X , Windows",
"This game has single-player and multi-player free-form time travel . Players can play at different points in time simultaneously and can stop , slow , and fast forward through the flow of time . Players can also send units through time"
],
[
"Blinx",
"2002",
"Xbox",
"This is a single-player 3D platformer with time travel . Players can exert some control over time itself ; slowing , speeding up , recording , reversing or stopping its flow entirely"
],
[
"Blinx 2",
"2004",
"Xbox",
"This is a single-player 3D platformer with time travel , the sequel to Blinx . Players can exert some control over time itself ; slowing , speeding up , recording , reversing or stopping its flow entirely"
],
[
"Braid",
"2008",
"Mac OS X , Windows , Linux , Xbox 360",
"The protagonist uses many time traveling elements incorporated into gameplay . Each chapter explores a different time travel gameplay effect"
],
[
"Chrono Trigger",
"1995",
"Super NES , Nintendo DS ,",
"The game contains various modes of time travel transport at the player 's free will , including portals called Gates and , later in gameplay , a flying time machine called the Epoch"
],
[
"Chronomaster",
"1995",
"MS-DOS",
"About 1/3 of the game is set in pocket universes in which time was stopped , while the heroes move in a bubble of normal time . Many puzzles involve restoring normal flow of time in a localized area - only for select few characters and objects"
],
[
"Chronotron",
"2008",
"Browser",
"The player uses a time machine which can go back to a certain point in time to cooperate with himself to complete puzzles"
],
[
"Cursor*10",
"2008",
"Browser",
"Cooperate with your ( past ) self to click triangles to advance to each level , within a time limit"
],
[
"Day of the Tentacle",
"1993",
"Amiga , Mac OS , MS-DOS",
"The player is in simultaneous control of three separate characters in the same location , initially at the same point in time . For the majority of the game , they are at three different points in time . Actions in one time period affect the circumstances in proceeding time periods"
],
[
"Evoland 2",
"2015",
"Mac OS X , Windows",
"Players travel to four different time periods by using Magilith stone pillars . By jumping through time , players can change consequences in the future to alter the world"
],
[
"Final Fantasy XIII-2",
"2011",
"PlayStation 3 , Xbox 360",
"Player can move across different timelines and reverse them to redo them by the Historia Crux system"
],
[
"Forza Motorsport 3",
"2009",
"Xbox 360",
"During races , if a player 's vehicle is involved in a normally race-ending crash , he can use the Flashback feature to effectively reverse time in order to rectify the mistake"
],
[
"Gateways",
"2012",
"Windows",
"Gateways is a 2D platform game set in the lab of an inventor called Ed following an outbreak of a number of his more creative experiments . Alongside the traditional platform elements such as jumping on enemies ' heads , spikes and moving platforms are the gateway guns . The gateway guns allow the player to place two gateways on the walls , floors and ceilings of the lab so that when he passes through one , he emerges from the other . One gateway gun does n't just connect to the other 's location , but also its time , allowing Ed to travel back in time and encounter earlier versions of himself"
],
[
"Gemini : Heroes Reborn",
"2016",
"Windows , Xbox One , PlayStation 4",
"Using a variety of superpowers such as telekinesis and time travel , Cassandra must battle her way through an enemy-filled underground facility called The Quarry in order to save her abducted friend and solve a family mystery"
],
[
"The Legend of Zelda : Majora 's Mask",
"2000",
"Nintendo 64 , GameCube , Nintendo 3DS",
"Playable character Link has only three days in order to avoid a moon crash into the country of Termina . In order to return to the first day , he uses the Ocarina of Time , which also allows him to slow the flow of time ( or restore if it was slowed ) or advance half a day"
],
[
"The Legend of Zelda : Ocarina of Time",
"1998",
"Nintendo 64 , GameCube , iQue Player , Nintendo 3DS",
"Link can travel back and forth through time via the Master Sword and the Temple of Time to complete puzzles as a young boy or adult man"
],
[
"The Legend of Zelda : Oracle of Ages",
"2001",
"Game Boy Color",
"Link uses the Harp of Ages to travel between the distant past and the present . Actions in the past can change the present world"
],
[
"The Legend of Zelda : Skyward Sword",
"2011",
"Wii",
"The player must activate Timeshift Stones in order to make certain areas time travel , including making robots , mine carts , thorny gates or lasers disappear"
],
[
"LittleBigPlanet Karting",
"2012",
"PlayStation 3",
"There is a power-up called the Fast Forward that sends the player to the location he would be in , in the near future"
],
[
"The Magic of Scheherazade",
"1987",
"NES",
"The game allows time travel between five different time periods"
]
] | {
"intro": "Many games contain time travel elements. This list includes video games, board games, pen and paper role-playing games and play by mail games which strongly feature time travel.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Video games -- Time travel as a gameplay element",
"title": "List of games containing time travel",
"uid": "List_of_games_containing_time_travel_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_games_containing_time_travel"
} | 4,079 |
4080 | List_of_mammals_of_Alabama_1 | [
[
"Scientific name",
"Common name",
"Family",
"Conservation concern"
],
[
"Tadarida brasiliensis",
"Mexican free-tailed bat Brazilian free-tailed bat",
"Molossidae",
"High"
],
[
"Corynorhinus rafinesquii",
"Rafinesque 's big-eared bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Highest"
],
[
"Eptesicus fuscus",
"big brown bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Lowest"
],
[
"Lasionycteris noctivagans",
"silver-haired bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Moderate"
],
[
"Lasiurus borealis",
"eastern red bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Lowest"
],
[
"Lasiurus seminolus",
"Seminole bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Lowest"
],
[
"Lasiurus cinereus",
"hoary bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Moderate"
],
[
"Lasiurus intermedius",
"northern yellow bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"High"
],
[
"Myotis lucifugus",
"little brown bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"High"
],
[
"Myotis austroriparius",
"southeastern myotis",
"Vespertilionidae",
"High"
],
[
"Myotis grisescens",
"gray bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Highest/ U.S . Fish and Wildlife lists as endangered"
],
[
"Myotis septentrionalis",
"northern long-eared myotis",
"Vespertilionidae",
"High"
],
[
"Myotis leibii",
"eastern small-footed myotis",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Moderate"
],
[
"Myotis sodalis",
"Indiana myotis",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Highest/ U.S . Fish and Wildlife lists as endangered"
],
[
"Nycticeius humeralis",
"evening bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Lowest"
],
[
"Perimyotis subflavus",
"eastern pipistrelle tricolored bat",
"Vespertilionidae",
"Lowest"
]
] | {
"intro": "The U.S. state of Alabama is home to these known indigenous mammal species. Historically, the state's indigenous species included one armadillo species, sixteen bat species, thirteen carnivore species, six insectivore species, one opossum species, four rabbit species, twenty-two rodent species, and three ungulate species. Four of these native species have become extirpated within the state, including the American bison, cougar, elk, and the red wolf. There are six known introduced mammal species in the state. These include the black rat, brown rat, fallow deer, feral swine, house mouse, and nutria. Several other mammal species have had verifiable sightings within the state, but are believed by biologists to be without established breeding populations. These include the California sea lion (in Mobile Bay), ring-tailed cat, and jaguarundi. Human predation and habitat destruction has placed several mammal species at risk of extirpation or extinction. The Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources lists the conservation status of each species within the state with a rank of lowest, low, moderate, high, and highest concern.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Bats",
"title": "List of mammals of Alabama",
"uid": "List_of_mammals_of_Alabama_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_of_Alabama"
} | 4,080 |
4081 | List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(crafts:_others)_12 | [
[
"Name",
"Remarks",
"Date",
"Type",
"Present location"
],
[
"Armour laced with red threads ( 赤絲威鎧 , akaitōdoshi yoroi )",
"Helmet and large sleeves with chrysanthemum motif ; also known as kiku ichimonji no yoroikabuta ( 菊一文字の鎧兜 ) ; nomination includes the helmet and a Chinese style chest ( 唐櫃 , karabitsu )",
"1185 late Kamakura period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Aomori Hachinohe Kushibiki Hachimangu Kushibiki Hachiman-gū ( 櫛引八幡宮 ) , Hachinohe , Aomori"
],
[
"Armour with white triangular-pattern thread lacing ( 白絲威褄取鎧 , shiroitōdoshi tsumadori yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet , cuirass , skirt and a Chinese style chest ( 唐櫃 , karabitsu )",
"1336 late Nanboku-chō period , 14th century",
"Ō-yoroi ; iron , copper , gold , leather , lacquer , and silk ; height of helmet bowl : 13.5 cm ( 5.3 in ) , cuirass height : 32.5 cm ( 12.8 in ) , skirt height : 29.5 cm ( 11.6 in )",
"Aomori Hachinohe Kushibiki Hachimangu Kushibiki Hachiman-gū ( 櫛引八幡宮 ) , Hachinohe , Aomori"
],
[
"Armour laced with red threads ( 赤絲威鎧 , akaitōdoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet ; dedicated by Hatakeyama Shigetada in 1191",
"1100 late Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Tokyo Ome Musashi Mitake Shrine Musashi Mitake Shrine ( 武蔵御嶽神社 ) , Ōme , Tokyo"
],
[
"Black dōmaru armour laced with leather cords ( 黒韋威胴丸 , kuro kawaodoshi dōmaru )",
