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T._K._Rajeev_Kumar_0
[ [ "Year", "Film", "Cast", "Language", "Production", "Notes" ], [ "1984", "My Dear Kuttichathan", "Master Aravind , Baby Sonia , Master Suresh , Kottarakkara Sridharan Nair", "Malayalam", "Navodaya Films", "India 's first 3D film . Worked as Assistant Director & Script Supervisor" ], [ "1989", "Chanakyan", "Kamal Hassan , Urmila Matondkar , Jayaram , Sitara", "Malayalam", "Navodaya Films", "Debut directorial venture . Kerala Film Critics Award & the Filmfare Award for the Best Director" ], [ "1990", "Kshanakkathu", "Niyas , Nedumudi Venu , Thilakan", "Malayalam", "M/S Central Pictures", "" ], [ "1991", "Ottayal Pattalam", "Mukesh , Madhubala", "Malayalam", "M/S Century Films", "" ], [ "1992", "Mahanagaram", "Mammootty", "Malayalam", "Sunitha Productions", "" ], [ "1994", "Pavithram", "Mohanlal , Vinduja Menon , Shobana", "Malayalam", "Vishudhi Films", "Filmfare Award for Best Actor ( Mohanlal ) 1994" ], [ "1996", "Thacholi Varghese Chekavar", "Mohanlal , Urmila Matondkar , Nirosha", "Malayalam", "Seven Arts Films", "" ], [ "1999", "Kannezhuthi Pottum Thottu", "Manju Warrier , Thilakan , Biju Menon , Abbas", "Malayalam", "One 2 One Creations", "First Malayalam film to use Avid technology . National special jury Award ( 1999 ) for Best Actress to Manju Warrier.She ended her first phase of acting after this film" ], [ "1999", "Jalamarmaram", "V C Harris , P Balachandran , Aswin Thampi , Joby", "Malayalam", "The Blue Mermaid Picture Company", "National Award for Best Feature Film on Environment , Kerala State Award for Second Best Feature Film 2000" ], [ "2000", "Raja Ko Rani Se Pyar Ho Gaya", "Arvind Swamy , Manisha Koirala", "Hindi", "", "" ], [ "2001", "Vakkalathu Narayanankutty", "Jayaram , Jagathy Sreekumar , Mukesh , Manya", "Malayalam", "Cinema Cinema", "" ], [ "2002", "Sesham", "Jayaram , Biju Menon , Murali , Geethu Mohandas", "Malayalam", "The Blue Mermaid Picture Company", "Kerala State Award 2002 for Best Feature Film , Editing , Sound Recording , Best Story and Special Jury Award for the actor in the lead role" ], [ "2004", "Ivar", "Jayaram , Biju Menon , Bhavana", "Malayalam", "Damor Films", "Fully shot using Steadycam" ], [ "2008", "Free Kick", "Sushand Singh , Asif Basra , Sathyajit , Gowri Karnik ,", "Hindi", "Jammu Sugahand Productions", "Not Yet Released" ], [ "2009", "Chal Chala Chal", "Govinda , Reema Sen , Rajpal Yadav , Murli Sharma , Om Puri , Manoj Joshi", "Hindi", "Fuel picture company", "Remake of Malayalam film Varavelpu and scenes from Ee Parakkum Thalika" ], [ "2009", "Seetha Kalyanam", "Jayaram , Jyothika , Indrajith , Geethu Mohandas", "Malayalam", "Revathy Kalamandir", "" ], [ "2009", "Kushti", "Rajpal Yadav , Great Khali , Om Puri , sarat Saxena , Manoj Joshi", "Hindi", "SRK entertainments", "Remake of Malayalam film Mutharamkunnu P.O" ], [ "2010", "Oru Naal Varum", "Mohanlal , Sreenivasan", "Malayalam", "Maniyanpilla Raju Productions", "" ], [ "2011", "Rathinirvedam", "Shweta Menon , KPAC Lalitha", "Malayalam", "Revathy Kalaamandhir Production", "Remake of the 1978 film of the same name" ], [ "2011", "Thalsamayam Oru Penkutty", "Nithya Menon , Shweta Menon , Unni Mukundan", "Malayalam", "Reel 2 Reel Cine Productions", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "T. K. Rajeev Kumar (born 1961 in Kottayam, India) is a National Award-winning Indian director of Malayalam films, from Trivandrum. A Show Director,Theatre Actor & Percussionist (Mridangam). Founder member & leader of the Musical Band Blue Birds in 1980 & Super Mimics, a comedy show in 1979. Kerala University Winner of Mono Act in the University Youth Festivals. 1980 - 82\nKerala Sangeetha Nataka Academy winner for Mono Act.1979 - 82.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Filmography -- Feature films", "title": "T. K. Rajeev Kumar", "uid": "T._K._Rajeev_Kumar_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._K._Rajeev_Kumar" }
6,800
6801
European_Film_Award_for_Best_Director_0
[ [ "Director", "Awards", "Nominations" ], [ "/ Michael Haneke", "3", "3" ], [ "Pedro Almodóvar", "2", "6" ], [ "Paolo Sorrentino", "2", "3" ], [ "Paweł Pawlikowski", "2", "3" ], [ "Susanne Bier", "1", "3" ], [ "Lars Von Trier", "1", "3" ], [ "/ Roman Polanski", "1", "3" ], [ "Matteo Garrone", "1", "2" ], [ "Cristian Mungiu", "1", "2" ], [ "Ruben Östlund", "1", "2" ], [ "Wim Wenders", "1", "2" ], [ "Yorgos Lanthimos", "1", "3" ], [ "Nuri Bilge Ceylan", "0", "3" ], [ "Aki Kaurismäki", "0", "3" ], [ "Ken Loach", "0", "3" ], [ "/ Fatih Akın", "0", "2" ], [ "Roy Andersson", "0", "2" ], [ "François Ozon", "0", "2" ], [ "Paolo Virzì", "0", "2" ], [ "Michael Winterbottom", "0", "2" ] ]
{ "intro": "The European Film Award for Best Director is an award given out at the annual European Film Awards to recognize a director who has exhibited outstanding directing while working in a film industry. The award is presented by the European Film Academy (EFA) and was first presented in 1988.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Records -- Most wins by director", "title": "European Film Award for Best Director", "uid": "European_Film_Award_for_Best_Director_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Film_Award_for_Best_Director" }
6,801
6802
List_of_family_relations_in_professional_wrestling_5
[ [ "Grandparent", "Grandchild ( ren )", "Country" ], [ "Al Amezcua", "Apolo Dantés Cesar Dantés Septiembre Negro Jr", "Mexico" ], [ "Ángel Blanco", "Horus", "Mexico" ], [ "Bull Curry", "Fred Curry Jr", "United States" ], [ "Hurricane Castillo Sr", "AJ Castillo", "Cuba Puerto Rico" ], [ "Helen Hild", "Mike DiBiase Ted DiBiase Jr. Brett DiBiase", "United States" ], [ "Humberto Garza", "Angel Garza Humberto Carrillo", "Mexico" ], [ "Gory Guerrero", "Chavo Guerrero Jr. Shaul Guerrero", "Mexico" ], [ "Santo", "Axel Santo Jr", "Mexico" ], [ "Stu Hart", "David Hart Smith Teddy Hart Matthew Annis Nattie Neidhart Matt Hart Bruce Hart Jr. Torrin Hart Lindsay Hart", "Canada United States" ], [ "Helen Hart", "David Hart Smith Teddy Hart Matthew Annis Nattie Neidhart Matt Hart Bruce Hart Jr. Torrin Hart Lindsay Hart", "United States Canada" ], [ "Lia Maivia", "Dwayne Johnson", "Canada United States" ], [ "Larry Hennig", "Joe Hennig Amy Hennig", "United States" ], [ "Eddie Marlin", "Jeff Jarrett", "United States" ], [ "Leroy McGuirk", "Max McGuirk", "United States" ], [ "Jess McMahon", "Vince McMahon Jr", "United States" ], [ "Vince McMahon , Sr", "Shane McMahon Stephanie McMahon", "United States" ], [ "Blackjack Mulligan", "Windham Rotunda Taylor Rotunda", "United States" ], [ "Frankie Hill Murdoch", "Ricky Murdoch", "United States" ], [ "Bob Orton Sr", "Randy Orton", "United States" ], [ "Salvador Pérez Sr", "Mike Mendoza", "El Salvador Puerto Rico" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of family relations in professional wrestling. Since the beginning of the artforms secretive history family members have been involved in all aspects of the industry, often to keep it closed off to outsiders. Although most connections are among wrestlers, there have been contributions from family members in many other fileds, such as managing, promoting, training and refereeing.", "section_text": "Ted DiBiase Jr. is the grandson of former wrestler Helen Hild . DiBiase is shown here with the Million Dollar Championship , a title created by his father Ted DiBiase , which was awarded to him in April 2010 Dwayne `` The Rock '' Johnson , pictured here at WrestleMania X8 , is the son of Rocky Johnson and grandson of promoter Lia Maivia Harry Smith ( left ) and Fit Finlay ( right ) both have grandparents in wrestling . Smith being the maternal grandson of a wrestler ( Stu ) and his promoter wife ( Helen ) . With Finlay both his paternal and maternal grandfathers were wrestlers .", "section_title": "Grandparent–grandchildren -- Biological", "title": "List of family relations in professional wrestling", "uid": "List_of_family_relations_in_professional_wrestling_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_family_relations_in_professional_wrestling" }
6,802
6803
Gabrielle_Union_0
[ [ "Year", "Title", "Role" ], [ "1999", "She 's All That", "Katarina Katie Darlingson" ], [ "1999", "10 Things I Hate About You", "Chastity Church" ], [ "2000", "Love & Basketball", "Shawnee" ], [ "2000", "Bring It On", "Isis" ], [ "2001", "The Brothers", "Denise Johnson" ], [ "2001", "Two Can Play That Game", "Conny Spalding" ], [ "2002", "Abandon", "Amanda Luttrell" ], [ "2002", "Welcome to Collinwood", "Michelle" ], [ "2003", "Deliver Us from Eva", "Evangeline Eva Dandrige" ], [ "2003", "Cradle 2 the Grave", "Daria" ], [ "2003", "Bad Boys II", "Special Agent Sydney Syd Burnett" ], [ "2003", "Ride or Die", "Masked Woman" ], [ "2004", "Breakin ' All the Rules", "Nicky Callas" ], [ "2005", "Neo Ned", "Rachael" ], [ "2005", "The Honeymooners", "Alice Kramden" ], [ "2005", "Say Uncle", "Elise Carter" ], [ "2006", "Running with Scissors", "Dorothy" ], [ "2007", "Constellation", "Carmel Boxer" ], [ "2007", "Daddy 's Little Girls", "Julia Rossmore" ], [ "2007", "The Box", "Det . Cris Romano" ] ]
{ "intro": "Gabrielle Monique Union-Wade (née Union; born October 29, 1972) is an American actress, voice artist, activist, and author. She began her career in the 1990s, appearing on television sitcoms, before landing supporting roles in teenage comedic films She's All That and 10 Things I Hate About You (1999). Her breakthrough role was in the 2000 film Bring It On. Union is also known for her performances in the romantic comedy films The Brothers (2001), Deliver Us from Eva (2003), Daddy's Little Girls (2007), Think Like a Man (2012) and Think Like a Man Too (2014). She also had starring roles in the CBS medical drama series City of Angels (2000) and films Bad Boys II (2003), Cradle 2 the Grave (2003), Neo Ned (2005), Cadillac Records (2008), Top Five (2014) and Breaking In (2018). In 2013, Union began starring as lead character in the BET drama series Being Mary Jane, for which she has received an NAACP Image Award. She co-starred in the 2016 film The Birth of a Nation, and next appeared in Almost Christmas (2016) and Sleepless (2017). Union is also the author of a memoir, We're Going to Need More Wine (2017), and an activist who works on issues around women's health and violence against women.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Filmography -- Film", "title": "Gabrielle Union", "uid": "Gabrielle_Union_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabrielle_Union" }
6,803
6804
List_of_viceregal_representatives_of_Elizabeth_II_1
[ [ "British Overseas Territory", "Viceregal representative", "Current holder", "Since" ], [ "Akrotiri and Dhekelia", "Administrator", "Michael Wigston", "20 January 2015" ], [ "Anguilla", "Governor", "Tim Foy", "21 August 2017" ], [ "Bermuda", "Governor", "John Rankin", "5 December 2016" ], [ "British Antarctic Territory", "Commissioner", "Ben Merrick", "July 2017" ], [ "British Indian Ocean Territory", "Commissioner", "Ben Merrick", "July 2017" ], [ "British Virgin Islands", "Governor", "Augustus Jaspert", "22 August 2017" ], [ "Cayman Islands", "Governor", "Martyn Roper", "29 October 2018" ], [ "Falkland Islands", "Governor", "Nigel Phillips", "12 September 2017" ], [ "Gibraltar", "Governor", "Ed Davis", "19 January 2016" ], [ "Montserrat", "Governor", "Andrew Pearce", "1 February 2018" ], [ "Pitcairn Islands", "Governor", "Laura Clarke", "23 January 2018" ], [ "Saint Helena , Ascension and Tristan da Cunha", "Governor", "Philip Rushbrook", "11 May 2019" ], [ "South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands", "Commissioner", "Nigel Phillips", "12 September 2017" ], [ "Turks and Caicos Islands", "Governor", "Nigel Dakin", "15 July 2019" ] ]
{ "intro": "Queen Elizabeth II is sovereign of 16 countries informally known as the Commonwealth realms. She resides primarily in the oldest and most populous realm, the United Kingdom, and is represented in the other countries by the following viceregal representatives. She is also represented in each of the Canadian provinces, Australian states, British overseas territories and Crown dependencies, and the states in free association with New Zealand.", "section_text": "See also : Lord Lieutenant In the fourteen British overseas territories , The Queen is represented by either an Administrator , a Commissioner , or a Governor . [ 1 ]", "section_title": "British overseas territories", "title": "List of viceregal representatives of Elizabeth II", "uid": "List_of_viceregal_representatives_of_Elizabeth_II_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_viceregal_representatives_of_Elizabeth_II" }
6,804
6805
2007_European_Women's_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships_9
[ [ "Rank", "Gymnast", "Nation", "Total" ], [ "1", "Dariya Zgoba", "Ukraine", "15.775" ], [ "2", "Steliana Nistor", "Romania", "15.725" ], [ "3", "Ekaterina Kramarenko", "Russia", "15.425" ], [ "4", "Kathleen Lindor", "France", "14.700" ], [ "5", "Jana Šikulová", "Czech Republic", "14.675" ], [ "6", "Vanessa Ferrari", "Italy", "14.375" ], [ "7", "Anja Brinker", "Germany", "13.600" ], [ "8", "Lichelle Wong", "Netherlands", "12.925" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2nd Individual European Artistic Gymnastics Championships for both men and women took place in Amsterdam in April 2007.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Women 's results -- Uneven bars", "title": "2007 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships", "uid": "2007_European_Women's_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships_9", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_European_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships" }
6,805
6806
List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_of_the_United_Kingdom_0
