database_id
stringlengths 1
4
| table_id
stringlengths 4
129
| table
sequencelengths 5
21
| context
dict | __index_level_0__
int64 0
8.1k
|
---|---|---|---|---|
5300 | 2010_Allsvenskan_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Arena",
"Capacity",
"Average attendance",
"Manager"
],
[
"AIK",
"Solna",
"Råsunda Stadion",
"36,608",
"11,925",
"Alex Miller"
],
[
"IF Brommapojkarna",
"Stockholm",
"Grimsta IP",
"4,500",
"2,262",
"Kim Bergstrand"
],
[
"Djurgårdens IF",
"Stockholm",
"Stockholms Stadion",
"14,500",
"7,178",
"Lennart Wass Carlos Banda"
],
[
"IF Elfsborg",
"Borås",
"Borås Arena",
"17,800",
"8,423",
"Magnus Haglund"
],
[
"GAIS",
"Gothenburg",
"Gamla Ullevi",
"18,800",
"4,666",
"Alexander Axén"
],
[
"Gefle IF",
"Gävle",
"Strömvallen",
"7,300",
"3,500",
"Per Olsson"
],
[
"Halmstads BK",
"Halmstad",
"Örjans Vall",
"15,500",
"4,240",
"Lars Jacobsson"
],
[
"Helsingborgs IF",
"Helsingborg",
"Olympia",
"17,200",
"10,543",
"Conny Karlsson"
],
[
"BK Häcken",
"Gothenburg",
"Rambergsvallen",
"7,000",
"2,576",
"Peter Gerhardsson"
],
[
"IFK Göteborg",
"Gothenburg",
"Gamla Ullevi",
"18,800",
"10,489",
"Stefan Rehn Jonas Olsson"
],
[
"Kalmar FF",
"Kalmar",
"Fredriksskans",
"9,000",
"4,285",
"Nanne Bergstrand"
],
[
"Malmö FF",
"Malmö",
"Swedbank Stadion",
"24,000",
"15,194",
"Roland Nilsson"
],
[
"Mjällby AIF",
"Mjällby",
"Strandvallen",
"7,500",
"4,380",
"Peter Swärdh"
],
[
"Trelleborgs FF",
"Trelleborg",
"Vångavallen",
"10,000",
"2,911",
"Tom Prahl"
],
[
"Åtvidabergs FF",
"Åtvidaberg",
"Kopparvallen",
"8,000",
"4,004",
"Andreas Thomsson"
],
[
"Örebro SK",
"Örebro",
"Behrn Arena",
"14,500",
"7,704",
"Sixten Boström"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2010 Allsvenskan, part of the 2010 Swedish football season, was the 86th Allsvenskan season. It began on 13 March 2010 and ended on 7 November 2010. AIK were the defending champions. Malmö FF secured their 16th title in the last round after winning with 2-0 against Mjällby AIF.",
"section_text": "Råsunda Stadium AIK – Capacity 36.608 Swedbank Stadion Malmö FF – Capacity : 24.000 Gamla Ullevi IFK Göteborg and GAIS Capacity 18.800",
"section_title": "Overview",
"title": "2010 Allsvenskan",
"uid": "2010_Allsvenskan_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Allsvenskan"
} | 5,300 |
5301 | List_of_county_routes_in_Fulton_County,_New_York_0 | [
[
"Route",
"Length ( mi )",
"Length ( km )",
"From",
"Via",
"To"
],
[
"CR 101",
"1.81",
"2.91",
"CR 131 at West Fulton Street Extension",
"Meco-Cork Road in Johnstown",
"NY 29A"
],
[
"CR 102",
"3.40",
"5.47",
"Gloversville city line in Johnstown",
"Easterly and Phelps streets",
"Riceville Road in Mayfield"
],
[
"CR 103",
"0.52",
"0.84",
"Montgomery County line ( becomes CR 28 )",
"Stoners Trail in Johnstown",
"NY 67"
],
[
"CR 104",
"2.37",
"3.81",
"Herkimer County line ( becomes CR 130 )",
"Unnamed road in Stratford",
"NY 29A"
],
[
"CR 105",
"0.27",
"0.43",
"Gloversville city line",
"Steele Avenue Extension in Johnstown",
"NY 920J at Saratoga Boulevard"
],
[
"CR 106",
"4.27",
"6.87",
"NY 29 in Mayfield",
"Black Street",
"NY 30 in Mayfield"
],
[
"CR 107",
"14.56",
"23.43",
"Johnstown city line",
"Perth-Johnstown and Perth-West Galway roads",
"CR 132 at West Galway Road in Perth"
],
[
"CR 108",
"4.03",
"6.49",
"Herkimer County line ( becomes CR 127 )",
"Schell and Twin Church roads in Oppenheim",
"NY 331"
],
[
"CR 109",
"1.67",
"2.69",
"Saratoga County line in Broadalbin ( becomes CR 14 )",
"Fish House Road",
"CR 110 in Northampton"
],
[
"CR 110",
"7.57",
"12.18",
"Broadalbin village line in Broadalbin",
"South Shore Road",
"Saratoga County line in Northampton ( becomes CR 7 )"
],
[
"CR 111",
"1.36",
"2.19",
"CR 112",
"London Bridge Road in Caroga",
"Kasson Drive"
],
[
"CR 112",
"8.84",
"14.23",
"NY 309 at Lily Lake Road in Bleecker",
"Unnamed road",
"NY 10 in Caroga"
],
[
"CR 113",
"1.48",
"2.38",
"CR 149 at Tennantville Road",
"Northville-Edinburg Road in Northampton",
"Saratoga County line ( becomes CR 4 )"
],
[
"CR 114",
"2.84",
"4.57",
"Montgomery County line ( becomes CR 56 )",
"Lassellsville Road in Oppenheim",
"NY 29"
],
[
"CR 115",
"0.06",
"0.10",
"NY 29",
"Johnson Avenue in Johnstown",
"Johnstown city line"
],
[
"CR 116",
"4.40",
"7.08",
"NY 334",
"Unnamed road in Johnstown",
"NY 29"
],
[
"CR 116A",
"0.57",
"0.92",
"Montgomery County line ( becomes CR 36 )",
"Unnamed road in Johnstown",
"CR 116"
],
[
"CR 117",
"1.1",
"1.77",
"CR 107",
"Tryon Technology Park in Perth",
"CR 117 ( 0.18 mi N of CR 107 )"
],
[
"CR 117",
"0.3",
"0.48",
"Broadalbin village line in Broadalbin",
"CR 117",
"Lakeview Road in Broadalbin"
],
[
"CR 118",
"0.3",
"0.48",
"NY 29",
"CR 118",
"NY 10"
]
] | {
"intro": "County routes in Fulton County, New York, are signed with the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices-standard yellow-on-blue pentagon route marker. Road names are given where available; however, some routes are known only by their county route designation, especially those located in the rural northern portion of the county that lies within Adirondack Park.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Routes 101–130",
"title": "List of county routes in Fulton County, New York",
"uid": "List_of_county_routes_in_Fulton_County,_New_York_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_county_routes_in_Fulton_County,_New_York"
} | 5,301 |
5302 | 2010_Russian_First_Division_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Head Coach",
"Venue",
"Capacity",
"Position in 2009"
],
[
"Avangard",
"Kursk",
"Aleksandr Ignatenko",
"Trudovye Rezervy",
"11,329",
"1st , D2 Centre"
],
[
"Baltika",
"Kaliningrad",
"Leonid Tkachenko",
"Baltika",
"14,664",
"9th"
],
[
"Dynamo Bryansk",
"Bryansk",
"Aleksandr Smirnov",
"Dynamo",
"10,100",
"2nd , D2 Centre"
],
[
"Dynamo St. Petersburg",
"Saint Petersburg",
"Sergey Frantsev",
"MSA Petrovsky",
"2,835",
"1st , D2 West"
],
[
"Irtysh",
"Omsk",
"Aleksandr Dorofeyev",
"Red Star",
"8,000",
"1st , D2 East"
],
[
"KAMAZ",
"Naberezhnye Chelny",
"Robert Yevdokimov",
"KAMAZ",
"9,221",
"5th"
],
[
"Khimki",
"Khimki",
"Yevgeni Bushmanov",
"Novyye Khimki",
"3,066",
"16th , Premier"
],
[
"Krasnodar",
"Krasnodar",
"Sergei Tashuev",
"Kuban",
"34,640",
"10th"
],
[
"Kuban",
"Krasnodar",
"Dan Petrescu",
"Kuban",
"34,640",
"15th , Premier"
],
[
"Luch-Energiya",
"Vladivostok",
"Francisco Arcos",
"Dinamo",
"10,185",
"14th"
],
[
"Mordovia",
"Saransk",
"Fyodor Shcherbachenko",
"Svetotekhnika",
"14,000",
"1st , D2 Ural-Povolzhye"
],
[
"Nizhny Novgorod",
"Nizhny Novgorod",
"Viktor Zaidenberg",
"Severny",
"3,180",
"13th"
],
[
"Rotor",
"Volgograd",
"Vitaliy Shevchenko",
"Central",
"32,126",
"3rd , D2 South"
],
[
"Salyut",
"Belgorod",
"Yuri Bykov",
"Salyut",
"11,500",
"7th"
],
[
"Shinnik",
"Yaroslavl",
"Aleksandr Pobegalov",
"Shinnik",
"18,481",
"6th"
],
[
"SKA-Energiya",
"Khabarovsk",
"Sergey Feldman",
"Lenin Stadium",
"15,200",
"15th"
],
[
"Ural",
"Yekaterinburg",
"Vladimir Fedotov",
"Uralmash",
"13,000",
"8th"
],
[
"Volga",
"Nizhny Novgorod",
"Omari Tetradze",
"Lokomotiv",
"17,856",
"4th"
],
[
"Volgar-Gazprom",
"Astrakhan",
"Lev Ivanov",
"Centralny",
"20,500",
"12th"
],
[
"Zhemchuzhina",
"Sochi",
"Oleg Vasilenko",
"Central",
"10,280",
"1st , D2 South"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Russian First Division is the 19th season of Russia's second-tier football league since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The season began on 27 March .",
"section_text": "AvangardBaltikaVolgaNNVolgarDynamo B Dynamo StPZhemchuzhinaIrtyshKAMAZKhimkiKrasnodarKubanLuch-EnergiyaMordoviaSalyutShinnikRotorSKA-EnergiyaUral Location of teams in Russian First Division 2010",
"section_title": "Overview",
"title": "2010 Russian First Division",
"uid": "2010_Russian_First_Division_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Russian_First_Division"
} | 5,302 |
5303 | List_of_lacrosse_teams_in_Canada_19 | [
[
"Team",
"City",
"Established",
"League Titles",
"Founders Cup Titles",
"Notes"
],
[
"Akwesasne Lightning",
"Akwesasne , Ontario",
"1970",
"0",
"0",
"Previously the St. Regis Braves , St. Regis Mohawks , and St. Regis Indians"
],
[
"Barrie Tornado",
"Barrie , Ontario",
"2000",
"1",
"1",
"Moved to OLA Jr A at start of 2009 season"
],
[
"Brampton Excelsiors",
"Brampton , Ontario",
"2012",
"0",
"0",
"Previously played OLA Jr B from 1989 to 1994 when franchise moved to Milton . That franchise is currently the Mississauga Tomahawks . Returned to OLA Jr B at start of 2012 season as a new franchise"
],
[
"Clarington Green Gaels",
"Clarington , Ontario",
"1963",
"2",
"4",
"Previously the Oshawa Green Gaels ; Previously played in OLA Junior A where they won seven league titles and seven Minto Cups"
],
[
"Cornwall Celtics",
"Cornwall , Ontario",
"2006",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Elora Mohawks",
"Elora , Ontario",
"1967",
"2",
"5",
"Previously the Fergus Thistles and Guelph Mohawks ; Previously played in OLA Junior A ; Has won three Castrol Cups"
],
[
"Gloucester Griffins",
"Gloucester , Ontario",
"1978",
"2",
"0",
""
],
[
"Guelph Regals",
"Guelph , Ontario",
"1992",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Halton Hills Bulldogs",
"Halton Hills , Ontario",
"1995",
"1",
"1",
"Previously the Georgetown Bulldogs"
],
[
"Hamilton Bengals",
"Hamilton , Ontario",
"2006",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Huntsville Hawks",
"Huntsville , Ontario",
"1965",
"1",
"1",
"Previously the Huntsville Legionaires and Huntsville Tornadoes ; Previously played in OLA Junior C and OLA Junior A ; Has won one Castrol Cup"
],
[
"Kahnawake Jr. Mohawks",
"Kahnawake , Quebec",
"1970",
"0",
"0",
"Previously the Caughnawaga Indians ; Moved to I.L.A"
],
[
"London Blue Devils",
"London , Ontario",
"2003",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Markham Ironheads",
"Markham , Ontario",
"2002",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Mimico Mountaineers",
"Toronto , Ontario",
"1993",
"0",
"0",
"Previously played in OLA Junior A"
],
[
"Mississauga Tomahawks",
"Mississauga , Ontario",
"1989",
"0",
"0",
"Previously the Brampton Excelsiors , Brampton-Milton Mavericks , Milton Mavericks , and Mississauga Tomahawks"
],
[
"Nepean Knights",
"Nepean , Ontario",
"1993",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Niagara Thunderhawks",
"Niagara-on-the-Lake , Ontario",
"2003",
"0",
"0",
""
],
[
"Oakville Buzz",
"Oakville , Ontario",
"2001",
"1",
"1",
""
],
[
"Orangeville Northmen",
"Orangeville , Ontario",
"2001",
"0",
"0",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of lacrosse teams in Canada. It includes the league(s) they play for and championships won.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Junior B -- Ontario Jr. B Council ( OLA )",
"title": "List of lacrosse teams in Canada",
"uid": "List_of_lacrosse_teams_in_Canada_19",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lacrosse_teams_in_Canada"
} | 5,303 |
5304 | John_from_Cincinnati_0 | [
[
"Actor",
"Role",
"Description"
],
[
"Bruce Greenwood",
"Mitch Yost",
"An aging and proud professional surfer who co-owns a surf shop with his wife . Their marriage is tumultuous , primarily due to Mitch 's self-indulgent behavior and Cissy 's overbearing personality . Mitch has come to believe that surfing should be an end unto itself , and that judged competitive events have tainted the sport"
],
[
"Rebecca De Mornay",
"Cissy Yost",
"Mitch 's stubborn wife and co-owner of the surf shop . It is revealed that when her son Butchie was an adolescent , and she was under the influence of LSD , Cissy caught him masturbating and proceeded to show him how to do that . Her regret and self-recrimination over this event had a serious impact on her emotions"
],
[
"Brian Van Holt",
"Mitch Butchie Yost II",
"Mitch 's heroin-addicted son and professional surfer , whose painful adolescence has rendered him emasculated and incapable of shouldering great responsibility . Became a professional surfer after signing with Linc Stark then revolutionized the sport by popularizing aerials in surfing"
],
[
"Austin Nichols",
"John Monad",
"A mysterious person , seemingly mentally disabled , who often repeats what he has already heard or what people are thinking , and can manifest requested objects through his pockets . He appears to be able to perform astral projection . During the projection , John is able to converse naturally , without resorting to only repeating words already spoken by others . His last name refers to the Greek word monas , a term the Pythagoreans linked to God as the original one from whom all else flows , a clue to a secret divinity or primal oneness"
],
[
"Ed O'Neill",
"Bill Jacks",
"An obsessive retired police officer and friend of the Yosts who tends to babble and talk to himself , and constantly tries to fill the hole that Butchie has made in Shaun 's life . His house is filled with caged birds , with whom he converses"
],
[
"Luke Perry",
"Linc Stark",
"A surf talent scout , manager and agent . Owner of Stinkweed surf products . Recently bought out by his financial backers"
],
[
"Luis Guzmán",
"Ramon Gaviota",
"Manager and caretaker of the Snug Harbor Motel"
],
[
"Matt Winston",
"Barry Cunningham",
"A mentally unstable man who recently won the Mega Millions lottery and bought the local Snug Harbor Motel ; went to grade school with Butchie . He experienced sexual abuse by Mr. Rollins in room 24 of the motel as a child and originally purchased it with the intent to tear it down . Was bullied in high school , specifically by Butchie Yost . A blow to the head caused him to develop epileptic seizures during which he has visions that guide his decisions"
],
[
"Willie Garson",
"Meyer Dickstein",
"Lawyer and huge surf fan who hangs around the Snug Harbor Motel , and who arranged the sale of the hotel to the new owner , Barry Cunningham"
],
[
"Jennifer Grey",
"Daphne",
"Meyer Dickstein 's fiancée"
],
[
"Greyson Fletcher",
"Shaun Yost",
"14-year-old son of Butchie Yost and Tina Blake ; surf prodigy . Tina gave Shaun to his grandparents , Cissy and Mitch Yost , to raise the day he was born"
],
[
"Keala Kennelly",
"Kai",
"A young woman surfer who works at the Yosts ' surf shop . She is friends with Shaun Yost , and usually surfs with him . Dated Butchie in high school"
],
[
"Jim Beaver",
"Vietnam Joe",
"A war veteran who helps people cross the Mexican border into the U.S. illegally . Grows and smokes marijuana"
],
[
"Garret Dillahunt",
"Dr. Michael Smith",
"The neurologist who treated Shaun after a surfing accident . Subsequently resigned to shield Shaun from undue scrutiny after Shaun 's miracle recovery from a broken neck sustained while winning his first surf competition"
],
[
"Dayton Callie",
"Steady Freddie Lopez",
"A drug dealer from Hawaii with ties to the Yost family , particularly Butchie"
],
[
"Emily Rose",
"Cass",
"A filmmaker formerly employed by Linc Stark to seduce Mitch and break up Mitch and Cissy 's marriage because , unlike Cissy , Mitch does not want Shaun to become a competition surfer , especially with Linc Stark , whom Mitch blames for Butchie 's disastrous failings"
],
[
"Paul Ben-Victor",
"Palaka",
"An associate of Steady Freddie Lopez"
],
[
"Chandra West",
"Tina Blake",
"Shaun 's mother . She now works as a pornographic actress and prostitute but wants to leave the business"
],
[
"Mark-Paul Gosselaar",
"Jake Ferris",
"Linc Stark 's business partner"
],
[
"Matthew Maher",
"Dwayne",
"Harelipped maintainer of the Yost family web site . Usually works out of Jerri 's coffee shop"
]
] | {
"intro": "John from Cincinnati is an American television drama, set against the surfing community of Imperial Beach, California, that aired on HBO from June 10, 2007, to August 12, 2007.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Cast and characters",
"title": "John from Cincinnati",
"uid": "John_from_Cincinnati_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_from_Cincinnati"
} | 5,304 |
5305 | List_of_parasites_of_humans_2 | [
[
"Common name of organism or disease",
"Latin name ( sorted )",
"Body parts affected",
"Prevalence",
"Transmission/Vector"
],
[
"Clonorchiasis",
"Clonorchis sinensis ; Clonorchis viverrini",
"gall bladder ducts and inflammation of liver",
"East Asia",
"ingestion of under prepared freshwater fish"
],
[
"Lancet liver fluke",
"Dicrocoelium dendriticum",
"gall bladder",
"rare",
"ingestion of ants"
],
[
"Liver fluke - Fasciolosis",
"Fasciola hepatica , Fasciola gigantica",
"liver , gall bladder",
"Fasciola hepatica in Europe , Africa , Australia , the Americas and Oceania ; Fasciola gigantica only in Africa and Asia , 2.4 million people infected by both species",
"freshwater snails"
],
[
"Fasciolopsiasis - intestinal fluke",
"Fasciolopsis buski",
"intestines",
"East Asia - 10 million people",
"ingestion of infested water plants or water ( intermediate host : amphibic snails )"
],
[
"Metagonimiasis - intestinal fluke",
"Metagonimus yokogawai",
"",
"Siberia , Manchuria , Balkan states , Israel , Spain",
"ingestion of undercooked or salted fish"
],
[
"Metorchiasis",
"Metorchis conjunctus",
"",
"Canada , US , Greenland",
"ingestion of raw fish"
],
[
"Chinese liver fluke",
"Opisthorchis viverrini , Opisthorchis felineus , Clonorchis sinensis",
"bile duct",
"1.5 million people in Russia",
"consuming infected raw , slightly salted or frozen fish"
],
[
"Paragonimiasis , lung fluke",
"Paragonimus westermani ; Paragonimus africanus ; Paragonimus caliensis ; Paragonimus kellicotti ; Paragonimus skrjabini ; Paragonimus uterobilateralis",
"lungs",
"East Asia",
"ingestion of raw or undercooked freshwater crabs crayfishes or other crustaceans"
],
[
"Schistosomiasis - bilharzia , bilharziosis or snail fever ( all types )",
"Schistosoma sp",
"",
"Africa , Caribbean , eastern South America , east Asia , Middle East - 200 million people",
"skin exposure to water contaminated with infected freshwater snails"
],
[
"intestinal schistosomiasis",
"Schistosoma mansoni and Schistosoma intercalatum",
"intestine , liver , spleen , lungs , skin , rarely infects the brain",
"Africa , Caribbean , South America , Asia , Middle East - 83 million people",
"skin exposure to water contaminated with infected Biomphalaria freshwater snails"
],
[
"urinary blood fluke",
"Schistosoma haematobium",
"kidney , bladder , ureters , lungs , skin",
"Africa , Middle East",
"skin exposure to water contaminated with infected Bulinus sp . snails"
],
[
"Schistosomiasis by Schistosoma japonicum",
"Schistosoma japonicum",
"intestine , liver , spleen , lungs , skin",
"China , East Asia , Philippines",
"skin exposure to water contaminated with infected Oncomelania sp . snails"
],
[
"Asian intestinal schistosomiasis",
"Schistosoma mekongi",
"",
"South East Asia",
"skin exposure to water contaminated with infected Neotricula aperta - freshwater snails"
],
[
"Echinostomiasis",
"Echinostoma echinatum",
"small intestine",
"Far East",
"ingestion of raw fish , mollusks , snails"
],
[
"Swimmer 's itch",
"Trichobilharzia regenti , Schistosomatidae",
"",
"worldwide",
"skin exposure to contaminated water ( snails and vertebrates )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Helminth organisms (also called helminths or intestinal worms) include:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Endoparasites -- Helminths ( worms )",
"title": "List of parasites of humans",
"uid": "List_of_parasites_of_humans_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_parasites_of_humans"
} | 5,305 |
5306 | 1998_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_2 | [
[
"Rank",
"Gymnasts",
"Country",
"Point"
],
[
"1",
"Tatiana Soloviova , Vladislav Oskner",
"Russia",
"17.75"
],
[
"2",
"Konstantza Popova , Kaloyan Kaloyanov",
"Bulgaria",
"17.60"
],
[
"3",
"Izabela Lăcătuș , Claudiu Varlam",
"Romania",
"16.10"
],
[
"4",
"Reka Meszaros , Norbert Baucsek",
"Hungary",
"15.70"
],
[
"5",
"Sandra Arrigada , Jaime Salgado",
"Chile",
"15.35"
],
[
"6",
"Janka Daubner , Chris Harvey",
"Germany",
"15.20"
],
[
"7",
"Henrik Bramsved , Marika Gustafsson",
"Sweden",
"15.15"
],
[
"8",
"Erika Perugini , Daniele Pierantonio",
"Italy",
"13.65"
],
[
"9",
"Stephan Brecard , Rachel Muller",
"France",
"13.30"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 4th Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships were held in Catania, Italy from May 15 to May 16, 1998.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Results -- Mixed Pair",
"title": "1998 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships",
"uid": "1998_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships"
} | 5,306 |
5307 | List_of_Masonic_buildings_in_the_United_States_23 | [
[
"",
"Building",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"1",
"Colonial Hall and Masonic Lodge No . 30",
"1922 built 1979 NRHP-listed",
"1900 3rd Ave. , S. 45°11′49″N 93°23′11″W / 45.19694°N 93.38639°W / 45.19694 ; -93.38639 ( Colonial Hall and Masonic Lodge No . 30 )",
"Anoka , Minnesota",
"NRHP-listed"
],
[
"2",
"Clearwater Masonic and Grand Army of the Republic Hall",
"1888 built 1979 NRHP-listed",
"205-215 Oak Street 45°25′18″N 94°2′57″W / 45.42167°N 94.04917°W / 45.42167 ; -94.04917 ( Clearwater Masonic Lodge )",
"Clearwater , Minnesota",
"Joint meeting hall shared with a Grand Army of the Republic post"
],
[
"3",
"Duluth Masonic Center",
"1905 built 2015 NRHP-listed",
"4 W. 2nd Street 46°47′16.5″N 92°6′1″W / 46.787917°N 92.10028°W / 46.787917 ; -92.10028 ( Duluth Masonic Center )",
"Duluth , Minnesota",
"Longstanding focal point of Duluth 's most influential fraternal organization , further noted for its collection of 80 original hand-painted stage backdrops"
],
[
"4",
"Masonic Temple Delta Lodge No . 119",
"1917 built 1982 NRHP-listed",
"325 W. Main 44°26′53″N 95°47′22″W / 44.44806°N 95.78944°W / 44.44806 ; -95.78944 ( _ )",
"Marshall , Minnesota",
"Exotic Revival , Second Egyptian Revival"
],
[
"5",
"Minneapolis Masonic Temple",
"1888 built 1975 NRHP-listed",
"528 Hennepin Avenue . 44°58′46″N 93°16′24″W / 44.97944°N 93.27333°W / 44.97944 ; -93.27333 ( Minneapolis Masonic Temple )",
"Minneapolis , Minnesota",
"Richardsonian Romanesque Masonic Temple , built in 1888 , now Hennepin Center for the Arts"
],
[
"6",
"Scottish Rite Temple",
"1906 built 1976 NRHP-listed",
"2011 Dupont Ave. S. 44°57′45″N 93°17′34″W / 44.96250°N 93.29278°W / 44.96250 ; -93.29278 ( Minneapolis Scottish Rite Temple )",
"Minneapolis , Minnesota",
"Romanesque , built in 1894-1906 for use as a church ( Fowler Methodist Episcopal Church ) and converted for Masonic use in 1915"
],
[
"7",
"Pleasant Grove Masonic Lodge",
"1868 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"Near Stewartsville 43°52′12″N 92°23′4″W / 43.87000°N 92.38444°W / 43.87000 ; -92.38444 ( Pleasant Grove Masonic Lodge )",
"Stewartville , Minnesota",
"NRHP-listed"
],
[
"8",
"Triune Masonic Temple",
"1910 built 1980 NRHP-listed",
"1898 Iglehart Avenue 44°56′57″N 93°10′50″W / 44.94917°N 93.18056°W / 44.94917 ; -93.18056 ( Triune Masonic Temple )",
"St. Paul , Minnesota",
"Classical Revival"
],
[
"9",
"Winona Masonic Temple",
"1909 built 1998 NRHP-listed",
"255 Main St. 44°3′2.5″N 91°38′22″W / 44.050694°N 91.63944°W / 44.050694 ; -91.63944 ( Winona Masonic Temple )",
"Winona , Minnesota",
"Beaux-Arts temple and Scottish Rite Valley particularly noted for its intact collection of 98 theatrical backdrops and original stage equipment"
]
] | {
"intro": "List of Masonic buildings in the United States identifies notable Masonic buildings in the United States. These have served as meeting halls by Masonic lodges, Grand Lodges or other Masonic bodies. Many of the buildings were built to house Masonic meetings and ritual activities in their upper floors, and to provide commercial space below. Many of the buildings listed have received landmark status, either by being listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) or listed by various State or City preservation agencies. In 2019, more than 390 Masonic buildings are listed here.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Minnesota",
"title": "List of Masonic buildings in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_Masonic_buildings_in_the_United_States_23",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Masonic_buildings_in_the_United_States"
} | 5,307 |
5308 | 2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup_3 | [
[
"Pos",
"Team",
"Points"
],
[
"1",
"FDJ.fr",
"145"
],
[
"2",
"Cofidis",
"119"
],
[
"3",
"Bretagne-Séché Environnement",
"114"
],
[
"4",
"Ag2r-La Mondiale",
"103"
],
[
"5",
"Sojasun",
"101"
],
[
"6",
"Team Europcar",
"94"
],
[
"7",
"La Pomme Marseille",
"67"
],
[
"8",
"BigMat-Auber 93",
"66"
],
[
"9",
"Roubaix-Lille Métropole",
"64"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 French Road Cycling Cup was the 22nd edition of the French Road Cycling Cup. Compared to the previous edition, the Flèche d'Emeraude was replaced by the Tour de la Somme. The defending champion from 2012 was Samuel Dumoulin, who won for a second consecutive time after a third place in the final event allowed him to overtake Bryan Coquard and Anthony Geslin in the overall standings. Bryan Coquard still won the youth classification, while FDJ.fr won the teams competition.",
"section_text": "Only French teams are eligible to be classified in the teams classification .",
"section_title": "Points standings -- Teams",
"title": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup",
"uid": "2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup"
} | 5,308 |
5309 | Russell_Tovey_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"2001",
"The Emperor 's New Clothes",
"Recruit"
],
[
"2006",
"The History Boys",
"Peter Rudge"
],
[
"2009",
"In Passing",
"Henry Travers"
],
[
"2012",
"Grabbers",
"Dr. Adam Smith"
],
[
"2012",
"The Pirates ! In an Adventure with Scientists",
"The Albino Pirate"
],
[
"2012",
"Tower Block",
"Paul"
],
[
"2014",
"Effie Gray",
"George"
],
[
"2014",
"Muppets Most Wanted",
"Delivery Man"
],
[
"2014",
"Pride",
"Tim"
],
[
"2014",
"Moomins on the Riviera",
"Moomintroll"
],
[
"2015",
"Stick Man",
"Dog"
],
[
"2015",
"The Lady in the Van",
"Young Man with Earring"
],
[
"2016",
"The Pass",
"Jason"
],
[
"2016",
"Mindhorn",
"Paul Melly"
],
[
"2017",
"The Hippopotamus",
"Rupert Keynes"
],
[
"2019",
"The Good Liar",
"Steven"
],
[
"TBA",
"Night of the Lotus",
"Charlie"
]
] | {
"intro": "Russell George Tovey (born 14 November 1981) is an English actor. He is known for playing the role of werewolf George Sands in the BBC's supernatural drama Being Human, Rudge in both the stage and film versions of The History Boys, Steve in the BBC Three sitcom Him & Her, Kevin Matheson in the HBO original series Looking and its subsequent series finale television film Looking: The Movie, Titanic midshipman Alonso Frame in the Doctor Who episode Voyage of the Damned and as Henry Knight in BBC TV series Sherlock. He has also starred as Harry Doyle in the drama-thriller series Quantico on the ABC network.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Film",
"title": "Russell Tovey",
"uid": "Russell_Tovey_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_Tovey"
} | 5,309 |
5310 | List_of_fictional_antiheroes_0 | [
[
"Character",
"Work",
"Author",
"First published"
],
[
"Annie Allen",
"Annie Allen",
"Gwendolyn Brooks",
"1949"
],
[
"Redmond Barry",
"The Luck of Barry Lyndon",
"William Makepeace Thackeray",
"1844"
],
[
"James Bond",
"James Bond novels and short stories",
"Ian Fleming",
"1953-1966"
],
[
"Pinkie Brown",
"Brighton Rock",
"Graham Greene",
"1938"
],
[
"Holden Caulfield",
"The Catcher in the Rye",
"J. D. Salinger",
"1951"
],
[
"Quentin Compson",
"The Sound and the Fury",
"William Faulkner",
"1929"
],
[
"Cross Damon",
"The Outsider",
"Richard Wright",
"1953"
],
[
"Macon Milkman Dead III",
"Song of Solomon",
"Toni Morrison",
"1977"
],
[
"Stephen Dedalus",
"A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man , Ulysses",
"James Joyce",
"1916 , 1922"
],
[
"Roland Deschain",
"The Dark Tower series",
"Stephen King",
"1982-2012"
],
[
"Raoul Duke",
"Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas",
"Hunter S. Thompson",
"1971"
],
[
"Tyler Durden and the Narrator",
"Fight Club",
"Chuck Palahniuk",
"1996"
],
[
"Geralt of Rivia",
"The Witcher",
"Andrzej Sapkowski",
"1986"
],
[
"Huckleberry Finn",
"Adventures of Huckleberry Finn",
"Mark Twain",
"1884"
],
[
"Randall Flagg",
"The Stand , Eyes of the Dragon and The Dark Tower series",
"Stephen King",
"1978-2012"
],
[
"Harry Flashman",
"The Flashman Papers",
"George MacDonald Fraser",
"1969"
],
[
"Artemis Fowl II",
"Artemis Fowl series",
"Eoin Colfer",
"2001"
],
[
"Jay Gatsby",
"The Great Gatsby",
"F. Scott Fitzgerald",
"1925"
],
[
"Prince Hamlet",
"Hamlet",
"William Shakespeare",
"1599-1602"
],
[
"Bob Jones",
"If He Hollers Let Him Go",
"Chester Himes",
"1945"
]
] | {
"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": "Literature",
"title": "List of fictional antiheroes",
"uid": "List_of_fictional_antiheroes_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_antiheroes"
} | 5,310 |
5311 | Paul_Bettany_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Film",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1994",
"Wycliffe",
"Ian Greaves",
"Episode : The Pea Green Boat"
],
[
"1996",
"The Bill",
"Jake Connolly",
"Episode : The Right Thing"
],
[
"1997",
"Sharpe 's Waterloo",
"Prince William of Orange",
"Television film"
],
[
"1998",
"Coming Home",
"Edward Carey-Lewis",
"Television serial"
],
[
"1998",
"Killer Net",
"Joe Hunter",
"Television miniseries"
],
[
"1999",
"Every Woman Knows a Secret",
"Rob",
"Television miniseries"
],
[
"2000",
"David Copperfield",
"James Steerforth",
"Television film"
],
[
"2017",
"Manhunt : Unabomber",
"Ted Kaczynski",
"Television miniseries"
],
[
"2020",
"WandaVision",
"Vision",
"Disney+ exclusive ; in production"
]
] | {
"intro": "Paul Bettany (born 27 May 1971) is a British-American actor. He is known for his role as J.A.R.V.I.S. and Vision in the Marvel Cinematic Universe films Iron Man (2008), Iron Man 2 (2010), The Avengers (2012), Iron Man 3 (2013), Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Captain America: Civil War (2016), and Avengers: Infinity War (2018). He first came to the attention of mainstream audiences when he appeared in the British film Gangster No. 1 (2000), and director Brian Helgeland's film A Knight's Tale (2001). He has gone on to appear in a wide variety of films, including A Beautiful Mind (2001), Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003), Dogville (2003), Wimbledon (2004), The Da Vinci Code (2006), Margin Call (2011), and Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018). He has been nominated for various awards, including BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. Bettany is married to American actress Jennifer Connelly, with whom he has two children.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Paul Bettany",
"uid": "Paul_Bettany_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Bettany"
} | 5,311 |
5312 | List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters_8 | [
[
"Name",
"Chartered",
"Institution",
"Location"
],
[
"Theta Alpha",
"1971",
"Northwestern University and National-Louis University",
"Evanston , Illinois"
],
[
"Theta Beta",
"1971",
"Pittsburgh City-Wide undergraduate",
"Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania"
],
[
"Theta Gamma",
"1971",
"Stephen F. Austin State University",
"Nacogdoches , Texas"
],
[
"Theta Delta",
"February 13 , 1971",
"Illinois State University",
"Normal , Illinois"
],
[
"Theta Epsilon",
"1971",
"Bradley University",
"Peoria , Illinois"
],
[
"Theta Zeta",
"1971",
"Eastern Illinois University",
"Charleston , Illinois"
],
[
"Theta Eta",
"April 3 , 1971",
"Cleveland City-Wide",
"Cleveland , Ohio"
],
[
"Theta Theta",
"April 24 , 1971",
"Central Michigan University",
"Mount Pleasant , Michigan"
],
[
"Theta Iota",
"1971",
"University of North Carolina at Wilmington",
"Wilmington , North Carolina"
],
[
"Theta Kappa",
"1971",
"Jarvis Christian College",
"Hawkins , Texas"
],
[
"Theta Lambda",
"1971",
"",
"Emporia , Kansas"
],
[
"Theta Mu",
"1971",
"Oklahoma State University",
"Stillwater , Oklahoma"
],
[
"Theta Nu",
"May 8 , 1971",
"Texas A & M University-Commerce",
"Commerce , Texas"
],
[
"Theta Xi",
"April 1971",
"University of Louisiana at Lafayette",
"Lafayette , Louisiana"
],
[
"Theta Omicron",
"1971",
"Culver-Stockton College",
"Canton , Missouri"
],
[
"Theta Pi",
"1971",
"Rust College",
"Holly Springs , Mississippi"
],
[
"Theta Rho",
"1971",
"University of Tennessee at Chattanooga",
"Chattanooga , Tennessee"
],
[
"Theta Sigma Original",
"1924",
"Chicago Alumnae",
"Chicago , Illinois"
],
[
"Theta Sigma",
"1971",
"Georgia Southwestern State University",
"Americus , Georgia"
],
[
"Theta Tau",
"May 28 , 1971",
"Valdosta State University",
"Valdosta , Georgia"
]
] | {
"intro": "Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. was founded on January 13, 1913 at Howard University, and began to expand its membership early on when it chartered Beta Chapter at Wilberforce University in 1914, Gamma Chapter at the University of Pennsylvania in 1918 and Delta Chapter at the University of Iowa in 1919. Delta Sigma Theta continues to Charter new chapters at both the Collegiate and Alumnae level. Individual Chapters are Chartered, not Founded, as only the Perpetual body was founded, and the founding occurred in 1913. Delta Sigma Theta has more than 940 Chapters located in the United States, England, Japan (Tokyo and Okinawa), Germany, the Virgin Islands, Liberia, Bermuda, Jamaica, The Bahamas, South Korea and Nigeria. The sorority's chapters are organized into seven regions and further sub-divided by state. While initially Alumnae / Graduate Chapters were named using the Greek Alphabet, the perpetual body of Delta Sigma Theta voted at the Twenty-Fourth National Convention, held in Detroit, Michigan on December 26-30, 1956, to abandon this practice. Following the vote, the Greek Letter names for the Alumnae Chapters are no longer in use or recognized by the Grand Chapter. Alumnae Chapters are instead named using their Geographic Location. This list includes Active, Inactive, Reassigned, and Retired undergraduate Chapters.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Chapters Beginning With `` Theta ''",