"Nomination includes the helmet and ōsode ( 大袖 ) ( long sleeves )",
"1400 Muromachi period , 15th century",
"Dō-maru",
"Nara Nara Kasuga Taisha Kasuga-taisha , Nara , Nara"
],
[
"Armour laced with red threads ( 赤絲威鎧 , akaitōdoshi yoroi )",
"With bamboo , tiger , sparrow motif ; nomination includes the helmet ; said to have been dedicated by Minamoto no Yoshitsune ; one of two similar armours at Kasuga-taisha",
"1185 Kamakura period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Nara Nara Kasuga Taisha Kasuga-taisha , Nara , Nara"
],
[
"Armour laced with red threads ( 赤絲威鎧 , akaitōdoshi yoroi )",
"With plum and Japanese bush-warbler motif ; nomination includes the helmet ; one of two similar armours at Kasuga-taisha",
"1185 Kamakura period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Nara Nara Kasuga Taisha Kasuga-taisha , Nara , Nara"
],
[
"Armour laced with red threads ( 赤絲威鎧 , akaitōdoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination does not include the helmet ; said to have been dedicated by Minamoto no Yoshitsune",
"0794 Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Ehime Imabari Oyamazumi Shrine Ōyamazumi Shrine , Imabari , Ehime"
],
[
"Black dōmaru armour laced with leather cords ( 黒韋威矢筈札胴丸 , kuro kawaodoshi yahazuzane dōmaru )",
"Offered by Kusunoki Masashige ; nomination includes the helmet",
"1336 late Nanboku-chō period",
"Dō-maru ; laced with leather cords ( kawaodoshi )",
"Nara Nara Kasuga Taisha Kasuga-taisha , Nara , Nara"
],
[
"Armour laced with white threads ( 白絲威鎧 , shiroitōdoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet",
"1300 late Kamakura period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Shimane Izumo Hinomisaki Shrine Hinomisaki Shrine ( 日御碕神社 ) , Izumo , Shimane"
],
[
"Armour with cherry-patterned leather lacing ( 小桜韋威鎧 , kozakura kawaodoshi yoroi )",
"Handed down in the Takeda clan ; also called tatenashi yoroi ( 楯無鎧 , lit . nospear cuirass or shieldless or armour that needs not shield ) ; nomination includes the helmet",
"1100 late Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi ; lacing pattern of cherry blossoms printed on leather ( kozakura ) , laced with leather cords ( kawaodoshi )",
"Yamanashi Koshu Kandaten Shrine Kandaten Shrine ( 菅田天神社 ) , Kōshū , Yamanashi"
],
[
"Red leather armour laced with leather cords ( 赤韋威鎧 , aka kawaodoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet",
"1100 late Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi ; black lacquered iron and leather kozane ( 小札 ) ( c. 1800 small scales laced together with leather cords ( kawaodoshi ) ) , metal plates for the helmet ; torso height : 40 cm ( 16 in ) ( front ) , 44 cm ( 17 in ) ( back ) ; circumference : 91 cm ( 36 in ) , tassets height : 27 cm ( 11 in ) , helmet height : 13.3 cm ( 5.2 in ) , diameter : 20 cm ( 7.9 in ) , large sleeves : 46 cm × 33 cm ( 18 in × 13 in ) , weight c. 25 kg ( 55 lb )",
"Okayama Okayama Okayama Prefectural Museum Okayama Prefectural Museum , Okayama , Okayama"
],
[
"Armour with cherry-patterned yellow leather lacing ( 小桜韋黄返威鎧 , kozakura kawa kigaeshi odoshi yoroi )",
"Formerly belonged to Minamoto no Tametomo ; nomination includes the helmet",
"1100 late Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Hiroshima Hatsukaichi Itsukushima Shrine Itsukushima Shrine , Hatsukaichi , Hiroshima"
],
[
"Armour laced with light light green silk braided threads ( 浅黄綾威鎧 , asagi ayaodoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet",
"1185 Kamakura period , 12th century",
"Ō-yoroi ; black lacquered iron and leather kozane ( 小札 ) ( small scales laced together )",
"Hiroshima Hatsukaichi Itsukushima Shrine Itsukushima Shrine , Hatsukaichi , Hiroshima"
],
[
"Armour laced with navy blue threads ( 紺絲威鎧 , konitoodoshi yoroi )",
"Nomination includes the helmet ; offered by Taira no Shigemori",
"0794 Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi ; black lacquered iron and leather scales ( 小札 , kozane ) laced together with a thick navy blue thread ; silver plating",
"Hiroshima Hatsukaichi Itsukushima Shrine Itsukushima Shrine , Hatsukaichi , Hiroshima"
],
[
"Black dōmaru armour laced with leather cords ( 黒韋威胴丸 , kuro kawaodoshi dōmaru )",
"Nomination includes the helmet",
"0794 Heian period",
"Dō-maru ; black lacquered iron and leather scales ( 小札 , kozane ) laced together with leather cords ( kawaodoshi )",
"Hiroshima Hatsukaichi Itsukushima Shrine Itsukushima Shrine , Hatsukaichi , Hiroshima"
],
[
"Armour laced with navy blue threads ( 紺絲威鎧 , konitoodoshi yoroi )",
"Belonged to Kōno Michinobu ( 河野通信 ) ; nomination includes the helmet",
"0794 Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi ; scales ( 小札 , kozane ) laced together with a thick navy blue thread",
"Ehime Imabari Oyamazumi Shrine Ōyamazumi Shrine , Imabari , Ehime"
],
[
"Armour laced in omodaka ( water plantain ) pattern ( 沢瀉威鎧 , omodaka odoshi yoroi )",
"Triangular lacing pattern resembling the leaves of the water plantain ; nomination includes the helmet ; oldest ō-yoroi armour",
"0794 early Heian period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Ehime Imabari Oyamazumi Shrine Ōyamazumi Shrine , Imabari , Ehime"
],
[
"Armour laced with purple silk braided threads ( 紫綾威鎧 , murasaki ayaodoshi yoroi )",
"Offered by Minamoto no Yoritomo ; nomination does not include a helmet",
"1185 Kamakura period",
"Ō-yoroi",
"Ehime Imabari Oyamazumi Shrine Ōyamazumi Shrine , Imabari , Ehime"
],
[
"Gauntlet ( 籠手 , kote )",
"Formerly in possession of Minamoto no Yoshitsune",
"1200 Kamakura period , 13th century",
"Pair of gauntlets or armored sleeves ; iron , copper , gold , silk ; length of each : 66.6 cm ( 26.2 in )",
"Nara Nara Kasuga Taisha Kasuga-taisha , Nara , Nara"
]
] | {
"intro": "The term National Treasure has been used in Japan to denote cultural properties since 1897,\nalthough the definition and the criteria have changed since the introduction of the term. The crafts items in the list adhere to the current definition and have been designated National Treasures according to the Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties that came into effect on June 9, 1951. The items are selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology based on their especially high historical or artistic value. The list presents 131 entries from Classical to early modern Japan, spanning from the 7th century Asuka to the 18th century Edo period. The number of items is higher, however, since groups of related objects have been joined as single entries. The listed objects are of many types and include household goods, objects related to Buddhism, armour and harnesses. Some of the oldest objects were imported from China at the time. The listed items consist of materials such as wood over clay or to bronze. Often the articles were decorated using a variety of artistic techniques like gilding of precious metals, line engraving, maki-e, mother of pearl inlay or lacquer. The objects are housed in Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines or museums. The objects in this list represent about half of the 253 National Treasures in the category crafts. They are complemented by 110 swords and 12 Japanese sword mountings National Treasures of the List of National Treasures of Japan (crafts: swords).",
"section_text": "Armour has been employed in battles in Japan since the Yayoi period . Some of the oldest extant items from the 4th to the 7th centuries were excavated from kofun and have been designated as archaeological National Treasures . These ancient armours were of two types : a tight fitting solid plate cuirass ( tankō ) and a skirted lamellar type ( keikō ) , both believed to be based on Chinese or Korean prototypes . [ 135 ] [ 136 ] [ 137 ] This list includes more recent pieces of armour , developed as result of a trend toward ( lamellar ) scale armour that began in Japan in the 6th to the 7th centuries and matured in the mid-Heian period ( 9th to 10th centuries ) . [ 138 ] Combining materials such as leather and silk with iron or steel parts , these armours had the advantage of being light , flexible , foldable and shock absorbent . They were generally lacquered to protect them from the humid climate and were used widely from the late Heian period to the mid-14th century . [ 136 ] [ 138 ] [ 139 ] [ 140 ] A complete set consisted of a helmet , mask , neck guard , throat protector , breastplate with shoulder guards , sleeve armour , skirt , greaves , shoes and a pennant attached to the back . [ 141 ] [ 142 ] During this time , there were two popular kinds of armour : the ō-yoroi ( lit . `` great armour '' ) with a boxlike appearance , mainly worn by high-ranking samurai on horseback , and the lighter and more flexible dō-maru that wrapped around the body and was initially worn by lower-ranking foot soldiers . [ 143 ] [ 144 ] [ 145 ] The ō-yoroi was made of leather and iron lames bound together in horizontal layers , ornamented and reinforced with leather , silk and gilt metal . [ 140 ] It originated around the 10th century but was only commonly used starting with the Genpei War at the end of the 12th century . [ 146 ] Being the most complete and elaborate Japanese armour , it was also worn for ceremonies . [ 147 ] The tighter fitting dō-maru , developed in the 11th century , was generally made of a combination of leather and metal and did not include a solid breastplate or sleeves . [ 145 ] [ 146 ] In many cases its armour plates were replaced with scales of metal , leather or whalebone laced together with silk or leather cords . [ 148 ] Even though it was a plainer armour compared to the ō-yoroi , upper class samurai started to adopt it around 1300 , as battles began to be fought on foot favouring a more comfortable suit . [ 143 ] [ 146 ] [ 149 ] Three dō-maru , fifteen ō-yoroi armours and one pair of gauntlets have been designated as National Treasures . Most of the items include a helmet and large sleeve protectors . [ 4 ]",
"section_title": "Treasures -- Armour",
"title": "List of National Treasures of Japan (crafts: others)",