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Date", "UNESCO data", "Description" ], [ "Blaenavon Industrial Landscape", "Blaenavon , Wales 51°47′N 3°05′W / 51.78°N 3.08°W / 51.78 ; -3.08 ( Blaenavon Industrial Landscape )", "19th century", "984 ; 2000 ; iii , iv", "In the 19th century , Wales was the world 's foremost producer of iron and coal . Blaenavon is an example of the landscape created by the industrial processes associated with the production of these materials . The site includes quarries , public buildings , workers ' housing , and a railway" ], [ "Blenheim Palace", "Woodstock , Oxfordshire , England 51°50′28″N 1°21′40″W / 51.841°N 1.361°W / 51.841 ; -1.361 ( Blenheim Palace )", "1705-1722", "425 ; 1987 ; ii , iv", "Blenheim Palace , the residence of John Churchill , 1st Duke of Marlborough , was designed by architects John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor . The associated park was landscaped by Capability Brown . The palace celebrated victory over the French and is significant for establishing English Romantic Architecture as a separate entity from French Classical Architecture" ], [ "Canterbury Cathedral , St Augustine 's Abbey , and St Martin 's Church", "Canterbury , Kent , England 51°17′N 1°05′E / 51.28°N 1.08°E / 51.28 ; 1.08 ( Canterbury Cathedral , St Augustine 's Abbey , and St Martin 's Church )", "11th century", "496 ; 1988 ; i , ii , vi", "St Martin 's Church is the oldest church in England . The church and St Augustine 's Abbey were founded during the early stages of the introduction of Christianity to the Anglo-Saxons . The cathedral exhibits Romanesque and Gothic architecture , and is the seat of the Church of England" ], [ "Castles and Town Walls of King Edward in Gwynedd", "Conwy , Isle of Anglesey and Gwynedd , Wales 53°08′20″N 4°16′34″W / 53.139°N 4.276°W / 53.139 ; -4.276 ( Castles and Town Walls of King Edward in Gwynedd )", "13th-14th centuries", "374 ; 1986 ; i , iii , iv", "During the reign of Edward I of England ( 1272-1307 ) , a series of castles was constructed in Wales with the purpose of subduing the population and establishing English colonies in Wales . The World Heritage Site covers many castles including Beaumaris , Caernarfon , Conwy , and Harlech . The castles of Edward I are considered the pinnacle of military architecture by military historians" ], [ "City of Bath", "Bath , Somerset , England 51°22′48″N 2°21′36″W / 51.380°N 2.360°W / 51.380 ; -2.360 ( City of Bath )", "1st-19th centuries", "428 ; 1987 ; i , ii , iv", "Founded by the Romans as a spa , an important centre of the wool industry in the medieval period , and a spa town in the 18th century , Bath has a varied history . The city is preserved for its Roman remains and Palladian architecture" ], [ "Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape", "Cornwall and Devon , England 50°08′N 5°23′W / 50.13°N 5.38°W / 50.13 ; -5.38 ( Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape )", "18th and 19th centuries", "1,215 ; 2006 ; ii , iii , iv", "Tin and copper mining in Devon and Cornwall boomed in the 18th and 19th centuries , and at its peak the area produced two-thirds of the world 's copper . The techniques and technology involved in deep mining developed in Devon and Cornwall were used around the world" ], [ "Derwent Valley Mills", "Derwent Valley , Derbyshire , England 53°01′12″N 1°29′56″W / 53.020°N 1.499°W / 53.020 ; -1.499 ( Derwent Valley Mills )", "18th and 19th centuries", "1,030 ; 2001 ; ii , iv", "The Derwent Valley Mills was the birthplace of the factory system ; the innovations in the valley , including the development of workers ' housing - such as at Cromford - and machines such as the water frame , were important in the Industrial Revolution . The Derwent Valley Mills influenced North America and Europe" ], [ "Dorset and East Devon Coast", "Dorset and Devon , England 50°42′N 2°59′W / 50.70°N 2.98°W / 50.70 ; -2.98 ( Dorset and East Devon Coast )", "N/A", "1029 ; 2001 ; viii", "The cliffs that make up the Dorset and Devon coast are an important site for fossils and provide a continuous record of life on land and in the sea in the area since 185 million years ago" ], [ "Durham Castle and Cathedral", "Durham , County Durham , England 54°46′26″N 1°34′30″W / 54.774°N 1.575°W / 54.774 ; -1.575 ( Durham Castle and Cathedral )", "11th and 12th centuries", "370 ; 1986 ; ii , iv , vi", "Durham Cathedral is the largest and finest example of Norman architecture in England and vaulting of the cathedral was part of the advent of Gothic architecture . The cathedral houses relics of St Cuthbert and Bede . The Norman castle was the residence of the Durham prince-bishops" ], [ "The English Lake District", "Cumbria , England 54°28′26″N 3°4′56″W / 54.47389°N 3.08222°W / 54.47389 ; -3.08222 ( The English Lake District )", "N/A", "422 ; 2017 ; ii , v , vi", "Famous for its scenic landscape of mountains , lakes , houses , gardens and parks , the Lake District was celebrated through picturesque and romantic visual arts and literature from the 18th century on" ], [ "Forth Bridge", "Edinburgh , Inchgarvie and Fife , Scotland 56°00′02″N 3°23′19″W / 56.000421°N 3.388726°W / 56.000421 ; -3.388726 ( Forth Bridge )", "1890", "1485 ; 2015 ; i , iv", "The Forth Bridge is a cantilever railway bridge over the Firth of Forth in the east of Scotland , 9 miles ( 14 kilometres ) west of Edinburgh City Centre . It is considered an iconic structure and a symbol of Scotland . It was designed by the English engineers Sir John Fowler and Sir Benjamin Baker" ], [ "Frontiers of the Roman Empire", "Northern England and southern Scotland 54°59′N 2°36′W / 54.99°N 2.60°W / 54.99 ; -2.60 ( Frontiers of the Roman Empire )", "2nd century", "430 ; 1987 ( modified in 2005 and 2008 ) ; ii , iii , iv", "Hadrian 's Wall was built in 122 AD and the Antonine Wall was constructed in 142 AD to defend the Roman Empire from barbarians . The World Heritage Site was previously listed as Hadrian 's Wall alone , but was later expanded to include the Antonine Wall in Scotland and the barriers , walls and forts in modern Germany" ], [ "Giant 's Causeway and Causeway Coast", "County Antrim , Northern Ireland 55°14′24″N 6°30′40″W / 55.240°N 6.511°W / 55.240 ; -6.511 ( Giant 's Causeway and Causeway Coast )", "60-50 million years ago", "369 ; 1986 ; vii , viii", "The causeway is made up of 40,000 basalt columns projecting out of the sea . It was created by volcanic activity in the Tertiary period" ], [ "Gorham 's Cave Complex", "East face of the Rock of Gibraltar , Gibraltar 36°07′13″N 5°20′31″W / 36.120397°N 5.342075°W / 36.120397 ; -5.342075 ( Gorham 's Cave )", "33-23 thousand years ago", "1500 ; 2016 ; iii", "Comprising four natural sea caves , the complex is the last known site of Neanderthal inhabitation some 28,000 years ago . Evidences of occupation by modern humans are also present at the site" ], [ "Gough and Inaccessible Islands", "Tristan da Cunha , Saint Helena , Ascension and Tristan da Cunha , South Atlantic Ocean 40°19′05″S 9°56′07″W / 40.3181°S 9.9353°W / -40.3181 ; -9.9353 ( Gough and Inaccessible Island )", "N/A", "740 ; 1995 ( modified in 2004 ) ; vii , x", "Together , the Gough and Inaccessible Islands preserve an ecosystem almost untouched by mankind , with many endemic species of plants and animals" ], [ "Heart of Neolithic Orkney", "Orkney , Scotland 58°59′46″N 3°11′17″W / 58.996°N 3.188°W / 58.996 ; -3.188 ( Heart of Historic Orkney )", "3rd millennium BC", "514 ; 1999 ; i , ii , iii , iv", "A collection of Neolithic sites with purposes ranging from occupation to ceremony . It includes the settlement of Skara Brae , the chambered tomb of Maes Howe and the stone circles of Stenness and Brodgar" ], [ "Henderson Island", "Henderson Island , Pitcairn Islands , Pacific Ocean 24°21′S 128°19′W / 24.35°S 128.31°W / -24.35 ; -128.31 ( Henderson Island )", "n/a", "487 ; 1988 ; vii , x", "The island is an atoll in the south of the Pacific Ocean , the ecology of which has been almost untouched by man and its isolation illustrates the dynamics of evolution . There are ten plant and four animal species endemic to the island" ], [ "Historic Town of St George and Related Fortifications , Bermuda", "St George , Bermuda 32°22′46″N 64°40′40″W / 32.379444°N 64.677778°W / 32.379444 ; -64.677778 ( St George )", "17th-20th centuries", "983 ; 2000 ; iv", "Founded in 1612 , St George 's is the oldest English town in the New World and an example of planned urban settlements established in the New World in the 17th century by colonial powers . The fortifications illustrate defensive techniques developed through the 17th to 20th centuries" ], [ "Ironbridge Gorge", "Ironbridge , Shropshire , England 52°37′34″N 2°29′10″W / 52.626°N 2.486°W / 52.626 ; -2.486 ( Ironbridge Gorge )", "18th century", "371 ; 1986 ; i , ii , iv , vi", "Ironbridge Gorge contains mines , factories , workers ' housing , and the transport infrastructure that was created in the gorge during the Industrial Revolution . The development of coke production in the area helped start the Industrial Revolution . The Iron Bridge was the world 's first bridge built from iron and was architecturally and technologically influential" ], [ "Jodrell Bank Observatory", "Cheshire , England 53°14.5′N 2°18.7′W / 53.2417°N 2.3117°W / 53.2417 ; -2.3117 ( Jodrell Bank Observatory )", "1945", "1594 ; 2019 ; i , ii , iv , vi", "N/A" ] ]
{ "intro": "The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Sites are places of importance to cultural or natural heritage as described in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, established in 1972. There are 32 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the United Kingdom and the British Overseas Territories. The UNESCO list contains one designated site in both England and Scotland (the Frontiers of the Roman Empire) plus eighteen exclusively in England, five in Scotland, three in Wales, one in Northern Ireland, and one in each of the overseas territories of Bermuda, Gibraltar, the Pitcairn Islands, and Saint Helena. The first sites in the UK to be inscribed on the World Heritage List were Giant's Causeway and Causeway Coast; Durham Castle and Cathedral; Ironbridge Gorge; Studley Royal Park including the Ruins of Fountains Abbey; Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites; and the Castles and Town Walls of King Edward in Gwynedd in 1986. The latest site to be inscribed was the Jodrell Bank Observatory in England in July 2019. The constitution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (commonly referred to as UNESCO) was ratified in 1946 by 26 countries, including the UK. Its purpose was to provide for the conservation and protection of the worlds inheritance of books, works of art and monuments of history and science. The UK contributes £130,000 annually to the World Heritage Fund which finances the preservation of sites in developing countries. Some designated properties contain multiple sites that share a common geographical location or cultural heritage. The United Kingdom National Commission for UNESCO advises the British government, which is responsible for maintaining its World Heritage Sites, on policies regarding UNESCO. The UK National Commission for UNESCO conducted research in 2014-15 on the Wider Value of UNESCO to the UK, and found that the UK's World Heritage Sites generated an estimated £85 million from April 2014 to March 2015 through their association with the global network. World Heritage Site selection criteria i-vi are culturally related, and selection criteria vii-x are the natural criteria.", "section_text": "The table lists information about each World Heritage Site : In danger", "section_title": "List of sites", "title": "List of World Heritage Sites in the United Kingdom", "uid": "List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_of_the_United_Kingdom_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_the_United_Kingdom" }
6,806
6807
List_of_Washington_Metro_stations_0
[ [ "Station", "Rail Connections", "Jurisdiction", "2017 Average weekday boardings", "Opened" ], [ "Addison Road", "N/A", "Prince George 's County , Maryland", "2,899", "November 22 , 1980" ], [ "Anacostia", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "6,026", "December 28 , 1991" ], [ "Archives", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "8,344", "April 30 , 1983" ], [ "Arlington Cemetery", "N/A", "Arlington , Virginia", "1,476", "July 1 , 1977" ], [ "Ballston-MU", "N/A", "Arlington , Virginia", "9,414", "December 11 , 1979" ], [ "Benning Road", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "2,536", "November 22 , 1980" ], [ "Bethesda", "N/A", "Montgomery County , Maryland", "9,142", "August 25 , 1984" ], [ "Braddock Road", "N/A", "Alexandria , Virginia", "3,969", "December 17 , 1983" ], [ "Branch Avenue", "N/A", "Prince George 's County , Maryland", "5,522", "January 13 , 2001" ], [ "Brookland-CUA", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "5,468", "February 6 , 1978" ], [ "Capitol Heights", "N/A", "Prince George 's County , Maryland", "1,965", "November 22 , 1980" ], [ "Capitol South", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "6,856", "July 1 , 1977" ], [ "Cheverly", "N/A", "Prince George 's County , Maryland", "557", "November 20 , 1978" ], [ "Clarendon", "N/A", "Arlington , Virginia", "4,028", "December 11 , 1979" ], [ "Cleveland Park", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "3,773", "December 5 , 1981" ], [ "College Park-University of Maryland", "MARC : Camden Line", "Prince George 's County , Maryland", "5,118", "December 11 , 1993" ], [ "Columbia Heights", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "10,679", "September 18 , 1999" ], [ "Congress Heights", "N/A", "District of Columbia", "2,173", "January 13 , 2001" ], [ "Court House", "N/A", "Arlington , Virginia", "6,354", "December 11 , 1979" ], [ "Crystal City", "VRE : Fredericksburg and Manassas Lines", "Arlington , Virginia", "10,239", "July 1 , 1977" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Washington Metro (commonly called Metro, and branded Metrorail) is a rapid transit system serving Washington, D.C. and neighboring communities in Maryland and Virginia, both inside and outside the Capital Beltway. With an average weekday ridership of 764,300, the Washington Metro is the second-busiest rapid transit system in the United States, behind the New York City Subway. As of 2015[update], the system has 91 active stations spread out on six lines with 117 miles (188 km) of tracks. Six more stations are planned in 2020 as part of the Phase II of the Silver Line and an infill station at Potomac Yard is planned to open in 2021 on the Yellow and Blue lines. The Washington Metro system was conceived as an alternative to the construction of a large freeway system throughout the Washington, D.C. area and was partially financed with funds originally dedicated to highway construction. Construction began in 1969, and in 1976 the first section of the Metro system opened along the Red Line between the Rhode Island Avenue and Farragut North stations in Washington, D.C. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, more stations were opened in the city and the suburban communities of Arlington County, the City of Alexandria, and Fairfax County in Virginia as well as Montgomery and Prince George's Counties in Maryland. By 1991, five rail lines were open: the Red, Blue, Green, Orange, and Yellow Lines. The system as originally planned was completed in 2001 with the extension of the Green Line to Branch Avenue. In 2004, three stations were opened: an extension of the Blue Line to the Largo Town Center and Morgan Boulevard stations and the first infill station, NoMa-Gallaudet U. In 2014, the Silver Line opened with five new stations: Greensboro, McLean, Spring Hill, Tysons Corner, and Wiehle-Reston East. Nine Metrorail stations are officially designated transfer stations, although other intermediate stations also allow passengers to transfer between lines.", "section_text": "Pylon by the entrance to the Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter station Passengers boarding a train at the Bethesda station Greenbelt station , one of the termini of the Green Line Crossvault of the L'Enfant Plaza station Platform of the Silver Spring station on a rainy day Union Station , the busiest station in the system The longest continuous escalator in the western hemisphere , at the Wheaton station [ 6 ] Vaulted ceiling at Farragut West Largo Town Center station , one of the newest stations Time-lapse of a train leaving Foggy Bottom–GWU Arlington Cemetery station on a snowy day Elevated platform at National Airport Upper level at Fort Totten Wiehle-Reston East station on the first day of Silver Line service in 2014 * Official transfer stations Terminals", "section_title": "Stations", "title": "List of Washington Metro stations", "uid": "List_of_Washington_Metro_stations_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Washington_Metro_stations" }