"title": "List of Delta Sigma Theta chapters",
"uid": "List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters_8",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters"
} | 5,312 |
5313 | 10th_United_States_Congress_0 | [
[
"State ( class )",
"Vacator",
"Reason for change",
"Successor",
"Date of successor 's formal installation"
],
[
"Georgia ( 2 )",
"Abraham Baldwin ( DR )",
"Died March 4 , 1807 . Temporary successor appointed August 27 , 1807 , to continue the term",
"George Jones ( DR )",
"August 27 , 1807"
],
[
"Connecticut ( 3 )",
"Uriah Tracy ( F )",
"Died July 19 , 1807 . Successor elected October 25 , 1807 , to finish the term",
"Chauncey Goodrich ( F )",
"October 25 , 1807"
],
[
"Rhode Island ( 2 )",
"James Fenner ( DR )",
"Resigned September , 1807 to become Governor of Rhode Island . Successor elected to finish the term",
"Elisha Mathewson ( DR )",
"October 26 , 1807"
],
[
"Vermont ( 1 )",
"Israel Smith ( DR )",
"Resigned October 1 , 1807 , to become Governor of Vermont . Successor elected to finish the term",
"Jonathan Robinson ( DR )",
"October 10 , 1807"
],
[
"Georgia ( 2 )",
"George Jones ( DR )",
"Successor elected November 7 , 1807 , to finish the term , in place of a temporary appointee",
"William H. Crawford ( DR )",
"November 7 , 1807"
],
[
"Ohio ( 1 )",
"John Smith ( DR )",
"Resigned April 25 , 1808 . Successor appointed to finish the term ending March 4 , 1809",
"Return J. Meigs , Jr. ( DR )",
"December 12 , 1808"
],
[
"Massachusetts ( 1 )",
"John Quincy Adams ( F )",
"Resigned June 8 , 1808 , having broken with his party and lost re-election to the next term . Winner elected to finish the term , having already won election to the next term",
"James Lloyd ( F )",
"June 9 , 1808"
],
[
"Pennsylvania ( 1 )",
"Samuel Maclay ( DR )",
"Resigned January 4 , 1809 , believing he would lose re-election . Winner was elected to finish the term , having already won election to the next term",
"Michael Leib ( DR )",
"January 9 , 1809"
]
] | {
"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": "There were 5 resignations , 2 deaths , and 1 interim appointment . Neither party had a net change . See also : List of special elections to the United States Senate",
"section_title": "Changes in membership -- Senate",
"title": "10th United States Congress",
"uid": "10th_United_States_Congress_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10th_United_States_Congress"
} | 5,313 |
5314 | List_of_sponsored_sports_stadiums_4 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Type"
],
[
"Barrie Molson Centre",
"Barrie , Ontario",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Bell MTS Place",
"Winnipeg",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"BMO Field",
"Toronto",
"Multi-sport stadium"
],
[
"Brandt Centre",
"Regina , Saskatchewan",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"CAA Centre",
"Brampton , Ontario",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Canadian Tire Centre",
"Ottawa",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Centre Air Creebec",
"Val-d'Or , Québec",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Centre Bell",
"Montréal",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"CN Centre",
"Prince George , British Columbia",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Coca-Cola Coliseum",
"Toronto",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Colisée Desjardins",
"Victoriaville , Québec",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"Credit Union Centre",
"Saskatoon , Saskatchewan",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"ENMAX Centre",
"Lethbridge , Alberta",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"ENMAX Centrium",
"Red Deer , Alberta",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"General Motors Centre",
"Oshawa , Ontario",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"IG Field",
"Winnipeg",
"Football stadium ( CFL , U Sports )"
],
[
"IGA Stadium",
"Montréal , Québec",
"Tennis stadium"
],
[
"Interior Savings Centre",
"Kamloops , British Columbia",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"The Budweiser Gardens",
"London , Ontario",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
],
[
"K-Rock Centre",
"Kingston , Ontario",
"Multi-purpose indoor arena"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of sports venues with sole naming rights:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Present naming rights -- Canada",
"title": "List of sponsored sports venues",
"uid": "List_of_sponsored_sports_stadiums_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sponsored_sports_venues"
} | 5,314 |
5315 | List_of_rivers_of_Croatia_1 | [
[
"River",
"Length within Croatia ( km )",
"Total length ( km )",
"Drains into"
],
[
"Trnava",
"47",
"47",
"Mura"
],
[
"Spačva",
"40",
"40",
"Bosut"
],
[
"Boljunčica",
"33",
"33",
"Adriatic Sea"
],
[
"Karašica",
"30.46",
"81",
"Danube"
],
[
"Raša",
"23",
"23",
"Adriatic Sea"
],
[
"Neretva",
"20",
"213",
"Adriatic Sea"
],
[
"Rječina",
"19",
"19",
"Adriatic Sea"
],
[
"Studva",
"19 ?",
"37",
"Bosut"
],
[
"Slunjčica",
"12.5",
"12.5",
"Korana"
],
[
"Gacka",
"11",
"11",
""
],
[
"Jadro",
"4",
"4",
"Adriatic Sea"
],
[
"Ombla",
"0.03",
"0.03",
"Adriatic Sea"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of rivers in Croatia.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Rivers shorter than 50 km in Croatia",
"title": "List of rivers of Croatia",
"uid": "List_of_rivers_of_Croatia_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rivers_of_Croatia"
} | 5,315 |
5316 | Sports_in_Atlanta_1 | [
[
"Club",
"Sport",
"League",
"Venue",
"Founded",
"Titles"
],
[
"Atlanta Blaze",
"Field Lacrosse",
"Major League Lacrosse",
"Fifth Third Bank Stadium",
"2016",
"0"
],
[
"Atlanta Gladiators",
"Ice hockey",
"ECHL",
"Infinite Energy Arena",
"2003",
"0"
],
[
"Atlanta Reign",
"Overwatch",
"Overwatch League",
"Coca-Cola Roxy",
"2018",
"0"
],
[
"Atlanta United 2",
"Soccer",
"USL Championship",
"Fifth Third Bank Stadium",
"2018",
"0"
],
[
"College Park Skyhawks",
"Basketball",
"NBA G League",
"Gateway Center Arena",
"2019",
"0"
],
[
"Georgia Swarm",
"Box Lacrosse",
"National Lacrosse League",
"Infinite Energy Arena",
"2015",
"1 ( 2017 )"
],
[
"Gwinnett Stripers",
"Baseball",
"International League ( AAA )",
"Coolray Field",
"2009",
"0"
],
[
"Rugby ATL",
"Rugby union",
"Major League Rugby",
"Lupo Family Field",
"2020",
"0"
]
] | {
"intro": "Sports in Atlanta has a rich history, including the oldest on-campus NCAA Division I football stadium, Bobby Dodd Stadium, built in 1913 by the students of Georgia Tech. Atlanta also played host to the second intercollegiate football game in the South, played between the A&M College of Alabama (now Auburn University) and the University of Georgia in Piedmont Park in 1892; this game is now called the Deep South's Oldest Rivalry. The city hosts college football's annual Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl and the Peachtree Road Race, the worlds largest 10 km race. Atlanta was the host city for the Centennial 1996 Summer Olympics, and Downtown Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park was built for and commemorates the games. Atlanta is home to professional franchises for five major team sports: the Atlanta Braves of Major League Baseball, the Atlanta Hawks of the National Basketball Association, the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League, the Atlanta Dream of the Women's National Basketball Association, and Atlanta United FC of Major League Soccer. Atlanta has also has top level teams in the Georgia Swarm of the National Lacrosse League, the Atlanta Blaze of Major League Lacrosse, and Rugby ATL of Major League Rugby.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Other teams",
"title": "Sports in Atlanta",
"uid": "Sports_in_Atlanta_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_in_Atlanta"
} | 5,316 |
5317 | List_of_Copa_do_Brasil_winners_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Winner",
"Runner-up",
"Years won",
"Years runner-up"
],
[
"Cruzeiro",
"6",
"2",
"1993 , 1996 , 2000 , 2003 , 2017 , 2018",
"1998 , 2014"
],
[
"Grêmio",
"5",
"3",
"1989 , 1994 , 1997 , 2001 , 2016",
"1991 , 1993 , 1995"
],
[
"Flamengo",
"3",
"4",
"1990 , 2006 , 2013",
"1997 , 2003 , 2004 , 2017"
],
[
"Corinthians",
"3",
"3",
"1995 , 2002 , 2009",
"2001 , 2008 , 2018"
],
[
"Palmeiras",
"3",
"1",
"1998 , 2012 , 2015",
"1996"
],
[
"Internacional",
"1",
"2",
"1992",
"2009 , 2019"
],
[
"Fluminense",
"1",
"2",
"2007",
"1992 , 2005"
],
[
"Santos",
"1",
"1",
"2010",
"2015"
],
[
"Sport",
"1",
"1",
"2008",
"1989"
],
[
"Vasco da Gama",
"1",
"1",
"2011",
"2006"
],
[
"Atlético Mineiro",
"1",
"1",
"2014",
"2016"
],
[
"Athletico Paranaense",
"1",
"1",
"2019",
"2013"
],
[
"Criciúma",
"1",
"0",
"1991",
"-"
],
[
"Juventude",
"1",
"0",
"1999",
"-"
],
[
"Santo André",
"1",
"0",
"2004",
"-"
],
[
"Paulista",
"1",
"0",
"2005",
"-"
],
[
"Coritiba",
"0",
"2",
"-",
"2011 , 2012"
],
[
"Goiás",
"0",
"1",
"-",
"1990"
],
[
"Ceará",
"0",
"1",
"-",
"1994"
],
[
"Botafogo",
"0",
"1",
"-",
"1999"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Copa do Brasil is an annual football competitions for clubs in Brazil established in 1989. With the exception of those teams competing in that season's Copa Libertadores, the competition is open to the top teams from Brazil's state leagues, as well as the top ten clubs in the country. Sixty-four teams qualify and compete in a two-legged single elimination tournament that culminates in the finals. The finals is contested over two legs, an away game and a home game. Thirteen teams have won the competition. Cruzeiro is the most successful team in the history of the competition, having won it six times. Teams from São Paulo state have won the tournament seven times, more than any other state. Only Cruzeiro won the title consecutively in the years 2017 and 2018. In fact, from 2001 to 2012, such a feat was impossible, as teams who won the tournament were not allowed to defend their title on the following year due to scheduling conflicts with the Copa Libertadores. Starting in 2013, the Copa do Brasil was rescheduled so that it instead conflicts with the Copa Sudamericana. Thus, it is now possible for teams to defend their titles.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Performance by club",
"title": "List of Copa do Brasil winners",
"uid": "List_of_Copa_do_Brasil_winners_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Copa_do_Brasil_winners"
} | 5,317 |
5318 | Clive_Churchill_Medal_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner",
"Team",
"Position"
],
[
"1954",
"Clive Churchill",
"South Sydney Rabbitohs",
"Fullback"
],
[
"1955",
"Jack Rayner",
"South Sydney Rabbitohs",
"Second row"
],
[
"1956",
"Kevin Brown",
"St George Dragons",
"Prop"
],
[
"1957",
"Norm Provan",
"St George Dragons",
"Second row"
],
[
"1958",
"Norm Provan",
"St George Dragons",
"Second row"
],
[
"1959",
"Peter Provan",
"St George Dragons",
"Lock"
],
[
"1960",
"Monty Porter",
"St George Dragons",
"Second row"
],
[
"1961",
"Brian Clay",
"St George Dragons",
"Five-eighth"
],
[
"1962",
"Ian Walsh",
"St George Dragons",
"Hooker"
],
[
"1963",
"Norm Provan",
"St George Dragons",
"Second row"
],
[
"1964",
"Graeme Langlands",
"St George Dragons",
"Fullback"
],
[
"1965",
"Kevin Ryan",
"St George Dragons",
"Prop"
],
[
"1966",
"John Raper",
"St George Dragons",
"Lock"
],
[
"1967",
"Les Johns",
"Canterbury-Bankstown ( losing team )",
"Fullback"
],
[
"1968",
"Eric Simms",
"South Sydney Rabbitohs",
"Fullback"
],
[
"1969",
"Dave Bolton",
"Balmain Tigers",
"Five-eighth"
],
[
"1970",
"Bob Grant",
"South Sydney Rabbitohs",
"Halfback"
],
[
"1971",
"Ron Coote",
"South Sydney Rabbitohs",
"Lock"
],
[
"1972",
"Dennis Ward",
"Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles",
"Halfback"
],
[
"1973",
"Bob Fulton",
"Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles",
"Centre"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Clive Churchill Medal is the award given to the player judged to be man-of-the-match in the National Rugby League's annual Grand Final. The award was created to honour Clive Churchill, one of the greatest rugby league players in Australian history, following his death in 1985. A prestigious honour in the NRL, the medal's recipient is chosen by the selectors of the Australian national team and announced and awarded to the player judged best and fairest on the ground at every post-grand final ceremony. The Clive Churchill Medal has been awarded ever since the 1986 NSWRL season when its first recipient was Parramatta's Peter Sterling. It was initially presented in a case until 2000 where it is presented separately with a ribbon being worn around the neck. The only two players to have won the award more than once are Canberra's Bradley Clyde (1989 and 1991) and Melbourne Storm's Billy Slater (2009 and 2017). In 2010, the Melbourne Storm were stripped of the 2007 and 2009 premierships due to salary cap breaches exposed by the NRL, however the Clive Churchill Medallists from those years still continue to be recognised. The medal has only been awarded to a member of the losing grand final team on four occasions. Bradley Clyde in 1991, Brad Mackay (St George) in 1993, Daly Cherry-Evans (Manly) in 2013, and Jack Wighton (Canberra Raiders) in 2019. Churchill, who the medal was named after, played for and later coached the South Sydney Rabbitohs, played interstate football for both New South Wales and Queensland, and also played for, captained and coached the Australian Kangaroos.",
"section_text": "As part of the Centenary of League celebrations , the Clive Churchill Medal has been retrospectively awarded for man-of-the-match performances from season 1954 , the first to feature mandatory grand finals . The first recipient from the 1954 season is the man for which the award was originally named , Clive Churchill . [ 8 ] Despite claims to the contrary at the time of the announcement of the retrospective medals that there had not been Man Of The Match awards for Grand Finals prior to 1986 , this was not the case - there had been the Dave Brown Medal awarded at some stage , and , according to the NSWRL 's official match day program , a new prize was awarded in 1971 , with the winner named by reporters covering the game ( [ citation needed ] ( the first was won by South Sydney 's Ron Coote ) . In 1972 the award went to Manly half back Dennis Ward , and the following year , to Manly 's Bob Fulton . The retrospective Clive Churchill Medals - either by coincidence or design - reflect those award winners . In the replayed grand finals of 1977 and 1978 , the award was based on efforts over the course of both games , although Manly-Warringah 's Graham Eadie was a clear choice in 1978 after a dominating performance from fullback in the Grand Final replay .",
"section_title": "List of recipients -- Retrospective awards",
"title": "Clive Churchill Medal",
"uid": "Clive_Churchill_Medal_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clive_Churchill_Medal"
} | 5,318 |
5319 | Case_competition_0 | [
[
"Competition",
"Country",
"University",
"Level",
"Teams",
"Inaugural Year"
],
[
"Alberta International Case Competition ( AIBC )",
"Canada",
"Alberta School of Business",
"Undergraduate",
"12 teams",
"2016"
],
[
"Australian Undergraduate Business Case Competition ( AUBCC )",
"Australia",
"QUT , UNSW , University of Melbourne",
"Undergraduate",
"16 teams",
"2013"
],
[
"CBS Case Competition",
"Denmark",
"Copenhagen Business School",
"Undergraduate",
"12 teams",
"2002"
],
[
"Belgrade Business International Case Competition - BBICC",
"Serbia",
"University of Belgrade",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"2013"
],
[
"Engineering and Commerce Case Competition",
"Canada",
"Concordia University",
"Undergraduate",
"12 teams",
"2013"
],
[
"Asian Business Case Competition @ Nanyang ( ABCC )",
"Singapore",
"Nanyang Technological University",
"Undergraduate",
"12 teams",
"2007"
],
[
"CaseIT MIS Case Competition",
"Canada",
"Beedie School of Business",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"2004"
],
[
"Central European Case Competition ( CECC )",
"Hungary",
"Case Solvers & Corvinus University of Budapest",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"2019"
],
[
"Champions Trophy Case Competition",
"New Zealand",
"University of Auckland",
"Undergraduate",
"12 teams",
"2008"
],
[
"Chulalongkorn International Business Case Competition ( CIBCC )",
"Thailand",
"Chulalongkorn University",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"2014"
],
[
"Citi International Case Competition",
"Hong Kong",
"HKUST",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"2003"
],
[
"Global Business Case Competition ( GBCC )",
"Japan",
"Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University",
"Undergraduate",
"16 teams",
"2015"
],
[
"Thammasat Undergraduate Business Challenge ( TUBC )",
"Thailand",
"Thammasat University",
"Undergraduate",
"16 teams",
"2007"
],
[
"Global Business Case Competition",
"United States",
"University of Washington",
"Undergraduate",
"15 teams",
"1999"
],
[
"Grossman School of Business Family Enterprise Case Competition ( FECC )",
"United States",
"The University of Vermont",
"Undergraduate & Graduate",
"24 teams",
"2013"
],
[
"HSBC/HKU Asia Pacific Business Case Competition",
"Hong Kong",
"The University of Hong Kong",
"Undergraduate",
"24 teams",
"2008"
],
[
"Japan MBA Case Competition",
"Japan",
"Tokyo-based MBA programs",
"Graduate - MBA",
"09 teams",
"2013"
],
[
"International Graduate Competition",
"Canada",
"HEC Montreal",
"Graduate",
"08 teams",
"2012"
],
[
"International Case Competition @ Maastricht",
"Netherlands",
"Maastricht University",
"Undergraduate",
"16 teams",
"2009"
],
[
"Marshall International Case Competition ( MICC )",
"United States",
"University of Southern California",
"Undergraduate",
"20 teams",
"1997"
]
] | {
"intro": "In a case competition, participants strive to develop the best solution to a business or education-related case study within an allocated time frame, typically with teams of two or more individuals pitted against each other in a head-to-head or broader relative ranking. Teams deliver presentations for judges and, while competitions vary in composition, a standard format and purpose exists. In terms of cumulative number of participants, the HSBC/HKU Asia Pacific Business Case Competition is the world's largest case competition, with over 130,000 participants since 2008 .",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Notable competitions -- Invitational competitions",
"title": "Case competition",
"uid": "Case_competition_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_competition"
} | 5,319 |
5320 | War_memorials_(Aisne)_0 | [
[
"Work",
"Location",
"Date ( s )",
"Subject , notes and references"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Achery",
"Achery",
"1925",
"The Achery war memorial features work by the sculptor N.Staquet . The inauguration took place on 29 July 1923 . The same statue , which features a French infantryman or poilu can be seen at Versigny , this war memorial being inaugurated on 12 July 1925"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Acy",
"Acy",
"1924",
"The Acy war memorial entitled L'Ange de l'Apocalypse is one of the sculptor Henri Charlier 's works and was completed in 1924 . It stands in front of the parish church . Also in Acy , and on the Plateau dAcy is the Pleureuse dAcy , another Charlier work , this remembering the dead of the 1939-1945 war"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Braine",
"Braine",
"1922",
"The war memorial at Braine was inaugurated on 10 December 1922 and features a bronze allegory of France by the sculptor Charles Breton . Breton had worked on the war memorials of Saint-Mandé and Fontenay-sous-Bois in Val-de-Marne and that at Saint-Alban-sur-Limagnole in Lozère . The Braine bronze memorial was produced by the foundry Leblanc-Barbedier et Fils"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Bucy-lès-Pierrepont",
"Bucy-lès-Pierrepont",
"1922",
"The Bucy-lès-Pierrepont memorial features a work by the sculptor Charles-Henri Pourquet . Cast by the foundry Val d'Osne , the work was given the title Poilu No.853 . It featured in the Val d'Osne catalogue , proved to be popular , and can be seen on war memorials throughout France . ThIs monument was inaugurated on 23 July 1922"
],
[
"The Monument aux morts at Chateau-Thierry",
"Château-Thierry",
"",
"The composition here is most dramatic and the sculptor Achille Jacopin has produced a sculpture depicting a dead soldier lying flat on the ground"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Chauny",
"Chauny",
"1930",
"Émile Pinchon was the sculptor of the war memorial at Chauny with inauguration taking place on 6 July 1930 . A maquette of this work is kept at the Historial de la Grande Guerre at Péronne . The Amiens born Pinchon 's composition features three women . The central figure represents La Republique with Douleur on one side and Jeunesse on the other"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Chavignon",
"Chavignon",
"1933",
"Chavignon 's war memorial involves sculptural work by Henri Albert Lagriffoul . There are two bas-reliefs on the monument , one depicting a soldier holding an antique sword and the other a woman carrying her child and a sheaf of wheat . The monument also remembers the action of the 4th Regiment of the French Army and those who fell in the action to expel the Germans from Chavignon on 23 October 1917 . This monument was inaugurated on 1 October 1933"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Danizy",
"Danizy",
"1923",
"At Danizy the war memorial features work by N.Staquet ; a depiction of a standing soldier . It was inaugurated on 15 August 1923"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Essigny-le-Petit",
"Essigny-le-Petit",
"",
"At the commune of Essigny-le-Petit is an Établissements H.Jacomet edition by the sculptor Étienne Camus . In bronzed cast iron it is called Poilu baïonnette au canon and is a well-known piece in France , as is Jacomet 's Poilu au repos , another work by Camus . Jacomet 's works are found in the Somme and Oise regions"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Fargniers",
"Fargniers",
"1926",
"In the commune of Fargniers east of Tergnier , the war memorial features a work by Paul Landowski whose work we encountered at Ault in the Somme . Fargniers suffered much destruction in the Great War and like many other communes was awarded the Croix de Guerre in recognition of her sufferings . This monument was inaugurated on 11 November 1926"
],
[
"The monuments aux morts at Foreste",
"Foreste",
"1924",
"The war memorial at Foreste features sculptural work by Raoul Josset . Josset had worked as an interpreter for the US troops during the Great War . The Foreste memorial was inaugurated in 1924 . After the war Josset emigrated to the US and lived in Texas , where he completed several public works"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Guignicourt",
"Guignicourt",
"1924",
"The war memorial at Guignicourt was inaugurated on 20 September 1924 . The sculptor is unknown . The composition shows a couple , bent before some graves , perhaps including that of their son . The woman carries a bouquet of roses and is supported by her husband"
],
[
"The monument aux morts at Guise",
"Guise",
"",
"The Guise war memorial features a work by sculptor André Joseph Allar . Allar depicts a woman , meant to represent Guise , who comforts a child . Guise was where Jean-Baptiste Godin , the humanist and phillanthropist , built his factory which was intended as an example of how the working classes should be treated . Alongside the factory , Godin had built all the amenities which he considered the workers should have ; housing , laundry facilities , a school , a theatre , gardens , a swimming pool , etc . In the grounds are a monument which remembers those Familistere men who lost their lives in the Great War , the Monument aux morts du Familistère de Guise , sculpted by the brothers Jan et Joël Martel ( 1896-1966 ) . These brothers were well known as avant garde and cubist sculptors . Guise was also the scene of a fierce battle in 1914 when the 5th French Army , retreating before the advancing German armies , stopped their retreat and engaged with the enemy . The 5th Army was commanded by General Lanrezac and the Martel brothers were sculptors of the monument which marks this battle . Several photographs of the Lanrezac monument are shown below as are photographs of the Familistere monument aux morts"
]
] | {
"intro": "The War Memorials of Aisne or Monuments aux Morts of Aisne are French war memorials in the Aisne, in the region of Picardy, commemorating those men of the Aisne region who died in World War I",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Some of the monument aux morts in the Aisne region",
"title": "War memorials (Aisne)",
"uid": "War_memorials_(Aisne)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_memorials_(Aisne)"
} | 5,320 |
5321 | France_at_the_2012_Summer_Paralympics_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Marie-Amélie Le Fur",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 100m T44"
],
[
"Gold",
"Mandy François-Elie",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 100m T37"
],
[
"Gold",
"Assia El Hannouni",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 200m T12"
],
[
"Gold",
"Assia El Hannouni",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 400m T12"
],
[
"Gold",
"Souhad Ghazouani",
"Powerlifting",
"Women 's 67.5kg"
],
[
"Gold",
"Cedric Fevre-Chevalier",
"Shooting",
"Mixed 10 m air rifle prone SH1"
],
[
"Gold",
"Charles Rozoy",
"Swimming",
"Men 's 100m butterfly S8"
],
[
"Gold",
"Élodie Lorandi",
"Swimming",
"Women 's 400m freestyle S10"
],
[
"Silver",
"Arnaud Assoumani",
"Athletics",
"Men 's long jump F46"
],
[
"Silver",
"Arnaud Assoumani",
"Athletics",
"Men 's triple jump F46"
],
[
"Silver",
"Tony Falelavaki",
"Athletics",
"Men 's javelin throw F44"
],
[
"Silver",
"Marie-Amelie le Fur",
"Athletics",
"Women 's 200m T44"
],
[
"Silver",
"Nathalie Benoit",
"Rowing",
"Women 's single sculls"
],
[
"Silver",
"Perle Bouge Stephane Tardieu",
"Rowing",
"Mixed double sculls"
],
[
"Silver",
"Raphael Voltz",
"Shooting",
"Mixed 10 m air rifle prone SH2"
],
[
"Silver",
"David Smetanine",
"Swimming",
"Men 's 50m freestyle S4"
],
[
"Silver",
"David Smetanine",
"Swimming",
"Men 's 200m freestyle S4"
],
[
"Silver",
"Élodie Lorandi",
"Swimming",
"Women 's 100m freestyle S10"
],
[
"Silver",
"Jean-Francois Ducay",
"Table tennis",
"Men 's individual - Class 1"
],
[
"Silver",
"Thu Kamkasomphou",
"Table tennis",
"Women 's individual - Class 8"
]
] | {
"intro": "France competed at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, United Kingdom, from 29 August to 9 September 2012.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Medalists",
"title": "France at the 2012 Summer Paralympics",
"uid": "France_at_the_2012_Summer_Paralympics_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_at_the_2012_Summer_Paralympics"
} | 5,321 |
5322 | 2010_V-League_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Becamex Bình Dương",
"Thủ Dầu Một",
"Gò Đậu Stadium",
"18,250"
],
[
"Đồng Tâm Long An",
"Tân An , Long An",
"Long An Stadium",
"19,975"
],
[
"Đồng Tháp",
"Cao Lãnh",
"Cao Lãnh Stadium",
"23,000"
],
[
"Hòa Phát Hà Nội",
"Hanoi",
"Hàng Đẫy Stadium",
"22,500"
],
[
"Hoàng Anh Gia Lai",
"Pleiku",
"Pleiku Stadium",
"15,000"
],
[
"Khatoco Khánh Hòa",
"Nha Trang",
"Nha Trang Stadium",
"25,000"
],
[
"Lam Sơn Thanh Hóa",
"Thanh Hóa",
"Thanh Hóa Stadium",
"14,000"
],
[
"Megastar Nam Định",
"Nam Định",
"Thiên Trường Stadium",
"30,000"
],
[
"Navibank Sài Gòn",
"Ho Chi Minh City",
"Thống Nhất Stadium",
"25,000"
],
[
"SHB Đà Nẵng",
"Da Nang",
"Chi Lăng Stadium",
"30,000"
],
[
"Sông Lam Nghệ A",
"Vinh",
"Vinh Stadium",
"22,000"
],
[
"T & T Hà Nội",
"Hanoi",
"Hàng Đẫy Stadium",
"22,500"
],
[
"Xi Măng Hải Phòng",
"Hai Phong",
"Lạch Tray Stadium",
"28,000"
],
[
"XM The Vissai Ninh Bình",
"Ninh Bình",
"Ninh Bình Stadium",
"22,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2010 V-League season was the 27th season of Vietnam's professional football league. The league and cup winners would enter the 2011 AFC Cup. The bottom side at the end of the season get relegated. The side that finishes 2ND from bottom enters an end of season play-off match against the 2nd Division's 2nd placed side.",
"section_text": "Da NangBình DươngSông Lam Nghệ AnNavibankT & T Hoa Phat Đồng ThápHoàng Anh Gia LaiHải PhòngKhatoco Khánh HòaDong TamThanh HóaNam ĐịnhNinh Bình Locations of the V. League 2010 teams",
"section_title": "Teams -- Stadia and locations",
"title": "2010 V-League",
"uid": "2010_V-League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_V-League"
} | 5,322 |
5323 | 2000_MLS_SuperDraft_2 | [
[
"Pick #",
"MLS team",
"Player",
"Position",
"Affiliation"
],
[
"25",
"Miami Fusion",
"David Wright",
"D",
"Creighton University"
],
[
"26",
"Colorado Rapids",
"Jeff DiMaria",
"F",
"Saint Louis University"
],
[
"27",
"D.C. United",
"* Sergio Salas",
"F",
"Project-40"
],
[
"28",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"Jon Conway",
"GK",
"Rutgers University"
],
[
"29",
"Los Angeles Galaxy",
"José Retiz",
"M",
"Rancho Santiago - Santa Ana"
],
[
"30",
"Kansas City Wizards",
"Kerry Zavagnin",
"D",
"Lehigh Valley Steam ( A-League )"
],
[
"31",
"New England Revolution",
"* Shaker Asad",
"M",
"North Carolina State University"
],
[
"32",
"Chicago Fire",
"Yuri Lavrinenko",
"M",
"Indiana University"
],
[
"33",
"Columbus Crew",
"Brian Winters",
"M",
"University of Portland"
],
[
"34",
"Dallas Burn",
"Steve Bernal",
"D",
"Creighton University"
],
[
"35",
"Miami Fusion",
"* Nick Rimando",
"GK",
"UCLA"
],
[
"36",
"New England Revolution",
"Fabio Zúñiga",
"F",
"Raritan Valley Community College"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2000 Major League Soccer SuperDraft was held on February 6, 2000 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Round 3",
"title": "2000 MLS SuperDraft",
"uid": "2000_MLS_SuperDraft_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_MLS_SuperDraft"
} | 5,323 |
5324 | Blaenplwyf_transmitting_station_13 | [
[
"Frequency",
"kW",
"Service"
],
[
"88.7 MHz",
"250",
"BBC Radio 2"
],
[
"90.9 MHz",
"250",
"BBC Radio 3"
],
[
"93.1 MHz",
"250",
"BBC Radio Cymru"
],
[
"95.3 MHz",
"120",
"BBC Radio Wales"
],
[
"98.3 MHz",
"250",
"BBC Radio 1"
],
[
"101.1 MHz",
"10",
"Classic FM"
],
[
"103.3 MHz",
"6",
"Radio Ceredigion"
],
[
"104.0 MHz",
"250",
"BBC Radio 4"
],
[
"107.7 MHz",
"10",
"Real Radio North Wales"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Blaenplwyf transmitting station (sometimes written Blaen Plwyf or Blaen-Plwyf) is a broadcasting and telecommunications facility located near the village of Blaenplwyf about 10 kilometres (6 mi) to the south west of the town of Aberystwyth, in Ceredigion, Wales (grid reference SN569756). It was originally built by the BBC, entering service in October 1956 acting as a main transmitter for BBC Band II VHF FM radio. It had been planned that the BBC's 405-line VHF television service would commence on the same date, but delays at Rowridge caused the official switch-on to happen six months later on 29 April 1957. Blaenplwyf was considered a main transmitter for VHF television (despite radiating only 3 kW ERP) as it was fed from a microwave link from Mynydd Pencarreg just south of Lampeter. The facility is now owned and operated by Arqiva. The site has a 152 metres (499 ft) guyed steel lattice mast standing on land that is itself 175 metres (574 ft) above sea level. The television and radio broadcasts were originally designed to cover the majority of the Cardigan Bay coastline, the antennas being designed for maximum ERP to the north and to the south-west. Blaenplwyf became a main transmitter for UHF analogue colour television from 1970 onwards, and was transmitting all three original UHF channels in colour from mid 1973. It currently carries all six UK digital television multiplexes.",
"section_text": "From 4 January 2011 , Real Radio was added to the set . [ 17 ] Real Radio 's OFCOM application claims they intended to radiate 10 kW and 2.5 kW beams . [ 18 ]",
"section_title": "Services listed by frequency -- Analogue radio ( FM VHF )",
"title": "Blaenplwyf transmitting station",
"uid": "Blaenplwyf_transmitting_station_13",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaenplwyf_transmitting_station"
} | 5,324 |
5325 | List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States_6 | [
[
"Church",
"Dates",
"Location",
"City , State",
"Description"
],
[
"St. Augustine Cathedral",
"1868 built",
"359 Washington Ave",
"Bridgeport , Connecticut",
"Gothic Revival ; Patrick Keely , architect"
],
[
"Holy Trinity Lithuanian Church",
"1927 built",
"53 Capitol Ave",
"Hartford , Connecticut",
""
],
[
"St. Patrick - St. Anthony Church",
"1859 built 1984 NRHP-listed",
"285 Church Street",
"Hartford , Connecticut",
""
],
[
"Cathedral of St. Joseph",
"1962 built",
"140 Farmington Avenue",
"Hartford , Connecticut",
"One spire of 86m height"
],
[
"Cathedral of St. Patrick",
"1879 built 1989 NRHP-listed",
"211 Broadway",
"Norwich , Connecticut",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"Basilica of Saint John the Evangelist",
"1868 built",
"279 Atlantic St",
"Stamford , Connecticut",
"Gothic Revival"
],
[
"St. Mary 's Church",
"1860 built 1987 NRHP-listed",
"540 Elm St",
"Stamford , Connecticut",
""
],
[
"St. Vladimir 's Cathedral",
"1957 built",
"24 Wenzel Terrace",
"Stamford , Connecticut",
"Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church"
],
[
"Basilica of the Immaculate Conception",
"1928 built 1983 NRHP-listed",
"74 W. Main St",
"Waterbury , Connecticut",
