database_id
stringlengths 1
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stringlengths 4
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sequencelengths 5
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int64 0
8.1k
|
---|---|---|---|---|
6000 | Deborah_Hopper_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Film",
"Director",
"Job"
],
[
"2001",
"America 's Sweethearts",
"Joe Roth",
"assistant costume designer"
],
[
"1999",
"The Haunting",
"Jan de Bont",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1999",
"True Crime",
"Clint Eastwood",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1997",
"Absolute Power",
"Clint Eastwood",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1996",
"Mulholland Falls",
"Lee Tamahori",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1995",
"Showgirls",
"Paul Verhoeven",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1994",
"Exit to Eden",
"Garry Marshall",
"wardrobe supervisor"
],
[
"1994",
"Intersection",
"Mark Rydell",
"costume supervisor : Los Angeles"
],
[
"1992",
"Chaplin",
"Richard Attenborough",
"costume supervisor : women , Los Angeles"
],
[
"1992",
"Death Becomes Her",
"Robert Zemeckis",
"costumer"
],
[
"1992",
"Basic Instinct",
"Paul Verhoeven",
"costume supervisor : women , Los Angeles"
],
[
"1991",
"Dead Again",
"Kenneth Branagh",
"costumer"
],
[
"1991",
"Defending Your Life",
"Albert Brooks",
"set costumer"
],
[
"1990",
"The Rookie",
"Clint Eastwood",
"costume supervisor : women"
],
[
"1989",
"Pink Cadillac",
"Buddy Van Horn",
"costume supervisor : women"
],
[
"1989",
"Troop Beverly Hills",
"Jeff Kanew",
"costumer"
],
[
"1988",
"The Dead Pool",
"Buddy Van Horn",
"costume supervisor : women"
],
[
"1988",
"Bird",
"Clint Eastwood",
"costume supervisor"
],
[
"1986",
"Heartbreak Ridge",
"Clint Eastwood",
"wardrobe : women ; as Deborah Ann Hopper"
],
[
"1986",
"Ratboy",
"Sondra Locke",
"wardrobe : women ; as Deborah Ann Hopper"
]
] | {
"intro": "Deborah Ann Hopper is a costume designer who has collaborated with Clint Eastwood on 16 films over the last 20 years.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Filmography -- Costume and Wardrobe Department",
"title": "Deborah Hopper",
"uid": "Deborah_Hopper_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deborah_Hopper"
} | 6,000 |
6001 | GPotato_2 | [
[
"Title",
"Developer",
"Genre",
"First Released"
],
[
"Space Cowboy Online",
"MasangSoft",
"Client-based MMO",
"2006"
],
[
"Canaan Online",
"XPEC Entertainment",
"Browser-based MMO",
"2008"
],
[
"Prius Online",
"CJ Corporation",
"Client-based MMO",
"2008"
],
[
"TalesRunner",
"Rhaon Entertainment",
"Client-based MMO",
"2008"
],
[
"Castle of Heroes",
"Snail Game",
"Browser-based MMO",
"2009"
],
[
"Dragonica",
"Gravity Games",
"Side-scrolling MMO",
"2009"
],
[
"Luna Online",
"Eya Soft",
"Client-based MMO",
"2009"
],
[
"AIKA Online",
"JoyImpact",
"Client-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"Vandia Breaker",
"Namco Bandai",
"Browser-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"Allods Online",
"Nival",
"Client-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"Iris Online",
"Eya Soft",
"Client-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"KungFu Hero",
"9wee",
"Browser-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"Terra Militaris",
"Snail Game",
"Browser-based MMO",
"2010"
],
[
"Age of Wulin",
"Snail Game",
"Client-based MMO",
"Open Beta July 2013"
]
] | {
"intro": "gPotato is a free multiplayer game portal website operated in Japan and South Korea by Gala Inc. and its subsidiaries, and formerly in North America and Europe by subsidiaries of South Korean-based Webzen. gPotato game portals are in South Korea and Japan. Games hosted at gPotato range from traditional MMORPGs to more accessible casual flash games/browser-based games, all of which are free-to-play so no annual/monthly payment is required; revenue is generated from a micropayment system. Games and their premium item shops can be accessed by the Group's regional gPotato portal sites. gPotato games are aimed at a broad range of players. Gala Inc.'s corporate philosophy is to connect people all over the world and by doing that, contribute to global peace. With this in mind, the games published on gPotato portals have no blood in them and are appropriate for a wide age group of players. gPotato in North America and Europe was previously operated by Gala Inc. In February 2013, Gala-Net, Gala Networks Europe and Gala-Net Brazil were acquired by Webzen. In May 2014 the European and North American gPotato Web sites were merged into the Webzen.com portal.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Games -- Games Formerly Licensed",
"title": "gPotato",
"uid": "GPotato_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/gPotato"
} | 6,001 |
6002 | List_of_Iranian_cities_by_population_1 | [
[
"Province",
"Largest city",
"2nd Largest",
"3rd Largest",
"4th largest"
],
[
"Tehran",
"Tehran",
"Eslamshahr",
"Shahriar",
"Shahr-e Qods"
],
[
"Razavi Khorasan",
"Mashhad",
"Nishapur",
"Sabzevar",
"Torbat-e Heydarieh"
],
[
"East Azerbaijan",
"Tabriz",
"Maragheh",
"Marand",
"Ahar"
],
[
"Alborz",
"Karaj",
"Fardis",
"Kamalshahr",
"Nazarabad"
],
[
"Isfahan",
"Isfahan",
"Kashan",
"Khomeyni Shahr",
"Najafabad"
],
[
"Fars",
"Shiraz",
"Marvdasht",
"Jahrom",
"Fasa"
],
[
"Khuzestan",
"Ahvaz",
"Dezful",
"Abadan",
"Mahshahr"
],
[
"Mazandaran",
"Sari",
"Babol",
"Amol",
"Qa'em Shahr"
],
[
"West Azerbaijan",
"Urmia",
"Khoy",
"Bukan",
"Mahabad"
],
[
"Kerman",
"Kerman",
"Sirjan",
"Rafsanjan",
"Jiroft"
],
[
"Gilan",
"Rasht",
"Bandar-e Anzali",
"Lahijan",
"Langrud"
],
[
"Sistan and Baluchistan",
"Zahedan",
"Zabol",
"Iran Shahr",
"Chabahar"
],
[
"Kermanshah",
"Kermanshah",
"Eslamabad-e Gharb",
"Javanrud",
"Kangavar"
],
[
"Lorestan",
"Khorramabad",
"Borujerd",
"Dorud",
"Aligudarz"
],
[
"Hamadan",
"Hamadan",
"Malayer",
"Nahavand",
"Asadabad"
],
[
"Golestan",
"Gorgan",
"Gonbad-e Kavus",
"Bandar Torkaman",
"Ali Abad"
],
[
"Kurdistan",
"Sanandaj",
"Saghez",
"Marivan",
"Baneh"
],
[
"Hormozgan",
"Bandar Abbas",
"Minab",
"Qeshm",
"Kish"
],
[
"Markazi",
"Arak",
"Saveh",
"Khomein",
"Mahallat"
],
[
"Ardabil",
"Ardabil",
"Parsabad",
"Meshkinshahr",
"Khalkhal"
]
] | {
"intro": "Iran has one of the highest urban population growth rates in the world. From 1950 to 2002, the urban proportion of the population increased from 27% to 60%. The United Nations predicts that by 2030 80% of the population will live in urban areas. [failed verification] Most internal migrants have settled near the cities of Tehran, Isfahan, Ahvaz, and Qom. Tehran, with a population of 8.7 million (2016 census), is the largest city in Iran and is the nation's capital. Tehran is home to around 11% of Iran's population. It is the hub of the country's communication and transport networks. Mashhad, with a population of 3 million, is the second-largest Iranian city and the centre of the province of Razavi Khorasan. Mashhad is one of the holiest Shi'a cities in the world as it is the site of the Imam Reza shrine. It is the centre of tourism in Iran and between 15 and 20 million pilgrims go to Imam Reza's shrine every year. The third most populous city of Iran is Isfahan with a population 1.9 million (as of 2016). This city is one of the most industrial cities of Iran with large industries and hosts several UNESCO World Heritage Sites.",
"section_text": "This is a list of the largest cities of the 31 provinces , based on the city 's population as of the 2016 census .",
"section_title": "Largest cities in the provinces",
"title": "List of largest cities of Iran",
"uid": "List_of_Iranian_cities_by_population_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_cities_of_Iran"
} | 6,002 |
6003 | List_of_Radio_Philippines_Network_affiliate_stations_0 | [
[
"Branding",
"Callsign",
"Ch . #",
"Power ( kW )",
"Station Type",
"Location ( Transmitter site )"
],
[
"RPN TV-9 Manila",
"DZKB-TV",
"TV-9",
"50 kW",
"Originating",
"Metro Manila"
],
[
"RPN TV-12 Baguio",
"DZBS-TV",
"TV-12",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Baguio"
],
[
"RPN TV-10 Iriga ( Bicol )",
"DWKI-TV",
"TV-10",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Iriga"
],
[
"RPN TV-8 Bacolod",
"DYKB-TV",
"TV-8",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Bacolod"
],
[
"RPN TV-9 Mandaue ( Cebu )",
"DYKC-TV",
"TV-9",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Mandaue"
],
[
"RPN TV-5 Zamboanga",
"DXXX-TV",
"TV-5",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Zamboanga City"
],
[
"RPN TV-5 Cagayan de Oro",
"DXKO-TV",
"TV-5",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Cagayan de Oro"
],
[
"RPN TV-9 Davao",
"DXWW-TV",
"TV-9",
"10 kW",
"Relay",
"Davao City"
]
] | {
"intro": "These are the nationwide via satellite-reach TV and Radio stations of the Radio Philippines Network (CNN Philippines).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "RPN Stations Nationwide -- RPN Owned and operated stations",
"title": "List of Radio Philippines Network affiliate stations",
"uid": "List_of_Radio_Philippines_Network_affiliate_stations_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Radio_Philippines_Network_affiliate_stations"
} | 6,003 |
6004 | List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014_21 | [
[
"Position",
"Player",
"To club",
"Fee"
],
[
"Goalkeeper",
"Wan Azraie Wan Teh",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Defender",
"Mohd Faizal Muhammad",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Forward",
"Jean-Emmanuel Effa Owona",
"Negeri Sembilan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"DR",
"Qhairul Anwar Roslani",
"Felda United F.C",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"DRC",
"Wan Muhd Firdaus Wan Demi",
"Kuantan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Defender",
"Ahmad Abdul Fattah Abdullah",
"Kuantan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"DMC",
"Khairan Ezuan Razali",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"AMR",
"Shamsul Kamal Mohamad",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"AMRL",
"G. Puaneswaran",
"Negeri Sembilan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"ST",
"Farderin Kadir",
"Sime Darby F.C",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"ST",
"Mohd Fahmi Izzuddin Mohd Zuki",
"Kuantan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"ST",
"Muhd Zul Helmi Jamaluddin",
"Kuantan FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Assistant Coach",
"Rosdi Talib",
"Hanelang F.C",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"GK",
"Syed Adney",
"ATM FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"GK",
"Mohd Shahrul Nizam Mohd Shukri",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"MF",
"Mohd Hasrol Syawal Hamid",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"MF",
"Mohd Ramzi Sufian",
"Harimau Muda B",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"DL",
"Nik Zul Aziz Nawawi",
"T-Team",
"align=right| 0"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of transfers for the 2014 Malaysian football.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Terengganu FA -- Transfers out",
"title": "List of Malaysian football transfers 2014",
"uid": "List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014_21",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014"
} | 6,004 |
6005 | Southeastern_United_States_1 | [
[
"Rank",
"City",
"State",
"Population ( 2015 )"
],
[
"1",
"Jacksonville",
"Florida",
"868,031"
],
[
"2",
"Charlotte",
"North Carolina",
"827,097"
],
[
"3",
"Washington",
"District of Columbia",
"672,228"
],
[
"4",
"Nashville",
"Tennessee",
"660,388"
],
[
"5",
"Memphis",
"Tennessee",
"652,717"
],
[
"6",
"Baltimore",
"Maryland",
"621,849"
],
[
"7",
"Louisville",
"Kentucky",
"615,366"
],
[
"8",
"Atlanta",
"Georgia",
"463,878"
],
[
"9",
"Virginia Beach",
"Virginia",
"452,745"
],
[
"10",
"Raleigh",
"North Carolina",
"451,066"
],
[
"11",
"Miami",
"Florida",
"441,003"
],
[
"12",
"New Orleans",
"Louisiana",
"389,617"
],
[
"13",
"Tampa",
"Florida",
"369,075"
],
[
"14",
"Lexington",
"Kentucky",
"314,488"
],
[
"15",
"Greensboro",
"North Carolina",
"285,342"
],
[
"16",
"Orlando",
"Florida",
"270,394"
],
[
"17",
"Durham",
"North Carolina",
"257,636"
],
[
"18",
"Saint Petersburg",
"Florida",
"257,083"
],
[
"19",
"Norfolk",
"Virginia",
"246,393"
],
[
"20",
"Winston-Salem",
"North Carolina",
"241,218"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Southeastern United States is broadly, the eastern portion of the Southern United States, and the southern portion of the Eastern United States. It comprises at least a core of states on the lower East Coast of the United States and eastern Gulf Coast. Expansively, it includes everything south of the Mason-Dixon line, the Ohio River and the 36°30' parallel, and as far west as Arkansas and Louisiana. There is no official U.S. government definition of the region, though various agencies and departments use different definitions.",
"section_text": "These are the largest cities in the Southeastern region of the United States by population , according to the United States Census Bureau : [ 8 ]",
"section_title": "Largest cities",
"title": "Southeastern United States",
"uid": "Southeastern_United_States_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeastern_United_States"
} | 6,005 |
6006 | List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_10 | [
[
"#",
"Artist",
"Artist 's nationality",
"Title"
],
[
"1",
"Israel Kamakawiwoʻole",
"United States",
"Over the Rainbow"
],
[
"2",
"Shakira featuring Freshlyground",
"Colombia South Africa",
"Waka Waka ( This Time for Africa )"
],
[
"3",
"Lena",
"Germany",
"Satellite"
],
[
"4",
"Unheilig",
"Germany",
"Geboren um zu leben"
],
[
"5",
"Yolanda Be Cool & DCUP",
"Australia",
"We No Speak Americano"
],
[
"6",
"K'naan",
"Canada",
"Wavin ' Flag"
],
[
"7",
"Stromae",
"Belgium",
"Alors on danse"
],
[
"8",
"Hurts",
"United Kingdom",
"Wonderful Life"
],
[
"9",
"Keri Hilson",
"United States",
"I Like"
],
[
"10",
"Kesha",
"United States",
"Tik Tok"
],
[
"11",
"Eminem featuring Rihanna",
"United States Barbados",
"Love the Way You Lie"
],
[
"12",
"Madcon",
"Norway",
"Glow"
],
[
"13",
"Mehrzad Marashi",
"Germany",
"Do n't Believe"
],
[
"14",
"Velile & Safri Duo",
"South Africa Denmark",
"Helele"
],
[
"15",
"Edward Maya featuring Vika Jigulina",
"Romania",
"Stereo Love"
],
[
"16",
"Empire of the Sun",
"Australia",
"We Are the People"
],
[
"17",
"Lady Gaga",
"United States",
"Bad Romance"
],
[
"18",
"Rihanna",
"Barbados",
"Only Girl ( In the World )"
],
[
"19",
"Lady Gaga",
"United States",
"Alejandro"
],
[
"20",
"Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg",
"United States",
"California Gurls"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of the twenty best-selling singles on the Media Control Charts in Germany from 2000 to 2018. The data was found out by Media Control and is based on the singles sold.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2010",
"title": "List of best-selling singles by year (Germany)",
"uid": "List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)_10",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_singles_by_year_(Germany)"
} | 6,006 |
6007 | NJCAA_Men's_Division_III_Basketball_Championship_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner",
"Runner Up",
"Score"
],
[
"2017",
"North Lake College",
"Elgin Community College",
"66-56"
],
[
"2016",
"Rock Valley College",
"Rochester Community and Technical College",
"88-75"
],
[
"2015",
"Richland College",
"Rock Valley College",
"67-64"
],
[
"2014",
"Rock Valley College",
"Caldwell Community College & Technical Institute",
"79-69"
],
[
"2013",
"Brookdale Community College",
"Eastfield College",
"61-55"
],
[
"2012",
"Sandhills Community College",
"Cedar Valley College",
"101-86"
],
[
"2011",
"Mountain View College",
"Rochester Community and Technical College",
"72-64"
],
[
"2010",
"Joliet Junior College",
"Rochester Community and Technical College",
"94-82"
],
[
"2009",
"Richland College",
"Minneapolis Community and Technical College",
"58-57"
],
[
"2008",
"North Lake College",
"Joliet Junior College",
"73-70"
],
[
"2007",
"Sullivan County Community College",
"Northland Community and Technical College",
"74-68"
],
[
"2006",
"North Lake College",
"Gloucester County College",
"78-65"
],
[
"2005",
"Hostos Community College",
"Joliet Junior College",
"73-71"
],
[
"2004",
"Suffolk County Community College",
"Eastfield College",
"83-81 ( OT )"
],
[
"2003",
"Suffolk County Community College",
"College of DuPage",
"61-56"
],
[
"2002",
"College of DuPage",
"Sullivan County Community College",
"73-58"
],
[
"2001",
"Cedar Valley College",
"Sullivan County Community College",
"78-55"
],
[
"2000",
"Roxbury Community College",
"College of DuPage",
"103-79"
],
[
"1999",
"Richland College",
"Vermilion Community College",
"80-76"
],
[
"1998",
"Minnesota State Community and Technical College",
"Monroe College",
"94-85 ( OT )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Men's Division III Basketball Championships consists of eight teams playing over a three-day period (Thursday-Saturday) in March to determine a National Champion. The tournament field is made up of teams that win either region or district championships that are required to earn entry into the tournament.",
"section_text": "The list of NJCAA Division III Men 's Basketball Championship winners , along with runners-up and final scores , follows .",
"section_title": "Past Tournament Results",
"title": "NJCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship",
"uid": "NJCAA_Men's_Division_III_Basketball_Championship_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NJCAA_Men's_Division_III_Basketball_Championship"
} | 6,007 |
6008 | List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements_5 | [
[
"Rank",
"Airport",
"Location",
"Code ( IATA/ICAO )",
"Total passengers",
"% Change"
],
[
"1",
"OR Tambo International Airport",
"Johannesburg , Gauteng",
"JNB/FAJS",
"17,794,100",
"10.7%"
],
[
"2",
"Cape Town International Airport",
"Cape Town , Western Cape",
"CPT/FACT",
"7,518,543",
"10.0%"
],
[
"3",
"Durban International Airport",
"Durban , KwaZulu-Natal",
"DUR/FADN",
"4,257,714",
"15.1%"
],
[
"4",
"Port Elizabeth Airport",
"Port Elizabeth , Eastern Cape",
"PLZ/FAPE",
"1,438,845",
"10.4%"
],
[
"5",
"East London Airport",
"East London , Eastern Cape",
"ELS/FAEL",
"696,515",
"17.9%"
],
[
"6",
"George Airport",
"George , Western Cape",
"GRJ/FAGG",
"597,910",
"2.3%"
],
[
"7",
"Bloemfontein Airport",
"Bloemfontein , Free State",
"BFN/FABL",
"353,723",
"38.8%"
],
[
"8",
"Kimberley Airport",
"Kimberley , Northern Cape",
"KIM/FAKM",
"132,358",
"14.6%"
],
[
"9",
"Upington Airport",
"Upington , Northern Cape",
"UTN/FAUP",
"40,631",
"22.4%"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of South African airports by passenger movements.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Statistics -- 2006–07",
"title": "List of South African airports by passenger movements",
"uid": "List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements"
} | 6,008 |
6009 | FIFA_Order_of_Merit_5 | [
[
"Recipient",
"Year",
"Nationality"
],
[
"Stanley Rous *",
"1984",
"England"
],
[
"Mihajlo Andrejević",
"1984",
"Yugoslavia"
],
[
"Paulo Machado de Carvalho",
"1987",
"Brazil"
],
[
"Ferdinand Hidalgo",
"1987",
"Ecuador"
],
[
"Teófilo Salinas Fuller",
"1987",
"Peru"
],
[
"Marat Gramov",
"1987",
"Soviet Union"
],
[
"João Lyra Filho",
"1988",
"Brazil"
],
[
"Pedro Escartín",
"1988",
"Spain"
],
[
"Yidnekatchew Tessema",
"1988",
"Ethiopia"
],
[
"K. Ziauddin",
"1992",
"India"
],
[
"Shizuo Fujita",
"1992",
"Japan"
],
[
"Juan José Russo",
"1992",
"Argentina"
],
[
"Abdel Aziz Mostafa",
"1992",
"Egypt"
],
[
"Arthur George",
"1994",
"Australia"
],
[
"Chen Chengda",
"1994",
"China"
],
[
"Abdel Halim Muhammad",
"1994",
"Sudan"
],
[
"Gene Edwards",
"1994",
"United States"
],
[
"Vitali Smirnov",
"1995",
"Russia"
],
[
"Maurice Burlaz",
"1996",
"France"
],
[
"Henry Fok",
"1998",
"Hong Kong"
]
] | {
"intro": "The FIFA Order of Merit is the highest honour awarded by FIFA. The award is presented at the annual FIFA congress. It is normally awarded to people who are considered to have made a significant contribution to association football. At FIFA's centennial congress they made one award for every decade of their existence. These awards were also handed out to fans, organisations, clubs, and one to African Football. These were referred to as the FIFA Centennial Order of Merit. The winner doesn't have to be directly involved with football to receive it. One such notable non-footballing personality was Nelson Mandela who won it for bringing South Africa back to international football.",
"section_text": "the 6th President of FIFA Stanley Rous was also serving is the international referee Santiago Bernabeu is generally considered the one to whom much of the credit can be given for transforming Real Madrid C.F . into the most successful football club in Spain and in Europe Miljan Miljanić became the recipient of the award posthumously for his contributions as a coach and the President of the Football Federation of Yugoslavia/Serbia Jules Rimet is FIFA 's longest-serving president and the initiator of the first FIFA World Cup",
"section_title": "Recipients -- Administrators",
"title": "FIFA Order of Merit",
"uid": "FIFA_Order_of_Merit_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIFA_Order_of_Merit"
} | 6,009 |
6010 | 3._deild_karla_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Winners",
"Runners-up",
"3rd Place",
"4th Place"
],
[
"1997",
"KS",
"Tindastóll",
"Afturelding",
"Ernir Í"
],
[
"1998",
"Sindri",
"Léttir",
"Hvöt",
"Leiknir F"
],
[
"1999",
"Afturelding",
"KÍB",
"Njarðvík",
"Huginn / Höttur"
],
[
"2000",
"Haukar",
"Nökkvi",
"Þróttur N",
"Fjölnir"
],
[
"2001",
"HK",
"Völsungur",
"Njarðvík",
"KFS"
],
[
"2002",
"KFS",
"Fjölnir",
"Fjarðabyggð",
"Leiknir F"
],
[
"2003",
"Vikingur Ó",
"Leiknir R",
"Númi",
"Höttur"
],
[
"2004",
"Huginn",
"Fjarðabyggð",
"Skallagrímur",
"Reynir S"
],
[
"2005",
"Reynir S",
"Sindri",
"Grótta",
"Leiknir F"
],
[
"2006",
"Höttur",
"Magni",
"ÍH",
"Kári"
],
[
"2007",
"Grótta",
"Hamar",
"Hvöt",
"Víðir"
],
[
"2008",
"Hamrarnir/Vinir",
"BÍ/Bolungarvík",
"KV",
"Skallagrímur"
],
[
"2009",
"Völsungur",
"KV",
"Hvíti riddarinn",
"Ýmir"
],
[
"2010",
"Tindastóll",
"Dalvík/Reynir",
"Árborg",
"KB"
],
[
"2011",
"KV",
"KFR",
"KB",
"Magni"
],
[
"2012",
"Sindri",
"Ægir",
"Leiknir F",
"Magni"
],
[
"2013",
"Fjarðabyggð",
"Huginn",
"KFR",
"Víðir"
],
[
"2014",
"Höttur",
"Leiknir F",
"Berserkir",
"Víðir"
],
[
"2015",
"Magni",
"Völsungur",
"Reynir S",
"Einherji"
],
[
"2016",
"Tindastóll",
"Víðir",
"Einherji",
"Kári"
]
] | {
"intro": "3. deild karla (e. Men's Third division) is a football league in Iceland. It is the fourth level, and second-lowest division, in the Icelandic football league system. Current champions are Kári. The league was reformed into a 10-team double round-robin tournament for the 2013 season, with the introduction of the newly established 5th level of the Icelandic football league system, 4. deild karla.",
"section_text": "Promoted teams shown in green",
"section_title": "Past winners",
"title": "3. deild karla",
"uid": "3._deild_karla_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3._deild_karla"
} | 6,010 |
6011 | Atlanta_Hawks_draft_history_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Round",
"Pick",
"Name",
"From"
],
[
"1951",
"1",
"2",
"Mel Hutchins",
"Brigham Young University"
],
[
"1951",
"2",
"11",
"Bill Gossett",
"Colorado State University"
],
[
"1951",
"3",
"21",
"Ron Bontemps",
"Beloit College"
],
[
"1951",
"4",
"31",
"Jim Slaughter",
"University of South Carolina"
],
[
"1951",
"5",
"41",
"Bob Sakel",
"University of Evansville"
],
[
"1951",
"6",
"51",
"John Rennicke",
"Drake University"
],
[
"1951",
"7",
"61",
"Bob Ambler",
"University of Arkansas"
],
[
"1951",
"8",
"71",
"Aaron Preece",
"Bradley University"
],
[
"1951",
"9",
"79",
"Wayne Tucker",
"University of Colorado"
],
[
"1951",
"10",
"83",
"John DeWitt",
"Texas A & M University"
],
[
"1950",
"1",
"3",
"Bob Cousy",
"College of the Holy Cross"
],
[
"1950",
"2",
"",
"Ed Gayda",
"Washington State University"
],
[
"1950",
"3",
"",
"Clarence Brannum",
"Kansas State University"
],
[
"1950",
"4",
"",
"Paul Hicks",
"Eastern Kentucky University"
],
[
"1950",
"5",
"51",
"Cal Christensen",
"University of Toledo"
],
[
"1950",
"6",
"",
"Bob Anderson",
"Loyola College Maryland"
],
[
"1950",
"7",
"",
"Bill Erickson",
"University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign"
],
[
"1950",
"8",
"",
"Loy Doty",
"University of Wyoming"
],
[
"1950",
"9",
"99",
"Nate DeLong",
"University of Wisconsin-River Falls"
],
[
"1950",
"10",
"",
"Keith Bloom",
"University of Wyoming"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Atlanta Hawks (formerly known as the Tri-Cities Blackhawks, the Milwaukee Hawks, and the St. Louis Hawks) have selected the following players in the National Basketball Association Draft.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "As Tri-Cities Blackhawks ( 1950–1951 )",
"title": "Atlanta Hawks draft history",
"uid": "Atlanta_Hawks_draft_history_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlanta_Hawks_draft_history"
} | 6,011 |
6012 | 2013_Nigeria_Premier_League_0 | [
[
"Team name",
"Home city",
"Home venue",
"First year of current stint in League"
],
[
"ABS F.C",
"Ilorin",
"Kwara State Stadium",
"2011"
],
[
"Akwa United",
"Uyo",
"Uyo Township Stadium /Rojenny Stadium , Oba",
"2011"
],
[
"Bayelsa United F.C",
"Yenegoa",
"Samson Siasia Stadium",
"2012"
],
[
"Dolphins",
"Port Harcourt",
"Liberation Stadium",
"2009"
],
[
"El-Kanemi Warriors",
"Maiduguri",
"El-Kanemi Stadium",
"2012"
],
[
"Enugu Rangers",
"Enugu",
"Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium",
"1973"
],
[
"Enyimba",
"Aba",
"Enyimba International Stadium",
"1994"
],
[
"Gombe United",
"Gombe",
"Pantami Stadium",
"1994"
],
[
"Heartland",
"Owerri",
"Dan Anyiam Stadium",
"1975"
],
[
"Kaduna United",
"Kaduna",
"Kaduna Township Stadium",
"2008"
],
[
"Kano Pillars",
"Kano",
"Sani Abacha Stadium",
"2001"
],
[
"Kwara United",
"Ilorin",
"Kwara State Stadium",
"2009"
],
[
"Lobi Stars",
"Makurdi",
"Emmanuel Atongo Stadium , Katsina-Ala/ Aper Aku Stadium",
"1999"
],
[
"Nasarawa United",
"Lafia",
"Lafia Township Stadium",
"2012"
],
[
"Nembe City F.C",
"Nembe",
"Samson Siasia Stadium",
"2012"
],
[
"Sharks",
"Port Harcourt",
"Sharks Stadium",
"2008"
],
[
"Shooting Stars",
"Ibadan",
"Awolowo Stadium",
"2009"
],
[
"Sunshine Stars",
"Akure",
"Akure Township Stadium",
"2007"
],
[
"Warri Wolves",
"Warri",
"Warri Township Stadium",
"2008"
],
[
"Wikki Tourists",
"Bauchi",
"Abubarkar Tafawa Balewa Stadium",
"2011"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Nigeria Professional Football League will be the 42nd season of the competition since its inception, and the 23rd since the rebranding of the league as the Professional League. Due to start in December, numerous delays and challenges to the board pushed the opening weekend back to February, and then pushed to March 9. There was a season-opening Super Four tournament won by Heartland F.C. between the four clubs involved in Continental competitions in order to get them ready for their international assignments.",
"section_text": "Sixteen teams from the previous season and four teams promoted from the Nigeria National League ( Bayelsa United , El-Kanemi Warriors , Nasarawa United and Nembe City F.C . ) participated in this season . Kano PillarsDolphinsSunshine StarsW.WolvesEnugu RangersEnyimbaHeartlandSharks3SCAkwa UnitedW . TouristsKaduna UnitedKwara UnitedABSLobi StarsBayelsa UnitedGombe UnitedNasarawa UnitedEl-Kanemi WarriorsNembe City Locations of the Nigeria Premier League 2012–13 teams",
"section_title": "Clubs",
"title": "2013 Nigeria Premier League",
"uid": "2013_Nigeria_Premier_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Nigeria_Premier_League"
} | 6,012 |
6013 | List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014_36 | [
[
"Position",
"Player",
"To club",
"Fee"
],
[
"Goalkeeper",
"Mohd Solehin Rodzi",
"DRB-Hicom F.C",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Defender",
"Mohd Fitri Jamaluddin",
"Perlis FA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Defender",
"Danial Fadzly Abdullah",
"Retired",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"Hafiz Che Hassan",
"Free agent",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"Khairul Anwar Idris",
"Released",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"Azrul Abdul Rahim",
"Released",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"A. Giri Ther",
"MISC-MIFA",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"Mohd Hisyam Shofi",
"Free agent",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Midfielder",
"Mohd Syafuan Riduwan",
"Johor Darul Takzim II",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Forward",
"Mohd Aminuddin Azmi",
"UiTM",
"align=right| 0"
],
[
"Forward",
"Mohd Haslan Abu Hassan",
"Free agent",
"align=right| 0"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of transfers for the 2014 Malaysian football.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Penang FA -- Transfers out",
"title": "List of Malaysian football transfers 2014",
"uid": "List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014_36",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Malaysian_football_transfers_2014"
} | 6,013 |
6014 | National_colours_3 | [
[
"Country",
"Primary colours",
"Secondary colours"
],
[
"Afghanistan",
"Black , red , green and white",
"Blue ( cricket )"
],
[
"Armenia",
"Red , blue and orange",
""
],
[
"Azerbaijan",
"Blue , red and green",
""
],
[
"Bahrain",
"Red and white",
""
],
[
"Bangladesh",
"Red , green and gold",
"White ( football )"
],
[
"Bhutan",
"Fulvous , gold , and white",
"Red ( football )"
],
[
"Brunei",
"Yellow , black , white and red",
"Blue and green ( football )"
],
[
"Cambodia",
"Red and blue",
"Black ( football )"
],
[
"China",
"Red and gold",
"Dark blue black and white ( sports )"
],
[
"Georgia",
"Red and white",
""
],
[
"Hong Kong",
"Red and white",
"Black and gray"
],
[
"India",
"Saffron orange , blue , white and green",
"Sky blue ( sports )"
],
[
"Indonesia",
"Red and white",
"Green ( sports )"
],
[
"Iran",
"Green , white and red",
"Black"
],
[
"Iraq",
"Red , white , black and green",
""
],
[
"Israel",
"Blue and white",
""
],
[
"Japan",
"Red and white",
"Black ( sports ) ; Blue , white and spring bud ( only used in football )"
],
[
"Jordan",
"Black , white , green and red",
""
],
[
"Kazakhstan",
"Blue and yellow",
"White and black ( sports )"
],
[
"Korea , North ( Democratic People 's Republic of Korea )",
"Red , white and blue",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "National colours are frequently part of a country's set of national symbols. Many states and nations have formally adopted a set of colours as their official national colours while others have de facto national colours that have become well-known through popular use. National colours often appear on a variety of different media, from the nation's flag to the colours used in sports.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Asia",
"title": "National colours",
"uid": "National_colours_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_colours"
} | 6,014 |
6015 | Looney_Tunes_Super_Stars'_Bugs_Bunny:_Hare_Extraordinaire_0 | [
[
"#",
"Title",
"Co-Stars",
"Release Date",
"Director",
"Series"
],
[
"1",
"Mutiny on the Bunny",
"Sam",
"February 11 , 1950 ( 1950-02-11 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"LT"
],
[
"2",
"Bushy Hare",
"Hippety Hopper",
"November 18 , 1950 ( 1950-11-18 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"LT"
],
[
"3",
"Hare We Go",
"",
"January 6 , 1951 ( 1951-01-06 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"MM"
],
[
"4",
"Foxy by Proxy",
"",
"February 23 , 1952 ( 1952-02-23 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"5",
"Hare Trimmed",
"Granny , Sam",
"June 20 , 1953 ( 1953-06-20 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"6",
"^ Lumber Jack-Rabbit *",
"Charlie",
"September 26 , 1953 ( 1953-09-26 )",
"Chuck Jones",
"LT"
],
[
"7",
"^ Napoleon Bunny-Part",
"Mugsy",
"June 16 , 1956 ( 1956-06-16 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"8",
"^ Bedevilled Rabbit",
"Taz , She-Devil",
"April 13 , 1957 ( 1957-04-13 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"MM"
],
[
"9",
"^ Apes of Wrath",
"Drunken Stork , Elvis Gorilla , Daffy Duck ( cameo )",
"April 18 , 1959 ( 1959-04-18 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"10",
"^ From Hare to Heir",
"Sam",
"September 3 , 1960 ( 1960-09-03 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"11",
"^ Lighter Than Hare",
"Sam",
"December 17 , 1960 ( 1960-12-17 )",
"Friz Freleng",
"MM"
],
[
"12",
"^ The Million Hare",
"Daffy",
"April 6 , 1963 ( 1963-04-06 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"LT"
],
[
"13",
"^ Mad as a Mars Hare",
"Marvin",
"October 19 , 1963 ( 1963-10-19 )",
"Chuck Jones",
"MM"
],
[
"14",
"^ Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare",
"Taz",
"March 28 , 1964 ( 1964-03-28 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"MM"
],
[
"15",
"^ False Hare",
"Big Bad Wolf , Wolf Jr. , Foghorn Leghorn ( cameo )",
"July 18 , 1964 ( 1964-07-18 )",
"Robert McKimson",
"LT"
]
] | {
"intro": "Looney Tunes Super Stars' Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire is a DVD of 15 new-to-DVD Bugs Bunny cartoons released on August 10, 2010. Along with Daffy Duck: Frustrated Fowl, these two DVDs are the successor to the Looney Tunes Golden Collection series. None of the cartoons featured in this DVD were previously found on the Golden Collection sets.",
"section_text": "All cartoons on this disc star Bugs Bunny .",
"section_title": "Contents",
"title": "Looney Tunes Super Stars' Bugs Bunny: Hare Extraordinaire",
"uid": "Looney_Tunes_Super_Stars'_Bugs_Bunny:_Hare_Extraordinaire_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Looney_Tunes_Super_Stars'_Bugs_Bunny:_Hare_Extraordinaire"
} | 6,015 |
6016 | World_Club_Challenge_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Winners",
"Score",
"Runners-up",
"Venue",
"Attendance"
],
[
"1976",
"Eastern Suburbs",
"25 - 2",
"St Helens",
"Sydney Cricket Ground",
"26,865"
],
[
"1987",
"Wigan",
"8 - 2",
"Manly-Warringah",
"Central Park",
"36,895"
],
[
"1989",
"Widnes",
"30 - 18",
"Canberra",
"Old Trafford",
"30,786"
],
[
"1991",
"Wigan ( 2 )",
"21 - 4",
"Penrith",
"Anfield",
"20,152"
],
[
"1992",
"Brisbane",
"22 - 8",
"Wigan",
"Central Park",
"17,764"
],
[
"1994",
"Wigan ( 3 )",
"20 - 14",
"Brisbane",
"QEII Stadium",
"54,220"
],
[
"1997",
"Brisbane ( 2 )",
"36 - 12",
"Hunter Mariners",
"Mt Smart Stadium",
"10,300"
],
[
"2000",
"Melbourne",
"44 - 6",
"St Helens",
"DW Stadium",
"13,394"
],
[
"2001",
"St Helens",
"20 - 18",
"Brisbane",
"Reebok Stadium",
"16,041"
],
[
"2002",
"Bradford",
"41 - 26",
"Newcastle Knights",
"Kirklees Stadium",
"21,113"
],
[
"2003",
"Sydney Roosters ( 2 )",
"38 - 0",
"St Helens",
"Reebok Stadium",
"19,807"
],
[
"2004",
"Bradford ( 2 )",
"22 - 4",
"Penrith",
"Kirklees Stadium",
"18,962"
],
[
"2005",
"Leeds",
"39 - 32",
"Canterbury-Bankstown",
"Elland Road",
"37,028"
],
[
"2006",
"Bradford ( 3 )",
"30 - 10",
"Wests",
"Kirklees Stadium",
"19,207"
],
[
"2007",
"St Helens ( 2 )",
"18 - 14",
"Brisbane",
"Reebok Stadium",
"23,207"
],
[
"2008",
"Leeds ( 2 )",
"11 - 4",
"Melbourne",
"Elland Road",
"33,204"
],
[
"2009",
"Manly-Warringah",
"28 - 20",
"Leeds",
"Elland Road",
"32,569"
],
[
"2010",
"Melbourne",
"18 - 10",
"Leeds",
"Elland Road",
"27,697"
],
[
"2011",
"St George Illawarra",
"21 - 15",
"Wigan",
"DW Stadium",
"24,268"
],
[
"2012",
"Leeds ( 3 )",
"26 - 12",
"Manly-Warringah",
"Headingley Stadium",
"21,062"
]
] | {
"intro": "The World Club Challenge is an annual rugby league competition between the winners of the Australian NRL and the Super League. The first such match was played in 1976 but did not become a regular fixture until the late 1980s. It was also punctuated in the 1990s by the Super League war but has been held every year since 2000. The Sydney Roosters are the current champions, having defeated the Wigan Warriors 8- 20 in Wigan. Between 2015 and 2017, the World Club Challenge was the championship match for the World Club Series which began at the beginning of 2015. The World Club Series includes two other games, these games are exhibition matches before the main game, the World Club Challenge. As the World Club Challenge is a match between the premiers of the NRL and the Super League Champions, it has been possible for teams from New Zealand, France and Wales to win it as well as England and Australia, however, to date only English and Australian sides have competed in and won the World Club Challenge.",
"section_text": "Main article : List of World Club Challenge finals 18 teams have competed in the World Club Challenge with 12 teams being successful and being crowned world champions . Sydney Roosters & Wigan have currently won more finals than any other team with 4 titles each . ( Roosters first title was prior to the club ’ s name change from Eastern Suburbs )",
"section_title": "Statistics -- List of Finals",
"title": "World Club Challenge",
"uid": "World_Club_Challenge_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Club_Challenge"
} | 6,016 |
6017 | La_Voz_(Spanish_TV_series,_season_1)_1 | [
[
"Order",
"Coach",
"Contestant",
"Contestant",
"Song"
],
[
"1",
"Malú",
"Beatriz Herrero",
"Rebeca Moscardó",
"I Have Nothing"
],
[
"2",
"David Bisbal",
"Eva María Cortés",
"Mara Ferrándiz",
"Last Dance"
],
[
"3",
"Melendi",
"Javi Mota",
"Mirela Cabero",
"Devuélveme la vida"
],
[
"4",
"Rosario Flores",
"Emmanuel Lehmann",
"Abraham Fernández",
"Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"
],
[
"5",
"Melendi",
"Mercedes Pérez",
"Susana del Río",
"Y , ¿Si Fuera Ella ?"