6,807
6808
List_of_islands_by_population_1
[ [ "Ranking", "Island", "Population", "Country" ], [ "17", "Hainan", "9,035,000 ( 2014E )", "China" ], [ "18", "Long Island", "7,838,822 ( 2015 )", "United States ( New York )" ], [ "19", "Ireland", "6,380,661 ( 2008 )", "Republic of Ireland and United Kingdom ( Northern Ireland )" ], [ "20", "Singapore Island", "5,607,300 ( 2016 )", "Singapore" ], [ "21", "Hokkaidō", "5,383,579 ( 2015C )", "Japan" ], [ "22", "Sicily", "5,017,000 ( 2007 )", "Italy ( Sicily )" ], [ "23", "Negros", "4,414,131 ( 2015 )", "Philippines" ], [ "24", "Panay", "4,307,000 ( 2015 )", "Philippines" ], [ "25", "Bali", "4,225,384 ( 2014 )", "Indonesia" ], [ "26", "Cebu", "4,164,535 ( 2016 )", "Philippines" ], [ "27", "Shikoku", "3,815,000 ( 2015 )", "Japan" ], [ "28", "Madura", "3,622,000 ( 2010 )", "Indonesia" ], [ "29", "North Island", "3,702,300 ( June 2018 )", "New Zealand" ], [ "30", "Puerto Rico", "3,474,182 ( 2015 )", "Puerto Rico ( territory of the United States )" ], [ "31", "Lombok", "3,311,044 ( 2014 )", "Indonesia" ], [ "32", "Timor", "3,182,693 ( 2014 )", "Indonesia and East Timor" ], [ "33", "Jamaica", "2,950,210 ( 2015 )", "Jamaica" ], [ "34", "Zhongshan Island", "2,890,000 ( 2015 )", "China and Macau" ], [ "35", "Zealand", "2,287,740 ( 2017 )", "Denmark" ], [ "36", "Leyte", "2,388,518 ( 2015 )", "Philippines" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of islands in the world ordered by population, which includes all islands with population greater than 100,000. For comparison, continental landmasses are also shown, in italics. The population of the world's islands is over 730 million, approximately 11% of the world's total population. Of those, only Java and Honshu have populations over 1% of the global population.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Islands ordered by population -- Population 1,000,000 to 10,000,000", "title": "List of islands by population", "uid": "List_of_islands_by_population_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_islands_by_population" }
6,808
6809
National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan_22
[ [ "", "Name on the Register", "Date listed", "Location", "City or town", "Description" ], [ "1", "Dumaw Creek Site", "November 15 , 1972 ( # 72001477 )", "Dumaw Crk , NE of Pentwater , Michigan 43°48′30″N 86°22′30″W / 43.808333°N 86.375°W / 43.808333 ; -86.375 ( Dumaw Creek Site )", "Pentwater", "The Dumaw Creek site was once a 17th-century village and cemetery . Archeological artifacts and human remains were discovered on this site in 1915" ], [ "2", "Jared H. Gay House", "January 26 , 1989 ( # 88003235 )", "Rt . 2 , 128th Ave. 43°46′33″N 86°14′16″W / 43.775833°N 86.237778°W / 43.775833 ; -86.237778 ( Jared H. Gay House )", "Crystal Valley", "The Jared H. Gay House is a log house built in 1861 by Jared Gay and his wife Catherine . The Gays were the first permanent European settlers in the area , and were instrumental in the development of Crystal Valley . They lived in this house until 1902" ], [ "3", "Green Quarry Site", "November 9 , 1972 ( # 72001478 )", "Address Restricted", "Mears", "The Green Quarry Site , covering 40 acres ( 16 ha ) , is the only known source of Lambrix chert , which was used for a variety of prehistoric tools" ], [ "4", "Hart Downtown Historic District", "November 24 , 2015 ( # 15000814 )", "Along S. State St. , roughly bounded by Main , Dryden , Water , and Lincoln Sts . 43°42′07″N 86°21′51″W / 43.701880°N 86.364233°W / 43.701880 ; -86.364233 ( Hart Downtown Historic District )", "Hart", "The Hart Downtown Historic District encompasses the central business district of the city . Structures in the district are primarily commercial , but include single family homes and government building as well . The buildings are predominantly one or two stories , and use a variety of construction materials , of which brick and block are most common . Architectural styles include Italianate , Art Moderne and Mid-Century Modern" ], [ "5", "Little Sable Point Light Station", "July 19 , 1984 ( # 84001827 )", "Little Sable Point 43°39′04″N 86°32′21″W / 43.651111°N 86.539167°W / 43.651111 ; -86.539167 ( Little Sable Point Light Station )", "Golden Township", "The Little Sable Point Light was constructed in 1874 from a design by Col. Orlando M. Poe . The light sits atop a brick tower with a stone base . Prior to 1900 , the brick was left in its natural color and state , as it was unusually hard and held up well to the elements . In 1900 the light was painted white for the first time , to assuage the complaints of mariners who said the brick was difficult to see . It remained that color until 1975 , when it was sand blasted , and returned to its natural color . The lantern is capped by a copper roof" ], [ "6", "Charles Mears Silver Lake Boardinghouse", "July 31 , 1986 ( # 86002115 )", "Corner of Lighthouse and Silver Lake Channel Rds . 43°39′20″N 86°32′15″W / 43.655556°N 86.5375°W / 43.655556 ; -86.5375 ( Charles Mears Silver Lake Boardinghouse )", "Mears", "Charles Mears was a Chicago lumberman who controlled timberland and owned mills across Michigan . Mears built a number of boardinghouses for his workers ; this boardinghouse was constructed in 1866" ], [ "7", "Navigation Structures at Pentwater Harbor", "January 11 , 2001 ( # 00001638 )", "Western end of Lowell St. 43°46′51″N 86°26′25″W / 43.780833°N 86.440278°W / 43.780833 ; -86.440278 ( Navigation Structures at Pentwater Harbor )", "Pentwater", "The Navigation Structures at Pentwater Harbor include a pair of concrete piers flanking the channel from Lake Michigan to Pentwater Lake , and the pierhead lights at the end of each pier . The channel itself dates to 1855 , when Charles Mears first dredged it for his lumber business" ], [ "8", "US 31-Pentwater River Bridge", "December 20 , 1999 ( # 99001534 )", "US 31 over the Pentwater River 43°44′29″N 86°23′22″W / 43.741389°N 86.389444°W / 43.741389 ; -86.389444 ( US 31-Pentwater River Bridge )", "Weare Township", "The US 31-Pentwater River Bridge is a three-span steel bridge with a total length of 270 feet ( 82 m ) . The two anchor spans are 84 feet ( 26 m ) long and cantilever over the piers to support the 102-foot ( 31 m ) center span , 60 feet ( 18 m ) of which is suspended" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of properties on the National Register of Historic Places in the U.S. state of Michigan.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Oceana County", "title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Michigan", "uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan_22", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan" }
6,809
6810
Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_16)_0
[ [ "Celebrity", "Notability ( known for )", "Professional partner", "Result" ], [ "Dorothy Hamill", "Olympic figure skater", "Tristan MacManus", "Withdrew on March 26 , 2013" ], [ "Wynonna Judd", "Country music singer", "Tony Dovolani", "Eliminated 1st on April 2 , 2013" ], [ "Lisa Vanderpump", "Reality television star", "Gleb Savchenko", "Eliminated 2nd on April 9 , 2013" ], [ "D. L. Hughley", "Comedian & sitcom actor", "Cheryl Burke", "Eliminated 3rd on April 16 , 2013" ], [ "Victor Ortiz", "Professional boxer", "Lindsay Arnold", "Eliminated 4th on April 23 , 2013" ], [ "Andy Dick", "Actor & comedian", "Sharna Burgess", "Eliminated 5th on April 30 , 2013" ], [ "Sean Lowe", "Reality television star", "Peta Murgatroyd", "Eliminated 6th on May 7 , 2013" ], [ "Ingo Rademacher", "Soap opera actor", "Kym Johnson", "Eliminated 7th on May 14 , 2013" ], [ "Aly Raisman", "Olympic gymnast", "Mark Ballas", "Eliminated 8th on May 21 , 2013" ], [ "Jacoby Jones", "NFL wide receiver", "Karina Smirnoff", "Third place on May 21 , 2013" ], [ "Zendaya", "Disney Channel star", "Valentin Chmerkovskiy", "Runner-up on May 21 , 2013" ], [ "Kellie Pickler", "Country music singer", "Derek Hough", "Winner on May 21 , 2013" ] ]
{ "intro": "Season sixteen of Dancing with the Stars premiered on March 18, 2013. Tom Bergeron and Brooke Burke Charvet returned as hosts, while Carrie Ann Inaba, Len Goodman and Bruno Tonioli returned as judges. The Harold Wheeler orchestra and singers also returned to provide the music throughout the season. Scoring returned to using traditional whole numbers, instead of continuing with the fractional scores introduced for the previous (all-star) season. This is the first season where all finalists did not learn a Latin and a ballroom dance; no finalist learned Tango, Alexandra Raisman did not learn Paso doble, Jacoby Jones did not learn Samba, Kellie Pickler did not learn Salsa, and Zendaya did not learn Rumba. Each of the four finalists also did not dance one of the two new dance styles introduced this season. Raisman and Zendaya did not dance Jazz while Pickler and Jones did not dance Contemporary (although Pickler danced a Contemporary freestyle in the finals and Raisman did an Afro-Jazz routine picked from Twitter). Pickler and her partner Derek Hough won the competition, marking his fourth of six wins and increasing his lead on the show as the professional dancer who has won the most mirror ball trophies.", "section_text": "The cast of eleven and their professional partners was announced on February 26 , 2013 on Good Morning America , with Jacoby Jones ' participation confirmed two days earlier on February 24 during a network promo for the series airing during the 85th Oscars as a tease for the GMA announcement . This season saw its youngest contestant to date—16-year-old Zendaya ( previously being Shawn Johnson from season 8 at 17 ) . Although in Season 20 , the record was taken from Zendaya by Willow Shields who competed when she was 14 . The following professionals who did not return for season 16 include Chelsie Hightower , Louis van Amstel , Anna Trebunskaya , and Maksim Chmerkovskiy ( he eventually returned for season 18 and won ) . Lindsay Arnold , a contestant from season nine of So You Think You Can Dance was introduced as a new professional along with Troupe member Sharna Burgess . Gleb Savchenko , who recently participated as a professional on season twelve of the Australian version , was also announced as a new professional . Witney Carson , also a contestant from season nine of So You Think You Can Dance , and Julian Tocker joined Oksana Dmytrenko , Henry Byalikov , Emma Slater , and Sasha Farber as the fifth and sixth members of the Dance Troupe . Two weeks following the cast announcement , Sean Lowe as revealed on GMA as the 12th contestant this season partnering with Peta Murgatroyd . After only two dances , Dorothy Hamill withdrew from the competition due to a potential severe back injury . She is the third celebrity to withdraw due to injury , after Misty May-Treanor in season seven and Tom DeLay in season nine . Sara Evans in season three also quit , but that time it was due to her impending divorce . This also marks the second consecutive season where Tristan MacManus and his partner have gone home first in the competition , although last season he and his partner were actually eliminated the first week . This is the first time since season nine that a couple withdrew .", "section_title": "Couples", "title": "Dancing with the Stars (American season 16)", "uid": "Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_16)_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_with_the_Stars_(American_season_16)" }
6,810
6811
Independent_Girls'_Schools_Sporting_Association_0
[ [ "Year", "Overall Champion", "1st VIII", "1st IV", "Year 10 Quad" ], [ "2001", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Roseville" ], [ "2002", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Canberra", "Loreto Normanhurst" ], [ "2003", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Roseville" ], [ "2004", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Canberra", "Canberra" ], [ "2005", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Canberra", "Canberra" ], [ "2006", "Pymble", "Pymble", "Pymble", "PLC Sydney" ], [ "2007", "Pymble", "Pymble", "MLC", "Pymble" ], [ "2008", "Pymble", "PLC Sydney", "Queenwood", "PLC Sydney" ], [ "2009", "Canberra", "Pymble", "Tara", "Ascham" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association (commonly known as IGSSA), was established in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, in 1922 with five founding members, all of them independent Protestant girls' schools. Today, the 29 member schools of the Association of Heads of Independent Girls' Schools (AHIGS), both Catholic and independent schools, compete against each other in a number of sporting carnivals and termly sports through the association. Secondary school girls compete in team and individual sports at school level and can be selected through IGSSA for state representative teams and higher competitions.", "section_text": "The IGSSA Rowing Regatta is typically held in March at the Sydney International Regatta Centre . [ 69 ] The ten schools that offer a rowing programme , and therefore regularly compete in the regatta are : Ascham , Canberra Girls ' Grammar School , Loreto Kirribilli , Loreto Normanhurst , MLC School , the Presbyterian Ladies ' College , Sydney , Pymble Ladies ' College , Queenwood School for Girls , Roseville College , and Tara Anglican School for Girls . These schools also make up the bulk of entries at the Schoolgirls Head of the River regatta .", "section_title": "Carnivals -- Rowing", "title": "Independent Girls' Schools Sporting Association", "uid": "Independent_Girls'_Schools_Sporting_Association_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_Girls'_Schools_Sporting_Association" }
6,811
6812
List_of_Major_League_Baseball_doubles_records_12
[ [ "Doubles", "Team", "Season" ], [ "373", "St. Louis Cardinals", "1930" ], [ "373", "Boston Red Sox", "1997" ], [ "373", "Boston Red Sox", "2004" ], [ "371", "Boston Red Sox", "2003" ], [ "363", "Boston Red Sox", "2013" ], [ "357", "Cleveland Indians", "1936" ], [ "357", "Toronto Blue Jays", "2003" ], [ "357", "Texas Rangers", "2006" ], [ "356", "Cleveland Indians", "1930" ], [ "355", "Cleveland Indians", "1921" ], [ "353", "St. Louis Cardinals", "1931" ], [ "352", "Boston Red Sox", "2007" ], [ "352", "Detroit Tigers", "2007" ], [ "351", "Cleveland Indians", "2006" ] ]
{ "intro": "Major League Baseball has various records related to doubles. Players denoted in boldface are still actively contributing to the record noted. (r) denotes a player's rookie season.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "350 Doubles by a Team in One Season", "title": "List of Major League Baseball doubles records", "uid": "List_of_Major_League_Baseball_doubles_records_12", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_doubles_records" }
6,812
6813
44th_United_States_Congress_0