"Italian Renaissance Revival"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of notable Catholic churches and cathedrals in the United States.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Connecticut",
"title": "List of Catholic churches in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Catholic_churches_in_the_United_States"
} | 5,325 |
5326 | Sports_in_Charlotte,_North_Carolina_0 | [
[
"Club",
"League",
"Venue",
"Location",
"Founded"
],
[
"Carolina Panthers",
"NFL",
"Bank of America Stadium",
"Uptown Charlotte",
"1995"
],
[
"Charlotte Hornets",
"NBA",
"Spectrum Center",
"Uptown Charlotte",
"1988"
],
[
"Charlotte MLS team",
"MLS",
"Bank of America Stadium",
"Uptown Charlotte",
"2019"
],
[
"Charlotte Knights",
"IL",
"BB & T Ballpark",
"Uptown Charlotte",
"1976"
],
[
"Charlotte Checkers",
"AHL",
"Bojangles ' Coliseum",
"Coliseum Drive , Charlotte",
"2010"
],
[
"Charlotte Independence",
"USL",
"Mecklenburg County Sportsplex",
"Matthews",
"2014"
],
[
"Carolina Energy",
"AAL",
"Bojangles ' Coliseum",
"Coliseum Drive , Charlotte",
"2017"
],
[
"Charlotte Eagles",
"PDL",
"Restart Field",
"Stonehaven , Charlotte",
"1993"
],
[
"Charlotte Rugby Club",
"MARFU",
"Skillbeck Athletic Grounds",
"Coulwood , Charlotte",
"1971"
],
[
"Charlotte Roller Girls",
"WFTDA",
"Grady Cole Center",
"Elizabeth , Charlotte",
"2006"
],
[
"Carolina Queens",
"IWFL",
"West Mecklenburg Stadium",
"Pawtuckett , Charlotte",
"2005"
],
[
"Charlotte Invasion",
"WBCBL",
"Belk SAC Gym",
"South Charlotte",
"2014"
]
] | {
"intro": "Sports in Charlotte, North Carolina have a long and varied history. The city is home to teams at nearly every level of American sports including the Carolina Panthers of the National Football League and Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association. In addition to serving as the home base for several teams the city plays host to many events of national and international importance including the longest race in NASCAR, the annual Coca-Cola 600 and golf's Wells Fargo Championship.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams and history -- Professional and non-collegiate amateur",
"title": "Sports in Charlotte, North Carolina",
"uid": "Sports_in_Charlotte,_North_Carolina_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_in_Charlotte,_North_Carolina"
} | 5,326 |
5327 | Danneel_Harris_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1999-2004",
"One Life to Live",
"Shannon McBain",
"Contract role ; 68 episodes"
],
[
"2004",
"What I Like About You",
"Kate",
"4 episodes ( season 2 )"
],
[
"2004",
"Joey",
"London / Katie Harper",
"3 episodes"
],
[
"2005",
"Charmed",
"New Paige Matthews",
"Episode : Something Wicca This Way Goes"
],
[
"2005",
"JAG",
"Cammie Cresswell",
"Episodes : Straits of Malacca , Death at the Mosque"
],
[
"2005-2010",
"One Tree Hill",
"Rachel Gatina",
"Recurring role ( seasons 3 , 5 , 7 ) ; main role ( season 4 ) ; 52 episodes"
],
[
"2007",
"CSI : Crime Scene Investigation",
"Shasta McCloud",
"Episode : A La Cart"
],
[
"2008",
"Free Radio",
"Danneel Harris",
"Episode : Lance Gets a Bodyguard"
],
[
"2008",
"How I Met Your Mother",
"Nora Zinman",
"Episode : Shelter Island"
],
[
"2009",
"NCIS",
"Jessica Shore",
"Episode : Love & War"
],
[
"2009",
"Trust Me",
"Jessica",
"Episode : All Hell the Victors"
],
[
"2009",
"CSI : Miami",
"Abby Dawson",
"Episode : Sink or Swim"
],
[
"2011",
"Friends with Benefits",
"Sara Maxwell",
"Main role ; 13 episodes"
],
[
"2012",
"Retired at 35",
"Jenn Harris",
"3 episodes ( season 2 )"
],
[
"2012",
"Naughty or Nice",
"Jill Rhodes",
"Television film"
],
[
"2013",
"How to Live with Your Parents",
"Olivia",
"2 episodes"
],
[
"2014",
"Baby Boot Camp",
"Julia",
"Television film"
],
[
"2018-present",
"Supernatural",
"Sister Jo / Anael",
"Recurring role ( season 13 -present ) ; 4 episodes"
],
[
"2018",
"The Christmas Contract",
"Naomi",
"Television film"
]
] | {
"intro": "Danneel Ackles (née Elta Danneel Graul; March 18, 1979), credited professionally before 2012 as Danneel Harris, is an American actress and model. She played the role of Shannon McBain on the American daytime soap opera One Life to Live and Rachel Gatina on the WB/CW television drama series One Tree Hill.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Danneel Ackles",
"uid": "Danneel_Harris_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danneel_Ackles"
} | 5,327 |
5328 | Alan_Hardaker_Trophy_0 | [
[
"Country",
"Win ( s )",
"Year ( s )"
],
[
"England",
"16",
"1990 , 1991 , 1993 , 1994 , 1995 , 1997 , 1998 , 2001 , 2005 , 2006 , 2008 , 2009 , 2011 , 2012 , 2013 , 2015"
],
[
"Scotland",
"2",
"1992 , 2000"
],
[
"Belgium",
"2",
"2016 , 2018"
],
[
"Ireland",
"1",
"1996"
],
[
"Denmark",
"1",
"1999"
],
[
"United States",
"1",
"2002"
],
[
"Poland",
"1",
"2003"
],
[
"Netherlands",
"1",
"2004"
],
[
"Ivory Coast",
"1",
"2007"
],
[
"Ecuador",
"1",
"2010"
],
[
"France",
"1",
"2014"
],
[
"Sweden",
"1",
"2017"
],
[
"Portugal",
"1",
"2019"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Alan Hardaker Trophy is an annual association football award presented to the Man of the Match in the EFL Cup final since 1990. The Alan Hardaker Trophy was first awarded in 1990, Des Walker was the inaugural recipient. Ben Foster, John Terry and Vincent Kompany have won the award on two occasions, the most wins by an individual. Manchester United have received the award five times, more than any other club. English players have won the trophy sixteen times, which is a record; the only other nations with multiple wins are Scotland and Belgium, with two recipients.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Awards won by nationality",
"title": "Alan Hardaker Trophy",
"uid": "Alan_Hardaker_Trophy_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Hardaker_Trophy"
} | 5,328 |
5329 | Papal_election,_1216_0 | [
[
"Elector",
"Title",
"Elevated",
"Elevator"
],
[
"Nicola de Romanis",
"Bishop of Frascati",
"December 18 , 1204",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Ugolino di Segni",
"Bishop of Ostia e Velletri",
"December 19 , 1198",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Guido Papareschi",
"Bishop of Palestrina",
"September 22 , 1190",
"Clement III"
],
[
"Pelagio Galvani",
"Bishop of Albano",
"ca . 1206/1207",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Cinzio Cenci",
"Priest of S. Lorenzo in Lucina",
"September 22 , 1190",
"Clement III"
],
[
"Cencio",
"Priest of SS . Giovanni e Paolo",
"February 20 , 1193",
"Celestine III"
],
[
"Giovanni Colonna di Carbognano",
"Deacon of SS . Cosma e Damiano",
"May 27 , 1206",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Gregorio Gualgano",
"Priest of S. Anastasia",
"May 27 , 1206",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Robert Curson",
"Priest of S. Stefano al Monte Celio",
"May 19 , 1212",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Peter of Benevento",
"Priest of S. Lorenzo in Damaso",
"May 19 , 1212",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Stefano di Ceccano , O.Cist",
"Priest of SS . XII Apostoli",
"April 13 , 1213",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Tommaso da Capua",
"Priest of S. Sabina",
"March 5 , 1216",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Guido Pierleone",
"Deacon of S. Nicola in Carcere Tulliano",
"December 18 , 1204",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Ottaviano dei conti di Segni",
"Deacon of SS . Sergio e Bacco",
"May 27 , 1206",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Gregorio Crescenzi",
"Deacon of S. Teodoro",
"March 5 , 1216",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Romano Bonaventura",
"Deacon of S. Maria in Portico",
"March 5 , 1216",
"Innocent III"
],
[
"Stefano de Normandis dei Conti",
"Deacon of S. Adriano",
"March 5 , 1216",
"Innocent III"
]
] | {
"intro": "The papal election of 1216 (July 18), was convoked after the death of Pope Innocent III in Perugia (July 16, 1216), elected Cardinal Cencio Camerario, who took the name of Honorius III.",
"section_text": "There were 25 cardinals in the College of Cardinals in July 1216 , including 23 curial cardinals and two `` external cardinals '' , who did not reside in the papal curia [ 2 ] It is known that 17 of them participated in the election : [ 3 ]",
"section_title": "List of participants",
"title": "1216 papal election",
"uid": "Papal_election,_1216_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1216_papal_election"
} | 5,329 |
5330 | Stout_Metal_Airplane_0 | [
[
"Model name",
"First flight",
"Number built",
"Type"
],
[
"Stout Batwing",
"1918",
"1",
"Experimental blended-wing craft ( not produced )"
],
[
"Stout Batwing Limousine",
"1920",
"1",
"Experimental blended-wing passenger aircraft ( not produced )"
],
[
"Stout ST-1",
"1922",
"1",
"All metal twin engine torpedo bomber ( not produced )"
],
[
"Stout 1-AS Air Sedan",
"1923",
"1",
"All metal single engine transport ( not produced )"
],
[
"Stout 2-AT Pullman",
"1924",
"11",
"9 Passenger single engine"
],
[
"Stout 3-AT",
"1924",
"1",
"Pullman style trimotor with open cockpit for pilot"
],
[
"Ford 4-AT",
"1924",
"79",
"Trimotor with 200 hp-300 hp engines"
],
[
"Ford Flivver",
"1926",
"6",
"Single seat ( not produced )"
],
[
"Stout Dragonfly",
"1927",
"1",
"Highly staggerd twin engine biplane without an elevator"
],
[
"Ford Executive",
"1927",
"1",
"5 place executive transport ( not produced )"
],
[
"Ford 5-AT",
"1929",
"121",
"Trimotor with 420 hp-450 hp engines"
],
[
"Ford 6-AT",
"1929",
"2",
"Trimotor"
],
[
"Ford 7-AT",
"1929",
"1",
"Trimotor with one 420 hp engine and two 300 hp engines"
],
[
"Ford 8-AT",
"1929",
"1",
"Trimotor converted to a single engine freighter"
],
[
"Ford 9-AT",
"1930",
"1",
"4-AT Trimotor upgraded to 300 hp engines"
],
[
"Ford 10-AT",
"1930",
"1",
"4 engined design ( not produced )"
],
[
"Ford 11-AT",
"1930",
"1",
"Trimotor with three 225 hp Packard DR-980 diesel engines"
],
[
"Ford 12-AT",
"1931",
"1",
"Trimotor with one 1000 hp and two 575 hp engines ( not produced )"
],
[
"Ford 13-AT",
"1931",
"1",
"Trimotor with one 575 hp and two 300 hp engines"
],
[
"Ford 14-AT",
"1932",
"1",
"Trimotor with one 1000 hp and two 715 hp engines in wings ( not produced )"
]
] | {
"intro": "Stout Metal Airplane Division of the Ford Motor Company was an American aircraft manufacturer founded by William Bushnell Stout as the Stout Metal Airplane Co. in 1922. The company was purchased by Ford Motor Company in 1924 and later produced the Ford Trimotor. At the height of the Depression, Ford closed the aircraft design and production division in 1936, temporarily re-entering the aviation market with the production of the B-24, at the Willow Run aircraft factory during World War II.",
"section_text": "The AT moniker originates from the Stout 2-AT `` Air Truck '' [ 22 ]",
"section_title": "Aircraft",
"title": "Stout Metal Airplane",
"uid": "Stout_Metal_Airplane_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stout_Metal_Airplane"
} | 5,330 |
5331 | Chinese_Volleyball_League_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Stadium",
"Capacity",
"City/Area"
],
[
"Bayi Nanchang",
"Nanchang Stadium",
"2,500",
"Nanchang"
],
[
"Beijing Baic Motor",
"Beijing Guangcai Stadium",
"2,800",
"Beijing"
],
[
"Fujian Anxi Tiekuanyin",
"Fuqing City Stadium",
"4,500",
"Fuqing"
],
[
"Guangdong Evergrande",
"Shenzhen Sports Center",
"5,000",
"Shenzhen"
],
[
"Hebei",
"Xingtai City Stadium",
"4,500",
"Xingtai"
],
[
"Henan Yinge Industrial Investment",
"Luohe Gymnasium",
"3,500",
"Luohe"
],
[
"Jiangsu Zenith Steel",
"Changzhou University Gymnasium",
"5,000",
"Changzhou"
],
[
"Liaoning Bayuquan",
"Weinan Sports Training Base",
"4,000",
"Shenyang"
],
[
"Shandong Sports Lottery",
"Zibo Sports Center Complex",
"6,000",
"Zibo"
],
[
"Shanghai Bright Ubest",
"Luwan Sports Centre",
"3,500",
"Shanghai"
],
[
"Sichuan",
"Shuangliu Sports Center",
"3,400",
"Chengdu"
],
[
"Tianjin Bohai Bank",
"Tianjin People 's Stadium",
"3,400",
"Tianjin"
],
[
"Yunnan University Dianchi College",
"Qujing Cultural Sports Park Gymnasium",
"5,000",
"Qujing"
],
[
"Zhejiang Jiaxing Xitang Ancient Town",
"Jiashan County Stadium",
"3,100",
"Jiashan"
]
] | {
"intro": "Chinese Volleyball Super League, often abbreviated to CVL (abbreviation remain unchanged), are the pre-eminent men's and women's professional volleyball leagues in China. It was founded in 1996 as the Chinese Volleyball League and is organized by the Chinese Volleyball Association (CVA), operating with IRENA Group. The league was rebranded to the Chinese Volleyball Super League when it became fully professional in 2017. The champions qualifies to AVC Club Volleyball Championship. The women's league of this season (2018/19) starts in November and ends in March of the following year, while the men's league starts in October and ends in February of the following year, lasting for about four months. The league is divided into four stages: the first two stages normally called the Regular Season, and the last two stages called the Playoffs. The number of teams has increased from 12 to 14 since the 2017/18 season, for both men's and women's leagues.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Women 's Super League -- Teams in the Chinese Volleyball Super League ( 2018–2019 )",
"title": "Chinese Volleyball Super League",
"uid": "Chinese_Volleyball_League_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Volleyball_Super_League"
} | 5,331 |
5332 | Miss_World_Talent_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner",
"Represented",
"Placement at Miss World"
],
[
"2004",
"Yessica Ramírez",
"Mexico",
"Top 15"
],
[
"2007",
"Zhang Zilin",
"China",
"Miss World 2007"
],
[
"2008",
"Ksenia Sukhinova",
"Russia",
"Miss World 2008"
],
[
"2009",
"Perla Beltrán",
"Mexico",
"1st Runner-up"
],
[
"2010",
"Mariann Birkedal",
"Norway",
"Top 7"
],
[
"2011",
"Zhanna Zhumaliyeva",
"Kazakhstan",
"Top 15"
],
[
"2012",
"Atong Demach",
"South Sudan",
"Top 7"
],
[
"2013",
"Megan Young",
"Philippines",
"Miss World 2013"
],
[
"2014",
"Isidora Borovčanin",
"Bosnia and Herzegovina",
"Unplaced"
],
[
"2015",
"Mireia Lalaguna",
"Spain",
"Miss World 2015"
],
[
"2016",
"Jing Kong",
"China",
"Top 11"
],
[
"2017",
"Ugochi Ihezue",
"Nigeria",
"Top 15"
],
[
"2018",
"Maëva Coucke",
"France",
"Top 12"
],
[
"2019",
"Nyekachi Douglas",
"Nigeria",
"Top 5"
]
] | {
"intro": "Miss World is the oldest running international beauty pageant. It was created in the United Kingdom by Eric Morley in 1951. Since his death in 2000, Morley's widow, Julia Morley, has co-chaired the pageant. Along with Miss Universe, Miss International and Miss Earth, this pageant is one of the Big Four international beauty pageants - the most coveted beauty titles when it comes to international pageant competitions. The current Miss World is Toni-Ann Singh of Jamaica who was crowned on 14 December 2019 in London, England. She is the fourth Jamaican to win Miss World.",
"section_text": "The Miss World Top Model is a modeling fast track competition at the Miss World Pageant . [ 107 ] The competition was first held in 2004 , but not in 2005-2006 . It has been held since 2007 ; the winner of the competition automatically qualifies for the semifinals .",
"section_title": "Fast track events -- Miss World Top Model",
"title": "Miss World",
"uid": "Miss_World_Talent_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_World"
} | 5,332 |
5333 | Cypriot_First_Division_(women)_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Home city",
"Home ground"
],
[
"Anorthosis Famagusta FC",
"Ayia Napa",
"Dimotiko Stadio Ayia Napa"
],
[
"Apollon Ladies F.C",
"Limassol",
"SEK Agiou Athanasiou"
],
[
"Apollon Lympion",
"Lympia",
"Stadium Apollon Lympion"
],
[
"Barcelona FA",
"Germasogeia",
"Koinotiko Gipedo Germasogeia"
],
[
"Football Academy of Ypsona Limassol Champions",
"Kolossi",
"Koinotiko Gipedo Kolossi"
],
[
"Amok Chrysomilia",
"Limassol",
"Dimotiko Stadio Kato polemidion Den xechno"
],
[
"Enosis Neon THOI Lakatamia",
"Lakatamia",
"THOI Lakatamia Stadium"
],
[
"Lefkothea Nicosia",
"Latsia",
"Dimotiko Stadio Latsia"
],
[
"Omonia Nicosia",
"Nicosia",
"THOI Lakatamia Stadium"
],
[
"Pafia",
"Paphos",
"Voithitiko AE Pafou"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Cypriot First Division is the top division of women's football in Cyprus. It has been running since its establishment by the Cyprus Football Association (C.F.A) and its originator Mr. Tassos Katsikidis (vice-president of the board) during the 1998-99 season. The winning team of the league qualifies for a spot in the UEFA Women's Champions League. Although a Cypriot team entered the Champions League every year from 2003-04 onwards, in 2008-09 Apollon Limassol became the first team to win a point in those competitions. There is no second league in Cyprus as of 2014, thus there is no relegation in place.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2017–18 teams",
"title": "Cypriot First Division (women)",
"uid": "Cypriot_First_Division_(women)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriot_First_Division_(women)"
} | 5,333 |
5334 | Fairfield_Stags_men's_basketball_0 | [
[
"Player",
"Class",
"Top League",
"Top Team"
],
[
"Tyler Nelson",
"2018",
"NBA G League",
"Greensboro Swarm"
],
[
"Amadou Sidibe",
"2017",
"HLA Lucentum",
"LEB Plata"
],
[
"Marcus Gilbert",
"2016",
"FC Porto",
"Liga Portuguesa de Basquetebol"
],
[
"Maurice Barrow",
"2014",
"Austrian Basketball League",
"Klosterneuburg Dukes"
],
[
"Derek Needham",
"2013",
"Lega Basket Serie A",
"Pallacanestro Reggiana"
],
[
"Sean Crawford",
"2012",
"Turkish Basketball First League",
"Pertevniyal S.K"
],
[
"Rakim Sanders",
"2012",
"Lega Basket Serie A",
"Pallacanestro Olimpia Milano"
],
[
"Ryan Olander",
"2012",
"Lithuanian Basketball League",
"BC Šiauliai"
],
[
"Jonathan Han",
"2011",
"Polish Basketball League",
"Śląsk Wrocław"
],
[
"Terrence Todd",
"2006",
"Premier League",
"UCC Demons"
],
[
"Deng Gai",
"2005",
"National Basketball Association",
"Philadelphia 76ers"
],
[
"Rob Thomson",
"2004",
"Liga Națională",
"CS Gaz Metan Mediaș"
],
[
"Ajou Deng",
"2003",
"British Basketball League",
"PAWS London Capitals"
],
[
"Darren Phillip",
"2000",
"Liga ACB",
"Unicaja Málaga"
],
[
"Drew Henderson",
"1993",
"National Basketball Association",
"Boston Celtics"
],
[
"Troy Bradford",
"1990",
"Spanish Basketball League",
"UPCT Basket Catagena"
],
[
"A. J. Wynder",
"1987",
"National Basketball Association",
"Boston Celtics"
],
[
"Joe DeSantis",
"1979",
"Lega Basket Serie A",
"Reyer Venezia Mestre"
],
[
"Art Kenny",
"1968",
"Lega Basket Serie A",
"Olimpia Milano"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Fairfield Stags men's basketball team represents Fairfield University in Fairfield, Connecticut and competes in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference of NCAA Division I. The Stags split their home games in the 9,500-seat, state-of-the-art Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, Connecticut and in Alumni Hall back on the campus of Fairfield University. The team is currently coached by Jay Young, his first year at the helm. The Stags have experienced post-season tournament action fourteen times having competed in the NAIA Tournament in 1951; the NCAA DII Tournament in 1960, 1961 and 1962; the National Invitational Tournament in 1973, 1974, 1978, 1996, 2003; and 2011 NIT; and the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament in 1986, 1987 and 1997. In the 1973 National Invitation Tournament, the Stags advanced to the second round where the team lost by one point to eventual champion Virginia Tech. And in the 1997 NCAA Tournament, the Stags nearly achieved a historical upset of top-seeded North Carolina after leading the Tar Heels by seven points at halftime. The team also won the MAAC Regular Season Title in 1986 and the MAAC Championship Tournament in 1986, 1987 and 1997. Individually, Joe DeSantis earned All-American honors in 1979; Darren Phillip was the nation's top rebounder averaging 14 rebounds per game in 2000; and Deng Gai was the nation's top shot blocker in 2005 averaging 5.5 blocks per game which ranks #5 on the NCAA's all-time blocked shot average list. Thirteen Stags have been either drafted or signed to play in the National Basketball Association.",
"section_text": "The following Stags play or played professional basketball across the globe :",
"section_title": "Stags in the pros",
"title": "Fairfield Stags men's basketball",
"uid": "Fairfield_Stags_men's_basketball_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairfield_Stags_men's_basketball"
} | 5,334 |
5335 | CP_System_2 | [
[
"Release date",
"Developer",
"English title",
"Japanese title",
"Genre"
],
[
"1994",
"Capcom",
"Warriors of Fate Sangokushi II ( Asia )",
"Tenchi o Kurau II : Sekiheki no Tatakai ( 天地を喰らう2・赤壁の戦い )",
"Beat 'em up"
],
[
"1994",
"Capcom",
"Capcom World 2 : Adventure Quiz",
"Adventure Quiz Capcom World 2 ( アドベンチャークイズカプコンワールド2 )",
"Quiz game"
],
[
"1995",
"Capcom",
"Captain Commando",
"Captain Commando ( キャプテンコマンドー )",
"Beat 'em up"
],
[
"1994",
"Capcom",
"Final Fight",
"Final Fight ( ファイナルファイト )",
"Beat 'em up"
],
[
"1995",
"Capcom",
"Knights of the Round",
"Knights of the Round ( ナイツオブザラウンド )",
"Beat 'em up"
],
[
"1995",
"Capcom",
"Muscle Bomber Duo : Ultimate Team Battle",
"Muscle Bomber Duo : Heat Up Warriors ( マッスルボマーDUO -Heat Up Warriors- )",
"Sports game"
],
[
"1994",
"Capcom",
"Saturday Night Slam Masters",
"Muscle Bomber : The Body Explosion ( マッスルボマー -The Body Explosion- )",
"Sports game"
],
[
"1994",
"Capcom",
"Street Fighter II′ : Champion Edition",
"Street Fighter II Dash : Champion Edition ( ストリートファイターⅡダッシュ -Champion Edition- )",
"Versus Fighting"
],
[
"1994 , pack-in",
"Capcom",
"Street Fighter II′ Turbo : Hyper Fighting",
"Street Fighter II Dash Turbo : Hyper Fighting ( ストリートファイターⅡダッシュターボ -Hyper Fighting- )",
"Versus Fighting"
],
[
"1995",
"Capcom",
"Street Fighter Alpha",
"Street Fighter Zero ( ストリートファイターZERO )",
"Versus Fighting"
],
[
"1995",
"Capcom",
"The King of Dragons",
"The King of Dragons ( ザ・キングオブドラゴンズ )",
"Beat 'em up"
]
] | {
"intro": "The CP System (CPシステム, shīpī shisutemu, CPS for short) is an arcade system board developed by Capcom that ran game software stored on removable ROM cartridges. More than two dozen arcade titles were released for CPS-1, before Capcom shifted game development over to its successor, the CP System II. Recognizable titles such as Capcom's Street Fighter II: The World Warrior, Street Fighter II: Champion Edition, Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting as well as their previous 1989 spin-off Final Fight were perhaps the most popular and successful games within the CPS library that would later be converted to various home consoles and handheld ports such as the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, PlayStation, Mega-CD, ZX Spectrum, Super NES, X68000, Xbox, Game Boy Advance, PlayStation Portable, iOS, etc.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Capcom Power System Changer -- List of games",
"title": "CP System",
"uid": "CP_System_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP_System"
} | 5,335 |
5336 | JC_Chasez_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1991-1996",
"The All-New Mickey Mouse Club ( TANMMC )",
"Himself",
"Seasons 4-7"
],
[
"2000",
"Saturday Night Live",
"Himself/Musical Guest",
"( along with NSYNC )"
],
[
"2001",
"The Simpsons",
"Himself",
"Episode : New Kids on the Blecch"
],
[
"2002",
"What I Like About You",
"Himself",
"Spa Day ( Season 1 , episode 2 )"
],
[
"2003",
"Greetings from Tucson",
"Jay Dugray",
"Home Sweet Home ( Season 1 , episode 18 )"
],
[
"2005",
"What 's New , Scooby-Doo ?",
"Himself",
"A Scooby-Doo Valentine"
],
[
"2006",
"Ghost Whisperer",
"Samson",
"The Curse of the Ninth ( Season 2 , episode 9 )"
],
[
"2008",
"Las Vegas",
"William",
"I Could Eat a Horse ( Season 5 , episode 12 )"
],
[
"2008-2012",
"America 's Best Dance Crew",
"Himself",
"Judge"
]
] | {
"intro": "Joshua Scott JC Chasez (/ˈʃɑːzeɪ/; born August 8, 1976) is an American singer, songwriter, dancer, record producer, and occasional actor. He started out his career as a cast member on The Mickey Mouse Club before rising to stardom with *NSYNC, and by writing and producing for music acts such as Girls Aloud, Basement Jaxx, David Archuleta, and Matthew Morrison. He also served as a judge for America's Best Dance Crew.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography",
"title": "JC Chasez",
"uid": "JC_Chasez_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JC_Chasez"
} | 5,336 |
5337 | 2006_Santos_FC_season_1 | [
[
"P",
"Name",
"Age",
"Moving from",
"Type"
],
[
"DF",
"Domingos",
"20",
"Grêmio",
"Loan return"
],
[
"DF",
"Neto",
"23",
"Paraná Clube",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Jonas",
"21",
"Guarani",
"Signed"
],
[
"GK",
"Fábio Costa",
"28",
"Corinthians",
"Signed"
],
[
"GK",
"Roger",
"33",
"São Paulo",
"Signed"
],
[
"MF",
"Maldonado",
"26",
"Cruzeiro",
"Signed"
],
[
"MF",
"Fabinho",
"26",
"Cerezo Osaka",
"Signed"
],
[
"DF",
"Julio Manzur",
"25",
"Guaraní",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Galvão",
"23",
"Iraty",
"Loaned"
],
[
"FW",
"Reinaldo",
"26",
"Kashiwa Reysol",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Gilmar",
"21",
"Vitória",
"Loaned"
],
[
"MF",
"Cléber Santana",
"24",
"Kashiwa Reysol",
"Signed"
],
[
"DF",
"Ronaldo Guiaro",
"31",
"Besiktas",
"Signed"
],
[
"MF",
"Magnum",
"23",
"Iraty",
"Loaned"
],
[
"MF",
"Rodrigo Tabata",
"25",
"Goiás",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Antonio de Nigris",
"27",
"Monterrey",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Rodrigo Tiuí",
"20",
"Noroeste",
"Signed"
],
[
"FW",
"Wellington Paulista",
"23",
"Juventus",
"Loaned"
],
[
"DF",
"Dênis",
"22",
"Ipatinga",
"Signed"
],
[
"MF",
"André Oliveira",
"21",
"Iraty",
"Loaned"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2006 season was Santos Futebol Clube's ninety-fourth season in existence and the club's forty-seventh consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football. This season, Santos announced the return of the manager Vanderlei Luxemburgo, who had left the club in the last season and failed at Real Madrid. On 9 April 2006, Santos won the Campeonato Paulista for sixteenth time in history, by beating Portuguesa 2-0 in the last match. On 31 August, they signed Brazilian midfielder Zé Roberto who was free agent since he left FC Bayern Munich, until June 2007. In the Campeonato Brasileiro, Santos ended in the 4th place, securing a place in the 2007 Copa Libertadores. In the Copa do Brasil, Santos were knocked out by Ipatinga in the quarter-finals. Santos also competed in the Copa Sudamericana, being eliminated in the round of 16 after a 1-3 loss on aggregate to San Lorenzo.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Transfers -- In",
"title": "2006 Santos FC season",
"uid": "2006_Santos_FC_season_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Santos_FC_season"
} | 5,337 |
5338 | American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Colt_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Horse",
"Trainer",
"Owner"
],
[
"1935",
"Tintagel",
"George M. Odom",
"Marshall Field III"
],
[
"1934",
"Balladier",
"Herbert J. Thompson",
"Edward R. Bradley"
],
[
"1933",
"Cavalcade",
"Robert Augustus Smith",
"Isabel Dodge Sloane"
],
[
"1932",
"Ladysman",
"Bud Stotler",
"William R. Coe"
],
[
"1931",
"Burning Blaze",
"John B. Partridge",
"Pat & Richard Nash"
],
[
"1930",
"Jamestown",
"A. Jack Joyner",
"George D. Widener Jr"
],
[
"1930",
"Equipoise",
"Fred Hopkins",
"Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney"
],
[
"1929",
"Whichone",
"James G. Rowe Jr",
"Harry Payne Whitney"
],
[
"1928",
"High Strung",
"George M. Odom",
"Marshall Field III"
],
[
"1927",
"Reigh Count",
"Henry E. McDaniel",
"Fannie Hertz"
],
[
"1927",
"Dice",
"James E. Fitzsimmons",
"Wheatley Stable"
],
[
"1926",
"Scapa Flow",
"Scott P. Harlan",
"Walter M. Jeffords Sr"
],
[
"1925",
"Pompey",
"William H. Karrick",
"William R. Coe"
],
[
"1924",
"Master Charlie",
"Andrew Blakely",
"William Daniel"
],
[
"1923",
"St. James",
"A. Jack Joyner",
"George D. Widener Jr"
],
[
"1923",
"Wise Counsellor",
"John S. Ward",
"Frederick A. Burton & John S. Ward"
],
[
"1922",
"Zev",
"Sam Hildreth",
"Rancocas Stable"
],
[
"1921",
"Morvich",
"Fred Burlew",
"Benjamin Block"
],
[
"1920",
"Tryster",
"James G. Rowe Sr",
"Harry Payne Whitney"
],
[
"1919",
"Man o ' War",
"Louis Feustel",
"Samuel D. Riddle"
]
] | {
"intro": "The American Champion Two-Year-Old Male Horse is an American Thoroughbred horse racing honor awarded annually in Thoroughbred flat racing. It became part of the Eclipse Awards program in 1971. The award originated in 1936 when the Daily Racing Form (DRF) began naming an annual champion. In the same year, the Baltimore-based Turf and Sports Digest magazine instituted a similar award. Starting in 1950, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations (TRA) began naming its own champion. The following list provides the name of the horses chosen by these organizations. Whenever there were different champions named, the horses are listed side-by-side with the one chosen as champion by the Daily Racing Form noted with the letters (DRF), the one chosen by the Thoroughbred Racing Associations by the letters (TRA) and the one chosen by Turf and Sports Digest by the letters (TSD). The Daily Racing Form, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations, and the National Turf Writers Association all joined forces in 1971 to create the Eclipse Award. Champions from 1887 through 1935 were selected retrospectively by a panel of experts as published by The Blood-Horse magazine.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Honorees -- The Blood-Horse retrospective champions",
"title": "American Champion Two-Year-Old Male Horse",
"uid": "American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Colt_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Male_Horse"
} | 5,338 |
5339 | List_of_football_clubs_in_Greece_4 | [
[
"Club",
"Greek name",
"Settlement",
"Regional unit",
"Region"
],
[
"Agrotikos Asteras",
"Αγροτικός Αστέρας",
"Evosmos",
"Thessaloniki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Almopos Aridaea",
"Αλμωπός Αριδαίας",
"Aridaea",
"Pella",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Anagennisi Giannitsa",
"Αναγέννηση Γιαννιτσών",
"Giannitsa",
"Pella",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Aris Palaiochori",
"Άρης Παλαιοχωρίου",
"Palaiochori",
"Chalkidiki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Astrapi Mesopotamia",
"Αστραπή Μεσοποταμιάς",
"Mesopotamia",
"Kastoria",
"West Macedonia"
],
[
"Edessaikos",
"Εδεσσαϊκός",
"Edessa",
"Pella",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Makedonikos",
"Μακεδονικός",
"Neapoli",
"Thessaloniki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Megas Alexandros Trikala",
"Μέγας Αλέξανδρος Τρικάλων",
"Trikala",
"Imathia",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Nea Kallikrateia",
"Νέα Καλλικράτεια",
"Kallikrateia",
"Chalkidiki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Niki Agkathia",
"Νίκη Αγκαθιάς",
"Agkathia",
"Imathia",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"PAS Florina",
"Π.Α.Σ . Φλώρινα",
"Florina",
"Florina",
"West Macedonia"
],
[
"Poseidon Michaniona",
"Ποσειδών Μηχανιώνας",
"Michaniona",
"Thessaloniki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Seirina",
"Σειρήνα",
"Grevena",
"Grevena",
"West Macedonia"
],
[
"Thermaikos",
"Θερμαϊκός",
"Thermi",
"Thessaloniki",
"Central Macedonia"
],
[
"Thyella Sarakinoi",
"Θύελλα Σαρακηνών",
"Sarakinoi",
"Pella",
"Central Macedonia"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of football clubs located in Greece and the leagues and divisions they are playing in for 2019-20 season.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Gamma Ethniki -- Group B",
"title": "List of football clubs in Greece",
"uid": "List_of_football_clubs_in_Greece_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_football_clubs_in_Greece"
} | 5,339 |
5340 | List_of_Drexel_University_alumni_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Grad year",
"Degree",
"Notability"
],
[
"Chuck Barris",
"1953",
"BS",
"Entertainer ; creator of The Gong Show"
],
[
"Howard Benson",
"1980",
"BS",
"Grammy Award -nominated music producer"
],
[
"David Kresh",
"1966",
"MS",
"Poet and reference specialist at the Library of Congress"
],
[
"Elizabeth McCracken",
"1997",
"MS",
"Author of Here 's Your Hat What 's Your Hurry and professor of creative writing at the University of Texas at Austin"
],
[
"Chris McKendry",
"1990",
"BS",
"ESPN anchor and journalist"
],
[
"Katherine McNamara",
"2013",
"BS",
"Actress , best known for her role as Clary Fray in Shadowhunters"
],
[
"Pat Munday",
"1978",
"BS",
"Author , professor , and environmentalist"
],
[
"Violet Oakley",
"1948",
"-",
"Artist ; first woman to receive the Gold Medal of Honor from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts"
],
[
"Maxfield Parrish",
"1895",
"Cert",
"Early twentieth century artist whose works included illustrating Mother Goose in Prose and Collier 's Weekly"
],
[
"Meinhardt Raabe",
"1970",
"MBA",
"Actor , known for his role as the Munchkin coroner in The Wizard of Oz"
],
[
"Frank Schoonover",
"1900",
"Cert",
"Illustrator for Hopalong Cassidy stories as well as the book A Princess of Mars"
],
[
"Susan Seidelman",
"1973",
"BS",
"Filmmaker whose film Smithereens was the first American independent film invited to compete at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival"
],
[
"Cameron Snyder",
"1941",
"-",
"Sportswriter , Dick McCann Memorial Award winner"
],
[
"Sarah Stolfa",
"2005",
"BS",
"Photographer , won The New York Times Photography Contest for College Students in 2004"
],
[
"Corinne Trang",
"2003",
"BS",
"Award-winning author of several Asian -themed cookbooks"
],
[
"Jack Wall",
"1986",
"BS",
"Video game music composer"
],
[
"Stephen Ward",
"2003",
"BS",
"Host and executive producer of Tough Love"
],
[
"Stephen M. Wolownik",
"1989",
"MS",
"Pioneer in the Russian and Eastern European music community in the United States"
]
] | {