"uid": "List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(crafts:_others)_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(crafts:_others)"
} | 4,081 |
4082 | Sykes_Churches_Trail_1 | [
[
"Dedication",
"Location",
"Notes",
"OS Grid square"
],
[
"St Andrew",
"East Heslerton",
"Newly built in 1877 to a design by G.E.Street and is now a Grade I listed building",
"SE927767"
],
[
"St Hilda",
"Sherburn , North Yorkshire",
"A Grade I listed building restored by the architect C. Hodgson Fowler between 1909 and 1913",
"SE959774"
],
[
"St Andrew",
"Kirby Grindalythe",
"Restored in 1872-5 to a design by G.E.Street and after a recent grant of about £175,000 from English Heritage the church is now a Grade II* listed building",
"SE903675"
],
[
"St Mary",
"West Lutton",
"Set in the Great Wold Valley and has an atmosphere of peace and wide open spaces . The architect was G. E. Street and the stained glass is by Burlinson and Grylls",
"SE930692"
],
[
"St Peter",
"Helperthorpe",
"Stands above the village . The original wooden church was pulled down in 1872 and replaced in 1875 . The church and vicarage were designed by architect G.E.Street",
"SE952704"
],
[
"St Andrew",
"Weaverthorpe",
"A stone built church with a Norman tower and unusual round staircase which protrudes on the exterior of the tower . It was restored by G.E.Street in 1870-72 and is Grade I listed",
"SE966711"
],
[
"St Peter",
"Langtoft , East Riding of Yorkshire",
"This was a restoration , by C. Hodgson Fowler , in 1900-03 when the north aisle was added",
"TA007670"
],
[
"St Margaret",
"Hilston",
"Probably of 12th-century origin , it was demolished and rebuilt to designs by J. L. Pearson in 1861-2 . This new church suffered extensive bomb damage in 1941 and was rebuilt in 1956-7 to designs by Mr. Francis Johnson of Bridlington , reusing a Norman doorway from the original church and some 19th-century stained glass windows",
"TA289335"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Sykes Churches Trail is a tour of East Yorkshire churches which were built, rebuilt or restored by the Sykes family of Sledmere House in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The tour was devised by the East Yorkshire Historic Churches Group and is divided into a southern circuit and a planned northern circuit. Work on the churches was financed by Sir Tatton Sykes, 4th Baronet (1772-1863) and his son Sir Tatton Sykes, 5th Baronet (1826-1913). The 4th Baronet engaged John Loughborough Pearson to work on churches at Garton on the Wolds, Kirkburn, Bishop Wilton and Hilston in Holderness. The 5th Baronet worked with the architects C. Hodgson Fowler, G.E.Street and Temple Moore. His achievements were far greater than his father's, and unparalleled elsewhere in Britain. He financed work on 17 rural churches between 1866 and 1913.",
"section_text": "These include several churches previously in the East Riding which , after boundary changes , are now in North Yorkshire . [ 3 ] Other Sykes churches Key EHSKWHWeLHi EH = East Heslerton H = Helperthorpe Hi = Hilston K = Kirby Grindalythe L = Langtoft S = Sherburn W = West Lutton WE = Weaverthorpe",
"section_title": "Other Sykes churches",
"title": "Sykes Churches Trail",
"uid": "Sykes_Churches_Trail_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sykes_Churches_Trail"
} | 4,082 |
4083 | List_of_fictional_pigs_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Origin",
"System ( s )",
"Notes"
],
[
"Bad Piggies",
"Angry Birds",
"Mobile",
"A group of pigs who want to eat the Birds ' eggs"
],
[
"Bilgemuck",
"The Elder Scrolls V : Skyrim - Dragonborn",
"PC , Xbox 360 , PlayStation 3",
"Bilgemuck is a unique bristleback found on Solstheim . He can be encountered during the quest The Chief of Thirsk Hall , when the chief asks you to bring Bilgemuck back to his pen . Bilgemuck drops boar tusks and boar meat if he is killed"
],
[
"Ganon",
"The Legend of Zelda",
"",
"Although he originated as a humanoid being known as a Gerudo ( and has been seen in that form numerous times ) , Ganon is also known for his bestial piglike form"
],
[
"Hogzilla",
"Cabela 's Dangerous Hunts 2",
"",
"A huge wild boar and boss villain"
],
[
"Padpork",
"Warsow",
"PC",
"A futuristic , sentient pig that can use advanced weaponry to massacre its enemies"
],
[
"Pey ' j",
"Beyond Good & Evil",
"",
""
],
[
"Pig",
"Minecraft",
"PC , Xbox 360 , Xbox One , PlayStation 3",
"When struck by lightning , becomes a humanoid zombified version known as a Zombie Pigman"
],
[
"Pigma Dengar",
"Star Fox",
"SNES",
""
],
[
"Professor Chops",
"Donkey Kong Country Returns",
"Wii , Nintendo 3DS",
"Serves as the level 's checkpoint"
],
[
"Snorty",
"Cabela 's Big Game Hunter ( 2007 video game )",
"",
"A huge male Wild Boar in the New Zealand level"
],
[
"Tutty",
"Aion : The Tower of Eternity",
"",
""
],
[
"Chris P. Bacon",
"Banjo Tooie",
"N64",
"A pig from Jolly Rodgers Lagoon"
]
] | {
"intro": "This page contains a list of pigs in various categories of fiction, including pigs and warthogss.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "In media -- Video games",
"title": "List of fictional pigs",
"uid": "List_of_fictional_pigs_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_pigs"
} | 4,083 |
4084 | List_of_fictional_antiheroes_1 | [
[
"Character",
"Film",
"Portrayed by",
"Year"
],
[
"Kevin O-Dog Anderson",
"Menace II Society",
"Larenz Tate",
"1993"
],
[
"Betelgeuse",
"Beetlejuice",
"Michael Keaton",
"1988"
],
[
"Travis Bickle",
"Taxi Driver",
"Robert De Niro",
"1976"
],
[
"Rick Blaine",
"Casablanca",
"Humphrey Bogart",
"1942"
],
[
"Louis Bloom",
"Nightcrawler",
"Jake Gyllenhaal",
"2014"
],
[
"Jason Bourne",
"Bourne film series",
"Matt Damon",
"2002"
],
[
"Brandon Breyer",
"Brightburn",
"Jackson A. Dunn",
"2019"
],
[
"Brodie Bruce",
"Mallrats",
"Jason Lee",
"1995"
],
[
"Harry Callahan",
"Dirty Harry",
"Clint Eastwood",
"1971"
],
[
"Jack Carter",
"Get Carter",
"Michael Caine",
"1971"
],
[
"Chev Chelios",
"Crank Crank : High Voltage",
"Jason Statham",
"2006 2009"
],
[
"Barnabas Collins",
"Dark Shadows",
"Johnny Depp",
"2012"
],
[
"John Constantine",
"Constantine",
"Keanu Reeves",
"2005"
],
[
"Rooster Cogburn",
"True Grit ( 1969 ) Rooster Cogburn True Grit ( 2010 )",
"John Wayne Jeff Bridges",
"1969 1975 2010"
],
[
"Michael Corleone",
"The Godfather film series",
"Al Pacino",
"1972"
],
[
"Rick Deckard",
"Blade Runner Blade Runner 2049",
"Harrison Ford",
"1982"
],
[
"Django",
"Django Unchained",
"Jamie Foxx",
"2012"
],
[
"DJay",
"Hustle & Flow",
"Terrence Howard",
"2005"
],
[
"Frank Drebin",
"The Naked Gun",
"Leslie Nielsen",
"1988"
],
[
"Judge Dredd",
"Dredd",
"Karl Urban",
"2012"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list is for characters in fictional works who exemplify the qualities of an antihero - a protagonist whose characteristics include the following:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Film",
"title": "List of fictional antiheroes",
"uid": "List_of_fictional_antiheroes_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_antiheroes"
} | 4,084 |
4085 | Riverview_Gold_Cup_3 | [
[
"Year",
"1st",
"2nd",
"3rd"
],
[
"1999",
"Redlands",
"Shore",
"Cranbrook"
],
[
"2000",
"King 's",
"Shore",
"Grammar"
],
[
"2001",
"St Ignatius '",
"King 's",
"Newington"
],
[
"2002",
"King 's",
"Grammar",
"St Ignatius '"
],
[
"2003",
"King 's",
"St Ignatius '",
"Redlands"
],
[
"2004",
"Shore",
"St Ignatius '",
"St Joseph 's"
],
[
"2005",
"Shore",
"St Ignatius '",
"King 's"
],
[
"2006",
"King 's",
"St Joseph 's",
"Redlands"
],
[
"2007",
"Shore",
"Redlands",
"Newington"
],
[
"2008",
"Shore",
"St Ignatius '",
"King 's"
],
[
"2009",
"Shore",
"Redlands",
"St Ignatius '"
],
[
"2010",
"King 's",
"Scots",
"St Ignatius '"
],
[
"2011",
"King 's",
"St Ignatius '",
"St Augustine 's"
],
[
"2012",
"King 's",
"St Ignatius '",
"St Joseph 's"
],
[
"2013",
"St Augustine 's",
"Shore",
"St Ignatius '"
],
[
"2014",
"St Augustine 's",
"St Joseph 's",
"Newington"
],
[
"2015",
"St Augustine 's",
"King 's",
"St Ignatius"
],
[
"2018",
"King 's",
"Shore",
"Newington"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Riverview Gold Cup Regatta is a rowing regatta with limited club events and mainly school crew events, held annually by Saint Ignatius' College at Riverview, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is an official Rowing NSW event within the New South Wales club season. The Riverview Gold Cup is the trophy contested by the men's open senior eight - the blue riband event of the day. Founded by Father Joseph Dalton, S.J., the founding Rector of Saint Ignatius' College, it is one of the oldest rowing events in Australia and the oldest New South Wales schoolboy regatta. It is held annually, typically in March and raced over 1400m on Sydney's Lane Cove River. As of 2018 it comprises 24 school crew events, 6 senior open club events, 2 masters events and 2 invitational sculling events.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Regatta winners ( since 1999 ) -- Schoolboy 1st IV for the Sydney University Cup",
"title": "Riverview Gold Cup",
"uid": "Riverview_Gold_Cup_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riverview_Gold_Cup"
} | 4,085 |
4086 | KL_Monorail_0 | [
[
"Station Code",
"Station Name",
"Platform type",
"Interchange/Notes"
],
[
"MR1",
"KL Sentral",
"Terminus ( Spanish solution )",
"Southern terminus . Accessed via NU Sentral Shopping Mall if coming from KL Sentral ( main terminal building ) . Connecting station ( requiring exiting the station 's paid area ) to : KA01 KS01 KTM Komuter Seremban Line , Port Klang Line , Skypark Link and ETS KJ15 LRT Kelana Jaya Line KE1 KT1 ERL KLIA Ekspres and KLIA Transit Additional 850 meters walking distance to SBK15 Muzium Negara for the MRT Sungai Buloh-Kajang Line"
],
[
"MR2",
"Tun Sambanthan",
"Side",
""
],
[
"MR3",
"Maharajalela",
"Side",
"Exit to Stadium Merdeka"
],
[
"MR4",
"Hang Tuah",
"Side",
"Interchange station to AG9 SP9 LRT Ampang and Sri Petaling Lines"
],
[
"MR5",
"Imbi",
"Side",
"Exit to Berjaya Times Square"
],
[
"MR6",
"AirAsia-Bukit Bintang",
"Side",
"Connecting station to SBK18A Bukit Bintang station on the MRT Sungai Buloh-Kajang Line . Pedestrian access to KJ10 KLCC station on LRT Kelana Jaya Line is possible via elevated walkway from Pavilion mall"