[ [ "State ( class )", "Vacator", "Reason for change", "Successor", "Date of successor 's formal installation" ], [ "Louisiana ( 3 )", "Vacant", "Senate had declined to seat rival claimants William L. McMillen and P. B. S. Pinchback . Successor elected January 12 , 1876", "James B. Eustis ( D )", "January 10 , 1876" ], [ "Tennessee ( 1 )", "Andrew Johnson ( D )", "Died July 31 , 1875 . Successor appointed August 18 , 1875 , to continue the term", "David M. Key ( D )", "August 18 , 1875" ], [ "Connecticut ( 3 )", "Orris S. Ferry ( R )", "Died November 21 , 1875 . Successor appointed November 27 , 1875 , to continue the term", "James E. English ( D )", "November 27 , 1875" ], [ "Connecticut ( 3 )", "James E. English ( D )", "Interim appointee retired May 17 , 1876 when successor elected . Successor elected May 17 , 1876", "William H. Barnum ( D )", "May 18 , 1876" ], [ "Maine ( 2 )", "Lot M. Morrill ( R )", "Resigned July 7 , 1876 to become U.S. Secretary of the Treasury . Successor appointed July 10 , 1876 , to continue the term . Interim appointee later elected January 17 , 1877", "James G. Blaine ( R )", "July 10 , 1876" ], [ "West Virginia ( 1 )", "Allen T. Caperton ( D )", "Died July 26 , 1876 . Successor appointed August 26 , 1876 , to continue the term", "Samuel Price ( D )", "August 26 , 1876" ], [ "Colorado ( 2 )", "New seat", "Colorado admitted to the Union August 1 , 1876 . First senator elected November 15 , 1876", "Henry M. Teller ( R )", "November 15 , 1876" ], [ "Colorado ( 3 )", "New seat", "Colorado admitted to the Union August 1 , 1876 . First senator elected November 15 , 1876", "Jerome B. Chaffee ( R )", "November 15 , 1876" ], [ "Tennessee ( 1 )", "David M. Key ( D )", "Interim appointee lost special election . Successor elected January 19 , 1877", "James E. Bailey ( D )", "January 19 , 1877" ], [ "West Virginia ( 1 )", "Samuel Price ( D )", "Interim appointee lost special election . Successor elected January 26 , 1877 , but seat remained vacant until successor qualified by resigning from the U.S. House on January 31 , 1877", "Frank Hereford ( D )", "January 31 , 1877" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Forty-fourth United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C. from March 4, 1875, to March 4, 1877, during the seventh and eighth years of Ulysses S. Grant's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Ninth Census of the United States in 1870. For the first time since the American Civil War, the House had a Democratic majority. The Senate maintained a Republican majority.", "section_text": "replacements : 4 Democratic : 1 seat net gain Republican : 1 seat net loss deaths : 3 resignations : 1 vacancy : 1 interim appointments : 3 seats of newly admitted states : 2 Total seats with changes : 7 See also : List of special elections to the United States Senate", "section_title": "Changes in membership -- Senate", "title": "44th United States Congress", "uid": "44th_United_States_Congress_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/44th_United_States_Congress" }
6,813
6814
2013_Grand_National_2
[ [ "Fence", "Horse", "Jockey", "SP", "Fate" ], [ "8 ( Canal Turn )", "The Rainbow Hunter", "Aidan Coleman", "1050 50/1", "Unseated rider" ], [ "8 ( Canal Turn )", "Treacle ( IRE )", "Noel Fehily", "1033 33/1", "Unseated rider" ], [ "8 ( Canal Turn )", "Big Fella Thanks", "Denis O'Regan", "1033 33/1", "Unseated rider" ], [ "11", "Ninetieth Minute ( IRE )", "Niall Madden", "1080 80/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "12", "Tatenen ( FRA )", "Andrew Thornton", "1100 100/1", "Fell" ], [ "14", "Viking Blond ( FRA )", "Adam Wedge", "1066 66/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "15 ( The Chair )", "Colbert Station ( IRE )", "Tony McCoy", "1012 12/1", "Unseated rider" ], [ "17", "Lost Glory ( NZL )", "Mark Walsh", "1050 50/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "19 ( open ditch )", "Joncol ( IRE )", "Robbie Power", "1050 50/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "19 ( open ditch )", "What A Friend", "Sam Thomas", "1033 33/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "21", "Becauseicouldntsee ( IRE )", "Martin Ferris", "1066 66/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "22 ( Becher 's Brook )", "Imperial Commander ( IRE )", "Sam Twiston-Davies", "1011 11/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "23 ( Foinavon )", "Forpadydeplasterer ( IRE )", "Andrew McNamara", "1066 66/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "23 ( Foinavon )", "Quel Esprit ( FRA )", "Paul Townend", "1040 40/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "23 ( Foinavon )", "Weird Al ( IRE )", "Timmy Murphy", "1066 66/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "24 ( Canal Turn )", "Ballabriggs ( IRE )", "Jason Maguire", "1020 20/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "25 ( Valentine 's )", "On His Own ( IRE )", "Ruby Walsh", "1008 8/1", "Fell" ], [ "25 ( Valentine 's )", "Harry the Viking", "Ryan Mahon", "1040 40/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "27 ( open ditch )", "Mr. Moonshine ( IRE )", "Peter Buchanan", "1066 66/1", "Pulled up" ], [ "30", "Mumbles Head ( IRE )", "Jamie Moore", "1100 100/1", "Refused" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2013 Grand National (officially known as the John Smith's Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 166th annual running of the Grand National horse race at Aintree Racecourse near Liverpool, England. The showpiece steeplechase, which concluded a three-day meeting (one of only four held at Aintree throughout the year), took place on 6 April 2013. The maximum permitted field of 40 runners competed for a share of the £975,000 prize fund, which made the National the most valuable jump race in Europe. The race was won by 66/1 shot Auroras Encore, who was ridden by jockey Ryan Mania for trainer Sue Smith. The 11/2 favourite Seabass, ridden by Katie Walsh, finished in 13th place. During the race only two horses fell and six unseated their riders; 17 completed the course and all 40 that ran returned safely to the stables. The race was broadcast on Channel 4 for the first time as it took over the broadcasting rights for a four-year period to 2016. The BBC had broadcast the race every year since it was first televised in 1960 and first aired on radio in 1927. The BBC retain the UK radio coverage rights.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Non-finishers", "title": "2013 Grand National", "uid": "2013_Grand_National_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Grand_National" }
6,814
6815
Yuuya_Watanabe_0
[ [ "Season", "Event type", "Location", "Format", "Date", "Rank" ], [ "2007", "Grand Prix", "Kyoto", "Standard", "17-18 March 2007", "1" ], [ "2008", "Nationals", "Yokohama", "Standard and Booster Draft", "19-21 September 2008", "3" ], [ "2008", "Worlds", "Memphis , Tennessee", "National team", "11-14 December 2008", "4" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Kobe", "Extended", "18-19 April 2009", "2" ], [ "2009", "Nationals", "Hiroshima", "Standard and Booster Draft", "18-20 July 2009", "2" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Bangkok", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "22-23 August 2009", "6" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Niigata , Niigata", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "29-30 August 2009", "8" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Prague", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "5-6 September 2009", "2" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Melbourne", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "10-11 October 2009", "1" ], [ "2009", "Pro Tour", "Austin , Texas", "Extended and Booster Draft", "16-18 October 2009", "6" ], [ "2009", "Grand Prix", "Kitakyushu", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "31 October-1 November 2009", "5" ], [ "2010", "Grand Prix", "Sendai", "Standard", "5-6 June 2010", "6" ], [ "2010", "Grand Prix", "Manila", "Standard", "12-13 June 2010", "4" ], [ "2010", "Grand Prix", "Sydney", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "9-10 October 2010", "5" ], [ "2011", "Grand Prix", "Kansas City , Missouri", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "18-19 June 2011", "2" ], [ "2011", "Grand Prix", "Shanghai", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "20-21 August 2011", "1" ], [ "2011", "Grand Prix", "Pittsburgh", "Standard", "27-28 August 2011", "1" ], [ "2012", "Grand Prix", "Kobe", "Sealed and Booster Draft", "18-19 February 2012", "7" ], [ "2012", "Grand Prix", "Kuala Lumpur", "Standard", "24-25 March 2012", "1" ], [ "2012-13", "Grand Prix", "Manila", "Standard", "16-17 June 2012", "1" ] ]
{ "intro": "Yuuya Watanabe (渡辺雄也) is a Japanese Magic: The Gathering player and former World Champion. [I] With five Pro Tour top eights and 27 Grand Prix top eights (including seven wins), Watanabe is best known for his Rookie of the Year title in 2007, and his Player of the Year titles in 2009 and 2012. He is one of only three players to become Player of the Year more than once. He was elected to the Magic: The Gathering Hall of Fame in 2016, along with Owen Turtenwald, but removed in May 2019 after a cheating scandal involving marked card sleeves.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Achievements -- Top 8 appearances", "title": "Yuuya Watanabe", "uid": "Yuuya_Watanabe_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuuya_Watanabe" }
6,815
6816
List_of_Atari_arcade_games_19
[ [ "Name", "Year", "Max Players", "Description" ], [ "S.T.U.N . Runner", "1989", "1", "The player drives a futuristic motorcycle -like vehicle . Running time trials , he can hinder other players with his weapons , including the eponymous S.T.U.N . gun" ], [ "San Francisco Rush : Extreme Racing", "1996", "2 , simultaneous", "A racing game set in San Francisco , California" ], [ "San Francisco Rush : The Rock", "1997", "2 , simultaneous", "A sequel to San Francisco Rush with extra , harder tracks , including one set on the former prison island , Alcatraz" ], [ "San Francisco Rush 2049", "1999", "2 , simultaneous", "A sequel to San Francisco Rush , a futuristic racing game which takes place in the eponymous city" ], [ "Sebring", "1979", "1", "An unreleased first-person racing game" ], [ "Shark Jaws", "1975", "2 , alternating", "The player is a diver trying to catch small fish while a great white shark tries to eat him" ], [ "Shuuz", "1990", "2 , alternating", "A video game of horseshoes with a distinct redneck theme" ], [ "Skull & Crossbones", "1989", "2 , simultaneous", "The players control pirates on a quest to kill the evil wizard , along the way battling and dispatching enemies" ], [ "Sky Diver", "1978", "2 , simultaneous", "The player tries to land a skydiver to a marked position on the ground , accounting for wind speed and timing the opening of the diver 's chute" ], [ "Sky Raider", "1978", "1", "The player pilots an aircraft and tries to destroy as many of a variety of enemies as possible in the allotted time" ], [ "Smokey Joe", "1978", "1", "One-player version of Fire Truck where the player drives a fire engine through a crowded street to a fire and must avoid obstacles such as parked cars" ], [ "Solar War", "1979", "4 , alternating", "An unreleased space-themed video pinball game" ], [ "Space Duel", "1982", "2 , simultaneous", "A space combat game where players fight one another and shoot various geometric objects which float about" ], [ "Space Lords", "1992", "8 , simultaneous", "An ambitious space combat game with numerous options where the player has to complete several phases of the game" ], [ "Space Race", "1973", "2 , simultaneous", "Player attempts to guide a spaceship to the top of the screen , avoiding asteroids along the way" ], [ "Sparkz", "1992", "2 , simultaneous", "A puzzle game where players attempt to connect both sides of a pit using falling blocks" ], [ "Sprint 1", "1978", "1", "A racing game with a variety of tracks with hazards" ], [ "Sprint 2", "1976", "2 , simultaneous", "The first game in Atari 's Sprint line of racing games" ], [ "Sprint 4", "1977", "4 , simultaneous", "A racing game with a variety of tracks with hazards" ], [ "Sprint 8", "1977", "8 , simultaneous", "An 8-player variant of Atari 's Sprint line of racing games" ] ]
{ "intro": "Atari was an early pioneer in the video game industry, in fact, they virtually created the industry with their introduction of the arcade game Pong. The brand name Atari was used for many years and applied to several other entities that developed products ranging from arcade video games to home video game consoles to home computers to video games for personal computers. Below is a list of arcade video games produced by Atari. These games were produced by Atari, Inc. from 1972 to 1984 starting with Pong and Atari Games from 1984 to 2000. Atari no longer manufacturers arcade games and, in fact, the entity that now owns the brand name (French company, Infogrames) never has. For a full list of games developed or published by Atari from 1972 to 1984, see List of Atari, Inc. games.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "S", "title": "List of Atari arcade games", "uid": "List_of_Atari_arcade_games_19", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Atari_arcade_games" }
6,816
6817
List_of_Muni_Metro_stations_0
[ [ "Station", "Line ( s )", "Platform Layout", "Year Opened" ], [ "Castro Street", "K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Side", "1980" ], [ "Church Street", "K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Side", "1980" ], [ "Civic Center", "J Church K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View N Judah T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Island", "1980" ], [ "Embarcadero", "J Church K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View N Judah T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Island", "1980" ], [ "Forest Hill", "K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( game days )", "Side", "1918" ], [ "Montgomery Street", "J Church K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View N Judah T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Island", "1980" ], [ "Powell Street", "J Church K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View N Judah T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Island", "1980" ], [ "Van Ness", "J Church K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View N Judah T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( peak hours/game days )", "Island", "1980" ], [ "West Portal", "K Ingleside ( outbound ) L Taraval M Ocean View T Third Street ( inbound ) S Shuttle ( game days )", "Side", "1918" ] ]