"intro": "Drexel University is a private university located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. The 16th largest private university in the nation, Drexel is made up of nine colleges and four schools, most of which serve both undergraduate and graduate students. It offers 96 undergraduate degree programs, 88 master's programs, and 35 doctoral programs. Drexel was founded as a technical school in 1891 for the improvement of industrial education as a means of opening better and wider avenues of employment to young men and women. Drexel began awarding undergraduate degrees in 1914, starting with the Bachelor of Science in engineering; before that, Drexel granted certificates or diplomas in the field of enrollment. In 1931, Drexel began offering graduate degrees through the School of Home Economics. Since its founding the university has graduated over 100,000 alumni. Certificate-earning alumni such as artist Violet Oakley and illustrator Frank Schoonover reflect the early emphasis on art as part of the university's curriculum. With World War II, the university's technical programs swelled, and as a result Drexel graduated alumni such as Paul Baran, one of the founding fathers of the Internet and one of the inventors of the packet switching network, and Norman Joseph Woodland the inventor of barcode technology. In addition to its emphasis on technology Drexel has graduated several notable athletes such as National Basketball Association (NBA) basketball players Michael Anderson and Malik Rose, and several notable business people such as Raj Gupta, former President and Chief executive officer (CEO) of Rohm and Haas, and Kenneth C. Dahlberg, former CEO of Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC).",
"section_text": "Violet Oakley , class of 1948 Jack Wall , class of 1986",
"section_title": "Notable alumni -- Humanities",
"title": "List of Drexel University alumni",
"uid": "List_of_Drexel_University_alumni_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Drexel_University_alumni"
} | 5,340 |
5341 | List_of_NCAA_conferences_1 | [
[
"Conference",
"Nickname",
"Founded",
"Full Members",
"Sports",
"Headquarters"
],
[
"Big Sky Conference",
"Big Sky BSC",
"1963",
"11",
"16",
"Ogden , Utah"
],
[
"Big South Conference",
"Big South",
"1983",
"11",
"19",
"Charlotte , North Carolina"
],
[
"Colonial Athletic Association",
"CAA",
"1983",
"10",
"21",
"Richmond , Virginia"
],
[
"Division I FCS Independents",
"",
"",
"1",
"1",
""
],
[
"Ivy League",
"Ivy League",
"1954",
"8",
"32",
"Princeton , New Jersey"
],
[
"Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference",
"MEAC",
"1970",
"11",
"15",
"Norfolk , Virginia"
],
[
"Missouri Valley Football Conference",
"MVFC",
"1985",
"10",
"1",
"St. Louis , Missouri"
],
[
"Northeast Conference",
"NEC",
"1981",
"11",
"23",
"Somerset , New Jersey"
],
[
"Ohio Valley Conference",
"OVC",
"1948",
"12",
"19",
"Brentwood , Tennessee"
],
[
"Patriot League",
"Patriot",
"1986",
"10",
"24",
"Center Valley , Pennsylvania"
],
[
"Pioneer Football League",
"PFL",
"1991",
"10",
"1",
"St. Louis , Missouri"
],
[
"Southern Conference",
"SoCon",
"1921",
"10",
"21",
"Spartanburg , South Carolina"
],
[
"Southland Conference",
"Southland",
"1963",
"13",
"18",
"Frisco , Texas"
],
[
"Southwestern Athletic Conference",
"SWAC",
"1920",
"10",
"18",
"Birmingham , Alabama"
]
] | {
"intro": "The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is divided into three divisions, based roughly on school size. Each division is made up of several conferences for regional league play. Unless otherwise noted, changes in conference affiliation will occur on July 1 of the given year.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "NCAA Division I -- Football Championship Subdivision",
"title": "List of NCAA conferences",
"uid": "List_of_NCAA_conferences_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NCAA_conferences"
} | 5,341 |
5342 | List_of_NCCAA_institutions_4 | [
[
"School",
"City",
"State/Province",
"Other Affiliations"
],
[
"Calvary University",
"Kansas City",
"Missouri",
"Midwest Christian College Conference"
],
[
"Central Christian College of the Bible",
"Moberly",
"Missouri",
""
],
[
"Emmaus Bible College",
"Dubuque",
"Iowa",
"Midwest Christian College Conference"
],
[
"Faith Baptist Bible College",
"Ankeny",
"Iowa",
"Midwest Christian College Conference ( ACCA )"
],
[
"Maranatha Baptist University",
"Watertown",
"Wisconsin",
"Independent ( NCAA Division III )"
],
[
"Moody Bible Institute",
"Chicago",
"Illinois",
""
],
[
"Oak Hills Christian College",
"Bemidji",
"Minnesota",
"Association of Christian College Athletics"
],
[
"Providence College",
"Otterburne",
"Manitoba",
"Manitoba Colleges Athletic Conference ( ACCA )"
],
[
"Trinity Bible College",
"Ellendale",
"North Dakota",
"Independent ( ACCA )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of institutions that compete in the National Christian College Athletic Association. There are currently 89 programs in the organization as of 2019.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "North Region -- Division II",
"title": "List of NCCAA institutions",
"uid": "List_of_NCCAA_institutions_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NCCAA_institutions"
} | 5,342 |
5343 | List_of_video_games_in_development_2 | [
[
"Title",
"Platform ( s )",
"Genre ( s )"
],
[
"Agent",
"PS3",
"Stealth , action"
],
[
"Dead Island 2",
"Win , PS4 , XBO",
"Action role-playing"
],
[
"Deep Down",
"PS4",
"Action role-playing"
],
[
"Earth No More",
"Win , PS4 , XBO",
"First-person shooter"
],
[
"Elysian Shadows",
"Win , Mac , Lin , DC , iOS , Droid , Ouya",
"Action-adventure , role-playing"
],
[
"In the Valley of Gods",
"Win , Mac , Lin",
"Adventure"
],
[
"Red Ash : The Indelible Legend",
"Win , PS4 , XBO",
"Action-adventure"
],
[
"Tekken X Street Fighter",
"PS4 , XBO",
"Fighting , beat 'em up"
],
[
"Two Worlds III",
"Unknown",
"Action role-playing"
],
[
"Wild",
"PS4",
"Survival , adventure"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a confirmed list of video games in development, but are scheduled for release beyond 2020 or currently carry no release date at all.",
"section_text": "The following list includes games that are considered vaporware . Games listed here are either officially on hold , are stuck in development hell , and/or have not had progress updates in years .",
"section_title": "List of vaporware games",
"title": "List of video games in development",
"uid": "List_of_video_games_in_development_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_video_games_in_development"
} | 5,343 |
5344 | List_of_New_Testament_Church_Fathers_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"DOD",
"Language"
],
[
"Acacius",
"Caesarea",
"366",
"Greek"
],
[
"Adamantius",
"Alexandria",
"300",
"Greek"
],
[
"Africanus",
"Jerusalem",
"240",
"Greek"
],
[
"Alexander",
"Alexandria",
"328",
"Greek"
],
[
"Ambrose",
"Milan",
"397",
"Latin"
],
[
"Ammonius",
"Alexandria",
"250 ( III )",
"Greek"
],
[
"Ammonius",
"Alexandria",
"450 ( V )",
"Greek"
],
[
"Amphilochius",
"Iconium",
"394",
"Greek"
],
[
"Anastasius",
"Sinai Peninsula",
"750 ( VIII ? )",
"Greek"
],
[
"Anastasius",
"Antioch",
"700",
"Greek"
],
[
"Andrew",
"Caesarea",
"614",
"Greek"
],
[
"Andrew",
"Crete",
"740",
"Greek"
],
[
"Ansbert",
"Rouen",
"750 ( VIII )",
"Latin"
],
[
"Anthony",
"Padua",
"1231",
"Latin"
],
[
"Antiochus",
"Mar Saba",
"614",
"Greek"
],
[
"Aphraates",
"Assyria",
"367",
"Syriac"
],
[
"Apollinaris",
"Laodicea",
"380",
"Greek"
],
[
"Apringius",
"Beja",
"551",
"Latin"
],
[
"Arethas",
"Caesarea",
"914",
"Greek"
],
[
"Aristides",
"Athens",
"150 ( II )",
"Greek"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following list of New Testament Church Fathers provides an overview of an important part of the secondary source evidence for the text of the New Testament (NT). The NT was quoted by early Christian authors, like Ignatius of Antioch, called the Church Fathers, and also in anonymous works like the Didache. Some anonymous works have traditionally been misattributed to better-known authors, and are now known by the name of that author, but with the prefix pseudo (meaning false in Greek), for example Pseudo-Dionysius. The other most substantial component of secondary sources for the text of the NT is its early translations into other languages, like Latin. Translations of the NT are known as versions.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Fathers",
"title": "List of New Testament Church Fathers",
"uid": "List_of_New_Testament_Church_Fathers_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_Testament_Church_Fathers"
} | 5,344 |
5345 | 1969_College_Baseball_All-America_Team_0 | [
[
"Position",
"Name",
"School"
],
[
"Pitcher",
"Burt Hooton ♦",
"Texas"
],
[
"Pitcher",
"Larry Gura",
"Arizona State"
],
[
"Catcher",
"Bob Williams",
"Washington State"
],
[
"First baseman",
"Mike Walseth",
"Minnesota"
],
[
"Second baseman",
"Dick Gold ( 2 )",
"Florida State"
],
[
"Third baseman",
"Les Rogers",
"Tulsa"
],
[
"Shortstop",
"Bill Stein",
"Southern Illinois"
],
[
"Outfielder",
"Larry Pyle",
"Miami"
],
[
"Outfielder",
"Paul Powell",
"Arizona State"
],
[
"Outfielder",
"Bob Long",
"Texas A & M"
]
] | {
"intro": "An All-American team is an honorary sports team composed of the best amateur players of a specific season for each team position - who in turn are given the honorific All-America and typically referred to as All-American athletes, or simply All-Americans. Although the honorees generally do not compete together as a unit, the term is used in U.S. team sports to refer to players who are selected by members of the national media. Walter Camp selected the first All-America team in the early days of American football in 1889. From 1947 to 1980, the American Baseball Coaches Association was the only All-American selector recognized by the NCAA.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "All-Americans",
"title": "1969 College Baseball All-America Team",
"uid": "1969_College_Baseball_All-America_Team_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969_College_Baseball_All-America_Team"
} | 5,345 |
5346 | Triple_J_Hottest_100,_2004_0 | [
[
"#",
"Song",
"Artist",
"Country of Origin"
],
[
"1",
"Take Me Out",
"Franz Ferdinand",
"United Kingdom"
],
[
"2",
"Scar",
"Missy Higgins",
"Australia"
],
[
"3",
"From the Sea",
"Eskimo Joe",
"Australia"
],
[
"4",
"Somebody Told Me",
"The Killers",
"United States"
],
[
"5",
"Black Betty",
"Spiderbait",
"Australia"
],
[
"6",
"Ten Days",
"Missy Higgins",
"Australia"
],
[
"7",
"Something 's Got ta Give",
"John Butler Trio",
"Australia"
],
[
"8",
"Beautiful to Me",
"Little Birdy",
"Australia"
],
[
"9",
"Bless My Soul",
"Powderfinger",
"Australia"
],
[
"10",
"Jolene ( Live )",
"The White Stripes",
"United States"
],
[
"11",
"Float On",
"Modest Mouse",
"United States"
],
[
"12",
"Coin-Operated Boy",
"The Dresden Dolls",
"United States"
],
[
"13",
"Mr. Brightside",
"The Killers",
"United States"
],
[
"14",
"It 's Too Late",
"Evermore",
"New Zealand"
],
[
"15",
"Gamble Everything for Love",
"Ben Lee",
"Australia"
],
[
"16",
"Hard Act to Follow",
"Grinspoon",
"Australia"
],
[
"17",
"Yo Mama",
"Butterfingers",
"Australia"
],
[
"18",
"Fit But You Know It",
"The Streets",
"United Kingdom"
],
[
"19",
"Dry Your Eyes",
"The Streets",
"United Kingdom"
],
[
"20",
"Fucken Awesome",
"Spiderbait",
"Australia"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2004 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on 26 January 2005. It was the twelfth such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. Voters were limited to 20 votes each: 10 via SMS (charged at 30c each) and 10 via the Internet (no charge). U2's Vertigo placed at number 38, despite having not been played on Triple J. Triple J presenter Craig Reucassel encouraged voters to vote for the Media Watch theme music on the condition that his counterpart Chris Taylor would do a nude run through the Big Day Out if it made the hottest 100. While announcing the count, Reucassel called number 7 for the Media Watch theme, initiating Taylor on a streak through the music festival. Upon Taylor's return, Richard Kingsmill explained that Media Watch was ineligible due to not being recording in 2004 and announced the real number 7. Missy Higgins was also in the studio and Reucassel goaded her into accepting a similar challenge should she win the Hottest 100. Higgins grew increasingly nervous as the count continued. From early in the voting process, it became very obvious that Franz Ferdinand's Take Me Out would be the clear winner of this Hottest 100. Throughout the countdown, numerous references were made to this well-established fact, including announcers sarcastically claiming Ha-ha! You thought they'd be #1 when The Dark of the Matinée was played at #50 as well a mock promotional piece heard in between in which votes for other bands such as Placebo were ignored in favour of Franz Ferdinand.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Full list",
"title": "Triple J Hottest 100, 2004",
"uid": "Triple_J_Hottest_100,_2004_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triple_J_Hottest_100,_2004"
} | 5,346 |
5347 | MegaStructures_3 | [
[
"#",
"Country",
"Title",
"Subject",
"Original Airdate"
],
[
"01",
"United Arab Emirates",
"World 's Tallest Hotel",
"Burj al-Arab Hotel in Dubai , United Arab Emirates",
"2007-07-09"
],
[
"02",
"Malaysia",
"SMART Tunnel",
"SMART Tunnel for road and storm water drainage in Kuala Lumpur to relieve traffic congestion as well as to prevent flooding within the city",
"2007-07-14"
],
[
"03",
"Bermuda",
"RMS Queen Mary 2",
"",
"2007-07-16"
],
[
"04",
"United States",
"South Pole Station",
"A science facility at the South Pole ( Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station )",
"2007-11-06"
],
[
"05",
"China",
"Beijing Water Cube",
"Beijing National Aquatics Center built for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics",
"2008-05-13"
],
[
"06",
"United States",
"Bridge Breakdown",
"Demolition of the ( 1927 ) Carquinez Bridge in the San Francisco Bay Area",
"2008-05-15"
],
[
"07",
"United States",
"747 Destruction",
"Evergreen Air Center storage facility for decommissioned aeroplanes in Marana , Arizona",
"2008-05-16"
],
[
"08",
"China",
"Shanghai Super Tower",
"Shanghai World Financial Centre in Shanghai , China",
"2008-05-20"
],
[
"09",
"China",
"China 's Ultimate Port",
"Yangshan Port in Hangzhou Bay",
"2008-05-27"
],
[
"10",
"United States",
"Sinking an aircraft carrier",
"Creating the world 's largest artificial reef with USS Oriskany in the Gulf of Mexico off Florida",
"2008-05-29"
],
[
"11",
"Finland",
"The World 's Biggest Cruise Liner",
"The building of cruise liner MS Freedom of the Seas",
"2008-06-04"
],
[
"12",
"China",
"Beijing Olympic Stadium",
"the building of the main stadium for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics",
"2008-08-05"
],
[
"13",
"China",
"World 's Biggest Casino",
"The Venetian Macao , the world 's biggest casino in Macau",
"?"
],
[
"14",
"Iceland",
"Icelandic Super Dam",
"The building of the Kárahnjúkar Hydropower Plant , Europe 's biggest dam in Iceland",
"?"
],
[
"15",
"Germany",
"Future Trains",
"Maglev train",
"?"
],
[
"16",
"United Arab Emirates",
"Building the World",
"The World ( archipelago ) of artificial islands in Dubai",
"?"
],
[
"17",
"United States",
"Train Wreck",
"the recycling of obsolete train locomotives in the USA",
"?"
],
[
"18",
"China",
"Building Green Beijing",
"2010 environmental improvement plan in Beijing , China",
"?"
],
[
"19",
"France Switzerland",
"Atom Smasher",
"The Large Hadron Collider at CERN near Geneva , Switzerland",
"?"
],
[
"20",
"China",
"Impossible Bridges : China",
"Lupu Bridge in Shanghai , Runyang Bridge in Jiangsu Province , and Sutong Bridge near Suzhou",
"?"
]
] | {
"intro": "Megastructures is a documentary television series appearing on the National Geographic Channel in the United States and the United Kingdom, Channel 5 in the United Kingdom, France 5 in France, and 7mate in Australia. Each episode is an educational look of varying depth into the construction, operation, and staffing of various structures or construction projects, but not ordinary construction products. Generally containing interviews with designers and project managers, it presents the problems of construction and the methodology or techniques used to overcome obstacles. In some cases (such as the Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge and Petronas Towers) this involved the development of new materials or products that are now in general use within the construction industry. Megastructures focuses on constructions that are extreme; in the sense that they are the biggest, tallest, longest, or deepest in the world. Alternatively, a project may appear if it had an element of novelty or are a world first (such as Dubai's Palm Islands). This type of project is known as a megaproject. The series follows similar subjects as the History Channel's Modern Marvels and Discovery Channel's Extreme Engineering, covering areas of architecture, transport, construction and manufacturing.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Episodes -- Season 4 ( 2007–2008 )",
"title": "Megastructures",
"uid": "MegaStructures_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megastructures"
} | 5,347 |
5348 | Mr._New_York_Basketball_2 | [
[
"Number",
"Program",
"Years"
],
[
"5",
"Syracuse",
"1992 , 2007 , 2009 , 2012 , 2019"
],
[
"3",
"Duke",
"1987 , 1997 , 2005"
],
[
"3",
"St. John 's",
"1988 , 1994 , 1998"
],
[
"2",
"West Virginia",
"2003 , 2011"
],
[
"2",
"Cincinnati",
"1999 , 2009"
],
[
"2",
"Virginia",
"1996 , 2008"
],
[
"2",
"Georgia Tech",
"1989 , 1995"
],
[
"2",
"Notre Dame",
"1986 , 2015"
]
] | {
"intro": "N/A",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Award winners -- Most winners by college",
"title": "Mr. New York Basketball",
"uid": "Mr._New_York_Basketball_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._New_York_Basketball"
} | 5,348 |
5349 | English_Premiership_(rugby_union)_4 | [
[
"Rank",
"Player",
"Club ( s )",
"Years",
"Tries"
],
[
"1",
"Tom Varndell",
"Leicester , Wasps , Bristol",
"2004-2017",
"92"
],
[
"2",
"Mark Cueto",
"Sale",
"2001-2015",
"90"
],
[
"3",
"Chris Ashton",
"Northampton , Saracens , Sale",
"2008-",
"85"
],
[
"4",
"Christian Wade",
"Wasps",
"2011-2018",
"82"
],
[
"5",
"Steve Hanley",
"Sale",
"1998-2007",
"75"
],
[
"6",
"Paul Sackey",
"Bedford , London Irish , Wasps , Harlequins",
"1999-2014",
"69"
],
[
"7",
"Matt Banahan",
"Bath , Gloucester",
"2007-",
"68"
],
[
"8",
"Tom Voyce",
"Bath , Wasps , Gloucester , London Welsh",
"2000-2013",
"66"
],
[
"9",
"Jonny May",
"Gloucester , Leicester",
"2010-",
"65"
],
[
"10",
"James Simpson-Daniel",
"Gloucester",
"2000-2013",
"63"
]
] | {
"intro": "Premiership Rugby (officially known as Gallagher Premiership Rugby, or the Gallagher Premiership due to sponsorship reasons) is an English professional rugby union competition. The Premiership consists of twelve clubs, and is the top division of the English rugby union system. Premiership clubs qualify for Europe's two main club competitions, the European Rugby Champions Cup and the European Rugby Challenge Cup. The team finishing at the bottom of the Premiership each season is relegated to the second division, the RFU Championship; the winner of the Championship is promoted to the Premiership. The competition has been played since 1987, and has evolved into the current Premiership system. The current champions are Saracens. The most recently promoted side are London Irish, who returned to the top flight in 2019.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Player records -- Tries",
"title": "Premiership Rugby",
"uid": "English_Premiership_(rugby_union)_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premiership_Rugby"
} | 5,349 |
5350 | Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album_4 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner ( s )",
"Work",
"Nominees"
],
[
"1990",
"Jay David Saks ( producer )",
"Jerome Robbins ' Broadway",
"Aspects of Love Broadway the Hard Way - Frank Zappa ( producer ) Sarafina ! Pacific Overtures"
],
[
"1991",
"David Caddick ( producer )",
"Les Misérables : The Complete Symphonic Recording",
"Anything Goes Black and Blue City of Angels Gypsy"
],
[
"1992",
"Cy Coleman ( composer ) · lyrics by Adolph Green & Betty Comden ; · produced by Cy Coleman & Mike Berniker",
"The Will Rogers Follies",
"Assassins Into the Woods Kiss Me , Kate The Music Man"
],
[
"1993",
"Jay David Saks ( producer )",
"Guys and Dolls ( The New Broadway Cast Recording )",
"Crazy for You Jelly 's Last Jam The King and I The Secret Garden"
],
[
"1994",
"Pete Townshend ( composer & lyricist ) · produced by George Martin",
"The Who 's Tommy",
"On the Town Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Kiss of the Spider Woman Sondheim : A Celebration at Carnegie Hall"
],
[
"1995",
"Stephen Sondheim ( composer & lyricist ) · produced by Phil Ramone",
"Passion",
"Beauty and the Beast Carousel Crazy for You Sunset Boulevard"
],
[
"1996",
"Arif Mardin , Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller ( producers )",
"Smokey Joe 's Cafe : The Songs Of Leiber And Stoller",
"Anyone Can Whistle : Live at Carnegie Hall Hello , Dolly ! How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying Kiss of the Spider Woman"
],
[
"1997",
"Bill Whelan ( composer & lyricist ) · produced by Bill Whelan",
"Riverdance",
"Bring in 'da Noise , Bring in 'da Funk A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum ( 1996 Broadway Cast ) Rent Victor/Victoria"
],
[
"1998",
"Jay David Saks ( producer )",
"Chicago : The Musical ( 1996 Broadway Revival Cast )",
"Jekyll and Hyde - Karl Richardson & Frank Wildhorn ( producers ) The Life - Cy Coleman ( composer ) ; Ira Gasman ( lyricist ) ; Mike Berniker & Cy Coleman ( producers ) Songs from Ragtime : The Musical ( 1996 Concept Album ) - Stephen Flaherty ( composer ) ; Lynn Ahrens ( lyricist ) ; Jay David Saks ( producer ) Titanic - Maury Yeston ( composer & lyricist ) ; Tommy Krasker & Maury Yeston ( producers )"
],
[
"1999",
"Mark Mancina ( producer )",
"The Lion King",
"Cabaret ( New Broadway Cast ) - Jay David Saks ( producer ) Chicago : The Musical ( 1998 London Cast ) - Thomas Z. Shepard ( producer ) Ragtime ( 1998 Original Broadway Cast ) - Jay David Saks ( producer ) The Wizard of Oz ( 1998 Cast Recording ) - Robert Sher ( producer )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album has been awarded since 1959. The award was given only to the album producer, and to the composer and lyricist who wrote at least 51% of the music which had not been recorded previously. Over the years, the qualifications for the individual nominees has fluctuated with principal artists, composers, and producers at one point being the sole eligible nominee, to the more recent standard which includes those whose contributions accounted for the majority of the album. As of 2012, the award description is as follows: Award to the principal vocalist(s) and the album producer(s) of 51% or more playing time of the album. The lyricist(s) and composer(s) of a new score are eligible for an Award if they have written and/or composed a new score which comprises 51% or more playing time of the album. Therefore, composers and lyricists are ineligible when recordings contain a majority of previously released material (revivals, collected works). Also, while they are not listed among the nominees, since 2001 the Recording Academy has awarded an official Grammy to the engineers/mixers of the winning Album. Years reflect the year in which the Grammy Awards were handed out, for music released in the previous year. As of 2008, the current eligibility year is defined by the Recording Academy as beginning October 1, and ending the following September 30. Awards are given in February following the eligibility period.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Winner and nominees -- 1990s",
"title": "Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album",
"uid": "Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album"
} | 5,350 |
5351 | Building_society_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Fate",
"Successor",
"Year"
],
[
"Abbey Road Building Society and National Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Abbey National Building Society",
"1944"
],
[
"Bingley Permanent Building Society and Bradford Equitable Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Bradford & Bingley Building Society",
"1964"
],
[
"Co-operative Permanent Building Society",
"changed its name to",
"Nationwide Building Society",
"1970"
],
[
"Leicester Permanent Building Society and Leicester Temperance Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Leicester Building Society",
"1974"
],
[
"Bedfordshire Building Society and Temperance Permanent",
"merged to form",
"Gateway Building Society",
"1974"
],
[
"Leek & Westbourne Building Society and Oldbury Britannia Building Society",
"merged to form",
"Britannia Building Society",
"1975"
],
[
"Huddersfield & Bradford Building Society and West Yorkshire Building Society",
"merged to form",
"Yorkshire Building Society",
"1982"
],
[
"Coventry Economic Building Society and Coventry Provident Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Coventry Building Society",
"1983"
],
[
"Burnley Building Society and Provincial Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"National & Provincial Building Society",
"1984"
],
[
"London Permanent Building Society ( est 1914 )",
"merged into",
"Cheltenham and Gloucester",
"1984"
],
[
"Alliance Building Society and Leicester Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Alliance & Leicester Building Society",
"1985"
],
[
"Waltham Abbey Building Society ( 1847 )",
"merged with the",
"Cheltenham and Gloucester Building Society",
"1985"
],
[
"Birmingham & Bridgwater Building Society and Midshires Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Birmingham Midshires Building Society",
"1986"
],
[
"Norwich Building Society and Peterborough Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Norwich & Peterborough Building Society",
"1986"
],
[
"Anglia Building Society and Nationwide Building Society",
"merged to form which changed name to the",
"Nationwide Anglia Building Society Nationwide Building Society",
"1987 1991"
],
[
"Gateway Building Society and Woolwich Equitable Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Woolwich Building Society",
"1988"
],
[
"Wessex Building Society and Portman Building Society",
"merged to form the",
"Portman Wessex Building Society",
"1989"
],
[
"Regency & West of England Building Society and Portman Wessex Building Society",
"merged to form",
"Portman Building Society",
"1990"
],
[
"Hendon Building Society",
"was taken over by",
"Bradford & Bingley Building Society",
"1991"
],
[
"Haywards Heath Building Society",
"merged with the",
"Yorkshire Building Society",
"1992"
]
] | {
"intro": "A building society is a financial institution owned by its members as a mutual organization. Building societies offer banking and related financial services, especially savings and mortgage lending. Building societies exist in the United Kingdom and Australia, and used to exist in Ireland and several Commonwealth countries. They are similar to credit unions in organisation, though few enforce a common bond. However, rather than promoting thrift and offering unsecured and business loans, the purpose of a building society is to provide home mortgages to members. Borrowers and depositors are society members, setting policy and appointing directors on a one-member, one-vote basis. Building societies often provide other retail banking services, such as current accounts, credit cards and personal loans. The term building society first arose in the 19th century in Great Britain from cooperative savings groups. In the United Kingdom, building societies actively compete with banks for most consumer banking services, especially mortgage lending and savings accounts, and regulations permit up to half of their lending to be funded by debt to non-members, allowing societies to access wholesale bond and money markets to fund mortgages. The world's largest building society is Britain's Nationwide Building Society. Further, in Australia, building societies also compete with retail banks and offer the full range of banking services to consumers.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List of building societies -- United Kingdom",
"title": "Building society",
"uid": "Building_society_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_society"
} | 5,351 |
5352 | 1983_Cricket_World_Cup_statistics_4 | [
[
"Player",
"Team",
"Overs",
"Figures",
"Opponent",
"Ground"
],
[
"Winston Davis",
"West Indies",
"10.3",
"7/51",
"Australia",
"Headingley Stadium , Leeds"
],
[
"Ken MacLeay",
"Australia",
"11.5",
"6/39",
"India",
"Trent Bridge , Nottingham"
],
[
"Sir Richard Hadlee",
"New Zealand",
"10.1",
"5/25",
"Sri Lanka",
"County Cricket Ground , Bristol"
],
[
"Ashantha de Mel",
"Sri Lanka",
"12.0",
"5/32",
"New Zealand",
"County Cricket Ground , Derby"
],
[
"Vic Marks",
"England",
"12.0",
"5/39",
"Sri Lanka",
"County Ground , Taunton"
],
[
"Ashantha de Mel",
"Sri Lanka",
"12.0",
"5/39",
"Pakistan",
"Headingley Stadium , Leeds"
],
[
"Kapil Dev",
"India",
"12.0",
"5/43",
"Australia",
"Trent Bridge , Nottingham"
],
[
"Abdul Qadir",
"Pakistan",
"12.0",
"5/44",
"Sri Lanka",
"Headingley Stadium , Leeds"
],
[
"Madan Lal",
"India",
"8.2",
"4/20",
"Australia",
"County Cricket Ground , Chelmsford"
],
[
"Abdul Qadir",
"Pakistan",
"12.0",
"4/21",
"New Zealand",
"Edgbaston Cricket Ground , Birmingham"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of statistics for the 1983 Cricket World Cup.",
"section_text": "This table lists the top ten players with the best bowling figures in the tournament . [ 7 ]",
"section_title": "Bowling statistics -- Best bowling figures",
"title": "1983 Cricket World Cup statistics",
"uid": "1983_Cricket_World_Cup_statistics_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_Cricket_World_Cup_statistics"
} | 5,352 |
5353 | List_of_football_clubs_in_Spain_2 | [
[
"Club",
"Home city",
"Stadium",
"Finishing position last season",
"First season in division",
"First season of current spell in division"
],
[
"Atlético Baleares",
"Palma",
"Son Malferit",
"1st in group 3",
"1977-78",
"2010-11"
],
[
"Atlético Madrid B",
"Madrid",
"Cerro del Espino",
"3rd",
"1992-93",
"2017-18"
],
[
"Celta Vigo B",
"Vigo",
"Barreiro",
"16th",
"1992-93",
"2013-14"
],
[
"Coruxo",
"Vigo",
"O Vao",
"10th",
"2010-11",
"2010-11"
],
[
"Getafe B",
"Getafe",
"Ciudad Deportiva",
"1st in Tercera División group 7",
"2010-11",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Ibiza",
"Ibiza",
"Municipal de Can Misses",
"6th in group 4",
"2018-19",
"2018-19"
],
[
"Internacional",
"Madrid",
"Polideportivo",
"14th",
"2018-19",
"2018-19"
],
[
"Langreo",
"Langreo",
"Ganzábal",
"9th in group 2",
"1977-78",
"2018-19"
],
[
"Las Palmas Atlético",
"Las Palmas",
"Anexo Gran Canaria",
"15th",
"1977-78",
"2017-18"
],
[
"Las Rozas",
"Las Rozas",
"Navalcarbón",
"2nd in Tercera División group 7",
"2019-20",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Marino Luanco",
"Luanco",
"Miramar",
"2nd in Tercera División group 2",
"1996-97",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Oviedo B",
"Oviedo",
"El Requexón",
"5th in group 2",
"1988-89",
"2018-19"
],
[
"Peña Deportiva",
"Santa Eulària des Riu",
"Municipal de Santa Eulària",
"1st in Tercera División group 11",
"1993-94",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Pontevedra",
"Pontevedra",
"Pasarón",
"6th",
"1977-78",
"2015-16"
],
[
"Racing Ferrol",
"Ferrol",
"A Malata",
"1st in Tercera División group 1",
"1977-78",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Rayo Majadahonda",
"Majadahonda",
"Cerro del Espino",
"19th in Segunda División",
"1997-98",
"2019-20"
],
[
"Real Madrid Castilla",
"Madrid",
"Alfredo Di Stéfano",
"4th",
"1977-78",
"2014-15"
],
[
"San Sebastián de los Reyes",
"San Sebastián de los Reyes",
"Nuevo Matapiñonera",
"8th",
"1987-88",
"2016-17"
],
[
"Sporting Gijón B",
"Gijón",
"Mareo",
"11th in group 2",
"1979-80",
"2017-18"
],
[
"UD Melilla",
"Melilla",
"Álvarez Claro",
"3rd in group 4",
"1987-88",
"1987-88"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of men's association football clubs in Spain. Currently the governing body of football in Spain is the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), which is in charge of its national teams and its leagues, with the highest one being La Liga. RFEF was founded in 1909 and is a member of both FIFA and UEFA.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Segunda División B -- Segunda División B teams 2019–20 season",
"title": "List of football clubs in Spain",
"uid": "List_of_football_clubs_in_Spain_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_football_clubs_in_Spain"
} | 5,353 |
5354 | List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_3 | [
[
"Team",
"Home town/suburb",
"Home ground"
],
[
"Bangor Celtic",
"Crumlin , Dublin",
"Iveagh Grounds"
],
[
"Bluebell United",
"Bluebell /Red Cow",
"Capco Park"
],
[
"Cherry Orchard",
"Ballyfermot",
"Elmdale Crescent"
],
[
"Crumlin United",
"Crumlin , Dublin",
"Pearse Park"
],
[
"Drumcondra",
"Clonturk , Drumcondra",
"Clonturk Park"
],
[
"Firhouse Clover",
"Firhouse",
"Belgard Road"
],
[
"Greystones United",
"Greystones",
"Woodlands"
],
[
"Killester United",
"Killester",
"Haddon Park"
],
[
"Malahide United",
"Malahide",
"Gannon Park"
],
[
"St. Patrick 's C.Y.F.C",
"Ringsend",
"Irishtown Stadium"
],
[
"St. Mochtas F.C",
"Clonsilla / Blanchardstown",
"Porterstown Road"
],
[
"Tolka Rovers",
"Glasnevin",
"Frank Cooke Park"
],
[
"UCD Reserves",
"Belfield , Dublin",
"UCD Bowl"
],
[
"Wayside Celtic",
"Kilternan",
"Jackson Park"
]
] | {
"intro": "Traditionally, association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland have been classified as either senior, intermediate or junior. These classifications effectively categorise clubs who compete in national, provincial and county leagues respectively.",