],
[
"MR7",
"Raja Chulan",
"Side",
"Pedestrian access to KJ10 KLCC station on the LRT Kelana Jaya Line is possible via elevated walkway from Pavilion mall"
],
[
"MR8",
"Bukit Nanas",
"Side",
"Connecting station to KJ12 Dang Wangi on the LRT Kelana Jaya Line"
],
[
"MR9",
"Medan Tuanku",
"Side",
"Pedestrian access to AG5 SP5 Sultan Ismail on the LRT Ampang and Sri Petaling Lines via 580 meter elevated walkway"
],
[
"MR10",
"Chow Kit",
"Side",
""
],
[
"MR11",
"Titiwangsa",
"Terminus ( Spanish solution )",
"Northern terminus . Interchange station to AG3 SP3 LRT Ampang and Sri Petaling Lines . Future integration with SSP13 MRT Sungai Buloh-Serdang-Putrajaya Line ( 2022 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The KL Monorail Line is the eighth rail transit line and the one of the operational monorail systems in Malaysia. Operated by Rapid Rail, a subsidiary of Prasarana Malaysia, it is one of the components of the Klang Valley Integrated Transit System. The line is numbered 8 and coloured Light Green on official transit maps.",
"section_text": "The line consists of a single dual-way line that links areas of inner Kuala Lumpur previously not served by rail transport , namely Brickfields , Bukit Bintang , and Chow Kit , with pre-existing LRT , MRT and/or KTM Komuter stations at KL Sentral , Muzium Negara Hang Tuah , Bukit Bintang , Bukit Nanas , and Titiwangsa . The two terminis are on a single track with a Spanish solution layout . The stations are designed as elevated structures with ticketing facilities on either the ground level ( as seen in the KL Sentral station ) or the first-floor level . The platforms are on the top floor , separated from the monorail lines by fencing . They were originally covered by large canvas roofs , which were replaced in 2014 by aluminium zinc roofs . [ 14 ] Certain stations are situated above roadways , or are slightly longer than others . Each station used to be designated with a sponsor , with route maps associating each station with a particular product brand . The depot is between KL Sentral and Tun Sambanthan .",
"section_title": "List of stations",
"title": "KL Monorail",
"uid": "KL_Monorail_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KL_Monorail"
} | 4,086 |
4087 | List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics_21 | [
[
"Name",
"Country",
"Event",
"Date of violation",
"Banned substance ( s ) / Anti-doping rule violation",
"Sanction"
],
[
"Martti Vainio",
"Finland",
"Long distance",
"1984 1983-1984",
"Positive test : Metenolone Self admittance : Blood transfusions , Testosterone",
"18 months ( Reduced from life ban )"
],
[
"Euclides Varela",
"Cape Verde",
"Long distance",
"2012",
"3 whereabouts failures",
"18 months"
],
[
"Roland Varga",
"Hungary",
"Discus throw",
"2006",
"Boldenone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Andrei Varantsou",
"Belarus",
"Hammer throw",
"2005 ( Sample retested 2012 ) January 2013 October 2013",
"Clomiphene , Oxandrolone Oral Turinabol Oral Turinabol",
"4 years Life ban"
],
[
"Sebastian Varga",
"Romania",
"",
"2006 2009",
"Stanozolol Metabolites of metandienone",
"2 years 8 years"
],
[
"Aleksandr Vashchilo",
"Belarus",
"Hammer throw",
"2005",
"Cannabis",
"Public warning"
],
[
"Cristina Vasiloiu",
"Romania",
"Middle distance",
"2008",
"EPO",
""
],
[
"Nikolai Vedehin",
"Estonia",
"Middle distance",
"2015",
"Trimetazidine",
"4 years"
],
[
"Velko Velev",
"Bulgaria",
"Hammer throw",
"1975",
"Anabolic steroids",
""
],
[
"Michael Velter",
"Belgium",
"Triple jump",
"2006 2011",
"Cannabis Cannabis",
"3 months 21 months"
],
[
"Venelina Veneva",
"Bulgaria",
"High jump",
"2007",
"Testosterone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Oksana Verner",
"Kazakhstan",
"Middle distance",
"2010",
"Stanozolol",
"2 years"
],
[
"Anna Verouli",
"Greece",
"Javelin throw",
"1984",
"Nandrolone",
""
],
[
"Ioan Vieru",
"Romania",
"Sprinting",
"2004",
"Stanozolol",
"2 years"
],
[
"Saurav Vij",
"India",
"Shot put",
"2010",
"Methylhexaneamine",
"2 years"
],
[
"Igor Vinichenko",
"Russia",
"Hammer throw",
"2013",
"Dehydrochloromethyltestosterone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Roman Virastyuk",
"Ukraine",
"Shot put",
"1991",
"",
""
],
[
"Innis Viviers",
"South Africa",
"Sprinting",
"2003 2005",
"Stanozolol Stanozolol",
"2 years Life ban"
],
[
"Aleksey Voyevodin",
"Russia",
"Race walking",
"2008",
"EPO",
"2 years"
],
[
"Nadezhda Vorobieva",
"Russia",
"Middle distance",
"2004",
"Pemoline",
"2 years"
]
] | {
"intro": "The use of performance-enhancing drugs (doping) is prohibited within the sport of athletics. Athletes who are found to have used such banned substances, whether through a positive drugs test, the biological passport system, an investigation or public admission, may receive a competition ban for a length of time which reflects the severity of the infraction. Athletes who are found to have banned substances in their possession, or who tamper with or refuse to submit to drug testing can also receive bans from the sport. Competitive bans may also be given to athletes who test positive for prohibited recreational drugs or stimulants with little performance-enhancing effect for competitors in athletics. The sports body responsible for determining which substances are banned in athletics is the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). Typically, any athlete who tests positive for banned substances after having served a previous ban receives a lifetime ban from the sport of athletics. Many high-profile sportspeople to receive doping bans have come from the sport of athletics, with significant past cases concerning Ben Johnson, Lance Armstrong, Alberto Contador, Shane Warne, Diego Maradona, Shoaib Akhtar, Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery. Furthermore, a number of athletes who underwent state-sponsored doping programmes in East Germany between the 1960s and 1980s were competitors in athletics, but the quality of the international anti-doping work was so poor that only one East German athlete ever tested positive. Following allegations of state-sponsored doping in Russia, the IAAF suspended the country's athletes from competition, including the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "V",
"title": "List of doping cases in athletics",
"uid": "List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics_21",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics"
} | 4,087 |
4088 | Usage_share_of_instant_messaging_clients_0 | [
[
"Instant messenger client",
"Company",
"Usage"
],
[
"Discord",
"Discord inc",
"250 million users ( May 2019 )"
],
[
"eBuddy XMS",
"eBuddy",
"250 million users ( September 2011 )"
],
[
"Facebook Messenger",
"Facebook",
"900 million active users ( April 2016 )"
],
[
"iMessage",
"Apple Inc",
"140 million users ( June 2012 )"
],
[
"Kik Messenger",
"Kik Interactive",
"300 million users ( May 2016 )"
],
[
"Line",
"Naver Corporation",
"217 million monthly active users ( 2016 )"
],
[
"Skype",
"Microsoft",
"300 million monthly active users ( 5 June 2019 ) , 1.55 billion registered users ( 2019 ) , 4.9 million daily active users ( 2 March 2014 ) , 34 million peak online ( February 2012 )"
],
[
"Snapchat",
"Snap Inc",
"301 million monthly active users ( 2016 )"
],
[
"Telegram",
"Telegram Messenger LLP",
"200 million monthly active users ( March 2018 ) , 365 million registered users ( 19 August 2019 )"
],
[
"Tencent QQ",
"Tencent Holdings Limited",
"823 million monthly active users ( July 2019 )"
],
[
"Viber",
"Rakuten",
"260 million monthly active users ( January 2019 ) , 1.095 billion registered users ( March 2019 )"
],
[
"WeChat",
"Tencent Holdings Limited",
"1132.7 million monthly active users ( Q2 '2019 )"
],
[
"WhatsApp",
"Facebook",
"1200 million monthly active users ( January 2017 ) , 1.5 billion registered users ( 31 January 2018 ) , 500 million daily active users ( March 2019 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Instant messaging (IM) technology is a type of online chat that offers real-time text transmission over the Internet. A LAN messenger operates in a similar way over a local area network. Short messages are typically transmitted between two parties, when each user chooses to complete a thought and select send. Some IM applications can use push technology to provide real-time text, which transmits messages character by character, as they are composed. More advanced instant messaging can add file transfer, clickable hyperlinks, Voice over IP, or video chat. Non-IM types of chat include multicast transmission, usually referred to as chat rooms, where participants might be anonymous or might be previously known to each other (for example collaborators on a project that is using chat to facilitate communication). Instant messaging systems tend to facilitate connections between specified known users (often using a contact list also known as a buddy list or friend list). Depending on the IM protocol, the technical architecture can be peer-to-peer (direct point-to-point transmission) or client-server (an Instant message service center retransmits messages from the sender to the communication device). By 2010, instant messaging over the Web was already in sharp decline, in favor of messaging features on social networks. The most popular IM platforms, such as AIM, closed in 2017, and Windows Live Messenger was merged into Skype. Today, most instant messaging takes place on messaging apps which by 2014 had more users than social networks.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "User base -- More than 100 million users",
"title": "Instant messaging",
"uid": "Usage_share_of_instant_messaging_clients_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_messaging"
} | 4,088 |
4089 | 2000_MLS_SuperDraft_4 | [
[
"Pick #",
"MLS team",
"Player",
"Position",
"Affiliation"
],
[
"49",
"MetroStars",
"Colby Jackson",
"F",
"Cal State-Fullerton"
],
[
"50",
"Kansas City Wizards",
"Tom Zawislan",
"GK",
"Creighton University"
],
[
"51",
"Tampa Bay Mutiny",
"Mark Schulte",