{ "intro": "Muni Metro is a light rail/streetcar system serving San Francisco, California, United States. Operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni), a part of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA), Muni Metro served an average of 166,900 passengers per weekday in the second quarter of 2013, making it the third-busiest light rail system in the United States. Two subway stations, West Portal Station and Forest Hill Station, and five of the six light-rail lines, J Church, K Ingleside, L Taraval, M Ocean View, and N Judah, are remnants of an extensive streetcar system that survived the mass conversion to buses in the 1950s. In 1980, seven subway stations, from Embarcadero Station to Castro Street Station, were opened with the inauguration of the Market Street Subway underneath Market Street, marking the conversion of San Francisco's streetcar system into the Muni Metro. In 1998, four surface stations on The Embarcadero opened, connecting the newly constructed AT&T Park (then called Pacific Bell Park) and Caltrain to Muni Metro. In 2007, the T Third Street line was started along 18 new surface stations built along new track laid from Caltrain down the eastern side of the city to the city line. The system consists of nine subway stations and twenty-four surface stations with high-level 34-inch (860 mm) platforms that allow for level boarding. There are also eighty-seven surface stops whose features vary anywhere between low-level platforms, traffic islands, and markers painted on nearby utility poles. Four stations, from Embarcadero to Civic Center, are shared with Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART). The oldest stations are Forest Hill and West Portal, built in 1918, while the newest stations were opened as part as the Third Street Light Rail Project in 2007.", "section_text": "S Shuttle train at Embarcadero station T Third Street train at Church station S Shuttle train at Castro station Platforms at Forest Hill station Train at West Portal station Transfer stations with BART Transfer stations with BART/Line termini Line termini", "section_title": "Subway stations", "title": "List of Muni Metro stations", "uid": "List_of_Muni_Metro_stations_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Muni_Metro_stations" }
6,817
6818
List_of_NHL_playoff_series_7
[ [ "Opponent", "S", "Occurrences", "GP", "Rec", "%" ], [ "Detroit Red Wings", "6", "1996 , 1997 , 1999 , 2000 , 2002 , 2008", "34", "3-3", ".500" ], [ "Montreal Canadiens", "5", "1982 , 1984 , 1985 , 1987 , 1993", "31", "2-3", ".400" ], [ "San Jose Sharks", "5", "1999 , 2002 , 2004 , 2010 , 2019", "32", "2-3", ".400" ], [ "Dallas Stars", "4", "1999 , 2000 , 2004 , 2006", "24", "2-2", ".500" ], [ "Minnesota Wild", "3", "2003 , 2008 , 2014", "20", "1-2", ".333" ], [ "Buffalo Sabres", "2", "1984 , 1985", "8", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Chicago Blackhawks", "2", "1996 , 1997", "12", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Los Angeles Kings", "2", "2001 , 2002", "14", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Vancouver Canucks", "2", "1996 , 2001", "10", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Boston Bruins", "2", "1982 , 1983", "11", "1-1", ".500" ], [ "Carolina Hurricanes", "2", "1986 , 1987", "9", "1-1", ".500" ], [ "Edmonton Oilers", "2", "1997 , 1998", "12", "1-1", ".500" ], [ "Philadelphia Flyers", "2", "1981 , 1985", "11", "0-2", ".000" ], [ "Arizona Coyotes", "1", "2000", "5", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "Calgary Flames", "1", "2019", "5", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "Florida Panthers", "1", "1996", "4", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "New Jersey Devils", "1", "2001", "7", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "St. Louis Blues", "1", "2001", "5", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "Anaheim Ducks", "1", "2006", "4", "0-1", ".000" ], [ "Nashville Predators", "1", "2018", "6", "0-1", ".000" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a complete listing of National Hockey League (NHL) playoff series, grouped by franchise. Series featuring relocated teams[nb 1] are kept with their ultimate relocation franchises. Bolded years indicate wins. Years in italics indicate series in progress. Tables are sorted first by the number of series, then the number of wins, and then alphabetically.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Colorado Avalanche", "title": "List of NHL playoff series", "uid": "List_of_NHL_playoff_series_7", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NHL_playoff_series" }
6,818
6819
1948_NFL_Draft_0
[ [ "Original NFL team", "Player", "Pos", "College", "Conf" ], [ "San Francisco 49ers", "Joe Perry ‡", "FB", "Compton", "N/A" ], [ "Cleveland Browns", "Len Ford ‡", "DE", "Michigan", "Big Ten" ], [ "Chicago Bears", "Wash Serini", "WR", "Kentucky", "SEC" ], [ "Detroit Lions", "Bob Mann", "WR", "Hampton", "CIAA" ], [ "New York Giants", "Emlen Tunnell", "CB", "Iowa", "Big Ten" ], [ "Philadelphia Eagles", "Walt Barnes", "G", "LSU", "SEC" ], [ "San Francisco 49ers", "Bill Johnson", "C", "Texas A & M", "SWC" ], [ "Washington Redskins", "Howard Hartley", "RB / DB", "Duke", "SoCon" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1948 National Football League Draft was held on December 19, 1947, at the Fort Pitt Hotel in Pittsburgh.", "section_text": "† = Pro Bowler [ 3 ] ‡ = Hall of Famer [ 9 ]", "section_title": "Notable undrafted players", "title": "1948 NFL Draft", "uid": "1948_NFL_Draft_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1948_NFL_Draft" }
6,819
6820
List_of_sailing_frigates_of_the_United_States_Navy_1
[ [ "Name", "Type", "Rate", "Dates of Service", "Fate" ], [ "Adams", "2nd class", "28", "1799-1814", "scuttled and burned to prevent capture" ], [ "Baltimore", "3rd class", "32", "1798-1801", "sold" ], [ "Boston", "2nd class", "28", "1799-1814", "burned to prevent capture" ], [ "Brandywine", "1st class", "50", "1825-1864", "destroyed by fire" ], [ "Chesapeake", "2nd class", "36", "1800-1813", "captured by the British" ], [ "Columbia", "1st class", "44", "1813-1814", "burned on the stocks to prevent capture" ], [ "Columbia", "1st class", "50", "1838-1861", "scuttled and burned to prevent capture" ], [ "Congress", "2nd class", "36 ( 38 )", "1799-1834", "broken up" ], [ "Congress", "1st class", "52", "1841-1862", "burned and sank after action with CSS Virginia" ], [ "Connecticut", "3rd class", "24", "1799-1801", "sold" ], [ "Constellation", "2nd class", "36 ( 38 )", "1797-1853", "broken up" ], [ "Constitution", "1st class", "44", "1797 to date", "remains in commission" ], [ "Cumberland", "1st class", "50", "1842-1855", "converted to sloop 1855 sunk by CSS Virginia 1862" ], [ "Cyane", "3rd class", "22", "1815-1836", "broken up" ], [ "Delaware", "3rd class", "20", "1798-1801", "sold" ], [ "Essex", "2nd class", "32", "1799-1814", "captured by the British" ], [ "Ganges", "3rd class", "24", "1798-1801", "sold" ], [ "General Greene", "2nd class", "30", "1799-1805", "hulked ; destroyed by fire 1814" ], [ "George Washington", "3rd class", "24", "1798-1802", "sold" ], [ "Guerriere", "1st class", "44", "1814-1841", "broken up" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of sailing frigates of the United States Navy. Frigates were the backbone of the early Navy, although the list shows that many suffered unfortunate fates. The sailing frigates of the United States built from 1797 on were unique in that their framing was made of American live oak, a particularly hardy genus that made very resilient hulls; as a result of this, the ships were known to withstand damage that would have scuppered frigates of other nations. American frigates were also very heavily armed; the USN's 44s carried 24-pound cannon as opposed to the 18-pounders usual in frigates, and like most ships of the period carried more than their nominal rate, 56 guns or more. On the other hand, the USN classed ships with 20 to 26 guns as third-class frigates, whereas the Royal Navy did not.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "United States Navy", "title": "List of sailing frigates of the United States Navy", "uid": "List_of_sailing_frigates_of_the_United_States_Navy_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sailing_frigates_of_the_United_States_Navy" }
6,820
6821
2009_Armenian_Premier_League_0
[ [ "Club", "Location", "Stadium", "Capacity" ], [ "Ararat Yerevan", "Yerevan", "City Stadium ( Abovyan )", "3,946" ], [ "Banants", "Yerevan", "Nairi Stadium", "6,850" ], [ "Gandzasar", "Kapan", "Gandzasar Stadium", "3,500" ], [ "Kilikia", "Yerevan", "Hrazdan Stadium", "54,208" ], [ "Mika", "Yerevan", "Mika Stadium", "7,250" ], [ "Pyunik", "Yerevan", "Republican Stadium", "14,403" ], [ "Shirak", "Gyumri", "Gyumri City Stadium", "2,844" ], [ "Ulisses", "Yerevan", "Mika Stadium", "7,250" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2009 Armenian Premier League season was the eighteenth since its establishment. The season began on 21 March 2009 and ended on 7 November 2009. FC Pyunik were the defending champions. There were no teams promoted from the previous season of the First League. Therefore, Kilikia FC play another season in the top league. Only 8 teams were allowed to play in the 2009 Armenian Premier League. The league was played in four stages. Teams played each other four times, twice at home and twice away. FC Pyunik gained maximum points after round 28 and were crowned champions; winning their ninth consecutive title, twelfth overall. Ararat Yerevan were relegated to Armenian First League.", "section_text": "YerevanShirakGandzasarYerevan teams : Ararat YerevanBanantsKilikiaMikaPyunikUlisses Location of teams in the 2009 Armenian Premier League", "section_title": "Participating teams", "title": "2009 Armenian Premier League", "uid": "2009_Armenian_Premier_League_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Armenian_Premier_League" }
6,821
6822
List_of_French-language_films_6
[ [ "Year", "French title", "English title", "Directed by" ], [ "1960", "À bout de souffle", "Breathless", "Jean-Luc Godard" ], [ "1960", "Tirez sur le pianiste", "Shoot the Piano Player", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1962", "L'amour à vingt ans", "Love at Twenty", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1962", "Jules et Jim", "Jules and Jim", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1962", "Cléo de 5 à 7", "Cleo from 5 to 7", "Agnès Varda" ], [ "1964", "La peau douce", "The Soft Skin", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1966", "Masculin , féminin", "", "Jean-Luc Godard" ], [ "1966", "Au hasard Balthazar", "", "Robert Bresson" ], [ "1966", "Un Homme et Une Femme", "", "Claude Lelouch" ], [ "1967", "2 ou 3 choses que je sais d'elle", "Two or Three Things I Know About Her", "Jean-Luc Godard" ], [ "1967", "Belle de jour", "Day Lilly/Daylight Beauty", "Luis Buñuel" ], [ "1967", "Le Samouraï", "The Godson", "Jean-Pierre Melville" ], [ "1967", "Soleil O", "Oh , Sun", "Med Hondo" ], [ "1967", "Alexandre le Bienheureux", "Alexander", "Yves Robert" ], [ "1968", "Baisers volés", "Stolen Kisses", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1968", "La Mariée était en noir", "The Bride Wore Black", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1969", "La sirène du Mississipi", "Mississippi Mermaid", "François Truffaut" ], [ "1969", "Que la bête meure", "This Man Must Die", "Claude Chabrol" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of French-language films, films mostly spoken in the French language.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "1960s", "title": "List of French-language films", "uid": "List_of_French-language_films_6", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_French-language_films" }
6,822
6823
NABC_Defensive_Player_of_the_Year_0
[ [ "Season", "Player", "School", "Position", "Class" ], [ "1986-87", "Tommy Amaker", "Duke", "PG", "Senior" ], [ "1987-88", "Billy King", "Duke", "F", "Senior" ], [ "1988-89", "Stacey Augmon", "UNLV", "SF", "Sophomore" ], [ "1989-90", "Stacey Augmon ( 2 )", "UNLV", "SF", "Junior" ], [ "1990-91", "Stacey Augmon ( 3 )", "UNLV", "SF", "Senior" ], [ "1991-92", "Alonzo Mourning", "Georgetown", "C", "Senior" ], [ "1992-93", "Grant Hill", "Duke", "SF", "Junior" ], [ "1993-94", "Jim McIlvaine", "Marquette", "C", "Senior" ], [ "1994-95", "Tim Duncan", "Wake Forest", "C", "Sophomore" ], [ "1995-96", "Tim Duncan ( 2 )", "Wake Forest", "C", "Junior" ], [ "1996-97", "Tim Duncan * ( 3 )", "Wake Forest", "C", "Senior" ], [ "1997-98", "Steve Wojciechowski", "Duke", "SG", "Senior" ], [ "1998-99", "Shane Battier", "Duke", "SF", "Sophomore" ], [ "1999-00", "Shane Battier ( 2 )", "Duke", "SF", "Junior" ], [ "1999-00", "Kenyon Martin *", "Cincinnati", "C", "Senior" ], [ "2000-01", "Shane Battier * ( 3 )", "Duke", "SF", "Senior" ], [ "2001-02", "John Linehan", "Providence", "PG", "Senior" ], [ "2002-03", "Emeka Okafor", "Connecticut", "C", "Sophomore" ], [ "2003-04", "Emeka Okafor ( 2 )", "Connecticut", "C", "Junior" ], [ "2004-05", "Shelden Williams", "Duke", "PF", "Junior" ] ]
{ "intro": "The NABC Defensive Player of the Year is an award given annually by the National Association of Basketball Coaches to recognize the top defensive player in United States college basketball. The award has been given since 1987 and was previously known as the Henry Iba Corinthian Award, named after Hall of Fame coach Henry Iba, who coached at Oklahoma State University from 1934-1970. Duke University has dominated the award with six recipients who have won a total of nine awards. The only other schools with more than one recipient are Connecticut, with two recipients who combined for four awards, and Ohio State, Kentucky, and Virginia with two recipients who each won the award once. Three players have been named the NABC Defensive Player of the Year on three occasions - Stacey Augmon of UNLV (1989-91), Tim Duncan of Wake Forest (1995-97), and Shane Battier of Duke (1999-2001). Greg Oden (2007) and Anthony Davis (2012) are the only freshmen to have won the award. Two winners of this award were born outside the main territory of the United States. Duncan was born in the United States Virgin Islands, an insular area of the U.S.; by U.S. law, all natives of the USVI are U.S. citizens by birth. Hasheem Thabeet, the 2008 and 2009 winner, is a native of Tanzania.", "section_text": "Tim Duncan is one of three players to win the award three times . Kenyon Martin was also named the Naismith and Wooden Award winner in 2000 . In 2007 , Greg Oden became the first freshman to be named Defensive Player of the Year .", "section_title": "Winners", "title": "NABC Defensive Player of the Year", "uid": "NABC_Defensive_Player_of_the_Year_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NABC_Defensive_Player_of_the_Year" }
6,823
6824
List_of_places_of_worship_in_Worthing_1