"section_text": "Senior",
"section_title": "Intermediate/Provincial leagues -- Leinster Senior League",
"title": "List of association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland",
"uid": "List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland"
} | 5,354 |
5355 | List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni_4 | [
[
"Name",
"Class year ( s )",
"Degree ( s )",
"Notability"
],
[
"F. Murray Abraham",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actor who won Academy Award for role in Amadeus"
],
[
"Kevin Alejandro",
"",
"",
"Actor featured in Ugly Betty"
],
[
"Barbara Barrie",
"1952",
"BA",
"Broadway , film and television actress , Academy Award nomination for Breaking Away and Best Actress Award at Cannes Film Festival for One Potato , Two Potato"
],
[
"Florence Bates",
"1906",
"BSc",
"Character actress"
],
[
"Steve Barton",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Broadway actor"
],
[
"Gail Davis",
"",
"BA",
"Actress , starred in 1950s syndicated western television series Annie Oakley"
],
[
"Felicia Day",
"1998",
"BSc",
"Actress ( Buffy the Vampire Slayer ) , writer and producer"
],
[
"Farrah Fawcett",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actress , star of films and original Charlie 's Angels television series"
],
[
"Peri Gilpin",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actress , starred as Roz Doyle on TV series Frasier"
],
[
"Jon Hamm",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actor , starred as Don Draper on TV series Mad Men"
],
[
"Marcia Gay Harden",
"1980",
"BA",
"Actress who won Academy Award for role in Pollock , nominated for role in Mystic River ; also Tony Award winner for God of Carnage"
],
[
"John Hillerman",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actor who won Golden Globe and Emmy Award for role in Magnum , P.I"
],
[
"Susan Howard",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actress , played Donna Culver Krebbs on soap opera Dallas"
],
[
"Jonathan Islas",
"2001",
"BA",
"Telenovela actor"
],
[
"L. Q. Jones",
"1950",
"",
"Prolific actor and producer in Westerns"
],
[
"Todd Lowe",
"1999",
"BA",
"Actor on True Blood and Gilmore Girls"
],
[
"Allen Ludden",
"1940 1941",
"BA MA",
"Daytime Emmy Award winner for work as Password host , Peabody Award winner for Mind Your Manners"
],
[
"Jayne Mansfield",
"",
"( never graduated )",
"Actress , film star who won Theatre World Award and Golden Globe ; mother of Mariska Hargitay"
],
[
"Matthew McConaughey",
"1993",
"BA",
"Actor , film star who won Academy Award for role in Dallas Buyers Club"
],
[
"Bruce McGill",
"1973",
"BFA",
"Actor in films such as Animal House , My Cousin Vinny , The Insider , Cinderella Man , Collateral , Lincoln and many other film and television roles"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of University of Texas at Austin alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of the University of Texas at Austin. The institution is a major research university in Downtown Austin, Texas, US and is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. Founded in 1883, the university has had the fifth largest single-campus enrollment in the nation as of Fall 2006 (and had the largest enrollment in the country from 1997 to 2003), with over 50,000 undergraduate and graduate students and 16,500 faculty and staff. It currently holds the second largest enrollment of all colleges in the state of Texas.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Entertainment -- Film and stage",
"title": "List of University of Texas at Austin alumni",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni"
} | 5,355 |
5356 | List_of_wealthiest_non-inflated_historical_figures_5 | [
[
"No",
"Name",
"Net worth ( USD )",
"Age",
"Nationality",
"Source ( s ) of wealth"
],
[
"1",
"Bill Gates",
"$ 76.0 billion",
"58",
"United States",
"Microsoft"
],
[
"2",
"Carlos Slim & family",
"$ 72.0 billion",
"74",
"Mexico",
"América Móvil , Grupo Carso"
],
[
"3",
"Amancio Ortega",
"$ 64.0 billion",
"77",
"Spain",
"Inditex"
],
[
"4",
"Warren Buffett",
"$ 58.2 billion",
"83",
"United States",
"Berkshire Hathaway"
],
[
"5",
"Larry Ellison",
"$ 48.0 billion",
"70",
"United States",
"Oracle Corporation"
],
[
"6",
"Charles Koch",
"$ 40.0 billion",
"78",
"United States",
"Koch Industries"
],
[
"6",
"David Koch",
"$ 40.0 billion",
"73",
"United States",
"Koch Industries"
],
[
"8",
"Sheldon Adelson",
"$ 38.0 billion",
"80",
"United States",
"Las Vegas Sands"
],
[
"9",
"Christy Walton & family",
"$ 36.7 billion",
"65",
"United States",
"Walmart"
],
[
"10",
"Jim Walton",
"$ 34.7 billion",
"65",
"United States",
"Walmart"
]
] | {
"intro": "The World's Billionaires is an annual ranking by documented net worth of the wealthiest billionaires in the world, compiled and published in March annually by the American business magazine Forbes. The list was first published in March 1987. The total net worth of each individual on the list is estimated and is cited in United States dollars, based on their documented assets and accounting for debt. Royalty and dictators whose wealth comes from their positions are excluded from these lists. This ranking is an index of the wealthiest documented individuals, excluding and ranking against those with wealth that is not able to be completely ascertained. In 2018, there was a record of 2,208 people on the list, that included 259 newcomers mostly from China and the U.S.; there were 63 people under 40 and it had a record number of 256 women. The average net worth of the list came in at US$4.1 billion, up US$350 million from 2017. Added together, the total net worth for 2018's billionaires was US$9.1 trillion, up from US$7.67 trillion in 2017. As of 2018[update], Microsoft founder Bill Gates had topped the list 18 of the past 24 years, while Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is ranked at the top for the first time and he became the first centibillionaire included in the ranking. In 2017, Mark Zuckerberg was the only person in the top 10 billionaires list who is under the age of 50, and the only one in the top 20 billionaires list who is under the age of 40. In 2017, 500 of the richest people in the world became richer by $1 trillion, according to a report by Bloomberg News. According to a 2017 Oxfam report, the top eight billionaires own as much combined wealth as the poorest half of the human race.",
"section_text": "Main article : The World 's Billionaires 2014 Gates added $ 9 billion to his fortune since 2013 and topped the Forbes 2014 billionaire list . He had topped the list in 15 of the previous 20 years , but his previous number one ranking was in 2009 . [ 28 ] Mexican telecommunication mogul Carlos Slim came in second place after being number one the previous four years . Zara founder Amancio Ortega placed third for the second consecutive year . American investor Warren Buffett was in the top five for the 20th consecutive year , placing fourth . [ 29 ] America 's Christy Walton was the highest ranking woman , placing ninth overall . [ 1 ] Aliko Dangote of Nigeria became the first African to enter the top 25 , with an estimated net worth of $ 25 billion . [ 3 ] A total of 1,645 people made the 2014 billionaire list , representing a combined wealth of $ 6.4 trillion . [ 29 ] Of those , a record 268 were newcomers , surpassing 2008 's 226 newcomers . [ 1 ] 100 people listed in 2013 failed to make the list . [ 29 ] The number of women on the list rose to a record 172 in 2014 . [ 1 ] Approximately 66 percent of the list were self-made , 13 percent achieved their wealth through inheritance alone , and 21 percent through a mixture of the two . [ 3 ] The United States had 492 billionaires on the list , the most of any country . [ 29 ] It also had the most newcomers with 50 , and women with 54 . [ 1 ] China had the second most billionaires with 152 , while Russia was third with 111 . [ 29 ] Algeria , Lithuania , Tanzania , and Uganda were all represented on the list for the first time . Turkey saw the most people drop off the list , 19 , due to a period of high inflation in the country . [ 3 ]",
"section_title": "Annual rankings -- 2014",
"title": "The World's Billionaires",
"uid": "List_of_wealthiest_non-inflated_historical_figures_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World's_Billionaires"
} | 5,356 |
5357 | 6th_Legislative_Assembly_of_Saskatchewan_1 | [
[
"Electoral district",
"Member elected",
"Party",
"Election date",
"Reason"
],
[
"Willow Bunch",
"James Albert Cross",
"Liberal",
"August 31 , 1925",
"A Hindle resigned seat to allow Cross to be elected to assembly"
],
[
"Pipestone",
"William John Patterson",
"Liberal",
"March 18 , 1926",
"WJ Patterson ran for reelection after being named to cabinet"
],
[
"Prince Albert",
"Thomas Clayton Davis",
"Liberal",
"March 18 , 1926",
"TC Davis ran for reelection after being named to cabinet"
],
[
"Île-à-la-Crosse",
"A. Jules Marion",
"Liberal",
"April 26 , 1926",
"JO Nolin died in office in December 1925"
],
[
"Moose Jaw County",
"Thomas Waddell",
"Liberal",
"May 25 , 1926",
"CA Dunning ran for federal seat"
],
[
"Notukeu",
"Alexander Lothian Grant",
"Liberal",
"June 1 , 1926",
"G Spence ran for federal seat"
],
[
"Kerrobert",
"Donald Laing",
"Liberal",
"November 9 , 1926",
"JA Dowd resigned seat"
],
[
"Saskatoon City",
"Howard McConnell",
"Conservative",
"January 21 , 1927",
"AP McNab named to local government board"
],
[
"Moose Jaw City",
"William Gladstone Ross",
"Liberal",
"May 17 , 1927",
"WE Knowles named to bench"
],
[
"Morse",
"Duncan Morris Robertson",
"Liberal",
"August 15 , 1927",
"WP MacLachlan died in office"
],
[
"Maple Creek",
"George Spence",
"Liberal",
"December 1 , 1927",
"PL Hyde resigned seat"
],
[
"Arm River",
"Thomas Frederick Waugh",
"Liberal",
"October 25 , 1928",
"GA Scott resigned after being named income tax inspector"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 6th Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan was elected in the Saskatchewan general election held in June 1925. The assembly sat from December 3, 1925, to May 11, 1929. The Liberal Party led by Charles Avery Dunning formed the government. After Dunning entered federal politics in 1926, James Garfield Gardiner became Liberal party leader and Premier. Charles Tran, the leader of the Progressive Party, and James Thomas Milton Anderson, the leader of the Conservative Party, shared the role of opposition leader in the assembly. Walter George Robinson served as speaker for the assembly.",
"section_text": "By-elections were held to replace members for various reasons : [ 5 ]",
"section_title": "By-elections",
"title": "6th Saskatchewan Legislature",
"uid": "6th_Legislative_Assembly_of_Saskatchewan_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6th_Saskatchewan_Legislature"
} | 5,357 |
5358 | 1963_PGA_Tour_0 | [
[
"Date",
"Tournament",
"Location",
"Winner",
"Score",
"1st prize ( $ )"
],
[
"Jan 7",
"Los Angeles Open",
"California",
"Arnold Palmer ( 36 )",
"274 ( −10 )",
"9,000"
],
[
"Jan 13",
"San Diego Open Invitational",
"California",
"Gary Player ( 7 )",
"270 ( −14 )",
"3,500"
],
[
"Jan 20",
"Bing Crosby National Pro-Am",
"California",
"Billy Casper ( 19 )",
"285 ( −3 )",
"5,300"
],
[
"Jan 27",
"Lucky International Open",
"California",
"Jack Burke , Jr. ( 16 )",
"276 ( −8 )",
"9,000"
],
[
"Feb 4",
"Palm Springs Golf Classic",
"California",
"Jack Nicklaus ( 4 )",
"345 ( −13 )",
"9,000"
],
[
"Feb 12",
"Phoenix Open Invitational",
"Arizona",
"Arnold Palmer ( 37 )",
"273 ( −15 )",
"5,300"
],
[
"Feb 17",
"Tucson Open Invitational",
"Arizona",
"Don January ( 4 )",
"266 ( −22 )",
"3,500"
],
[
"Mar 4",
"Greater New Orleans Open Invitational",
"Louisiana",
"Bo Wininger ( 6 )",
"279 ( −9 )",
"6,400"
],
[
"Mar 10",
"Pensacola Open Invitational",
"Florida",
"Arnold Palmer ( 38 )",
"273 ( −15 )",
"3,500"
],
[
"Mar 17",
"St. Petersburg Open Invitational",
"Florida",
"Raymond Floyd ( 1 )",
"274 ( −14 )",
"3,500"
],
[
"Mar 24",
"Doral C.C . Open Invitational",
"Florida",
"Dan Sikes ( 1 )",
"283 ( −5 )",
"9,000"
],
[
"Mar 31",
"Azalea Open",
"North Carolina",
"Jerry Barber ( 7 )",
"274 ( −14 )",
"2,800"
],
[
"Apr 7",
"Masters Tournament",
"Georgia",
"Jack Nicklaus ( 5 )",
"286 ( −2 )",
"20,000"
],
[
"Apr 14",
"Greater Greensboro Open",
"North Carolina",
"Doug Sanders ( 12 )",
"270 ( −14 )",
"5,500"
],
[
"Apr 21",
"Houston Classic",
"Texas",
"Bob Charles ( 1 )",
"268 ( −12 )",
"10,000"
],
[
"Apr 28",
"Texas Open Invitational",
"Texas",
"Phil Rodgers ( 3 )",
"268 ( −16 )",
"4,300"
],
[
"May 5",
"Tournament of Champions",
"Nevada",
"Jack Nicklaus ( 6 )",
"273 ( −15 )",
"13,000"
],
[
"May 5",
"Waco Turner Open",
"Oklahoma",
"Gay Brewer ( 4 )",
"280 ( −12 )",
"2,800"
],
[
"May 12",
"Colonial National Invitation",
"Texas",
"Julius Boros ( 10 )",
"279 ( −1 )",
"12,000"
],
[
"May 19",
"Oklahoma City Open Invitational",
"Oklahoma",
"Don Fairfield ( 3 )",
"280 ( −8 )",
"5,300"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1963 PGA Tour season was played from January 4 to November 24. The season consisted of 44 official money events. Arnold Palmer won the most tournaments, seven, and there were seven first-time winners. Palmer was the leading money winner with earnings of $128,230. Julius Boros was voted the PGA Player of the Year and Billy Casper won the Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average.",
"section_text": "The following table shows all the official money events for the 1963 season . `` Date '' is the ending date of the tournament . The numbers in parentheses after the winners ' names are the number of wins they had on the tour up to and including that event . Majors are shown in bold .",
"section_title": "Tournament results",
"title": "1963 PGA Tour",
"uid": "1963_PGA_Tour_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963_PGA_Tour"
} | 5,358 |
5359 | List_of_cathedrals_in_Scotland_0 | [
[
"Name & dedication",
"Presbytery",
"Established",
"Website",
"Location"
],
[
"St Machar , Aberdeen",
"Aberdeen",
"1131",
"www .stmachars .com",
"57°10′11″N 2°06′08″W / 57.1698°N 2.1021°W / 57.1698 ; -2.1021 ( St Machar 's Cathedral Aberdeen )"
],
[
"Brechin Cathedral",
"Angus",
"13th century",
"brechincathedral .org .uk",
"56°43′55″N 2°39′42″W / 56.731944°N 2.661667°W / 56.731944 ; -2.661667 ( Brechin Cathedral )"
],
[
"Dornoch Cathedral",
"Sutherand",
"13th century",
"www .dornoch-cathedral .com",
"57°52′52″N 4°01′47″W / 57.881128°N 4.029622°W / 57.881128 ; -4.029622 ( Dornoch Cathedral )"
],
[
"Dunblane Cathedral",
"Stirling",
"7th century",
"www .dunblanecathedral .org .uk",
"56°11′22″N 3°57′55″W / 56.189419°N 3.96525°W / 56.189419 ; -3.96525 ( Dunblane Cathedral )"
],
[
"Dunkeld Cathedral",
"Dunkeld and Meigle",
"1260",
"www .dunkeldcathedral .org .uk",
"56°33′54″N 3°35′23″W / 56.565°N 3.589722°W / 56.565 ; -3.589722 ( Dunkeld Cathedral )"
],
[
"St Giles , Edinburgh",
"Edinburgh",
"12th century",
"www .stgilescathedral .org .uk",
"55°56′58″N 3°11′27″W / 55.949444°N 3.190833°W / 55.949444 ; -3.190833 ( St Giles Cathedral , Edinburgh )"
],
[
"St Mungo , Glasgow",
"Glasgow",
"1136",
"www .glasgowcathedral .org .uk",
"55°51′47″N 4°14′05″W / 55.863°N 4.2346°W / 55.863 ; -4.2346 ( St Mungo 's Cathedral , Glasgow )"
],
[
"St Magnus , Kirkwall",
"Orkney",
"1137",
"www .stmagnus .org",
"58°58′56″N 2°57′32″W / 58.982222°N 2.958889°W / 58.982222 ; -2.958889 ( St Magnus Cathedral , Kirkwall )"
],
[
"St Moluag , Lismore",
"Argyll",
"592",
"isleoflismore.com",
"56°32′04″N 5°28′50″W / 56.534444°N 5.480556°W / 56.534444 ; -5.480556 ( St Moluag 's Cathedral , Lismore )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of cathedrals in Scotland. A cathedral church is a Christian place of worship that is the chief, or 'mother' church of a diocese. The distinction of cathedral refers to that church being the location of the cathedra, the seat of the bishop. In the strictest sense, only Christian denominations with an episcopal hierarchy - those that are led by bishops - possess cathedrals. However in common parlance, the title cathedral is often still used to refer to former Scottish cathedrals, which are now within the (presbyterian) Church of Scotland. Because of Scotland's religious history, cathedrals of several different Christian denominations are found around the country. Before the Scottish Reformation, the Christian church in Scotland was Catholic. Its thirteen dioceses were each governed by a bishop whose Episcopal see was centred on a cathedral. In 1560, the Scottish church broke communion with Rome and became Protestant. After years of dispute, the post-Reformation Church of Scotland finally abolished the Episcopacy in 1689 and adopted the Presbyterian system of governance. Scotland's former cathedrals remained in use as parish churches, now organised under a system of synods and presbyteries. The Scottish Episcopal Church formed as a breakaway from the Established Church of Scotland, retaining the system of bishops, was Anglican, but it was excluded from mainstream religious life.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Church of Scotland",
"title": "List of cathedrals in Scotland",
"uid": "List_of_cathedrals_in_Scotland_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cathedrals_in_Scotland"
} | 5,359 |
5360 | List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_South_Africa_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Period",
"UNESCO data",
"Description"
],
[
"Fossil Hominid Sites of South Africa",
"Sterkfontein",
"Pliocene and Pleistocene epochs",
"915 ; 1999 , 2005 ( extended ) ; iii , vi",
"The area contains various fossil sites containing traces of human occupation and evolution dating back some 3.3 million years"
],
[
"Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape",
"Limpopo Province",
"11th to 14th centuries",
"1099 ; 2003 ; ii , iii , iv , v",
"This open savanna lies at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers . It was the heart of the Mapungubwe Kingdom until the 14th century , when the area was abandoned , leaving untouched remains of palaces and settlements"
],
[
"Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape",
"Northern Cape",
"19th century to present",
"1265 ; 2007 ; iv , v",
"This mountainous desert is communally owned and managed . It sustains the semi-nomadic pastoral livelihood of the Namaqua people , including seasonal migrations that have persisted for two millennia"
],
[
"Robben Island",
"Table Bay",
"17th to 20th centuries",
"916 ; 1999 ; iii , iv",
"Between the 17th and 20th centuries , the island was used as a prison , including for political prisoners , a hospital for socially unacceptable groups ( leper colony ) , and a military base"
],
[
"Cape Floral Region Protected Areas",
"Western Cape , Eastern Cape",
"N/A",
"1007 ; 2004 ; ix , x",
"The site consists of eight protected areas that are among the richest in plant life worldwide , containing nearly 20% of Africa 's total flora . Its scientific value is demonstrated by the presence of fire and radiation adaptivity in plants and seed dispersal by insects"
],
[
"iSimangaliso Wetland Park",
"KwaZulu-Natal",
"N/A",
"914 ; 1999 ; vii , ix , x",
"The park features a variety of landforms , including coral reefs , long sandy beaches , coastal dunes , lake systems , swamps , and reed and papyrus wetland , caused by fluvial , marine and aeolian processes . This has resulted in an exceptional species diversity"
],
[
"Vredefort Dome",
"Vredefort",
"Paleoproterozoic era",
"1162 ; 2005 ; viii",
"The crater , with a diameter of 190 km ( 120 mi ) , is the largest , oldest and most deeply eroded astrobleme found on Earth , dating back more than 2 billion years"
],
[
"uKhahlamba / Drakensberg Park",
"KwaZulu-Natal , Lesotho",
"2000 B.C",
"985 ; 2000 ; i , iii , vii , x",
"The park features soaring basaltic buttresses , incisive dramatic cutbacks , golden sandstone ramparts , rolling high-altitude grasslands , pristine steep-sided river valleys and rocky gorges"
],
[
"ǂKhomani Cultural Landscape",
"",
"",
"1545 , 2017 , 959,100 ha , ( v ) ( vi )",
"The ǂKhomani Cultural Landscape is located at the border with Botswana and Namibia in the northern part of the country , coinciding with the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park ( KGNP ) . The large expanse of sand contains evidence of human occupation from the Stone Age to the present and is associated with the culture of the formerly nomadic ǂKhomani San people and the strategies that allowed them to adapt to harsh desert conditions . They developed a specific ethnobotanical knowledge , cultural practices and a worldview related to the geographical features of their environment . The ǂKhomani Cultural Landscape bears testimony to the way of life that prevailed in the region and shaped the site over thousands of years"
],
[
"Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains",
"Mpumalanga",
"Archean aera",
"1575 ; 2018 ; viii",
"The Barberton Makhonjwa Mountains represents the best-preserved succession of volcanic and sedimentary rock dating back 3.6 to 3.25 billion years , when the first continents were starting to form on the primitive Earth"
]
] | {
"intro": "The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Sites are places of importance to cultural or natural heritage as described in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, established in 1972. South Africa accepted the convention on 10 July 1997, making its historical sites eligible for inclusion on the list. As of 2018, there are nine World Heritage Sites in South Africa, including four cultural sites, four natural sites and one mixed site.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "World Heritage Sites",
"title": "List of World Heritage Sites in South Africa",
"uid": "List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_South_Africa_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_South_Africa"
} | 5,360 |
5361 | Federal_Correctional_Institution,_Fort_Worth_2 | [
[
"Inmate Name",
"Register Number",
"Status",
"Details"
],
[
"Gil Dozier",
"01326-095",
"Released from custody in 1986 after his sentence was commuted by President Ronald Reagan ; served 4 years",
"Louisiana Commissioner of Agriculture from 1976 to 1980 ; convicted of extortion and racketeering for demanding $ 90,000 from Louisiana businesses in exchange for receiving favorable treatment from the state"
],
[
"Gaston Gerald",
"01446-095",
"Released from custody in 1982 ; served 30 months",
"Former Louisiana State Senator ; convicted of attempted extortion for demanding $ 25,000 from a construction contractor in exchange for helping the contractor avoid financial penalties ; expelled from the State Senate in 1981"
],
[
"James McDougal",
"18525-009",
"Deceased ; died in 1998 while serving a 3-year sentence",
"Financial partner with Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton in land dealings which were the subject of the Whitewater political scandal ; convicted in 1997 of fraud and conspiracy"
],
[
"Peter MacDonald",
"08986-055",
"Released from custody in 1997 after serving 5 years",
"Chairman of the Navajo Nation from 1970 to 1989 ; convicted in 1992 of conspiracy and burglary for inciting his supporters to riot after he was suspended for corruption , leading to the deaths of two protesters"
],
[
"Jason R. Smith",
"59089-019",
"Served a 10-year sentence and was released on August 17 , 2016",
"Former Atlanta Police officer ; pleaded guilty in 2007 to civil rights violations in connection with the death of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston , who was shot by officers enforcing a search warrant which they obtained based on false information"
],
[
"Andrew Spengler",
"08587-089",
"Currently serving a 15-year sentence ; scheduled for release in 2021",
"Former Milwaukee police officer ; convicted in 2007 of civil rights violations in connection with the 2004 knife point beating of Frank Jude Jr. ; known as the worst incident of police brutality in the city 's history"
],
[
"Steve Stockman",
"23502-479",
"Currently serving a 10-year sentence ; scheduled for release in 2026",
"Former Republican Congressman from Texas , convicted of 23 felony counts in 2018 . Ordered to pay $ 1,014,718.51 in restitution"
],
[
"Leland Yee",
"19629-111",
"Now at FCI Big Spring",
"Former California State Senator and gun control advocate ; convicted in 2016 of charges relating to public corruption and gun trafficking"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Federal Medical Center (FMC) Fort Worth is an administrative-security United States federal prison in Fort Worth, Texas for male inmates of all security levels with special medical and mental health needs. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice. Originally opening as a Federal Correctional Institution in 1971, the institution was converted to a Federal Medical Center in 1994. At the end of 2006, FMC Fort Worth was returned to FCI status. As of 2017, FMC Fort Worth was again converted back to a Federal Medical Center.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Notable inmates ( current and former ) -- Corrupt public officials",
"title": "Federal Medical Center, Fort Worth",
"uid": "Federal_Correctional_Institution,_Fort_Worth_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Medical_Center,_Fort_Worth"
} | 5,361 |
5362 | Tamil_Nadu_Agricultural_University_0 | [
[
"No",
"Name",
"Location",
"District",
"Estd",
"Status"
],
[
"1",
"Agricultural College and Research Institute Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore district",
"1908",
"University Main Campus"
],
[
"2",
"School of Post Graduate Studies , Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore district",
"1965",
"University Main Campus"
],
[
"3",
"Agricultural College and Research Institute Madurai",
"Madurai",
"Madurai district",
"1965",
"University Main Campus"
],
[
"4",
"Anbil Dharmalingam Agricultural College and Research Institute",
"Navalur Kuttapattu",
"Tiruchirappalli district",
"1989",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"5",
"Agricultural College and Research Institute , Killikulam",
"Killikulam , Vallanadu",
"Thoothukudi district",
"1985",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"6",
"Agricultural Engineering College and Research Institute , Kumulur",
"Kumulur , Lalgudi",
"Tiruchirapalli district",
"1992",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"7",
"Agricultural Engineering College and Research Institute Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore district",
"1972",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"8",
"Horticultural College and Research Institute Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore",
"Coimbatore district",
"1972",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"9",
"Horticultural College and Research Institute Periyakulam",
"Periyakulam",
"Theni district",
"1990",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"10",
"Horticultural College and Research Institute for Women",
"Navalur Kuttapattu",
"Tiruchirappalli district",
"2012",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"11",
"Forest College and Research Institute Mettupalayam",
"Mettupalayam",
"Coimbatore district",
"1990",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"12",
"Home Science College and Research Institute , Madurai",
"Madurai",
"Madurai district",
"2000",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"13",
"Agricultural College & Research Institute , Eachankottai",
"Eachankottai",
"Thanjavur district",
"2014",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"14",
"Agricultural College & Research Institute , Valavachanur",
"Valavachanur",
"Thiruvannamalai District",
"2014",
"University Constituent College"
],
[
"15",
"Agricultural College & Research Institute , Kudumiyanmalai",
"Kudimiyanmalai",
"Pudukkottai district",
"2014",
"University Constituent College"
]
] | {
"intro": "Tamil Nadu Agricultural University (TNAU) is an agricultural university located in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India.",
"section_text": "The university has 15 constituent colleges : [ 6 ]",
"section_title": "Constituent colleges",
"title": "Tamil Nadu Agricultural University",
"uid": "Tamil_Nadu_Agricultural_University_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamil_Nadu_Agricultural_University"
} | 5,362 |
5363 | List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Class year",
"Notes"
],
[
"Chazwick Bundick",
"2009",
"aka Toro Y Moi , musician"
],
[
"Amanda Baker",
"2001",
"actress on General Hospital soap opera"
],
[
"Mel Byars",
"1960",
"book author , journalist , professor , and Besterman/McColvin Gold Medal winner"
],
[
"Mike Colter",
"1998",
"actor"
],
[
"Rita Cosby",
"1989",
"host of MSNBC 's Rita Cosby Live and three-time Emmy Award winner"
],
[
"Wilson Casey",
"1977",
"syndicated columnist , book author , and Guinness World Record holder"
],
[
"Dean Neistat",
"2005",
"Award Winning Stuntman , Actor , and Decorated USAF Combat Pilot"
],
[
"Harry Dent",
"1975",
"economist and writer"
],
[
"Ainsley Earhardt",
"1999",
"anchor for Fox News Weekend TV program"
],
[
"Charles Frazier",
"1986",
"author of the best-selling novel Cold Mountain"
],
[
"Lilian Garcia",
"1988",
"singer and WWE ring announcer"
],
[
"Leeza Gibbons",
"1978",
"actress and former host of Entertainment Tonight TV program , three-time Emmy winner"
],
[
"Alex Daniels",
"1978",
"stunt coordinator and actor , Borat , The Guardian , Dodgeball"
],
[
"Lauren Michelle Hill",
"2000",
"actress ; February 2001 Playboy Playmate of the Month"
],
[
"Jim Hoagland",
"1961",
"columnist and former chief foreign correspondent of The Washington Post ; two-time Pulitzer Prize winner"
],
[
"Hootie and the Blowfish",
"",
"all four band members attended the University ; drummer Jim Sonefeld played on the USC soccer team"
],
[
"Jesse Hughes",
"",
"musician in Eagles of Death Metal group"
],
[
"Jasper Johns",
"",
"artist ; attended 1947-48 ; did not graduate"
],
[
"Bruce Littlefield",
"1989",
"author , lifestyle expert"
],
[
"Amos Lee",
"1999",
"singer , songwriter , and folk guitarist"
]
] | {
"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": "Darius Rucker of the Hootie and the Blowfish",
"section_title": "Alumni -- Arts , entertainment , and media",
"title": "List of University of South Carolina people",
"uid": "List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_South_Carolina_people"
} | 5,363 |
5364 | France_at_the_2002_Winter_Olympics_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Jean-Pierre Vidal",
"Alpine skiing",
"Men 's slalom"
],
[
"Gold",
"Carole Montillet",
"Alpine skiing",
"Women 's downhill"
],
[
"Gold",
"Marina Anissina Gwendal Peizerat",
"Figure skating",
"Ice dancing"
],
[
"Gold",
"Isabelle Blanc",
"Snowboarding",
"Women 's parallel giant slalom"
],
[
"Silver",
"Sébastien Amiez",
"Alpine skiing",
"Men 's slalom"
],
[
"Silver",
"Laure Pequegnot",
"Alpine skiing",
"Women 's slalom"
],
[
"Silver",
"Raphaël Poirée",
"Biathlon",
"Men 's 12.5 km pursuit"
],
[
"Silver",
"Karine Ruby",
"Snowboarding",
"Women 's parallel giant slalom"
],
[
"Silver",
"Doriane Vidal",
"Snowboarding",
"Women 's halfpipe"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Vincent Defrasne Gilles Marguet Raphaël Poirée Julien Robert",
"Biathlon",
"Men 's 4 × 7.5 km relay"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Richard Gay",
"Freestyle skiing",
"Men 's moguls"
]
] | {
"intro": "France competed at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Medalists",
"title": "France at the 2002 Winter Olympics",
"uid": "France_at_the_2002_Winter_Olympics_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_at_the_2002_Winter_Olympics"
} | 5,364 |
5365 | NYPD_Blue_(season_6)_0 | [
[
"Actor",
"Character",
"Main cast",
"Recurring cast"
],
[
"Jimmy Smits",
"Bobby Simone",
"episodes 1-5",
"N/A"
],
[
"Dennis Franz",
"Andy Sipowicz",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Rick Schroder",
"Danny Sorenson",
"episodes 6-22",
"N/A"
],
[
"James McDaniel",
"Arthur Fancy",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Kim Delaney",
"Diane Simone",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Gordon Clapp",
"Greg Medavoy",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Nicholas Turturro",
"James Martinez",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Andrea Thompson",
"Jill Kirkendall",
"entire season",
"N/A"
],
[
"Sharon Lawrence",
"Sylvia Costas",
"episodes 1-10",
"episodes 20-21"
],
[
"Bill Brochtrup",
"John Irvin",
"episodes 13-22",
"episodes 1,5,7,9,12"
]
] | {
"intro": "The sixth season of NYPD Blue premiered on ABC on October 20, 1998, and concluded on May 25, 1999.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Cast",
"title": "NYPD Blue (season 6)",
"uid": "NYPD_Blue_(season_6)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYPD_Blue_(season_6)"
} | 5,365 |
5366 | List_of_German_colonel_generals_1 | [
[
"Promoted",
"Name",
"Born",
"Died",
"Notes"
],
[
"20 Apr 1936",
"Werner von Fritsch",
"1880",
"1939",
"Commander-in-Chief of the Oberkommando des Heeres"
],
[
"1 Nov 1938",
"Ludwig Beck",
"1880",
"1944",
"Chief of the German General Staff"
],
[
"1 Jan 1939",
"Wilhelm Adam",
"1877",
"1949",
"Commander-in-Chief of the Heeresgruppe 2 in Kassel ( 1938 )"
],
[
"1 Oct 1939",
"Johannes Blaskowitz",
"1883",
"1948",
"8th Army ( Wehrmacht ) - 9th Army ( Wehrmacht ) - 1st Army ( Wehrmacht ) - Army Group G - Army Group H - 25th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Friedrich Dollmann",
"1882",
"1944",
"7th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Nikolaus von Falkenhorst",
"1885",
"1968",
"Army HC Norwegen"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Friedrich Fromm",
"1888",
"1945",
"Replacement Army"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Heinz Guderian",
"1884",
"1954",
"Panzer Group Guderian - 2nd Panzer Army -Chief of the German General Staff"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Curt Haase",
"1881",
"1943",
"15th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Franz Halder",