"D",
"Twin Cities Tornado ( PDL )"
],
[
"52",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"Ian Russell",
"F",
"Seattle Sounders ( A-League )"
],
[
"53",
"Miami Fusion",
"Pablo Gentile",
"D",
"Miami Breakers ( PDL )"
],
[
"54",
"Tampa Bay Mutiny",
"Brian Waltrip",
"F",
"University of South Florida"
],
[
"55",
"Colorado Rapids",
"Peter Scavo",
"F",
"Seton Hall University"
],
[
"56",
"Chicago Fire",
"Alejandro Rincon",
"M",
"Southern Connecticut State"
],
[
"57",
"Columbus Crew",
"Dominic Schell",
"D",
"University of Mobile"
],
[
"58",
"Dallas Burn",
"Seth Marks",
"D",
"Furman University"
],
[
"59",
"Los Angeles Galaxy",
"Thomas Serna",
"F",
"Rancho Santiago ( Mexico )"
],
[
"60",
"D.C. United",
"* Micah Cooks",
"M",
"Project-40"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2000 Major League Soccer SuperDraft was held on February 6, 2000 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Round 5",
"title": "2000 MLS SuperDraft",
"uid": "2000_MLS_SuperDraft_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_MLS_SuperDraft"
} | 4,089 |
4090 | Neil_Patrick_Harris_2 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1997",
"Rent",
"Mark Cohen",
"National Tour"
],
[
"1998",
"Romeo and Juliet",
"Romeo Montague",
"Old Globe Theatre"
],
[
"2001",
"Sweeney Todd",
"Tobias Ragg",
"San Francisco Symphony Orchestra concert version"
],
[
"2002",
"Proof",
"Hal",
"Manhattan Theatre Club"
],
[
"2003",
"Cabaret",
"Emcee",
"Stephen Sondheim Theatre"
],
[
"2004",
"The Paris Letter",
"Young Anton / Burt Sarris",
"Roundabout Theatre"
],
[
"2004",
"Assassins",
"Lee Harvey Oswald / The Balladeer",
"Roundabout Theatre"
],
[
"2005",
"Tick , Tick ... BOOM !",
"Jon",
"Menier Chocolate Factory"
],
[
"2006",
"All My Sons",
"Chris Keller",
"Geffen Playhouse"
],
[
"2006",
"Amadeus",
"Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart",
"Hollywood Bowl"
],
[
"2010",
"Rent",
"N/A",
"Directed Hollywood Bowl"
],
[
"2011",
"Company",
"Robert",
"New York Philharmonic Concert Version"
],
[
"2011",
"A Snow White Christmas",
"The Magic Mirror",
"El Portal Theater"
],
[
"2014",
"Nothing to Hide",
"N/A",
"Director Romulus Linney Courtyard Theatre"
],
[
"2014",
"Hedwig and the Angry Inch",
"Hedwig",
"Belasco Theatre"
]
] | {
"intro": "Neil Patrick Harris (born June 15, 1973) is an American actor, comedian, filmmaker, philanthropist, magician, and singer. He is known primarily for his comedy roles on television and his dramatic and musical stage roles. On television, he is known for playing the title character on Doogie Howser, M.D. (1989-1993), Barney Stinson on How I Met Your Mother (2005-2014, for which he was nominated for four Emmy Awards), and Count Olaf in A Series of Unfortunate Events (2017-2019). Harris is also known for his role as the title character in Joss Whedon's musical Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog (2008) and a fictional version of himself in the Harold & Kumar film series (2004-2011). His other films include Starship Troopers (1997), Beastly (2011), The Smurfs (2011), The Smurfs 2 (2013), A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014), and Gone Girl (2014). In 2014, he starred in the title role in Hedwig and the Angry Inch on Broadway, for which he won the 2014 Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Musical. Harris has hosted the Tony Awards in 2009, 2011, 2012, and 2013, for which he won four special class Emmy Awards. He also hosted the Primetime Emmy Awards in 2009 and 2013, and hosted the 87th Academy Awards in 2015, thus making him the first openly gay man to host the Academy Awards. Harris was named one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2010. He is married to David Burtka. In 2010, they had twins via surrogacy.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Theater",
"title": "Neil Patrick Harris",
"uid": "Neil_Patrick_Harris_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Patrick_Harris"
} | 4,090 |
4091 | List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(writings:_Chinese_books)_1 | [
[
"Name",
"Authors",
"Remarks",
"Date",
"Format",
"Present location"
],
[
"Records of the Grand Historian ( 史記 , shiki , Chin . Shiji ) vol . 10 of the Imperial Biographies ( 本紀 , Chin . Benji ) : Chronicle of Emperor Wen of Han Dynasty",
"Ōe no Iekuni ( 大江家国 )",
"Transcription ; oldest manuscript of the shiki ; handed down in the Ōe family",
"1073 Heian period , 1073",
"One scroll , ink on paper , 28.5 cm × 972.7 cm ( 11.2 in × 383.0 in )",
"Miyagi Sendai Tohoku University Tohoku University , Sendai , Miyagi"
],
[
"Records of the Grand Historian ( 史記 , shiki , Chin . Shiji ) , Kōzan-ji edition , vol . 2 and 5 of the Imperial Biographies ( 本紀 , Chin . Benji ) : Chronicle of the Xia Dynasty and Chronicle of the Qin Dynasty",
"unknown",
"Transcription",
"1145 Heian period , 1145",
"Two scrolls , ink on paper",
"Tokyo Tokyo Toyo Bunko Tōyō Bunko , Tokyo"
],
[
"Records of the Grand Historian ( 史記 , shiki , Chin . Shiji ) , vol . 11 of the Imperial Biographies ( 本紀 , Chin . Benji ) : Chronicle of the Emperor Jing of Han Dynasty",
"Ōe no Iekuni ( 大江家国 )",
"Transcription ; oldest manuscript of the shiki ; handed down in the Ōe family",
"1073 Heian period , 1073",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Tokyo Tokyo Daitokyu Memorial Library Daitōkyū Memorial Library ( 大東急記念文庫 , daitōkyū kinen bunko ) , Tokyo"
],
[
"Records of the Grand Historian ( 史記 , shiki , Chin . Shiji ) , vol . 9 of the Imperial Biographies ( 本紀 , Chin . Benji ) : Chronicle of the Empress Lü Zhi Dynasty",
"Ōe no Iekuni ( 大江家国 )",
"Transcription ; oldest manuscript of the shiki ; handed down in the Ōe family",
"1073 Heian period , 1073",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Yamaguchi Hofu Mori Museum Mōri Museum , Hōfu , Yamaguchi"
],
[
"Records of the Grand Historian ( 史記 , shiki , Chin . Shiji ) , vol . 96 and fragments of vol . 97",
"unknown",
"Transcription ; oldest extant manuscripts of the shiki",
"0710 Nara period , 8th century",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Shiga Otsu Ishiyamadera Ishiyama-dera , Ōtsu , Shiga"
],
[
"Spring and Autumn Annals collected commentaries ( 春秋経伝集解 , Shunjū keiden shikkai ) , vol . 10",
"unknown",
"Part of a 30 volume work ; backside contains considerations on the Diamond Realm",
"0794 Heian period",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Tokyo Tokyo Toyo Bunko Tōyō Bunko , Tokyo"
],
[
"Spring and Autumn Annals collected commentaries ( 春秋経伝集解 , Shunjū keiden shikkai ) , fragments of vol . 26",
"unknown",
"Part of a 30 volume work",
"0990 mid Heian period",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Shiga Otsu Ishiyamadera Ishiyama-dera , Ōtsu , Shiga"
],
[
"Spring and Autumn Annals collected commentaries ( 春秋経伝集解 , Shunjū keiden shikkai ) , fragments of vol . 29",
"unknown",
"Part of a 30 volume work",
"0990 mid Heian period",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Shiga Otsu Ishiyamadera Ishiyama-dera , Ōtsu , Shiga"
],
[
"Book of Han ( 漢書 , kanjo ) , Annals of Han Gaozu No . 2 and fragments of No.4 from the section Biographies",
"unknown",
"Transcription ; red annotations from the mid 10th century",
"0710 Nara period",
"Two scrolls , ink on paper",
"Shiga Otsu Ishiyamadera Ishiyama-dera , Ōtsu , Shiga"
],
[
"Book of Han ( 漢書 , kanjo ) , No . 4 from Treatise on food and merchandise",
"unknown",
"Transcription ; end sheet with red ink marks of ministries of ceremonies",
"0794 Nara - Heian period",
"One scroll , ink on jute paper , 20 sheets , 27 cm × 1,311 cm ( 11 in × 516 in )",
"Aichi Nagoya Osu Kannon Ōsu Kannon Hōshō-in ( 宝生院 ) , Nagoya , Aichi"
],
[
"Huangdi Neijing ( 黄帝内経 , kōteidaikei ) : Myōdō ( 明堂 ) vol . 1 and Taiso ( 太素 )",
"unknown , member ( s ) of Tanba family",
"Annotated editions of the Chinese medical text Huangdi Neijing ; transcribed and handed down in the Tanba family",
"1167 Heian period 1167-1168 ( Taiso ) and 1296 and 1383 ( Myōdō )",
"Myōdō : Two scrolls ; Taiso : 23 scrolls",
"Kyoto Kyoto Ninnaji Ninna-ji , Kyoto"
],
[
"Wenguan cilin ( 文館詞林 , Bunkan shirin , lit . Forest of officials ' poems and prose ) fragments",
"unknown",
"Tang Dynasty imperial poetry collection ; other manuscripts of work had been lost in China as early as 9th century",
"0677 Tang Dynasty , and Heian period , 677-823",
"Twelve scrolls",
"Wakayama Koya Reihōkan Reihōkan ( owned by Shōchi-in ( 正智院 ) ) Kōya , Wakayama"
],
[
"Wenguan cilin ( 文館詞林 , Bunkan shirin , lit . Forest of officials ' poems and prose ) fragments",
"unknown",
"Tang Dynasty imperial poetry collection ; work had been lost in China as early as 9th century",
"0618 Tang Dynasty , Heian period",
"One scroll",
"Wakayama Koya Reihōkan Reihōkan ( owned by Hōju-in ( 宝寿院 ) ) Kōya , Wakayama"
],
[
"Yupian ( 玉篇 , gyokuhen ) vol . 22",
"unknown",
"Part of a 30 volume Chinese character dictionary ; one of two extant complete volumes of the work",
"0904 Heian period , 904",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Mie Ise Ise Shrine Ise Shrine Ise , Mie"
],
[
"Book of Odes commentary fragment ( 毛詩鄭箋残巻 , mōshi teisen zankan )",
"unknown",
"Commentary on the Book of Odes by Zheng Xuan",
"0794 Heian period",
"One scroll , ink on paper",
"Osaka Osaka Dainenbutsuji Dainenbutsu-ji , Osaka"
],
[
"Kan'en ( 翰苑 ) vol . 30",
"unknown",
"Description of people and geography of ancient Japan , the Three Kingdoms of Korea and China ; only extant old manuscript of this work",
"0900 Heian period , 10th century",
"One scroll , ink on paper , 28 sheets of 22-23 lines each with 16-17 characters per line 27.6 cm × 1,585.2 cm ( 10.9 in × 624.1 in )",
"Fukuoka Dazaifu Dazaifu Tenmangu Dazaifu Tenman-gū , Dazaifu , Fukuoka"
],
[
"Anthology of Tang Dynasty Poems ( 新撰類林抄 , shinsen ruirin-shō ) fragment of vol . 4",
"presumably transcribed by Kūkai",
"Part of an anthology of Chinese poems by Tang Dynasty poets containing 40 poems ( 282 lines ) ; only extant part of this work",
"0800 Heian period , 9th century",
"One scroll , ink on paper , 27.0 cm × 558.0 cm ( 10.6 in × 219.7 in )",
"Kyoto Kyoto Kyoto National Museum Kyoto National Museum , Kyoto"
],
[