],
[
"6",
"Malú",
"María Moreta",
"Yolanda Rodríguez",
"Manos al Aire"
],
[
"7",
"David Bisbal",
"Rafa Blas",
"David Ros",
"It 's My Life"
],
[
"8",
"Malú",
"Eli López",
"Efrén García",
"Recuérdame"
],
[
"9",
"Melendi",
"Neus Ferri",
"Javi Brichis",
"Ironic"
],
[
"10",
"David Bisbal",
"Yanela Brooks",
"Yolanda Vierge",
"Historia de un Amor"
],
[
"11",
"Rosario Flores",
"Juan Carlos Mata",
"David Santiago",
"Volando voy"
]
] | {
"intro": "La Voz (season 1) is a Spanish reality talent show that premiered on 19 September 2012 on Telecinco. Based on the reality singing competition The Voice of Holland, the series was created by Dutch television producer John de Mol. It is part of an international series. The coaches for the debut season were David Bisbal, Rosario Flores, Malú and Melendi. Jesús Vázquez hosted the programme while Tania Llasera shared hosting duties as the social media correspondent. The first episode kicked off with 4,591,000 viewers (30.6% market share).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Step 2 : « Las Batallas » ( The Battles ) -- Episode 7 : 31 October 2012",
"title": "La Voz (Spanish season 1)",
"uid": "La_Voz_(Spanish_TV_series,_season_1)_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Voz_(Spanish_season_1)"
} | 6,017 |
6018 | List_of_songs_recorded_by_Rufus_Wainwright_0 | [
[
"Song",
"Album",
"Year",
"Length",
"Author",
"Producer"
],
[
"11:11",
"Want One",
"2003",
"4:27",
"Wainwright",
"Marius de Vries"
],
[
"14th Street",
"Want One",
"2003",
"4:44",
"Wainwright",
"Marius de Vries"
],
[
"A Bit of You",
"Rufus Wainwright [ Japan ]",
"1999",
"5:00",
"Wainwright",
"Pierre Marchand"
],
[
"Agnus Dei",
"Want Two",
"2004",
"5:45",
"Wainwright",
"Marius de Vries"
],
[
"Another Believer",
"Meet the Robinsons",
"2007",
"4:39",
"Wainwright",
""
],
[
"April Fools",
"Rufus Wainwright",
"1998",
"5:00",
"Wainwright",
"Jon Brion"
],
[
"Ashes ( original demo )",
"House of Rufus",
"2011",
"4:37",
"Wainwright",
""
],
[
"As in Happy",
"Want Two [ DVD ]",
"2004",
"3:40",
"Wainwright",
""
],
[
"Baby",
"Rufus Wainwright",
"1998",
"5:13",
"Wainwright",
"Jon Brion , Van Dyke Parks"
],
[
"Barbara",
"Out of the Game",
"2012",
"3:55",
"Wainwright",
"Mark Ronson"
],
[
"Barcelona",
"Rufus Wainwright",
"1998",
"6:53",
"Wainwright",
"Jon Brion"
],
[
"Beautiful Child",
"Want One",
"2003",
"4:15",
"Wainwright",
"Marius de Vries"
],
[
"Beauty Mark",
"Rufus Wainwright",
"1998",
"2:14",
"Wainwright",
"Jon Brion"
],
[
"Between My Legs",
"Release the Stars",
"2007",
"4:26",
"Wainwright",
"Wainwright , Marius de Vries"
],
[
"Bitter Tears",
"Out of the Game",
"2012",
"3:31",
"Wainwright",
"Mark Ronson"
],
[
"California",
"Poses",
"2001",
"3:23",
"Wainwright",
"Ethan Johns"
],
[
"Candles",
"Out of the Game",
"2012",
"7:41",
"Wainwright",
"Mark Ronson"
],
[
"Chic and Pointless",
"Vibrate : The Best of Rufus Wainwright",
"2014",
"3:49",
"Wainwright",
"Guy Chambers"
],
[
"Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk",
"Poses",
"2001",
"4:44",
"Wainwright",
"Pierre Marchand"
],
[
"Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk [ Reprise ]",
"Poses",
"2001",
"3:59",
"Wainwright",
"Pierre Marchand"
]
] | {
"intro": "The columns Song, Album, and Year list each song title, the official release on which the song first appeared, and the year in which the song was released for the first time. The columns Length, Author, and Producer indicate the length of the track, the author of the song (most often Wainwright alone), and the producer of the track. References are also provided for each song in the last column of the table. While many songs listed appear on multiple releases (for example, Spotlight on Christmas appears on Maybe This Christmas Too?, The McGarrigle Christmas Hour, and Elton John's Christmas Party), songs are listed based on the first release and only appear twice when the recordings have different production information (producer, length, etc.). The list includes original songs released on studio recordings, songs written but not performed by Wainwright, original songs performed live, and recorded cover songs.",
"section_text": "Following is a list of original songs by Wainwright that have been released on a studio album , EP , soundtrack , compilation album , single , or DVD . Also included is `` Ode to Antidote '' , a studio-quality promotional single used to promote a perfume by Viktor & Rolf , and `` Patience is a Virtue '' , an original song available via digital download on Wal-Mart 's website with the purchase of Release the Stars .",
"section_title": "Original songs -- Studio recordings",
"title": "List of songs recorded by Rufus Wainwright",
"uid": "List_of_songs_recorded_by_Rufus_Wainwright_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_recorded_by_Rufus_Wainwright"
} | 6,018 |
6019 | List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics_8 | [
[
"Name",
"Country",
"Event",
"Date of violation",
"Banned substance ( s ) / Anti-doping rule violation",
"Sanction"
],
[
"Monica Iagăr",
"Romania",
"High jump",
"1996",
"",
"6 months"
],
[
"Abdulagadir Idriss",
"Sudan",
"Sprinting",
"2005",
"Norandrosterone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Samson Idiata",
"Nigeria",
"Long jump",
"2015",
"Clenbuterol",
"4 years"
],
[
"Gulustan Ieso",
"Iraq",
"Sprtinting",
"2011",
"Methylhexaneamine",
"1 year"
],
[
"Kirill Ikonnikov",
"Russia",
"Hammer throw",
"2012",
"Dehydrochloromethyltestosterone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Chidi Imoh",
"Nigeria",
"Sprinting",
"1994",
"",
"4 years"
],
[
"Cristinel Irimia",
"Romania",
"Long distance",
"2014",
"Exogenous steroids",
"2 years"
],
[
"Ekaterina Ishova ( Ekaterina Gorbunova )",
"Russia",
"Middle/Long distance",
"2011",
"Biological passport",
"2 years"
],
[
"Daniel Ivanov",
"Bulgaria",
"Long jump",
"1993",
"Amphetamine",
""
],
[
"Lyubov Ivanova ( Lyubov Kharlamova )",
"Russia",
"Steeplechase",
"2006",
"Methyltestosterone",
"2 years"
],
[
"Olimpiada Ivanova",
"Russia",
"Race walking",
"1997",
"Stanazolol",
"2 years"
]
] | {
"intro": "The use of performance-enhancing drugs (doping) is prohibited within the sport of athletics. Athletes who are found to have used such banned substances, whether through a positive drugs test, the biological passport system, an investigation or public admission, may receive a competition ban for a length of time which reflects the severity of the infraction. Athletes who are found to have banned substances in their possession, or who tamper with or refuse to submit to drug testing can also receive bans from the sport. Competitive bans may also be given to athletes who test positive for prohibited recreational drugs or stimulants with little performance-enhancing effect for competitors in athletics. The sports body responsible for determining which substances are banned in athletics is the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). Typically, any athlete who tests positive for banned substances after having served a previous ban receives a lifetime ban from the sport of athletics. Many high-profile sportspeople to receive doping bans have come from the sport of athletics, with significant past cases concerning Ben Johnson, Lance Armstrong, Alberto Contador, Shane Warne, Diego Maradona, Shoaib Akhtar, Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery. Furthermore, a number of athletes who underwent state-sponsored doping programmes in East Germany between the 1960s and 1980s were competitors in athletics, but the quality of the international anti-doping work was so poor that only one East German athlete ever tested positive. Following allegations of state-sponsored doping in Russia, the IAAF suspended the country's athletes from competition, including the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "I",
"title": "List of doping cases in athletics",
"uid": "List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics_8",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_doping_cases_in_athletics"
} | 6,019 |
6020 | List_of_castles_and_manor_houses_in_Sweden_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Swedish name",
"Location",
"Date",
"Condition"
],
[
"Almnäs Castle",
"Almnäs slott",
"Västergötland",
"1776",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Alnarp Castle",
"Alnarp slott",
"Scania",
"1862",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Alsnö Castle",
"Alsnö hus",
"Uppland",
"c. 1200",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Bäckaskog Castle",
"Bäckaskogs slott",
"Scania",
"13th century",
"Museum"
],
[
"Barsebäck Castle",
"Barsebäcks slott",
"Scania",
"14th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Bellinga Castle",
"Bellinga slott",
"Scania",
"16th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Bergkvara Castle",
"Bergkvara slott",
"Småland",
"15th century",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Bjärka-Säby Castle",
"Nya slottet Bjärka-Säby",
"Östergötland",
"1791",
"Museum"
],
[
"Bjärsjöholm Castle",
"Bjärsjöholms slott",
"Scania",
"14th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Bjärsjölagård Castle",
"Bjärsjölagårds slott",
"Scania",
"1766",
"Hotel"
],
[
"Björksund Castle",
"Björksunds slott",
"Södermanland",
"18th century",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Björnstorp Castle",
"Björnstorps slott",
"Scania",
"1752",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Blekhem",
"Blekhem",
"Småland",
"1838",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Bollerup",
"Bollerups borg",
"Scania",
"15th century",
"School"
],
[
"Boo Castle",
"Boo slott",
"Närke",
"1882",
"Private residence"
],
[
"Bogesund Castle",
"Bogesunds slott",
"Uppland",
"16th century",
"Museum"
],
[
"Bohus Fortress",
"Bohus fästning",
"Bohuslän",
"1308",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Borgeby Castle",
"Borgeby slott",
"Scania",
"15th century",
"Museum"
],
[
"Borgholm Castle",
"Borgholms slott",
"Öland",
"13th century",
"Ruin"
],
[
"Börringe Priory",
"Börringeklosters slott",
"Scania",
"13th century",
"Private residence"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of castles and palaces in Sweden. In the Swedish language the word slott is used for both castles, châteaus and palaces; this article lists all of them as well as fortresses.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "A-B",
"title": "List of castles and palaces in Sweden",
"uid": "List_of_castles_and_manor_houses_in_Sweden_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_castles_and_palaces_in_Sweden"
} | 6,020 |
6021 | 2014_Faroe_Islands_Premier_League_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Capacity",
"Manager",
"Kit manufacturer",
"Shirt sponsor"
],
[
"AB",
"Argir",
"Blue Water Arena",
"2,000",
"Oddbjørn Joensen",
"Adidas",
"Install"
],
[
"B36",
"Tórshavn",
"Gundadalur",
"5,000",
"Sámal Erik Hentze",
"Adidas",
"P/F Wenzel"
],
[
"B68",
"Toftir",
"Svangaskarð",
"6,000",
"Øssur Hansen",
"Nike",
"None"
],
[
"EB/Streymur",
"Streymnes",
"Við Margáir",
"1,000",
"Rúni Nolsøe",
"Nike",
""
],
[
"HB",
"Tórshavn",
"Gundadalur",
"5,000",
"Heðin Askham",
"Nike",
"Auto Service"
],
[
"ÍF",
"Fuglafjørður",
"Í Fløtugerði",
"3,000",
"Albert Ellefsen",
"Puma",
"Bank Nordik"
],
[
"KÍ",
"Klaksvík",
"Við Djúpumýrar",
"3,000",
"Eyðun Klakstein",
"Adidas",
"JFK"
],
[
"NSÍ",
"Runavík",
"Við Løkin",
"2,000",
"Trygvi Mortensen",
"Nike",
"Bakkafrost"
],
[
"Skála",
"Skála",
"Undir Mýruhjalla",
"2,000",
"Pauli Poulsen",
"Stanno",
"R Transport"
],
[
"Víkingur",
"Norðragøta",
"Sarpugerði",
"3,000",
"Sigfríður Clementsen",
"Adidas",
"Vodafone"
]
] | {
"intro": "2014 Faroe Islands Premier League was the seventy-second season of top-tier football on the Faroe Islands. For sponsorship reasons, it was known as Effodeildin. Havnar Bóltfelag were the defending champions.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams -- Teams summaries",
"title": "2014 Faroe Islands Premier League",
"uid": "2014_Faroe_Islands_Premier_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Faroe_Islands_Premier_League"
} | 6,021 |
6022 | Carrier_Air_Wing_Eight_0 | [
[
"Code",
"Squadron",
"Nickname",
"Assigned Aircraft"
],
[
"VFA-34",
"Strike Fighter Squadron 34",
"Blue Blasters",
"F/A-18E Super Hornet"
],
[
"VFA-37",
"Strike Fighter Squadron 37",
"Bulls",
"F/A-18E Super Hornet"
],
[
"N/A",
"N/A",
"N/A",
"N/A"
],
[
"VFA-213",
"Strike Fighter Squadron 213",
"Black Lions",
"F/A-18F Super Hornet"
],
[
"VAW-124",
"Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 124",
"Bear Aces",
"E-2C Hawkeye"
],
[
"VAQ-131",
"Electronic Attack Squadron 131",
"Lancers",
"EA-18G Growler"
],
[
"VRC-40",
"Fleet Logistics Support Squadron 40 Det . 2",
"Rawhides",
"C-2A Greyhound"
],
[
"HSC-9",
"Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 9",
"Tridents",
"MH-60S Seahawk"
],
[
"HSM-70",
"Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 70",
"Spartans",
"MH-60R Seahawk"
]
] | {
"intro": "Carrier Air Wing Eight (CVW-8), is a United States Navy aircraft carrier air wing based at Naval Air Station Oceana, Virginia. The air wing is attached to the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush.",
"section_text": "See also : List of United States Navy aircraft squadrons CVW-8 consists of 8 Squadrons [ 3 ]",
"section_title": "Subordinate units",
"title": "Carrier Air Wing Eight",
"uid": "Carrier_Air_Wing_Eight_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier_Air_Wing_Eight"
} | 6,022 |
6023 | Lists_of_the_Arab_League_7 | [
[
"Ethnicity",
"Total",
"Estimated Date"
],
[
"Arabs",
"295,921,955",
"est.2007"
],
[
"Afars",
"456,000",
"2007"
],
[
"Amhara",
"191,000",
"2007"
],
[
"Arameans",
"75,300",
"2006"
],
[
"Armenians",
"260,500",
"2007"
],
[
"Assyrians",
"222,900",
"2007"
],
[
"Beja",
"2,779,000",
"2007"
],
[
"Berbers",
"16,364,100",
"2007"
],
[
"Cherkes",
"229,600",
"2006"
],
[
"Western Europeans",
"853,950",
"2007"
],
[
"Greeks",
"89,100",
"2007"
],
[
"Gypsies",
"1,260,500",
"2007"
],
[
"Han Chinese",
"105,590",
"2007"
],
[
"Hindi",
"228,900",
"2004"
],
[
"Somali",
"14,882,500",
"2007"
],
[
"Jews",
"9,940",
"2007"
],
[
"Kurds",
"6,216,500",
"2007"
],
[
"Malays",
"516,100",
"2007"
],
[
"Nubians",
"1,132,000",
"2006"
],
[
"Persians",
"1,192,000",
"2006"
]
] | {
"intro": "All lists and statistics of the Arab League",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Demographic Lists -- Ethnicities",
"title": "Lists of the Arab League",
"uid": "Lists_of_the_Arab_League_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_the_Arab_League"
} | 6,023 |
6024 | Endorsements_for_the_Republican_Party_presidential_primaries,_2012_20 | [
[
"Statesmen , former politicians , and celebrities",
"Party",
"Endorsement",
"Date",
"Notes"
],
[
"Robert Bork",
"",
"Mitt Romney",
"8.2.2011",
"Jurist/Former Solicitor General/Author"
],
[
"Jeb Bush",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"March 21 , 2012",
"Former Governor of Florida , the son of former President George H. W. Bush , and the younger brother of former President George W. Bush"
],
[
"Cindy Crawford",
"",
"Mitt Romney",
"",
"Supermodel"
],
[
"John Danforth",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"12.2.2011",
"Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations and former United States Senator from Missouri"
],
[
"Clint Eastwood",
"Libertarian",
"Mitt Romney",
"8.3.2012",
"Academy Award -winning Director , Actor , and Former Mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea , California . A strong proponent of the Second Amendment and the NRA"
],
[
"Carly Fiorina",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"March 26 , 2012",
"Former Hewlett-Packard CEO and 2010 Republican California Senatorial nominee"
],
[
"Rudy Giuliani",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"April 23 , 2012",
"Former New York City Mayor and 2008 presidential candidate"
],
[
"Dan Jansen",
"",
"Mitt Romney",
"",
"Retired speed skater"
],
[
"Brad Little",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"",
"Lieutenant Governor of Idaho"
],
[
"Daniel S. Loeb",
"",
"Mitt Romney",
"",
"Hedge fund manager ; shareholder activist"
],
[
"Christine O'Donnell",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"December 13 , 2011",
"Republican Delaware Senatorial nominee in 2008 and 2010"
],
[
"Robert Ray",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"12.2.2011",
"Former Governor of Iowa"
],
[
"Nancy Reagan",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"May 31 , 2012",
"Former First Lady of the United States under President Ronald Reagan"
],
[
"Donald Trump",
"Independent",
"Mitt Romney",
"February 2 , 2012",
"An American business magnate , television personality and author"
],
[
"Lech Wałęsa",
"",
"Mitt Romney",
"July 31 , 2012",
"Iconic leader and past president of Poland"
],
[
"Meg Whitman",
"Republican",
"Mitt Romney",
"",
"2010 Republican nominee for Governor of California , former eBay CEO and current Hewlett-Packard CEO ; also a business associate of Romney 's at Bain Capital"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article is a list of endorsements made by members of the 112th United States Congress and other elected officials during the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries. Endorsements of statesmen and celebrities are also important to candidates. Late in the Republican race cycle, Romney toured Israel and Poland after a visit to the London 2012 Olympics. He received the endorsement of former President of Poland Lech Wałęsa, and soon after, the endorsement of actor and Second Amendment proponent Clint Eastwood. The winning of endorsements, also known as the Endorsement Race or Endorsement Derby, is argued to be a vital feature of the United States presidential race and the political party system. [by whom?]",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Tier 3 ( Statesmen , former politicians , and celebrities ) -- Mitt Romney",
"title": "Endorsements in the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries",
"uid": "Endorsements_for_the_Republican_Party_presidential_primaries,_2012_20",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endorsements_in_the_2012_Republican_Party_presidential_primaries"
} | 6,024 |
6025 | 2013_Kazakhstan_Premier_League_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Venue",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Aktobe",
"Aktobe",
"Aktobe Central Stadium",
"13,500"
],
[
"Akzhayik",
"Oral",
"Petr Atoyan Stadium",
"8,320"
],
[
"Astana",
"Astana",
"Astana Arena",
"30,000"
],
[
"Atyrau",
"Atyrau",
"Munaishy Stadium",
"9,000"
],
[
"Irtysh",
"Pavlodar",
"Pavlodar Central Stadium",
"15,000"
],
[
"Kairat",
"Almaty",
"Almaty Central Stadium",
"25,057"
],
[
"Ordabasy",
"Shymkent",
"Kazhimukan Munaitpasov Stadium",
"37,000"
],
[
"Shakhter",
"Karagandy",
"Shakhter Stadium",
"19,000"
],
[
"Taraz",
"Taraz",
"Taraz Central Stadium",
"12,525"
],
[
"Tobol",
"Kostanay",
"Kostanay Central Stadium",
"0 8,323"
],
[
"Vostok",
"Oskemen",
"Vostok Stadium",
"0 8,500"
],
[
"Zhetysu",
"Taldykorgan",
"Zhetysu Stadium",
"0 4,000"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Kazakhstan Premier League was the 22nd season of the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest football league competition in Kazakhstan. The season began on 9 March 2013 and ended on 2 November. Shakhter Karagandy were the defending champions, having won their second league championship the previous year.",
"section_text": "AktobeAkzhayikAtyrauIrtyshKairatAstanaOrdabasyShakhterTarazTobolVostokZhetysu Locations of teams in the 2013 Kazakhstan Premier League",
"section_title": "Teams -- Team overview",
"title": "2013 Kazakhstan Premier League",
"uid": "2013_Kazakhstan_Premier_League_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Kazakhstan_Premier_League"
} | 6,025 |
6026 | 2004_Chinese_Grand_Prix_1 | [
[
"Pos",
"No",
"Driver",
"Constructor",
"Time",
"Gap"
],
[
"1",
"2",
"Rubens Barrichello",
"Ferrari",
"1:34.012",
"-"
],
[
"2",
"6",
"Kimi Räikkönen",
"McLaren - Mercedes",
"1:34.178",
"+0.166"
],
[
"3",
"9",
"Jenson Button",
"BAR - Honda",
"1:34.295",
"+0.283"
],
[
"4",
"12",
"Felipe Massa",
"Sauber - Petronas",
"1:34.759",
"+0.747"
],
[
"5",
"4",
"Ralf Schumacher",
"Williams - BMW",
"1:34.891",
"+0.879"
],
[
"6",
"8",
"Fernando Alonso",
"Renault",
"1:34.917",
"+0.905"
],
[
"7",
"11",
"Giancarlo Fisichella",
"Sauber - Petronas",
"1:34.951",
"+0.939"
],
[
"8",
"17",
"Olivier Panis",
"Toyota",
"1:34.975",
"+0.963"
],
[
"9",
"10",
"Takuma Sato",
"BAR - Honda",
"1:34.993",
"+0.981"
],
[
"10",
"5",
"David Coulthard",
"McLaren - Mercedes",
"1:35.029",
"+1.017"
],
[
"11",
"3",
"Juan Pablo Montoya",
"Williams - BMW",
"1:35.245",
"+1.233"
],
[
"12",
"14",
"Mark Webber",
"Jaguar - Cosworth",
"1:35.286",
"+1.274"
],
[
"13",
"7",
"Jacques Villeneuve",
"Renault",
"1:35.384",
"+1.372"
],
[
"14",
"16",
"Ricardo Zonta",
"Toyota",
"1:35.410",
"+1.398"
],
[
"15",
"18",
"Nick Heidfeld",
"Jordan - Ford",
"1:36.507",
"+2.495"
],
[
"16",
"15",
"Christian Klien",
"Jaguar - Cosworth",
"1:36.535",
"+2.523"
],
[
"17",
"19",
"Timo Glock",
"Jordan - Ford",
"1:37.140",
"+3.128"
],
[
"18",
"21",
"Zsolt Baumgartner",
"Minardi - Cosworth",
"1:40.240",
"+6.228"
],
[
"19",
"20",
"Gianmaria Bruni",
"Minardi - Cosworth",
"no time",
"no time"
],
[
"20",
"1",
"Michael Schumacher",
"Ferrari",
"no time",
"no time"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2004 Chinese Grand Prix (formally the I Sinopec Chinese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 26 September 2004 at the Shanghai International Circuit. It was the sixteenth race of the 2004 Formula One season and the inaugural Chinese Grand Prix. The 56-lap race was won by Rubens Barrichello for the Ferrari team, from a pole position start. Jenson Button finished second for the BAR team, with Kimi Räikkönen third in a McLaren. This was the first race back for Ralf Schumacher after injuries in the 2004 United States Grand Prix three months prior.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Classification -- Qualifying",
"title": "2004 Chinese Grand Prix",
"uid": "2004_Chinese_Grand_Prix_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Chinese_Grand_Prix"
} | 6,026 |
6027 | Loja_Province_0 | [
[
"Canton",
"Pop . ( 2010 )",
"Area ( km² )",
"Seat/capital"
],
[
"Calvas",
"28,185",
"841,1",
"Cariamanga"
],
[
"Catamayo",
"30,638",
"646",
"Catamayo"
],
[
"Celica",
"14,468",
"518",
"Celica"
],
[
"Chaguarpamba",
"7,161",
"311",
"Chaguarpamba"
],
[
"Espíndola",
"14,799",
"514",
"Amaluza ( Espíndola )"
],
[
"Gonzanamá",
"12,716",
"693",
"Gonzanamá"
],
[
"Loja",
"214,855",
"1,881",
"Loja"
],
[
"Macará",
"19,018",
"575",
"Macará"
],
[
"Olmedo",
"4,870",
"112",
"Olmedo"
],
[
"Paltas",
"23,801",
"1,145",
"Catacocha"
],
[
"Pindal",
"8,645",
"200",
"Pindal"
],
[
"Puyango",
"15,513",
"634",
"Alamor"
],
[
"Quilanga",
"4,337",
"235",
"Quilanga"
],
[
"Saraguro",
"30,183",
"1,075",
"Saraguro"
],
[
"Sozoranga",
"7,465",
"410",
"Sozoranga"
],
[
"Zapotillo",
"12,312",
"1,209",
"Zapotillo"
]
] | {
"intro": "Loja Province (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈlo.xa]) is one of 24 provinces in Ecuador and shares its southern border on the west with El Oro Province, on the north with El Azuay, and on the east with Zamora-Chinchipe. Founded on its present site in 1548 by Captain Alonso de Mercadillo (Spanish), the site had been previously moved and rebuilt from La Toma due to earthquakes. It also is named as Cuxibamba Valley, from the Quichua language, which means the Smiley Valley.",
"section_text": "The province is divided into 16 cantons . The following table lists each with its population at the 2001 census , its area in square kilometres ( km² ) , and the name of its canton seat or capital . [ 9 ]",
"section_title": "Cantons",
"title": "Loja Province",
"uid": "Loja_Province_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loja_Province"
} | 6,027 |
6028 | Biathlon_World_Championships_12 | [
[
"Season",
"Winner",
"Runner-up",
"Third"
],
[
"2005",
"Russia Olga Pyleva Svetlana Ishmouratova Ivan Tcherezov Nikolay Kruglov , Jr",
"Russia Anna Bogaliy-Titovets Olga Zaitseva Sergei Tchepikov Sergei Rozhkov",
"Germany Uschi Disl Kati Wilhelm Michael Greis Ricco Groß"
],
[
"2006",
"Russia Anna Bogaliy-Titovets Sergei Tchepikov Irina Malgina Nikolay Kruglov , Jr",
"Norway Linda Tjørhom Halvard Hanevold Tora Berger Ole Einar Bjørndalen",
"France Florence Baverel-Robert Vincent Defrasne Sandrine Bailly Raphaël Poirée"
],
[
"2007",
"Sweden Helena Jonsson Anna Carin Olofsson Björn Ferry Carl Johan Bergman",
"France Florence Baverel-Robert Sandrine Bailly Vincent Defrasne Raphaël Poirée",
"Norway Tora Berger Jori Mørkve Emil Hegle Svendsen Frode Andresen"
],
[
"2008",
"Germany Sabrina Buchholz Magdalena Neuner Andreas Birnbacher Michael Greis",
"Belarus Liudmila Kalinchik Darya Domracheva Rustam Valiullin Sergey Novikov",
"Russia Svetlana Sleptsova Oksana Neupokoeva Nikolay Kruglov , Jr. Dmitri Yaroshenko"
],
[
"2009",
"France Marie-Laure Brunet Sylvie Becaert Vincent Defrasne Simon Fourcade",
"Sweden Helena Jonsson Anna Carin Olofsson-Zidek David Ekholm Carl Johan Bergman",
"Germany Andrea Henkel Simone Hauswald Arnd Peiffer Michael Greis"
],
[
"2010",
"Germany Simone Hauswald Magdalena Neuner Simon Schempp Arnd Peiffer",
"Norway Ann Kristin Flatland Tora Berger Emil Hegle Svendsen Ole Einar Bjørndalen",
"Sweden Helena Jonsson Anna Carin Olofsson-Zidek Björn Ferry Carl Johan Bergman"
],
[
"2011",
"Norway Tora Berger Ann Kristin Aafedt Flatland Ole Einar Bjørndalen Tarjei Bø",
"Germany Andrea Henkel Magdalena Neuner Arnd Peiffer Michael Greis",
"France Marie-Laure Brunet Marie Dorin Alexis Bœuf Martin Fourcade"
],
[
"2012",
"Norway Tora Berger Synnøve Solemdal Ole Einar Bjørndalen Emil Hegle Svendsen",
"Slovenia Andreja Mali Teja Gregorin Klemen Bauer Jakov Fak",
"Germany Andrea Henkel Magdalena Neuner Andreas Birnbacher Arnd Peiffer"
],
[
"2013",
"Norway Tora Berger ( 3 ) Synnøve Solemdal Tarjei Bø Emil Hegle Svendsen",
"France Marie-Laure Brunet Marie Dorin Habert Alexis Bœuf Martin Fourcade",
"Czech Republic Veronika Vítková Gabriela Soukalová Jaroslav Soukup Ondřej Moravec"
],
[
"2015",
"Czech Republic Veronika Vítková Gabriela Soukalová Michal Šlesingr Ondřej Moravec",
"France Anaïs Bescond Marie Dorin Habert Jean-Guillaume Béatrix Martin Fourcade",
"Norway Fanny Welle-Strand Horn Tiril Eckhoff Johannes Thingnes Bø Tarjei Bø"
],
[
"2016",
"France Anaïs Bescond Marie Dorin Habert Quentin Fillon Maillet Martin Fourcade",
"Germany Franziska Preuß Franziska Hildebrand Arnd Peiffer Simon Schempp",
"Norway Marte Olsbu Tiril Eckhoff Johannes Thingnes Bø Tarjei Bø"
],
[
"2017",
"Germany Vanessa Hinz Laura Dahlmeier Arnd Peiffer Simon Schempp",
"France Anais Chevalier Marie Dorin Habert Quentin Fillon Maillet Martin Fourcade",
"Russia Olga Podchufarova Tatiana Akimova Alexandr Loginov Anton Shipulin"
],
[
"2019",
"Norway Marte Olsbu Røiseland Tiril Eckhoff Johannes Thingnes Bø Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen",
"Germany Vanessa Hinz Denise Herrmann Arnd Peiffer Benedikt Doll",
"Italy Lisa Vittozzi Dorothea Wierer Lukas Hofer Dominik Windisch"
]
] | {
"intro": "The first Biathlon World Championships (BWCH) was held in 1958, with individual and team contests for men. The number of events has grown significantly over the years. Beginning in 1984, women biathletes had their own World Championships, and finally, from 1989, both genders have been participating in joint BWCHs. In 1978 the development was enhanced by the change from the large army rifle calibre to a small bore rifle, while the range to the target was reduced from 150 to 50 meters.",
"section_text": "This event was first held in 2005 , at the Biathlon World Cup finals in Khanty-Mansiysk . In 2005 the women biathletes did the first two legs , and the men did the following two , while in 2006 the sequence was woman–man–woman–man . At the Biathlon World Championships 2007 in Antholz , the sequence was women–women–man–man . The men ski legs of 7.5 km ( in 2005–06 : 6 km ) and the women ski 6 km each . From 2007 only one team per nation is allowed to compete .",
"section_title": "Mixed -- Mixed Relay ( 2 × 6 km + 2 × 7.5 km )",
"title": "Biathlon World Championships",
"uid": "Biathlon_World_Championships_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biathlon_World_Championships"
} | 6,028 |
6029 | List_of_television_series_produced_by_Paramount_Television_35 | [
[
"Airdate",
"Title",
"Network"
],
[
"September 13 , 1989",
"Fire and Rain",
"USA Network"
],
[
"July 11 , 1990",
"Wheels of Terror",
"USA Network"
],
[
"October 31 , 1990",
"Nightmare on the 13th Floor",
"USA Network"
],
[
"January 29 , 1991",
"Deadly Desire",
"USA Network"
],
[
"March 18 , 1992",
"Duplicates",
"USA Network"
],
[
"April 8 , 1992",
"Treacherous Crossing",
"USA Network"
],
[
"October 8 , 1993",
"Linda",
"USA Network"
],
[
"March 17 , 1994",
"Accidental Meeting",
"USA Network"
],
[
"January 5 , 1995",
"A Vow to Kill",
"USA Network"
],
[
"May 10 , 1995",
"As Good as Dead",
"USA Network"
],
[
"January 14 , 1998",
"Atomic Dog",
"USA Network"
],
[
"January 28 , 1999",
"Alien Cargo",
"UPN"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of television series produced and/or owned by ViacomCBS' brands, including Paramount Television Studios, CBS Television Studios, CBS Television Distribution, CBS News, and ViacomCBS media networks. This list also includes shows produced or distributed by ViacomCBS' predecessor companies, including CBS Productions, Viacom Productions/Enterprises, the older incarnation of Paramount Television, Rysher Entertainment, Republic Pictures Television, Worldvision Enterprises/Taft Entertainment, Group W Productions, KingWorld, Desilu Productions and Spelling Television.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Television movies and specials -- Paramount Television ( original )",
"title": "List of ViacomCBS television programs",
"uid": "List_of_television_series_produced_by_Paramount_Television_35",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ViacomCBS_television_programs"
} | 6,029 |
6030 | List_of_peaks_by_prominence_1 | [
[
"Peak",
"Location",
"Height ( m )",
"Prominence ( m )",
"Col ( m )",
"Parent/ Notable for"
],
[
"Mount Ruapehu",
"New Zealand",
"2,797",
"2,797",
"0",
"none / HP North Island , New Zealand"
],
[
"Mount Cereme",
"Indonesia",
"3,078",
"2,792",
"286",
"Semeru"
],
[
"Huascarán",
"Peru",
"6,746",
"2,776",
"3,970",
"Ojos del Salado"
],
[
"Mount Arfak",
"Indonesia",
"2,955",
"2,775",
"179",
""
],
[
"Mount Elbert",
"United States",
"4,401",
"2,772",
"1,629",
"Mount Whitney"
],
[
"San Gorgonio Mountain",
"United States",
"3,506",
"2,528",
"978",
"Olancha"
],
[
"Anamudi",
"India",
"2,695",
"2,479",
"216",
"Western Ghats"
],
[
"Musala",
"Bulgaria",
"2,925",
"2,473",
"432",
"Großglockner ¹ / Mont Blanc ² / HP Southeast Europe , Balkan Peninsula and Bulgaria"
],
[
"Mount Bazardüzü",
"Azerbaijan Russia",
"4,466",
"2,454",
"2012",
""
],
[
"Qurnat as Sawda",
"Lebanon",
"3,093",
"2,393",
"700",
""
],
[
"Galdhøpiggen",
"Norway",
"2,469",
"2,372",
"97",
"Sauyr Zhotasy ¹ / Everest ²/ HP Scandinavia"
],
[
"Gerlachovský štít",
"Slovakia",
"2,655",
"2,355",
"300",
"Mont Blanc / HP Hight Tatras and Slovakia"
],
[
"Mount Olympos ( Mytikas )",
"Greece",
"2,917",
"2,353",
"564",
"Großglockner ¹ / Mont Blanc ²/ HP Greece"
],
[
"Mount Taranaki",
"New Zealand",
"2,518",
"2,308",
"210",
"Mount Ruapehu , North Island , New Zealand"
],
[
"Mount Kosciuszko",
"Australia",
"2,228",
"2,228",
"0",
"none / HP mainland Australia"
],
[
"Monte Rosa",
"Switzerland",
"4,634",
"2,165",
"2,469",
"Mont Blanc / HP Switzerland"
],
[
"Hvannadalshnúkur",
"Iceland",
"2,110",
"2,110",
"0",
"none / HP Iceland"
],
[
"Barre des Écrins",
"France",
"4,102",
"2,045",
"2057",
"Mont Blanc"
],
[
"Hermon",
"Lebanon Syria",
"2,814",
"1,804",
"1010",
"Qurnat as Sawda ' / HP Lebanon"
],
[
"Vihren",
"Bulgaria",
"2,914",
"1,784",
"1,131",
"Musala / HP Pirin Mountain"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of mountain peaks ordered by their topographic prominence.",
"section_text": "All peaks with a prominence of more than 1,500 metres rank as an Ultra . For a complete listing of all 1,524 peaks with prominence greater than this level , see the lists of Ultras .",
"section_title": "Additional peaks",
"title": "List of mountain peaks by prominence",
"uid": "List_of_peaks_by_prominence_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mountain_peaks_by_prominence"
} | 6,030 |
6031 | List_of_Roman_bridges_1 | [
[
"Name",
"River",
"Town",
"Country",
"Spans"
],
[
"Apollodorus Bridge ( or Trajan 's Bridge )",
"Danube",
"Turnu-Severin / Kladovo",
"Romania / Serbia",
"21 x > 30 m"
],
[
"Caesar 's Rhine bridges",
"Rhine",
"Koblenz",
"Germany",
"c. 26 spans"
],
[
"Chesters Bridge",
"North Tyne",
"Chesters",
"England",
"4 x S"
],
[
"Constantine 's Bridge",
"Danube",
"Corabia",
"Romania / Bulgaria",
"?"