"1884",
"1972",
"Chief of the German General Staff"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Hermann Hoth",
"1885",
"1971",
"17th Army ( Wehrmacht ) - 4th Panzer Army - Panzer Group Hoth"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Erich Hoepner",
"1886",
"1944",
"4th Panzer Army"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Eugen von Schobert",
"1883",
"1941",
"11th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"19 July 1940",
"Adolf Strauß",
"1879",
"1973",
"9th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"1 Jan 1942",
"Georg-Hans Reinhardt",
"1887",
"1963",
"3rd Panzer Army - Army Group Center"
],
[
"1 Jan 1942",
"Rudolf Schmidt",
"1886",
"1957",
"2nd Panzer Army"
],
[
"1 Apr 1942",
"Richard Ruoff",
"1883",
"1967",
"4th Panzer Army - 17th Army ( Wehrmacht ) - Panzer Group Ruoff - 17th Army ( Wehrmacht )"
],
[
"1 June 1942",
"Eduard Dietl",
"1890",
"1944",
"Army Lapland - 20th Mountain Army"
],
[
"5 July 1942",
"Georg Lindemann",
"1884",
"1963",
"18th Army ( Wehrmacht ) - Army Group North"
],
[
"4 Dec 1942",
"Hans-Jürgen von Arnim",
"1889",
"1962",
"5th Panzer Army - Army Group Africa"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is an incomplete list of German colonel generals. Generals later promoted to general field marshal (GFM) are not included.",
"section_text": "See also : ⇒ World War II German Army ranks and insignia Insignias Epaulette Collar tabs",
"section_title": "Third Reich -- Heer",
"title": "List of German colonel generals",
"uid": "List_of_German_colonel_generals_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_German_colonel_generals"
} | 5,366 |
5367 | Brush_Park_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Year",
"Location",
"Style",
"Architect",
"Notes"
],
[
"Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity House",
"c. 1918",
"293 Eliot St",
"American Foursquare",
"Unknown",
"Since May 15 , 1939 , this building houses Gamma Lambda Chapter , a local chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha African-American Greek-lettered fraternity . Detroit 's Gamma Lambda Chapter , founded in 1919 , served as a focal point for black social , cultural , educational , and community service activities in an era when there were few other outlets . The house , built around 1918 , was designated a Michigan State Historic Site on August 30 , 1977"
],
[
"Bonstelle Theatre",
"1902",
"3424 Woodward Ave",
"Beaux-Arts , Greek Revival",
"Albert Kahn ; C. Howard Crane ( remodeling )",
"In accordance with the wishes of rabbi Leo M. Franklin , Albert Kahn designed this neoclassical temple on Woodward Avenue for Detroit 's Jewish community . Groundbreaking began on November 25 , 1901 , with the ceremonial cornerstone laid on April 23 , 1902 . After the construction of a new synagogue at 8801 Woodward , in 1925 the Temple Beth El was converted into a theater by C. Howard Crane ; the façade was later strongly altered with the 1936 Woodward widening . The structure - the oldest synagogue building in Detroit - is listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"Max Broock House",
"1905",
"233 Erskine St",
"Edwardian",
"Mueller & Mildner",
"This house ( pictured left ) was built in 1905 for Max Broock , a real estate and insurance broker whose offices were located in the Breitmeyer-Tobin Building . Designed by the Detroit firm of Mueller & Mildner , the structure reflects strongly the transitional character of many houses of the Edwardian period - part Victorian , and part twentieth century"
],
[
"Frederick Butler House",
"1882",
"291 Edmund Pl",
"French Renaissance Revival , Second Empire",
"William Scott & Co",
"Built in 1882 , the Frederick Butler House is a French Renaissance Second Empire style mansion containing 8,400 sq ft ( 780 m ) ; the original owner , Frederick Butler , was a banker . It was restored and converted to condos in 2006 . The house , located within the Woodward East Historic District , is presently now as Edmund Place"
],
[
"James V. Campbell House",
"1877",
"261 Alfred St",
"Italianate",
"Unknown",
"James Valentine Campbell ( 1823-1890 ) was secretary of the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan , justice of the Michigan Supreme Court , and Marshall Professor of Law at the University of Michigan . The house was occupied by the Campbell family from 1877 to 1891 . The building is within the Woodward East Historic District"
],
[
"The Carlton",
"1923",
"2915 John R. St. at Edmund",
"Beaux-Arts , Chicago School",
"Louis Kamper",
"The Carlton Plaza Hotel opened on May 31 , 1924 ; designed by famed Detroit architect Louis Kamper , it was his 12th major commission , and his firm 's first documented hotel project . During the Jazz Age , the hotel became a popular gathering place for wealthy and affluent African-Americans , including some of the biggest names in jazz . In 1950 , Ebony magazine described the Carlton as the most beautifully decorated and most elaborately furnished hotel for Negroes anywhere in the U.S. ; in May 1960 , Jet heralded it as the premier destination for the discriminating negro . By the 1980s , the hotel had progressively fell into decay ; taken over by the City of Detroit and shuttered in the 1990s , it was bought by private investors and renovated as condominiums in 2005"
],
[
"Carola Building",
"1912",
"78 Watson St",
"Renaissance Revival",
"",
"Renovated as condominiums"
],
[
"Lyman Cochrane House",
"1870",
"216 Winder St",
"Italianate",
"",
"This house is a relatively rare example of residential Italianate architecture in Detroit . It was originally built for eye doctor John F. Terry , but in 1871 was sold to Lyman Cochrane . Cochrane was a state senator and Superior Court Judge , serving in this capacity until his death in 1879"
],
[
"Crystal lofts",
"1919",
"3100 Woodward Ave. at Watson",
"Art Deco",
"",
"Originally constructed as a ballroom ( the Crystal Palace ) , the building was recently renovated as condominiums . The Art Deco façade was added in 1936"
],
[
"J.P. Donaldson House",
"1879",
"82 Alfred St",
"Queen Anne",
"Mason & Rice ; Gordon W. Lloyd ( remodeling )",
"This house was built in 1879 for James P. Donaldson , a ship chandler . In 1892 , David Charles Whitney ( son of David Whitney Jr. ) acquired the home , which was completely renovated by Gordon W. Lloyd . At the time it was said to be one of the most substantial homes in Detroit and valued at $ 30,000 ( today $ 750,000± ) . The home had several other owners before becoming a rooming house ; in 2012 the building was sold to a private buyer for $ 110,000 . In the same year the mansion has been a movie set for the vampire film Only Lovers Left Alive , directed by Jim Jarmusch"
],
[
"Clifford Elliot House",
"1899",
"305 Eliot St",
"Victorian , Edwardian",
"M.A . Edwards",
"Built in 1899 for Clifford Elliot , a wholesale grocery executive , this turn-of-the-century house exemplifies the transition from the Victorian design to the Edwardian style of architecture"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church",
"1889",
"2930 Woodward Ave",
"Richardsonian Romanesque",
"George D. Mason",
"George D. Mason modeled the First Presbyterian Church after Henry Hobson Richardson 's Trinity Church in Boston . When Woodward was widened in 1936 , the elaborately-carved entrance porch was moved from the Woodward façade to the Edmund Place side . The church is listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"John P. Fiske House",
"1876",
"261 Edmund Pl",
"Second Empire , French Renaissance Revival , Victorian",
"",
"John P. Fiske was a Detroit merchant of china and crockery . The house , located within the Woodward East Historic District , was designated a Michigan State Historic Site on August 18 , 1988"
],
[
"Ransom Gillis House",
"1876",
"205 Alfred St. at John R",
"Venetian Gothic",
"Henry T. Brush & George D. Mason",
"This building has been heavily documented by John Kossik and photographed by documentarian Camilo José Vergara . The house , built between 1876 and 1878 for Ransom Gillis , a wholesale dry goods merchant , is within the Woodward East Historic District"
],
[
"Bernard Ginsburg House",
"1898",
"236 Adelaide St",
"Tudor Revival",
"George W. Nettleton & Albert Kahn",
"Bernard Ginsburg was an important figure in philanthropy , civic service , and the Jewish community in Detroit during the late 19th and early 20th century . He commissioned architect Albert Kahn to design this house , one of Kahn 's earliest works . Kahn went on to become well known in industrial and commercial architecture ; the Ginsburg house and its English Renaissance style exhibited is typical of Kahn 's early work . The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"John Harvey House",
"1887",
"97 Winder St",
"Second Empire",
"John V. Smith",
"John Harvey was a pharmacist and philanthropist . The house contains 11,000 square feet ( 1,000 m ) , eight marble fireplaces , and three-story staircase . Developers purchased the John Harvey House in 1986 , renovated the structure , and , in 2005 , opened it as the Inn at 97 Winder , a bed and breakfast . The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"Hudson-Evans House",
"1874",
"79 Alfred St",
"Second Empire , French Renaissance Revival , Italianate",
"Unknown",
"Also known as the Joseph Lothian Hudson House or the Grace Whitney Evans House . Built in 1874 for shipowner Philo Wright , the house was a gift from David Whitney Jr. to his daughter Grace upon her marriage to John Evans in 1882 . It later became the Joseph L. Hudson family residence . Listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"Albert Kahn House",
"1906",
"208 Mack Ave",
"English Renaissance",
"Albert Kahn",
"In 1906 , architect Albert Kahn built a home for his personal use . He lived in this mansion fronting Mack Avenue from 1906 until his death in 1942 ; the structure was later obtained by the Detroit Urban League , which still uses it today . The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places"
],
[
"George Ladve House",
"1882",
"269 Edmund Pl",
"Eastlake Victorian",
"",
"Originally owned by George Ladve , 269 Edmund Pl. , an Eastlake Victorian style mansion built in 1882 and restored in 2008 , contains 7,400 sq ft ( 690 m ) . Ladve had owned a carpet and upholstery company . In the late 1890s , the Frohlich family added a music room . Edward P. Frohlich was among the original philanthropists to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra . The house is within the Woodward East Historic District"
],
[
"Lucien S. Moore House",
"c. 1885",
"104 Edmund Pl",
"French Renaissance Revival , Gothic Revival",
"Unknown",
"Originally owned by lumber baron Lucien S. Moore , 104 Edmund Place , built around 1885 in a French Renaissance Gothic Revival style and restored in 2006 , has 7,000 sq ft ( 650 m ) . The Lucien Moore House restoration was featured December 27 , 2005 by HGTV 's restore America Initiative in partnership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation . It may also be known as the Moorie Town House or The Edmund"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Brush Park Historic District, frequently referred to as simply Brush Park, is a 22-block neighborhood located within Midtown Detroit, Michigan and designated by the city. It is bounded by Mack Avenue on the north, Woodward Avenue on the west, Beaubien Street on the east, and the Fisher Freeway on the south. The Woodward East Historic District, a smaller historic district completely encompassed by the larger Brush Park neighborhood, is located on Alfred, Edmund, and Watson Streets, from Brush Street to John R. Street, and is recognized by the National Register of Historic Places. Originally part of a French ribbon farm, Brush Park was developed beginning in the 1850s as an upscale residential neighborhood for Detroit's elite citizens by entrepreneur Edmund Askin Brush. Dozens of Victorian mansions were built there during the final decades of the nineteenth century, and Brush Park was nicknamed Little Paris due to its elegant architecture. The neighborhood's heyday didn't last long, however: by the early twentieth century most of is affluent residents started moving to more modern, quieter districts, and Brush Park was quickly populated by members of Detroit's fast-growing working class. Severely affected by depopulation, blight and crime during the 1970s and 1980s, the neighborhood is currently experiencing restorations of its historic buildings and luring new residents.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Notable buildings",
"title": "Brush Park",
"uid": "Brush_Park_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brush_Park"
} | 5,367 |
5368 | List_of_best-selling_singles_5 | [
[
"Artist",
"Single",
"Released",
"Sales ( in millions )"
],
[
"Tino Rossi",
"Petit Papa Noël",
"1946",
"5.7"
],
[
"Christina Aguilera , Lil ' Kim , Mýa and Pink",
"Lady Marmalade",
"2001",
"5.5"
],
[
"1910 Fruitgum Company",
"Simon Says",
"1967",
"5"
],
[
"ABBA",
"Waterloo",
"1974",
"5"
],
[
"Gene Austin",
"My Blue Heaven",
"1927",
"5"
],
[
"Gene Autry",
"That Silver-Haired Daddy of Mine",
"1935",
"5"
],
[
"The Beatles",
"She Loves You",
"1963",
"5"
],
[
"Bee Gees",
"Massachusetts",
"1967",
"5"
],
[
"Culture Club",
"Karma Chameleon",
"1983",
"5"
],
[
"Enigma",
"Sadeness ( Part I )",
"1990",
"5"
],
[
"Engelbert Humperdinck",
"Release Me",
"1967",
"5"
],
[
"Terry Jacks",
"Seasons in the Sun",
"1974",
"5"
],
[
"The Jackson 5",
"I 'll Be There",
"1970",
"5"
],
[
"Tommy James and the Shondells",
"Crimson and Clover",
"1968",
"5"
],
[
"Tom Jones",
"Delilah",
"1968",
"5"
],
[
"Jerry Lee Lewis",
"Great Balls of Fire",
"1957",
"5"
],
[
"Kaoma",
"Lambada",
"1989",
"5"
],
[
"Madonna",
"Like a Prayer",
"1989",
"5"
],
[
"Ricky Martin",
"María",
"1995",
"5"
],
[
"Michael Zager Band",
"Let 's All Chant",
"1977",
"5"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article is a compendium of the best-selling music singles. The criterion for inclusion on the list is to have sold at least five million copies worldwide. The singles listed here were cited by reliable sources from various media, such as digital journalism, newspapers, magazines, and books. It is notable that, according to Guinness World Records, Irving Berlin's White Christmas (1942) as performed by Bing Crosby is the best-selling single worldwide, with estimated sales of over 50 million copies. The song, recognized as the best-selling single of all time, was released before the pop/rock singles-chart era and was listed as the world's best-selling single in the first-ever Guinness Book of Records (published in 1955) and - remarkably - still retains the title more than 50 years later. Also, Guinness World Records states that double A-side charity single Candle in the Wind 1997/Something About the Way You Look Tonight (1997) by Elton John (which was originally written in 1973, in honour of Marilyn Monroe, who had died 11 years earlier. In 1997, John performed a rewritten version of the song as a tribute to the late Diana, Princess of Wales, is the biggest-selling single since UK and US singles charts began in the 1950s, having accumulated worldwide sales of 33 million copies, making it the second-best-selling physical single of all time. There are three best-selling singles lists displayed here:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Best-selling physical singles -- 5–5.9 million copies",
"title": "List of best-selling singles",
"uid": "List_of_best-selling_singles_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_singles"
} | 5,368 |
5369 | Central_and_Western_Heritage_Trail_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Notes/References"
],
[
"8- Old Halls , the University of Hong Kong",
"Mid-levels",
"[ 84 ] Old Halls is a collective name given in 1966 to Lugard , Eliot and May Halls . Only Eliot and May Halls remain"
],
[
"9- Main Building , the University of Hong Kong",
"Mid-levels",
"[ 85 ] [ 86 ] The exterior of the building is a Declared Monument"
],
[
"10- Hung Hing Ying Building , the University of Hong Kong",
"Mid-levels",
"[ 87 ] [ 88 ] The exterior of the building is a Declared Monument"
],
[
"11- Elliot Pumping Station and Filters Workmen 's Quarters",
"Pok Fu Lam Road , Kennedy Town",
"[ 89 ] Grade II Historic Building"
],
[
"12- Former Fung Ping Shan Museum ( University Museum and Art Gallery , the University of Hong Kong )",
"94 Bonham Road",
"[ 90 ] The Fung Ping Shan Building is a Grade II Historic Building"
],
[
"13- Tang Chi Ngong Building , the University of Hong Kong",
"Mid-levels",
"[ 91 ] [ 92 ] The exterior of the building is a Declared Monument"
],
[
"14- King 's College",
"63A Bonham Road , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 93 ] Grade II Historic Building"
],
[
"15- Kau Yan Church",
"97A High Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 94 ] Grade III Historic Building"
],
[
"16- Old Tsan Yuk Maternity Hospital",
"36A Western Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 95 ] Grade III Historic Building . Named Western District Community Centre since 1973"
],
[
"17- Main Building of St. Stephen 's Girls ' College",
"2 Lyttelton Road , Mid-Levels",
"[ 96 ] [ 97 ] Declared Monument"
],
[
"18- Old Site of Diocesan Boys ' School",
"9A Bonham Road",
"[ 98 ] Now the Bonham Road Government Primary School"
],
[
"19- Old Lunatic Asylum ( Chinese Block )",
"45 Eastern Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 99 ] Grade II Historic Building . Now the Eastern Street Methadone Clinic"
],
[
"20- Old Mental Hospital",
"2 High Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 100 ] The façade is a Grade I Historic Building . Now part of the Sai Ying Pun Community Complex"
],
[
"21- Upper Levels Police Station",
"1F High Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 101 ] Grade III Historic Building . Now used as the Crime Hong Kong Island Regional Headquarters"
],
[
"22- St. Louis School",
"179 Third Street , Sai Ying Pun",
"[ 102 ] Grade III Historic Building"
],
[
"23- Ex-Western Fire Station",
"12 Belcher 's Street , Kennedy Town",
"[ 103 ] Grade III Historic Building . Converted into the Po Leung Kuk Chan Au Big Yan Home for the Elderly"
],
[
"24- Fok Hing Tong , Hong Kong Society for the Promotion of Virtue",
"8-9 Tai Pak Terrace",
"[ 104 ]"
],
[
"25- Lo Pan Temple",
"15 Ching Lin Terrace , Kennedy Town",
"[ 105 ] Grade I Historic Building"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Central and Western Heritage Trail is a Heritage Trail in Hong Kong, that was designed by the Antiquities and Monuments Office of the Leisure and Cultural Services Department. It covers the Central and Western District of Hong Kong and consists of 3 parts:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "The Western District and the Peak Route -- Section A",
"title": "Central and Western Heritage Trail",
"uid": "Central_and_Western_Heritage_Trail_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_and_Western_Heritage_Trail"
} | 5,369 |
5370 | Transportation_in_Saskatchewan_0 | [
[
"Ferry",
"Location",
"Waterway"
],
[
"Estuary",
"connecting Estuary and Laporte",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Lemsford",
"North of Lemsford connecting 32 and 30",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Lancer",
"North of Lancer connecting 32 and 30",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Riverhurst",
"Highway 42 and Highway 373",
"Lake Diefenbaker"
],
[
"Clarkboro",
"Between Warman and Aberdeen on 784",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Hague",
"Between Hague and Aberdeen",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"St. Laurent",
"East of Duck Lake , 11 and Batoche 225",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Fenton",
"Between 25 and 3 on Grid Road",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Weldon",
"Between 3 , Weldon via 682 and 302 , Prince Albert",
"South Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Paynton",
"Between 16 and 26 via 764",
"North Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Wingard",
"East of Marcelin , 40 connecting to 11 Wingard",
"North Saskatchewan River"
],
[
"Cecil",
"Between 302 and 55 east of Prince Albert",
"North Saskatchewan River"
]
] | {
"intro": "Transportation in Saskatchewan is the movement of people and goods from one place to another within the province. Transportation in Saskatchewan includes an infrastructure system of roads, highways, freeways, airports, ferries, pipelines, trails, waterways and railway systems serving a population of approximately 1,003,299",
"section_text": "There are currently twelve ferry services operating in the province , all under the jurisdiction of the Department of Highways . In the 1920s [ 25 ] through to the 1950s there were 36 ferries in operation , the highest number of ferries in the province . [ 20 ] In the 1860s the Hudson 's Bay Company built a river ferry near Fort Carlton on the North Saskatchewan River . 1871 saw the ferry crossing at Gabriel 's Crossing near present-day St. Laurent Ferry . [ 23 ] In 1883 a ferry on the Battleford Trail was able to provide crossing service for two red river carts across the South Saskatchewan River at Saskatchewan Landing . This ferry operated until 1953 when the second bridge was officially opened . [ 26 ]",
"section_title": "Waterways -- Ferry services",
"title": "Transportation in Saskatchewan",
"uid": "Transportation_in_Saskatchewan_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_Saskatchewan"
} | 5,370 |
5371 | List_of_Ukrainian_composers_0 | [
[
"Composer",
"Life Span",
"City of Birth",
"Significant Works"
],
[
"Sebastian z Felsztyna",
"1480/1490 ? - after 1543",
"Felsztyn ( Skelivka )",
"three motets"
],
[
"Marcin Leopolita",
"1537-1584",
"Lviv",
"Missa paschalis"
],
[
"Mykola Dyletsky",
"1630-1690",
"Kyiv",
"Sacred choral concerti"
],
[
"Tymofiy Bilohradsky",
"ca . 1710-ca . 1782",
"Cherkasy ?",
"Famous lutenist who worked throughout Europe"
],
[
"Hryhoriy Skovoroda",
"1722-1794",
"Chornukhy , Kyiv Governorate",
"Liturgical music"
],
[
"Maksym Berezovsky",
"1745-1777",
"Hlukhiv ?",
"Sacred choral concerti . First Ukrainian to compose an opera , symphony , and violin sonata"
],
[
"Dmytro Bortnyansky",
"1751-1825",
"Hlukhiv",
"Sacred choral concerti , operas , symphonies , piano sonatas"
],
[
"Artem Vedel",
"1767-1808",
"Kyiv",
"Sacred choral concerti"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Ukrainian composers of classical music who were either born on the territory of modern-day Ukraine or were ethnically Ukrainian.",
"section_text": "The composers in this period correspond roughly to the time period of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth , Ukrainian Cossack self-governance , such as the Zaporizhian Sich ( late 15th century – 1775 ) and the Cossack Hetmanate ( 1649–1764 ) . This period includes western-educated composers whose music is similar in style to that of their Western European contemporaries .",
"section_title": "List by historic periods -- Early Period ( to end of 18th century )",
"title": "List of Ukrainian composers",
"uid": "List_of_Ukrainian_composers_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ukrainian_composers"
} | 5,371 |
5372 | List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Oregon_0 | [
[
"School",
"Main location",
"Control",
"Type",
"Enrollment ( 2005 )",
"Founded"
],
[
"American College of Healthcare Sciences",
"Portland",
"Private ( for-profit )",
"Health professions school",
"1,032",
"1978"
],
[
"Blue Mountain Community College",
"Pendleton",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"2,216",
"1962"
],
[
"Central Oregon Community College",
"Bend",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"4,048",
"1949"
],
[
"Chemeketa Community College",
"Salem",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"9,228",
"1970"
],
[
"Clackamas Community College",
"Oregon City",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"6,902",
"1961"
],
[
"Clatsop Community College",
"Astoria",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"1,610",
"1958"
],
[
"Columbia Gorge Community College",
"The Dalles",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"831",
"1989"
],
[
"Concordia University",
"Portland",
"Private ( Lutheran )",
"Masters university",
"1,404",
"1905"
],
[
"Corban University",
"Salem",
"Private ( Baptist )",
"Masters university",
"754",
"1935"
],
[
"Eastern Oregon University",
"La Grande",
"Public",
"Masters university",
"3,338",
"1929"
],
[
"George Fox University",
"Newberg",
"Private ( Quaker )",
"Research university",
"3,382",
"1891"
],
[
"Gutenberg College",
"Eugene",
"Private ( Protestant )",
"Religious school",
"48",
"1994"
],
[
"Klamath Community College",
"Klamath Falls",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"1,619",
"1996"
],
[
"Lane Community College",
"Eugene",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"9,110",
"1964"
],
[
"Lewis & Clark College",
"Portland",
"Private",
"Liberal arts college",
"3,259",
"1867"
],
[
"Linfield College",
"McMinnville",
"Private ( Baptist )",
"Liberal arts college",
"2,606",
"1858"
],
[
"Linn-Benton Community College",
"Albany",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"5,391",
"1967"
],
[
"Mount Angel Seminary",
"St. Benedict",
"Private ( Catholic )",
"Religious school",
"177",
"1887"
],
[
"Mt . Hood Community College",
"Gresham",
"Public",
"Associates college",
"7,817",
"1965"
],
[
"Multnomah University",
"Portland",
"Private ( Protestant )",
"Religious school",
"763",
"1936"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of colleges and universities in the U.S. state of Oregon. Seven public universities, overseen by the Oregon Office of University Coordination, are operated by boards appointed by the governor, and seventeen community colleges are operated by locally elected boards. There are also numerous private degree-granting institutions. The oldest college is Willamette University, which was established 1842, and is the oldest university in the Western United States. The oldest community college is Southwestern Oregon Community College which was established in 1959 (Year conflicts with Institutions list below). The college has about 14,500 students (Enrollment conflicts with Institutions list below) which have access to the over 150 acres (61 ha) of campus. This list includes all schools that grant degrees at an associate level or higher, and are either accredited or in the process of accreditation by a recognized accrediting agency.",
"section_text": "George Fox University Gutenberg College Lane Community College Oregon Health & Science University Oregon State University Pacific University New Hope Christian College Portland Community College Portland State University University of Oregon University of Portland Willamette University",
"section_title": "Institutions",
"title": "List of colleges and universities in Oregon",
"uid": "List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Oregon_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_Oregon"
} | 5,372 |
5373 | List_of_marquessates_in_the_peerages_of_Britain_and_Ireland_2 | [
[
"Title",
"Date of creation",
"Surname",
"Current status",
"Notes"
],
[
"Marquess of Beverley",
"26 May 1708",
"Douglas",
"Extinct 22 October 1778",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Dover , who was also Duke of Queensberry and Marquess of Dumfriesshire in the Peerage of Scotland ; also Marquess of Queensberry 1708-1711 and 1715-1778"
],
[
"Marquess of Wharton",
"15 February 1715",
"Wharton",
"Extinct 31 May 1731",
"Also Marquess of Malmesbury and Marquess of Catherlough in Ireland ; created Duke of Wharton in 1718"
],
[
"Marquess of Malmesbury",
"15 February 1715",
"Wharton",
"Extinct 31 May 1731",
"Also Marquess of Wharton and Marquess of Catherlough in Ireland ; created Duke of Wharton in 1718"
],
[
"Marquess of Clare",
"11 August 1715",
"Pelham-Holles",
"Extinct 1768",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne"
],
[
"Marquess of Titchfield",
"6 July 1716",
"Bentinck",
"Extinct 30 July 1990",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Portland"
],
[
"Marquess of Carnarvon",
"29 April 1719",
"Brydges",
"Extinct 29 September 1789",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Chandos"
],
[
"Marquess of Brackley",
"18 June 1720",
"Egerton",
"Extinct 8 March 1803",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Bridgewater"
],
[
"Marquess of the Isle of Ely",
"26 July 1726",
"Guelph",
"Merged in crown 25 October 1760",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Edinburgh ; also Prince of Wales from 1727 ; also Duke of Cornwall in England and Duke of Rothesay in Scotland 1727-1751 . The marquessate was apparently erroneously gazetted as Marquess of the Isle of Wight although Marquess of the Isle of Ely was the intended title . In later editions of the London Gazette the Duke is referred to as the Marquess of the Isle of Ely"
],
[
"Marquess of Berkhampstead",
"27 July 1726",
"Guelph",
"Extinct 31 October 1765",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Cumberland"
],
[
"Marquess Grey",
"19 May 1740",
"Grey",
"Extinct 19 January 1797",
"Also Duke of Kent until 1740 , when this title became extinct ; passed by special patent to his granddaughter"
],
[
"Marquess of Rockingham",
"19 April 1746",
"Watson-Wentworth",
"Extinct 2 July 1782",
""
],
[
"Marquess of Monthermer",
"5 November 1766",
"Montagu",
"Extinct 23 May 1790",
"Subsidiary title of the Duke of Montagu"
],
[
"Marquess of Buckingham",
"4 December 1784",
"Temple-Nugent-Grenville",
"Extinct 26 March 1889",
"Created Duke of Buckingham and Chandos in 1822"
],
[
"Marquess of Lansdowne",
"6 December 1784",
"Petty-Fitzmaurice",
"Extant",
""
],
[
"Marquess of Stafford",
"1 March 1786",
"Leveson-Gower",
"Extant",
"Created Duke of Sutherland in 1833"
],
[
"Marquess Townshend",
"31 October 1787",
"Townshend",
"Extant",
""
],
[
"Marquess of Salisbury",
"18 August 1789",
"Cecil",
"Extant",
""
],
[
"Marquess of Bath",
"24 August 1789",
"Thynne",
"Extant",
""
],
[
"Marquess of Abercorn",
"15 October 1790",
"Hamilton",
"Extant",
"Created Duke of Abercorn in Ireland in 1868"
],
[
"Marquess Cornwallis",
"8 October 1792",
"Cornwallis",
"Extinct 9 August 1823",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "This page lists all marquessates, extant, extinct, dormant, abeyant, or forfeit, in the peerages of England, Scotland, Great Britain, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. The title of Marquess of Dublin, which is perhaps best described as Anglo-Irish, was the first to be created, in 1385, but like the next few creations, the title was soon forfeit. The title of Marquess of Pembroke, created in 1532 by Henry VIII for Anne Boleyn, has the distinction of being the first English hereditary peerage granted to a woman in her own right (styled Marchioness in the patent). The English title Marquess of Winchester, created in 1551, is the earliest still extant, so is Premier Marquess of England. The title long remained less common, and on the evening of the Coronation of Queen Victoria in 1838, the Prime Minister Lord Melbourne explained to her (from her journals):",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Marquessates in the Peerage of Great Britain , 1707–1801",
"title": "List of marquessates in the peerages of Britain and Ireland",
"uid": "List_of_marquessates_in_the_peerages_of_Britain_and_Ireland_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_marquessates_in_the_peerages_of_Britain_and_Ireland"
} | 5,373 |
5374 | List_of_fictional_turtles_5 | [
[
"Character",
"Origin",
"Notes"
],
[
"Bentley",
"Sly Cooper",
"The Cooper Gang 's technical aid , computer programmer and hacker"
],
[
"Bowser",
"Super Mario Bros",
"The main villain of the Super Mario series"
],
[
"Bowser Jr",
"Super Mario Sunshine",
"Bowser 's son"
],
[
"Devan Shell",
"Jazz Jackrabbit",
"Nemesis of Jazz"
],
[
"Gerson",
"Undertale",
"An elderly olive green tortoise-monster who runs a vendor in Waterfall"
],
[
"Ghido",
"Final Fantasy V",
"Ancient turtle who guides Bartz and the Warriors of Light on their quest"
],
[
"The Giant Turtle",
"The Legend of Zelda : Majora 's Mask",
"Helps get to Great Bay Temple"
],
[
"Kamek",
"Super Mario World 2 : Yoshi 's Island",
"Caretaker of Bowser during his childhood"
],
[
"Koopa Troopa",
"Super Mario Bros",
"Common enemy creatures in the Super Mario series"
],
[
"Koopalings",
"Super Mario Bros. 3",
"Bowser 's seven minions . Their individual names are Wendy , Morton , Iggy , Larry , Lemmy , Roy , and Ludwig"
],
[
"Kooper",
"Paper Mario",
"One of Mario 's partners"
],
[
"Koops",
"Paper Mario : The Thousand-Year Door",
"One of Mario 's partners"
],
[
"Lakitu",
"Super Mario Bros",
"One of the enemies in the Super Mario series . Also serves as the referee in spin-offs like Mario Tennis and Mario Kart"
],
[
"Shen-zin Su",
"World of Warcraft : Mists of Pandaria",
"Giant sea turtle and starting zone for the Pandaren race"
],
[
"Tiptup",
"Banjo Kazooie",
"Appears in Banjo Kazooie , Banjo Tooie and Diddy Kong Racing"
],
[
"Tortimer",
"Animal Crossing",
"The eccentric tortoise mayor of the town"
],
[
"Valluta",
"RuneScape",
"An ancient tortoise-like creature that is one of the Guardians of Guthix"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of fictional turtles, tortoises, and terrapins from literature, movies and other elements of popular culture.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "In video games",
"title": "List of fictional turtles",
"uid": "List_of_fictional_turtles_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_turtles"
} | 5,374 |
5375 | Sheryl_Lee_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"1990-1991",
"Twin Peaks",
"Laura Palmer / Maddy Ferguson",
"18 episodes Nominated - Soap Opera Digest Awards for Best Prime Time Death Scene"
],
[
"1991",
"Love , Lies and Murder",
"Patti Bailey",
"Television film"
],
[
"1992",
"Red Shoe Diaries",
"Kate Lyons",
"Episode : Jake 's Story"
],
[
"1994",
"Guinevere",
"Guinevere",
"Television film"
],
[
"1994",