"New book of the two capitals ( 両京新記 , Ryōkyō shinki , Chin . Liangling xinji ) vol . 3 , Kanazawa Bunko edition",
"unknown",
"Account of the life in the capitals Luoyang and Chang'an ; other manuscripts of this work had been lost in China ; formerly stored at the Kanazawa Bunko library",
"1185 Kamakura period",
"One scroll",
"Tokyo Tokyo Maeda Ikutokukai Maeda Ikutokukai , Tokyo"
],
[
"Annotated edition of Wen Xuan ( 文選集注 , monsen shicchū )",
"unknown",
"Chinese poetry collection",
"1000 mid Heian period",
"Seven scrolls , ink on paper",
"Tokyo Tokyo Toyo Bunko Tōyō Bunko , Tokyo"
],
[
"Annotated edition of Wen Xuan ( 文選集注 , monsen shicchū )",
"unknown",
"Chinese poetry collection",
"0794 Heian period",
"19 scrolls , ink on paper",
"Kanagawa Yokohama Shomyoji Shōmyō-ji ( 称名寺 ) , Yokohama , Kanagawa ; custody of Kanazawa Bunko"
]
] | {
"intro": "The term National Treasure has been used in Japan to denote cultural properties since 1897,\nalthough the definition and the criteria have changed since the introduction of the term. The written materials in the list adhere to the current definition, and have been designated National Treasures according to the Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties that came into effect on June 9, 1951. The items are selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology based on their especially high historical or artistic value. The list presents 56 entries from the 7th century Tang Dynasty to the Kamakura period with more than half originating in China. The total number of items is higher, however, since groups of related objects have been joined as single entries. The list contains works that have been originally compiled in China by Chinese authors. A large proportion of these works are Chinese classics. Written language was introduced to Japan around 400 AD in the form of Chinese books written in Classical Chinese. Japanese interest in Chinese writings and culture gradually increased towards the end of the 6th century when Japanese rulers sent missions to the mainland for cultural studies, and to bring back books. During circa 300 years in the Sui and Tang Dynasties, a large number of Chinese books were brought to Japan. By the 8th century, Chinese works were customarily copied at Japanese libraries to satisfy the demand for education of the male aristocracy. Until the early 17th century, copying in Japan was largely by hand.",
"section_text": "In Japan , until the Heian period , the language of government and ritual was Classical Chinese in which was composed decrees , codes , commands , communications and certificates . [ 37 ] [ 38 ] [ 39 ] Consequently , Chinese books were essential for the education of the ( male ) aristocracy , and beginning readers studied books such as the Mencius or the Thousand Character Classic . [ 40 ] [ 41 ] Towards the end of the 7th century , to prepare selected sons of the nobility for a government career , Emperor Tenji established the Daigaku-ryō ( `` Academy '' ) . [ 42 ] [ 43 ] At first the curriculum consisted mainly of Confucian Classics and Chinese history . [ nb 9 ] [ 42 ] [ 43 ] Chinese learning thrived in the 9th century , and the Academy 's curriculum saw a rise in literary composition based on the Chinese books Wen Xuan , Records of the Grand Historian and the Books of Han and Later Han . [ 37 ] [ 39 ] [ 44 ] [ 45 ] Unlike in China at the time , Classical Confucian studies , especially the historical and political side of Confucianism , were still held in high esteem in the Heian period with commentaries used for study dating to the Han Dynasty . [ 46 ] In fact , one of the Japanese emperor 's prescribed activities was listening to lectures on the Chinese classics , histories , and poetic anthologies . [ 47 ] Chinese books had reached Japan since circa 400 AD and had been imported in large quantities through a number of missions during the Sui and Tang Dynasties . Official missions ended after 894 , but books continued to reach Japan in the mid to late Heian period through commercial exchange or via priests travelling to China . [ 48 ] Imported Chinese books were copied at Japanese libraries , but unlike sutra copying little is known about the actual copying process of Chinese secular works in Japan . [ 49 ] The Japanese aristocracy and clergy sponsored the transcription of religious and government texts on a large scale by the Nara period . [ 50 ] The first state library was the Zusho-ryō ( `` Bureau of Archives '' ) established by the Taihō Code from 701 . [ nb 10 ] [ 51 ] Attached to the Daigaku-ryō , it oversaw the custody ( collection and preservation ) and transmission of Buddhist and Confucian books from the Nara period , until its destruction by fire in the mid-Heian period ( 11th century ) . [ 8 ] [ 42 ] [ 51 ] [ 52 ] Collection depended largely on the copying of texts held elsewhere . [ 49 ] [ 51 ] In addition to the Zusho-ryō , books were also copied at imperial palace libraries , private libraries of aristocrats , temple libraries and at libraries of organs of the state . [ 42 ] [ 51 ] [ 53 ] In the Heian period , the majority of works held in libraries ( both those produced in China and those copied in Japan ) consisted of Chinese works and scholarly collections were dominated by Chinese secular works . [ 54 ] At the end of the Heian period , the great fire of Kyoto in 1177 , and the burning of temples by the Taira in 1180 , destroyed a large part of the literary heritage . [ 55 ] [ 56 ] During the Kamakura period , the warrior class founded new libraries such as the Kanazawa Bunko . [ 56 ]",
"section_title": "Treasures -- Japanese manuscripts",
"title": "List of National Treasures of Japan (writings: Chinese books)",
"uid": "List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(writings:_Chinese_books)_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures_of_Japan_(writings:_Chinese_books)"
} | 4,091 |
4092 | Savannah,_Georgia_in_popular_culture_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Notes"
],
[
"2019",
"Lady and the Tramp",
"Starring Tessa Thompson and Justin Theroux"
],
[
"2017",
"Baywatch",
"Starring Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron"
],
[
"2016",
"The Do-Over",
"Starring Adam Sandler and David Spade"
],
[
"2015",
"The SpongeBob Movie : Sponge Out of Water",
"Filmed in both Savannah and Tybee Island . Starring Antonio Banderas"
],
[
"2010",
"The Conspirator",
"Filmed completely in Savannah . The Conspirator is a 2010 historical drama about the trial of Mary Surratt , the only female co-conspirator in the Abraham Lincoln assassination and the first woman to be hanged by the United States federal government . It stars Robin Wright Penn , James McAvoy , Justin Long , Evan Rachel Wood , Tom Wilkinson , Alexis Bledel , Kevin Kline , and Toby Kebbell"
],
[
"2010",
"The Last Song",
"Filmed in both Savannah and Tybee Island , The Last Song is the film adaptation of the Nicholas Sparks book by the same name . It stars Miley Cyrus , Greg Kinnear , and Liam Hemsworth . The film 's storyline follows a troubled teenager , played by Cyrus , and her estranged father , played by Kinnear , as they reconnect with each other through music during a summer in a quiet Southern beach town"
],
[
"2005",
"Boogeyman",
"A young man tries to deal with the childhood terror that has affected his life . Starring Barry Watson"
],
[
"2005",
"Red Thread",
""
],
[
"2005",
"Snap",
"Savannah College of Art and Design student film starring actor Bubba Lewis . A young boy must defend his house after his parents are brutally murdered"
],
[
"2004",
"95 Miles to Go",
""
],
[
"2004",
"Damn Good Dog",
"A profile of University of Georgia mascot Uga"
],
[
"2003",
"Undertow",
""
],
[
"2000",
"Meeting Daddy",
""
],
[
"2000",
"The Gift",
"A woman with extrasensory perception is asked to help find a young woman who has disappeared . Starring Cate Blanchett and Katie Holmes"
],
[
"1999",
"The Legend of Bagger Vance",
"A disillusioned war veteran , Captain Rannulph Junah , reluctantly agrees to play a game of golf . He finds the game futile until his caddy , Bagger Vance , teaches him the secret of the authentic golf stroke which turns out also to be the secret to mastering any challenge and finding meaning in life . Starring Will Smith , Matt Damon , and Charlize Theron"
],
[
"1998",
"Claudine 's Return",
"starring Christina Applegate , it was released as Kiss of Fire on DVD"
],
[
"1998",
"Forces of Nature",
"Only the last 15 to 20 minutes of the film takes place in Savannah . A soon-to-be-married man encounters an exciting stranger after his plane suffers an accident on takeoff . Starring Ben Affleck and Sandra Bullock"
],
[
"1998",
"The General 's Daughter",
"Portions were filmed on the campus of Savannah State University and a plantation house on the outskirts of Savannah"
],
[
"1997",
"The Dinner",
""
],
[
"1997",
"The Gingerbread Man",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The city of Savannah, Georgia, the largest city and the county seat of Chatham County, Georgia, is frequently mentioned in popular culture. What follows is a list of Savannah, Georgia in popular culture and includes works of literature, music, film, and television. Savannah was established in 1733 and was the first colonial and state capital of Georgia. It is known as America's first planned city and attracts millions of visitors who enjoy the city's architecture and historic buildings: the birthplace of Juliette Gordon Low (founder of the Girl Scouts of the United States of America), the Telfair Academy of Arts and Sciences (one of the South's first public museums), the First African Baptist Church (one of the oldest black Baptist congregations in the United States), Temple Mickve Israel (the third oldest synagogue in America), and the Central of Georgia Railway roundhouse complex (the oldest standing antebellum rail facility in America). Today, Savannah's downtown area is one of the largest National Historic Landmark Districts in the United States (designated by the federal government in 1966). [B]",
"section_text": "The following is based on a list assembled by the Savannah Film Commission [ 3 ] , as well as the IMDb [ 4 ]",