],
[
"Cornelius Fuscus 's Bridge",
"Danube",
"Orlea",
"Romania / Bulgaria",
"?"
],
[
"Justinian 's bridge",
"Siberis",
"Sykeon",
"Turkey",
"8 x 5.4-9.6 m"
],
[
"London Bridge",
"Thames",
"London",
"England",
"?"
],
[
"Piercebridge Roman Bridge",
"Tees",
"Piercebridge",
"England",
"?"
],
[
"Pons Aelius",
"Tyne",
"Newcastle",
"England",
"?"
],
[
"Pons Sublicius",
"Tiber",
"Rome",
"Italy",
"?"
],
[
"Pons Tirenus",
"Garigliano",
"Minturnae",
"Italy",
"?"
],
[
"Römerbrücke",
"Mosel",
"Trier",
"Germany",
"?"
],
[
"Römerbrücke",
"Rhine",
"Cologne",
"Germany",
"20 spans"
],
[
"Römerbrücke",
"Rhine",
"Mainz",
"Germany",
"?"
],
[
"?",
"Churn",
"Cirencester",
"England",
"?"
],
[
"?",
"Eden",
"Hyssop Holme Well",
"England",
"?"
],
[
"?",
"Forth",
"?",
"Scotland",
"?"
],
[
"?",
"Irthing",
"Willowford",
"England",
""
],
[
"?",
"Kelvin",
"Summerston",
"Scotland",
"?"
],
[
"?",
"Loire",
"Orléans",
"France",
"?"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Romans were the world's first major bridge builders. The following list constitutes an attempt to list all known surviving remains of Roman bridges. A Roman bridge in the sense of this article includes any of these features:",
"section_text": "A timber bridge is a structure composed wholly out of wood , while a stone pillar bridge features a wooden superstructure resting on stone pillars . Strictly speaking , many bridges of the second type should be rather called `` concrete pillar bridges '' , as the Romans preferably used opus caementicium for constructing their bridge piers ( stone was confined in these cases to covering ) . Both types , timber bridges and stone respectively concrete pillar bridges , are listed here in the same category as historically , with the consolidation of Roman power in the newly conquered provinces , wooden bridges often gave way to solid pillar bridges .",
"section_title": "Timber and stone pillar bridges",
"title": "List of Roman bridges",
"uid": "List_of_Roman_bridges_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_bridges"
} | 6,031 |
6032 | IWF_World_Weightlifter_of_the_Year_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner",
"Country"
],
[
"1991",
"Sun Caiyan",
"China"
],
[
"1992",
"Peng Liping",
"China"
],
[
"1993",
"Chen Shu-chih",
"Chinese Taipei"
],
[
"1994",
"Guan Hong",
"China"
],
[
"1995",
"Chen Shu-chih",
"Chinese Taipei"
],
[
"1996",
"Li Hongyun",
"China"
],
[
"1997",
"Tang Weifang",
"China"
],
[
"1998",
"Tang Weifang",
"China"
],
[
"1999",
"Ding Meiyuan",
"China"
],
[
"2000",
"Ding Meiyuan",
"China"
],
[
"2001",
"Valentina Popova",
"Russia"
],
[
"2002",
"Wang Mingjuan",
"China"
],
[
"2003",
"Liu Chunhong",
"China"
],
[
"2004",
"Liu Chunhong",
"China"
],
[
"2005",
"Pawina Thongsuk",
"Thailand"
],
[
"2006",
"Chen Yanqing",
"China"
],
[
"2007",
"Jang Mi-ran",
"South Korea"
],
[
"2008",
"Liu Chunhong",
"China"
],
[
"2009",
"Jang Mi-ran",
"South Korea"
],
[
"2010",
"Svetlana Podobedova",
"Kazakhstan"
]
] | {
"intro": "The IWF World Weightlifter of the Year award is a prize that can be won by weightlifters participating in events within the sport of weightlifting organised by the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Women",
"title": "IWF World Weightlifter of the Year",
"uid": "IWF_World_Weightlifter_of_the_Year_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IWF_World_Weightlifter_of_the_Year"
} | 6,032 |
6033 | List_of_shopping_malls_in_India_10 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Year",
"Size ( gross leasable area )"
],
[
"Prozone Mall",
"Chikalthana , Aurangabad",
"2010",
"680,189 sq ft ( 63,191.6 m )"
],
[
"High Street Phoenix",
"Lower Parel",
"2008",
"650,000 sq ft ( 60,000 m )"
],
[
"Metro Junction Mall",
"Kalyan",
"2008",
"750,000 sq ft ( 70,000 m )"
],
[
"Infiniti Mall",
"Andheri , Malad",
"2004 / 2011",
"310,000 sq ft ( 29,000 m ) / 850,000 sq ft ( 79,000 m )"
],
[
"Inorbit Mall",
"Malad , Vashi",
"2004 / 2008",
"364,000 sq ft ( 33,800 m ) / 545,000 sq ft ( 50,600 m )"
],
[
"Raghuleela Mall",
"Vashi",
"2007",
"375,000 sq ft ( 34,800 m )"
],
[
"Korum Mall",
"Thane",
"2009",
"500,000 sq ft ( 46,000 m )"
],
[
"Growel 's 101",
"Kandivli",
"2007",
"650,000 sq ft ( 60,000 m )"
],
[
"R-Mall",
"Mulund",
"2003",
"250,000 sq ft ( 23,000 m )"
],
[
"Crossroad Mall",
"Worli",
"1999",
"150,000 sq ft ( 14,000 m )"
],
[
"Fountain Square",
"Kharghar",
"2008",
""
],
[
"R City Mall",
"Ghatkopar",
"2009",
"657,000 sq ft ( 61,000 m )"
],
[
"Neptune Magnet Mall",
"Bhandup",
"2011",
"1,056,000 sq ft ( 98,100 m )"
],
[
"Nashik City Centre Mall",
"Untwadi",
"2009",
"900,000 sq ft ( 84,000 m )"
],
[
"Pinnacle Mall",
"C.B.S",
"2011",
"500,000 sq ft ( 46,000 m )"
],
[
"Phoenix Market City",
"Vimannagar",
"2011",
"800,000 sq ft ( 74,000 m )"
],
[
"Koregaon Park Plaza",
"Koregaon Park",
"2012",
"400,000 sq ft ( 37,000 m )"
],
[
"Viviana Mall",
"Thane",
"2013",
"1,000,000 sq ft ( 93,000 m )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of shopping malls in India, sortable by name, location, year opened and size.",
"section_text": "Inorbit Mall , Mumbai Palladium Mall , Mumbai Raghuleela Mall , Navi Mumbai Korum Mall , Outside View Inorbit Mall , Mumbai Metro Junction Mall , Kalyan East , as seen from across the street",
"section_title": "Maharashtra",
"title": "List of shopping malls in India",
"uid": "List_of_shopping_malls_in_India_10",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shopping_malls_in_India"
} | 6,033 |
6034 | School_of_mines_2 | [
[
"Institution",
"Location",
"Country"
],
[
"University of Leoben",
"Leoben",
"Austria"
],
[
"Faculty of Applied Sciences - Mining & Geology , Université de Liège",
"Liège",
"Belgium"
],
[
"Department of Natural Resources , Katholieke Universiteit Leuven",
"Leuven",
"Belgium"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining Engineering , Faculté polytechnique de Mons",
"Mons",
"Belgium"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining , Geology and Civil Engineering , University of Tuzla",
"Tuzla",
"Bosnia and Herzegovina"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining , Geology and Petroleum Engineering , University of Zagreb",
"Zagreb",
"Croatia"
],
[
"Chair of Mining Engineering , Department of Mining , Tallinn University of Technology",
"Tallinn",
"Estonia"
],
[
"Helsinki University of Technology",
"Helsinki , Finland",
"Finland"
],
[
"Groupe des écoles des mines ( GEM ) Seven engineering schools in France : Mines ParisTech École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Nancy École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Saint-Étienne École des Mines d'Alès École des Mines de Douai École des Mines de Nantes École des mines d'Albi-Carmaux",
"Paris Nancy Saint-Étienne Alès Douai Nantes Albi",
"France"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining and Geotechnical Engineering , University of Miskolc",
"Miskolc",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Politecnico di Torino",
"Turin",
"Italy"
],
[
"Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg",
"Freiberg",
"Germany"
],
[
"Technische Universität Clausthal",
"Clausthal-Zellerfeld",
"Germany"
],
[
"TH Georg Agricola",
"Bochum",
"Germany"
],
[
"RWTH Aachen University",
"Aachen",
"Germany"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy , National Technical University of Athens",
"Athens",
"Greece"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining Resources Engineering , Technical University of Crete",
"Crete",
"Greece"
],
[
"Technische Universiteit Delft",
"Delft",
"Netherlands"
],
[
"Department of Geology and Mineral Resources Engineering , Norwegian University of Science and Technology",
"Trondheim",
"Norway"
],
[
"Faculty of Mining and Geology , Silesian University of Technology",
"Gliwice",
"Poland"
]
] | {
"intro": "A school of mines (or mining school) is an engineering school, often established in the 18th and 19th centuries, that originally focused on mining engineering and applied science. Most have been integrated within larger constructs such as mineral engineering, some no longer focusing primarily on mining subjects, while retaining the name.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Universities offering degrees in mining engineering -- Europe",
"title": "List of schools of mines",
"uid": "School_of_mines_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_of_mines"
} | 6,034 |
6035 | List_of_disasters_in_the_United_States_by_death_toll_2 | [
[
"Year",
"Type",
"Fatalities",
"Article",
"Location"
],
[
"1871",
"Fire ( urban conflagration )",
"200-300",
"Great Chicago Fire",
"Chicago , Illinois"
],
[
"1900",
"Accident - coal mine",
"200",
"Scofield Mine disaster",
"Scofield , Utah"
],
[
"1898",
"Accident - shipwreck",
"192",
"The Portland",
"Gloucester , Massachusetts"
],
[
"1863",
"Mass murder , military operation",
"185-200",
"Lawrence Massacre",
"Lawrence , Kansas"
],
[
"1947",
"Tornado",
"181",
"1947 Glazier-Higgins-Woodward tornadoes",
"Oklahoma ( especially Woodward ) , Texas ( including Glazier and Higgins ) , Kansas"
],
[
"1908",
"Fire ( building )",
"174",
"Collinwood school fire",
"Cleveland , Ohio"
],
[
"1908",
"Fire ( building )",
"171",
"Rhoads Opera House fire",
"Boyertown , Pennsylvania"
],
[
"1917",
"Fire ( mine )",
"168",
"Speculator Mine disaster",
"Butte , Montana"
],
[
"1944",
"Fire ( building )",
"168",
"Hartford circus fire",
"Hartford , Connecticut"
],
[
"1966",
"Smog incident",
"168",
"1966 New York City smog",
"New York City and New York metropolitan area , including parts of New Jersey and Connecticut"
],
[
"1995",
"Terrorism",
"168",
"Oklahoma City bombing",
"Oklahoma City , Oklahoma"
],
[
"1946",
"Tsunami and Earthquake",
"165",
"1946 Aleutian Islands earthquake",
"Alaska , Hawaii"
],
[
"1977",
"Fire ( building )",
"165",
"Beverly Hills Supper Club fire",
"Southgate , Kentucky"
],
[
"1944",
"Maritime Accident",
"163",
"West Loch disaster",
"Pearl Harbor , Hawaii"
],
[
"1956",
"Blizzard",
"162",
"March 18-20 , 1956 nor'easter",
"Northeastern United States"
],
[
"2011",
"Tornado",
"158",
"2011 Joplin tornado",
"Joplin , Missouri"
],
[
"2012",
"Tropical cyclone",
"158",
"Hurricane Sandy",
"Most of the United States East Coast"
],
[
"1960",
"Tropical cyclone",
"157",
"Hurricane Donna",
"The Caribbean , United States East Coast"
],
[
"1987",
"Accident - aircraft",
"156",
"Northwest Airlines Flight 255",
"Detroit , Michigan"
],
[
"1982",
"Accident - aircraft",
"153",
"Pan Am Flight 759",
"New Orleans , Louisiana"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list of United States disasters by death toll includes disasters that occurred either in the United States, at diplomatic missions of the United States, or incidents outside of the United States in which a number of U.S. citizens were killed. It does not include death tolls from the American Civil War. Due to inflation, the monetary damage estimates are not comparable. Unless otherwise noted, the year given is the year in which the currency's valuation was calculated. This list is not comprehensive in general and epidemics are not included.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "81 to 200 deaths",
"title": "List of disasters in the United States by death toll",
"uid": "List_of_disasters_in_the_United_States_by_death_toll_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disasters_in_the_United_States_by_death_toll"
} | 6,035 |
6036 | Biharia_Euroregion_0 | [
[
"City",
"Population",
"Metro",
"Country"
],
[
"Oradea",
"206,614",
"260,000",
"Romania"
],
[
"Debrecen",
"205,084",
"237,888",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Hajdúböszörmény",
"32,228",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Hajdúszoboszló",
"23,695",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Balmazújváros",
"18,615",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Hajdúnánás",
"18,185",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Salonta",
"18,137",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Marghita",
"17,291",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Berettyóújfalu",
"16,227",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Püspökladány",
"16,126",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Hajdúhadház",
"13,001",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Beiuş",
"12,089",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Săcueni",
"11,665",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Hajdúsámson",
"10,946",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
],
[
"Aleşd",
"10,852",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Valea lui Mihai",
"10,317",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Ştei",
"9,466",
"N/A",
"Romania"
],
[
"Derecske",
"9,086",
"N/A",
"Hungary"
]
] | {
"intro": "Biharia euroregion (Romanian: Euroregiunea Biharia, Hungarian: Biharia Eurorégió) is a euroregion located in Romania and Hungary.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Largest cities",
"title": "Biharia Euroregion",
"uid": "Biharia_Euroregion_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biharia_Euroregion"
} | 6,036 |
6037 | Consejo_Mundial_de_Lucha_Libre_1 | [
[
"Championship",
"Current champion ( s )",
"Date won",
"Reign",
"Days held"
],
[
"CMLL World Heavyweight Championship",
"Último Guerrero",
"October 16 , 2018",
"2",
"480+"
],
[
"CMLL World Light Heavyweight Championship",
"Niebla Roja",
"June 10 , 2017",
"1",
"973+"
],
[
"CMLL World Middleweight Championship",
"El Cuatrero",
"January 19 , 2018",
"1",
"750+"
],
[
"CMLL World Welterweight Championship",
"Titán",
"December 8 , 2019",
"1",
"62+"
],
[
"CMLL World Lightweight Championship",
"Vacant",
"-",
"-",
"-"
],
[
"CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship",
"Chamuel",
"December 25 , 2019",
"1",
"45+"
],
[
"CMLL World Mini-Estrella Championship",
"Shockercito",
"March 5 , 2017",
"1",
"1070+"
],
[
"CMLL World Tag Team Championship",
"Alianza de Plata y Oro ( Carístico and Místico )",
"November 1 , 2019",
"1",
"99+"
],
[
"CMLL World Trios Championship",
"Los Guerreros Lagunero ( Euforia ( 3 ) , Gran Guerrero ( 2 ) and Último Guerrero ( 5 ) )",
"September 28 , 2018",
"2",
"498+"
],
[
"CMLL World Women 's Championship",
"Marcela",
"November 19 , 2018",
"5",
"446+"
],
[
"NWA World Historic Light Heavyweight Championship",
"Stuka Jr",
"August 14 , 2018",
"1",
"543+"
],
[
"NWA World Historic Middleweight Championship",
"Carístico",
"August 21 , 2018",
"1",
"536+"
],
[
"NWA World Historic Welterweight Championship",
"Volador Jr",
"August 4 , 2018",
"3",
"553+"
]
] | {
"intro": "Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre Co., Ltd. (CMLL; Spanish pronunciation: [konˈsexo munˈdjal de ˈlutʃa ˈliβɾe], World Wrestling Council) is a lucha libre professional wrestling promotion based in Mexico City. The promotion was previously known as Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre (EMLL) (Mexican Wrestling Enterprise). Founded in 1933, it is the oldest professional wrestling promotion still in existence. CMLL has been nicknamed The serious and the stable, referencing their very conservative booking style and their traditional structure to how wrestlers are used and allowed to express themselves. Outside live television broadcasts, CMLL has not shown matches where one of the competitors bleeds. They have a few steel cage matches and on occasion have Super Libre matches where there are no disqualifications, but otherwise do not promote any variety of matches that would be considered hardcore wrestling, nor match types such as Ladder matches. CMLL has on occasion fired wrestlers for excessive violence, like the use of chairs, during a match or for using profanity while addressing the crowd during a show. CMLL currently recognizes and promotes twelve World Championships for various weight divisions and classifications, six national level and six regional level championships. The CMLL Anniversary Show series is the longest running annual major show, starting in 1934, with the CMLL 85th Anniversary Show being the most recent. CMLL also regularly promotes major events under the names Homenaje a Dos Leyendas (Homage to two legends), Sin Piedad (No Mercy), Sin Salida (No Escape), Infierno en el Ring (Inferno in the Ring) during the year. CMLL has promoted their regular weekly Super Viernes (Super Friday) on a regular basis since the 1930s. Founder Salvador Lutteroth funded the building of Arena Coliseo in 1943, making it the first building in Mexico built specifically for professional wrestling.",
"section_text": "Main article : List of current champions in CMLL CMLL-promoted world championships",
"section_title": "Championships -- Current",
"title": "Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre",
"uid": "Consejo_Mundial_de_Lucha_Libre_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consejo_Mundial_de_Lucha_Libre"
} | 6,037 |
6038 | List_of_improvisational_theatre_companies_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Group Level",
"Improv Type",
"Location",
"Date Established"
],
[
"The Comedy Store Players",
"Professional",
"Improvisational",
"London , England",
"1985"
],
[
"Improverts",
"Collegiate",
"Theatresports",
"Edinburgh , Scotland",
"1989"
],
[
"The Free Association",
"Professional",
"Long-form",
"London",
"2014"
],
[
"The Oxford Imps",
"Semi-Professional",
"Improvisational",
"Oxford , England",
"2003"
],
[
"Showstoppers",
"Professional",
"Musical Theatre",
"London , England",
"2008"
],
[
"The Suggestibles",
"Professional",
"Improvisational",
"Newcastle upon Tyne , England",
"2001"
],
[
"The Spontaneity Shop",
"Professional",
"Multiple",
"London , England",
"1996"
],
[
"The Antics",
"Collegiate",
"Shortform",
"Sheffield , England",
"2008"
],
[
"The Maydays",
"Professional",
"Longform",
"Brighton , England",
"2003"
],
[
"Mischief Theatre",
"Professional",
"Multiple",
"London , England",
"2008"
],
[
"The Blank Slates",
"Collegiate",
"Multiple",
"London , England",
"2011"
]
] | {
"intro": "Improvisational theatre companies, also known as improv troupes or improv groups, are the primary practitioners of improvisational theater. Modern companies exist around the world and at a range of skill levels. Most groups make little or no money, while a few, well-established groups are profitable. Although improvisational theater has existed in some form or another since the 16th century, modern improv began with the teachings of Viola Spolin in Chicago, Illinois, USA and Keith Johnstone during the 1940-50s in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Spolin's teachings led to the creation of The Compass Players, the first modern improvisational theater company, in 1955. The presence of The Compass Players, The Second City, and ImprovOlympic in Chicago created a strength in the form within the city that continues to this day. New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Toronto are other major hubs of improvisational theater in the North America. Many companies host improvisational theatre festivals or give improvisational theatre classes. Professional groups often perform a regular stage show acted by the most senior members. Along with this, they host house improv teams made up of improv students or graduates from their classes. In the past decade, professional improvisational theater groups have gradually started working more with corporate clients, using improvisational games to improve productivity and communication in the workplace. Major Professional companies have branches in more than one city, have touring groups, and/or host large-scale improvisational comedy schools.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Improvisational theatre companies in the United Kingdom",
"title": "List of improvisational theatre companies",
"uid": "List_of_improvisational_theatre_companies_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_improvisational_theatre_companies"
} | 6,038 |
6039 | European_Commissioner_for_External_Relations_0 | [
[
"Commissioner",
"State",
"National party",
"Commission",
"Term start",
"Term end"
],
[
"Jean Rey",
"Belgium",
"Liberal Reformist Party",
"Hallstein Commission I",
"1958",
"1962"
],
[
"Jean Rey",
"Belgium",
"Liberal Reformist Party",
"Hallstein Commission II",
"1962",
"1967"
],
[
"Edoardo Martino",
"Italy",
"Christian Democracy",
"Rey Commission",
"1967",
"1970"
],
[
"Jean-François Deniau",
"France",
"Union for French Democracy",
"Malfatti Commission",
"1970",
"1972"
],
[
"Jean-François Deniau",
"France",
"Union for French Democracy",
"Mansholt Commission",
"1972",
"1973"
],
[
"Christopher Soames",
"United Kingdom",
"Conservative Party",
"Ortoli Commission",
"1973",
"1977"
],
[
"Wilhelm Haferkamp",
"West Germany",
"Social Democratic Party",
"Jenkins Commission",
"1977",
"1981"
],
[
"Wilhelm Haferkamp",
"West Germany",
"Social Democratic Party",
"Thorn Commission",
"1981",
"1985"
],
[
"Willy De Clercq",
"Belgium",
"Flemish Liberals and Democrats",
"Delors Commission I",
"1985",
"1989"
],
[
"Frans Andriessen",
"Netherlands",
"Christian Democratic Appeal",
"Delors Commission II",
"1989",
"1993"
],
[
"Hans van den Broek",
"Netherlands",
"Christian Democratic Appeal",
"Delors Commission III",
"1993",
"1995"
],
[
"Leon Brittan",
"United Kingdom",
"Conservative Party",
"Santer Commission",
"1995",
"1999"
],
[
"Chris Patten",
"United Kingdom",
"Conservative Party",
"Prodi Commission",
"1999",
"2004"
],
[
"Benita Ferrero-Waldner",
"Austria",
"Austrian People 's Party",
"Barroso Commission I",
"2004",
"2009"
]
] | {
"intro": "The European Commissioner for External Relations was a member of the European Commission with responsibility over the Commissions external representation in the world and the European Union's (EU) Neighbourhood Policy (ENP). The responsibility was shared though between other Commission posts (see below) and the High Representative. As a result of the Treaty of Lisbon, on 1 December 2009, merged the positions of Commissioner and High Representative into a composite entity called the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. The first Commissioner to hold the post was Jean Rey in 1958, who later became Commission President. The last Commissioner was Benita Ferrero-Waldner who served from 2004 to 2009 in the first Barroso Commission.",
"section_text": "The post has been under various names ( External Relations/External Affairs ) and often combined with Trade or other portfolios . In the Barroso I Commission it was combined with the European Neighbourhood Policy portfolio , hence its name under that administration . Ferrero-Waldner was also the last Commissioner for External Relations as the post was taken over by the High Representative Catherine Ashton from 1 December 2009 . [ 1 ] Benita Ferrero-Waldner , the last External Relations Commissioner",
"section_title": "List of commissioners",
"title": "European Commissioner for External Relations",
"uid": "European_Commissioner_for_External_Relations_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Commissioner_for_External_Relations"
} | 6,039 |
6040 | Binaca_Geetmala_annual_list_1975_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Song",
"Film",
"Music Director",
"Lyricist",
"Singer ( s )"
],
[
"1953",
"Ye Zindagi Usi ki Hai",
"Anarkali ( film )",
"C. Ramachandra",
"Rajinder Krishan",
"Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1954",
"Jayen To Jayen Kahan",
"Taxi Driver",
"S.D . Burman",
"Sahir Ludhianvi",
"Talat Mahmood"
],
[
"1955",
"Mera Joota Hai Japani",
"Shri 420",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Shailendra",
"Mukesh"
],
[
"1956",
"Ae Dil Hai Mushkil Jeena Yaha",
"C.I.D",
"O. P. Nayyar",
"Majrooh Sultanpuri",
"Mohammed Rafi , Geeta Dutt"
],
[
"1957",
"Zara Saamne Toh Aao Chhaliye",
"Janam Janam Ke Phere",
"S. N. Tripathi",
"Bharat Vyas",
"Mohammed Rafi , Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1958",
"Hai Apna Dil Toh Awara",
"Solva Saal",
"S. D. Burman",
"Majrooh Sultanpuri",
"Hemant Kumar"
],
[
"1959",
"Haal Kaisa Hai Janaab Ka",
"Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi",
"S. D. Burman",
"Majrooh Sultanpuri",
"Kishore Kumar , Asha Bhosle"
],
[
"1960",
"Zindagi Bhar Nai Bhoolegi Wo Barsaat Ki Raat",
"Barsaat Ki Raat",
"Roshan",
"Sahir Ludhianvi",
"Mohammed Rafi"
],
[
"1961",
"Teri Pyaari Pyaari Surat Ko",
"Sasural",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Hasrat Jaipuri",
"Mohammed Rafi"
],
[
"1962",
"Ehsaan Tera Hoga Mujh Par",
"Junglee",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Hasrat Jaipuri",
"Mohammed Rafi"
],
[
"1963",
"Jo Wada Kiya Woh Nibhana",
"Taj Mahal",
"Roshan",
"Sahir Ludhianvi",
"Mohammed Rafi , Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1964",
"Mere Man ki Ganga aur tere man ki Jamuna ka",
"Sangam",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Shailendra",
"Mukesh , Vyjayanthimala"
],
[
"1965",
"Jis dil mein basa tha pyaar tera",
"Saheli",
"Kalyanji Anandji",
"Indeevar",
"Mukesh"
],
[
"1966",
"Baharon phool barsao mera mehboob aaya hai",
"Suraj",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Hasrat Jaipuri",
"Mohammed Rafi"
],
[
"1967",
"Saawan ka mahina pawan kare sor",
"Milan",
"Laxmikant-Pyarelal",
"Anand Bakshi",
"Mukesh , Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1968",
"Dil wil pyar vyar main kya jaanu re",
"Shagird",
"Laxmikant-Pyarelal",
"Majrooh Sultanpuri",
"Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1969",
"Kaise rahoon chup ki meine pee hi kya hai",
"Inteqam",
"Laxmikant-Pyarelal",
"Rajendra Krishna",
"Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1970",
"Bindiya chamkegi choodi khankegi",
"Do Raaste",
"Laxmikant-Pyarelal",
"Anand Bakshi",
"Lata Mangeshkar"
],
[
"1971",
"Zindagi ek safar hai suhana",
"Andaz",
"Shankar Jaikishan",
"Hasrat Jaipuri",
"Kishore Kumar , Asha Bhosle"
],
[
"1972",
"Dum Maro Dum",
"Hare Raama Hare Krishna",
"R. D. Burman",
"Anand Bakshi",
"Asha Bhosle , Usha Iyer"
]
] | {
"intro": "Binaca Geetmala was a weekly countdown show of top filmi songs from Hindi cinema. It was popular and had millions of listeners. Binaca Geetmala was broadcast on Radio Ceylon from 1952 to 1988 and then shifted to the Vividh Bharati Service of All India Radio network in 1989 where it ran until 1994. It was the first radio countdown show of Indian film songs, and has been quoted as being the most popular radio program in India during its run. Its name reflects its sponsorship by Binaca. Binaca Geetmala, and its subsequent incarnations named after Cibaca - Cibaca Sangeetmala, Cibaca Geetmala, and Colgate Cibaca Sangeetmala - ran from 1954 to 1994 on Radio Ceylon and then on Vividh Bharati. They also broadcast annual year-end lists from 1954 to 1993.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Lists of top songs per year",
"title": "Binaca Geetmala",
"uid": "Binaca_Geetmala_annual_list_1975_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaca_Geetmala"
} | 6,040 |
6041 | List_of_Nobel_laureates_affiliated_with_Washington_University_in_St._Louis_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Laureate",
"Relation",
"Category",
"Rationale"
],
[
"1927",
"Arthur Compton",
"Faculty of Arts and Sciences , 1920-1923 and 1945-1962 , Chancellor , 1945-1953",
"Physics",
"for his discovery of the effect named after him"
],
[
"1943",
"Edward Adelbert Doisy",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1919-1923",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for his discovery of the chemical nature of vitamin K"
],
[
"1944",
"Joseph Erlanger",
"Chairman , Department of Physiology , 1910-1946",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries relating to the highly differentiated functions of single nerve fibres"
],
[
"1944",
"Herbert Spencer Gasser",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1916-1931",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries relating to the highly differentiated functions of single nerve fibres"
],
[
"1947",
"Carl Ferdinand Cori",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1931-1984",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discovery of the course of the catalytic conversion of glycogen"
],
[
"1947",
"Gerty Cori",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1931-1957",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discovery of the course of the catalytic conversion of glycogen"
],
[
"1959",
"Arthur Kornberg",
"Chairman , Department of Microbiology , 1952-1959",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discovery of the mechanisms in the biological synthesis of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid"
],
[
"1959",
"Severo Ochoa",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1940-1942",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discovery of the mechanisms in the biological synthesis of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid"
],
[
"1969",
"Alfred Hershey",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1934-1950",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries concerning the replication mechanism and the genetic structure of viruses"
],
[
"1970",
"Luis Federico Leloir",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1944",
"Chemistry",
"for his discovery of sugar nucleotides and their role in the biosynthesis of carbohydrates"
],
[
"1971",
"Earl Wilbur Sutherland Jr",
"M.D . , 1942 , Resident in Internal Medicine , 1943-1945 , Faculty of Medicine , 1945-1953",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for his discoveries concerning the mechanisms of the action of hormones"
],
[
"1974",
"Christian de Duve",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1946-1947",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries concerning the structural and functional organization of the cell"
],
[
"1978",
"Daniel Nathans",
"M.D. , 1954",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for the discovery of restriction enzymes and their application to problems of molecular genetics"
],
[
"1978",
"Hamilton O. Smith",
"Washington University Medical Service , 1956-1957",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for the discovery of restriction enzymes and their application to problems of molecular genetics"
],
[
"1980",
"Paul Berg",
"Faculty of Medicine , 1954-1959",
"Chemistry",
"for his fundamental studies of the biochemistry of nucleic acids , with particular regard to recombinant-DNA"
],
[
"1980",
"George Davis Snell",
"Faculty of Arts and Sciences , 1933-1934",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries concerning genetically determined structures on the cell surface that regulate immunological reactions"
],
[
"1986",
"Stanley Cohen",
"Faculty of Arts and Sciences , 1953-1959",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries of growth factors"
],
[
"1986",
"Rita Levi-Montalcini",
"Faculty of Arts and Sciences , 1948-",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries of growth factors"
],
[
"1992",
"Edwin G. Krebs",
"M.D. , 1943 , Resident in Internal Medicine , Research Fellow in Biological Chemistry , 1945-1948",
"Physiology or Medicine",
"for their discoveries concerning reversible protein phosphorylation as a biological regulatory mechanism"
],
[
"1993",
"Douglass North",
"Faculty of Arts and Sciences , 1983-",
"Economics",
"for having renewed research in economic history by applying economic theory and quantitative methods in order to explain economic and institutional change"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Nobel Prizes are awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Karolinska Institute, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee to individuals who make outstanding contributions in the fields of chemistry, physics, literature, peace, and physiology or medicine. They were established by the 1895 will of Alfred Nobel, which dictates that the awards should be administered by the Nobel Foundation. Another prize, the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, was established in 1968 by the Sveriges Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden, for contributors to the field of economics. Each prize is awarded by a separate committee; the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awards the Prizes in Physics, Chemistry, and Economics, the Karolinska Institute awards the Prize in Physiology or Medicine, and the Norwegian Nobel Committee awards the Prize in Peace. Each recipient receives a medal, a diploma and a cash prize that has varied throughout the years. In 1901, the winners of the first Nobel Prizes were given 150,782 SEK, which is equal to 7,731,004 SEK in December 2007. In 2008, the winners were awarded a prize amount of 10,000,000 SEK. The awards are presented in Stockholm in an annual ceremony on December 10, the anniversary of Nobel's death. As of 2014, there have been 23 laureates affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis. Washington University considers laureates who attended the university as undergraduate students, graduate students or were members of the faculty as affiliated laureates. Arthur Compton, the chancellor of the university from 1945 to 1953, was the first laureate affiliated with the university, winning the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1927. Four Nobel Prizes were shared by Washington University laureates; Joseph Erlanger and Herbert Spencer Gasser won the 1944 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Carl Ferdinand Cori and wife Gerty Cori won the 1947 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Arthur Kornberg and Severo Ochoa won the 1959 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, and Daniel Nathans and George Davis Snell won the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Laureates",
"title": "List of Nobel laureates affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis",
"uid": "List_of_Nobel_laureates_affiliated_with_Washington_University_in_St._Louis_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nobel_laureates_affiliated_with_Washington_University_in_St._Louis"
} | 6,041 |
6042 | Southern_Conference_Hall_of_Fame_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Institution",
"Sport",
"Inducted"
],
[
"Adrian Peterson",
"Georgia Southern",
"Football",
"2009"
],
[
"Angie Barker",
"East Tennessee State",
"Track & Field",
"2012"
],
[
"Armanti Edwards",
"Appalachian State",
"Football",
"2016"
],
[
"Arnold Palmer",
"Wake Forest",
"Golf",
"2009"
],
[
"Banks McFadden",
"Clemson",
"Football and Basketball",
"2010"
],
[
"Brad Faxon",
"Furman",
"Golf",
"2016"
],
[
"Charlie Justice",
"North Carolina",
"Football",
"2009"
],
[
"Charlie Teague",
"Wake Forest",
"Baseball",
"2014"
],
[
"Clint Dempsey",
"Furman",
"Soccer",
"2014"
],
[
"Dexter Coakley",
"Appalachian State",
"Football",
"2011"
],
[
"Dick Groat",
"Duke",
"Baseball and Basketball",
"2009"
],
[
"Dick Modzelewski",
"Maryland",
"Football",
"2012"
],
[
"Eddie Cameron",
"Duke",
"Basketball and Football",
"2014"
],
[
"Everett Case",
"North Carolina State",
"Basketball",
"2010"
],
[
"Frank Selvy",
"Furman",
"Basketball",
"2009"
],
[
"Fred Hetzel",
"Davidson",
"Basketball",
"2010"
],
[
"J. Dallas Shirley",
"George Washington",
"Basketball",
"2010"
],
[
"Jerry Moore",
"Appalachian State",
"Football",
"2014"
],
[
"Jerry West",
"West Virginia",
"Basketball",
"2009"
],
[
"Jim Burch",
"-",
"Special Contributor",
"2012"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Southern Conference Hall of Fame, located in Spartanburg, South Carolina, USA, is a hall of fame devoted to former Southern Conference student-athletes, coaches, and administrators. The Hall of Fame, with an inaugural class of 10, was established in 2009. The second class for 2010 included seven former conference greats.",
"section_text": "As of 2016 , the Hall of Fame has 38 members .",
"section_title": "Members",
"title": "Southern Conference Hall of Fame",
"uid": "Southern_Conference_Hall_of_Fame_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Conference_Hall_of_Fame"
} | 6,042 |
6043 | Wisconsin_Public_Radio_1 | [
[
"Location",
"Frequency",
"Call sign"
],
[
"Brule ( Superior )",
"89.9 FM",
"WHSA"
],
[
"Eau Claire",
"89.7 FM",
"WUEC"
],
[
"Elkhorn",
"101.7 FM",
"W269BV"
],
[
"Green Bay",
"89.3 FM",
"WPNE"
],
[
"Lake Geneva",
"103.3 FM",
"W277BM"
],
[
"Kenosha",
"91.1 FM",
"WGTD"
],
[
"La Crosse",
"88.9 FM",
"WLSU"
],