"Dr. Quinn , Medicine Woman",
"Catherine",
"Episode : Another Woman"
],
[
"1994",
"Aaahh ! ! ! Real Monsters",
"Actress ( voice )",
"Episode : Krumm Goes Hollywood"
],
[
"1995",
"Follow the River",
"Mary Draper Ingles",
"Television film"
],
[
"1997",
"David",
"Bathsheba",
"3 episodes"
],
[
"1998-1999",
"L.A. Doctors",
"Dr. Sarah Church",
"22 episodes"
],
[
"2001",
"Hitched",
"Eve Robbins",
"Television film"
],
[
"2003",
"Kingpin",
"Marlene McDillon Cadena",
"6 episodes Nominated - Prism Award for Performance in a TV Movie or Miniseries"
],
[
"2003",
"Without a Trace",
"Tina Hodges",
"Episode : Coming Home"
],
[
"2004",
"Desperate Housewives",
"Mary Alice Young",
"Unaired pilot"
],
[
"2005-2006",
"One Tree Hill",
"Elizabeth Ellie Harp",
"9 episodes"
],
[
"2006",
"The Secrets of Comfort House",
"Wendy",
"Television film"
],
[
"2006",
"CSI : NY",
"Ellen Garner",
"Episode : And Here 's To You , Mrs Azrael"
],
[
"2006",
"House M.D",
"Stephanie Green",
"Episode : Cane and Able"
],
[
"2007",
"Manchild",
"Mary",
"Pilot"
],
[
"2007",
"State of Mind",
"Leslie Petrovsky",
"Episode : Pilot"
],
[
"2007-2009",
"Dirty Sexy Money",
"Andrea Smithson",
"12 episodes"
]
] | {
"intro": "Sheryl Lynn Lee (born April 22, 1967) is an American film, stage, and television actress. After studying acting in college, Lee relocated to Seattle, Washington to work in theater, where she was cast by David Lynch as Laura Palmer and Maddy Ferguson on the 1990 cult TV series Twin Peaks and in the 1992 film Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me. After completing Twin Peaks, she returned to theater, appearing in the title role of Salome on Broadway opposite Al Pacino. Her film roles include as Astrid Kirchherr in Backbeat (1994), as well as a lead role in the drama Mother Night (1996), the role of Katrina in John Carpenter's Vampires (1998) and the part of April in Winter's Bone (2010). She has had recurring roles on such television series as One Tree Hill (2005-2006) and Dirty Sexy Money (2007-2009). She reprised her role of Laura Palmer in the Showtime revival of Twin Peaks (2017).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Sheryl Lee",
"uid": "Sheryl_Lee_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheryl_Lee"
} | 5,375 |
5376 | Justin_Hartley_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"2002-2006",
"Passions",
"Nicholas Foxworth Fox Crane",
"Series regular"
],
[
"2006-2011",
"Smallville",
"Green Arrow/Oliver Queen",
"Recurring role ( seasons 6-7 ) ; main role ( seasons 8-10 ) ; 72 episodes Also director ( Dominion ) ; writer ( Sacrifice )"
],
[
"2006",
"Aquaman",
"Arthur A.C. Curry",
"Unsold television pilot"
],
[
"2007",
"CSI : NY",
"Elliott Bevins",
"Episode : Heart of Glass"
],
[
"2007",
"Cold Case",
"Mike Delaney ( 1982 )",
"Episode : Justice"
],
[
"2009",
"MegaFault",
"Dan Lane",
"Television film"
],
[
"2011",
"Chuck",
"Wesley Sneijder",
"Episode : Chuck Versus the Bearded Bandit"
],
[
"2012",
"Castle",
"Reggie Starr",
"Episode : An Embarrassment of Bitches"
],
[
"2012",
"Hart of Dixie",
"Jesse Kinsella",
"Episode : Bachelorettes & Bullets"
],
[
"2012-2013",
"Emily Owens , M.D",
"Will Collins",
"Main role"
],
[
"2013",
"Melissa & Joey",
"Noah Butler",
"Episode : Fast Times"
],
[
"2013-2014",
"Revenge",
"Patrick Osbourne",
"Recurring role ( season 3 ) , 13 episodes"
],
[
"2014-2016",
"Mistresses",
"Scott Trosman",
"Recurring role ( seasons 2-4 )"
],
[
"2014-2016",
"The Young and the Restless",
"Adam Newman",
"Series regular"
],
[
"2016-present",
"This Is Us",
"Kevin Pearson",
"Main role"
],
[
"2019",
"Jane the Virgin",
"Himself",
"Episode : Chapter Eighty-Nine"
]
] | {
"intro": "Justin Scott Hartley (born January 29, 1977) is an American actor. He is known for his television roles that include Fox Crane on the NBC daytime soap opera Passions (2002-2006), Oliver Queen/Green Arrow on The CW television series Smallville (2006-2011), and Adam Newman on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless (2014-2016) which earned him an Emmy nomination. Hartley appeared in the recurring role of Patrick Osbourne in the third season of the television series Revenge. Since 2016, he has starred in the NBC drama series This Is Us, for which he was nominated for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography",
"title": "Justin Hartley",
"uid": "Justin_Hartley_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Hartley"
} | 5,376 |
5377 | Neil_Patrick_Harris_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role"
],
[
"1988",
"Clara 's Heart",
"David Hart"
],
[
"1988",
"Purple People Eater",
"Billy Johnson"
],
[
"1995",
"Animal Room",
"Arnold Mosk"
],
[
"1997",
"Starship Troopers",
"Carl Jenkins"
],
[
"1998",
"The Proposition",
"Roger Martin"
],
[
"2000",
"The Next Best Thing",
"David"
],
[
"2002",
"The Mesmerist",
"Benjamin"
],
[
"2002",
"Undercover Brother",
"Lance"
],
[
"2004",
"Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle",
"Himself"
],
[
"2005",
"The Golden Blaze",
"The Comic Shop Owner"
],
[
"2008",
"Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay",
"Himself"
],
[
"2008",
"Beyond All Boundaries",
"1st Lt. David Hettema ( voice )"
],
[
"2008",
"Justice League : The New Frontier",
"Barry Allen / The Flash ( voice )"
],
[
"2009",
"Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs",
"Steve the Monkey ( voice )"
],
[
"2010",
"Cats & Dogs : The Revenge of Kitty Galore",
"Lou the Beagle ( voice )"
],
[
"2010",
"The Best and the Brightest",
"Jeff"
],
[
"2010",
"Batman : Under the Red Hood",
"Dick Grayson / Nightwing ( voice )"
],
[
"2011",
"Beastly",
"Will Fratalli"
],
[
"2011",
"The Smurfs",
"Patrick Winslow"
],
[
"2011",
"A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas",
"Himself"
]
] | {
"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 -- Film",
"title": "Neil Patrick Harris",
"uid": "Neil_Patrick_Harris_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Patrick_Harris"
} | 5,377 |
5378 | Michael_Graziadei_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Title",
"Role",
"Notes"
],
[
"2004",
"Grounded for Life",
"College Guy",
"Episode : Communication Breakdown"
],
[
"2004-13 , 2016",
"The Young and the Restless",
"Daniel Romalotti",
"917 episodes Nominated - Soap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Male Newcomer Nominated - Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series ( 2005 , 2006 )"
],
[
"2004",
"NCIS",
"Chuck",
"Episode : Split Decision"
],
[
"2008",
"Criminal Minds",
"Steven",
"Episode : In Heat"
],
[
"2008",
"The Cleaner",
"Aaron",
"Episode : Pilot"
],
[
"2008",
"90210",
"Eric",
"3 episodes"
],
[
"2009",
"Castle",
"Brent Johnson",
"Episode : Nanny McDead"
],
[
"2009",
"Crash",
"Gavin Buckley",
"3 episodes"
],
[
"2010",
"CSI : NY",
"Keith Borgese",
"Episode : Sanguine Love"
],
[
"2010",
"Saving Grace",
"Kaz",
"Episode : Let 's Talk"
],
[
"2010",
"Miami Medical",
"Scott",
"Episode : Golden Hour"
],
[
"2010",
"Ghost Whisperer",
"Kyle/Seth",
"Episode : Dead Ringer"
],
[
"2010",
"CSI : Crime Scene Investigation",
"Kurt Francis",
"Episode : Blood Moon"
],
[
"2011",
"Necessary Roughness",
"Tyler Paxton",
"Episode : Dream On"
],
[
"2011",
"American Horror Story : Murder House",
"Travis Wanderley",
"5 episodes"
],
[
"2012",
"The Secret Circle",
"Callum",
"5 episodes"
],
[
"2012",
"The Mob Doctor",
"Louis",
"Episode : Confessions"
],
[
"2013",
"Justified",
"Mason Goines",
"Episode : Truth and Consequences"
],
[
"2013",
"The Client List",
"Bobby",
"Episode : Unanswered Prayers"
],
[
"2013",
"Longmire",
"Richard Montero",
"Episode : Sound and Fury"
]
] | {
"intro": "Michael Graziadei (born September 22, 1979) is an American actor, known for his role as Daniel Romalotti on the CBS daytime soap opera The Young and the Restless.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Television",
"title": "Michael Graziadei",
"uid": "Michael_Graziadei_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Graziadei"
} | 5,378 |
5379 | Patrick_Chapin_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Event type",
"Location",
"Format",
"Date",
"Rank"
],
[
"1996-97",
"Pro Tour",
"New York",
"Booster Draft",
"30 May-1 June 1997",
"8"
],
[
"1998-99",
"Pro Tour",
"Los Angeles",
"Rochester Draft",
"26-28 February 1999",
"6"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Grand Prix",
"Milwaukee",
"Standard",
"11-12 May 2002",
"2"
],
[
"2007",
"Worlds",
"New York",
"Special",
"6-9 December 2007",
"2"
],
[
"2011",
"Pro Tour",
"Paris",
"Standard",
"10-13 February 2011",
"6"
],
[
"2011",
"Grand Prix",
"Pittsburgh",
"Standard",
"27-28 August 2011",
"3"
],
[
"2012",
"Grand Prix",
"Orlando",
"Standard",
"14-15 January 2012",
"2"
],
[
"2013-14",
"Pro Tour",
"Atlanta",
"Block Constructed",
"16-18 May 2014",
"1"
],
[
"2014-15",
"Worlds",
"Nice",
"Special",
"2-7 December 2014",
"2"
],
[
"2015-16",
"Grand Prix",
"Indianapolis",
"Standard",
"31 October-1 November 2015",
"6"
]
] | {
"intro": "Patrick Chapin is an American Magic: The Gathering player. Also known for his writing, and deck-design, Chapin has made five Pro Tour top eights, spanning three decades, and four Grand Prix top eights. In 2012, Chapin was voted into the Magic: The Gathering Hall of Fame. His induction took place during Pro Tour Return to Ravnica in October 2012.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Achievements",
"title": "Patrick Chapin",
"uid": "Patrick_Chapin_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Chapin"
} | 5,379 |
5380 | List_of_cheeses_39 | [
[
"Name",
"Region",
"Description"
],
[
"Castelo Branco cheese ( PDO )",
"Beira Baixa",
"a cheese named after the city of the same name in Portugal , the main city of the district where it is produced . The cheese is made from milk produced by either a goat or a ewe , and has a soft texture"
],
[
"Queijo de Nisa ( PDO )",
"Alto Alentejo",
"a semi-hard sheep 's milk cheese from the municipality of Nisa . It is created from raw milk , which is coagulated , then curdled using an infusion of thistle"
],
[
"Queijo do Pico ( PDO )",
"Azores",
"Originating from the island of Pico , this cured cheese is produced in cylindrical formats from cow milk It is considered a fatty cheese and the ripening of the cheese forms a yellow exterior irregular crust and yellowish-white , soft and pasty interior . Pico cheese has a salty taste and a , characteristically , intense aroma"
],
[
"Queijo de Azeitão ( PDO )",
"Azeitão , Setúbal",
"Sheep 's milk cheese originating from the town of Azeitão"
],
[
"São Jorge ( PDO )",
"Azores",
"Produced in the São Jorge Island , this is a hard/semi-hard cheese made from unpasteurised cow 's milk , and the pâte has small eyes"
],
[
"Serra da Estrela ( PDO )",
"Serra da Estrela",
"Produced in a mountainous region this cheeses is made from sheep 's milk , mostly during the months of November to March . The texture of the paste varies depending on its age , from a very soft semi-liquid when young , to a soft but sliceable solid when older . It is a cured cheese created by artisanal producers with a white or slightly yellow color and a uniform creamy consistency with at most a few small holes in it"
],
[
"Requeijão",
"",
"A milk-derived product produced in Portugal and Brazil , it is sometimes called requesón ( the Spanish word for ricotta ) in English-speaking countries . It is a loose , ricotta -like cheese used to make cheese spreads"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of cheeses by place of origin. Cheese is a milk-based food that is produced in wide-ranging flavors, textures, and forms. Hundreds of types of cheese from various countries are produced. Their styles, textures and flavors depend on the origin of the milk (including the animal's diet), whether they have been pasteurized, the butterfat content, the bacteria and mold, the processing, and aging. Herbs, spices, or wood smoke may be used as flavoring agents. The yellow to red color of many cheeses, such as Red Leicester, is normally formed from adding annatto. While most current varieties of cheese may be traced to a particular locale, or culture, within a single country, some have a more diffuse origin, and cannot be considered to have originated in a particular place, but are associated with a whole region, such as queso blanco in Latin America. Cheese is an ancient food whose origins predate recorded history. There is no conclusive evidence indicating where cheesemaking originated, either in Europe, Central Asia or the Middle East, but the practice had spread within Europe prior to Roman times and, according to Pliny the Elder, had become a sophisticated enterprise by the time the Roman Empire came into existence. In this list, types of cheeses are included; brand names are only included if they apply to a distinct variety of cheese.",
"section_text": "See also : Portuguese cuisine and List of Portuguese cheeses with protected status",
"section_title": "Europe -- Portugal",
"title": "List of cheeses",
"uid": "List_of_cheeses_39",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cheeses"
} | 5,380 |
5381 | Retired_numbers_in_association_football_0 | [
[
"Team",
"No",
"Player",
"Pos",
"Career",
"Notes"
],
[
"JS Kabylie",
"9",
"Albert Ebossé Bodjongo",
"Forward",
"2013-2014",
"posthumous"
],
[
"Valletta Football Club",
"7",
"Gilbert Aguis",
"Midfielder",
"1990-2013",
"Club 's Legend . Still serves today as an assistant coach of the senior team"
],
[
"Rapid Vienna",
"5",
"Peter Schöttel",
"Defender",
"1986-2001",
"His number was temporarily retired for at least 10 years . In 2013 , it was reactivated and given to Thanos Petsos"
],
[
"Rapid Vienna",
"11",
"Steffen Hofmann",
"Midfielder",
"2002-2018",
"Retired for at least 11 years"
],
[
"Red Bull Salzburg",
"26",
"Jonathan Soriano",
"Striker",
"2012-2017",
"Club 's Legend"
],
[
"SK Sturm Graz",
"3",
"Günther Neukirchner",
"Defender",
"1989-2006",
""
],
[
"SK Sturm Graz",
"7",
"Mario Haas",
"Striker",
"1993-2012",
""
],
[
"SV Ried",
"27",
"Sanel Kuljic",
"Striker",
"2003-2006",
""
],
[
"Anorthosis Famagusta",
"14",
"Temur Ketsbaia",
"Midfielder",
"1991-1994 , 2002-2009",
""
],
[
"Club Brugge",
"23",
"François Sterchele",
"Striker",
"2007-2008",
"posthumous"
],
[
"UR Namur",
"3",
"Michel Soulier",
"Defender",
"1967-1977",
"posthumous"
],
[
"Palmeiras",
"12",
"Marcos",
"Goalkeeper",
"1993-2012",
"For goalkeepers only . Outfield players have wore the number since his retirement"
],
[
"São Paulo",
"01",
"Rogério Ceni",
"Goalkeeper",
"1990-2015",
"His number was retired on 12 December 2015 , when he retired from football . The number ' 1 ' may still be used , but the iconic '01 ' , which is an inverted '10 ' , is retired"
],
[
"Lokomotiv Plovdiv",
"8",
"Hristo Bonev",
"Midfielder",
"1963-1967 , 1968-1979 , 1982-1984",
""
],
[
"Montreal Impact",
"20",
"Mauro Biello",
"Forward",
"1993-1998 , 2000-2009",
""
],
[
"Cobreloa",
"8",
"Fernando Cornejo",
"Midfielder",
"1992-1997 , 2000-2004",
"posthumous"
],
[
"Beijing Enterprises",
"24",
"Cheick Tioté",
"Midfielder",
"2017",
"posthumous"
],
[
"Chengdu Blades",
"18",
"Yao Xia",
"Striker",
"2005-2010",
""
],
[
"Dalian Shide",
"26",
"Zhang Yalin",
"Midfielder",
"2000-2009",
"posthumous"
],
[
"Dalian Transcendence",
"17",
"Wang Renlong",
"Striker",
"2014",
"posthumous"
]
] | {
"intro": "Association football clubs around the world sometimes retire squad numbers to recognise players' loyal service, most as a memorial after their death.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Retired numbers",
"title": "List of retired numbers in association football",
"uid": "Retired_numbers_in_association_football_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_retired_numbers_in_association_football"
} | 5,381 |
5382 | List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks_14 | [
[
"Round",
"Overall",
"Player",
"Position",
"Nationality",
"Club team"
],
[
"1",
"9",
"Brian Lee",
"Defence",
"United States",
"Lincoln Stars ( USHL )"
],
[
"3",
"70",
"Vitali Anikienko",
"Defence",
"Russia",
"Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ( Russia )"
],
[
"4",
"95",
"Cody Bass",
"Centre",
"Canada",
"Mississauga IceDogs ( OHL )"
],
[
"4",
"98",
"Ilya Zubov",
"Centre",
"Russia",
"Traktor Chelyabinsk ( Russia )"
],
[
"4",
"115",
"Janne Kolehmainen",
"Left Wing",
"Finland",
"SaiPa ( Finland )"
],
[
"5",
"136",
"Tomas Kudelka",
"Defence",
"Czech Republic",
"Zlín ZPS ( Czech . )"
],
[
"6",
"186",
"Dmitry Megalinsky",
"Defence",
"Russia",
"Lokomotiv Yaroslavl ( Russia )"
],
[
"7",
"204",
"Colin Greening",
"Left Wing",
"Canada",
"Upper Canada College ( OFSAA )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The complete list of players drafted by the Ottawa Senators (1992-) of the National Hockey League (NHL) at the NHL Entry Draft. The Senators were approved as franchise partners of the NHL in December 1990, and participated in their first entry draft in 1992. That year, the team also participated in the 1992 NHL Expansion Draft.",
"section_text": "Ottawa 's draft picks from the 2005 NHL Entry Draft held on July 30 , 2005 , at the Westin Hotel in Ottawa , Ontario .",
"section_title": "2005 Draft picks",
"title": "List of Ottawa Senators draft picks",
"uid": "List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks_14",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ottawa_Senators_draft_picks"
} | 5,382 |
5383 | Doping_at_the_Olympic_Games_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Country",
"Sport",
"Banned substance"
],
[
"Serafim Grammatikopoulos",
"Greece",
"Weightlifting",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Vésteinn Hafsteinsson",
"Iceland",
"Athletics",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Tomas Johansson",
"Sweden",
"Wrestling",
"Methenolone"
],
[
"Stefan Laggner",
"Austria",
"Weightlifting",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Göran Pettersson",
"Sweden",
"Weightlifting",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Eiji Shimomura",
"Japan",
"Volleyball",
"Testosterone"
],
[
"Mikiyasu Tanaka",
"Japan",
"Volleyball",
"Ephedrine"
],
[
"Ahmed Tarbi",
"Algeria",
"Weightlifting",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Mahmud Tarha",
"Lebanon",
"Weightlifting",
"Nandrolone"
],
[
"Giampaolo Urlando",
"Italy",
"Athletics",
"Testosterone"
],
[
"Martti Vainio",
"Finland",
"Athletics",
"Methenolone"
],
[
"Anna Verouli",
"Greece",
"Athletics",
"Nandrolone"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article is about the history of competitors at the Olympic Games using banned athletic performance-enhancing drugs.",
"section_text": "Main article : 1984 Summer Olympics",
"section_title": "Summer Olympic Games -- 1984 Los Angeles",
"title": "Doping at the Olympic Games",
"uid": "Doping_at_the_Olympic_Games_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doping_at_the_Olympic_Games"
} | 5,383 |
5384 | FR_Yugoslavia_at_the_1997_Mediterranean_Games_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Stevan Zorić",
"Athletics",
"High jump"
],
[
"Gold",
"Water polo team Dragan Jovanović Petar Trbojević Aleksandar Nikolić Risto Maljković Dejan Savić Danilo Ikodinović Željko Vičević Veljko Uskoković Aleksandar Ćirić Aleksandar Šapić Vladimir Vujasinović Nenad Vukanić Nikola Kuljača",
"Water polo",
"Men 's tournament"
],
[
"Gold",
"Nemanja Mirosavljev",
"Shooting",
"50 metre rifle three positions"
],
[
"Gold",
"Jasna Šekarić",
"Shooting",
"25m Pistol"
],
[
"Gold",
"Nandor Sabo",
"Wrestling",
"Greco-Roman 69kg"
],
[
"Silver",
"Stevan Pletikosić",
"Shooting",
"50 m Rifle prone"
],
[
"Silver",
"Marijana Frič",
"Shooting",
"50 metre rifle three positions"
],
[
"Silver",
"Slobodan Grujić , Aleksandar Karakašević",
"Table tennis",
"Men 's doubles"
],
[
"Silver",
"Leposava Marković",
"Judo",
"48kg"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Olivera Jevtić",
"Athletics",
"10.000m"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Veselin Mićović",
"Karate",
""
],
[
"Bronze",
"Roksanda Lazarević",
"Karate",
"65 kg"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Basketball team",
"Basketball",
"Men 's tournament"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Vladan Marković",
"Swimming",
"200m Butterfly"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Vladan Marković",
"Swimming",
"100m Butterfly"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Aleksandar Jovančević",
"Wrestling",
"Greco-Roman 85kg"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Slobodan Grujić",
"Table tennis",
"Men 's singles"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Fatima Isanović , Marta Poljak",
"Table tennis",
"Women 's doubles"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Jasna Šekarić",
"Shooting",
"10m Air Pistol"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Dano Pantić",
"Judo",
"95kg"
]
] | {
"intro": "FR Yugoslavia competed at the 1997 Mediterranean Games held in Bari, Italy.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List of Medalists",
"title": "FR Yugoslavia at the 1997 Mediterranean Games",
"uid": "FR_Yugoslavia_at_the_1997_Mediterranean_Games_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FR_Yugoslavia_at_the_1997_Mediterranean_Games"
} | 5,384 |
5385 | Welsh_Open_(snooker)_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Nationality",
"Winner",
"Runner-up"
],
[
"John Higgins",
"Scotland",
"5",
"2"
],
[
"Ronnie O'Sullivan",
"England",
"4",
"1"
],
[
"Stephen Hendry",
"Scotland",
"3",
"2"
],
[
"Steve Davis",
"England",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Ken Doherty",
"Ireland",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Paul Hunter",
"England",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Mark Williams",
"Wales",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Neil Robertson",
"Australia",
"2",
"1"
],
[
"Stuart Bingham",
"England",
"1",
"2"
],
[
"Ali Carter",
"England",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Ding Junhui",
"China",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Stephen Lee",
"England",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Stephen Maguire",
"Scotland",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Mark Selby",
"England",
"1",
"1"
],
[
"Alan McManus",
"Scotland",
"0",
"2"
],
[
"Barry Hawkins",
"England",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Andrew Higginson",
"England",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Mark King",
"England",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Darren Morgan",
"Wales",
"0",
"1"
],
[
"Shaun Murphy",
"England",
"0",
"1"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Welsh Open is a professional ranking snooker tournament, a part of the Home Nations Series. It replaced the Welsh Professional Championship, which started in 1980 and was only open to Welsh players. Since the tournament's creation in 1992, Mark Williams has been the only Welsh player to win the championship (in 1996 and 1999). John Higgins holds the record for the most wins, with five Welsh Open titles. Ronnie O'Sullivan has won four titles, while Stephen Hendry has won the tournament three times. Shaun Murphy is the reigning champion.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Statistics -- Finalists",
"title": "Welsh Open (snooker)",
"uid": "Welsh_Open_(snooker)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_Open_(snooker)"
} | 5,385 |
5386 | Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_11)_2 | [
[
"Dance",
"Highest scored dancer ( s )",
"Highest score",
"Lowest scored dancer ( s )",
"Lowest score"
],
[
"Cha-cha-cha",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"The Situation David Hasselhoff",
"15"
],
[
"Viennese Waltz",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"Margaret Cho",
"15"
],
[
"Jive",
"Kyle Massey",
"29",
"Michael Bolton",
"12"
],
[
"Quickstep",
"Brandy Rick Fox Jennifer Grey",
"27",
"The Situation",
"18"
],
[
"Samba",
"Kyle Massey",
"29",
"Margaret Cho",
"18"
],
[
"Waltz",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"Florence Henderson",
"20"
],
[
"Foxtrot",
"Brandy",
"28",
"Bristol Palin",
"19"
],
[
"Rumba",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"Bristol Palin",
"14"
],
[
"Argentine tango",
"Brandy",
"30",
"The Situation",
"12"
],
[
"Tango",
"Jennifer Grey",
"27",
"Florence Henderson",
"21"
],
[
"Paso doble",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"Kurt Warner",
"18"
],
[
"Freestyle",
"Jennifer Grey",
"30",
"Bristol Palin",
"25"
]
] | {
"intro": "Season eleven of Dancing with the Stars premiered on September 20, 2010. The cast was announced during the August 30 episode of Bachelor Pad during a live press conference that included a Q&A session with host Tom Bergeron and co-host Brooke Burke and the new cast. There are twelve celebrity cast members this season. The pairs were announced on September 1 (however, Bristol Palin and Mark Ballas were announced as being a couple the day before by way of a Good Morning America interview). Corky Ballas returned to the show for the first time since season seven. This is the first season to feature no new professional dancers, as each of the 12 pros has appeared on at least one previous season. Edyta Śliwińska, the only pro to have appeared throughout the entire run of the series, did not return this season. Kym Johnson and Karina Smirnoff also returned, while Damian Whitewood also did not. Len Goodman, Bruno Tonioli, and Carrie Ann Inaba continued as the judges. Several changes were introduced this season including an Acoustic Week, in which couples performed either the Rumba or the Argentine Tango, while the audience was brought closer to the dance floor, which was elevated and made circular, a TV Theme Week and a Rock n' Roll Week, in which couples performed the Paso doble or the Tango and danced in a Rock n' Roll marathon. Fan favorites from previous seasons also came back to judge the couples, who re-created their most memorable routines on the 200th episode; these guest judges were Hélio Castroneves, Kelly Osbourne, Emmitt Smith, Drew Lachey, Gilles Marini, and Mel B. Kristi Yamaguchi and Apolo Ohno also served as team captains for the team dances. Yamaguchi's team consisted of Rick & Cheryl, Kyle & Lacey and Bristol & Mark, while Brandy & Maksim, Jennifer & Derek and Kurt & Anna were on Ohno's team.",
"section_text": "The best and worst performances in each dance according to the judges ' marks are as follows :",
"section_title": "Highest and lowest scoring performances",
"title": "Dancing with the Stars (American season 11)",
"uid": "Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_11)_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_with_the_Stars_(American_season_11)"
} | 5,386 |
5387 | Moel-y-Parc_transmitting_station_6 | [
[
"Frequency",
"UHF",
"kW",
"Service",
"System"
],
[
"546.000 MHz",
"30",
"0.25",
"Arqiva ( Mux C )",
"DVB-T"
],
[
"578.000 MHz",
"34",
"0.25",
"Arqiva ( Mux D )",
"DVB-T"
],
[
"639.25 MHz",
"42",
"100",
"S4C",
"PAL System I"
],
[
"663.25 MHz",
"45",
"100",
"BBC Two Wales",
"PAL System I"
],
[
"695.25 MHz",
"49",
"100",
"ITV1 Wales ( HTV Wales until 2002 )",
"PAL System I"
],
[
"719.25 MHz",
"52",
"100",
"BBC One Wales",
"PAL System I"
],
[
"738.000 MHz",
"54",
"1",
"BBC ( Mux 1 )",
"DVB-T"
],
[
"770.000 MHz",
"58",
"1",
"Digital 3 & 4 ( Mux 2 )",
"DVB-T"
],
[
"794.000 MHz",
"61",
"1",
"SDN ( Mux A )",
"DVB-T"
],
[
"818.000 MHz",
"64",
"1",
"BBC ( Mux B )",
"DVB-T"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Moel-y-Parc transmitting station is situated on Moel y Parc, a hill in north-east Wales at the northern end of the Clwydian range, close to the town of Caerwys and several miles (kilometres) north-east of Denbigh. It was built in 1962/1963 by the IBA to bring 405-line VHF ITV television to North Wales and it has been on the air since 1963. Its original height of 229 metres (751 ft) made it the tallest structure in North Wales and it stands on land that is itself about 335 metres (1,099 ft) above sea level. In 1965, VHF television transmissions from the BBC commenced from the site. With the addition of the UHF aerials in 1969, the mast height increased to 235 metres (771 ft) high. Its official coverage area includes parts of Flintshire, Denbighshire and Wrexham (although the majority of Wrexham is in a blindspot of direct transmission from Moel-y-Parc, its analogue transmissions were relayed via the Wrexham-Rhos transmitting station). A network of relay stations extends television coverage as far as Colwyn Bay in the west and Bala in the south. VHF television services from both BBC and ITV were discontinued in January 1985 as the 405-line TV system was switched off across the UK as a whole. Moel-y-Parc's UHF channel allocation made it a Group B transmitter, but with the roll-out of the UK's first digital TV services in 1998, a Group W wideband aerial was needed. The site reverted to being a Group B transmitter at digital switchover (DSO). Technically, with the advent of the temporary MUXES 7 and 8 Moel Y Parc became a K group, and is due to remain so at its 700MHz clearance. However most B group aerials will still work on all Moel's transmitted DTT channels (see graph).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Channels listed by frequency -- Analogue and digital television",
"title": "Moel-y-Parc transmitting station",
"uid": "Moel-y-Parc_transmitting_station_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moel-y-Parc_transmitting_station"
} | 5,387 |
5388 | List_of_government_enterprises_of_Norway_0 | [
[
"Company",
"Type",
"Cat",
"Ministry",
"Sector"
],
[
"Argentum Fondsinvesteringer",
"AS",
"1",
"Trade and Industry",
"Venture capital"
],
[
"Avinor",
"AS",
"4",
"Transport and Communications",
"Airport operation and airspace control"
],
[
"Baneservice",
"AS",
"1",
"Transport and Communications",
"Maintenance of railway infrastructure"
],
[
"Bjørnøen",
"AS",
"4",
"Trade and Industry",
"Real estate"
],
[
"Central Norway Regional Health Authority",
"RHF",
"-",
"Health and Care Services",
"Healthcare"
],
[
"Eksportutvalget For Fisk",
"AS",
"-",
"Fisheries and Coastal Affairs",
"Marketing"
],
[
"Electronic Chart Centre",
"AS",
"3",
"Trade and Industry",
"Cartography"
],
[
"Enova",
"SF",
"4",
"Petroleum and Energy",
"Marketing"
],
[
"Entra Eiendom",
"AS",
"1",
"Trade and Industry",
"Real estate"
],
[
"Flytoget",
"AS",
"1",
"Trade and Industry",
"Railway company"
],
[
"Gassco",
"AS",
"4",
"Petroleum and Energy",
"Natural gas pipes"
],
[
"Gassnova",
"SF",
"4",
"Petroleum and Energy",
"Research"
],
[
"Industrial Development Corporation of Norway",
"SF",
"4",
"Trade and Industry",
"Industry"
],
[
"Innovation Norway",
"AS",
"4",
"Trade and Industry",
"Innovation"
],
[
"Kompetansesenter for IT i helse- og sosialsektoren",
"AS",
"4",
"Health and Care Services",
"Information technology"
],
[
"Kings Bay",
"AS",
"4",
"Trade and Industry",
"Research"
],
[
"Mesta",
"AS",
"1",
"Trade and Industry",
"Road construction and maintenance"
],
[
"Nationaltheatret",
"AS",
"-",
"Culture and Church Affairs",
"Theater"
],
[
"Nofima",
"AS",
"-",
"Fisheries and Coastal Affairs",
"Research"
],
[
"Norfund",
"AS",
"4",
"Foreign Affairs",
"Investments in developing countries"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of Norwegian government owned companies. In addition to this the government of Norway owns publicly traded stock domestically through Folketrygdfondet and internationally through The Government Pension Fund of Norway. The list is as of 2005[update].",
"section_text": "Avinor operates Oslo Airport , Gardermoen and 45 other airports ; in the middle two Scandinavian Airlines aircraft—an airline that is partially government owned . Flytoget operates the Airport Express Train Kings Bay owns the whole village of Ny-Ålesund , Svalbard , where it provides research facilities A post office in Bergen belonging to Posten Norge Gaustad Hospital is one of the hospitals run by Southern and Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority Vinmonopolet holds a monopoly on the retailing of wine and liquor",
"section_title": "Wholly owned",
"title": "List of government enterprises of Norway",
"uid": "List_of_government_enterprises_of_Norway_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_government_enterprises_of_Norway"
} | 5,388 |
5389 | List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_1 | [
[
"Team",
"Home city/suburb",
"Stadium"
],
[
"Athlone Town",
"Athlone",
"Athlone Town Stadium"
],
[
"Cabinteely",
"Cabinteely , Dublin",
"Stradbrook Road"
],
[
"Bray Wanderers",
"Bray",
"Carlisle Grounds"
],
[
"Cobh Ramblers",
"Cobh",
"St. Colman 's Park"
],
[
"Drogheda United",
"Drogheda",
"United Park"
],
[
"Galway United",
"Galway",
"Eamonn Deacy Park"
],
[
"Shamrock Rovers II",
"Tallaght , Dublin",
"Tallaght Stadium"
],
[
"Longford Town",
"Longford",
"City Calling Stadium"
],
[
"Treaty United",
"Limerick",
"Markets Field"
],
[
"UCD",
"Belfield , Dublin",
"UCD Bowl"
],
[
"Wexford",
"Crossabeg",
"Ferrycarrig Park"
]
] | {
"intro": "Traditionally, association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland have been classified as either senior, intermediate or junior. These classifications effectively categorise clubs who compete in national, provincial and county leagues respectively.",
"section_text": "Athlone TownBray WanderersCobh RamblersDrogheda UnitedGalway UnitedLongford TownTreaty UnitedWexfordDublinDublin teamsCabinteelyShamrock Rovers IIUCD Locations of the First Division teams CabinteelyShamrock Rovers IIUCD Locations of Dublin First Division teams",
"section_title": "Senior/National leagues -- League of Ireland",
"title": "List of association football clubs in the Republic of Ireland",
"uid": "List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_association_football_clubs_in_the_Republic_of_Ireland"
} | 5,389 |
5390 | Greek_Basket_League_0 | [
[
"Club",
"Position 2018-19",
"Greek League Arena",
"Seating Capacity",
"EuroLeague / EuroCup / Champions League Arena*",
"Seating Capacity"
],
[
"AEK",
"3rd",
"Nikos Galis Olympic Indoor Hall , Athens",
"19,250",
"Nikos Galis Olympic Indoor Hall , Athens",
"19,250"
],
[
"Aris",
"8th",
"Alexandrio Melathron , Thessaloniki",
"5,138",
"Alexandrio Melathron , Thessaloniki",
"5,138"
],
[