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Denomination/ Affiliation", "Grade", "Notes" ], [ "St Paul 's Church", "Worthing 50°48′49″N 0°22′17″W / 50.8137°N 0.3714°W / 50.8137 ; -0.3714 ( Former St Paul 's Church , Worthing )", "Anglican", "II", "An 1809 Act of Parliament allowed St Paul 's to be built as a chapel of ease to St Mary 's Church in Broadwater ; it remained in force until 1893 , when a parish was formed . It thrived as Worthing 's reputation as a fashionable seaside resort grew , and the sale of pews to visitors brought in much money . John Rebecca 's stuccoed brick building with Doric columns and cupola became structurally unsound and was closed in 1995" ], [ "Anglesea Street Mission", "Worthing 50°49′01″N 0°22′44″W / 50.8169°N 0.3789°W / 50.8169 ; -0.3789 ( Former Anglesea Street Mission , Worthing )", "Anglican", "-", "Christ Church 's first mission hall was opened in the 1880s , originally under the name Clifton Road Mission Hall . Under its present name , Verrall Hall , it is a Scout headquarters" ], [ "Crescent Road Mission", "Worthing 50°48′37″N 0°22′34″W / 50.8102°N 0.3761°W / 50.8102 ; -0.3761 ( Former Crescent Road Mission , Worthing )", "Anglican", "-", "Originally a non-denominational mission chapel , this was taken over by Christ Church and used as a mission hall . It is now part of an adjacent shop" ], [ "Newland Road Mission", "Worthing 50°49′06″N 0°22′07″W / 50.8184°N 0.3686°W / 50.8184 ; -0.3686 ( Former Newland Road Mission , Worthing )", "Anglican", "-", "Built in 1883 by St George 's Church to serve new housing near the railway , this red-brick chapel , designed by George Hewer , was used until 1936 . Under the new guise of Forester 's Hall , it has been a school and a photographic studio" ], [ "Ham Arch Mission", "East Worthing 50°49′10″N 0°21′14″W / 50.8194°N 0.3538°W / 50.8194 ; -0.3538 ( Former Ham Arch Mission , East Worthing )", "Anglican", "-", "Named after a nearby railway bridge , and ironically known as The Cathedral locally , this tiny hut - now a workshop - was served from St George 's Church for 29 years from 1885" ], [ "Brethren Gospel Hall", "West Tarring 50°49′31″N 0°23′35″W / 50.8253°N 0.3931°W / 50.8253 ; -0.3931 ( Former Brethren Gospel Hall , West Tarring )", "Brethren", "-", "This tiny chapel , now in residential use , is set back from Tarring 's ancient high street . It is in a simple Classical style with a pediment and oeil de boeuf . Services were held from 1860 until 1992" ], [ "Christian Brethren Hall", "Worthing 50°48′37″N 0°22′08″W / 50.8103°N 0.3688°W / 50.8103 ; -0.3688 ( Former Christian Brethren Hall , Worthing )", "Brethren", "-", "This stuccoed building of around 1850 was in religious use from 1910 , by Brethren , Baptists and ( from 1977 ) Evangelicals . It has fallen out of use and is unoccupied as of 2020" ], [ "Gospel Hall", "Durrington 50°49′58″N 0°24′46″W / 50.8327°N 0.4127°W / 50.8327 ; -0.4127 ( Former Gospel Hall , Durrington )", "Brethren", "-", "Planning permission for this meeting hall on Birkdale Road was granted in 1990 . It had a capacity for about 60 worshippers . In June 2011 the charity Scope stated that they had recently bought it and converted it into a social and activity centre" ], [ "Bedford Row Methodist Chapel", "Worthing 50°48′41″N 0°22′08″W / 50.8114°N 0.3690°W / 50.8114 ; -0.3690 ( Former Bedford Row Methodist Chapel , Worthing )", "Methodist", "II", "Worthing 's first Wesleyan Methodist chapel , the Providence Chapel of 1822 , was replaced by this pedimented , stuccoed , Neoclassical building , with tall , tapering windows , in 1840 . It passed into secular use in 1900 when the church in Steyne Gardens ( now Cornerstone Methodist Church ) replaced it , and is now the function room of the Vintners Parrot pub" ], [ "Lyndhurst Road Methodist Church", "East Worthing 50°49′01″N 0°21′20″W / 50.8169°N 0.3556°W / 50.8169 ; -0.3556 ( Former Lyndhurst Road Methodist Church , Worthing )", "Methodist", "-", "An iron chapel for Primitive Methodists opened in Chapel Road in 1880 , moved to Lyndhurst Road in 1893 and was superseded by H.K . Armitage 's Perpendicular Gothic church in 1929 . The Methodist Church declared it redundant in 2005 , and permission was granted to establish a children 's centre in it" ], [ "Methodist Providence Chapel", "Worthing 50°48′39″N 0°22′09″W / 50.8109°N 0.3691°W / 50.8109 ; -0.3691 ( Former Methodist Providence Chapel , Worthing )", "Methodist", "-", "This chapel was built in 1822 in a Neoclassical style using flint cobblestones on the exterior . After the new chapel in nearby Bedford Row was built in 1840 , it was unused until 1852 , when an independent Christian group took it on . The building now houses a youth club" ], [ "Montague Street Tabernacle Chapel", "Worthing 50°48′37″N 0°22′15″W / 50.8104°N 0.3707°W / 50.8104 ; -0.3707 ( Former Montague Street Tabernacle Chapel , Worthing )", "Independent", "-", "This 1839 building had many uses ( hall , theatre , temporary church ) until 1895 , when the Worthing Tabernacle was founded . It moved to its new premises in 1908 , after which it was renamed St James 's Hall and used as an entertainment venue . It is now a shop" ], [ "New Street Chapel", "Worthing 50°48′36″N 0°22′32″W / 50.8101°N 0.3755°W / 50.8101 ; -0.3755 ( Former New Street Chapel , Worthing )", "Independent", "-", "This was built in the Classical style in 1861 for Independent Evangelicals . It declined after its founder , John Adams , died , and closed in 1906 . The building survives behind a shop façade" ], [ "Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel", "Worthing 50°48′46″N 0°22′22″W / 50.8129°N 0.3729°W / 50.8129 ; -0.3729 ( Former Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel , Worthing )", "Baptist", "-", "In 2005 , planning permission was granted for the conversion of this Strict Baptist chapel into a house . The congregation formed in 1887 worshipped elsewhere until 1907 , when the chapel was built" ], [ "St James 's Evangelical Free Church", "Worthing 50°48′45″N 0°22′03″W / 50.8124°N 0.3674°W / 50.8124 ; -0.3674 ( Former St James 's Evangelical Free Church , Worthing )", "Evangelical", "-", "T.H . Winney 's Perpendicular-style building was used as an Evangelical church from 1926 until 1988 , when it became a restaurant and bar . The name was derived from St James 's Hall in Montague Street , where the congregation previously met , although when its marriage registration ( granted in February 1927 ) was cancelled in February 1989 it was called Worthing Evangelical Free Church" ], [ "Kingdom Hall", "West Tarring 50°49′16″N 0°23′32″W / 50.8211°N 0.3922°W / 50.8211 ; -0.3922 ( Kingdom Hall of Jehovah 's Witnesses , West Tarring )", "Jehovah 's Witnesses", "-", "This converted house was the fifth Jehovah 's Witnesses place of worship in Worthing . The denomination , which was first established in the town in 1922 , moved to it in 1992 . It was used by three Worthing-based Congregations of Jehovah 's Witnesses : Broadwater , Durrington and Tarring . In 2013 , a planning application was submitted to construct a purpose-built Kingdom Hall on the site of the disused Second Church of Christ , Scientist on nearby Grand Avenue . This was approved , building work was completed in 2015 , and the old building 's marriage registration was cancelled in July 2015" ], [ "Elim Tabernacle", "Worthing 50°48′49″N 0°22′25″W / 50.8135°N 0.3737°W / 50.8135 ; -0.3737 ( Former Elim Tabernacle , Worthing )", "Pentecostal", "-", "George Jeffreys , founder of the Elim Pentecostal Church in the United Kingdom , established this church in 1931 . The small building , opposite Christ Church , was registered for worship in January 1935 and was used until 1982 ; a nursery school now occupies it" ], [ "Shelley Road United Reformed Church", "Worthing 50°48′40″N 0°22′29″W / 50.8112°N 0.3746°W / 50.8112 ; -0.3746 ( Former Shelley Road United Reformed Church , Worthing )", "United Reformed Church", "-", "This brick and terracotta Early English-style building served the Congregational ( later United Reformed Church ) community from 1904 until 2005 , when the congregation moved to the renamed Emmanuel Church - formerly St Columba 's . Its marriage registration was cancelled in January 2006" ] ]
{ "intro": "The borough of Worthing, one of seven local government districts in the English county of West Sussex, has 49 extant, operating churches and other places of worship. Sixteen other former places of worship are still in existence but are no longer in religious use. The district, on the south coast of England, is mostly urban: it consists of the seaside resort of Worthing, established in the 19th century, and its residential suburbs, ranging from ancient villages absorbed by the growing town to housing estates built after World War II. Most residents identify themselves as Christian, and there is only one non-Christian place of worship, a mosque. The Church of England, the country's officially established church, is represented by more churches than any other denomination, but Worthing's first church was an Independent chapel. Protestant Nonconformism flourished in the early 19th century during the town's early development, while Roman Catholic worship (after the Catholic Emancipation) took root somewhat later. English Heritage has awarded listed status to 12 of Worthing's extant churches and two former church buildings. A building is defined as listed when it is placed on a statutory register of buildings of special architectural or historic interest in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport, a Government department, is responsible for this; English Heritage, a non-departmental public body, acts as an agency of the department to administer the process and advise the department on relevant issues. There are three grades of listing status. Grade I, the highest, is defined as being of exceptional interest; Grade II* is used for particularly important buildings of more than special interest; and Grade II, the lowest, is used for buildings of special interest.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Closed or disused places of worship", "title": "List of places of worship in Worthing", "uid": "List_of_places_of_worship_in_Worthing_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_places_of_worship_in_Worthing" }
6,824
6825
2013_County_Championship_1
[ [ "Team", "Primary home ground", "Other grounds", "Coach", "Captain", "Overseas player ( s )" ], [ "Essex", "County Ground , Chelmsford", "Castle Park Cricket Ground , Colchester", "Paul Grayson", "James Foster", "Rob Quiney ( Apr-May ) Hamish Rutherford ( Jun-Jul ) Gautam Gambhir ( Aug-Sep )" ], [ "Glamorgan", "SWALEC Stadium , Cardiff", "Penrhyn Avenue , Rhos-on-Sea St Helen 's , Swansea", "Matthew Mott", "Mark Wallace", "Marcus North ( Apr-Jul/Aug ) Nathan McCullum ( Jul )" ], [ "Gloucestershire", "County Ground , Bristol", "College Ground , Cheltenham", "John Bracewell", "Michael Klinger", "Michael Klinger" ], [ "Hampshire", "The Rose Bowl , Southampton", "-", "Giles White", "Jimmy Adams", "George Bailey ( Apr-May ) Sohail Tanvir ( Jun-Aug )" ], [ "Kent", "St Lawrence Ground , Canterbury", "Nevill Ground , Tunbridge Wells", "Jimmy Adams", "James Tredwell", "Vernon Philander ( Jul )" ], [ "Lancashire", "Old Trafford , Manchester", "Aigburth , Liverpool Trafalgar Road Ground , Southport", "Peter Moores", "Glen Chapple", "Simon Katich" ], [ "Leicestershire", "Grace Road , Leicester", "-", "Phil Whitticase", "Ramnaresh Sarwan", "Ramnaresh Sarwan ( Apr-May ) Joe Burns ( May-Jul )" ], [ "Northamptonshire", "County Ground , Northampton", "-", "David Ripley", "Stephen Peters", "Trent Copeland ( Apr-Jun/Aug-Sep ) Cameron White ( Jul-Aug )" ], [ "Worcestershire", "County Ground , New Road , Worcester", "-", "Steve Rhodes", "Daryl Mitchell", "Thilan Samaraweera" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2013 County Championship season, known as the LV= County Championship for sponsorship reasons, was the 114th cricket County Championship season. It was contested through two divisions: Division One and Division Two. Each team played all the others in their division both home and away. Durham were County Champions for the third time in six seasons. The top two teams from Division Two, Lancashire and Northamptonshire, gained promotion to the first division for the 2014 season, while the bottom two sides from Division One - Derbyshire and Surrey - were relegated to Division Two for 2014.", "section_text": "Team relegated from Division One", "section_title": "Teams -- Division Two", "title": "2013 County Championship", "uid": "2013_County_Championship_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_County_Championship" }
6,825
6826
Drainage_basins_of_South_Africa_0
[ [ "Code", "Gross capacity x10 m", "Nr . regions", "Major rivers", "Drains to" ], [ "A", "1,284", "9", "Limpopo River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "B", "1,502", "9", "Olifants River", "Limpopo River" ], [ "C", "7,941", "9", "Vaal River", "Orange River" ], [ "D", "11,105", "8", "Orange River ( below Gariep Dam ) , Kraai River", "South Atlantic" ], [ "E", "128", "4", "Olifants River ( above confluence with the Doring River ) , Groot River", "South Atlantic" ], [ "F", "", "6", "Buffels River", "South Atlantic" ], [ "G", "445", "5", "Berg River , Diep River , Eerste River , Verlorevlei River , Bot River , Klein River , Uilkraal River", "South Atlantic" ], [ "H", "1,024", "9", "Hex River , Kingna River , Breede River ( below Brandvlei Dam ) , Tributaries of the Sonderend River above theewaterskloof Dam", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "J", "200", "4", "Touws River , Gamka River , Olifants River , Langtou River , Weyers River", "" ], [ "K", "183", "9", "Little Brak River , Great Brak River , Karatara River , Knysna River , Keurbooms River , Bloukrans River , Lottering River , Storms River , Sandrif River , Groot River , Tsitsikamma River , Klippedrift River , Kromme River , Seekoei River , Kabelkous River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "L", "219", "9", "Baviaanskloof River , Kouga River , Lower Gamtoos River", "" ], [ "M", "12", "3", "Swartkops River , Maitland River , Van Stadens River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "N", "227", "4", "Sundays River ( below Darlington Dam , and above Vanrynevelds Pass Dam ) , Skoenmakers River ( below Skoenmakers Canal Outlet ) , Gats River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "P", "", "4", "Bushmans River , Kowie River , Kariega River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "Q", "131", "9", "Great Fish River , Little Fish River , Tarka River , Vlekpoort River , Lake Arthur", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "R", "211", "5", "Buffels River , Kwenxura River , Kwelera River , Gonubie River , Nahoon River", "" ], [ "S", "610", "7", "White Kei River ( above Xonxa Dam ) , Indwe River ( above Lubisi Dam ) , Swart Kei River ( above Klipplaat River confluence ) , Klipplaat River ( above Waterdown Dam ) , Oxkraal River ( above Oxkraal Dam ) , Thorn River , Thomas River , Tsomo River , Kwa-Qokwama River , Mbokotwa River , Kubisi River ( above Wriggleswade Dam ) , Toise River , Xilinxa River ( above Xilinxa Dam )", "" ], [ "T", "248", "9", "Slang River , Xuka River , Mtata River ( above Mtata Dam ) , Tsitsa River , Pot River , Mooi River , Inxu River , Wildebees River , Gatberg River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "U", "806", "8", "Mgeni River , Mvoti River", "Indian Ocean" ], [ "V", "1,110", "7", "Tugela River , Mooi River , Sundays River , Bushmans River", "Indian Ocean" ] ]
{ "intro": "A drainage basin is an extent of land where water from rain and melting snow or ice drains downhill into a body of water, such as a river, lake, reservoir, estuary, wetland, sea or ocean. The drainage basin includes both the streams and rivers that convey the water as well as the land surfaces from which water drains into those channels, and is separated from adjacent basins by a drainage divide. The drainage basin acts like a funnel, collecting all the water within the area covered by the basin and channelling it into a waterway. Each drainage basin is separated topographically from adjacent basins by a geographical barrier such as a ridge, hill or mountain, which is known as a water divide. Other terms that are used to describe a drainage basin are catchment, catchment area, catchment basin, drainage area, river basin, water basin and watershed. The drainage basins in South Africa do not correspond with the Water Management Areas, and have the letters A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, and X. The Area A comes close to the same area that the Limpopo WMA seems to cover. Apart from these letters they seem to have no name referring to them. What seems to be the case though is that each area refers to some major river systems and their tributaries (a region for each major river system).", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of drainage basins", "title": "List of drainage basins of South Africa", "uid": "Drainage_basins_of_South_Africa_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_drainage_basins_of_South_Africa" }