[
"Madison",
"88.7 FM",
"WERN"
],
[
"Menomonie",
"90.7 FM",
"WVSS"
],
[
"Sister Bay",
"89.7 FM",
"WHND"
],
[
"Superior",
"88.5 FM",
"WSSU"
],
[
"Washburn",
"104.7 FM",
"WHWA"
],
[
"Wausau",
"90.9 FM",
"WHRM"
]
] | {
"intro": "Wisconsin Public Radio is a network of 34 public radio stations in the state of Wisconsin. WPR's network is divided into two distinct analog services, the Ideas Network and the NPR News and Classical Network, as well as the HD2 Classical Service, a digital-only, full-time classical music service.",
"section_text": "The NPR News and Classical Network primarily broadcasts classical music , , while serving as the network 's outlet for national NPR and other public radio programming to complement the local Ideas Network schedules . With NPR 's increasing news-heavy direction though , the classical music that makes up the network has been reduced to non-prime periods on the network , with NPR 's programming airing in morning rush and afternoon drive , along with the evening . Music is programmed locally during daytime hours , with network programming from Classical 24 being carried in late evenings and overnight . These programs include NPR 's Morning Edition , All Things Considered , Fresh Air and Weekend Edition , as well as APM 's Marketplace ( it also carries Morning Marketplace during Morning Edition ) , the BBC World Service 's Newshour , along with Live from Here . The network also carries weekend jazz , folk and world music programming - including Higher Ground , hosted by Dr. Jonathan Overby on Saturday nights ( this program is also heard on WPR 's Milwaukee-based Ideas Network Station WHAD ) . Other forms of music such as blues , new-age , and Native American music can be heard regionally . A few Ideas Network stations in areas not served by this network carry the above programs in place of the master Ideas Network schedule . The flagship station of the NPR News and Classical Network is WERN in Madison .",
"section_title": "NPR News and Classical Network",
"title": "Wisconsin Public Radio",
"uid": "Wisconsin_Public_Radio_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisconsin_Public_Radio"
} | 6,043 |
6044 | List_of_craters_on_Mercury_13 | [
[
"Crater",
"Diameter ( km )",
"Approval Year",
"Eponym",
"Ref"
],
[
"Nabokov",
"166",
"2012",
"Vladimir Nabokov , Russian and American writer",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Namatjira",
"34",
"2015",
"Albert Namatjira , Australian Aboriginal artist",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Nampeyo",
"49",
"1976",
"Nampeyo , Hopi potter",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Navoi",
"69",
"2008",
"Ali-Shir Nava ' i , Uzbek poet",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Nāwahī",
"38",
"2008",
"Joseph Nāwahī , Hawaiian painter",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Neruda",
"112",
"2008",
"Pablo Neruda , Chilean poet",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Nervo",
"66",
"1979",
"Amado Nervo , Mexican poet",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Neumann",
"122",
"1976",
"Johann Balthasar Neumann , German architect",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Nizāmī",
"77",
"1979",
"Nizami , Persian poet",
"WGPSN"
],
[
"Nureyev",
"16",
"2012",
"Rudolf Nureyev , Soviet and British ballet dancer",
"WGPSN"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of named craters on Mercury, the innermost planet of the Solar System (for other features, see list of geological features on Mercury). Most Mercurian craters are named after famous writers, artists and composers. According to the rules by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature, all new craters must be named after an artist that was famous for more than fifty years, and dead for more than three years, before the date they are named. Craters larger than 250 km in diameter are referred to as basins (also see § Terminology). As of 2019, there are 401 named Mercurian craters, a small fraction of the total number of named Solar System craters, most of which are lunar, Martian and Venerian craters. [a]\n Other, non-planetary bodies with numerous named craters include Callisto (141), Ganymede (131), Rhea (128), Vesta (90), Ceres (90), Dione (73), Iapetus (58), Enceladus (53), Tethys (50) and Europa (41). For a full list, see List of craters in the Solar System.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "N",
"title": "List of craters on Mercury",
"uid": "List_of_craters_on_Mercury_13",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_craters_on_Mercury"
} | 6,044 |
6045 | Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_10)_2 | [
[
"Dance",
"Highest scored dancer ( s )",
"Highest score",
"Lowest scored dancer ( s )",
"Lowest score"
],
[
"Cha-cha-cha",
"Nicole Scherzinger",
"29",
"Buzz Aldrin",
"14"
],
[
"Viennese Waltz",
"Evan Lysacek",
"28",
"Kate Gosselin",
"16"
],
[
"Jive",
"Nicole Scherzinger",
"30",
"Kate Gosselin",
"15"
],
[
"Foxtrot",
"Evan Lysacek Nicole Scherzinger",
"29",
"Buzz Aldrin",
"12"
],
[
"Paso doble",
"Evan Lysacek Nicole Scherzinger",
"30",
"Kate Gosselin",
"15"
],
[
"Waltz",
"Evan Lysacek Chad Ochocinco Nicole Scherzinger",
"27",
"Buzz Aldrin",
"13"
],
[
"Quickstep",
"Evan Lysacek",
"28",
"Chad Ochocinco",
"18"
],
[
"Rumba",
"Nicole Scherzinger",
"28",
"Aiden Turner",
"15"
],
[
"Tango",
"Nicole Scherzinger",
"29",
"Kate Gosselin",
"14"
],
[
"Samba",
"Erin Andrews",
"29",
"Evan Lysacek Jake Pavelka",
"21"
],
[
"Argentine tango",
"Evan Lysacek Nicole Scherzinger",
"30",
"Niecy Nash",
"21"
],
[
"Freestyle",
"Nicole Scherzinger",
"27",
"Evan Lysacek",
"24"
]
] | {
"intro": "Season ten of Dancing with the Stars premiered on March 22, 2010. There was not an elimination the first week of competition. The first elimination took place on March 30. Singer Nicole Scherzinger won the competition. Samantha Harris did not return as co-host for this season, due to her expanded correspondent duties on The Insider and Entertainment Tonight. On March 8, 2010, Tom Bergeron announced on Good Morning America that his new co-host is season seven champion Brooke Burke. Len Goodman, Bruno Tonioli, and Carrie Ann Inaba continued as the judges this season. Season ten had 11 contestants. Damian Whitewood, from the Broadway dance revue Burn the Floor, joined the list of professionals this season. Ashly DelGrosso Costa, whose last season as a pro was season three, returned, and Edyta Śliwińska continued as the longest tenured professional on the show, having appeared on the first ten seasons. This is the second season since season 5 that none of the couples scored a perfect 30 in the first night of the finals, and so far the first and only season where none of the couples got a 10 in the freestyle dances. This season, the Results Show was moved to 8 pm on Tuesdays instead of the usual 9 pm slot.",
"section_text": "The best and worst performances in each dance according to the judges ' 30-point scale are as follows :",
"section_title": "Highest and lowest scoring performances",
"title": "Dancing with the Stars (American season 10)",
"uid": "Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_10)_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_with_the_Stars_(American_season_10)"
} | 6,045 |
6046 | List_of_film_festivals_in_North_and_Central_America_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Est",
"City",
"State/Prov",
"Notes",
"Website"
],
[
"100 Words Film Festival",
"2014",
"Charlotte",
"North Carolina",
"Celebrating concise storytelling , each film must contain exactly 100 spoken words . Held annually in November",
"100wordsfilmfestival.com"
],
[
"168 Film Festival",
"2003",
"Los Angeles",
"California",
"Speed filmmaking competition and festival . Entries accepted from anywhere in the world . Held annually in April",
"168project.com"
],
[
"Action On Film International Film Festival",
"2005",
"Monrovia",
"California",
"Started as part of the World Martial Arts Trade Show and International Championships",
"actiononfilmfest.com"
],
[
"Anchorage International Film Festival",
"2001",
"Anchorage",
"Alaska",
"Largest film festival in the state of Alaska",
"anchoragefilmfestival.org"
],
[
"Ann Arbor Film Festival",
"1961",
"Ann Arbor",
"Michigan",
"Film festival showcasing experimental and independent film in North America . Held annually in late March",
"aafilmfest.org"
],
[
"Arlington International Film Festival",
"2010",
"Arlington",
"Massachusetts",
"The festival focuses on Multicultural awareness and stresses also the importance of the artistic and educational value of films from all around the world",
"aiffest.org"
],
[
"Asian World Film Festival",
"2015",
"Los Angeles",
"California",
"International ; held annually in October-November",
"asianworldfilmfest.org"
],
[
"Bel Air Film Festival",
"2008",
"Los Angeles",
"California",
"An international festival held annually in November",
"belairfilmfestival.com"
],
[
"Beloit International Film Festival",
"2006",
"Beloit",
"Wisconsin",
"Annual 10-day film festival in late February . Feature length narrative & documentary films and shorts",
"beloitfilmfestival.org"
],
[
"Bentonville Film Festival",
"2015",
"Bentonville",
"Arkansas",
"Held annually in May and focused on diversity in film , specifically women and under represented minority filmmakers",
"bentonvillefilmfestival.com"
],
[
"Berlin & Beyond Film Festival",
"1996",
"San Francisco",
"California",
"German-language film festival outside of Europe , held annually in January",
"berlinbeyond.com"
],
[
"Big Bear Lake International Film Festival",
"2000",
"Big Bear Lake",
"California",
"Committed to presenting emerging talents of independent filmmakers and screenwriters , held annually in September",
"bigbearlakefilmfestival.com"
],
[
"Boston Film Festival",
"1984",
"Boston",
"Massachusetts",
"Annually showcasing feature films , documentaries and shorts in September",
"bostonfilmfestival.org"
],
[
"Boulder International Film Festival",
"2004",
"Boulder",
"Colorado",
"",
"biff1.com"
],
[
"BronzeLens Film Festival",
"2009",
"Atlanta",
"Georgia",
"Annual film festival in late August designed to promote Atlanta as the new film mecca for people of color , to showcase films and to provide networking opportunities that will develop the next generation of filmmakers",
"bronzelens.com"
],
[
"Burbank International Film Festival",
"2009",
"Burbank",
"California",
"",
"burbankfilmfest.org/"
],
[
"CAAMFest",
"2012",
"San Francisco",
"California",
"The nations largest showcase for new Asian American and Asian films",
"caamedia.org"
],
[
"Cape Cod International Film Festival",
"2014",
"Chatham",
"Massachusetts",
"Annual high-curation-standard global boutique festival , early-mid October on Cape Cod",
"cciff.org"
],
[
"Capital City Film Festival",
"2011",
"Lansing",
"Michigan",
"Celebrates and promotes filmmakers with an emphasis on Michigan-made , homegrown talent . A four-day festival taking place in venues across Lansing",
"capitalcityfilmfest.com"
],
[
"The Capitol Hill Film Classic",
"2018",
"Washington",
"District of Columbia",
"The only bracket style knockout competition for short film in the USA",
"www.capitolhillfilm.com"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of film festivals that take place (or took place) in North America (Canada, United States and Mexico).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Film festivals -- International festivals",
"title": "List of film festivals in North and Central America",
"uid": "List_of_film_festivals_in_North_and_Central_America_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_film_festivals_in_North_and_Central_America"
} | 6,046 |
6047 | List_of_Alberta_provincial_highways_6 | [
[
"Number",
"Length ( km )",
"Length ( mi )",
"Connecting Highway",
"Destination"
],
[
"UAR 55",
"1.703",
"1.058",
"Highway 56",
"Big Valley"
],
[
"UAR 56",
"1.703",
"1.058",
"Highway 45",
"Dewberry"
],
[
"UAR 57",
"1.703",
"1.058",
"Highway 45",
"Clandonald"
],
[
"UAR 68",
"0.763",
"0.474",
"Highway 43",
"Rochfort Bridge"
],
[
"UAR 71",
"0.557",
"0.346",
"Highway 21",
"Huxley"
],
[
"UAR 73",
"1.419",
"0.882",
"Highway 44",
"Pibroch"
],
[
"UAR 74",
"0.805",
"0.500",
"Highway 28",
"Waskatenau"
],
[
"UAR 79",
"1.374",
"0.854",
"Highway 2",
"Vimy"
],
[
"UAR 81",
"1.626",
"1.010",
"Highway 44",
"Jarvie"
],
[
"UAR 82",
"3.248",
"2.018",
"Highway 44",
"Flatbush"
],
[
"UAR 83",
"3.248",
"2.018",
"Highway 44",
"Fawcett"
],
[
"UAR 84",
"0.938",
"0.583",
"Highway 43",
"Onoway"
],
[
"UAR 86",
"0.382",
"0.237",
"Highway 13",
"Hughenden"
],
[
"UAR 87",
"2.955",
"1.836",
"Highway 13",
"Metiskow"
],
[
"UAR 88",
"0.350",
"0.217",
"Highway 12",
"Tees"
],
[
"UAR 89",
"3.267",
"2.030",
"Highway 21",
"Elnora"
],
[
"UAR 90",
"3.634",
"2.258",
"Highway 21",
"Lousana"
],
[
"UAR 96",
"3.296",
"2.048",
"Highway 28",
"Bonnyville Beach"
],
[
"UAR 104",
"0.825",
"0.513",
"Highway 28",
"Warspite"
],
[
"UAR 108",
"10.527",
"6.541",
"Highway 13",
"Cadogan"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Canadian province of Alberta has provincial highway network of nearly 31,000 kilometres (19,000 mi) as of 2009, of which 24,851 kilometres (15,442 mi) were paved. All of Alberta's provincial highways are maintained by Alberta Transportation (AT), a department of the Government of Alberta. The network includes two distinct series of numbered highways:",
"section_text": "An urban approach road ( UAR ) is an access route managed by Alberta Transportation that connects urbanized areas to designated provincial highways . [ 82 ] The following is a list of all urban approach roads in Alberta as of March 2017 . [ 13 ] [ 83 ]",
"section_title": "Urban approach roads",
"title": "List of Alberta provincial highways",
"uid": "List_of_Alberta_provincial_highways_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Alberta_provincial_highways"
} | 6,047 |
6048 | Conservative_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_2 | [
[
"Riding",
"Candidate 's Name",
"Notes",
"Gender",
"Residence",
"Occupation"
],
[
"Cape Breton - Canso",
"Clarence Derrick Kennedy",
"",
"M",
"",
""
],
[
"Central Nova",
"Peter MacKay",
"Incumbent Member of Parliament",
"M",
"New Glasgow",
"Lawyer"
],
[
"Cumberland - Colchester - Musquodoboit Valley",
"Scott Armstrong",
"Incumbent Member of Parliament",
"M",
"Truro",
"School principal"
],
[
"Dartmouth - Cole Harbour",
"Wanda Webber",
"2008 Candidate",
"F",
"Dartmouth",
"Teacher"
],
[
"Halifax",
"George Nikolaou",
"",
"M",
"",
""
],
[
"Halifax West",
"Bruce Pretty",
"",
"M",
"Prospect",
"Ophthalmologist"
],
[
"Kings - Hants",
"David Morse",
"Former provincial cabinet minister",
"M",
"New Minas",
""
],
[
"Sackville - Eastern Shore",
"Adam Mimnagh",
"",
"M",
"Fall River",
"Small Business Owner"
],
[
"South Shore - St. Margaret 's",
"Gerald Keddy",
"Incumbent Member of Parliament",
"M",
"New Ross",
"Parliamentarian"
],
[
"Sydney - Victoria",
"Cecil Clarke",
"Former provincial cabinet minister",
"M",
"",
""
],
[
"West Nova",
"Greg Kerr",
"Incumbent Member of Parliament",
"M",
"Granville Ferry",
"Retired Teacher"
]
] | {
"intro": "Candidates representing the Conservative Party took part in the 2011 Canadian federal election. 166 of them won their seat, giving the party an overall majority in the House of Commons.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Nova Scotia - 11 seats",
"title": "Conservative Party of Canada candidates in the 2011 Canadian federal election",
"uid": "Conservative_Party_of_Canada_candidates,_2011_Canadian_federal_election_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Party_of_Canada_candidates_in_the_2011_Canadian_federal_election"
} | 6,048 |
6049 | United_States_Medical_Center_for_Federal_Prisoners_2 | [
[
"Inmate Name",
"Register Number",
"Status",
"Details"
],
[
"Antonio Corallo",
"08341-016",
"Died in 2000",
"Mobster"
],
[
"Clayton Fountain",
"89129-132",
"Died in 2004 while serving a life sentence",
"Member of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang ; murdered Correction Officer Robert Hoffman at the United States Penitentiary , Marion in 1983 ; held in solitary confinement until his death . The incident resulted in a 23-year lockdown at Marion , and contributed to the creation of the federal supermax prison , Florence ADX"
],
[
"John Gotti",
"18261-053",
"Died in 2002",
"John The Teflon Don Gotti was head of New York 's Gambino crime family . One of the most powerful and dangerous crime bosses in the world , Gotti was charged with five counts of murder , conspiracy to commit murder , loansharking , illegal gambling , obstruction of justice , bribery and tax evasion . Convicted on all counts , he was sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole and a $ 250,000 fine"
],
[
"Howard Krantz",
"",
"Died in 2000",
"New York City Attorney ; convicted in 1996 of participation in murder-for-hire conspiracy . Sentenced to life imprisonment plus five years without possibility of parole"
],
[
"Hemant Lakhani",
"25753-050",
"Died in 2013 while serving a 47-year sentence",
"British businessman ; convicted in 2005 of providing material support for terrorism and other charges for attempting to sell shoulder-fired missiles to what he thought was a terrorist group intent on shooting down US airliners"
],
[
"Gennaro Langella",
"10405-054",
"Died in 2013",
"Mobster"
],
[
"Anthony Salerno",
"12812-054",
"Died in 1992",
"Mobster"
],
[
"Garrett Brock Trapnell",
"72021-158",
"Died in 1993 while serving a life sentence ; served the majority of his sentence at USP Marion",
"Serial bank robber ; convicted in 1973 of aircraft hijacking and in 1974 of armed robbery and conspiracy to commit kidnapping"
],
[
"Robert Spangler",
"29442-013",
"Died of cancer on August 5 , 2001 while serving life sentence",
"Serial Killer who murder his first wife and two children in 1978 in Littleton , Colorado and his third wife at the Grand Canyon in 1993 . Pleaded guilty in October 2000 to murder on federal land of third wife . Sentenced to life imprisonment"
],
[
"David Waters",
"",
"Died in 2003 from lung cancer",
"Known for his role in the kidnapping , robbery and murder of the famed atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair , her son Jon Garth and granddaughter Robyn in 1995"
],
[
"Robert Franklin Stroud",
"",
"Died November 21 , 1963",
"Birdman of Alcatraz"
]
] | {
"intro": "The United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners (MCFP Springfield) is a United States federal prison in Springfield, Missouri which provides medical, mental health, and dental services to male offenders. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Notable inmates -- Died at MCFP Springfield",
"title": "United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners",
"uid": "United_States_Medical_Center_for_Federal_Prisoners_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Medical_Center_for_Federal_Prisoners"
} | 6,049 |
6050 | Itaru_Ishida_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Event type",
"Location",
"Format",
"Date",
"Rank"
],
[
"1996-97",
"Nationals",
"Tokyo",
"Special",
"5-6 July 1997",
"7"
],
[
"1997-98",
"Nationals",
"Tokyo",
"Special",
"4-5 July 1998",
"2"
],
[
"1997-98",
"APAC Region Championship",
"Tokyo",
"Special",
"26-27 July 1998",
"3"
],
[
"1998-99",
"Grand Prix",
"Manila",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"12-13 December 1998",
"8"
],
[
"1998-99",
"Grand Prix",
"Taipei",
"Limited",
"24-25 April 1999",
"4"
],
[
"1999-00",
"Grand Prix",
"Tohoku",
"Limited",
"11-12 September 1999",
"4"
],
[
"2000-01",
"Masters",
"Tokyo",
"Team Limited",
"16-18 March 2001",
"2"
],
[
"2000-01",
"Grand Prix",
"Taipei",
"Team Limited",
"21-22 July 2001",
"2"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Grand Prix",
"Kobe",
"Block Constructed",
"18-19 August 2001",
"1"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Grand Prix",
"Sendai",
"Extended",
"15-16 December 2001",
"5"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Grand Prix",
"Fukuoka",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"16-17 February 2002",
"3"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Masters",
"Osaka",
"Team Limited",
"15-17 March 2002",
"2"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Grand Prix",
"Sapporo",
"Block Constructed",
"24-25 August 2002",
"4"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Masters",
"Venice",
"Team Limited",
"21-23 March 2003",
"7"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Grand Prix",
"Kyoto",
"Sealed and Booster Draft",
"29-30 March 2003",
"5"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Grand Prix",
"Bangkok",
"Standard",
"12-13 July 2003",
"2"
],
[
"2003-04",
"Grand Prix",
"Sydney",
"Rochester Draft",
"4-5 October 2003",
"4"
],
[
"2003-04",
"Grand Prix",
"Okayama",
"Extended",
"24-25 January 2004",
"2"
],
[
"2003-04",
"Pro Tour",
"Seattle",
"Team Limited",
"9-11 July 2004",
"2"
],
[
"2005",
"Grand Prix",
"Osaka",
"Team Limited",
"8-9 January 2005",
"2"
]
] | {
"intro": "Itaru Ishida (石田格) was a Japanese Magic: The Gathering player. The bulk of his success was on the Grand Prix circuit, where he reached the top eight seventeen times. In addition to his Grand Prix success, Ishida had success in the teams format, with second-place finishes at Pro Tour Seattle 2004 and at the Master Series in Tokyo (2001) and Osaka (2002). He died on January 13, 2013.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Achievements",
"title": "Itaru Ishida",
"uid": "Itaru_Ishida_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itaru_Ishida"
} | 6,050 |
6051 | List_of_Miss_Teen_USA_titleholders_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Miss Teen USA",
"State Represented",
"Hometown",
"Age",
"Notes"
],
[
"1983",
"Ruth Zakarian",
"New York",
"Amsterdam",
"17",
"She competed as Miss Teen USA in the Miss USA pageant in 1984 alongside Cherise Haugen of Illinois who had held the Miss Teen USA title that year . ( a short-lived tradition gave Miss Teen USA 's in the early 1980s this opportunity ) . She was unplaced"
],
[
"1984",
"Cherise Haugen",
"Illinois",
"Sleepy Hollow",
"17",
"She competed as Miss Teen USA in the Miss USA pageant in 1984 alongside Ruth Zakarian of New York who had also previously held the Miss Teen USA title , in 1983 . ( a short-lived tradition gave Miss Teen USA 's in the early 1980s this opportunity ) . She was unplaced"
],
[
"1985",
"Kelly Ann Hu",
"Hawaii",
"Honolulu",
"16",
"First Asian American ( and as well as the first multiracial ) to win the Miss Teen USA title . Later Miss Hawaii USA 1993 and top 6 at Miss USA 1993 Actress has starred in moves such as Cassandra in The Scorpion King and Lady Deathstrike in X2 : X-Men United"
],
[
"1986",
"Allison Elaine Brown",
"Oklahoma",
"Edmond",
"17",
"She competed as Miss Teen USA in the Miss USA pageant in 1987 ( a short-lived tradition gave Miss Teen USA 's in the early 1980s this opportunity ) . She was unplaced"
],
[
"1987",
"Kristi Lynn Addis",
"Mississippi",
"Holcomb",
"16",
""
],
[
"1988",
"Mindy Duncan",
"Oregon",
"Newberg",
"16",
""
],
[
"1989",
"Brandi Dawn Sherwood",
"Idaho",
"Idaho Falls",
"18",
"Later Miss Idaho USA 1997 and 1st runner-up at Miss USA 1997 , assumed the Miss USA title after Brook Lee won Miss Universe"
],
[
"1990",
"Bridgette Leann Wilson",
"Oregon",
"Gold Beach",
"16",
"Actress ; recipient of the Distinguished Achievement Award in 1998 ; married to tennis player Pete Sampras"
],
[
"1991",
"Janel Bishop",
"New Hampshire",
"Manchester",
"17",
""
],
[
"1992",
"Jamie Solinger",
"Iowa",
"Altoona",
"17",
"Later Miss Iowa USA 1998"
],
[
"1993",
"Charlotte Lopez",
"Vermont",
"Dorset",
"16",
"First Hispanic American to win the Miss USA title"
],
[
"1994",
"Shauna Gambill",
"California",
"Acton",
"17",
"Later Miss California USA 1998 , 1st runner-up at Miss USA 1998 and top 10 at Miss World 1998"
],
[
"1995",
"Keylee Sue Sanders",
"Kansas",
"Louisburg",
"18",
"She was co-director of the Miss California USA and Miss California Teen USA pageants from 2006 to 2007 along with Keith Lewis of K2 Productions"
],
[
"1996",
"Christie Lee Woods",
"Texas",
"Huntsville",
"18",
"Two-time The Amazing Race contestant"
],
[
"1997",
"Shelly Moore",
"Tennessee",
"Knoxville",
"18",
""
],
[
"1998",
"Vanessa Joy Minnillo",
"South Carolina",
"Charleston",
"17",
"Born in the Philippines . Actress and presenter is known for hosting Total Request Live on MTV from 2003-2007 as well as her past reporting as a New York-based correspondent for Entertainment Tonight ; married to singer-actor and TV personality Nick Lachey"
],
[
"1999",
"Ashley Coleman",
"Delaware",
"Camden",
"17",
"First African American to win the Miss Teen USA title , appeared briefly on The Price Is Right as a Barkers Beauty"
],
[
"2000",
"Jillian Parry",
"Pennsylvania",
"Newtown",
"18",
""
],
[
"2001",
"Marissa Whitley",
"Missouri",
"Springfield",
"18",
""
],
[
"2002",
"Vanessa Marie Semrow",
"Wisconsin",
"Rhinelander",
"17",
""
]
] | {
"intro": "Miss Teen USA is a beauty pageant run by the Miss Universe Organization for girls aged 14-19. Unlike its sister pageants Miss Universe and Miss USA, which are broadcast on Fox, this pageant is webcast on the Miss Teen USA website and simulcast on mobile devices and video game consoles. The pageant was first held in 1983 and has been broadcast live on CBS until 2002 and then on NBC from 2003-2007. In March 2007, it was announced that the broadcast of the Miss Teen USA pageant on NBC had not been renewed, and that Miss Teen USA 2007 would be the final televised event. From 2008-15, the pageant was held at the Atlantis Paradise Island Resort, located in Nassau, Bahamas. Notable pageant winners include actresses Kelly Hu (1985, Hawaii), Bridgette Wilson (1990, Oregon), Charlotte Lopez-Ayanna (1993, Vermont), Vanessa Minnillo (1998, South Carolina) and Shelley Hennig (2004, Louisiana). The current titleholder is Kaliegh Garris of Connecticut who was crowned on April 28, 2019 at Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nevada.",
"section_text": "This is a list of delegates who have won the Miss Teen USA beauty pageant .",
"section_title": "Titleholders",
"title": "Miss Teen USA",
"uid": "List_of_Miss_Teen_USA_titleholders_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Teen_USA"
} | 6,051 |
6052 | List_of_hoards_in_Britain_4 | [
[
"Hoard",
"Date",
"Place of discovery",
"Year of discovery",
"Current Location",
"Contents"
],
[
"Abergavenny Hoard",
"late 11th century",
"Abergavenny Monmouthshire 51°49′26″N 3°01′01″W / 51.824°N 3.017°W / 51.824 ; -3.017 ( Abergavenny Hoard )",
"2002",
"National Museum Cardiff",
"199 silver pennies of Edward the Confessor and William the Conqueror"
],
[
"Baschurch Hoard",
"mid 13th century",
"Baschurch Shropshire 52°47′31″N 2°51′14″W / 52.792°N 2.854°W / 52.792 ; -2.854 ( Baschurch Hoard )",
"2007-2008",
"Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery",
"191 long cross pennies of Henry III of England , 1 penny of Alexander III of Scotland , and some coin fragments"
],
[
"Beverley Hoard",
"mid 13th century",
"Beverley East Yorkshire 53°50′42″N 0°25′37″W / 53.845°N 0.427°W / 53.845 ; -0.427 ( Beverley Hoard ( Med ) )",
"2000",
"British Museum , London",
"448 short cross pennies 27 cut half pennies"
],
[
"Chesterton Lane Hoard",
"mid 14th century",
"Chesterton Lane , Cambridge Cambridgeshire 52°12′40″N 0°06′54″E / 52.211°N 0.115°E / 52.211 ; 0.115 ( Chesterton Lane Hoard )",
"2000",
"Fitzwilliam Museum , Cambridge",
"9 gold coins 1806 silver coins"
],
[
"Chesterton Lane Hoard",
"mid 14th century",
"Chesterton Lane , Cambridge Cambridgeshire 52°12′40″N 0°06′54″E / 52.211°N 0.115°E / 52.211 ; 0.115 ( Chesterton Lane Hoard )",
"2000",
"Fitzwilliam Museum , Cambridge",
"9 gold coins 1806 silver coins"
],
[
"Chew Valley Hoard",
"mid 11th century",
"Chew Valley Somerset 51°21′00″N 2°36′00″W / 51.350°N 2.600°W / 51.350 ; -2.600 ( Chew Valley Hoard )",
"2019",
"",
"2,528 silver coins , including 1,236 coins of Harold II and 1,310 coins of William I"
],
[
"Colchester Hoard ( 1902 )",
"mid 13th century",
"High Street , Colchester Essex 51°53′24″N 0°54′11″E / 51.890°N 0.903°E / 51.890 ; 0.903 ( Colchester Hoard )",
"1902",
"British Museum , London",
"11,000 - 12,000 silver pennies in a lead canister"
],
[
"Colchester Hoard ( 1969 )",
"late 13th century",
"High Street , Colchester Essex 51°53′24″N 0°54′11″E / 51.890°N 0.903°E / 51.890 ; 0.903 ( Colchester Hoard )",
"1969",
"British Museum , London",
"over 14,000 silver pennies of Henry III in a lead canister"
],
[
"Cwm Nant Col Hoard",
"early 16th century",
"near Llanbedr Gwynedd 52°49′12″N 4°06′04″W / 52.820°N 4.101°W / 52.820 ; -4.101 ( Cwm Nant Col Hoard )",
"1918",
"National Museum Cardiff",
"1 late 13th or early 14th century copper alloy aquamanile in the shape of a stag , 1 5th century copper alloy ewer , 1 copper alloy tray , 1 bronze cauldron , 2 bronze skillets , 1 woodman 's iron axe , and iron firedog fragments"
],
[
"Fauld Hoard",
"early 15th century",
"Fauld , Tutbury Staffordshire 52°50′N 1°44′W / 52.84°N 1.73°W / 52.84 ; -1.73 ( Fauld Hoard )",
"2000",
"Potteries Museum & Art Gallery , Stoke-on-Trent",
"114 silver groats"
],
[
"Fishpool Hoard",
"mid 15th century",
"Ravenshead Nottinghamshire 53°05′N 1°10′W / 53.08°N 1.17°W / 53.08 ; -1.17 ( Fishpool Hoard )",
"1966",
"British Museum , London",
"1,237 gold coins 8 pieces of jewellery 2 lengths of gold chain"
],
[
"Fillongley Hoard",
"early 13th century",
"Fillongley Warwickshire 52°28′55″N 1°35′17″W / 52.482°N 1.588°W / 52.482 ; -1.588 ( Fillongley Hoard )",
"1997",
"Warwickshire Museum , Warwick",
"2 silver brooches silver finger ring 127 short-cross pennies"
],
[
"Gayton Hoard",
"late 12th century",
"Gayton Northamptonshire 52°10′12″N 0°59′35″W / 52.170°N 0.993°W / 52.170 ; -0.993 ( Gayton Hoard )",
"1998-1999",
"Ashmolean Museum , Oxford",
"308 silver pennies 7 fragments"
],
[
"Glenluce Hoard",
"late 15th century",
"Glenluce sand-dunes Wigtownshire 54°51′00″N 4°52′59″W / 54.850°N 4.883°W / 54.850 ; -4.883 ( Glenluce Hoard )",
"1956",
"",
"2 English silver coins 10 Scottish silver coins 99 Scottish billon coins 1 Scottish copper farthing"
],
[
"Gorefield Hoard",
"early 14th century",
"Gorefield Cambridgeshire 52°40′59″N 0°05′31″E / 52.683°N 0.092°E / 52.683 ; 0.092 ( Gorefield Hoard )",
"1998",
"British Museum , London Wisbech & Fenland Museum , Fitzwilliam Museum , Cambridge",
"1,084 silver pennies , halfpennies and farthings"
],
[
"Llanddona Hoard",
"early 14th century",
"Llanddona Anglesey 53°17′38″N 4°08′20″W / 53.294°N 4.139°W / 53.294 ; -4.139 ( Llanddona Hoard )",
"1999 , 2005-2006",
"returned to finder",
"970 silver pennies"
],
[
"Piddletrenthide Hoard ( 2008 )",
"1400 - 1412",
"Piddletrenthide , Dorset 50°48′00″N 2°25′30″W / 50.800°N 2.425°W / 50.800 ; -2.425 ( Piddletrenthide Hoard ( 2008 ) )",
"2008",
"",
"293 Medieval silver coins , comprising 272 complete pennies , 2 broken pennies , 14 half groats , and 4 groats , found in a fragmentary pottery vessel"
],
[
"Reigate Hoard",
"mid 15th century",
"Reigate Surrey 51°13′48″N 0°11′17″W / 51.230°N 0.188°W / 51.230 ; -0.188 ( Reigate Hoard )",
"1990",
"dispersed",
"135 gold nobles , half nobles and quarters 6,566 silver groats"
],
[
"Rhoneston Hoard",
"late 15th century",
"Rhoneston , near Dumfries Dumfriesshire 55°09′14″N 3°42′29″W / 55.154°N 3.708°W / 55.154 ; -3.708 ( Rhoneston Hoard )",
"1961",
"",
"7 English silver coins 6 Scottish silver coins 70 Scottish billon coins"
],
[
"Roslin Hoard",
"late 13th/early 14th century",
"Roslin Midlothian",
"spring equinox day of 2019",
"National Museums of Scotland , Edinburgh",
"A total of about 250 coins and their fragments as well as the vessel in which they were hidden have been found . At the moment protection and conservation of the whole is in progress . Over 200 long cross complete silver pennies mostly English of Edward I , number of Irish mint and Scottish from the reign of Alexander III found in a fragmentary pottery vessel"
]
] | {
"intro": "The list of hoards in Britain comprises significant archaeological hoards of coins, jewellery, precious and scrap metal objects and other valuable items discovered in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales). It includes both hoards that were buried with the intention of retrieval at a later date (personal hoards, founder's hoards, merchant's hoards, and hoards of loot), and also hoards of votive offerings which were not intended to be recovered at a later date, but excludes grave goods and single items found in isolation. The list is subdivided into sections according to archaeological and historical periods.",
"section_text": "Map this section 's coordinates using : OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as : KML · GPX Hoards dating to the later medieval period , from 1066 to about 1500 , mostly comprise silver pennies , in some cases amounting to many thousands of coins , although the Fishpool Hoard contains over a thousand gold coins .",
"section_title": "Later Medieval hoards",
"title": "List of hoards in Great Britain",
"uid": "List_of_hoards_in_Britain_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hoards_in_Great_Britain"
} | 6,052 |
6053 | Moody_Radio_0 | [
[
"Call sign",
"Frequency",
"City of license",
"State",
"FCC info"
],
[
"WMBV",
"91.9 FM",
"Dixons Mills",
"Alabama",
"FCC"
],
[
"WRNF",
"89.5 FM",
"Selma",
"Alabama",
"FCC"
],
[
"WMFT",
"88.9 FM",
"Tuscaloosa",
"Alabama",
"FCC"
],
[
"K204CE",
"88.7 FM",
"Clifton",
"Arizona",
"FCC"
],
[
"K216FX",
"91.1 FM",
"Mena",
"Arkansas",
"FCC"
],
[
"WRMB",
"89.3 FM",
"Boynton Beach",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"WHGN",
"91.9 FM",
"Crystal River",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"W263AH",
"100.5 FM",
"Fort Pierce",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"WKES",
"91.1 FM",
"Lakeland",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"WSOR",
"90.9 FM",
"Naples",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"W218BB",
"91.5 FM",
"Okeechobee",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"WKZM",
"104.3 FM",
"Sarasota",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"W212AC",
"90.3 FM",
"Stuart",
"Florida",
"FCC"
],
[
"K220EO",
"91.9 FM",
"Hilo",
"Hawaii",
"FCC"
],
[
"K217FR",
"91.3 FM",
"Bonners Ferry",
"Idaho",
"FCC"
],
[
"K279CN",
"103.7 FM",
"Kamiah",
"Idaho",
"FCC"
],
[
"K265AP",
"100.9 FM",
"Lewiston",
"Idaho",
"FCC"
],
[
"K213BN",
"90.5 FM",
"Orofino",
"Idaho",
"FCC"
],
[
"WMBI",
"1110 AM",
"Chicago",
"Illinois",
"FCC"
],
[
"WMBI-FM",
"90.1 FM",
"Chicago",
"Illinois",
"FCC"
]
] | {
"intro": "Moody Radio is one of the largest Christian radio networks in the United States. Located in downtown Chicago, Moody Radio has 71 owned and operated stations and hundreds of affiliates and outlets that carry all or part of its programming. It is owned by the Moody Bible Institute. The network airs a variety of programming directed primarily toward a Christian audience. The format features local morning drives, teaching and national talk programming, plus specially selected Christian music.",
"section_text": "The following stations are owned and operated by Moody Radio . [ 1 ]",
"section_title": "Owned & operated stations",
"title": "Moody Radio",
"uid": "Moody_Radio_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moody_Radio"
} | 6,053 |
6054 | Sidney_Sussex_College,_Cambridge_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Birth",
"Death",
"Career"
],
[
"Sir Thomas Adams , 1st Baronet",
"1586",
"1667/8",
"Lord Mayor of London"
],
[
"William Ross Ashby",
"1903",
"1972",
"Cybernetics pioneer"
],
[
"Tony Badger",
"1947",
"",
"Paul Mellon Professor of American History at Cambridge , Master of Clare College , Cambridge"
],
[
"Karan Bilimoria , Baron Bilimoria",
"1961",
"",
"Businessman , Chairman of Cobra Beer , Chancellor for the University of Birmingham"
],
[
"Lawrence Booth",
"1975",
"",
"Editor of Wisden Cricketers ' Almanack"
],
[
"Ronald N. Bracewell",
"1921",
"2007",
"Physicist"
],
[
"John Bramhall",
"1594",
"1663",
"Archbishop"
],
[
"Asa Briggs",
"1921",
"2016",
"Historian"
],
[
"Ann Copestake",
"1959",
"",
"Professor of Computational Linguistics , University of Cambridge"
],
[
"Stuart Corbridge",
"1957",
"",
"Vice-Chancellor of Durham University"
],
[
"Oliver Cromwell",
"1599",
"1658",
"Lord Protector"
],
[
"Rebecca Evans",