"section_title": "Savannah in film",
"title": "Savannah, Georgia in popular culture",
"uid": "Savannah,_Georgia_in_popular_culture_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savannah,_Georgia_in_popular_culture"
} | 4,092 |
4093 | List_of_association_football_stadiums_by_country_6 | [
[
"#",
"Stadium",
"Capacity",
"City",
"Province",
"Home team"
],
[
"1",
"Soccer City",
"94,736",
"Johannesburg",
"Gauteng",
"South Africa national football team , Kaizer Chiefs"
],
[
"2",
"Ellis Park Stadium",
"62,567",
"Johannesburg",
"Gauteng",
"Lions , Golden Lions"
],
[
"3",
"Odi Stadium",
"60,000",
"Mabopane",
"Gauteng",
"Garankuwa United"
],
[
"4",
"Phakisa Freeway",
"60,000",
"Welkom",
"Free State",
"Motor Racing"
],
[
"5",
"Mmabatho Stadium",
"59,000",
"Mahikeng",
"North West",
"training ground for North-West University"
],
[
"6",
"Cape Town Stadium",
"55,000",
"Cape Town",
"Western Cape",
"Ajax Cape Town , Cape Town City F.C"
],
[
"7",
"Moses Mabhida Stadium",
"54,000",
"Durban",
"KwaZulu-Natal",
"Amazulu"
],
[
"8",
"Kings Park Stadium",
"52,000",
"Durban",
"KwaZulu-Natal",
"Sharks , Sharks ( Currie Cup )"
],
[
"9",
"Loftus Versfeld Stadium",
"51,762",
"Pretoria",
"Gauteng",
"Bulls , Blue Bulls"
],
[
"10",
"Newlands Stadium",
"51,100",
"Cape Town",
"Western Cape",
"South Africa national rugby union team , Stormers , Western Province"
],
[
"11",
"Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium",
"48,459",
"Port Elizabeth",
"Eastern Cape",
"Southern Kings , Eastern Province Elephants"
],
[
"12",
"Royal Bafokeng Stadium",
"42,000",
"Rustenburg",
"North West",
"Platinum Stars"
],
[
"13",
"Peter Mokaba Stadium",
"41,733",
"Polokwane",
"Limpopo",
"Polokwane City"
],
[
"14",
"Mbombela Stadium",
"40,929",
"Mbombela",
"Mpumalanga",
"Pumas , Mpumalanga Black Aces"
],
[
"15",
"Free State Stadium",
"40,911",
"Bloemfontein",
"Free State",
"Bloemfontein Celtic F.C . , Cheetahs , Free State Cheetahs"
],
[
"16",
"Orlando Stadium",
"40,000",
"Soweto",
"Gauteng",
"Orlando Pirates F.C"
],
[
"17",
"Johannesburg Stadium",
"37,500",
"Johannesburg",
"Gauteng",
"training ground for Lions and Golden Lions"
],
[
"18",
"Charles Mopeli Stadium",
"35,000",
"Phuthaditjhaba",
"Free State",
"Maluti FET College F.C"
],
[
"19",
"Wanderers Stadium",
"34,000",
"Johannesburg",
"Gauteng",
"Proteas , Highveld Lions cricket team , Gauteng cricket team"
],
[
"20",
"EPRU Stadium",
"33,852",
"Port Elizabeth",
"Eastern Cape",
"no current tenant"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of major football stadiums, grouped by country and ordered by capacity. It does not include American Football stadiums in the USA that are also used for association football.",
"section_text": "The following is a list of stadiums in South Africa , ordered by capacity . Currently all stadiums with a capacity of 30,000 or more are included . Stadium Capacity City Province Home team",
"section_title": "South Africa",
"title": "List of association football stadiums by country",
"uid": "List_of_association_football_stadiums_by_country_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_association_football_stadiums_by_country"
} | 4,093 |
4094 | List_of_solar_thermal_power_stations_3 | [
[
"Name",
"Country",
"Location",
"Electrical capacity ( MW )",
"Technology",
"Notes"
],
[
"Sandstone Solar Energy Project",
"US",
"Nye County , Nevada",
"1,600",
"solar power tower",
"8 units with 10h heat storage"
],
[
"Blythe Solar Power Project",
"US",
"Blythe , California",
"1,000",
"Parabolic trough",
"4 units , converted to 485 MW PV"
],
[
"Stirling Energy Systems Solar One Project",
"US",
"San Bernardino County , California",
"850",
"Dish Stirling",
"converted to 618 MW PV , license terminated 27 August 2013"
],
[
"Stirling Energy Systems Solar Two Project",
"US",
"Imperial County , California",
"750",
"Dish Stirling",
"converted to 594 MW PV"
],
[
"Palen Solar Power Project",
"US",
"Riverside County , California",
"500",
"Parabolic trough",
"2 units , certification expired 15 December 2015"
],
[
"Ridgecrest Solar Power Project",
"US",
"Kern County , California",
"250",
"Parabolic trough",
"2 units , license terminated 22 April 2014"
],
[
"Luz SEGS XI-XII Project",
"US",
"San Bernardino County , California",
"160",
"Parabolic trough",
"license expired 22 September 1989"
],
[
"Aurora Solar Thermal Power Project",
"Australia",
"Port Augusta , South Australia",
"150",
"solar power tower",
""
],
[
"El Reboso 2+3",
"Spain",
"La Puebla del Rio ( Seville )",
"100",
"",
"Parabolic trough"
],
[
"SCE Solar 100",
"US",
"Johnson Valley , California",
"100",
"Solar power tower",
"license expired 1983"
],
[
"Diwakar",
"India",
"Askandra",
"100",
"Parabolic trough",
"2014 , Parabolic trough with 3h heat storage"
],
[
"KVK Energy Solar Project",
"India",
"Askandra",
"100",
"Parabolic trough",
"2014 , Parabolic trough with 4h heat storage"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the largest facilities generating electricity through the use of solar thermal power, specifically concentrated solar power.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Cancelled",
"title": "List of solar thermal power stations",
"uid": "List_of_solar_thermal_power_stations_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_solar_thermal_power_stations"
} | 4,094 |
4095 | List_of_comic_book_supervillain_debuts_7 | [
[
"Character / Team",
"Year Debuted",
"Company",
"Creator/s",
"First Appearance"
],
[
"Kyle Abbot",
"2000",
"DC",
"Greg Rucka",
"Detective Comics # 743"
],
[
"Able Crown",
"2000",
"DC",
"",
"Detective Comics # 744"
],
[
"Agamemno",
"2000",
"DC",
"",
"Silver Age # 1"
],
[
"Orca",
"2000",
"DC",
"Larry Hama",
"Batman # 579"
],
[
"Zeiss",
"2000",
"DC",
"Ed Brubaker , Scott McDaniel",
"Batman # 582"
],
[
"Mortalla",
"2000",
"DC",
"Walt Simonson",
"Orion # 6"
],
[
"Queen of Fables",
"2000",
"DC",
"Mark Waid , Gail Simone",
"JLA # 47"
],
[
"Nero",
"2001",
"DC",
"Judd Winick , Darryl Banks , Mark Bright",
"Green Lantern Vol . 3 # 132"
],
[
"Black , White Bandit",
"2001",
"DC",
"Dave Gibbons",
"Batman : Gotham Knights # 12"
],
[
"Blacksmith",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Ethan Van Sciver",
"Iron Heights"
],
[
"Double Down",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Ethan Van Sciver",
"Flash : Iron Heights"
],
[
"Girder",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Ethan Van Sciver",
"Flash : Iron Heights"
],
[
"Murmur",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Ethan Van Sciver",
"Flash : Iron Heights"
],
[
"Cicada",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Scott Kollins",
"The Flash v2 , # 171"
],
[
"Onimar Synn",
"2001",
"DC",
"David S. Goyer , Geoff Johns",
"JSA # 23"
],
[
"Tar Pit",
"2001",
"DC",
"Geoff Johns , Scott Kollins",
"Flash v.2 # 174"
],
[
"Monsieur Stigmonus",
"2001",
"DC",
"J. M. DeMatteis , Ryan Sook",
"The Spectre v4 # 6"
],
[
"Manchester Black",
"2001",
"DC",
"Joe Kelly , Doug Mahnke",
"Action Comics # 775"
],
[
"Mongal",
"2001",
"DC",
"",
"Superman # 170"
],
[
"Morlun",
"2001",
"Marvel",
"J. Michael Straczynski , John Romita , Jr",
"The Amazing Spider-Man # 471"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of first appearances of fictional supervillains and teams in American comic books. For a list of comic book superhero debuts, see List of superhero debuts.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Debuts by decade -- 2000s",
"title": "List of comic book supervillain debuts",
"uid": "List_of_comic_book_supervillain_debuts_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_comic_book_supervillain_debuts"
} | 4,095 |
4096 | 1972_Perth_Carnival_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Age",
"Position",
"Club"
],
[
"Peter Marker ( c )",
"23",
"Half forward",
"Glenelg"
],
[
"Brenton Adcock",
"29",
"Back pocket",
"Sturt"
],
[
"Paul Bagshaw",
"25",
"Ruck-rover",
"Sturt"
],
[
"Malcolm Blight",
"22",
"Ruck-rover",
"Woodville"
],
[
"Tony Burgan",
"22",
"Wingman",
"Sturt"
],
[
"Neil Button",
"20",
"Ruckman",
"Norwood"
],
[
"Brian Colbey",
"25",
"Half back",
"Glenelg"
],
[
"Mark Coombe",
"21",
"Centreman",
"South Adelaide"
],
[
"Graham Cornes",
"24",
"Ruck-rover",
"Glenelg"
],
[
"Russell Ebert",
"22",
"Centreman",
"Port Adelaide"
],
[
"Glynn Hewitt",
"19",
"Full-forward",
"West Adelaide"
],
[
"Ray Huppatz",
"23",
"Rover",
"Woodville"
],
[
"Bohdan Jaworskyj",
"24",
"Centre half back",
"North Adelaide"
],
[
"Bob Kingston",
"27",
"Centre half forward",
"Port Adelaide"
],
[
"Terry Moore",
"20",
"Ruckman",
"Central District"
],
[
"Robin Mulholland",
"26",
"Rover",
"Central District"
],
[
"Sandy Nelson",
"26",
"Half back",
"Sturt"
],
[
"Dean Ottens",
"25",
"Ruckman",
"Sturt"
],
[
"Dennis Phillis",
"23",
"Full-forward",
"Glenelg"
],
[
"Rodney Pope",
"26",
"Half back",
"West Adelaide"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1972 Perth Carnival was the 18th edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian rules football interstate competition. It was the last of the traditional single-city round-robin carnivals in the residential qualification era of interstate football. Four teams took part, Victoria, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania, with each playing one another once in a round robin format. Victoria won the Carnival after finishing as the only undefeated team. Peter McKenna was the most successful goal kicker with 19 goals, followed by Glynn Hewitt and Phil Tierney who kicked 11 each.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Squads -- South Australia",
"title": "1972 Perth Carnival",
"uid": "1972_Perth_Carnival_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972_Perth_Carnival"
} | 4,096 |
4097 | Toxin-antitoxin_system_1 | [
[
"Toxin",
"Antitoxin",
"Notes"
],
[
"ccdB",
"ccdA",
"Found on the F plasmid of Escherichia coli"
],
[
"parE",
"parD",
"Found in multiple copies in Caulobacter crescentus"
],
[
"mazF",
"mazE",
"Found in E. coli and in chromosomes of other bacteria"
],
[
"yafO",
"yafN",
"A system induced by the SOS response to DNA damage in E. coli"
],
[
"hicA",
"hicB",
"Found in archaea and bacteria"
],
[
"kid",