6,826
6827
Kentucky_Wildcats_football_0
[ [ "Player", "Position", "Year", "Unanimous", "Consensus", "Selectors" ], [ "Clyde Johnson", "T", "1942", "No", "No", "AP" ], [ "Bob Gain", "T", "1949", "No", "No", "All-Players , NY Sun , NEA" ], [ "Bob Gain", "T", "1950", "Yes", "Yes", "AP , UPI , INS , Camp , NEA , CP , FWAA-Look , AAB , FD , NYNews" ], [ "Babe Parilli", "QB", "1950", "Yes", "Yes", "AP , INS , Camp , Colliers , NY News , Sporting News , AA" ], [ "Bob Gain", "QB", "1951", "Yes", "Yes", "UP , INS , Camp , NEA , CP , AAB , NY News , All-Player" ], [ "Doug Moseley", "C", "1951", "No", "No", "AP , FWAA-Look" ], [ "Steve Meilinger", "DE", "1952", "No", "No", "AP , NEA , All-Player" ], [ "Steve Meilinger", "DE", "1953", "No", "No", "NEA , Colliers , AAB" ], [ "Ray Correll", "DG", "1953", "No", "No", "FWAA-Look , Chicago Tribun" ], [ "Howard Schnellenberger", "DE", "1955", "No", "Yes", "AP" ], [ "Lou Michaels", "OT", "1956", "No", "Yes", "UPI , NA , Camp , Colliers , NY News" ], [ "Lou Michaels", "OT", "1957", "No", "Yes", "AP , NEA , Camp , FWAA-Look , Coaches , NY News , Sporting News" ], [ "Irv Goode", "C", "1961", "No", "No", "Time" ], [ "Herschel Turner", "T", "1963", "No", "No", "Time" ], [ "Sam Ball", "T", "1965", "No", "Yes", "UPI , NEA , Camp , FWAA-Look , Coaches , Time , Sporting New" ], [ "Rodger Bird", "HB", "1965", "No", "No", "Time , NBC" ], [ "Rick Norton", "QB", "1965", "No", "No", "Time , NBC" ], [ "Elmore Stephens", "TE", "1974", "No", "No", "Time" ], [ "Rick Nuzum", "C", "1974", "No", "No", "NEA" ], [ "Warren Bryant", "T", "1976", "No", "No", "Camp , Coaches" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Kentucky Wildcats football program represents the University of Kentucky in the sport of American football. The Wildcats compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The Wildcats play their home games at Kroger Field in Lexington, Kentucky and are currently led by head coach Mark Stoops.", "section_text": "Consensus All-Americans in bold .", "section_title": "Individual Awards and Honors -- All-Americans", "title": "Kentucky Wildcats football", "uid": "Kentucky_Wildcats_football_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kentucky_Wildcats_football" }
6,827
6828
List_of_flag_bearers_for_Canada_at_the_Olympics_0
[ [ "#", "Event year", "Season", "Flag bearer", "Sport" ], [ "47", "2018", "Winter", "Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir", "Figure Skating" ], [ "46", "2016", "Summer", "Rosannagh MacLennan", "Gymnastics" ], [ "45", "2014", "Winter", "Hayley Wickenheiser", "Hockey" ], [ "44", "2012", "Summer", "Simon Whitfield", "triathlon" ], [ "43", "2010", "Winter", "Clara Hughes", "speed skating" ], [ "42", "2008", "Summer", "Adam van Koeverden", "Kayaking" ], [ "41", "2006", "Winter", "Danielle Goyette", "Hockey" ], [ "40", "2004", "Summer", "Nicolas Gill", "Judo" ], [ "39", "2002", "Winter", "Catriona Le May Doan", "Speed skating" ], [ "38", "2000", "Summer", "Caroline Brunet", "Kayak racing" ], [ "37", "1998", "Winter", "Jean-Luc Brassard", "Freestyle skiing" ], [ "36", "1996", "Summer", "Charmaine Crooks", "Athletics" ], [ "35", "1994", "Winter", "Kurt Browning", "Figure skating" ], [ "34", "1992", "Summer", "Mike Smith", "Athletics" ], [ "33", "1992", "Winter", "Sylvie Daigle", "Short track speed skating" ], [ "32", "1988", "Summer", "Carolyn Waldo", "Synchronized swimming" ], [ "31", "1988", "Winter", "Brian Orser", "Figure skating" ], [ "30", "1984", "Summer", "Alex Baumann", "Swimming" ], [ "29", "1984", "Winter", "Gaétan Boucher", "Speed skating" ], [ "", "1980", "Summer", "Sue Holloway", "Canoe" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of flag bearers who have represented Canada at the Olympics.", "section_text": "Flag bearers carry the national flag of their country at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games .", "section_title": "Opening ceremonies", "title": "List of flag bearers for Canada at the Olympics", "uid": "List_of_flag_bearers_for_Canada_at_the_Olympics_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_flag_bearers_for_Canada_at_the_Olympics" }
6,828
6829
Neighborhoods_in_Detroit_4
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Summary" ], [ "Chandler Park", "", "Detroit Public Library operates the Chandler Park Branch Library at 12800 Harper . The branch opened at its current location on March 23 , 1957 . The third floor collection has an emphasis on African American authors" ], [ "Cornerstone Village", "", "Formally established as Organized Neighbors East in 1977 , this neighborhood changed its name to Cornerstone Village to reflect its location as the easternmost corner of Detroit 's east side . Borders Grosse Pointe , Grosse Pointe Farms , Grosse Pointe Woods and Harper Woods . Home of the infamous Balduck Park" ], [ "East English Village", "", "The tree-lined streets of East English Village feature a variety of homes ranging from small bungalows to large , luxurious older homes . The housing stock also includes a small number of two-family homes . Grosse Pointe borders it on the South" ], [ "Hamtramck", "Hamtramck is an incorporated city almost entirely surrounded by Detroit 's boundaries . 42°23′52″N 83°3′26″W / 42.39778°N 83.05722°W / 42.39778 ; -83.05722 ( Hamtramck , Michigan )", "German farmers established the area , but Polish immigrants flooded into the area when the Dodge Brothers plant opened in 1914 . As of the 2000 census , over 22% of Hamtramck 's population is of Polish origin ; in 1970 , it was 90% Polish . A large number of immigrants from the Middle East , and South Asia ( especially Bangladesh ) have moved to the area" ], [ "Highland Heights-Stevens ' Subdivision Historic District / North End", "Highland Heights area bounded by John R. and California St. 42°23′49″N 83°5′13″W / 42.39694°N 83.08694°W / 42.39694 ; -83.08694 ( Highland Heights-Stevens ' Subdivision Historic District ) North End area bounded by Woodward Avenue to the west , E. Grand Blvd to the south , Chrysler Freeway to the east , and Woodland St. to the north", "There are 422 single-family homes , two apartment buildings , five commercial buildings , and the McGregor Library located within the historic district . Of these , 392 single-family houses , both two apartment buildings , and the library are classified as contributing to the district 's historic character . The surrounding North End neighborhood area is a focus neighborhood for the NEXT Detroit Neighborhood Initiative , with specific goals to beautify the neighborhood and strengthen civic leadership . Some in the city have accused the administration of using the NEXT Detroit Neighborhood Initiative to give tax breaks to speculators . Many musicians , such as Aretha Franklin , Smokey Robinson and Diana Ross , are from the North End" ], [ "Krainz Woods", "7 Mile Road and Ryan Road to E Nevada Street and Mound Road", "The neighborhood was named after Captain John Krainz , a World War II hero from Detroit . Nation of Islam member Malcolm X lived on Keystone street in the 1950s . The Sojourner Truth Homes housing project is located there , which housed many Motown -ers singing groups such as The Dramatics & The Floaters . In 2009 , Mayor Bing led a ribbon-cutting dedication of Krainz Park" ], [ "Milwaukee Junction", "East Grand Boulevard to the north , St. Aubin St./Hamtramck Drive to the east , Woodward Avenue to the west , and the border following I-94 to I-75 to Warren Road to the south", "An area with significant history related to the automobile industry , east of the New Center area , it is near the railroad junction of the Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad , and the Grand Trunk Western Railroad lines . One of the largest collections of early 20th century industrial architecture in North America , and the birthplace of the Model T" ], [ "MorningSide", "Harper Avenue and I-94 to the north , Mack Avenue to the south , E. Outer Drive and Whittier to the west and Alter Road and E. Outer Drive to the east", "MorningSide is an upper east side neighborhood in Detroit encompassing 2.875 square miles ( 7.45 km ) . It is characterized by red brick tudors with wide streets" ], [ "Van Steuban / Osborn", "", "In May 2007 , Osborn had about 37,000 residents , mostly middle income . In a period before May 2007 Osborne 's population grew by 11% , a rarity in Detroit neighborhoods . During that period , the number of children grew by 35.8% ; therefore most of the overall growth in Osborne was of an increase in children . In May 2007 , per capita , Osborn had more children than any other neighborhood in Michigan . The neighborhood includes brick homes" ], [ "NoHam/Banglatown", "", "Located north of Hamtramck ( hence the name NoHam ) , it gained a Bangladeshi American community since 2000 ( hence the name Banglatown ) . By 2015 many artists began to congregate in this neighborhood . It is near Interstate 75 and Davison" ] ]
{ "intro": "Neighborhoods in Detroit provides a general overview of neighborhoods and historic districts within the city. Neighborhood names and boundaries vary in their formality some are well defined and long established, while others are more informal. Further names and boundaries have evolved over time due to development or changes in demographics. Woodward Avenue, a major a north-south thoroughfare, serves as a demarcation for neighborhood areas on the east side and west side of the city.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Areas and neighborhoods -- East", "title": "List of neighborhoods in Detroit", "uid": "Neighborhoods_in_Detroit_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neighborhoods_in_Detroit" }
6,829
6830
13th_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba_0
[ [ "Member", "Electoral district", "Party" ], [ "Amos Lyle", "Arthur", "Conservative" ], [ "Aimé Bénard", "Assiniboia", "Conservative" ], [ "James Argue", "Avondale", "Conservative" ], [ "James H. Howden", "Beautiful Plains", "Conservative" ], [ "George Malcolm", "Birtle", "Liberal" ], [ "George R. Coldwell", "Brandon City", "Conservative" ], [ "Alfred Carroll", "Brandon South", "Conservative" ], [ "Albert Prefontaine", "Carillon", "Conservative" ], [ "George Steel", "Cypress", "Conservative" ], [ "James G. Harvey", "Dauphin", "Conservative" ], [ "John C. W. Reid", "Deloraine", "Conservative" ], [ "Rodmond Roblin", "Dufferin", "Conservative" ], [ "David Henry McFadden", "Emerson", "Conservative" ], [ "Samuel Hughes", "Gilbert Plains", "Conservative" ], [ "Baldwin Baldwinson", "Gimli", "Conservative" ], [ "James William Armstrong", "Gladstone", "Liberal" ], [ "William Ferguson", "Hamiota", "Conservative" ], [ "Orton Grain", "Kildonan and St. Andrews", "Conservative" ], [ "George Lawrence", "Killarney", "Conservative" ], [ "Charles Duncan McPherson", "Lakeside", "Liberal" ] ]
{ "intro": "The members of the 13th Manitoba Legislature were elected in the Manitoba general election held in July 1910. The legislature sat from February 9, 1911, to June 15, 1914. The Conservatives led by Rodmond Roblin formed the government. Tobias Norris of the Liberal Party was Leader of the Opposition. James Johnson served as speaker for the assembly. There were four sessions of the 13th Legislature:", "section_text": "The following members were elected to the assembly in 1910 : [ 1 ]", "section_title": "Members of the Assembly", "title": "13th Manitoba Legislature", "uid": "13th_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/13th_Manitoba_Legislature" }
6,830
6831
Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history_9
[ [ "Round", "Pick #", "Overall", "Name", "Position", "College" ], [ "1", "25", "25", "John Ward", "Tackle", "Oklahoma State" ], [ "2", "25", "51", "Bill Cappleman", "Quarterback", "Florida State" ], [ "3", "25", "77", "Chuck Burgoon", "Linebacker", "North Park" ], [ "5", "25", "129", "Greg Jones", "Running back", "UCLA" ], [ "7", "25", "181", "Hap Farber", "Linebacker", "Mississippi" ], [ "8", "25", "207", "Mike Carroll", "Guard", "Missouri" ], [ "9", "25", "233", "George Morrow", "Defensive end", "Mississippi" ], [ "10", "25", "259", "Stu Voigt", "Tight end", "Wisconsin" ], [ "11", "25", "285", "Godfrey Zaunbrecher", "Center", "Louisiana State" ], [ "12", "25", "311", "James Holland", "Defensive back", "Jackson State" ], [ "13", "25", "337", "Robert Pearce", "Defensive back", "Stephen F. Austin" ], [ "14", "25", "363", "Tommy Spinks", "Wide receiver", "Louisiana Tech" ], [ "15", "25", "389", "Bennie Francis", "Defensive end", "Chadron State" ], [ "16", "25", "415", "Bruce Cerone", "Wide receiver", "Emporia State" ], [ "17", "25", "441", "Brian Healy", "Defensive back", "Michigan" ] ]
{ "intro": "This page is a list of the Minnesota Vikings NFL Draft selections. The first draft the Vikings participated in was the 1961 NFL Draft, in which they made Tommy Mason of Tulane their first ever selection.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "1970 NFL Draft", "title": "Minnesota Vikings draft history", "uid": "Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history_9", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Vikings_draft_history" }
6,831
6832
1978_NFL_Draft_0
[ [ "Original NFL team", "Player", "Pos", "College", "Conf" ], [ "Chicago Bears", "Mike Morgan", "RB", "Wisconsin", "Big Ten" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Dave Kraayeveld", "DE", "Milton", "IBFC" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Robert Steele", "WR", "North Alabama", "Gulf South" ], [ "Detroit Lions", "Ken Callicutt", "RB", "Clemson", "ACC" ], [ "Green Bay Packers", "Paul Coffman", "TE", "Kansas State", "Big Eight" ], [ "Green Bay Packers", "Walt Landers", "RB", "Clark Atlanta", "SIAC" ], [ "Green Bay Packers", "Paul Rudzinski", "LB", "Michigan State", "Big Ten" ], [ "Houston Oilers", "Warren Moon", "QB", "Washington", "Pac-8" ], [ "Houston Oilers", "Guido Merkens", "QB / WR", "Sam Houston State", "Lone Star" ], [ "Los Angeles Rams", "Preston Dennard", "WR", "New Mexico", "WAC" ], [ "Los Angeles Rams", "Dwayne O'Steen", "CB", "San Jose State", "PCAA" ], [ "Los Angeles Rams", "Doug Smith", "C / G", "Bowling Green", "MAC" ], [ "Minnesota Vikings", "Kevin Miller", "WR", "Louisville", "Ind . ( D-I )" ], [ "New England Patriots", "Nick Lowery", "K", "Dartmouth", "Ivy" ], [ "New York Jets", "Mark Iwanowski", "TE", "Penn", "Ivy" ], [ "Oakland Raiders", "Booker Russell", "RB", "Texas State", "Lone Star" ], [ "Philadelphia Eagles", "Ken Clarke", "DT", "Syracuse", "Ind" ], [ "Seattle Seahawks", "Kerry Justin", "CB", "Oregon State", "Pac-8" ], [ "Washington Redskins", "J.T . Smith", "WR", "North Texas", "Ind" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1978 NFL draft was the procedure by which National Football League teams selected amateur college football players. It is officially known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting. The draft was held May 2-3, 1978, at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City, New York. The league also held a supplemental draft after the regular draft and before the regular season. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers had the first pick in the 1978 draft, by virtue of their 2-12 record in 1977. Tampa Bay traded the pick to the Oilers, for tight end Jimmie Giles and the Oilers' first- and second-round picks in the 1978 draft, and their third- and fifth-round picks in 1979. Leon White, who was drafted in the third round, went on to have an extensive professional wrestling career as Big Van Vader.", "section_text": "† = Pro Bowler [ 5 ] ‡ = Hall of Famer [ 9 ]", "section_title": "Notable undrafted players", "title": "1978 NFL Draft", "uid": "1978_NFL_Draft_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_NFL_Draft" }