"1976",
"",
"Politician"
],
[
"Thomas Fuller",
"1608",
"1661",
"Author , churchman , historian"
],
[
"William Du Gard",
"1602",
"1662",
"Printer"
],
[
"Sue Gibson",
"1960",
"",
"Research Chemist , Chair in Chemistry and Director of the Graduate School , Imperial College London"
],
[
"Chris Grayling",
"1962",
"",
"Secretary of State for Transport"
],
[
"Dick Heckstall-Smith",
"1934",
"2004",
"Musician"
],
[
"John Herivel",
"1918",
"2011",
"Bletchley Park cryptanalyst , science historian"
],
[
"Ronald Holmes",
"1913",
"1981",
"Colonial government official"
],
[
"Alex Horne",
"1978",
"",
"Comedian"
]
] | {
"intro": "Sidney Sussex College (referred to informally as Sidney) is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge in England. The college was founded in 1596 under the terms of the will of Frances Sidney, Countess of Sussex (1531-1589) wife of Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex and named after its founder. It was from its inception an avowedly Protestant foundation; some good and godlie moniment for the mainteynance of good learninge. In her will, Lady Sussex left the sum of £5,000 together with some plate to found a new college at Cambridge University to be called the Lady Frances Sidney Sussex College. Her executors Sir John Harington and Henry Grey, 6th Earl of Kent, supervised by Archbishop John Whitgift, founded the college seven years after her death.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "People associated with the college -- List of alumni",
"title": "Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge",
"uid": "Sidney_Sussex_College,_Cambridge_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidney_Sussex_College,_Cambridge"
} | 6,054 |
6055 | List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_sauropodomorph_tracks_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Description"
],
[
"Calcari Grigi di Noriglio Formation",
"Italy",
"Description"
],
[
"Dolomia Principale Formation",
"Italy",
"Description"
],
[
"Durrestein Formation",
"Italy",
"Description"
],
[
"McCoy Brook Formation",
"Canada",
"Description"
],
[
"Moenave Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
],
[
"Montemarcello Formation",
"Italy",
"Description"
],
[
"Portezuelo Formation",
"Argentina",
"Description"
],
[
"Portland Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
],
[
"Redonda Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
],
[
"Rock Point Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
],
[
"Rotzo Formation",
"Italy",
"Description"
],
[
"Sheep Pen Sandstone Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
],
[
"Sloan Canyon Formation",
"USA",
"Description"
]
] | {
"intro": "List of dinosaur-bearing rock formations",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Prosauropods",
"title": "List of stratigraphic units with sauropodomorph tracks",
"uid": "List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_sauropodomorph_tracks_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_sauropodomorph_tracks"
} | 6,055 |
6056 | List_of_Texas_state_symbols_1 | [
[
"Type",
"Symbol",
"Date Designated"
],
[
"Air force",
"Commemorative Air Force",
""
],
[
"Bread",
"Pan de campo",
""
],
[
"Cooking implement",
"Dutch oven",
""
],
[
"Dinosaur",
"Sauroposeidon",
""
],
[
"Dish",
"Chili",
"1977"
],
[
"Domino game",
"Texas 42 , a four-player domino game with bidding and trumps",
""
],
[
"Fiber and fabric",
"Cotton",
"1997"
],
[
"Fish",
"Guadalupe bass ( Micropterus treculii )",
"1989"
],
[
"Folk dance",
"Square dance",
"1991"
],
[
"Fruit",
"Texas red grapefruit",
"1993"
],
[
"Gem",
"Texas blue topaz",
"1969"
],
[
"Gemstone cut",
"Lone Star Cut",
""
],
[
"Grass",
"Sideoats grama ( Bouteloua curtipendula )",
"1971"
],
[
"Insect",
"Monarch butterfly ( Danaus plexippus )",
"1995"
],
[
"Molecule",
"Buckyball or Buckminsterfullerene , C 60",
""
],
[
"Music",
"Western swing",
""
],
[
"Musical instrument",
"Acoustic guitar",
""
],
[
"Nut",
"Native Pecan",
"1919"
],
[
"Pepper ( native )",
"Chiltepin ( Capsicum annuum var . glabriusculum )",
""
],
[
"Pepper ( other )",
"Jalapeño",
"1995"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of symbols of the U.S. state of Texas.",
"section_text": "Texas centennial half dollar commemorative Texas quarter reverse",
"section_title": "Other official designations",
"title": "List of Texas state symbols",
"uid": "List_of_Texas_state_symbols_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Texas_state_symbols"
} | 6,056 |
6057 | 1992_World_Rhythmic_Gymnastics_Championships_5 | [
[
"Place",
"Nation",
"Total"
],
[
"1",
"Russia",
"38.650"
],
[
"2",
"Spain",
"38.550"
],
[
"3",
"North Korea",
"38.550"
],
[
"4",
"Italy",
"38.450"
],
[
"5",
"Ukraine",
"38.400"
],
[
"6",
"China",
"37.900"
],
[
"6",
"Germany",
"37.900"
],
[
"6",
"Greece",
"37.900"
],
[
"9",
"Japan",
"37.850"
],
[
"10",
"France",
"37.800"
],
[
"11",
"Belarus",
"37.700"
],
[
"12",
"Finland",
"37.400"
]
] | {
"intro": "The XVI World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships were held in Brussels, Belgium, on November 20-22, 1992.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Group -- All-Around",
"title": "1992 World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships",
"uid": "1992_World_Rhythmic_Gymnastics_Championships_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1992_World_Rhythmic_Gymnastics_Championships"
} | 6,057 |
6058 | Zuiderduin_Masters_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner ( average in final )",
"Score",
"Runner-Up ( average in final )"
],
[
"1995",
"Raymond van Barneveld",
"4 - 3",
"Richie Burnett"
],
[
"1996",
"Martin Adams",
"4 - 2",
"Mervyn King"
],
[
"2000",
"Martin Adams ( 97.05 )",
"5 - 4",
"Steve Beaton ( 92.70 )"
],
[
"2001",
"Raymond van Barneveld",
"5 - 1",
"Andy Fordham"
],
[
"2002",
"Tony David ( 96.03 )",
"6 - 4",
"Mervyn King ( 95.07 )"
],
[
"2003",
"Raymond van Barneveld ( 94.23 )",
"6 - 1",
"Mervyn King ( 88.05 )"
],
[
"2004",
"Raymond van Barneveld ( 94.17 )",
"5 - 1",
"Ted Hankey ( 81.21 )"
],
[
"2005",
"Mervyn King ( 99.30 )",
"5 - 4",
"Martin Adams ( 99.48 )"
],
[
"2007",
"Gary Anderson ( 100.32 )",
"5 - 4",
"Mark Webster ( 96.45 )"
],
[
"2008",
"Gary Anderson ( 99.21 )",
"5 - 4",
"Scott Waites ( 93.75 )"
],
[
"2009",
"Darryl Fitton ( 93.94 )",
"5 - 2",
"Martin Adams ( 97.00 )"
],
[
"2010",
"Ross Montgomery ( 94.17 )",
"5 - 4",
"Robbie Green ( 93.81 )"
],
[
"2011",
"Scott Waites ( 99.62 )",
"5 - 4",
"Darryl Fitton ( 97.91 )"
],
[
"2012",
"Stephen Bunting ( 97.62 )",
"5 - 0",
"Alan Norris ( 92.67 )"
],
[
"2013",
"James Wilson ( 91.10 )",
"5 - 1",
"Stephen Bunting ( 88.45 )"
],
[
"2014",
"Jamie Hughes ( 96.12 )",
"5 - 0",
"Gary Robson ( 86.22 )"
],
[
"2015",
"Glen Durrant ( 100.83 )",
"5 - 2",
"Martin Adams ( 97.35 )"
],
[
"2016",
"Glen Durrant ( 97.33 )",
"5 - 3",
"Jamie Hughes ( 89.53 )"
],
[
"2017",
"Danny Noppert ( 95.03 )",
"5 - 3",
"Jim Williams ( 86.97 )"
],
[
"2018",
"Glen Durrant ( 100.60 )",
"5 - 3",
"Richard Veenstra ( 92.11 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Finder Darts Masters was a darts tournament held in Egmond aan Zee, Netherlands, sanctioned by the British Darts Organisation and the World Darts Federation, running intermittently under several different names from 1995 to 2018. The tournament was previously known as the Zuiderduin Masters from 2007 to 2014, as the Leendesk Masters in 2005, as the Doeland Grand Masters from 2001 to 2004, as the European Grand Masters in 2000, and as the Dutch Grand Masters in 1995 and 1996. It was held in December and was traditionally the last BDO event held before the annual World Championship. The tournament was an unranked event until 2008, when it was installed as a ranking event, along with the World Championships and the World Masters, following the cancellation of the World Darts Trophy and the International Darts League. The organizers of the event announced in 2019 that that year's event would not take place due to the termination of the sponsorship with Dutch e-commerce company Finder, and the tournament has been discontinued.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Finals -- Men",
"title": "Finder Darts Masters",
"uid": "Zuiderduin_Masters_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finder_Darts_Masters"
} | 6,058 |
6059 | 1995_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_3 | [
[
"Rank",
"Country",
"Team",
"Time"
],
[
"1",
"Romania",
"Cristina Pomacu Anuța Cătună Elena Fidatof",
"3:31:29"
],
[
"2",
"Russia",
"Valentina Yegorova Alla Zhilyayeva Firiya Sultanova-Zhdanova",
"3:33:12"
],
[
"3",
"Spain",
"Ana Isabel Alonso Rocío Ríos Carmen Fuentes",
"3:34:26"
],
[
"4",
"France",
"Zahia Dahmani Nadia Prasad Nicole Lévêque",
"3:38:00"
],
[
"5",
"Italy",
"Maura Viceconte Lucilla Andreucci Ornella Ferrara",
"3:39:40"
],
[
"6",
"Japan",
"Naomi Sakashita Mari Yoshikawa Harue Morishita",
"3:41:51"
],
[
"7",
"Netherlands",
"Anne van Schuppen Gabrielle Vijverberg Marianne van de Linde",
"3:42:04"
],
[
"8",
"Great Britain",
"Cath Mijovic Angie Hulley Vikki McPherson",
"3:42:59"
],
[
"9",
"South Africa",
"Colleen de Reuck Lizianne Holmes Grace de Oliveira",
"3:43:11"
],
[
"10",
"United States",
"Lynn Doering Darlene Mota Maria Trujillo",
"3:45:26"
],
[
"11",
"Ethiopia",
"Getenesh Urge Asha Gigi Asselefech Assefa",
"3:45:34"
],
[
"12",
"Poland",
"Kamila Gradus Danuta Marczyk Dorota Gruca-Giezek",
"3:46:03"
],
[
"13",
"Mexico",
"María del Carmen Díaz María Luisa Servín Petra Guevara",
"3:47:39"
],
[
"14",
"Belarus",
"Yelena Mazovka Alla Zadorozhnaya Tatyana Nefedyeva",
"3:48:38"
],
[
"15",
"Ukraine",
"Yelena Plastinina Rimma Dubovik Lyubov Klotschko",
"3:51:12"
],
[
"16",
"Belgium",
"Marleen Renders Siska Maton Christel Rogiers",
"3:54:44"
],
[
"17",
"Algeria",
"Leila Bendahmane Nasria Baghdad Hamida Mazouzi",
"4:03:35"
],
[
"18",
"Albania",
"Miranda Grecu Manushaqe Taku Sonila Cekina",
"4:50:43"
],
[
"-",
"Brazil",
"Solange de Souza Silvana Pereira Rizoneide Vanderley",
"DNF"
],
[
"-",
"Germany",
"Andrea Fleischer Luminita Zaituc Monika Schäfer",
"DNF"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 4th IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held on October 1, 1995, from Montbéliard to Belfort, France. A total of 243 athletes, 147 men and 96 women, from 54 countries took part. Complete results were published.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Team Results -- Women 's",
"title": "1995 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships",
"uid": "1995_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships"
} | 6,059 |
6060 | Switzerland_at_the_2000_Summer_Olympics_0 | [
[
"Medal",
"Name",
"Sport",
"Event"
],
[
"Gold",
"Brigitte McMahon",
"Triathlon",
"Women 's individual"
],
[
"Silver",
"Barbara Blatter",
"Cycling",
"Women 's mountainbike cross country"
],
[
"Silver",
"Markus Fuchs Beat Mändli Lesley McNaught Willi Melliger",
"Equestrian",
"Team Jumping"
],
[
"Silver",
"Gianna Hablützel-Bürki",
"Fencing",
"Women 's épée"
],
[
"Silver",
"Gianna Hablützel-Bürki Sophie Lamon Diana Romagnoli",
"Fencing",
"Women 's team épée"
],
[
"Silver",
"Xeno Müller",
"Rowing",
"Men 's single sculls"
],
[
"Silver",
"Michel Ansermet",
"Shooting",
"Men 's 25 metre rapid fire pistol"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Magali Messmer",
"Triathlon",
"Women 's individual"
],
[
"Bronze",
"Christoph Sauser",
"Cycling",
"Men 's mountainbike cross country"
]
] | {
"intro": "Switzerland competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia. 102 competitors, 64 men and 38 women, took part in 82 events in 19 sports.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Medalists",
"title": "Switzerland at the 2000 Summer Olympics",
"uid": "Switzerland_at_the_2000_Summer_Olympics_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switzerland_at_the_2000_Summer_Olympics"
} | 6,060 |
6061 | List_of_hospitals_in_Georgia_(U.S._state)_1 | [
[
"Hospital name",
"City",
"County"
],
[
"Central Georgia Rehabilitation Hospital",
"Macon",
"Bibb"
],
[
"Columbus Specialty Hospital",
"Columbus",
"Muscogee"
],
[
"DeKalb Medical Long Term Acute Care",
"Decatur",
"DeKalb"
],
[
"Kindred Hospital Atlanta",
"Atlanta",
"Fulton"
],
[
"Landmark Hospital of Athens",
"Athens",
"Clarke"
],
[
"Regency Hospital of Central Georgia",
"Macon",
"Bibb"
],
[
"Regency Hospital of South Atlanta",
"East Point",
"Fulton"
],
[
"Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation",
"Warm Springs",
"Meriwether"
],
[
"Select Specialty Hospital Atlanta",
"Atlanta",
"Fulton"
],
[
"Select Specialty Hospital Augusta",
"Augusta",
"Richmond"
],
[
"Select Specialty Hospital Savannah",
"Savannah",
"Chatham"
],
[
"Shepherd Center",
"Atlanta",
"Fulton"
],
[
"Southern Crescent Hospital for Specialty Care",
"Riverdale",
"Clayton"
],
[
"Triumph the Specialty Hospital Rome",
"Rome",
"Floyd"
],
[
"Walton Rehabilitation Hospital",
"Augusta",
"Richmond"
],
[
"WellStar Windy Hill Hospital",
"Marietta",
"Cobb"
],
[
"Wesley Woods Geriatric Hospital",
"Atlanta",
"Dekalb"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of hospitals in Georgia, sorted by city and then hospital name.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Long-term and/or rehabilitation hospitals",
"title": "List of hospitals in Georgia (U.S. state)",
"uid": "List_of_hospitals_in_Georgia_(U.S._state)_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hospitals_in_Georgia_(U.S._state)"
} | 6,061 |
6062 | 2011_Foxtel_Cup_0 | [
[
"Club",
"Nickname",
"Location",
"Qualified as"
],
[
"Ainslie Football Club",
"Tri- Colours",
"Ainslie , ACT",
"AFL Canberra premiers 2010"
],
[
"Claremont Football Club",
"Tigers",
"Claremont , Western Australia",
"West Australian Football League runners-up 2010"
],
[
"Clarence Football Club",
"Kangaroos",
"Clarence , Tasmania",
"Tasmanian Football League premiers 2010"
],
[
"East Coast Eagles Australian Football Club",
"Eagles",
"Rouse Hill , NSW",
"Sydney AFL premiers 2010"
],
[
"East Perth Football Club",
"Royals",
"Leederville , Western Australia",
"West Australian Football League 3rd place 2010"
],
[
"Greater Western Sydney Giants",
"Giants",
"Blacktown , NSW",
"Australian Football League Expansion club"
],
[
"Labrador Australian Football Club",
"Tigers",
"Labrador , Queensland",
"Queensland Australian Football League runners-up 2010"
],
[
"Morningside Australian Football Club",
"Panthers",
"Hawthorne , Queensland",
"Queensland Australian Football League premiers 2010"
],
[
"North Adelaide Football Club",
"Roosters",
"Prospect , South Australia",
"South Australian National Football League 7th place , 2010 SA invitee"
],
[
"North Ballarat Football Club",
"Roosters",
"Ballarat , Victoria",
"Victorian Football League premiers 2010"
],
[
"Northern Bullants Football Club",
"Bullants",
"Preston , Victoria",
"Victorian Football League runners-up 2010"
],
[
"Northern Territory Football Club",
"Thunder",
"Darwin , Northern Territory",
"Queensland Australian Football League 5th place 2010 NT representative"
],
[
"Port Adelaide Football Club ( SANFL )",
"Magpies",
"Alberton , South Australia",
"South Australian National Football League 8th place 2010 SA invitee"
],
[
"Swan Districts Football Club",
"Swans",
"Bassendean , Western Australia",
"West Australian Football League premiers 2010"
],
[
"West Adelaide Football Club",
"Bloods",
"Richmond , South Australia",
"South Australian National Football League 6th place 2010 SA invitee"
],
[
"Williamstown Football Club",
"Seagulls",
"Williamstown , Victoria",
"Victorian Football League 3rd place 2010"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2011 Foxtel Cup was the inaugural season of the Australian rules football club knockout cup competition involving clubs from the various state league competitions from around Australia. The first year of the competition also included the AFL's newest expansion side Greater Western Sydney Giants. Its purpose was to support and promote the second-tier Australian rules football competitions and to provide another way of developing the lower-tier AFL players. It was originally designed to be a one-off, but due to a significant amount of public interest the AFL said the competition would continue for at least the next five years. The competition began on 26 March 2011 and ran through to August. Matches were played as curtain-raisers to AFL Saturday night games and were screened on Fox Sports in a late-afternoon slot between afternoon and night AFL matches. $40,000 of prize money was awarded to eventual winners, Williamstown Football Club. The AFL originally invited the three highest ranked teams from the South Australian National Football League, the Victorian Football League and the West Australian Football League; the top two teams from the Queensland Australian Football League; and the top team from AFL Sydney and the Tasmanian Football League. The Northern Territory Football Club and Greater Western Sydney Giants received special invitations. However, despite the SANFL on 9 December 2010 signing on to be part of the Cup competition, opposition to the proposal came from its top three clubs Central District, Norwood and Woodville-West Torrens. The three clubs were given until 14 December 2010 to reconsider with the SANFL willing to extend invitations to its next best teams from 2010 if its top three clubs refused to participate. After the top five SANFL clubs released a joint statement on 15 December 2010 declining the invitation to participate in the Cup competition, citing lack of prize money, sponsorship conflicts, salary cap implications, schedule concerns and removing the focus from their SANFL premiership ambitions, their places were taken up by fellow SANFL clubs West Adelaide, North Adelaide and Port Adelaide Magpies.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2011 season -- Club details",
"title": "2011 Foxtel Cup",
"uid": "2011_Foxtel_Cup_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Foxtel_Cup"
} | 6,062 |
6063 | Independent_Labour_Party_election_results_4 | [
[
"Constituency",
"Candidate",
"Votes",
"%",
"Position"
],
[
"Accrington",
"John Hempsall",
"433",
"3.3",
"3"
],
[
"Ashton-under-Lyne",
"James Johnston",
"737",
"11.0",
"3"
],
[
"Blackburn",
"Philip Snowden",
"7,096",
"25.6",
"3"
],
[
"Bradford West",
"Fred Jowett",
"4,949",
"49.8",
"2"
],
[
"Halifax",
"James Parker",
"3,276",
"16.1",
"4"
],
[
"Leicester",
"Ramsay MacDonald",
"4,164",
"13.0",
"4"
],
[
"Merthyr Tydfil",
"Keir Hardie",
"5,745",
"31.3",
"2"
],
[
"Preston",
"Keir Hardie",
"4,834",
"22.1",
"3"
],
[
"Rochdale",
"Allen Clarke",
"901",
"8.0",
"3"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article lists the Independent Labour Party's election results in UK parliamentary elections.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Election results -- 1900 general election",
"title": "Independent Labour Party election results",
"uid": "Independent_Labour_Party_election_results_4",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_Labour_Party_election_results"
} | 6,063 |
6064 | 1972_South_African_Gazelles_rugby_union_tour_in_Argentina_0 | [
[
"#",
"Date",
"Rival",
"City",
"Venue",
"Score"
],
[
"1",
"23 Sep",
"San Isidro Club",
"Buenos Aires",
"Ferro Carril Oeste",
"13-13"
],
[
"2",
"27 Sep",
"Sur Rugby Union",
"Bahía Blanca",
"Club Liniers",
"84-3"
],
[
"3",
"30 Sep",
"Mar del Plata",
"Mar del Plata",
"Parque Camet",
"19-0"
],
[
"4",
"4 Oct",
"Río Negro & Neuquén",
"Neuquén",
"Colegio Don Bosco",
"113-0"
],
[
"5",
"7 Oct",
"Cuyo",
"El Challao , Mendoza",
"Club Marista",
"23-0"
],
[
"6",
"12 Oct",
"Córdoba",
"Córdoba",
"Club Universitario",
"50-7"
],
[
"7",
"14 Oct",
"Tucumán",
"Tucumán",
"Escuela Educ . Física",
"47-6"
],
[
"8",
"17 Oct",
"Salta RU",
"Salta",
"Gimnasia y Tiro",
"100-0"
],
[
"9",
"21 Oct",
"Argentina",
"Buenos Aires",
"Ferro Carril Oeste",
"14-6"
],
[
"10",
"24 Oct",
"Santa Fe RU",
"Santa Fe",
"Club Unión",
"67-12"
],
[
"11",
"28 Oct",
"Buenos Aires RU",
"Buenos Aires",
"Ferro Carril Oeste",
"14-12"
],
[
"12",
"1 Nov",
"Rosario RU",
"Rosario",
"Plaza Jewell",
"43-12"
],
[
"13",
"4 Nov",
"Argentina",
"Buenos Aires",
"Ferro Carril Oeste",
"16-18"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1972 South African Gazelles rugby union tour in Argentina was a series of matches played by the Gazelles (Under-23 South African selection) in Argentina, between September and November 1972. It was the second tour of Argentina by this selection, after the 1966 tour and the fourth of a South African team. [citation needed]\n The series between Gazelles and Pumas (Argentina national team) was tied with a victory for both. In fact, the second test played on 4 November was the first victory ever of a national team over a South African side.",
"section_text": "Complete list of matches played by the South Africa u23 in Argentina : [ 1 ] Test matches Alejandro Travaglini running with the ball during the second test v Argentina on 4 November",
"section_title": "Match summary",
"title": "1972 South African Gazelles rugby union tour in Argentina",
"uid": "1972_South_African_Gazelles_rugby_union_tour_in_Argentina_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972_South_African_Gazelles_rugby_union_tour_in_Argentina"
} | 6,064 |
6065 | Dixie_Series_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Winning League",
"Winner",
"Score",
"Finalist"
],
[
"1920",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-2-1",
"Little Rock Travelers"
],
[
"1921",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-2",
"Memphis Chicks"
],
[
"1922",
"Southern Association",
"Mobile Bears",
"4-2-1",
"Fort Worth Panthers"
],
[
"1923",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-2-1",
"New Orleans Pelicans"
],
[
"1924",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-3-1",
"Memphis Chicks"
],
[
"1925",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-2",
"Atlanta Crackers"
],
[
"1926",
"Texas League",
"Dallas Steers",
"4-2-1",
"New Orleans Pelicans"
],
[
"1927",
"Texas League",
"Wichita Falls Spudders",
"4-0",
"New Orleans Pelicans"
],
[
"1928",
"Texas League",
"Houston Buffaloes",
"4-2",
"Birmingham Barons"
],
[
"1929",
"Southern Association",
"Birmingham Barons",
"4-2",
"Dallas Steers"
],
[
"1930",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Panthers",
"4-1",
"Memphis Chicks"
],
[
"1931",
"Southern Association",
"Birmingham Barons",
"4-3",
"Houston Buffaloes"
],
[
"1932",
"Southern Association",
"Chattanooga Lookouts",
"4-1",
"Beaumont Exporters"
],
[
"1933",
"Southern Association",
"New Orleans Pelicans",
"4-2",
"San Antonio Missions"
],
[
"1934",
"Southern Association",
"New Orleans Pelicans",
"4-2",
"Galveston Buccaneers"
],
[
"1935",
"Texas League",
"Oklahoma City Indians",
"4-2",
"Atlanta Crackers"
],
[
"1936",
"Texas League",
"Tulsa Oilers",
"4-0",
"Birmingham Barons"
],
[
"1937",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Cats",
"4-1",
"Little Rock Travelers"
],
[
"1938",
"Southern Association",
"Atlanta Crackers",
"4-0-1",
"Beaumont Exporters"
],
[
"1939",
"Texas League",
"Fort Worth Cats",
"4-3",
"Nashville Vols"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Dixie Series was an Interleague Minor League Postseason Series pitting the playoff champions of the Southern Association and the Texas League in a best-of-seven matchup from 1920 to 1958. The series was not held from 1943 to 1945 due to World War II. It was revived for one year in 1967, pitting the Southern League champion against the Texas League champion.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Results",
"title": "Dixie Series",
"uid": "Dixie_Series_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dixie_Series"
} | 6,065 |
6066 | 1989_NCAA_Women's_Division_I_Basketball_Tournament_2 | [
[
"Region",
"Rnd",
"Host",
"Venue",
"City",
"State"
],
[
"East",
"1",
"Western Kentucky University",
"E.A . Diddle Arena",
"Bowling Green",
"Kentucky"
],
[
"East",
"1",
"James Madison University",
"James Madison University Convocation Center",
"Harrisonburg",
"Virginia"
],
[
"East",
"1",
"University of Connecticut",
"Hugh S. Greer Field House",
"Storrs",
"Connecticut"
],
[
"East",
"1",
"Vanderbilt University",
"Memorial Gymnasium ( Vanderbilt University )",
"Nashville",
"Tennessee"
],
[
"East",
"1",
"University of Tennessee",
"Thompson-Boling Arena",
"Knoxville",
"Tennessee"
],
[
"East",
"2",
"Ohio State University",
"St. John Arena",
"Columbus",
"Ohio"
],
[
"East",
"2",
"Long Beach State",
"University Gym ( Gold Mine )",
"Long Beach",
"California"
],
[
"East",
"2",
"University of Virginia",
"University Hall ( University of Virginia )",
"Charlottesville",
"Virginia"
],
[
"Mideast",
"1",
"University of Georgia",
"Georgia Coliseum ( Stegeman Coliseum )",
"Athens",
"Georgia"
],
[
"Mideast",
"1",
"Rutgers University",
"Louis Brown Athletic Center",
"Piscataway",
"New Jersey"
],
[
"Mideast",
"1",
"Old Dominion University",
"Old Dominion University Fieldhouse",
"Norfolk",
"Virginia"
],
[
"Mideast",
"1",
"Temple University",
"McGonigle Hall",
"Philadelphia",
"Pennsylvania"
],
[
"Mideast",
"2",
"North Carolina State University",
"Reynolds Coliseum",
"Raleigh",
"North Carolina"
],
[
"Mideast",
"2",
"University of Mississippi",
"Tad Smith Coliseum",
"Oxford",
"Mississippi"
],
[
"Mideast",
"2",
"Auburn University",
"Memorial Coliseum ( Beard-Eaves-Memorial Coliseum )",
"Auburn",
"Alabama"
],
[
"Mideast",
"2",
"Clemson University",
"Littlejohn Coliseum",
"Clemson",
"South Carolina"
],
[
"Midwest",
"1",
"University of South Carolina",
"Carolina Coliseum",
"Columbia",
"South Carolina"
],
[
"Midwest",
"1",
"Oklahoma State University",
"Gallagher-Iba Arena",
"Stillwater",
"Oklahoma"
],
[
"Midwest",
"1",
"Illinois State University",
"Redbird Arena",
"Normal",
"Illinois"
],
[
"Midwest",
"1 & 2",
"Purdue University",
"Mackey Arena",
"West Lafayette",
"Indiana"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 1989 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament began on March 15 and ended on April 2. The tournament expanded from 40 to 48 teams. The Final Four consisted of Auburn, Louisiana Tech, Tennessee, and Maryland, with Tennessee winning its second title with a 76-60 victory over Auburn. Tennessee's Bridgette Gordon was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.",
"section_text": "In 1989 , the field expanded to 48 teams . The teams were seeded , and assigned to four geographic regions , with seeds 1-12 in each region . In Round 1 , seeds 8 and 9 faced each other for the opportunity to face the 1 seed in the second round , seeds 7 and 10 played for the opportunity to face the 2 seed , seeds 5 and 12 played for the opportunity to face the 4 seed , and seeds 6 and 11 played for the opportunity to face the 3 seed . In the first two rounds , the higher seed was given the opportunity to host the first-round game . In most cases , the higher seed accepted the opportunity . The exceptions : [ 3 ] Fifth seeded Purdue played fourth seeded LSU at Purdue Tenth seeded Montana played seventh seeded Cal St. Fullerton at Montana Ninth seeded Oklahoma State played eighth seeded Miami ( FL ) at Oklahoma State Seventh seeded Vanderbilt played tenth seeded St. Joseph 's at St. Joseph 's Ninth seeded Bowling Green played eighth seeded Cincinnati at Bowling Green Because Purdue was also a first round venue , there are only 31 rather than 32 first and second round venues The following table lists the region , host school , venue and the thirty-one first and second round locations : Bowling GreenHarrisonburgStorrsNashvilleAthensPiscatawayNorfolkPhiladelphiaColumbiaStillwaterNormalMissoulaSeattleLas VegasBowling GreenW . Lafayette 1989 NCAA first round W. LafayetteColumbusLong BeachCharlottesvilleKnoxvilleRaleighUniversityAuburnClemsonRustonIowa CityStanfordCollege ParkAustinBoulderNacogdoches 1989 NCAA second round",
"section_title": "First and second rounds",
"title": "1989 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament",
"uid": "1989_NCAA_Women's_Division_I_Basketball_Tournament_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_NCAA_Division_I_Women's_Basketball_Tournament"
} | 6,066 |
6067 | Records_of_members_of_parliament_of_the_United_Kingdom_10 | [
[
"Name known by while in Commons",
"Born",
"Disappeared",
"Political Party",
"MP 's Seat",
"Offices Held"
],
[
"George Robinson",
"before 1727",
"1732",
"",
"Great Marlow ( 1731-32 )",
""
],
[
"Orlando Bridgeman , 2nd Baronet",
"1678",
"1738 ( about 5 months ) - died 1746",
"Whig",
"Dunwich ( 1734-38 )",
"Commissioner of the Board of Trade , Governor of Barbados ( 1737-38 )"
],
[
"Henry Vansittart",
"1732",
"1769",
"",
"Reading ( 1768-death )",
"Governor of Bengal ( 1759-64 )"
],
[
"Montagu Chapman , 3rd Baronet",
"1808",
"1852",
"Whig Party",
"Westmeath ( 1832-41 )",
"High Sheriff of Westmeath 1844"
],
[
"Walter Powell",
"1842",
"1881",
"Conservative Party",
"Malmesbury ( 1868-death )",
""
],
[
"Victor Grayson",
"1881",
"1920",
"Independent Labour",
"Colne Valley ( 1907-1910 )",
""
],
[
"Henry Newton Knights",
"1872",
"1921 ( some 2 weeks ) - died 1959",
"Conservative Party",
"Camberwell North ( 1918-21 )",
"Mayor of Camberwell 1913 , Sheriff of the City of London 1920"
],
[
"John Stonehouse",
"1925",
"1974 ( 34 days ) - died 1988",
"Labour Party",
"Walsall North ( 1974-1976 )",
"Postmaster-General ( 1968-1969 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "This article about records of members of parliament of the United Kingdom and of England includes a variety of lists of MPs by age, period and other circumstances of service, familiar sets, ethnic or religious minorities, physical attributes, and circumstances of their deaths.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Members of Parliament who have disappeared",
"title": "Records of members of parliament of the United Kingdom",
"uid": "Records_of_members_of_parliament_of_the_United_Kingdom_10",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Records_of_members_of_parliament_of_the_United_Kingdom"
} | 6,067 |
6068 | List_of_sports_films_49 | [
[
"Title",
"Year",
"Genre",
"Notes"
],
[
"The White Ecstasy",
"1931",
"Drama",
"Leni Riefenstahl portrays a young woman learning how to ski"
],
[
"Ski Patrol",
"1940",
"Drama",
"Rivals from 1936 Winter Olympics also end up at odds in time of war"
],
[
"Sun Valley Serenade",
"1941",
"Romance",
"Sonja Henie falls in love on the ski slopes of Idaho"
],
[
"Two-Faced Woman",
"1941",
"Romance",
"Ski instructor ( Greta Garbo ) and twin sister pursue a fashion magazine editor"
],
[
"Water Trix",
"1948",
"Short Film",
"Oscar-nominated short by Pete Smith on ski champ Preston Peterson"
],
[
"Ski Party",
"1965",
"Comedy",
"Frankie Avalon and Dwayne Hickman go to Idaho lodge disguised as women"
],
[
"Ski Fever",
"1966",
"Romance",
"Martin Milner competes on skis and for a girl ( Claudia Martin )"
],
[
"Downhill Racer",
"1969",
"Drama",
"A self-involved skier ( Robert Redford ) qualifies for the U.S. Olympic team"
],
[
"Snow Job",
"1972",
"Action",
"Jean-Claude Killy as a thief who robs a ski resort"
],
[
"The Other Side of the Mountain",
"1975",
"Biographical",
"An accident leaves Olympic-bound slalom skier Jill Kinmont paralyzed"
],
[
"Copper Mountain",
"1983",
"Comedy",
"Jim Carrey and Alan Thicke go after fun and women in Colorado"
],
[
"Hot Dog ... the Movie",
"1984",
"Comedy",
"Romance and hijinks at a freestyle competition in Squaw Valley"
],
[
"Going for the Gold : The Bill Johnson Story",
"1985",
"Biographical",
"TV film with Anthony Edwards as 1984 Olympic downhill gold medalist Bill Johnson"
],
[
"Better Off Dead",
"1985",
"Comedy",
"A teen skier has to deal with his girlfriend dumping him and family issues"
],
[
"Fire and Ice",
"1986",
"Action",
"German film , narrated in English by John Denver"
],
[
"Ski School",
"1990",
"Comedy",
"Pals play pranks on one another at a ski school"
],
[
"Aspen Extreme",
"1993",
"Action Drama",
"Two friends from Michigan move to Colorado to become ski instructors"
],
[
"Ski School 2",
"1994",
"Comedy",
"When a ski instructor learns his ex-girlfriend is getting married , he returns to ski school to stop it"
],
[
"Steep",
"2007",
"Documentary",
"A behind-the-scenes look at extreme skiing"
],
[
"Frozen",
"2010",
"Thriller",
"Horror story set at a New England ski resort"
]
] | {
"intro": "This compilation of films covers all sports activities. Sports films have been made since the era of silent films, such as the 1915 film The Champion starring Charlie Chaplin. Films in this genre can range from serious (Raging Bull) to silly (Horse Feathers). A classic theme for sports films is the triumph of an individual or team who prevail despite the difficulties, standard elements of melodrama.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Skiing",
"title": "List of sports films",
"uid": "List_of_sports_films_49",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sports_films"
} | 6,068 |
6069 | List_of_U.S._cities_with_significant_Korean-American_populations_3 | [
[
"Rank",
"Municipality",
"County",
"State",
"Percentage"
],
[
"1",
"Palisades Park",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"51.5%"
],
[
"2",
"Leonia",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"26.5%"
],
[
"3",
"Ridgefield",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"25.7%"
],
[
"4",
"Fort Lee",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"23.5%"
],
[
"5",
"Closter",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"21.2%"
],
[
"6",
"Englewood Cliffs",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"20.3%"
],
[
"7",
"Norwood",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"20.1%"
],
[
"8",
"Edgewater",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"19.6%"
],
[
"9",
"Cresskill",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"17.8%"
],
[
"10",
"Demarest",
"Bergen County",
"New Jersey",
"17.3%"
]
] | {
"intro": "Cities with significant Korean American populations represent municipalities with critical masses of Korean Americans in their total urban or suburban populations. Information is based on the 2005-2009 American Community Survey or as specified in each table. The list includes those who have emigrated from South Korea as well as Korean Americans of multiple generations. There are numbers of North Koreans living in the United States, despite North Korean citizens being unable to freely emigrate out of their country. As of 2009, Americans of Korean descent made up about 0.4% of the population, or 1,307,000 people. The three metropolitan areas with the highest Korean American populations as per the 2009 American Community Survey were the Greater Los Angeles Combined Statistical Area (300,000), the Greater New York Combined Statistical Area (200,000), and the Washington-Baltimore Metropolitan Area (93,000). Southern California and the New York City Metropolitan Area have the largest populations of Koreans outside of the Korean Peninsula. Among Korean Americans born in Korea, the Los Angeles metropolitan area had 226,000 as of 2012; Greater New York (including Northern New Jersey) was home to 153,000 Korean-born Korean Americans; and metropolitan Washington, 60,000. By percentage, the Korean American population of Bergen County, New Jersey, in the New York City Metropolitan Area, was 6.3% by the 2010 United States Census, the highest of any county in the United States. In 2010, Bergen County, host to the county's highly ranked Academies magnet public high school as well as to the North American headquarters operations of South Korean chaebols including Samsung, LG Corp, and Hanjin Shipping, was home to all of the nation's top ten municipalities by percentage of Korean population and an absolute total of 56,773 Korean Americans. The concentration of Korean Americans in Palisades Park, New Jersey, within Bergen County, was the highest of any municipality in the United States in 2010, at 52% of the population. The city of Los Angeles contained the highest Korean American population of any city proper in 2010, approximately 108,282.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Top ten municipalities as ranked by Korean-American percentage of overall population in 2010",
"title": "List of U.S. cities with significant Korean-American populations",
"uid": "List_of_U.S._cities_with_significant_Korean-American_populations_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._cities_with_significant_Korean-American_populations"