"Ifaistos Limnou",
"6th",
"Nikos Samaras Indoor Hall , Myrina",
"1,260",
"",
""
],
[
"Ionikos Nikaias",
"1st ( A2 )",
"Sofia Befon Indoor Hall , Palaio Faliro , Athens",
"1,204",
"",
""
],
[
"Iraklis Thessaloniki",
"2nd ( A2 )",
"Ivanofeio Sports Arena , Thessaloniki",
"2,500",
"",
""
],
[
"Kolossos Rodou",
"13th",
"Kallithea Palais des Sports , Rhodes City",
"1,400",
"",
""
],
[
"Larisa",
"7th ( A2 )",
"Larissa Neapolis Indoor Arena , Larissa",
"4,000",
"Larissa Neapolis Indoor Arena , Larissa",
"4,000"
],
[
"Lavrio",
"12th",
"Lavrio Indoor Hall , Lavrio",
"1,700",
"",
""
],
[
"Panathinaikos OPAP",
"1st",
"Nikos Galis Olympic Indoor Hall , Marousi , Athens",
"19,250",
"Nikos Galis Olympic Indoor Hall , Marousi , Athens",
"19,250"
],
[
"Panionios",
"10th",
"Sofia Befon Indoor Hall , Palaio Faliro , Athens",
"1,204",
"",
""
],
[
"PAOK",
"5th",
"PAOK Sports Arena , Pylaia",
"8,500",
"PAOK Sports Arena , Pylaia",
"8,500"
],
[
"Peristeri",
"4th",
"Peristeri Indoor Hall , Peristeri , Athens",
"4,000",
"Peristeri Indoor Hall , Peristeri , Athens",
"4,000"
],
[
"Promitheas Patras",
"2nd",
"Dimitris Tofalos Arena , Patras",
"4,150",
"Dimitris Tofalos Arena , Patras",
"4,150"
],
[
"Rethymno Cretan Kings",
"9th",
"Rethymno Indoor Hall , Rethymno",
"1,600",
"",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "The Greek Basket League (GBL), often also referred to as the Greek Basketball League, Greek A1 Basketball League, or Greek Basketball Championship (originally called Panhellenic Basketball Championship), and known as the ΕΚΟ Basket League for sponsorship reasons, is the first tier professional basketball league in Greece. It is run by HEBA (Greek: ΕΣΑΚΕ), under the legal authority of the Hellenic Basketball Federation (E.O.K.). The league is also known as the Betshop.gr Basket League for sponsorship reasons. It consists of 14 teams and runs from October to June, with teams playing 26 games each during the regular season, and the top 8 teams then competing in the playoffs. The first official Greek Basketball Championship was held in the 1927-28 season. The league first held a playoff round in the 1986-87 season. The league has always been ranked as one of the top 3-5 level national domestic leagues in European basketball, since league rankings began. For further information, see historical European national basketball league rankings, and European national basketball league rankings.",
"section_text": "The clubs for the 2019–20 season :",
"section_title": "Current clubs",
"title": "Greek Basket League",
"uid": "Greek_Basket_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Basket_League"
} | 5,390 |
5391 | List_of_islands_by_population_density_1 | [
[
"Island",
"Country",
"Population",
"Area km²",
"Density per km²",
"Year"
],
[
"Kinmen",
"Taiwan",
"122,974",
"132",
"932",
"2008"
],
[
"Cebu",
"Philippines",
"3,979,155",
"4,467.5",
"890",
"2015"
],
[
"Mauritius",
"Mauritius",
"1,263,089",
"1,865",
"680",
"2012"
],
[
"Taiwan",
"Taiwan",
"23,000,000",
"35,801",
"642",
"2008"
],
[
"Aquidneck Island , Rhode Island",
"United States",
"60,870",
"98",
"621",
"2000"
],
[
"Unguja",
"Tanzania",
"896,721",
"643",
"538",
""
],
[
"Luzon",
"Philippines",
"48,520,774",
"104,688",
"463",
"2010"
],
[
"Honshū",
"Japan",
"103,000,000",
"230,500",
"447",
"2005"
],
[
"Puerto Rico",
"Puerto Rico",
"3,994,259",
"9,104",
"439",
"2007"
],
[
"Lamma Island",
"Hong Kong",
"5,500",
"13.74",
"400",
"2007"
],
[
"Kyūshū",
"Japan",
"13,231,995",
"35,640",
"371",
""
],
[
"Réunion",
"France",
"840,974",
"2511",
"335",
"2013"
],
[
"Sri Lanka ( main island )",
"Sri Lanka",
"21,184,000",
"65,268",
"325",
"2008"
],
[
"Mindanao",
"Philippines",
"29,968,174",
"94,630",
"317",
"2010"
],
[
"Great Britain",
"United Kingdom",
"61,450,000",
"209,331",
"294",
"2011"
],
[
"Awaji Island",
"Japan",
"147,359",
"592.17",
"249",
""
],
[
"Majorca",
"Spain",
"869,067",
"3640.11",
"239",
""
],
[
"Shikoku",
"Japan",
"4,141,955",
"18,800",
"220",
"2005"
],
[
"Sicily",
"Italy",
"5,051,075",
"25,700",
"197",
"2010"
],
[
"Langkawi , Kedah",
"Malaysia",
"65,000",
"479",
"136",
"2010"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of islands, sorted by population density, and including islands that connect to other island or inland with land mean of transportation (e.g. bridge or tunnel).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Most densely populated islands ( over 1,000 people per km² ) -- Other notable islands",
"title": "List of islands by population density",
"uid": "List_of_islands_by_population_density_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_islands_by_population_density"
} | 5,391 |
5392 | 2011_Santos_FC_season_3 | [
[
"P",
"Name",
"Age",
"moving to",
"Source"
],
[
"MF",
"Breitner",
"21",
"Figueirense",
"Globo Esporte"
],
[
"MF",
"Madson",
"24",
"Atlético-PR",
"Globo Esporte"
],
[
"MF",
"Marquinhos",
"29",
"Avaí",
"R7 Esporte"
],
[
"DF",
"Maranhão",
"25",
"Coritiba",
"Terra Esporte"
],
[
"DF",
"Domingos",
"25",
"São Caetano",
"UOL Esporte"
],
[
"DF",
"Rafael Caldeira",
"19",
"Oeste",
"SantosFC.com.br"
],
[
"MF",
"Rodrigo Mancha",
"24",
"Botafogo",
"Lancenet"
],
[
"GK",
"Felipe",
"23",
"Avaí",
"Globo Esporte"
],
[
"FW",
"Tiago Luis",
"20",
"Ponte Preta",
"Lancenet"
],
[
"MF",
"Alan Santos",
"20",
"Paulista",
"Futebol Interior"
],
[
"MF",
"Rodrigo Mancha",
"25",
"Vitória",
"Terra Esporte"
],
[
"MF",
"Breitner",
"21",
"Criciúma",
"Terra Esporte"
],
[
"DF",
"Rafael Caldeira",
"20",
"ABC",
"IG Esporte"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 season was Santos Futebol Clube's ninety-ninth season in existence and the club's fifty-second consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football. On 8 November 2010, Santos announced Adílson Batista to coach the team and his debut was on January in the Campeonato Paulista. But, on 27 February 2011, Santos sacked him although he had only one defeat in 11 matches. Marcelo Martelotte assumed as caretaker until 5 April when Muricy Ramalho was officially announced as new coach. On 15 May, Santos won their 19th Campeonato Paulista title beating their rival Corinthians 2-1 on aggregate in the final. Santos also won their 3rd Copa Libertadores title, beating Uruguay's Peñarol 2-1 on aggregate after the first leg had ended scoreless in Montevideo. As they won the Copa Libertadores, they played the 2011 FIFA Club World Cup but lost 4-0 in the final to Spanish's Barcelona.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Transfers -- Out on loan",
"title": "2011 Santos FC season",
"uid": "2011_Santos_FC_season_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Santos_FC_season"
} | 5,392 |
5393 | List_of_companies_traded_on_the_JSE_12 | [
[
"Stock symbol",
"Company",
"Notes"
],
[
"MCU",
"M Cubed Holdings Limited",
"financial services"
],
[
"MDN",
"Madison Property Fund Managers Holdings Ltd",
""
],
[
"MKL",
"Makalani Holdings Limited",
"holding company ; finance"
],
[
"MSS",
"Marshalls Limited",
"commercial and light industrial property ; parking garages"
],
[
"MAS",
"Masonite ( Africa ) Limited",
"forestry , construction materials"
],
[
"MSM",
"Massmart Holdings Limited",
""
],
[
"MTZ",
"Matodzi Resources Limited",
"diamonds in Lesotho"
],
[
"MDC",
"Medi-Clinic Corporation Limited",
""
],
[
"MRF",
"Merafe Resources Limited",
"mining , metallurgy , chromium"
],
[
"MTL",
"Mercantile Bank Holdings Limited",
""
],
[
"MTA",
"Metair Investments Limited",
"motor vehicle components for the vehicle assembly industry"
],
[
"MML",
"Metmar Limited",
"direct mail , logistics"
],
[
"MEMTX",
"Metorex Limited",
"mining , support to the mining industry"
],
[
"MFL",
"Metrofile Holdings Limited",
"information management , document management , archiving"
],
[
"MET",
"Metropolitan Holdings Limited",
""
],
[
"MMG",
"Micromega Holdings Limited",
"financial services , information technology , automotive"
],
[
"MMH",
"Miranda Mineral Holdings Limited",
"prospecting : diamonds , coal , gold , silver , base metals"
],
[
"MLA",
"Mittal Steel South Africa Limited",
"Arcelor-Mittal , a global steel company"
],
[
"MMI",
"MMI Holdings Limited",
"life insurance , employee benefits , medical scheme , health insurance , asset management"
],
[
"MOB",
"Mobile Industries Limited",
"marine cargo industry , including beer kegs , transponders and software solutions"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of companies traded on the JSE. The original compilation of the list was done in February 2006. It is in the process of being updated.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "M",
"title": "List of companies traded on the JSE",
"uid": "List_of_companies_traded_on_the_JSE_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_traded_on_the_JSE"
} | 5,393 |
5394 | 2011_Woodlands_Wellington_Season_0 | [
[
"Position",
"Player",
"Transferred From",
"Date"
],
[
"DF",
"Munier Raychouni",
"SV Altlüdersdorf",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"DF",
"Graham Tatters",
"Tampa Bay Rowdies",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"FW",
"Leonardo Aleixa da Costa",
"Volyn Lutsk",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"DF",
"Adrian Butters",
"Toronto Lynx",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"DF",
"Madhu Mohana",
"Courts Young Lions",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"DF",
"Darrel Tan",
"Hougang United",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"MF",
"Jalal",
"Hougang United",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"GK",
"Amos Boon",
"Hougang United",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"MF",
"Han Yiguang",
"Balestier Khalsa",
"1 January 2011"
],
[
"FW",
"Goh Swee Swee",
"Balestier Khalsa",
"1 January 2011"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 season was Woodlands Wellington's 16th competitive and consecutive season in the top flight of Singapore football and 24th year in existence as a football club.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Transfers -- In",
"title": "2011 Woodlands Wellington FC season",
"uid": "2011_Woodlands_Wellington_Season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Woodlands_Wellington_FC_season"
} | 5,394 |
5395 | Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album_6 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner ( s )",
"Work",
"Nominees"
],
[
"2010",
"David Caddick & David Lai ( producer ) · engineered/mixed by Todd Whitelock",
"West Side Story ( New Broadway Cast Recording )",
"Ai n't Misbehavin ' Hair 9 To 5 : The Musical Shrek The Musical"
],
[
"2011",
"Billie Joe Armstrong ( producer ) · engineered/mixed by Chris Dugan & Chris Lord-Alge",
"American Idiot ( featuring Green Day )",
"Fela ! - Robert Sher ( producer ) A Little Night Music - Tommy Krasker ( producer ) Promises , Promises - David Caddick & David Lai ( producers ) Sondheim on Sondheim - Philip Chaffin & Tommy Krasker ( producers )"
],
[
"2012",
"Andrew Rannells & Josh Gad ( artists ) · composer & lyrics by Matt Stone , Robert Lopez & Trey Parker ; · produced by Anne Garefino , Matt Stone , Robert Lopez , Scott Rudin , Stephen Oremus & Trey Parker ; · engineered/mixed by Frank Filipetti",
"The Book of Mormon",
"Anything Goes ( New Broadway Cast Recording ) - Sutton Foster & Joel Grey ( principal soloists ) ; Rob Fisher , James Lowe & Joel Moss ( producers ) How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying ( 2011 Broadway Cast ) - John Larroquette & Daniel Radcliffe ( principal soloists ) ; Robert Sher ( producer )"
],
[
"2013",
"Steve Kazee & Cristin Milioti ( principal soloists ) · produced by Steven Epstein & Martin Lowe ; · engineered/mixed by Richard King",
"Once : A New Musical",
"Follies - Danny Burstein , Jan Maxwell , Elaine Paige , Bernadette Peters & Ron Raines ( principal soloists ) ; Philip Chaffin & Tommy Krasker ( producers ) The Gershwins ' Porgy & Bess - David Alan Grier , Norm Lewis & Audra McDonald ( principal soloists ) ; Tommy Krasker ( producer ) Newsies - Jeremy Jordan & Kara Lindsay ( principal soloists ; Frank Filipetti , Michael Kosarin , Alan Menken & Chris Montan ( producers ) Nice Work If You Can Get It - Matthew Broderick & Kelli O'Hara ( principal soloists ) ; David Chase , Bill Elliott & Robert Sher ( producers )"
],
[
"2014",
"Billy Porter & Stark Sands ( principal soloists ) · composer & lyrics by Cyndi Lauper ; · produced by Sammy James , Jr. , Cyndi Lauper , Stephen Oremus & William Wittman ; · engineered/mixed by Derik Lee & William Wittman",
"Kinky Boots",
"Matilda : The Musical - Bertie Carvel , Sophia Gennusa , Oona Laurence , Bailey Ryon , Milly Shapiro & Lauren Ward ( principal soloists ) ; Tim Minchin ( composer & lyricist ) ; Michael Croiter , Van Dean & Chris Nightingale ( producers ) Motown : The Musical - Brandon Victor Dixon & Valisia Lakae ( principal soloists ) ; Frank Filipetti & Ethan Popp ( producers )"
],
[
"2015",
"Jessie Mueller ( principal soloist ) · produced by Jason Howland , Steve Sidwell & Billy Jay Stein",
"Beautiful : The Carole King Musical",
"Aladdin - James Monroe Iglehart , Adam Jacobs & Courtney Reed ( principal soloists ) ; Frank Filipetti , Michael Kosarin , Alan Menken & Chris Montan ( producers ) A Gentleman 's Guide to Love & Murder - Jefferson Mays & Bryce Pinkham ( principal soloists ) ; Kurt Deutsch & Joel W. Moss , ( producers ) ; Steven Lutvak ( composer/lyricist ) ; Robert L. Freedman ( lyricist ) Hedwig and the Angry Inch - Lena Hall & Neil Patrick Harris ( principal soloists ) ; Justin Craig , Tim O'Heir & Stephen Trask ( producers ) West Side Story - Cheyenne Jackson & Alexandra Silber ( principal soloists ) ; Michael Tilson Thomas & Jack Vad ( producers )"
],
[
"2016",
"Daveed Diggs , Renée Elise Goldsberry , Jonathan Groff , Christopher Jackson , Jasmine Cephas Jones , Lin-Manuel Miranda , Leslie Odom Jr. , Okieriete Onaodowan , Anthony Ramos & Phillipa Soo ( principal soloists ) · music & lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda · produced by Alex Lacamoire , Lin-Manuel Miranda , Bill Sherman , Ahmir Thompson & Tarik Trotter",
"Hamilton",
"An American in Paris - Leanne Cope , Max von Essen , Robert Fairchild , Jill Paice & Brandon Uranowitz ( principal soloists ) ; Rob Fisher & Scott Lehrer ( producers ) Fun Home - Michael Cerveris , Judy Kuhn , Sydney Lucas , Beth Malone & Emily Skeggs ( principal soloists ) ; Philip Chaffin & Tommy Krasker ( producers ) The King and I - Ruthie Ann Miles , Kelli O'Hara , Ashley Park , Conrad Ricamora & Ken Watanabe ( principal soloists ) ; David Lai & Ted Sperling ( producers ) Something Rotten ! - Heidi Blickenstaff , Christian Borle , John Cariani , Brian d'Arcy James , Brad Oscar & Kate Reinders ( principal soloists ) ; Kurt Deutsch , Karey Kirkpatrick , Wayne Kirkpatrick , Lawrence Manchester , Kevin McCollum & Phil Reno ( producers ) ; Karey Kirkpatrick & Wayne Kirkpatrick ( composers/lyricists )"
],
[
"2017",
"Danielle Brooks , Cynthia Erivo & Jennifer Hudson ( principal soloists ) · produced by Stephen Bray , Van Dean , Frank Filipetti , Roy Furman , Scott Sanders & Jhett Tolentino",
"The Color Purple ( 2015 Broadway Cast )",
"Bright Star ( Original Broadway Cast ) - Carmen Cusack ( principal soloist ) ; Jay Alix , Peter Asher & Una Jackman ( producers ) ; Steve Martin ( composer ) ; Edie Brickell ( composer & lyricist ) Fiddler on the Roof ( 2016 Broadway Cast ) - Danny Burstein ( principal soloist ) ; Louise Gund , David Lai & Ted Sperling ( producers ) Kinky Boots ( Original West End Cast ) - Killian Donnelly & Matt Henry ( principal soloists ) ; Sammy James , Jr. , Cyndi Lauper , Stephen Oremus & William Wittman ( producers ) Waitress ( Original Broadway Cast ) - Jessie Mueller ( principal soloist ) ; Neal Avron , Sara Bareilles & Nadia DiGiallonardo ( producers ) ; Sara Bareilles ( composer & lyricist )"
],
[
"2018",
"Laura Dreyfuss , Mike Faist , Rachel Bay Jones , Kristolyn Lloyd , Michael Park , Ben Platt , Will Roland & Jennifer Laura Thompson ( principal soloists ) ; Pete Ganbarg , Alex Lacamoire , Stacey Mindich , Benj Pasek & Justin Paul ( producers ) ; Pasek & Paul ( composers/lyricists )",
"Dear Evan Hansen ( Original Broadway Cast )",
"Come from Away ( Original Broadway Cast ) - Ian Eisendrath , August Eriksmoen , David Hein , David Lai & Irene Sankoff , ( producers ) ; David Hein & Irene Sankoff ( composers/lyricists ) Hello , Dolly ! ( 2017 Broadway Cast ) - Bette Midler ( principal soloist ) ; Steven Epstein ( producer )"
],
[
"2019",
"Etai Benson , Adam Kantor , Katrina Lenk & Ari'el Stachel ( principal soloists ) ; Dean Sharenow ( producer ) ; David Yazbek ( producer , composer & lyricist )",
"The Band 's Visit ( Original Broadway Cast )",
"Carousel ( 2018 Broadway Cast ) - Renée Fleming , Alexander Gemignani , Joshua Henry , Lindsay Mendez & Jessie Mueller ( principal soloists ) ; Steven Epstein ( producer ) Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert ( Original Soundtrack of the NBC Television Event ) - Sara Bareilles , Alice Cooper , Ben Daniels , Brandon Victor Dixon , Erik Grönwall , Jin Ha , John Legend , Norm Lewis & Jason Tam ( principal soloists ) ; Harvey Mason Jr. ( producer ) My Fair Lady ( 2018 Broadway Cast ) - Lauren Ambrose , Norbert Leo Butz & Harry Hadden-Paton ( principal soloists ) ; Andre Bishop , Van Dean , Hattie K. Jutagir , David Lai , Adam Siegel & Ted Sperling ( producers ) Once on This Island ( 2017 Broadway Cast ) - Phillip Boykin , Merle Dandridge , Quentin Earl Darrington , Hailey Kilgore , Kenita R. Miller , Alex Newell , Isaac Cole Powell & Lea Salonga ( principal soloists ) ; Lynn Ahrens , Hunter Arnold , Ken Davenport , Stephen Flaherty & Elliot Scheiner ( producers )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album has been awarded since 1959. The award was given only to the album producer, and to the composer and lyricist who wrote at least 51% of the music which had not been recorded previously. Over the years, the qualifications for the individual nominees has fluctuated with principal artists, composers, and producers at one point being the sole eligible nominee, to the more recent standard which includes those whose contributions accounted for the majority of the album. As of 2012, the award description is as follows: Award to the principal vocalist(s) and the album producer(s) of 51% or more playing time of the album. The lyricist(s) and composer(s) of a new score are eligible for an Award if they have written and/or composed a new score which comprises 51% or more playing time of the album. Therefore, composers and lyricists are ineligible when recordings contain a majority of previously released material (revivals, collected works). Also, while they are not listed among the nominees, since 2001 the Recording Academy has awarded an official Grammy to the engineers/mixers of the winning Album. Years reflect the year in which the Grammy Awards were handed out, for music released in the previous year. As of 2008, the current eligibility year is defined by the Recording Academy as beginning October 1, and ending the following September 30. Awards are given in February following the eligibility period.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Winner and nominees -- 2010s",
"title": "Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album",
"uid": "Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammy_Award_for_Best_Musical_Theater_Album"
} | 5,395 |
5396 | Constitutional_Convention_(Ireland)_0 | [
[
"Assembly",
"Party / group",
"Number",
"Members"
],
[
"Oireachtas",
"Fine Gael",
"12",
"Charles Flanagan TD ( head ) James Bannon TD Jerry Buttimer TD Regina Doherty TD Frances Fitzgerald TD Terence Flanagan TD Tom Hayes TD Derek Keating TD Tony McLoughlin TD Michelle Mulherin TD Senator Catherine Noone Mary Mitchell O'Connor TD"
],
[
"Oireachtas",
"Labour Party",
"7",
"Senator Ivana Bacik ( head ) Ciara Conway TD Robert Dowds TD Anne Ferris TD Senator Aideen Hayden John Lyons TD Michael McCarthy TD"
],
[
"Oireachtas",
"Fianna Fáil",
"4",
"Seán Ó Fearghaíl TD Séamus Kirk TD Senator Averil Power Senator Thomas Byrne"
],
[
"Oireachtas",
"Dáil technical group",
"2",
"Catherine Murphy TD Maureen O'Sullivan TD"
],
[
"Oireachtas",
"Seanad independents",
"2",
"Senator Jillian van Turnhout Senator Rónán Mullen"
],
[
"Oireachtas + Northern Ireland Assembly",
"Sinn Féin",
"3 ( 2 + 1 )",
"Gerry Adams TD Mary Lou McDonald TD Martin McGuinness MLA"
],
[
"Northern Ireland Assembly",
"SDLP",
"1",
"Alban Maginness MLA"
],
[
"Northern Ireland Assembly",
"Alliance Party",
"1",
"Stewart Dickson MLA"
],
[
"Northern Ireland Assembly",
"Green Party in Northern Ireland",
"1",
"Steven Agnew MLA"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Convention on the Constitution (Irish: An Coinbhinsiún ar an mBunreacht) was established in Ireland in 2012 to discuss proposed amendments to the Constitution of Ireland. More commonly called simply the Constitutional Convention, it met for the first time 1 December 2012 and sat until 31 March 2014. It had 100 members: a chairman; 29 members of the Oireachtas (parliament); four representatives of Northern Ireland political parties; and 66 randomly selected citizens of Ireland. The Convention was mandated to consider eight specified issues, and also selected two others to discuss. The government was not obliged to proceed with any amendment proposal, but committed to respond formally to each recommendation and debate it in the Oireachtas. As of December 2018[update], the government had formally responded to all nine of the Convention's reports, and put three of its proposals to referendum. Two of those referendums took place on 22 May 2015: to mandate legal same-sex marriage and to reduce the age of eligibility for the presidency from 35 to 21. The former was accepted, and the latter rejected. A third referendum was passed on 26 October 2018 to remove the offence of blasphemy from the Constitution.",
"section_text": "Thirty-three places were reserved for members of the legislatures of the Republic of Ireland ( Oireachtas ) and Northern Ireland ( Northern Ireland Assembly ) . Six parties in the Northern Ireland Assembly were each invited to send one representative . [ 22 ] Four accepted , while the Democratic Unionist Party and Ulster Unionist Party declined , regarding the Convention as internal to the Republic . [ 23 ] The remaining places , 29 in the event , were divided between the Oireachtas groups so as to be `` impartially representative of the Houses '' . [ 5 ] Each Oireachtas group is represented , roughly proportional to their total numbers in both houses ( Dáil and Seanad ) , including the Dáil technical group and the Seanad independent group . Sinn Féin has a joint delegation from both legislatures . [ 24 ]",
"section_title": "Members -- Legislators",
"title": "Constitutional Convention (Ireland)",
"uid": "Constitutional_Convention_(Ireland)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutional_Convention_(Ireland)"
} | 5,396 |
5397 | Neighborhoods_in_Detroit_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Summary"
],
[
"Belle Isle State Park",
"Detroit River 42°20′32″N 82°58′46″W / 42.34222°N 82.97944°W / 42.34222 ; -82.97944 ( Belle Isle ) Jefferson 07200s Over bridge to south",
"Belle Isle State Park is a 982-acre ( 397 ha ) island state park in the Detroit River , home to the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory , the Detroit Yacht Club , the Detroit Boat Club , the Dossin Great Lakes Museum , a Coast Guard post , and a golf course . Until its November 2013 conversion to a state park , it was largest island city park in the United States"
],
[
"St. Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic Parish Complex",
"Baldwin Ave. at St. Paul Ave. 42°21′18″N 83°0′7″W / 42.35500°N 83.00194°W / 42.35500 ; -83.00194 ( St. Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic Parish Complex )",
"In 1886 , a parish dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo was established to minister to the eastside area where in influx of Belgians had settled . As Detroit grew , the parish grew along with it , with French , German , Irish , Scotch , and English congregants in addition to the original Belgians . By 1920 , the congregation numbered over 3000"
],
[
"Eastside Historic Cemetery District",
"Bounded by Elmwood and Mt . Elliot Aves. , Lafayette and Waterloo Sts . 42°20′59″N 83°1′5″W / 42.34972°N 83.01806°W / 42.34972 ; -83.01806 ( Eastside Historic Cemetery District )",
"The Eastside Historic Cemetery District consists of three separate cemeteries : Mount Elliott Cemetery ( Catholic , established 1841 ) , Elmwood Cemetery ( Protestant , established 1846 ) , and the Lafayette Street Cemetery ( Jewish , established 1850 ) , spreading over 150 acres ( 61 ha ) in total . The cemeteries are known for the monuments , landscaping , and notable individuals interred there"
],
[
"East Grand Boulevard Historic District",
"E. Grand Boulevard , between E. Jefferson Ave. and Mack Ave. 42°21′12″N 83°0′22″W / 42.35333°N 83.00611°W / 42.35333 ; -83.00611 ( East Grand Boulevard Historic District )",
"The East Grand Boulevard Historic District includes a few moderate-sized apartment buildings and numerous large homes constructed primarily between 1900 and 1925 . The apartment buildings in the district include the El Tovar Apartments , Saint Paul Manor Apartments , and the Kingston Arms Apartments"
],
[
"East Jefferson Avenue Residential District",
"E. Jefferson Avenue . 42°20′28″N 83°1′0″W / 42.34111°N 83.01667°W / 42.34111 ; -83.01667 ( East Jefferson Avenue Residential District )",
"Contains many prominent residences including the Alden Park Towers"
],
[
"Indian Village",
"Bounded by Mack , Burns , Jefferson , and Seminole Aves . 42°21′40″N 82°59′48″W / 42.36111°N 82.99667°W / 42.36111 ; -82.99667 ( Indian Village Historic District )",
"Indian Village has a number of architecturally-significant homes built in the early 20th century . Many of the homes were built by prominent architects such as Albert Kahn , Louis Kamper and William Stratton for some of the area 's most prominent citizens such as Edsel Ford"
],
[
"Island View",
"Bounded by Baldwin St. on the east",
"Immediately west of West Village , Island View is bound by Jefferson to the south , Mack to the north , Baldwin to the east , and Mt . Elliott to the west . The eastern boundary of the neighborhood , Baldwin Street , was the Detroit city limit until 1891 . The eastern portion features many large turn of the 20th century single and multi-family homes , apartment buildings and brick row houses . The western portion is home to several non-profits , including the Capuchin Soup Kitchen , the Earthworks Urban Farming Project , and Gleaners Food Bank . Large portions of the neighborhood , ( especially the southeastern portion close to West Village ) are undergoing a rebirth with several new housing developments by community-based Messiah Housing Corp. and Islandview Development Corp. English Village , a luxury condominium , townhouse and loft development is being constructed along Townsend , Sheridan and Field streets just south of Kercheval . Islandview is named for its close proximity to Detroit 's island park , Belle Isle"
],
[
"Jefferson-Chalmers Historic Business District",
"Between Eastlawn and Alter . 42°22′26″N 82°56′34″W / 42.37389°N 82.94278°W / 42.37389 ; -82.94278 ( Jefferson-Chalmers Historic Business District )",
"The district has recently seen a resurgence , with a Michigan Cool Cities grant , five million dollars worth of streetscape improvements , and rehabilitation of a number of anchor buildings in the district , such as the Platte Warehouse at Jefferson and Ashland and the Chalmers Building at Jefferson and Chalmers"
],
[
"Lafayette Park / Mies van der Rohe Residential District",
"Roughly bounded by Lafayette Ave. , Rivard , Antietam , and Orleans Sts . 42°20′31″N 83°2′8″W / 42.34194°N 83.03556°W / 42.34194 ; -83.03556 ( Mies van der Rohe Residential District , Lafayette Park )",
"Mies van der Rohe , Ludwig Hilberseimer and Alfred Caldwell planned this 78-acre ( 32 ha ) urban renewal project constructed on the site of the former Black Bottom area . Lafayette Park includes a landscaped , 19-acre ( 7.7 ha ) park with no through traffic , in which these and other low-rise apartment buildings are sited . The apartment buildingsare classic examples of Mies ' International Style , with their simplicity , clean proportions , and cladding of tinted glass and aluminum"
],
[
"Rivertown",
"East Jefferson Avenue",
"Rivertown includes Detroit 's upscale high rise Harbortown condominiums and marina near the MacArthur Bridge leading to Belle Isle State Park"
],
[
"West Village",
"Roughly bounded by Jefferson , Kercheval , Parker and Seyburn Aves . 42°21′16″N 82°59′53″W / 42.35444°N 82.99806°W / 42.35444 ; -82.99806 ( West Village Historic District )",
"The West Village Historic District is a neighborhood just west of Indian Village . It is a primarily residential neighborhoods containing 275 single and two-family houses , thirty apartment buildings , and about twenty commercial structures of a wide range of architectural styles spread over 20 square blocks . It has many Victorian homes and four squares with apartment buildings and row houses interspersed in between . A walkable urban neighborhood , it is an advantageous location just 2 miles ( 3.2 km ) east of downtown Detroit and minutes from Belle Isle State Park and the new Detroit Riverwalk make it a popular neighborhood . Many historic homes and apartment buildings have recently been restored . Its commercial areas include a short stretch along Agnes Street in the center of the neighborhood and along Kercheval and busy Jefferson Avenue"
]
] | {
"intro": "Neighborhoods in Detroit provides a general overview of neighborhoods and historic districts within the city. Neighborhood names and boundaries vary in their formality some are well defined and long established, while others are more informal. Further names and boundaries have evolved over time due to development or changes in demographics. Woodward Avenue, a major a north-south thoroughfare, serves as a demarcation for neighborhood areas on the east side and west side of the city.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Areas and neighborhoods -- East",
"title": "List of neighborhoods in Detroit",
"uid": "Neighborhoods_in_Detroit_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neighborhoods_in_Detroit"
} | 5,397 |
5398 | 2001_Torneo_Descentralizado_0 | [
[
"Team",
"City",
"Stadium",
"Capacity",
"Field"
],
[
"Alianza Atlético",
"Sullana",
"Campeones del 36",
"8,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Alianza Lima",
"Lima",
"Alejandro Villanueva",
"35,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Cienciano",
"Cuzco",
"Garcilaso",
"42,056",
"Grass"
],
[
"Coopsol Trujillo",
"Trujillo",
"Mansiche",
"24,000",
"Artificial"
],
[
"Deportivo Wanka",
"Huancayo",
"Huancayo",
"20,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Estudiantes de Medicina",
"Ica",
"José Picasso Peratta",
"8,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Juan Aurich",
"Chiclayo",
"Elías Aguirre",
"24,500",
"Grass"
],
[
"Melgar",
"Arequipa",
"Mariano Melgar",
"20,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Sport Boys",
"Callao",
"Miguel Grau",
"15,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Sporting Cristal",
"Lima",
"San Martín de Porres",
"18,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Unión Minas",
"Cerro de Pasco",
"Daniel Alcides Carrión",
"8,000",
"Grass"
],
[
"Universitario",
"Lima",
"Monumental",
"80,093",
"Grass"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2001 Torneo Descentralizado, was the 85th season of the top category of Peruvian football (soccer). It was played by 12 teams. The national champion was Alianza Lima.",
"section_text": "Alianza AtléticoJuan AurichCoopsol TrujilloUnión MinasEstudiantesWankaCiencianoMelgar Alianza LimaSporting CristalUniversitarioSport Boys Locations of the 2001 Primera División teams",
"section_title": "Teams",
"title": "2001 Torneo Descentralizado",
"uid": "2001_Torneo_Descentralizado_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_Torneo_Descentralizado"
} | 5,398 |
5399 | 1963_International_Cross_Country_Championships_0 | [
[
"Rank",
"Athlete",
"Nationality",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Roy Fowler",
"England",
"37:19.7"
],
[
"2",
"Gaston Roelants",
"Belgium",
"37:32"
],
[
"3",
"Mariano Haro",
"Spain",
"37:41.6"
],
[
"4",
"Robert Bogey",
"France",
"37:55.6"
],
[
"5",
"Tim Johnston",
"England",
"37:58.7"
],
[
"6",
"Francisco Guardia",
"Spain",
"38:00"
],
[
"7",
"Mohamed Gammoudi",
"Tunisia",
"38:11.6"
],
[
"8",
"Henri Clerckx",
"Belgium",
"38:22.8"
],
[
"9",
"Hamoud Ameur",
"France",
"38:24.1"
],
[
"10",
"Abdeslem Bouchta",
"Morocco",
"38:24.5"
],
[
"11",
"Andy Brown",
"Scotland",
"38:26"
],
[
"12",
"Ali Khamassi",
"Tunisia",
"38:29"
],
[
"13",
"Basil Heatley",
"England",
"38:34"
],
[
"14",
"Hedwig Leenaert",
"Belgium",
"38:39"
],
[
"15",
"Pat Killeen",
"Ireland",
"38:39"
],
[
"16",
"Labidi Ayachi",
"Tunisia",
"38:42"
],
[
"17",
"Marcel Vandewattyne",
"Belgium",
"38:44"
],
[
"18",
"Michel Jazy",
"France",
"38:51"
],
[
"19",
"Tom O'Riordan",
"Ireland",
"38:52"
],
[
"20",
"Bakir Benaissa",
"Morocco",
"38:53"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1963 International Cross Country Championships was held in San Sebastián, Spain, at the Lasarte Hippodrome on 17 March 1963. The distance for the men's race was reduced from the traditional 9 miles (14.5 km) to 7.5 miles (12.1 km). A preview of the event was given in the Glasgow Herald. Complete results for men, junior men, medallists, \n and the results of British athletes were published.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Individual Race Results -- Men 's ( 7.5 mi / 12.1 km )",
"title": "1963 International Cross Country Championships",
"uid": "1963_International_Cross_Country_Championships_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963_International_Cross_Country_Championships"
} | 5,399 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.