"kis",
"Stabilises the R1 plasmid and is related to the CcdB/A system"
],
[
"ζ",
"ε",
"Found mostly in Gram-positive bacteria"
],
[
"ataT",
"ataR",
"Found in enterohemorragic E. coli and Klebsiella spp"
]
] | {
"intro": "A toxin-antitoxin system is a set of two or more closely linked genes that together encode both a toxin protein and a corresponding antitoxin. Toxin-antitoxin systems are widely distributed in prokaryotes, and organisms often have them in multiple copies. When these systems are contained on plasmids - transferable genetic elements - they ensure that only the daughter cells that inherit the plasmid survive after cell division. If the plasmid is absent in a daughter cell, the unstable antitoxin is degraded and the stable toxic protein kills the new cell; this is known as 'post-segregational killing' (PSK). Toxin-antitoxin systems are typically classified according to how the antitoxin neutralises the toxin. In a type I toxin-antitoxin system, the translation of messenger RNA (mRNA) that encodes the toxin is inhibited by the binding of a small non-coding RNA antitoxin that binds the toxin mRNA. The toxic protein in a type II system is inhibited post-translationally by the binding of an antitoxin protein. Type III toxin-antitoxin systems consist of a small RNA that binds directly to the toxin protein and inhibits its activity. There are also types IV-VI, which are less common. Toxin-antitoxin genes are often inherited through horizontal gene transfer and are associated with pathogenic bacteria, having been found on plasmids conferring antibiotic resistance and virulence. Chromosomal toxin-antitoxin systems also exist, some of which are thought to perform cell functions such as responding to stresses, causing cell cycle arrest and bringing about programmed cell death. In evolutionary terms, toxin-antitoxin systems can be considered selfish DNA in that the purpose of the systems are to replicate, regardless of whether they benefit the host organism or not.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "System types -- Type II",
"title": "Toxin-antitoxin system",
"uid": "Toxin-antitoxin_system_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxin-antitoxin_system"
} | 4,097 |
4098 | List_of_Indiana_state_parks_0 | [
[
"Park Name",
"City",
"County or Counties",
"Year Established",
"Size",
"Remarks"
],
[
"Brown County",
"Nashville 39°07′N 86°16′W / 39.11°N 86.26°W / 39.11 ; -86.26 ( Brown County )",
"Brown",
"1929",
"15,776 acres ( 63.84 km )",
"Largest State Park in Indiana"
],
[
"Chain O ' Lakes",
"Albion 41°20′N 85°23′W / 41.33°N 85.38°W / 41.33 ; -85.38 ( Chain O'Lakes )",
"Noble",
"1960",
"2,718 acres ( 11.00 km )",
"Features eight connected kettle lakes"
],
[
"Charlestown",
"Charlestown 38°26′N 85°38′W / 38.43°N 85.63°W / 38.43 ; -85.63 ( Charlestown )",
"Clark",
"1996",
"5,100 acres ( 21 km )",
"Built on the grounds of the old Indiana Army Ammunition Plant"
],
[
"Clifty Falls",
"Madison 38°46′N 85°25′W / 38.76°N 85.42°W / 38.76 ; -85.42 ( Clifty Falls )",
"Jefferson",
"1920",
"1,416 acres ( 5.73 km )",
"Features a canyon that has daylight only at midday"
],
[
"Falls of the Ohio",
"Clarksville 38°16′37″N 85°45′47″W / 38.277°N 85.763°W / 38.277 ; -85.763 ( Falls of the Ohio )",
"Clark",
"1990",
"165 acres ( 0.67 km )",
"Offers views of the Falls of the Ohio and Louisville , Kentucky"
],
[
"Fort Harrison",
"Indianapolis 39°52′N 86°01′W / 39.87°N 86.01°W / 39.87 ; -86.01 ( Fort Harrison )",
"Marion",
"1996",
"1,700 acres ( 6.9 km )",
"Built on the site of old Fort Benjamin Harrison"
],
[
"Harmonie",
"New Harmony 38°04′N 87°57′W / 38.06°N 87.95°W / 38.06 ; -87.95 ( Harmonie )",
"Posey",
"1966",
"3,465 acres ( 14.02 km )",
"Near historic Rappite and Owenite villages"
],
[
"Indiana Dunes",
"Porter 41°40′N 87°02′W / 41.66°N 87.04°W / 41.66 ; -87.04 ( Indiana Dunes )",
"Porter",
"1925",
"2,182 acres ( 8.83 km )",
"Attached to Indiana Dunes National Park"
],
[
"Lincoln",
"Lincoln City 38°06′N 87°00′W / 38.10°N 87.00°W / 38.10 ; -87.00 ( Lincoln )",
"Spencer",
"1932",
"1,847 acres ( 7.47 km )",
"Across from Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial , it was the last state park established by Richard Lieber"
],
[
"McCormick 's Creek",
"Spencer 39°17′N 86°44′W / 39.29°N 86.73°W / 39.29 ; -86.73 ( McCormick 's Creek )",
"Owen",
"1916",
"1,924 acres ( 7.79 km )",
"First state park in Indiana"
],
[
"Mounds",
"Anderson 40°06′N 85°37′W / 40.10°N 85.62°W / 40.10 ; -85.62 ( Mounds )",
"Madison",
"1930",
"290 acres ( 1.2 km )",
""
],
[
"O'Bannon Woods",
"Corydon 38°11′N 86°17′W / 38.18°N 86.29°W / 38.18 ; -86.29 ( O'Bannon Woods )",
"Harrison",
"2004",
"2,000 acres ( 8.1 km )",
"Formerly the Wyandotte SRA , renamed in honor of the late Indiana governor Frank O'Bannon"
],
[
"Ouabache",
"Bluffton 40°43′N 85°07′W / 40.72°N 85.11°W / 40.72 ; -85.11 ( Ouabache )",
"Wells",
"1962",
"1,104 acres ( 4.47 km )",
"Name comes from the French spelling of Wabash"
],
[
"Pokagon",
"Angola 41°43′N 85°01′W / 41.71°N 85.02°W / 41.71 ; -85.02 ( Pokagon )",
"Steuben",
"1925",
"1,260 acres ( 5.1 km )",
"Well known for its skiing"
],
[
"Potato Creek",
"North Liberty 41°33′N 86°20′W / 41.55°N 86.34°W / 41.55 ; -86.34 ( Potato Creek )",
"St. Joseph",
"1969",
"3,840 acres ( 15.5 km )",
""
],
[
"Prophetstown",
"West Lafayette 40°30′N 86°50′W / 40.50°N 86.83°W / 40.50 ; -86.83 ( Prophetstown )",
"Tippecanoe",
"2004",
"2,000 acres ( 8.1 km )",
""
],
[
"Shades",
"Waveland 39°56′N 87°05′W / 39.93°N 87.08°W / 39.93 ; -87.08 ( Shades )",
"Montgomery",
"1947",
"3,082 acres ( 12.47 km )",
"Only state park to ever have its own airstrip"
],
[
"Shakamak",
"Jasonville 39°10′N 87°14′W / 39.17°N 87.24°W / 39.17 ; -87.24 ( Shakamak )",
"Clay , Greene and Sullivan",
"1929",
"1,766 acres ( 7.15 km )",
"Used to be a strip mine"
],
[
"Spring Mill",
"Mitchell 38°44′N 86°25′W / 38.73°N 86.42°W / 38.73 ; -86.42 ( Spring Mill )",
"Lawrence",
"1927",
"1,358 acres ( 5.50 km )",
"Featured a pioneer village , numerous caves , and a memorial to Gus Grissom"
],
[
"Summit Lake",
"New Castle 40°02′N 85°18′W / 40.03°N 85.30°W / 40.03 ; -85.30 ( Summit Lake )",
"Henry",
"1988",
"2,680 acres ( 10.8 km )",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The U.S. state of Indiana has 25 state parks maintained and operated by Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR). In addition, a separate state agency operates White River State Park in downtown Indianapolis. Marion and Clark are the only counties to have two parks. Brown County, the largest state park, has the greatest number of visitors, followed by Indiana Dunes State Park. Richard Lieber was instrumental in the foundation of the Indiana State Park system. The first state park in Indiana was McCormick's Creek State Park, in Owen County in 1916, followed in the same year by Turkey Run State Park in Parke County. The number of state parks rose steadily in the 1920s, mostly by donations of land from local authorities to the state government. Of the initial twelve parks, only Muscatatuck State Park is no longer a state park, having been given back to Jennings County in 1968. It was during the Great Depression of the 1930s that much infrastructure was built within the parks, constructed by New Deal agencies such as the Civilian Conservation Corps and the Works Progress Administration, with the majority of this Depression-era construction still in use in the 21st century. This delay in infrastructure was due in part to Richard Lieber's belief that the parks should be kept as natural as possible. Initially, the state parks were intended to feature natural environments in Indiana. The establishing of Mounds State Park for its historical nature and Shakamak State Park (an abandoned strip mine) purely for recreational purposes represented changes from the initial purposes of the Indiana state park system.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "State parks",
"title": "List of Indiana state parks",
"uid": "List_of_Indiana_state_parks_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indiana_state_parks"
} | 4,098 |
4099 | Syrian_detainees_at_Guantanamo_Bay_0 | [
[
"isn",
"name",
"arrival date",
"departure date",
"notes"
],
[
"307",
"Abd Al Nasir Mohammed Abd Al Qadir Khantumani",
"2002-02-11",
"2010-07-20",
"Transferred to Cape Verde in July 2010"
],
[
"312",
"Muhammed Khan Tumani",
"2002-02-11",
"2009-08-28",
"Transferred to Portugal on 2009-08-28"
],
[
"317",
"Moammar Badawi Dokhan",
"2002-02-12",
"2009-08-28",
"Transferred to Portugal on 2009-08-28"
],
[
"326",
"Ahmed Adnan Ahjam",
"2002-06-14",
"2014-12-07",
"Released to Uruguay on December 7 , 2014"
],
[
"327",
"Ali Husein Muhammad Shaaban",
"2002-06-14",
"2014-12-07",
"Released to Uruguay on December 7 , 2014"
],
[
"329",
"Abd Al Hadi Omar Mahmoud Faraj",
"2002-06-08",
"2014-12-07",
"Released to Uruguay on December 7 , 2014"
],
[
"330",
"Maasoum Abdah Mouhammad",
"2002-06-10",
"2010-05-04",
"Released to Bulgaria on May 4 , 2010"
],
[
"489",
"Abd Al Rahim Abdul Rassak Janko",
"2002-05-01",
"",
"Transferred to Belgium"
],
[
"537",
"Mahmud Salem Horan Mohammed Mutlak Al Ali",
"",
"2010-09-16",
"Released to Germany on September 16 , 2010"
],
[
"722",
"Jihad Ahmed Mujstafa Diyab aka Abu Wa'el Dhiab",
"2002-08-05",
"2014-12-07",
"Released to Uruguay on December 7 , 2014"
],
[
"726",
"Menhal Al Henali",
"2002-08-05",
"2004-03-31",
"Fethi Boucetta was one of the 38 captives determined not to have been enemy combatants after all"
]
] | {
"intro": "The United States Department of Defense was holding a total of eleven\nSyrian detainees in Guantanamo. A total of 778 suspects have been held in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba since the camps opened on January 11, 2002\nThe camp population peaked in 2004 at approximately 660.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Syrian detainees at Guantanamo",
"title": "List of Syrian detainees at Guantanamo Bay",
"uid": "Syrian_detainees_at_Guantanamo_Bay_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Syrian_detainees_at_Guantanamo_Bay"
} | 4,099 |
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