} | 6,069 |
6070 | List_of_conservation_areas_in_Brighton_and_Hove_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Size",
"Date",
"Notes"
],
[
"Benfield Barn , Hangleton",
"1.43 acres ( 0.58 ha )",
"1989",
"The city 's smallest conservation area includes a Grade II-listed barn - part of an ancient farm next to the former Benfield Manor house - and the four terraced cottages which replaced it . The red-brick and flint barn may be late-18th-century , and the houses were built in 1871 for farm workers . They are of yellow stock brick with slate-tiled roofs"
],
[
"Brunswick Town , Hove",
"95.92 acres ( 38.82 ha )",
"1969",
"Local architecture evolved into serious Neoclassical at this carefully planned and landscaped set-piece in the mid-1820s . Columns of various orders , pilasters and bow fronts characterise the square and its flanking terraces , all of which enjoy sea views and access to extensive lawns . Smaller squares and streets , such as Adelaide Crescent , Lansdowne Place and Palmeira Square , surround the centrepiece , and are slightly more modest in scope . Stuccoed façades , slate roofs , consistent building heights and long parapets contribute to the impression of regularity and formality"
],
[
"Carlton Hill",
"4.05 acres ( 1.64 ha )",
"2008",
"This early-19th-century working-class area was comprehensively redeveloped in the mid-20th century after degenerating into a slum , but a few old buildings remain : Tilbury Place is a good example of Georgian architecture , George Cheesman junior 's severely Classical church dates from 1839 , and the cobble-fronted Mighell Farmhouse survived when adjacent buildings were demolished for Amex House , a large office block . The area 's character derives from these buildings , its site on a steep hill with long views , and the survival of fragments of old street layouts and boundary walls in places"
],
[
"Cliftonville , Hove",
"40.05 acres ( 16.21 ha )",
"1969",
"A small area of delightful mid- Victorian houses , in a villa style with angled bay windows and exterior ironwork , this 1850s suburb is an example of the long-lasting influence of the Regency style on Victorian domestic architecture . The increasingly fashionable Italianate style is also evident . Slight differences can be seen between individual houses : plots were sold speculatively , so most houses were built to individuals ' requirements . Sash windows with valances are characteristic features"
],
[
"College",
"18.60 acres ( 7.53 ha )",
"1988",
"Many architects associated with Brighton have made complementary additions to George Gilbert Scott 's original buildings for Brighton College , founded in 1848 : T.G . Jackson , F.T . Cawthorn and Clayton & Black , amongst others . Pevsner found the ensemble joyless , but they are important as Brighton 's largest set of Gothic Revival buildings ( a style rarely found among secular buildings in the city ) . Flint and brick predominate , and there is much use of terracotta"
],
[
"Denmark Villas , Hove",
"7.42 acres ( 3.00 ha )",
"1984",
"This road was a northern extension of Cliftonville , built on the way to Hove railway station ( opened in 1865 ) . The area has well-spaced Italianate houses in a more modestly detailed style than the rest of Cliftonville , with prominent architraves , quoins and eaves , yellow brickwork and mosaic tiled paths . The road is lined with mature trees , contributing to its character"
],
[
"East Cliff",
"153.99 acres ( 62.32 ha )",
"1973",
"Hundreds of listed buildings , a strong and little changed street pattern and the prevalence of Regency architecture characterise the East Cliff , which developed from the late 18th century because of its proximity to the fashionable Old Steine . Many landowners held small plots , so cohesive large-scale developments were not possible ; instead , streets tended to follow a north-south alignment defined by old field boundaries . The houses and hotels of Marine Parade , the east-west clifftop road ( built from 1827 on the site of a trackway ) , present a long stuccoed façade which has been described as unsurpassed anywhere in Britain"
],
[
"Engineerium , West Blatchington",
"8.89 acres ( 3.60 ha )",
"1982",
"Built in 1866 as the Goldstone Pumping Station to provide more piped water for Brighton and Hove 's rapidly growing population , this became a museum in 1976 . Considered to be excellent examples of 19th-century industrial design , the brick buildings are intricately detailed with Classical motifs and multicoloured brickwork . The tall chimney is a significant landmark"
],
[
"Hangleton",
"15.54 acres ( 6.29 ha )",
"1984",
"Hangleton became a postwar overspill estate , with what Pevsner called a grisly set of parodies of the English cottage , but at the centre a set of ancient buildings remain around a park . St Helen 's Church has changed little since the 11th century , and Hangleton Manor is Hove 's oldest secular building . Now used as a restaurant , it retains its old dovecote and associated cottages"
],
[
"Hove Station",
"14.56 acres ( 5.89 ha )",
"1996",
"Built as Cliftonville in 1865 , Hove railway station soon stimulated middle-class residential development . Goldstone Villas , a wide tree-lined avenue with terraced houses in various styles , was developed in the 1880s and 1890s . Brick in pale colours such as yellow , buff and brown predominates ; slate roofs are also common , and many windows are canted bays . Some large-scale late-20th-century developments have affected the area . The Ralli Memorial Hall , a red brick and stone Renaissance-style building of 1913 , and a Neoclassical former chapel of 1878 ( now an office ) provide variety"
],
[
"Kemp Town",
"47.94 acres ( 19.40 ha )",
"1970",
"The estate has two sea-facing terraces ( Arundel and Chichester Terrace ) linked to a three-sided square ( Sussex Square ) by Lewes Crescent , an 840-foot ( 260 m ) double curve of 28 stuccoed houses with large Corinthian pilasters at regular intervals . Charles Busby 's original designs were followed most closely in the crescent ; the 300-by-550-foot ( 91 m × 168 m ) square took longer to complete and diverges from his plan . Chichester Terrace was finished only in 1855 . Thomas Cubitt built 37 of the estate 's 106 houses . Surrounding mews and backstreets , the private gardens at the centre , original street furniture and the seafront esplanade ( by Henry Kendall ) are included in the conservation area"
],
[
"Montpelier & Clifton Hill",
"75.40 acres ( 30.51 ha )",
"1973",
"Clifton Hill rises gently to a summit between the old town centre and West Hill . Built up from the 1820s to the 1860s , the southwest-facing slopes became Brighton 's most desirable suburb . Regency and Italianate architecture dominate the area , and many buildings are stuccoed . St Nicholas ' Church , Brighton 's ancient parish church , is in the area , and is one of hundreds of listed buildings . Other listed churches include St Michael and All Angels , whose interior is considered the best in England , and St Mary Magdalen , but the Gothic Christ Church burnt down in the 1970s and was replaced by International/Modern-style flats"
],
[
"North Laine",
"41.37 acres ( 16.74 ha )",
"1977",
"Based around the east end of Church Street , the oldest road , this tightly packed residential and commercial area was developed in the late 18th and early 19th centuries , helped by Brighton railway station 's proximity . A laine was an open field which was divided into strips ( furlongs and paul-pieces ) separated by pathways ; pre-modern Brighton was surrounded by five , including North Laine . The boundaries defined the pattern of development : main roads ( such as Church Street ) follow the old paths , while side streets run at right-angles along the furlongs and paul-pieces . Total redevelopment was proposed in the 1960s , but the area survived ; its attractive townscape has a distinctive ambience which makes it the heart and soul of Brighton"
],
[
"Old Hove",
"34.44 acres ( 13.94 ha )",
"1997",
"Hove Street - the ancient village street , whose manor house was demolished in the 1930s - and its surroundings make up this conservation area . Most housing is of the late 19th century : large , mostly semi-detached or terraced and built of red brick . St Andrew 's , the former parish church ( rebuilt in a Neo-Norman / Romanesque style by George Basevi in 1834 ) and Hove Public Library are both listed buildings . The former Connaught Road School , of brown and red brick with Dutch gables and terracotta dressings , adds further interest"
],
[
"Old Town",
"46.77 acres ( 18.93 ha )",
"1973",
"The narrow , winding twittens known as The Lanes were built up in the 16th and 17th centuries as Brighton 's fishing industry thrived . Most surviving buildings come from a second period of growth in the 18th and 19th centuries , as small houses were built for newly arrived workers . Many have been converted into small independent shops . Several old pubs , Thomas Lainson 's Byzantine Revival Middle Street Synagogue ( 1875 ) and the Quaker meeting house ( 1805 ) are also in the area"
],
[
"Ovingdean",
"48.58 acres ( 19.66 ha )",
"1970",
"Events in Harrison Ainsworth 's novel Ovingdean Grange are fictional , but the building ( formerly the manor house ) exists in the centre of this downland village , inland from Rottingdean and 2.5 miles ( 4 km ) east of Brighton . St Wulfran 's Church , whose churchyard contains a memorial to the family of William Willett , is 12th-century . The adjacent rectory , Ovingdean Hall ( a school until 2010 ) and many flint cottages , mostly of the 18th century , surround the village green and main street"
],
[
"Patcham",
"20.78 acres ( 8.41 ha )",
"1970",
"This ancient downland village was extensively suburbanised in the interwar period , but the core of the village - around All Saints Church - remains intact . One of Sussex 's largest villages ( and parishes ) in the 11th century , the population declined by the 19th century ; the conservation area 's boundary match those of the village as it was from the 1870s until expansion began ( as a result of its inclusion within the Borough of Brighton in 1928 ) . Well-wooded parkland , especially around the Grade II*-listed Patcham Place , and access to the South Downs ( affected by construction of the Brighton Bypass in the 1990s ) contribute to the area 's character . Many buildings are of flint or cobblestone ; some have glazed black mathematical tiles"
],
[
"Pembroke & Princes , Hove",
"54.74 acres ( 22.15 ha )",
"1989",
"Most of this area consists of large late Victorian and early Edwardian houses built during Hove 's westward expansion . There is also some later housing , mainly of the 1920s and 1930s . Large front gardens , wide curved tree-lined streets , tile-hung façades , painted exterior timbers and hipped roofs with gable ends characterise the area . Non-residential buildings of interest include the Italianate Brooker Hall , now a museum , and Barford Court - an unusual Neo-Georgian/ Art Deco nursing home built of handmade purple bricks"
],
[
"Portslade Old Village",
"34.21 acres ( 13.84 ha )",
"1974",
"Portslade sits in a valley west of Hove and has pre-medieval origins ; the old village clusters around St Nicolas ' Church and the ruined manor house . Pevsner thought that the combination of small flint-walled cottages and a huge Classical / Italianate brewery building of 1881 made it a bizarre landscape . Extensive parkland , nearby woodland , extensive flint walling and some large 19th-century detached houses contribute to the area 's character . Many buildings are listed"
],
[
"Preston Park",
"214.47 acres ( 86.79 ha )",
"1970",
"This area consists of the extensive late-19th-century residential areas north and east of Preston Park : the park itself is part of the neighbouring Preston Village conservation area . Developed in a controlled , architecturally harmonious manner between 1865 and 1885 , the long , straight streets of brick villas have features such as timbered gables , decorated bargeboards , canted bay windows and walls combining red brickwork and stucco . Two churches , including the Grade II-listed St Augustine 's , contribute to the character of the area"
]
] | {
"intro": "As of 2020, there are 34 conservation areas in the city of Brighton and Hove, a seaside resort on the English Channel coast in southeast England. The definition of a conservation area is a principally urban area of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance. Such areas are identified according to criteria defined by Sections 69 and 70 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990. Brighton and Hove City Council is responsible for creating conservation areas within the city, and expands upon the statutory definition by stating that each area has high townscape quality [and] its own distinctive character [. which] creates a sense of place. The city has existed in its present form only since 2000, when Queen Elizabeth II granted city status to the unitary authority of Brighton and Hove, which was in turn created in 1997 by the amalgamation of Brighton and Hove Borough Councils. Before 1997, the two councils were separately responsible for creating and administering conservation areas. Hove Borough Council designated the first two, in 1969: Charles Busby's expansive self-contained Brunswick Town estate, with a twin-terrace centrepiece as grand as anything in St Petersburg, and the rapidly developed mid-19th-century suburb of Cliftonville, characterised by Italianate villas and large Tudorbethan houses. The following year, Brighton Borough Council set up conservation areas to preserve and improve the historic centres of five ancient downland villages - Ovingdean, Patcham, Preston, Rottingdean and Stanmer - which became part of the urban area in 1928 and 1952 because of boundary changes. Brighton's own architectural set-piece, Thomas Read Kemp's striking, [.] graceful and imposing Kemp Town estate of the mid-1820s, by Busby and Amon Wilds, was designated at the same time. Many more parts of the urban area have been included in conservation areas in subsequent years, either through the creation of new areas or by means of extensions to existing areas.",
"section_text": "In 1970 , nearly 50 acres ( 20 ha ) of Ovingdean—an ancient village east of Brighton—was designated a conservation area . [ 29 ] The houses of Kings Gardens , on Hove seafront , are in The Avenues conservation area . Regency Square is at the heart of the conservation area of the same name . Stanmer ( park and church pictured ) is a rural area on the edge of the city . Two-storey brick houses with decorative ironwork and gables characterise the Preston Park conservation area . Round Hill has mid-19th-century terraced houses . The expansive gabled houses of the Pembroke & Princes conservation area date from the late 1890s . The former Goldstone Villas Methodist Church , in the Hove Station conservation area , was converted into offices in the 1960s . This 19th-century drinking fountain is one of several distinctive structures in Queen 's Park . Topographical features can add to a conservation area 's character . Round Hill Crescent , seen from Hartington Road to the east , `` curves and changes height dramatically along its length '' . [ 30 ] The Preston Park conservation area is beyond . 1 Tilbury Place , built in about 1815 , is one of several `` fragments of early 19th-century Brighton '' in the substantially redeveloped Carlton Hill area . [ 31 ] Preston Manor , rebuilt from its 13th-century origins in 1738 , is at the heart of the Preston Village conservation area . East Cliff has many 19th-century squares and terraces , such as Eastern Terrace . Clifton Terrace is part of the Montpelier & Clifton Hill conservation area . Valley Gardens has buildings of various ages , sizes and uses , including the `` elegant '' Neo-Georgian Allied Irish Bank at 20–22 Marlborough Place , Brighton . [ 32 ]",
"section_title": "Conservation areas",
"title": "List of conservation areas in Brighton and Hove",
"uid": "List_of_conservation_areas_in_Brighton_and_Hove_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_conservation_areas_in_Brighton_and_Hove"
} | 6,070 |
6071 | National_Recording_Registry_12 | [
[
"Recording or collection",
"Performer or agent",
"Year"
],
[
"The Vernacular Wax Cylinder Recordings at University of California , Santa Barbara Library",
"University of California , Santa Barbara",
"1890-1910"
],
[
"The Benjamin Ives Gilman Collection , recorded at the 1893 World 's Columbian Exposition at Chicago",
"Benjamin Ives Gilman",
"1893"
],
[
"The Boys of the Lough/The Humours of Ennistymon",
"Michael Coleman",
"1922"
],
[
"That Black Snake Moan / Matchbox Blues",
"Blind Lemon Jefferson",
"1928"
],
[
"Sorry , Wrong Number ( episode of Suspense radio series )",
"Suspense",
"May 25 , 1943"
],
[
"Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive",
"Johnny Mercer",
"1944"
],
[
"Radio Coverage of President Franklin D. Roosevelt 's Funeral",
"Arthur Godfrey , et al",
"April 14 , 1945"
],
[
"Kiss Me , Kate Original Cast Recording",
"Original Cast",
"1949"
],
[
"John Brown 's Body",
"Tyrone Power , Judith Anderson , and Raymond Massey ; directed by Charles Laughton",
"1953"
],
[
"My Funny Valentine",
"The Gerry Mulligan Quartet featuring Chet Baker",
"1953"
],
[
"Sixteen Tons",
"Tennessee Ernie Ford",
"1955"
],
[
"Mary Do n't You Weep",
"The Swan Silvertones",
"1959"
],
[
"Joan Baez",
"Joan Baez",
"1960"
],
[
"Stand By Me",
"Ben E. King",
"1961"
],
[
"New Orleans Sweet Emma Barrett and her Preservation Hall Jazz Band",
"Sweet Emma Barrett and her Preservation Hall Jazz Band",
"1964"
],
[
"You 've Lost That Lovin ' Feelin '",
"The Righteous Brothers",
"1964"
],
[
"The Doors",
"The Doors",
"1967"
],
[
"Lincoln Mayorga and Distinguished Colleagues",
"Lincoln Mayorga",
"1968"
],
[
"Stand !",
"Sly and the Family Stone",
"1969"
],
[
"A Wild and Crazy Guy",
"Steve Martin",
"1978"
]
] | {
"intro": "The National Recording Registry is a list of sound recordings that are culturally, historically, or aesthetically important, and/or inform or reflect life in the United States. The registry was established by the National Recording Preservation Act of 2000, which created the National Recording Preservation Board, whose members are appointed by the Librarian of Congress. The recordings preserved in the United States National Recording Registry form a registry of recordings selected yearly by the National Recording Preservation Board for preservation in the Library of Congress. The National Recording Preservation Act of 2000 established a national program to guard America's sound recording heritage. The Act created the National Recording Registry, The National Recording Preservation Board and a fund-raising foundation. The purpose of the Registry is to maintain and preserve sound recordings and collections of sound recordings that are culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant. Beginning in 2002, the National Recording Preservation Board has selected recordings nominated each year to be preserved. The first four yearly lists each had 50 selections. Since 2006, 25 recordings have been selected annually. As of 2018[update], a total of 525 recordings have been preserved in the Registry. Each calendar year, public nominations are accepted for inclusion in that year's list of selections, which are announced the following spring. Each yearly list typically includes a few recordings that have also been selected for inclusion in the holdings of the National Archives' audiovisual collection.",
"section_text": "On March 25 , 2015 , the following 25 selections were announced . [ 37 ] Blind Lemon Jefferson Johnny Mercer , one of the many songwriters of The Great American Songbook The Doors with controversial bandleader Jim Morrison who was also known as `` The Lizard King '' . Lauryn Hill went on a Grammy-winning R & B solo career after leaving the rap group The Fugees .",
"section_title": "2014",
"title": "National Recording Registry",
"uid": "National_Recording_Registry_12",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Recording_Registry"
} | 6,071 |
6072 | Timeline_of_space_exploration_0 | [
[
"Date",
"Mission achievements",
"Country/organization",
"Mission name"
],
[
"21 August 1957",
"First intercontinental ballistic missile ( ICBM )",
"USSR",
"R-7 Semyorka/SS-6 Sapwood"
],
[
"4 October 1957",
"First artificial satellite First signals from space",
"USSR",
"Sputnik 1"
],
[
"3 November 1957",
"First mammal in orbit , the dog Laika",
"USSR",
"Sputnik 2"
],
[
"31 January 1958",
"Confirmed existence of the Van Allen radiation belt",
"USA ( ABMA )",
"Explorer 1"
],
[
"4 January 1959",
"First rocket to reach Earth escape velocity ; attempt to impact the Moon 's surface ; missed by 5,995 kilometers ( 3,237 nmi ) First artificial object in heliocentric orbit First detection of solar wind",
"USSR",
"Luna 1"
],
[
"7 August 1959",
"First photograph of Earth from orbit",
"USA ( NASA )",
"Explorer 6"
],
[
"13 September 1959",
"First impact into the Moon First delivery of national pennants to a celestial body",
"USSR",
"Luna 2"
],
[
"4 October 1959",
"First photos of another world from space : the far side of the Moon",
"USSR",
"Luna 3"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a timeline of space exploration including notable achievements and first accomplishments or major events in humanity's exploration of outer space.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "1956–1959",
"title": "Timeline of space exploration",
"uid": "Timeline_of_space_exploration_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_space_exploration"
} | 6,072 |
6073 | Deloitte_Football_Money_League_19 | [
[
"Rank",
"Club",
"Income ( € million )",
"Country"
],
[
"1",
"Manchester United",
"217.2",
"England"
],
[
"2",
"Juventus",
"173.5",
"Italy"
],
[
"3",
"Bayern Munich",
"173.2",
"Germany"
],
[
"4",
"Milan",
"164.6",
"Italy"
],
[
"5",
"Real Madrid",
"138.2",
"Spain"
],
[
"6",
"Liverpool",
"137.6",
"England"
],
[
"7",
"Lazio",
"125.4",
"Italy"
],
[
"8",
"Roma",
"123.8",
"Italy"
],
[
"9",
"Chelsea",
"118.4",
"England"
],
[
"10",
"Internazionale",
"112.8",
"Italy"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Deloitte Football Money League is a ranking of football clubs by revenue generated from football operations. It is produced annually by the accountancy firm Deloitte and released in early February of each year, describing the season most recently finished.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Rankings by season -- 2002",
"title": "Deloitte Football Money League",
"uid": "Deloitte_Football_Money_League_19",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deloitte_Football_Money_League"
} | 6,073 |
6074 | 2005_MLS_SuperDraft_2 | [
[
"Pick #",
"MLS Team",
"Player",
"Position",
"Affiliation"
],
[
"25",
"MetroStars",
"Chris Corcoran",
"M",
"St. Johns University"
],
[
"26",
"C.D . Chivas USA",
"Aaron Lopez",
"D",
"UCLA"
],
[
"27",
"F.C . Dallas",
"Winston Marshall",
"D",
"Wright State University"
],
[
"28",
"F.C . Dallas",
"Chris Gomez",
"GK",
"Brown University"
],
[
"29",
"Chicago Fire",
"Chris Rolfe",
"F",
"University of Dayton"
],
[
"30",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"Victor Arbelaez",
"M",
"UNLV"
],
[
"31",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"Orlando Ramirez",
"F",
"Fresno Pacific University"
],
[
"32",
"San Jose Earthquakes",
"C.J . Klaas",
"D",
"University of Washington"
],
[
"33",
"New England Revolution",
"Tony Lochhead",
"D",
"UC Santa Barbara"
],
[
"34",
"Los Angeles Galaxy",
"* Quavas Kirk",
"F",
"Generation adidas"
],
[
"35",
"Chicago Fire",
"Gonzalo Segares",
"D",
"Virginia Commonwealth University"
],
[
"36",
"Chicago Fire",
"Thabiso Khumalo",
"M",
"Coastal Carolina University"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2005 MLS SuperDraft, held in Baltimore, Maryland on January 14, 2005, was the sixth incarnation of the annual Major League Soccer SuperDraft. Expansion club Real Salt Lake had the first pick as the result of a coin toss (fellow newcomers C.D. Chivas USA got to go first in the expansion draft). RSL drafted Under-17 midfielder Nikolas Besagno with the first selection. A collective bargaining agreement with the MLS Players' Union dictated that the draft be reduced from six to four rounds, although a Supplemental Draft was held to equip newly formed reserve teams and compensate for expansion.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Player selection -- Round three",
"title": "2005 MLS SuperDraft",
"uid": "2005_MLS_SuperDraft_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_MLS_SuperDraft"
} | 6,074 |
6075 | List_of_Important_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_(Heian_period:_structures)_2 | [
[
"Structure",
"Date",
"Municipality",
"Prefecture",
"Ref"
],
[
"Ganjōju-in Hōtō 願成就院宝塔 Ganjōjuin hōtō",
"1086-1184",
"Hiraizumi",
"Iwate",
"[ 16 ]"
],
[
"Shaku-in Gorintō 釈尊院五輪塔 Shakuin gorintō",
"1169",
"Hiraizumi",
"Iwate",
"[ 17 ]"
],
[
"* Chūson-ji Konjikidō 中尊寺金色堂 Chūsonji Konjikidō",
"1124",
"Hiraizumi",
"Iwate",
"[ 18 ]"
],
[
"Chūson-ji Sutra Repository 中尊寺経蔵 Chūsonji kyōzō",
"1064-1184",
"Hiraizumi",
"Iwate",
"[ 19 ]"
],
[
"Kōzō-ji Amidadō 高蔵寺阿弥陀堂 Kōzōji Amidadō",
"1177",
"Kakuda",
"Miyagi",
"[ 20 ]"
],
[
"Torii 鳥居 torii",
"1086-1184",
"Yamagata",
"Yamagata",
"[ 21 ]"
],
[
"Hachiman Jinja Torii 八幡神社鳥居 Hachiman Jinja torii",
"1086-1184",
"Yamagata",
"Yamagata",
"[ 22 ]"
],
[
"* Shiramizu Amidadō 八幡神社鳥居 Shiramizu Amidadō",
"1160",
"Iwaki",
"Fukushima",
"[ 23 ]"
],
[
"Gorintō 五輪塔 gorintō",
"1181",
"Tamakawa",
"Fukushima",
"[ 24 ]"
],
[
"* Ishiyama-dera Hondō 石山寺本堂 Ishiyamadera hondō",
"1096",
"Ōtsu",
"Shiga",
"[ 25 ]"
],
[
"* Ujigami Jinja Honden 宇治上神社本殿 Ujigami Jinja honden",
"1086-1184",
"Uji",
"Kyoto",
"[ 26 ]"
],
[
"Ōjõ Gokurakuin Amidadõ 往生極楽院阿弥陀堂 Ōjō Gokurakuin Amidadõ",
"1148",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 27 ]"
],
[
"Tō-ji Treasure House 教王護国寺宝蔵 Kyōōgokokuji hōzō",
"1086-1184",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 28 ]"
],
[
"Kōryū-ji Lecture Hall 広隆寺講堂 Kõryūji kõdõ",
"1165",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 29 ]"
],
[
"* Jōruri-ji Three-Storey Pagoda 浄瑠璃寺三重塔 Jōruriji sanjūnotõ",
"before 1178",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 30 ]"
],
[
"* Jōruri-ji Hondō 浄瑠璃寺本堂 Jōruriji hondō",
"1157",
"Kizugawa",
"Kyoto",
"[ 31 ]"
],
[
"* Daigo-ji Kondō 醍醐寺金堂 Daigoji kondō",
"1086-1184",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 32 ]"
],
[
"* Daigo-ji Yakushidō 醍醐寺薬師堂 Daigoji Yakushidō",
"1121",
"Kyoto",
"Kyoto",
"[ 33 ]"
],
[
"Kongō-ji Tahōtō 金剛寺 多宝塔 Kongōji tahōtō",
"1086-1184",
"Kawachinagano",
"Osaka",
"[ 34 ]"
],
[
"* Ichijō-ji Three-Storey Pagoda 一乗寺三重塔 Kongōji tahōtō",
"1171",
"Kasai",
"Hyōgo",
"[ 35 ]"
]
] | {
"intro": "This list is of Japanese structures dating from the Heian period (794-1185) that have been designated Important Cultural Properties (including *National Treasures).",
"section_text": "Thirty-five surviving sites with thirty-six component structures have been designated , including fourteen National Treasures . The earliest structures , other than four stone tō , outside Nara and Kyoto Prefectures date from the second half of the eleventh century or early twelfth century . Those at Chūson-ji form part of the World Heritage Site Hiraizumi – Temples , Gardens and Archaeological Sites Representing the Buddhist Pure Land . [ 6 ] Buraku-ji in Kōchi Prefecture , Shikoku , and Fuki-ji in Ōita Prefecture , Kyushu , contain the earliest wooden structures outside Honshu . The honden of Ujigami Jinja is the earliest wooden Shinto shrine building , while two stone examples from the city of Yamagata are the earliest torii .",
"section_title": "Structures -- Late Heian period",
"title": "List of Important Cultural Properties of Japan (Heian period: structures)",
"uid": "List_of_Important_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_(Heian_period:_structures)_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Important_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_(Heian_period:_structures)"
} | 6,075 |
6076 | Javelin_throw_3 | [
[
"Rank",
"Mark",
"Athlete",
"Date",
"Place"
],
[
"1",
"104.80",
"Uwe Hohn ( GDR )",
"21 July 1984",
"Berlin"
],
[
"2",
"99.72",
"Tom Petranoff ( USA )",
"15 May 1983",
"Westwood"
],
[
"3=",
"96.72",
"Ferenc Paragi ( HUN )",
"23 April 1980",
"Tata"
],
[
"3=",
"96.72",
"Detlef Michel ( GER )",
"9 June 1983",
"Berlin"
],
[
"5",
"95.80",
"Bob Roggy ( USA )",
"29 August 1982",
"Stuttgart"
],
[
"6",
"95.10",
"Brian Crouser ( USA )",
"5 August 1985",
"Eugene"
],
[
"7",
"94.58",
"Miklós Németh ( HUN )",
"26 July 1976",
"Montreal"
],
[
"8",
"94.22",
"Michael Wessing ( FRG )",
"3 August 1978",
"Oslo"
],
[
"9",
"94.20",
"Heino Puuste ( EST )",
"5 June 1983",
"Birmingham"
],
[
"10",
"94.08",
"Klaus Wolfermann ( FRG )",
"5 May 1973",
"Leverkusen"
],
[
"11",
"94.06",
"Duncan Atwood ( USA )",
"26 July 1985",
"Eugene"
],
[
"12",
"93.90",
"Hannu Siitonen ( FIN )",
"6 June 1973",
"Helsinki"
],
[
"13",
"93.84",
"Pentti Sinersaari ( FIN )",
"27 January 1979",
"Auckland"
],
[
"14",
"93.80",
"Jānis Lūsis ( LAT )",
"6 July 1972",
"Stockholm"
],
[
"15",
"93.70",
"Viktor Yevsyukov ( KAZ )",
"17 July 1985",
"Kiev"
]
] | {
"intro": "The javelin throw is a track and field event where the javelin, a spear about 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) in length, is thrown. The javelin thrower gains momentum by running within a predetermined area. Javelin throwing is an event of both the men's decathlon and the women's heptathlon.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "All-time top 15 javelin throwers ( old model ) -- Men",
"title": "Javelin throw",
"uid": "Javelin_throw_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javelin_throw"
} | 6,076 |
6077 | Grammy_Award_for_Best_Music_Film_1 | [
[
"Year",
"Work",
"Performing artist ( s )",
"Director ( s )",
"Producers",
"Nominees"
],
[
"2000",
"Band of Gypsys : Live at Fillmore East",
"Jimi Hendrix",
"Bob Smeaton",
"Chips Chipperfield and Neil Aspinall",
"Asleep at the Wheel - The Making of 'Ride With Bob ' Gloria Estefan - Do n't Stop Radiohead - Meeting People Is Easy U2 - PopMart : Live from Mexico City"
],
[
"2001",
"Gim me Some Truth : The Making of John Lennon 's Imagine Album",
"John Lennon",
"Andrew Solt",
"Andrew Solt , Greg Vines , Leslie Tong , and Yoko Ono",
"Ella Fitzgerald - American Masters : Ella Fitzgerald - Something to Live For Willie Nelson - Teatro The Beach Boys - Endless Harmony Various artists - The Art of Piano : Great Pianists of the 20th Century"
],
[
"2002",
"Recording The Producers : A Musical Romp with Mel Brooks",
"Mel Brooks",
"Susan Froemke",
"Peter Gelb and Susan Froemke",
"Bob Marley - Rebel Music : The Bob Marley Story Freddie Mercury - Freddie Mercury : The Untold Story Moby - Play : The DVD"
],
[
"2003",
"Westway to the World",
"The Clash",
"Don Letts",
"N/A",
"Nappy Roots - The World According to Nappy 1 Giant Leap - 1 Giant Leap Various artists - Welcome to the Club : The Women of Rockabilly Robbie Williams - Live at the Albert"
],
[
"2004",
"Legend",
"Sam Cooke",
"N/A",
"Mary Wharton , Mick Gochanour , and Robin Klein",
"Gorillaz - Phase One : Celebrity Take Down Various artists - Leonard Bernstein : Trouble in Tahiti Various artists - The American Folk Blues Festival 1962-1966 , Volume 1 Muddy Waters - American Masters : Muddy Waters : Ca n't Be Satisfied"
],
[
"2005",
"Concert for George",
"Various artists",
"David Leland",
"Jon Kamen , Olivia Harrison , and Ray Cooper",
"John Adams and London Symphony Orchestra - John Adams : The Death of Klinghoffer Coldplay - Coldplay Live 2003 Various artists - Martin Scorsese Presents : The Blues - A Music Journey Various artists - Tom Dowd & The Language of Music"
],
[
"2006",
"No Direction Home",
"Bob Dylan",
"Martin Scorsese",
"Anthony Wall , Jeff Rosen , Margaret Bodde , Martin Scorsese , Nigel Sinclair , and Susan Lacy",
"R. Kelly - Trapped in the Closet Ramones - End of the Century : The Story of the Ramones Bruce Springsteen - Devils & Dust Brian Wilson - Brian Wilson Presents Smile"
],
[
"2007",
"Wings for Wheels : The Making of Born to Run",
"Bruce Springsteen",
"Thom Zimny",
"Thom Zimny",
"Terence Blanchard - Flow : Living in the Stream of Music Death Cab for Cutie - Directions Gorillaz - Demon Days : Live in Manchester Madonna - I 'm Going to Tell You a Secret"
],
[
"2008",
"The Confessions Tour",
"Madonna",
"Jonas Åkerlund",
"David May and Sara Martin",
"Dierks Bentley - Live & Loud at the Fillmore R. Kelly - Trapped in the Closet Chapters 13-22 Kenny Wayne Shepherd - 10 Days Out : Blues from the Backroads Various artists - The Songs of the New Cuban Underground"
],
[
"2009",
"Runnin ' Down a Dream",
"Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers",
"Peter Bogdanovich",
"George Drakoulias and Skot Bright",
"John Mayer - Where The Light Is : Live in Los Angeles Rihanna - Good Girl Gone Bad Live Various artists - Great Performances : Respect Yourself : The Stax Records Story The Who - Amazing Journey : The Story of The Who"
],
[
"2010",
"The Beatles Love - All Together Now",
"The Beatles and Cirque du Soleil",
"Adrian Wills",
"Jonathan Clyde and Martin Bolduc",
"Chris Botti - In Boston Johnny Cash - Johnny Cash 's America Anita O'Day - Anita O'Day : The Life of a Jazz Singer Keith Urban - Love , Pain & The Whole Crazy World Tour Live"
],
[
"2011",
"When You 're Strange : A Film About The Doors",
"The Doors",
"Tom DiCillo",
"Dick Wolf , Jeff Jampol , John Beug , and Peter Jankowski",
"Blur - No Distance Left to Run Arif Mardin - The Greatest Ears in Town : The Arif Mardin Story Rush - Rush : Beyond the Lighted Stage The White Stripes - Under Great White Northern Lights"
],
[
"2012",
"Back and Forth",
"Foo Fighters",
"James Moll",
"James Moll and Nigel Sinclair",
"Beyoncé - I Am ... World Tour Kings of Leon - Talihina Sky : The Story of Kings of Leon A Tribe Called Quest - Beats , Rhymes & Life : The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest TV on the Radio - Nine Types of Light"
],
[
"2013",
"Big Easy Express",
"Mumford & Sons , Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros , and Old Crow Medicine Show",
"Emmett Malloy",
"Bryan Ling , Mike Luba , and Tim Lynch",
"Sade - Bring Me Home - Live 2011 Esperanza Spalding - Radio Music Society Tegan & Sara - Get Along U2 - From the Sky Down"
],
[
"2014",
"Live Kisses",
"Paul McCartney",
"Jonas Akerlund",
"",
"Coldplay - Live 2012 Green Day - Cuatro Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite - I 'm In I 'm Out and I 'm Gone : The Making of Get Up ! Mumford & Sons - The Road to Red Rocks"
],
[
"2015",
"20 Feet from Stardom",
"Darlene Love , Merry Clayton , Lisa Fischer & Judith Hill",
"Morgan Neville",
"Gil Friesen and Caitlin Rogers",
"Beyoncé and Jay Z - On the Run Tour Coldplay - Ghost Stories Metallica - Metallica Through the Never Pink - The Truth About Love Tour : Live from Melbourne"
],
[
"2016",
"Amy",
"Amy Winehouse",
"Asif Kapadia",
"James Gay-Rees",
"James Brown - Mr Dynamite : The Rise of James Brown Foo Fighters - Sonic Highways Nina Simone - What Happened , Miss Simone ? Roger Waters - The Wall"
],
[
"2017",
"The Beatles : Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years",
"The Beatles",
"Ron Howard",
"Brian Grazer , Ron Howard , Scott Pascucci , Nigel Sinclair",
"Steve Aoki - I 'll Sleep When I 'm Dead Beyoncé - Lemonade Yo-Yo Ma & The Silk Road Ensemble - The Music of Strangers Various Artists - American Saturday Night : Live from the Grand Ole Opry"
],
[
"2018",
"The Defiant Ones",
"Various performers",
"Allen Hughes",
"Sarah Anthony , Fritzi Horstman , Broderick Johnson , Gene Kirkwood , Andrew Kosove , Laura Lancaster , Michael Lombardo , Jerry Longarzo , Doug Pray & Steven Williams",
"Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - One More Time with Feeling Grateful Dead - Long Strange Trip Various Artists - Soundbreaking Various Artists - Two Trains Runnin '"
],
[
"2019",
"Quincy",
"Quincy Jones",
"Alan Hicks & Rashida Jones",
"Paula DuPré Pesmen",
"Eric Clapton - Life in 12 Bars Whitney Houston - Whitney Itzhak Perlman - Itzhak Various Artists - Elvis Presley : The King"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Grammy Award for Best Music Film (until 2012 known as Best Long Form Music Video) is an accolade presented at the Grammy Awards, a ceremony that was established in 1958 and originally named the Gramophone Awards, to performers, directors, and producers of quality videos or musical programs. Honors in several categories are presented at the ceremony annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States to honor artistic achievement, technical proficiency and overall excellence in the recording industry, without regard to album sales or chart position. The category was preceded by the Grammy Award for Video of the Year, which was presented in 1982 and 1983, awarding long form videos (or video albums as they were known back then) in the budding music video market. The category was discontinued after 1983. The Best Music Film category is for concert/performance films or music documentaries. The eligibility rules have changed slightly over the years. As of 2016, the main rules are:",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Recipients -- 2000s and 2010s",
"title": "Grammy Award for Best Music Film",
"uid": "Grammy_Award_for_Best_Music_Film_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammy_Award_for_Best_Music_Film"
} | 6,077 |
6078 | Sports_teams_in_the_Halifax_Regional_Municipality_1 | [
[
"Club",
"League",
"Venue",
"Founded",
"Championships"
],
[
"Halifax Rugby Football Club",
"Rugby Nova Scotia",
"Wanderers Grounds",
"1958",
"7"
],
[
"Sackville Blazers",
"Nova Scotia Junior Hockey League",
"Sackville Arena",
"1982",
"5"
],
[
"Halifax Pelham Canadians",
"Nova Scotia Senior Baseball League",
"Mainland North Commons",
"1985",
"3"
],
[
"Dartmouth Moosehead Dry",
"Nova Scotia Senior Baseball League",
"Beazley Field",
"1990",
"19"
],
[
"East Hants Penguins",
"Nova Scotia Junior Hockey League",
"East Hants Sportsplex",
"2000",
"2"
],
[
"Halifax Tars RFC",
"Rugby Nova Scotia",
"Graves Oakley",
"2006",
"0"
],
[
"Halifax Xplosions",
"Maritime Women 's Football League",
"Burnside All-Weather Turf",
"2006",
"0"
],
[
"Spryfield Silver & Black Attack",
"Nova Scotia Junior C Hockey League",
"Spryfield Lions Rink",
"2011",
"1"
],
[
"Metro Jaguars",
"Nova Scotia Junior C Hockey League",
"Centennial Arena",
"2015",
"0"
],
[
"Halifax Dockers",
"AFL Canada",
"Wanderers Grounds",
"2009",
"0"
]
] | {
"intro": "This page has the sports teams and venues in Nova Scotia's Halifax Regional Municipality:",
"section_text": "Amateur or minor-league teams",
"section_title": "Current Teams -- Minor",
"title": "Sports teams in the Halifax Regional Municipality",
"uid": "Sports_teams_in_the_Halifax_Regional_Municipality_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sports_teams_in_the_Halifax_Regional_Municipality"
} | 6,078 |
6079 | You_Better_Believe_It_0 | [
[
"Track",
"Song",
"Featuring",
"Album Artist",
"Album"
],
[
"1",
"Bitch Please",
"Snoop Dogg , Nate Dogg",
"Snoop Dogg",
"No Limit Top Dogg"
],
[
"2",
"You Better Believe It !",
"King Tee",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
],
[
"3",
"Down For The Count",
"Rah Digga , Talib Kweli",
"Talib Kweli 's & Hi Tek",
"Reflection Eternal"
],
[
"4",
"Father Day",
"Snoop Dogg , Kokane",
"",
"Likwit Rhymes titled U Can Count On Me"
],
[
"5",
"Killin ' It",
"Tha Alkaholiks",
"Tha Alkaholiks",
"Likwidation"
],
[
"6",
"Prime Time",
"Tash , E-Swift , J-Ro , Phil Da Agony",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
],
[
"7",
"Year 2000",
"",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
],
[
"8",
"Likwit Rhyming",
"Tony Touch , Tash , Defari",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
],
[
"9",
"Westcoast Hip Hop",
"Kurupt , Rosco , King Tee",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
],
[
"10",
"Loose Cannons",
"Kurupt",
"Kurupt",
"Tha Streetz Iz a Mutha"
],
[
"11",
"Big Bang Theory",
"Snoop Dogg , Tha Eastsidaz , Kurupt , CPO & Pinky",
"Snoop Dogg Presents Tha Eastsidaz",
"Tha Eastsidaz"
],
[
"12",
"My Writes",
"De La Soul , Tha Alkaholiks",
"De La Soul",
"Art Official Intelligence : Mosaic Thump"
],
[
"13",
"Pop X",
"Mack 10 , Techniec , Caviar , Pinky & Skoop",
"Mack 10",
"The Paper Route"
],
[
"14",
"The Wake Up Show",
"Tha Mexakinz , Chino XL",
"Sway & King Tech",
""
],
[
"15",
"Larger Than Life",
"Phil da Agony , Montage One",
"",
""
],
[
"16",
"Step Up",
"Kurupt , Daz , Crooked I",
"Kurupt",
"Tha Streetz Iz a Mutha"
],
[
"17",
"Thunder & Lighting",
"Defari",
"Defari",
"Focused Daily"
],
[
"18",
"U Ca n't Fuck With Me",
"Snoop Dogg , LL Cool J , Jayo Felony",
"LL Cool J",
"G.O.A.T . ( Greatest of All Time )"
],
[
"19",
"Bitch Please II",
"Snoop Dogg , Nate Dogg , Eminem , Dr. Dre",
"Eminem",
"The Marshall Mathers LP"
],
[
"20",
"Up From Da Underground",
"Ras Kass , Mad Lion , KRS-One",
"Xzibit",
"Likwit Rhymes"
]
] | {
"intro": "You Better Believe It is a compilation album by Xzibit containing songs that featured him. The compilation contains previously released material including songs he was on as a featured guest.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Track listing",
"title": "You Better Believe It",
"uid": "You_Better_Believe_It_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Better_Believe_It"
} | 6,079 |
6080 | Nancy_Lieberman_Award_0 | [
[
"Season",
"Player",
"School",
"Class"
],
[
"1999-00",
"Sue Bird",
"Connecticut",
"Sophomore"
],
[
"2000-01",
"Sue Bird ( 2 )",
"Connecticut",
"Junior"
],
[
"2001-02",
"Sue Bird * ( 3 )",
"Connecticut",
"Senior"
],
[
"2002-03",
"Diana Taurasi *",
"Connecticut",
"Junior"
],
[
"2003-04",
"Diana Taurasi * ( 2 )",
"Connecticut",
"Senior"
],
[
"2004-05",
"Temeka Johnson",
"LSU",
"Senior"
],
[
"2005-06",
"Ivory Latta",
"North Carolina",
"Junior"
],
[
"2006-07",
"Lindsey Harding *",
"Duke",
"Senior"
],
[
"2007-08",
"Kristi Toliver",
"Maryland",
"Junior"
],
[
"2008-09",
"Renee Montgomery",
"Connecticut",
"Senior"
],
[
"2009-10",
"Andrea Riley",
"Oklahoma State",
"Senior"
],
[
"2010-11",
"Courtney Vandersloot",
"Gonzaga",
"Senior"
],
[
"2011-12",
"Skylar Diggins",
"Notre Dame",
"Junior"
],
[
"2012-13",
"Skylar Diggins ( 2 )",
"Notre Dame",
"Senior"
],
[
"2013-14",
"Odyssey Sims *",
"Baylor",
"Senior"
],
[
"2014-15",
"Moriah Jefferson",
"Connecticut",
"Junior"
],
[
"2015-16",
"Moriah Jefferson ( 2 )",
"Connecticut",
"Senior"
],
[
"2016-17",
"Kelsey Plum *",
"Washington",
"Senior"
],
[
"2017-18",
"Sabrina Ionescu",
"Oregon",
"Sophomore"
],
[
"2018-19",
"Sabrina Ionescu * ( 2 )",
"Oregon",
"Junior"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Nancy Lieberman Award, named for Basketball Hall of Fame legend Nancy Lieberman, was given annually by the Rotary Club of Detroit in the Award's first 14 years to the nation's top collegiate point guard in women's Division I basketball. Sue Bird won the inaugural award in 2000 - her first of an unmatched three Lieberman Awards. No freshman (first-year player) has ever won the award, and only two players have won as sophomores (second-year players) - Bird in 2000 and Sabrina Ionescu in 2018. The award is given to a player who exemplifies the floor leadership, play-making and ball-handling skills that personified Nancy Lieberman during her career. Originally, voting was performed exclusively by sportswriters. The announcement of the winner has coincided with the Final Four weekend, with an award ceremony the following Wednesday which was hosted by the Detroit Rotary Club at the Detroit Athletic Club through 2013. Beginning with the 2014 award to Odyssey Sims of Baylor University, the Nancy Lieberman Award has been presented by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as part of the Final Four proceedings, and is now presented at the annual convention of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA). The 2017-18 season started a new era for the award. Since that season, the WBCA has partnered with the Naismith Hall in the presentation of the award. The two bodies also incorporated the Lieberman Award into a new set of awards known as the Naismith Starting 5, presented at the WBCA convention to players at each of the five traditional basketball positions. These awards parallel a previously existing set of men's basketball positional awards also presented by the Hall. The other four are:",
"section_text": "Connecticut 's Sue Bird ( with ball ) is the only player to have won the Nancy Lieberman Award on three occasions .",
"section_title": "Winners",
"title": "Nancy Lieberman Award",
"uid": "Nancy_Lieberman_Award_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Lieberman_Award"
} | 6,080 |
6081 | Historic_Chapels_Trust_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"Date",
"Notes",
"Grade"
],
[
"Farfield Friends Meeting House",
"Addingham , West Yorkshire 53°57′44″N 1°53′08″W / 53.9621°N 1.8855°W / 53.9621 ; -1.8855 ( Farfield Friends Meeting House )",
"1689",
"This is a small , simple Quaker meeting house built immediately after the Act of Toleration , on land previously used as a burial ground . Outside the meeting house are five chest tombs of an unusual type for a Quaker burial ground",
"II*"
],
[
"Walpole Old Chapel",
"Walpole , Suffolk 52°19′24″N 1°28′54″E / 52.3232°N 1.4816°E / 52.3232 ; 1.4816 ( Walpole Old Chapel )",
"1689",
"Built as soon as allowed by the Act of Toleration , the chapel was converted from an existing farmhouse . Initially used by a group of Independent Christians , it later became a Congregational chapel . In the 1860s , it was taken over by the Primitive Methodists",
"II*"
],
[
"Cote Baptist Chapel",
"Bampton , Oxfordshire 51°43′32″N 1°29′35″W / 51.7255°N 1.4930°W / 51.7255 ; -1.4930 ( Cote Baptist Chapel )",
"1703-04",
"The chapel was built for a group of Baptists originating on the other side of the River Thames . It was enlarged in the 1750s , and in the late 1850s underwent an extensive restoration . Following another restoration in the 1990s , it is now used for weddings , concerts , and other events",
"II*"
],
[
"Salem Chapel",
"East Budleigh , Devon 50°39′28″N 3°19′00″W / 50.6577°N 3.3167°W / 50.6577 ; -3.3167 ( Salem Chapel , East Budleigh )",
"1719",
"Initially a Presbyterian chapel , it was later used by Congregationalists , and then by the Assemblies of God . Adjacent to it is a separate assembly room . It is now used for concerts and other events , weddings , and the occasional church service",
"II*"
],
[
"Coanwood Friends Meeting House",
"Haltwhistle , Northumberland 54°55′27″N 2°27′15″W / 54.9243°N 2.4541°W / 54.9243 ; -2.4541 ( Coanwood Friends Meeting House )",
"1720",
"This meeting house stands in an isolated position and is unchanged since it was built , other than the replacement of its thatched roof with slates . The interior retains its original layout , with rows of benches for the congregation and elders still in place . In the burial ground are typical Quaker gravestones , some of which commemorate the Wigham family , who helped to found the meeting house",
"II*"
],
[
"Grittleton Strict Baptist Chapel",
"Grittleton , Wiltshire 51°31′09″N 2°12′02″W / 51.5193°N 2.2006°W / 51.5193 ; -2.2006 ( Grittleton Baptist Chapel )",
"1720 c. 1720",
"The chapel opened in 1721 . It has a rectangular plan with a tiled roof . Inside there are galleries at each end . Under the north gallery is a vestry , in front of which is a pulpit with a staircase and preacher 's seat . In the body of the chapel are box pews and a child 's pew",
"II*"
],
[
"St George 's German Lutheran Church",
"Alie Street , London 51°30′51″N 0°04′14″W / 51.5142°N 0.0705°W / 51.5142 ; -0.0705 ( St George 's German Lutheran Church )",
"1762-63",
"St George 's was the fifth Lutheran church to be built in London , and continued to be used by Lutherans until 1996 . It now contains the offices of the Historic Chapels Trust and is also used for concerts , organ recitals , and other events",
"II*"
],
[
"St Benet 's Chapel",
"Netherton , Merseyside 53°29′41″N 2°58′04″W / 53.4946°N 2.9678°W / 53.4946 ; -2.9678 ( St Benet 's Chapel , Netherton )",
"1793",
"Although it was built after the Catholic Relief Acts that allowed Roman Catholics to worship openly , the chapel is concealed behind the presbytery that appears from the road to be a standard two-bay house . It retains some of its original fittings , and as of 2010 it is being restored as it would have been before the Second Vatican Council . The presbytery is used as a residence for retired priests",
"II*"
],
[
"Bethesda Methodist Chapel",
"Hanley , Stoke-on-Trent , Staffordshire 53°01′24″N 2°10′37″W / 53.0233°N 2.1769°W / 53.0233 ; -2.1769 ( Bethesda Methodist Chapel , Hanley )",
"1819",
"Once known as the Cathedral of the Potteries , it was built for the Methodist New Connexion . An elaborate portico was added to its frontage in 1859 . During the 20th century its congregation declined and its fabric deteriorated , leading to its closure in 1985 . Repairs costing £2.5 million are under way as of 2010",
"II*"
],
[
"Biddlestone Chapel",
"Biddlestone , Northumberland 55°22′08″N 2°04′19″W / 55.3688°N 2.0720°W / 55.3688 ; -2.0720 ( Biddlestone Chapel )",
"1820 c. 1820",
"The chapel stands in a remote location and was built as a private chapel for Biddlestone Hall by the Roman Catholic Selby family . The hall has been demolished , but the chapel has been retained . It was built on the remains of a medieval pele tower , incorporating some of its fabric",
"II*"
],
[
"Dissenters ' Chapel",
"Kensal Green Cemetery , London 51°31′37″N 0°12′57″W / 51.5269°N 0.2159°W / 51.5269 ; -0.2159 ( Dissenters ' Chapel , Kensal Green Cemetery )",
"1832",
"The first purpose-built Nonconformist chapel to be built in a public cemetery , its condition had deteriorated so much that its wings were demolished in the 1970s . Later that decade , the chapel underwent a major restoration , including rebuilding the wings , and restoring the original painting scheme",
"II*"
],
[
"Thorndon Park Chapel",
"Thorndon Park , Essex 51°35′55″N 0°19′48″E / 51.5987°N 0.3301°E / 51.5987 ; 0.3301 ( Thorndon Park Chapel )",
"1850 c. 1850",
"This was built as the private Roman Catholic chantry chapel and mausoleum for the Petre family in the grounds of Thorndon Hall . It was designed by William Wardell , and is in Decorated style . The interior has an elaborately decorated roof , including depictions of angels , and a richly carved reredos",
"II*"
],
[
"Wainsgate Baptist Church",
"Hebden Bridge , West Yorkshire 53°45′20″N 2°00′15″W / 53.7555°N 2.0041°W / 53.7555 ; -2.0041 ( Wainsgate Baptist Church )",
"1859-60",
"The chapel stands in an elevated position overlooking Hebden Bridge . Attached to the rear of the chapel is the former manse , converted into a school in 1890 . The chapel closed in 2001 , and is now a venue for concerts and other events",
"II*"
],
[
"Todmorden Unitarian Church",
"Todmorden , West Yorkshire 53°42′40″N 2°05′56″W / 53.7111°N 2.0990°W / 53.7111 ; -2.0990 ( Todmorden Unitarian Church )",
"1865-69",
"The church was built by the Fielden family , local mill owners , and it is constructed using the best quality materials . It was designed by John Gibson in Gothic style with a large spire 196 feet ( 60 m ) high . Following a £1 million programme of repairs , which included restoration of the surrounding landscape and burial ground , it is now used for occasional services , weddings and other events",
"I"
],
[
"Westgate Methodist Chapel",
"Bishop Auckland , County Durham 54°44′14″N 2°08′54″W / 54.7372°N 2.1482°W / 54.7372 ; -2.1482 ( Westgate Methodist Chapel )",
"1871",
"Built for the Primitive Methodists , the chapel closed in 2007 . It retains its Victorian layout , complete with the original pews , gallery , windows , a magnificent organ , and much detailed decoration",
"II*"
],
[
"Umberslade Baptist Church",
"Hockley Heath , West Midlands 52°20′48″N 1°47′09″W / 52.3467°N 1.7859°W / 52.3467 ; -1.7859 ( Umberslade Baptist Chapel )",
"1877",
"George Ingall designed the church for the Baptist George Frederick Muntz , junior , of Umberslade Hall . It is constructed in blue lias stone in Decorated style with a spire , and has much elaborate detail . Repairs costing about £500,000 were completed in 2008",
"II"
],
[
"Penrose Methodist Chapel",
"St Ervan , Cornwall 50°29′53″N 4°59′50″W / 50.4980°N 4.9971°W / 50.4980 ; -4.9971 ( Penrose Methodist Chapel )",
"1861",
"The chapel 's plan is a simple rectangle with a single storey . Its interior retains its original layout , with box pews , and benches in the area once occupied by the musicians and choir",
"II*"
],
[
"Longworth Roman Catholic Chapel",
"Bartestree , Herefordshire 52°03′43″N 2°37′51″W / 52.0620°N 2.6308°W / 52.0620 ; -2.6308 ( Longworth RC Chapel )",
"1869-70",
"Originally the medieval chapel to the manor house at Old Longworth , it was used for agricultural purposes after the Reformation . The chapel was restored in 1851 , then moved to a site adjacent to convent at Bartestree in 1869-70 . It is probable that the move and rebuilding were supervised by E. W. Pugin",
"II*"
],
[
"Wallasey Memorial Unitarian Church",
"Wallasey , Merseyside 53°25′18″N 3°02′28″W / 53.4216°N 3.0410°W / 53.4216 ; -3.0410 ( Wallasey Memorial Unitarian Church )",
"1899",
"Designed by Edmund Waring and Edmund Rathbone in Arts and Crafts style , the church is constructed in brick with stone dressings . Many of the internal fittings were designed by Art Nouveau craftsmen from the Bromsgrove Guild",
"II*"
],
[
"Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes",
"Blackpool , Lancashire 53°49′22″N 3°00′59″W / 53.8229°N 3.0165°W / 53.8229 ; -3.0165 ( Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes )",
"1955-57",
"The shrine was built as a thanksgiving for the relatively small amount of damage sustained by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lancaster during the Second World War . It was designed by Francis Xavier Verlarde and is constructed in Portland stone with copper cladding to its roof and flèche . As of 2010 the shrine is being converted into a community centre",
"II*"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Historic Chapels Trust is a British Registered Charity set up to care for redundant non-Anglican churches, chapels, and places of worship in England. To date, its holdings encompass various nonconformist Christian denominations and Roman Catholic sites.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Rescued Places of Worship",
"title": "Historic Chapels Trust",
"uid": "Historic_Chapels_Trust_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_Chapels_Trust"
} | 6,081 |
6082 | List_of_United_States_death_row_inmates_16 | [
[
"Name",
"Description of crime",
"Time on death row"
],
[
"Romell Broom",
"Kidnapped , raped and strangled a teenage girl , and attempted to kidnap two of her friends",
"34 years , 106 days"
],
[
"Shawn Grate",
"Serial killer with 5 known victims",
"1 year , 251 days"
],
[
"Anthony Kirkland",
"Between 2006 and 2009 , Kirkland strangled , raped , and burned the bodies of four females",
"9 years , 312 days"
],
[
"Michael Madison",
"Madison kidnapped , raped and strangled three women in 2012-2013",
"3 years , 239 days"
],
[
"Austin Myers",
"Orchestrated the murder of 18-year-old Justin Back",
"5 years , 113 days"
],
[
"Donna Roberts",
"Shot her ex-husband in order to collect his life insurance",
"16 years , 226 days"
],
[
"Anthony Sowell",
"Committed 11 murders between 2007 and 2009",
"8 years , 146 days"
],
[
"James D. Worley",
"Murdered 20-year-old Sierah Joughin",
"1 year , 294 days"
]
] | {
"intro": "As of October 1, 2019, there were 2,639 death row inmates in the United States. The number of death row inmates changes daily with new convictions, appellate decisions overturning conviction or sentence alone, commutations, or deaths (through execution or otherwise). Due to this fluctuation as well as lag and inconsistencies in inmate reporting procedures across jurisdictions, the information in this article may be out of date.",
"section_text": "Main article : Capital punishment in Ohio Currently on death row : 136 ( September 10 , 2019 ) [ 75 ] Total number executed : 483 ( 1700–2018 ) [ 18 ] [ 29 ] Due to the high number of Ohio death row inmates , only prisoners with Wikipedia pages are listed in this article . A full list is externally linked : List of death row inmates in Ohio",
"section_title": "List of death row inmates by jurisdiction -- Ohio",
"title": "List of death row inmates in the United States",
"uid": "List_of_United_States_death_row_inmates_16",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_death_row_inmates_in_the_United_States"
} | 6,082 |
6083 | 2002_AFL_Draft_1 | [
[
"Round",
"Pick",
"Player",
"Recruited from",
"Club"
],
[
"1",
"1",
"Brendon Goddard",
"Gippsland Power",
"St Kilda"
],
[
"1",
"2",
"Daniel Wells",
"Peel Thunder",
"Kangaroos"
],
[
"1",
"3",
"Jared Brennan",
"Southern Districts",
"Brisbane Lions"
],
[
"1",
"4",
"Tim Walsh",
"Northern Knights",
"Western Bulldogs"
],
[
"1",
"5",
"Jarrad McVeigh",
"NSW/ACT Rams",
"Sydney Swans"
],
[
"1",
"6",
"Steven Salopek",
"Dandenong Stingrays",
"Port Adelaide"
],
[
"1",
"7",
"Andrew Mackie",
"Glenelg",
"Geelong"
],
[
"1",
"8",
"Luke Brennan",
"North Ballarat Rebels",
"Hawthorn"
],
[
"1",
"9",
"Hamish McIntosh",
"Murray Bushrangers",
"Kangaroos"
],
[
"1",
"10",
"Jason Laycock",
"Tassie Mariners",
"Essendon"
],
[
"1",
"11",
"Jason Winderlich",
"Gippsland Power",
"Essendon"
],
[
"1",
"12",
"Jay Schulz",
"Woodville-West Torrens",
"Richmond"
],
[
"1",
"13",
"Byron Schammer",
"West Adelaide",
"Fremantle"
],
[
"1",
"14",
"Daniel Bell",
"Glenelg",
"Melbourne"
],
[
"1",
"15",
"Nicholas Smith",
"Norwood",
"Melbourne"
],
[
"2",
"16",
"Stephen Gilham",
"Oakleigh Chargers",
"Port Adelaide"
],
[
"2",
"17",
"Cameron Faulkner",
"Central District",
"Western Bulldogs"
],
[
"2",
"18",
"Kris Shore",
"Eastern Ranges",
"Kangaroos"
],
[
"2",
"19",
"Troy Selwood",
"Bendigo Pioneers",
"Brisbane Lions"
],
[
"2",
"20",
"Will Minson",
"Norwood",
"Western Bulldogs"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2002 AFL draft consisted of a pre-season draft, a national draft, a trade period and the elevation of rookies. The AFL draft is the annual draft of talented players by Australian rules football teams that participate in the main competition of that sport, the Australian Football League. In 2002 there were 88 picks to be drafted between 16 teams in the national draft. Carlton forfeited its priority and first round draft picks due to gross salary cap breaches (it would have also forfeited its second round pick, but they had already traded it to Port Adelaide for Barnaby French). Carlton's punishment came on the back of a dismal 2002 season in which it won its first ever wooden spoon after 105 years of competition. The first pick therefore went to St Kilda, who finished second last during the 2002 AFL season. This was the first draft since their introduction in 1993 that no team received a priority pick, as St Kilda had a record of 5-16-1 (giving them 22 premiership points, above the 20.5 premiership points needed to qualify for a priority pick under the rules at the time).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "2002 national draft",
"title": "2002 AFL draft",
"uid": "2002_AFL_Draft_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_AFL_draft"
} | 6,083 |
6084 | List_of_prehistoric_insects_6 | [
[
"Name",
"Authors",
"Unit",
"Location",
"Notes"
],
[
"Acanthognathus poinari",
"Baroni Urbani & De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A trap-jaw ant"
],
[
"Acanthostichus hispaniolicus",
"De Andrade , 1998",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A doryline ant"
],
[
"Acropyga glaesaria",
"Lapolla , 2005",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"Oldest record of trophophoresy in ants"
],
[
"Anochetus ambiguus",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus brevidentatus",
"MacKay , 1991",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus conisquamis",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus dubius",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus exstinctus",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus intermedius",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anochetus lucidus",
"De Andrade , 1994",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A ponerin ant"
],
[
"Anthophorula persephone",
"Engel , 2012",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A bee"
],
[
"Aphaenogaster amphioceanica",
"De Andrade , 1995",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A myrmicin ant"
],
[
"Aphaenogaster avita",
"Fujiyama , 1970",
"Chojabaru Formation",
"Japan",
"A myrmicin ant"
],
[
"Aphaenogaster praerelicta",
"De Andrade , 1995",
"Mexican amber",
"Mexico",
"A myrmicin ant"
],
[
"Apterostigma electropilosum",
"Schultz , 2007",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A myrmicin fungus farming ant"
],
[
"Apterostigma eowilsoni",
"Schultz , 2007",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A myrmicin fungus farming ant"
],
[
"Attopsis longipennis",
"Heer , 1849",
"Radoboj",
"Croatia",
"A formicine ant"
],
[
"Augochlora leptoloba",
"Engel , 1995",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A sweat bee"
],
[
"Dicromantispa electromexicana",
"Engel & Grimaldi , 2007",
"Mexican Amber",
"Mexico",
"A mantidfly"
],
[
"Dicromantispa moronei",
"Engel & Grimaldi , 2007",
"Dominican amber",
"Dominican Republic",
"A mantidfly"
]
] | {
"intro": "Prehistoric insects are various groups of insects that lived before recorded history. Their study is the field of paleoentomology. Insects inhabited Earth since before the time of the dinosaurs. The earliest identifiable insect is the Devonian Rhyniognatha hirsti, estimated at 407 to 396 million years ago. Forms similar to many modern insects had already evolved before the dawning of the dinosaur and lived alongside them and beyond up to the present day. Like today, prehistoric insects were an important part of the food chain in their time. The differences between modern and prehistoric varieties can be essential, and, like many other creatures of prehistory, the latter tended to be much larger than their contemporary equivalents. This size difference is thought to be due to higher atmospheric oxygen levels (allowing diffusion through spiracles over greater distances), higher temperatures (enhancing metabolism), and the absence of birds as key predators of insect life. Since insects have chitin exoskeletons rather than mineralized bones, their burial processes differ compared to the fossils of much larger vertebrates such as dinosaurs. Many insect remains are found preserved in the hardened sap of ancient trees (amber).",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Miocene",
"title": "List of prehistoric insects",
"uid": "List_of_prehistoric_insects_6",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prehistoric_insects"
} | 6,084 |
6085 | FIS_Snowboard_World_Cup_5 | [
[
"Season",
"Winner",
"Runner-up",
"Third"
],
[
"2010-11",
"Cai Xuetong",
"Holly Crawford",
"Sun Zhifeng"
],
[
"2011-12",
"Cai Xuetong",
"Queralt Castellet",
"Emma Bernard"
],
[
"2012-13",
"Kelly Clark",
"Liu Jiayu",
"Sophie Rodriguez"
],
[
"2013-14",
"Šárka Pančochová",
"Kelly Clark",
"Cheryl Maas"
],
[
"2014-15",
"Cheryl Maas",
"Klaudia Medlová",
"Kelly Clark"
],
[
"2015-16",
"Jamie Anderson",
"Cai Xuetong",
"Katie Ormerod"
],
[
"2016-17",
"Anna Gasser",
"Jamie Anderson",
"Julia Marino"
],
[
"2017-18",
"Miyabi Onitsuka",
"Chloe Kim",
"Liu Jiayu"
],
[
"2018-19",
"Miyabi Onitsuka",
"Reira Iwabuchi",
"Cai Xuetong"
]
] | {
"intro": "The FIS Snowboard World Cup is an annual snowboarding competition, arranged by the International Ski Federation (FIS) since 1994. Throughout the years they have come and gone different disciplines, and categories that grouped some of the disciplines. Currently disciplines contested in the World Cup are: Parallel giant slalom and Parallel slalom (grouped into Parallel category), Halfpipe, Big air and Slope style (grouped into AFU category) and the discipline-category of Snowboard cross. Some of these disciplines have played discontinuously in time. The only discipline contested in every season of the World Cup is the Halfpipe (and from 1996-97 season the Snowboard cross). There was an Overall classification until the 2009-10 season. Since then, the World Cup is divided into the three categories described above, some of which already existed before.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Women 's standings -- Existing disciplines and grouped",
"title": "FIS Snowboard World Cup",
"uid": "FIS_Snowboard_World_Cup_5",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIS_Snowboard_World_Cup"
} | 6,085 |
6086 | Golden_Spike_award_(Belgium)_0 | [
[
"Year",
"Winner ( Male )",
"Winner ( Female )",
"Talent ( Male )",
"Talent ( Female )"
],
[
"1989",
"Godfried Dejonckheere",
"Véronique Collard",
"Gino Van Geyte",
"Anneke Matthijs"
],
[
"1990",
"Patrick Stevens",
"Lieve Slegers",
"Stefaan Allemeersch",
"Sandrine Hennart"
],
[
"1991",
"Godfried Dejonckheere",
"Sylvia Dethier",
"Yassin Guellet",
"Anja Smolders"
],
[
"1992",
"William Van Dijck",
"Lieve Slegers",
"Benjamin Leroy",
"Sabrina De Leeuw"
],
[
"1993",
"Vincent Rousseau",
"Sabrina De Leeuw",
"Nathan Kahan",
"Kathleen Van Hove"
],
[
"1994",
"Vincent Rousseau",
"Lieve Slegers",
"Erik Nijs",
"Annelies Demeester"
],
[
"1995",
"Patrick Stevens",
"Lieve Slegers",
"Sven Pieters",
"Kim Gevaert"
],
[
"1996",
"Patrick Stevens",
"Ann Mercken",
"Kjell Provost",
"Cindy Stas"
],
[
"1997",
"Mohammed Mourhit",
"Marleen Renders",
"Ben Quintelier",
"Ludivine Michel"
],
[
"1998",
"Jonathan N'Senga",
"Marleen Renders",
"Johan Kloek",
"Catherine Lallemand"
],
[
"1999",
"Mohammed Mourhit",
"Marleen Renders",
"Thibaut Duval & Hans Janssens",
"Veerle Dejaeghere"
],
[
"2000",
"Mohammed Mourhit",
"Veerle Dejaeghere",
"Matthieu Van Diest",
"Mieke Geens"
],
[
"2001",
"Mohammed Mourhit",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Kevin Rans",
"Sigrid Vanden Bempt"
],
[
"2002",
"Cédric Van Branteghem",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Michael Velter",
"Elfje Willemsen"
],
[
"2003",
"Cédric Van Branteghem",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Xavier De Baerdemaeker",
"Olivia Borlée"
],
[
"2004",
"Joeri Jansen",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Pieter Desmet",
"Lien Huyghebaert"
],
[
"2005",
"François Gourmet",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Frédéric Xhonneux",
"Eline Berings"
],
[
"2006",
"Kristof Beyens",
"Tia Hellebaut",
"Jonathan Borlée",
"Annelies Peetroons"
],
[
"2007",
"Hans Van Alphen",
"Kim Gevaert",
"Adrien Deghelt",
"Anne Zagré"
],
[
"2008",
"Kevin Borlée",
"Tia Hellebaut",
"Kevin Borlée",
"Hannelore Desmet"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Gouden Spike (English: Golden Spike) is the most important athletics prize in Belgium. The prize honours the best Belgian male and female athlete of the year and the best male and female Belgian young talent of the year.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Winners",
"title": "Golden Spike award",
"uid": "Golden_Spike_award_(Belgium)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Spike_award"
} | 6,086 |
6087 | List_of_disasters_in_Australia_by_death_toll_1 | [
[
"Disaster",
"Location",
"Deaths",
"Date",
"Notes"
],
[
"Heat wave",
"Southern regions Australia",
"99",
"1972 Dec - 1973 Feb",
""
],
[
"Cyclone",
"Northern Queensland",
"99",
"1934 Mar 12",
"A tropical cyclone crossed the North Queensland coast around Cape Tribulation , which generated a 9.1 storm surge . A pearling fleet off the coast was damaged , with 75 people reported lost ( one source says 99 )"
],
[
"Explosion",
"Mount Kembla , New South Wales",
"96",
"1902 Jul 31",
"Mount Kembla Mine disaster . Coal mine gas explosion"
],
[
"Shipwreck",
"Monte Bello Islands , Western Australia",
"93",
"1622 May 24",
"Tryall . Earliest recorded Australian shipwreck"
],
[
"Flood",
"Gundagai , New South Wales",
"89",
"1852 Jun 24-25",
"A severe flash flood destroyed the town of Gundagai , which resulted in 89 deaths"
],
[
"Shipwreck",
"near Carpenter Rocks , in South East South Australia",
"89",
"1859 Aug 6",
"SS Admella . South Australia 's worst loss of life"
],
[
"Air raid",
"Broome , Western Australia",
"88",
"1942 Mar 3",
"Air raid on Broome . Japanese fighter planes strafed the town . Official toll ; may not include some refugees from the Dutch East Indies"
],
[
"Rail accident",
"Sydney , New South Wales",
"83",
"1977 Jan 18",
"Granville railway disaster . Derailment followed by bridge collapse"
],
[
"Sinking",
"twenty miles south-east of Jervis Bay , New South Wales",
"82",
"1964 Feb 10",
"Melbourne-Voyager collision - HMAS Voyager sank after collision with HMAS Melbourne"
],
[
"Explosion",
"Bulli , New South Wales",
"81",
"1887 Mar 23",
"Bulli Colliery coal mine gas explosion"
],
[
"Shipwreck",
"King Island , Tasmania",
"79",
"1874 May 23",
"British Admiral"
],
[
"Cyclone",
"Queensland coast , particularly Innisfail",
"77+",
"1918 Mar 10",
"Cyclone and storm surge with death toll estimated between 77 and 100"
],
[
"Storms",
"New South Wales between Port Stephens and Sydney",
"77",
"1866 Jul 12",
"60 lives lost on SS Cawarra alone"
],
[
"Explosion",
"Mount Mulligan , Queensland",
"75",
"1921 Sep 19",
"Mount Mulligan coal dust explosion"
],
[
"Bushfire",
"Victoria and South Australia",
"75",
"1983 Feb 16",
"Ash Wednesday bushfires"
],
[
"Shipwreck",
"Green Cape , New South Wales",
"71",
"1886 May 30",
"The steamship Ly-Ee-Moon was wrecked during a violent gale on 30 May 1886 near Green Cape , resulting in around 71 deaths"
],
[
"Bushfire",
"Victoria",
"71",
"1939 Jan 13",
"Black Friday bushfires"
],
[
"Cyclone",
"Darwin",
"71",
"1974 Dec 25",
"Cyclone Tracy destroys the city of Darwin on Christmas Day 1974 . Top wind gust recorded was 217 kilometres per hour ( 135 mph ) . On 17 March 2005 , a Northern Territory Coroner 's Inquest outcome increased the official death toll from 65 to 71"
],
[
"Flood",
"Clermont , Queensland",
"65",
"1916 Dec 27",
""
],
[
"Bushfire",
"Tasmania",
"62",
"1967 Feb 7",
"Now known as Black Tuesday , 62 people lost their lives , and 7,000 left homeless as over a hundred fires burned in southern Tasmania"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of disasters and tragic events in modern Australia sorted by death toll.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "50 to 99 deaths",
"title": "List of disasters in Australia by death toll",
"uid": "List_of_disasters_in_Australia_by_death_toll_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disasters_in_Australia_by_death_toll"
} | 6,087 |
6088 | Supreme_Commander_of_the_Swedish_Armed_Forces_0 | [
[
"No",
"Name",
"Took office",
"Left office",
"Time in office",
"Defence branch"
],
[
"1",
"Thörnell , Olof General Olof Thörnell ( 1877-1977 )",
"8 December 1939",
"31 March 1944",
"4 years , 114 days",
"Army"
],
[
"2",
"Jung , Helge General Helge Jung ( 1886-1978 )",
"1 April 1944",
"31 March 1951",
"6 years , 364 days",
"Army"
],
[
"3",
"Swedlund , Nils General Nils Swedlund ( 1898-1965 )",
"1 April 1951",
"30 September 1961",
"10 years , 182 days",
"Army"
],
[
"4",
"Rapp , Torsten General Torsten Rapp ( 1905-1993 )",
"1 October 1961",
"30 September 1970",
"8 years , 364 days",
"Air Force"
],
[
"5",
"Synnergren , Stig General Stig Synnergren ( 1915-2004 )",
"1 October 1970",
"30 September 1978",
"7 years , 364 days",
"Army"
],
[
"6",
"Ljung , Lennart General Lennart Ljung ( 1921-1990 )",
"1 October 1978",
"30 September 1986",
"7 years , 364 days",
"Army"
],
[
"7",
"Gustafsson , Bengt General Bengt Gustafsson ( 1933-2019 )",
"1 October 1986",
"30 June 1994",
"7 years , 272 days",
"Army"
],
[
"8",
"Wiktorin , Owe General Owe Wiktorin ( born 1940 )",
"1 July 1994",
"30 June 2000",
"5 years , 365 days",
"Air Force"
],
[
"9",
"Hederstedt , Johan General Johan Hederstedt ( born 1943 )",
"1 July 2000",
"31 December 2003",
"3 years , 184 days",
"Army"
],
[
"10",
"Syrén , Håkan General Håkan Syrén ( born 1952 )",
"1 January 2004",
"24 March 2009",
"5 years , 82 days",
"Navy ( Amphibious Corps )"
],
[
"11",
"Göranson , Sverker General Sverker Göranson ( born 1954 )",
"25 March 2009",
"30 September 2015",
"6 years , 189 days",
"Army"
],
[
"12",
"Bydén , Micael General Micael Bydén ( born 1964 )",
"1 October 2015",
"Incumbent",
"4 years , 124 days",
"Air Force"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Supreme Commander (Swedish: Överbefälhavaren; acronym: ÖB) is the highest ranked professional military officer in the Swedish Armed Forces, and is by NATO terminology the Swedish chief of defence equivalent. The Supreme Commander is the agency head of the Swedish Armed Forces and formally reports to the Government of Sweden, though normally through the Minister for Defence. [b] The primary responsibilities and duties of the Supreme Commander (and the charter for the Armed Forces) are prescribed in an ordinance issued by the Government. The Supreme Commander is, apart from the honorary ranks held by the King of Sweden and in the past other members of the Swedish Royal Family, by unwritten convention normally the only professional military officer on active duty to hold the highest rank (a four-star General or Admiral). An exception was made 2009-2014 when Håkan Syrén was chairman of the European Union Military Committee. The present Supreme Commander, General Micael Bydén, took office on 1 October 2015.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List of Supreme Commanders",
"title": "Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces",
"uid": "Supreme_Commander_of_the_Swedish_Armed_Forces_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supreme_Commander_of_the_Swedish_Armed_Forces"
} | 6,088 |
6089 | List_of_living_Medal_of_Honor_recipients_2 | [
[
"Name",
"Branch",
"Birth date and age"
],
[
"Bennie Adkins",
"Army",
"( 1934-02-01 ) February 1 , 1934 ( age 86 )"
],
[
"John Baca",
"Army",
"( 1949-01-10 ) January 10 , 1949 ( age 71 )"
],
[
"Donald E. Ballard",
"Navy",
"( 1945-12-05 ) December 5 , 1945 ( age 74 )"
],
[
"Harvey C. Barnum , Jr",
"Marine Corps",
"( 1940-07-21 ) July 21 , 1940 ( age 79 )"
],
[
"Gary B. Beikirch",
"Army",
"( 1947-08-29 ) August 29 , 1947 ( age 72 )"
],
[
"Patrick Henry Brady",
"Army",
"( 1936-10-01 ) October 1 , 1936 ( age 83 )"
],
[
"Paul Bucha",
"Army",
"( 1943-08-01 ) August 1 , 1943 ( age 76 )"
],
[
"John Canley",
"Marine Corps",
"( 1938-02-01 ) February 1 , 1938 ( age 82 )"
],
[
"Bruce P. Crandall",
"Army",
"( 1933-02-17 ) February 17 , 1933 ( age 86 )"
],
[
"Sammy L. Davis",
"Army",
"( 1946-11-01 ) November 1 , 1946 ( age 73 )"
],
[
"Drew Dennis Dix",
"Army",
"( 1944-12-14 ) December 14 , 1944 ( age 75 )"
],
[
"Roger Donlon",
"Army",
"( 1934-01-30 ) January 30 , 1934 ( age 86 )"
],
[
"Frederick Edgar Ferguson",
"Army",
"( 1939-08-18 ) August 18 , 1939 ( age 80 )"
],
[
"Michael John Fitzmaurice",
"Army",
"( 1950-03-09 ) March 9 , 1950 ( age 69 )"
],
[
"James P. Fleming",
"Air Force",
"( 1943-03-12 ) March 12 , 1943 ( age 76 )"
],
[
"Robert F. Foley",
"Army",
"( 1941-05-30 ) May 30 , 1941 ( age 78 )"
],
[
"Harold A. Fritz",
"Army",
"( 1944-02-21 ) February 21 , 1944 ( age 75 )"
],
[
"Charles C. Hagemeister",
"Army",
"( 1946-08-21 ) August 21 , 1946 ( age 73 )"
],
[
"Frank A. Herda",
"Army",
"( 1947-09-13 ) September 13 , 1947 ( age 72 )"
],
[
"Robert R. Ingram",
"Navy",
"( 1945-01-20 ) January 20 , 1945 ( age 75 )"
]
] | {
"intro": "There are currently 71 living recipients of the United States military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor. The Medal of Honor is bestowed upon any member of the United States armed forces who distinguishes himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States. Of the 71 living recipients, two earned their Medals of Honor in World War II, five in the Korean War, 49 in the Vietnam War, 14 in the War in Afghanistan and one in the War in Iraq. One earned his medal while serving in the U.S. Air Force, 50 in the U.S. Army, 12 in the U.S. Marine Corps, and eight in the U.S. Navy. The oldest recipient is Charles H. Coolidge, aged 98, whereas the youngest is Kyle Carpenter, aged 30. Two medal holders are still on active duty in the U.S. military, War in Afghanistan soldiers William D. Swenson and Matthew O. Williams of the U.S. Army. Among the recipients are former U.S. Senator Bob Kerrey and three retired generals: Patrick Henry Brady and Robert F. Foley of the Army and James E. Livingston of the Marine Corps.",
"section_text": "Main article : List of Medal of Honor recipients for the Vietnam War During the Vietnam War and in the following twelve months , 235 Medals of Honor were awarded and since 1978 a further 26 awards have been presented . Of the total of 261 awards , 174 were to the US Army , 15 to the US Navy , 58 to the USMC and 14 to the USAF . [ 12 ]",
"section_title": "Vietnam War",
"title": "List of living Medal of Honor recipients",
"uid": "List_of_living_Medal_of_Honor_recipients_2",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_living_Medal_of_Honor_recipients"
} | 6,089 |
6090 | Top_Latin_Albums_Year-End_Chart_1 | [
[
"Rank",
"Album",
"Artist",
"Peak Top Latin Albums",
"Peak Billboard 200"
],
[
"1",
"The Last",
"Aventura",
"1",
"5"
],
[
"2",
"Euphoria",
"Enrique Iglesias",
"1",
"10"
],
[
"3",
"Iconos",
"Marc Anthony",
"1",
"11"
],
[
"4",
"Dejarte de Amar",
"Camila",
"1",
"64"
],
[
"5",
"La Revolución",
"Wisin & Yandel",
"1",
"7"
],
[
"6",
"Sale el Sol",
"Shakira",
"1",
"7"
],
[
"7",
"La Gran Señora",
"Jenni Rivera",
"2",
"171"
],
[
"8",
"No Hay Imposibles",
"Chayanne",
"1",
"23"
],
[
"9",
"Amarte a la Antigua",
"Pedro Fernández",
"2",
"141"
],
[
"10",
"En Vivo Desde Culiacan",
"Larry Hernandez",
"2",
"-"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Billboard Top Latin albums chart, published in Billboard magazine, is a record chart that features Latin music sales information. This data is compiled by Nielsen SoundScan from a sample that includes music stores, music departments at electronics and department stores, Internet sales (both physical and digital) and verifiable sales from concert venues in the United States.",
"section_text": "Unlike the List of number-one Billboard Latin Albums from the 2010s , the year-end chart on Billboard Magazine is a compilation of feature recaps throughout the year . The rankings for this chart reflect airplay or sales during the weeks that titles appeared on the respective lists during the tracking period . This includes activity during unpublished weeks for those lists that print every other week . The best selling Latin album of 2010 was The Last by Aventura . Enrique Iglesias 's Euphoria ranked at number-two within the Top 10 .",
"section_title": "Top Latin Albums Year-End Chart of 2010",
"title": "Top Latin Albums Year-End Chart",
"uid": "Top_Latin_Albums_Year-End_Chart_1",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_Latin_Albums_Year-End_Chart"
} | 6,090 |
6091 | 2009_in_Japanese_television_3 | [
[
"Show",
"Station",
"Ending Date",
"Genre",
"Original Run"
],
[
"A Certain Magical Index",
"Chiba TV",
"March 19th",
"anime",
"October 4 , 2008 - March 19 , 2009"
],
[
"Akaneiro ni Somaru Saka",
"Chiba TV",
"December 18th",
"anime",
"October 2 , 2008 - December 18 , 2008"
],
[
"Clannad After Story",
"TBS",
"March 26th",
"anime",
"October 2 , 2008 - March 26 , 2009"
],
[
"Engine Sentai Go-onger",
"TV Asahi",
"February 8th",
"tokusatsu",
"February 17 , 2008 - February 8 , 2009"
],
[
"Kamen Rider Decade",
"TV Asahi",
"August 30th",
"tokusatsu",
"January 25 , 2009 - August 30 , 2009"
],
[
"Kamen Rider Kiva",
"TV Asahi",
"January 18th",
"tokusatsu",
"January 27 , 2008 - January 18 , 2009"
],
[
"Kami no Shizuku",
"Nippon TV",
"March 10th",
"drama",
"January 13 , 2009 - March 10 , 2009"
],
[
"Kirarin Revolution STAGE-3",
"TV Tokyo",
"March 27th",
"anime",
"April 4 , 2008 - March 27 , 2009"
],
[
"Otomen",
"Fuji TV",
"October 27th",
"drama",
"August 1 , 2009 - October 27 , 2009"
],
[
"Shinya Shokudō",
"MBS",
"December 12th",
"drama",
"October 10 , 2009 - December 12 , 2009"
],
[
"Shussha ga tanoshii keizaigaku",
"NHK Educational TV",
"October 8th",
"Education",
"October 8 , 2009"
],
[
"Slayers Evolution-R",
"TV Tokyo",
"January 12th",
"anime",
"January 12 , 2009 - April 6 , 2009"
],
[
"Soul Eater",
"TV Tokyo",
"March 30th",
"anime",
"April 7 , 2008 - March 30 , 2009"
],
[
"Stitch !",
"TV Tokyo",
"March 25th",
"anime",
"October 8 , 2008 - March 25 , 2009"
],
[
"Tsubasa",
"NHK",
"September 26th",
"drama",
"March 30 , 2009 - September 26 , 2009"
],
[
"Tsure ga Utsu ni Narimashite",
"NHK",
"June 12th",
"drama",
"May 29 , 2009 - June 12 , 2009"
],
[
"Ultra Galaxy Mega Monster Battle : Never Ending Odyssey",
"BS11",
"March 14th",
"tokusatsu",
"December 20 , 2008 - March 14 , 2009"
]
] | {
"intro": "Events in 2009 in Japanese television.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Endings",
"title": "2009 in Japanese television",
"uid": "2009_in_Japanese_television_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_in_Japanese_television"
} | 6,091 |
6092 | List_of_mountains_of_the_canton_of_Schwyz_0 | [
[
"Mountain",
"Height ( m )",
"Drop ( m )",
"Range",
"District ( s )"
],
[
"Bös Fulen",
"2802",
"367",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Ortstock",
"2716",
"538",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Höch Turm",
"2666",
"264",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Pfannenstock",
"2573",
"373",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Chaiserstock",
"2515",
"470",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Fulen",
"2491",
"311",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Rossstock",
"2461",
"173",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Wasserbergfirst",
"2341",
"325",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Mutteristock ( Redertenstock )",
"2295",
"745",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"March"
],
[
"Druesberg",
"2282",
"722",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Brünnelistock",
"2133",
"250",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"March"
],
[
"Zindlenspitz",
"2097",
"195",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"March"
],
[
"Fluebrig",
"2092",
"268",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"March / Schwyz"
],
[
"Biet",
"1965",
"185",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Chlingenstock",
"1935",
"448",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Fronalpstock",
"1921",
"189",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Grosser Mythen",
"1898",
"493",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Chöpfenberg",
"1896",
"465",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"March"
],
[
"Kleiner Mythen",
"1811",
"373",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Schwyz"
],
[
"Rigi ( Kulm )",
"1798",
"1290",
"Schwyzer Alps",
"Küssnacht / Schwyz"
]
] | {
"intro": "This is a list of mountains of the Swiss canton of Schwyz. Schwyz is a very mountainous canton and lies almost entirely within the Alps. It is also one of the 15 cantons having summits above 2,000 metres. Topographically, the two most important summits of the canton are those of the Bös Fulen (most elevated) and the Rigi (most prominent and isolated). All of the mountains of the canton are part of the Schwyzer Alps mountain range, although not all the mountains of that range lie within the canton. This list only includes significant summits with a topographic prominence of at least 150 metres (492 ft). There are 38 such summits in the canton of Schwyz and they are found in almost all its districts. All mountain heights and prominences on the list are from the largest-scale maps available.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "List",
"title": "List of mountains of the canton of Schwyz",
"uid": "List_of_mountains_of_the_canton_of_Schwyz_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mountains_of_the_canton_of_Schwyz"
} | 6,092 |
6093 | Terraforming_in_popular_culture_3 | [
[
"Date",
"Title",
"Genre",
"Notes"
],
[
"1989",
"Millennium 2.2",
"Strategy",
"Colonization of the Solar System with the ultimate goal of returning Earth to habitability"
],
[
"1992",
"Star Control II",
"Multiple",
"The fungoid Mycon terraform geologically active worlds to their liking , shattering the crust , giving direct access to the mantle"
],
[
"1995",
"Millennia : Altered Destinies",
"Simulation ?",
"The invention of the terraformer usually kills its species ; it must be copied , prevented and reintroduced later to a more mature society . Success marks the end of guarding sentient species against an invader and begins the more tedious task of balancing them against each other"
],
[
"1995-2008",
"The Command & Conquer Tiberian series",
"Real-time strategy",
"Earth ravaged by the alien substance Tiberium , a self-replicating mineral extractor crystal that works on a planetary scale"
],
[
"1997",
"Outpost 2 : Divided Destiny",
"Real-time strategy",
"A failed attempt at terraforming an alien planet precipitates the game 's events as inhabitants flee the Blight and lava flows"
],
[
"1999-2008",
"The X series",
"Space flight simulator game",
"Earth has built a race of terraformer ships which have started to build colonies on uninhabited planets throughout the X Universe . These robotic machines then turn on their owners due to a programming error and wage a war against them , destroying the Terran colonies and attacking Earth itself . They now exist as the Xenon"
],
[
"2000",
"Armored Core 2",
"Third-person shooter",
"Mars is undergoing the last stages terraformation during the events of the game . It has a breathable atmosphere , surface temperatures comparable to Earth 's and a sizable ocean"
],
[
"2001",
"Hostile Waters : Antaeus Rising",
"Strategy / Third-person shooter",
"As we delve deeper in the plot , the genetically-engineered alien Species , after having turned against their masters ( Cabal ) , begin to drop the ambient temperatures of the island chicane where they operate . And in addition to pumping toxins into the air and increasing ground radiation levels , to bypass their in-built sensitivity to heat ( which in itself was a safety feature to prevent them from spreading too far ) . The effects of terraforming become more and more pronounced with every mission , until the final islands come to resemble nothing on our planet Earth , as we know it"
],
[
"2002-2008",
"Escape Velocity Nova",
"Space trading and combat",
"Mars saw the first use of terraforming technology , becoming a ball of toxic algae sludge . Other planets have been terraformed and colonized using the now-corrected processes . An optional sidequest involves hauling terraforming equipment to a barren world that becomes more hospitable"
],
[
"2004",
"Half-Life 2",
"First-person shooter",
"Earth under terraformation by the Combine Empire for new inhabitants . Examples include the draining of the oceans ( evidence of a receding shoreline can be seen near the coast ) and depletion of natural resources . A Suppression Field prevents humans from reproducing"
],
[
"2006",
"Resistance : Fall of Man",
"First-person shooter",
"The Chimera cool the Earth for their purposes , making it snow in London in July"
],
[
"2007",
"Crysis",
"First-person shooter",
"An alien ship begins forming an ice sphere around the island it has landed on , affecting weather patterns and ultimately making the Earth more habitable for them"
],
[
"2008",
"Fallout 3",
"RPG / First-person shooter",
"A prototype module capable of terraforming large areas of land and creating life itself from inanimate matter , designed to be used following a nuclear war , is central to the game 's storyline . ( The G.E.C.K . aka Garden Eden Creation Kit )"
],
[
"2009",
"Red Faction : Guerrilla",
"RPG/FPS",
"Mars is in the process of being terraformed to allow colonists and miners to walk the surface of the planet without any advanced protection . Light vegetation can be seen in certain parts of the game"
],
[
"2013",
"Defiance",
"Shooter/MMO",
"The entire Earth was subjected to terraforming events , many of which were designed to replicate alien environments . Due to the nature in which these terraforming devices were activated , it created a mostly new world : altering the physical landscape of the world , causing severe and odd weather patterns , and hybridizing plants and animals to create vicious and terrifying replacements"
],
[
"2013",
"Warframe",
"Third-person shooter",
"The Orokin were an advanced race of people capable of terraforming the entirety of the Solar System , most notable Venus , which was transformed into a cold planet through a network of coolant liquid rivers . They also deployed terraforming drones en route to the Tau Ceti system , that finally gained sentience and rebelled against their masters"
],
[
"2017",
"Horizon Zero Dawn",
"Action RPG",
"After the end of all life on Earth due to the Faro Plague , an AI is responsible to recreate and restore all life on Earth , terraforming it from lifelessness"
],
[
"2019",
"The Outer Worlds",
"Action RPG",
"After colony ships depart Earth to colonize Halcyon , they terraform planets to better fit human life . It is explained in the setting that terraforming is a relatively new science for humanity and the results are unpredictable , with the hostile moon of Monarch as an in-universe example of terraforming gone wrong with its hostile creatures and a sulfurous atmosphere that causes chronic health problems . Despite this terraforming allowing genetically modified crops to be grown , it is later discovered that food grown on these terraformed worlds is not nutritious enough to sustain all the colonists , leading to a food shortage crisis"
]
] | {
"intro": "Terraforming is well represented in popular culture, usually in the form of science fiction. While many stories involving interstellar travel feature planets already suited to habitation by humans and supporting their own indigenous life, some authors prefer to address the unlikeliness of such a concept by instead detailing the means by which humans have converted inhospitable worlds to ones capable of supporting life through artificial means. Author Jack Williamson is credited with inventing and popularizing the term terraform. In July 1942, under the pseudonym Will Stewart, Williamson published a science fiction novella entitled Collision Orbit in Astounding Science-Fiction magazine. The series was later published as two novels, Seetee Shock (1949) and Seetee Ship (1951). American geographer Richard Cathcart successfully lobbied for formal recognition of the verb to terraform, and it was first included in the fourth edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary in 1993.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Video Games -- As a plot element",
"title": "Terraforming in popular culture",
"uid": "Terraforming_in_popular_culture_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terraforming_in_popular_culture"
} | 6,093 |
6094 | Sharpe_(novel_series)_0 | [
[
"Series No",
"Title",
"Sub-title",
"First published"
],
[
"01",
"Sharpe 's Tiger",
"Richard Sharpe and the Siege of Seringapatam , 1799",
"1997"
],
[
"02",
"Sharpe 's Triumph",
"Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Assaye , September 1803",
"1998"
],
[
"03",
"Sharpe 's Fortress",
"Richard Sharpe and the Siege of Gawilghur , December 1803",
"1999"
],
[
"04",
"Sharpe 's Trafalgar",
"Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Trafalgar , October 1805",
"2000"
],
[
"05",
"Sharpe 's Prey",
"Richard Sharpe and the Siege of Copenhagen , 1807",
"2001"
],
[
"06",
"Sharpe 's Rifles",
"Richard Sharpe and the French Invasion of Galicia , January 1809",
"1988"
],
[
"07",
"Sharpe 's Havoc",
"Richard Sharpe and the Campaign in Northern Portugal , Spring 1809",
"2003"
],
[
"08",
"Sharpe 's Eagle",
"Richard Sharpe and the Talavera Campaign , July 1809",
"1981"
],
[
"09",
"Sharpe 's Gold",
"Richard Sharpe and the Destruction of Almeida , August 1810",
"1981"
],
[
"10",
"Sharpe 's Escape",
"Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Bussaco , September 1810",
"2004"
],
[
"11",
"Sharpe 's Fury",
"Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Barrosa March 1811 , Winter 1811",
"2007"
],
[
"12",
"Sharpe 's Battle",
"Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro , May 1811",
"1995"
],
[
"13",
"Sharpe 's Company",
"Richard Sharpe and the Siege of Badajoz , January to April 1812",
"1982"
],
[
"14",
"Sharpe 's Sword",
"Richard Sharpe and the Salamanca Campaign , June and July 1812",
"1983"
],
[
"15",
"Sharpe 's Skirmish",
"Richard Sharpe and the Defence of the Tormes , August 1812 ( short story )",
"1999"
],
[
"16",
"Sharpe 's Enemy",
"Richard Sharpe and the Defence of Portugal , Christmas 1812",
"1984"
],
[
"17",
"Sharpe 's Honour",
"Richard Sharpe and the Vitoria Campaign , February to June 1813",
"1985"
],
[
"18",
"Sharpe 's Regiment",
"Richard Sharpe and the Invasion of France , June to November 1813",
"1986"
],
[
"19",
"Sharpe 's Christmas",
"December 1813 , Franco-Spanish border ( short story )",
"1994"
],
[
"20",
"Sharpe 's Siege",
"Richard Sharpe and the Winter Campaign , 1814",
"1987"
]
] | {
"intro": "Sharpe is a series of historical fiction stories by Bernard Cornwell centered on the character of Richard Sharpe. The stories formed the basis for an ITV television series featuring Sean Bean in the title role. Cornwell's series is composed of several novels and short stories, and charts Sharpe's progress in the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars. He begins in Sharpe's Tiger as a private in the 33rd Regiment of Foot who becomes a sergeant by the end of the book; he is an ensign in the 74th Regiment during Sharpe's Trafalgar who is transferred to the newly formed 95th Rifles as a second lieutenant. He is gradually promoted through the ranks, finally becoming a lieutenant colonel in Sharpe's Waterloo. The character of Sharpe is born a guttersnipe in the rookeries of London, and the stories dramatize his struggle for acceptance and respect from his fellow officers and from the men whom he commands. He is commissioned an officer on the battlefield and overcomes class in an army where an officer's rank is often bought. He is an experienced soldier, unlike many of the officers with whom he serves. His adventures result in his improbable presence at nearly every important event in the British Empire at the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th Centuries. Sharpe is described as brilliant but wayward in Sharpe's Sword, and he is portrayed by the author as a loose cannon. He is a highly skilled leader of light troops who takes part in a range of historical events during the Napoleonic Wars and other conflicts, including the Battle of Waterloo. He is considered dangerous to have as an enemy; he is a skilled marksman and grows to be a good swordsman.",
"section_text": "The first book was written in 1981 , with Richard Sharpe in Spain at the Talavera Campaign in 1809 . The next seven books were written in order up to Sharpe 's Siege in 1814 . The novel Sharpe 's Rifles was written next , set earlier in 1809 at the time of the retreat from Corunna , Spain . The next four books follow on from Sharpe 's Siege up to Sharpe 's Devil , set in 1820–21 . Then came Sharpe 's Battle set between Sharpe 's Gold and Sharpe 's Company ( set in 1811 ) . Cornwell then moved to the beginning of Sharpe 's army career in British India with Sharpe 's Tiger set in 1799 , beginning a series of three books , closing with Sharpe 's Prey set in 1807 . Cornwell followed this with two novels and four short stories which lie between Sharpe 's Rifles ( 1809 ) and Sharpe 's Devil ( 1820–21 ) . Cornwell published the non-fiction book Waterloo : The History of Four Days , Three Armies and Three Battles in September 2014 , timely for the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo . [ 1 ]",
"section_title": "Novels , short stories , and non-fiction",
"title": "Sharpe (novel series)",
"uid": "Sharpe_(novel_series)_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpe_(novel_series)"
} | 6,094 |
6095 | Washington_(state)_3 | [
[
"Club",
"Sport",
"League",
"Stadium and city"
],
[
"Everett AquaSox",
"Baseball",
"Northwest League ( A )",
"Everett Memorial Stadium , Everett"
],
[
"Everett Silvertips",
"Ice hockey",
"Western Hockey League",
"Angel of the Winds Arena , Everett"
],
[
"Seattle Dragons",
"American football",
"XFL",
"CenturyLink Field , Seattle"
],
[
"Seattle Majestics",
"American football",
"Women 's Football Alliance",
"French Field , Kent"
],
[
"Seattle Mist",
"Indoor football",
"Legends Football League",
"ShoWare Center , Kent"
],
[
"Seattle Saracens",
"Rugby union",
"Canadian Direct Insurance Premier League",
"Magnuson Park , Seattle"
],
[
"Seattle Seawolves",
"Rugby union",
"Major League Rugby",
"Starfire Stadium , Tukwila"
],
[
"Seattle Thunderbirds",
"Ice hockey",
"Western Hockey League",
"ShoWare Center , Kent"
],
[
"Spokane Chiefs",
"Ice hockey",
"Western Hockey League",
"Spokane Arena , Spokane"
],
[
"Spokane Indians",
"Baseball",
"Northwest League ( A )",
"Avista Stadium , Spokane"
],
[
"Tacoma Defiance",
"Soccer",
"USL Championship",
"Cheney Stadium , Tacoma"
],
[
"Tacoma Rainiers",
"Baseball",
"Pacific Coast League ( AAA )",
"Cheney Stadium , Tacoma"
],
[
"Tacoma Stars",
"Indoor soccer",
"Major Arena Soccer League",
"ShoWare Center , Kent"
],
[
"Tri-City Americans",
"Ice hockey",
"Western Hockey League",
"Toyota Center , Kennewick"
],
[
"Tri-City Dust Devils",
"Baseball",
"Northwest League ( A )",
"Gesa Stadium , Pasco"
],
[
"Wenatchee Wild",
"Ice hockey",
"British Columbia Hockey League",
"Town Toyota Center , Wenatchee"
]
] | {
"intro": "Washington (/ˈwɒʃɪŋtən/ (listen)), officially the State of Washington, is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Named for George Washington, the first U.S. president, the state was made out of the western part of the Washington Territory, which was ceded by the British Empire in 1846, in accordance with the Oregon Treaty in the settlement of the Oregon boundary dispute. The state, which is bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean, Oregon to the south, Idaho to the east, and the Canadian province of British Columbia to the north, was admitted to the Union as the 42nd state in 1889. Olympia is the state capital; the state's largest city is Seattle. Washington is often referred to as Washington State to distinguish it from the nation's capital, Washington, D.C.\n Washington is the 18th largest state, with an area of 71,362 square miles (184,827 km2), and the 13th most populous state, with more than 7.4 million people. Approximately 60 percent of Washington's residents live in the Seattle metropolitan area, the center of transportation, business, and industry along Puget Sound, an inlet of the Pacific Ocean consisting of numerous islands, deep fjords, and bays carved out by glaciers. The remainder of the state consists of deep temperate rainforests in the west; mountain ranges in the west, central, northeast, and far southeast; and a semi-arid basin region in the east, central, and south, given over to intensive agriculture. Washington is the second most populous state on the West Coast and in the Western United States, after California. Mount Rainier, an active stratovolcano, is the state's highest elevation, at almost 14,411 feet (4,392 meters), and is the most topographically prominent mountain in the contiguous U.S.\n Washington is a leading lumber producer. Its rugged surface is rich in stands of Douglas fir, hemlock, ponderosa pine, white pine, spruce, larch, and cedar. The state is the US's largest producer of apples, hops, pears, red raspberries, spearmint oil, and sweet cherries, and ranks high in the production of apricots, asparagus, dry edible peas, grapes, lentils, peppermint oil, and potatoes. Livestock and livestock products make important contributions to total farm revenue, and the commercial fishing of salmon, halibut, and bottomfish makes a significant contribution to the state's economy.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Culture -- Sports",
"title": "Washington (state)",
"uid": "Washington_(state)_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_(state)"
} | 6,095 |
6096 | Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_3 | [
[
"Year",
"Actor",
"Show"
],
[
"2003",
"Simi Garewal",
"Rendezvous with Simi Garewal"
],
[
"2004",
"Barkha Dutt",
"We The People"
],
[
"2005",
"Prabhu Chawla",
"Seedhi Baat"
],
[
"2006",
"Lola Kutty Barkha Dutt",
"Lola TV We The People"
],
[
"2007",
"Karan Johar",
"Koffee with Karan"
],
[
"2008",
"Vikram Chandra",
"The Big Fight"
],
[
"2009",
"Rajdeep Sardesai Kiran Bedi",
"Battle For India Aap Ki Kachehri"
],
[
"2010",
"Amitabh Bachchan",
"Bigg Boss 3"
],
[
"2011",
"Koel Purie",
"On the Couch with Koel"
],
[
"2012",
"Sumeet Raghavan",
"Jay Hind !"
],
[
"2013",
"Amitabh Bachchan",
"Kaun Banega Crorepati"
]
] | {
"intro": "The Indian Television Academy Awards, also known as the ITA Awards, is an annual event organised by the Indian Television Academy to honour excellence of Indian Television.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Categories -- Other Awards",
"title": "Indian Television Academy Awards",
"uid": "Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_3",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Television_Academy_Awards"
} | 6,096 |
6097 | List_of_Michigan_State_Historic_Sites_in_Bay_County,_Michigan_0 | [
[
"Name",
"Location",
"City",
"Listing date"
],
[
"Bangor Township District School No . 1",
"NW corner of Old Kawkawlin and Wheeler roads",
"Bay City ( Kawkawlin vicinity )",
"November 21 , 1991"
],
[
"Bauer House",
"1980 Hotchkiss Road",
"Frankenlust Township",
"July 17 , 1981"
],
[
"Bay City Armory",
"321 Washington Avenue",
"Bay City",
"April 25 , 1988"
],
[
"Bay City Boating and Fishing Club Commemorative Designation",
"2313 Weadock Highway",
"Essexville",
"June 20 , 1994"
],
[
"Bay City Informational Designation",
"Sixth Street , Wenonah Park",
"Bay City",
"July 19 , 1956"
],
[
"Bay City YMCA Informational Designation",
"111 North Madison Avenue",
"Bay City",
"August 20 , 1992"
],
[
"Bay City Sawdust Strike Informational Designation",
"Water and Sixth streets",
"Bay City",
"May 15 , 1987"
],
[
"Beet Sugar Industry Informational Designation",
"2 miles south of Bay City on M-13 , in Veteran 's Park",
"Bay City vicinity",
"January 19 , 1957"
],
[
"Center Avenue Neighborhood Residential District †",
"Roughly bounded by Green and North Madison avenues , Fifth and Sixth streets",
"Bay City",
"December 14 , 1976"
],
[
"Calvin and Elizabeth Chillson House",
"300 Midland Street",
"Bay City",
"July 17 , 1997"
],
[
"City Hall †",
"301 Washington Street",
"Bay City",
"April 5 , 1974"
],
[
"James Clements Airport Administration Building †",
"614 South River Road",
"Bay City",
"April 21 , 1980"
],
[
"Covenant Presbyterian Church",
"1001 N Lynn Street",
"Bay City",
"May 18 , 1989"
],
[
"Davidson Shipyard",
"800 John F. Kennedy Drive",
"Bay City",
"August 6 , 1976"
],
[
"First Presbyterian Church",
"805 Center Avenue",
"Bay City",
"August 17 , 2000"
],
[
"The Leona",
"727 South Linwood Beach Road",
"Linwood",
"May 20 , 1982"
],
[
"Andrew C. Maxwell House -demolished",
"615 Fourth Street",
"Bay City",
"April 24 , 1981"
],
[
"James J. McCormick House",
"1011 S Water Street",
"Bay City",
"January 27 , 1983"
],
[
"Mercy Hospital and Elizabeth McDowell Bialy Memorial House †",
"15th and Water Streets",
"Bay City",
"July 29 , 1980"
],
[
"Midland Street Commercial District †",
"500-800 blocks of Midland Street",
"Bay City",
"March 16 , 1995"
]
] | {
"intro": "The following is a list of Michigan State Historic Sites in Bay County, Michigan. Sites marked with a dagger (†) are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Bay County, Michigan.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Current listings",
"title": "List of Michigan State Historic Sites in Bay County",
"uid": "List_of_Michigan_State_Historic_Sites_in_Bay_County,_Michigan_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Michigan_State_Historic_Sites_in_Bay_County"
} | 6,097 |
6098 | 2013_Big_South_Conference_men's_soccer_season_0 | [
[
"Team",
"Location",
"Stadium",
"Capacity"
],
[
"Campbell Fighting Camels",
"Indianapolis , Indiana",
"Eakes Athletic Complex",
"1,000"
],
[
"Coastal Carolina Chanticleers",
"Conway , South Carolina",
"CCU Soccer Field",
"1,000"
],
[
"Gardner-Webb Runnin ' Bulldogs",
"Boiling Springs , North Carolina",
"Greene-Harbison Soccer Stadium",
"800"
],
[
"High Point Panthers",
"High Point , North Carolina",
"Vert Stadium",
"1,100"
],
[
"Liberty Flames",
"Lynchburg , Virginia",
"Liberty Soccer Stadium",
"2,000"
],
[
"Longwood Lancers",
"Farmville , Virginia",
"Longwood Athletics Complex",
"350"
],
[
"Presbyterian Blue Hose",
"Clinton , South Carolina",
"Martin Stadium",
"400"
],
[
"Radford Highlanders",
"Radford , Virginia",
"Cupp Memorial Stadium",
"5,000"
],
[
"UNC Asheville Bulldogs",
"Asheville , North Carolina",
"Greenwood Soccer Field",
"1,000"
],
[
"VMI Keydets",
"Lexington , Virginia",
"Patchin Field",
"1,000"
],
[
"Winthrop Eagles",
"Rock Hill , South Carolina",
"Eagle Field",
"1,500"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season will be the 30th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference. It will be the final Big South season for VMI, which will return to the Southern Conference in July 2014. The defending regular season champions are the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers, while the defending tournament champions are the Winthrop Eagles.",
"section_text": "",
"section_title": "Teams -- Stadia and locations",
"title": "2013 Big South Conference men's soccer season",
"uid": "2013_Big_South_Conference_men's_soccer_season_0",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Big_South_Conference_men's_soccer_season"
} | 6,098 |
6099 | 2012_European_Trophy_7 | [
[
"Player",
"Team",
"GP",
"Pts",
"POS"
],
[
"Matt Foy",
"Eisbären Berlin",
"2",
"5",
"F"
],
[
"Cam Abbott",
"Luleå HF",
"2",
"3",
"F"
],
[
"Jack Connolly",
"Färjestad BK",
"2",
"3",
"F"
],
[
"Chris Connolly",
"Tappara",
"2",
"3",
"F"
],
[
"Chet Pickard",
"Djurgårdens IF",
"1",
"3",
"G"
],
[
"Rhett Rakhshani",
"HV71",
"1",
"3",
"F"
],
[
"Ryan Glenn",
"Red Bull Salzburg",
"2",
"3",
"D"
],
[
"Jason Lepine",
"JYP",
"2",
"3",
"D"
],
[
"Byron Ritchie",
"SC Bern",
"2",
"3",
"F"
],
[
"Ari Vallin",
"Sparta Praha",
"1",
"3",
"D"
]
] | {
"intro": "The 2012 European Trophy was the third European Trophy, a European ice hockey tournament held annually. It is also the seventh tournament since its predecessor, the Nordic Trophy, was launched in 2006. The regulation round started on 31 July 2012 with the South Division game between Piráti Chomutov-Slovan Bratislava, and will end on 28 November 2012. The playoffs will be played between 13-16 December 2012 in Vienna and in Bratislava. The preliminary schedule for the regulation round was released on 12 April 2012. In this year's tournament the number of participating teams was increased from 24 to 32. Also, as Red Bull Salzburg no longer hosted the playoffs for the first time in European Trophy history, they weren't guaranteed a playoff spot. Of the 128 regular round games, 20 were played mid-season (i.e. after teams had started their league seasons in their respective countries). Regarding the playoffs, there were only Quarterfinals, Semifinals as well as the Final game, meaning that the losing teams in each round were immediately eliminated from the tournament. On 31 May 2012, Slavia Praha announced that they were pulling out of the tournament. On 18 June it was announced that Piráti Chomutov would take over Slavia Praha's spot in the South Division.",
"section_text": "The European Star Award is a three stars award given to the three best players in each game . The first star gets three points , the second gets two points , and the third gets one point . List shows the top ten players based on the number of European Star Award points .",
"section_title": "Ranking and statistics -- European Star Award leaders",
"title": "2012 European Trophy",
"uid": "2012_European_Trophy_7",
"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_European_Trophy"
} | 6,099 |
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