6,832
6833
Asian_Club_Championship_and_AFC_Champions_League_records_and_statistics_2
[ [ "City", "Winners", "Runners-up", "Winning clubs", "Runners-up" ], [ "Jeddah", "2", "2", "Al-Ittihad ( 2 )", "Al-Ittihad ( 1 ) , Al-Ahli ( 1 )" ], [ "Jeonju", "2", "1", "Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors ( 2 )", "Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors ( 1 )" ], [ "Saitama", "2", "1", "Urawa Red Diamonds ( 2 )", "Urawa Red Diamonds ( 1 )" ], [ "Guangzhou", "2", "0", "Guangzhou Evergrande Taobao ( 2 )", "-" ], [ "Al Ain", "1", "2", "Al-Ain ( 1 )", "Al-Ain ( 2 )" ], [ "Riyadh", "1", "2", "Al-Hilal ( 1 )", "Al-Hilal ( 2 )" ], [ "Seongnam", "1", "1", "Seongnam FC ( 1 )", "Seongnam FC ( 1 )" ], [ "Osaka", "1", "0", "Gamba Osaka ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Pohang", "1", "0", "Pohang Steelers ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Doha", "1", "0", "Al-Sadd ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Ulsan", "1", "0", "Ulsan Hyundai ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Sydney", "1", "0", "Western Sydney Wanderers ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Kashima", "1", "0", "Kashima Antlers ( 1 )", "-" ], [ "Isfahan", "0", "2", "-", "Sepahan ( 1 ) , Zob Ahan ( 1 )" ], [ "Bangkok", "0", "1", "-", "BEC Tero Sasana ( 1 )" ], [ "Homs", "0", "1", "-", "Al-Karamah ( 1 )" ], [ "Adelaide", "0", "1", "-", "Adelaide United ( 1 )" ], [ "Seoul", "0", "1", "-", "FC Seoul ( 1 )" ], [ "Dubai", "0", "1", "-", "Shabab Al-Ahli ( 1 )" ], [ "Tehran", "0", "1", "-", "Persepolis ( 1 )" ] ]
{ "intro": "This page details statistics of the Asian Club Championship and AFC Champions League.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "General performances -- AFC Championes League era", "title": "Asian Club Championship and AFC Champions League records and statistics", "uid": "Asian_Club_Championship_and_AFC_Champions_League_records_and_statistics_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_Club_Championship_and_AFC_Champions_League_records_and_statistics" }
6,833
6834
List_of_Trabzonspor_players_0
[ [ "Nat", "Name", "First game", "Final game", "Apps", "Goals" ], [ "Turkey", "Şenol Güneş", "1975", "1987", "453", "0" ], [ "Turkey", "Hami Mandıralı", "1987", "27 April 2002", "416", "212" ], [ "Turkey", "Orhan Çıkırıkçı", "1989", "26 May 2001", "321", "49" ], [ "Turkey", "Ünal Karaman", "26 August 1990", "23 May 1999", "258", "16" ], [ "Turkey", "Abdullah Ercan", "23 September 1990", "23 May 1999", "286", "16" ], [ "Georgia", "Shota Arveladze", "1994", "1997", "96", "61" ], [ "Turkey", "Fatih Tekke", "25 January 1995", "14 May 2006", "223", "101" ], [ "Turkey", "Metin Aktaş", "23 March 1997", "5 May 2003", "108", "0" ], [ "Croatia", "Davor Vugrinec", "2 August 1997", "21 May 2000", "95", "36" ], [ "Turkey", "Hüseyin Çimşir", "2 November 1997", "30 May 2009", "289", "7" ], [ "Turkey", "Gökdeniz Karadeniz", "16 December 1997", "29 February 2008", "277", "78" ], [ "Turkey", "Hasan Üçüncü", "23 September 2001", "26 April 2008", "160", "4" ], [ "Turkey", "Erman Özgür", "8 August 1999", "31 May 2003", "116", "9" ], [ "Australia", "Michael Petkovic", "9 August 2002", "7 May 2005", "97", "0" ], [ "Turkey", "Tayfun Cora", "16 February 2003", "Present", "169", "8" ], [ "Guinea", "Ibrahima Yattara", "9 August 2003", "Present", "193", "34" ], [ "Turkey", "Erdinç Yavuz", "9 August 2003", "26 April 2008", "177", "9" ], [ "Turkey", "Umut Bulut", "5 August 2006", "Present", "153", "69" ], [ "Turkey", "Serkan Balcı", "12 August 2007", "Present", "98", "2" ], [ "Turkey", "Turgay Semercioğlu", "1973", "1988", "480", "23" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of notable players who have played for Trabzonspor Kulübü. Trabzonspor were founded in 1967 after a merger of several Trabzon based clubs. The club made their début in the 2.Lig and joined the 1.Lig for the first time seven years later.", "section_text": "The following list includes all Trabzonspor players that have played 100 or more competitive matches for the club in league ( 2.Lig , 1.Lig/Süper Lig ) and cup ( Türkiye Kupası ) play . Players are listed with their first-team début and last appearance for the club , along with appearances and goals . Some dates are approximate and are listed in italics . Statistics are correct as of 6 June 2010 .", "section_title": "List of players", "title": "List of Trabzonspor players", "uid": "List_of_Trabzonspor_players_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Trabzonspor_players" }
6,834
6835
Comparison_of_assemblers_7
[ [ "Assembler", "License", "Instruction set", "Host platform" ], [ "Assembly Language for Multics ( ALM )", "MIT", "GE-645 Honeywell 6180", "GE-645 Honeywell 6180" ], [ "The Macroassembler AS", "Free", "29xxx , AVR , 65816 , ACE , F2MC-8L , F2MC-16L , HMCS400 , 6301 , 6309 , H8/300 ( H ) , H8/500 , SH7000 / SH7600 / SH7700 , HuC6280 , PPC403GA , 4004/4040 , 8008 , MCS-48 , MCS-41 , MCS-51 , MCS-251 , MCS-96/196/296 , 8080/8085 , 8086 / 80186 , i960 , CDP1802 ( A ) /1804 ( A ) /1805 ( A ) , LatticeMico8 , PIC 16C5x , PIC 16C8x , PIC 17C42 , MELPS-740 , MELPS-7700 , MELPS-4500 , M16 , M16C , 68000 ( up to 68040 ) , ColdFire , DSP56000 , DSP56300 , PowerPC 601/505 , M-Core , 6800 , 68HC11 ( K4 ) , 6805 , 68HC ( S ) 08 , 6809 , 68HC12 incl . XGATE , 68HC16 , 68RS08 , SC/MP , INS807x , COP4 , COP8 , SC14xxx , µpD7720/7725 , µpD77230 , µpD78C1x , 75K0 , 78K0 , 78K2 , 78K3 , 78K4 , V30/35 , OLMS-40 , OLMS-50 , XA , 6502 , ( W ) 65 ( S ) C02 , 65C19 , 80C382 , 80C166/167 , 2650 , 8X30x , ST6 , ST7 , ST9 , 6804 , SYM53C8xx , TMS3201x , TMS320C2x , TMS320C20x , TMS320C3x , TMS320C4x , TMS320C5x , TMS320C54x , TMS320C6x , TMS7000 , TMS9900 , TMS370xxx , MSP430 ( X ) , TLCS-900 , TLCS-90 , TLCS-870 , TLCS-47 , TLCS-9000 , TC9331 , KCPSM/KCPSM3 ( 'PicoBlaze ' ) , Z80 , Z180 , Z380 , Z8 , eZ8 , MIL STD 1750", "Win32 , DOS/DPMI , DOS ( no longer maintained ) , OS/2 ( no longer maintained ) , Linux" ], [ "Babbage", "Proprietary", "GEC 4000 series", "GEC 4000 series" ], [ "COMPASS", "Proprietary", "CDC mainframe", "CDC mainframe" ], [ "MACRO-10", "Free", "PDP-10", "PDP-10" ], [ "MACRO-11", "Free", "PDP-11", "PDP-11" ], [ "vasm", "Free", "Zilog Z80 , Motorola 6800 family", "various" ], [ "GPASM", "GNU GPL", "PIC microcontroller", "many" ], [ "MIPS", "Free", "MIPS", "MIPS" ], [ "Symbolic Optimal Assembly Program ( SOAP )", "Proprietary", "IBM 650", "IBM 650" ], [ "Technical Assembly System ( TASS )", "Free", "IBM 650", "IBM 650" ], [ "Autocoder", "Free", "IBM 705 , 14xx , 1410 , 7010 , 7070 , 7072 , 7074 , 7080", "various" ], [ "Fortran Assembly Program ( FAP )", "Free", "IBM 709 , 704x , 709x", "Fortran Monitor System , IBSYS" ], [ "GCOS Macro Assembly Program ( GMAP )", "Free", "GE-600 series , Honeywell 6000 series", "GCOS" ], [ "Macro Assembly Program ( MAP )", "Free", "IBM 709 , 704x , 709x", "IBSYS /IBJOB on 709 , 704x , 709x" ], [ "Meta-Symbol", "Free", "SDS Sigma series", "BTM , UTS , CP-V" ], [ "Symbolic Assembly Program ( SAP )", "Free", "IBM 704", "IBM 704" ], [ "Symbolic Programming System ( SPS )", "Free", "IBM 14xx , 1620 , 1710", "IBM 1401 , 1440 , 1460 , 1620 , 1710" ], [ "ASMB , ASBL , NSBL - Numeric op codes , used for 1900 Operating System Executive", "Proprietary", "ICL 1900", "ICL 1900" ], [ "GINerator mnemonic opcodes , used for GEORGE ( operating system )", "Proprietary", "ICL 1900", "ICL 1900" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of assemblers: computer programs that translate assembly language source code into binary programs. Some assemblers are components of a compiler system for a high level language and may have limited or no usable functionality outside of the compiler system. Some assemblers are hosted on the target processor and operating system, while other assemblers (cross-assemblers) may run under an unrelated operating system or processor. For example, assemblers for embedded systems are not usually hosted on the target system since it would not have the storage and terminal I/O to permit entry of a program from a keyboard. An assembler may have a single target processor or may have options to support multiple processor types. Very simple assemblers may lack features, such as macros, present in more powerful versions.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Other", "title": "Comparison of assemblers", "uid": "Comparison_of_assemblers_7", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_assemblers" }
6,835
6836
List_of_Grand_Slam_singles_champions_by_age_at_first_win_0
[ [ "Age", "Name", "Tournament", "Date of birth", "Date of first title", "Notes" ], [ "33 years , 220 days", "Ken Rosewall *", "1968 French Open", "2 November 1934", "9 June 1968", "1st of 4" ], [ "29 years , 332 days", "Rod Laver *", "1968 Wimbledon", "9 August 1938", "6 July 1968", "1st of 5" ], [ "25 years , 60 days", "Arthur Ashe", "1968 US Open", "10 July 1943", "8 September 1968", "1st of 3" ], [ "24 years , 98 days", "Jan Kodeš", "1970 French Open", "1 March 1946", "7 June 1970", "1st of 3" ], [ "26 years , 42 days", "John Newcombe *", "1970 Wimbledon", "23 May 1944", "4 July 1970", "1st of 5" ], [ "24 years , 241 days", "Stan Smith", "1971 US Open", "14 December 1946", "12 August 1971", "1st of 2" ], [ "34 years , 306 days", "Andrés Gimeno", "1972 French Open", "3 August 1937", "4 June 1972", "" ], [ "26 years , 53 days", "Ilie Năstase", "1972 US Open", "19 July 1946", "10 September 1972", "1st of 2" ], [ "21 years , 121 days", "Jimmy Connors", "1974 Australian Open", "2 September 1952", "1 January 1974", "1st of 8" ], [ "18 years , 10 days", "Björn Borg", "1974 French Open", "6 June 1956", "16 June 1974", "1st of 11" ], [ "26 years , 214 days", "Manuel Orantes", "1975 US Open", "5 February 1949", "7 September 1975", "" ], [ "21 years , 195 days", "Mark Edmondson", "1976 Australian Open", "24 June 1954", "5 January 1976", "" ], [ "25 years , 340 days", "Adriano Panatta", "1976 French Open", "9 July 1950", "14 June 1976", "" ], [ "25 years , 87 days", "Roscoe Tanner", "1977 Australian Open ( January )", "15 October 1951", "10 January 1977", "" ], [ "24 years , 292 days", "Guillermo Vilas", "1977 French Open", "17 August 1952", "5 June 1977", "1st of 4" ], [ "23 years , 159 days", "Vitas Gerulaitis", "1977 Australian Open ( December )", "26 July 1954", "1 January 1978", "" ], [ "20 years , 205 days", "John McEnroe", "1979 US Open", "16 February 1959", "9 September 1979", "1st of 7" ], [ "26 years , 13 days", "Brian Teacher", "1980 Australian Open", "23 December 1954", "5 January 1981", "" ], [ "23 years , 273 days", "Johan Kriek", "1981 Australian Open", "5 April 1958", "2 January 1982", "1st of 2" ], [ "17 years , 293 days", "Mats Wilander", "1982 French Open", "22 August 1964", "11 June 1982", "1st of 7" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of all Open Era tennis Grand Slam singles champions and how old they were when winning their first title. Players who won a title before the Open Era are designated with an asterisk (*), but those results do not factor into these lists.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Men", "title": "List of Grand Slam singles champions in Open Era with age of first title", "uid": "List_of_Grand_Slam_singles_champions_by_age_at_first_win_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Grand_Slam_singles_champions_in_Open_Era_with_age_of_first_title" }
6,836
6837
Sakshi_Tanwar_0
[ [ "Year", "Awards", "Category", "Character", "For The Show", "Result" ], [ "2003", "Indian Telly Awards", "Best Actress in Lead Role", "Parvati Aggarwal", "Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii", "Won" ], [ "2004", "Kalakar Awards", "Best Actress", "Parvati Aggarwal", "Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii", "Won" ], [ "2010", "Indian Television Academy Awards", "ITA Milestone Award", "Parvati Aggarwal", "Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii", "Won" ], [ "2011", "Indian Television Academy Awards", "Best Actress - Drama ( Jury )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2011", "Big Star Entertainment Awards", "Best Actress in a Lead Role ( Television )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2012", "18th Lions Gold Awards", "Best Actress in a Lead Role ( Television )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2012", "11th Indian Telly Awards", "Best Actress in a Lead Role ( Jury )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2012", "Apsara Film & Television Producers Guild Awards", "Best Actress in Drama Series", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2012", "5th Boroplus Gold Awards", "Best Actress ( Critics )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2012", "People 's Choice Awards India", "Best Drama Actress", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2013", "19th Lions Gold Awards", "Best Actress in a Lead Role ( Television )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2013", "Star Guild Awards", "Best Actress in Drama Series", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ], [ "2013", "6th Boroplus Gold Awards", "Best Actress ( Critics )", "Priya Kapoor", "Bade Achhe Lagte Hain", "Won" ] ]
{ "intro": "Sakshi Tanwar (born 12 January 1973) is an Indian actress and television presenter. She is known for her work in the television soaps Kahaani Ghar Ghar Kii and Bade Achhe Lagte Hain. In 2016, she starred in the Aamir Khan-starrer Dangal.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Awards and recognition", "title": "Sakshi Tanwar", "uid": "Sakshi_Tanwar_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakshi_Tanwar" }
6,837
6838
Classification_society_0
[ [ "Name", "Abbreviation", "Date", "Head office", "IACS member ?" ], [ "Lloyd 's Register", "LR", "1760", "London", "Yes" ], [ "Bureau Veritas", "BV", "1828", "Paris", "Yes" ], [ "Croatian Register of Shipping / Austrian Veritas ( Hrvatski Registar Brodova )", "CRS", "1858/ 1949", "Split", "Yes" ], [ "Registro Italiano Navale", "RINA", "1861", "Genoa", "Yes" ], [ "American Bureau of Shipping", "ABS", "1862", "Houston", "Yes" ], [ "DNV GL", "DNV GL", "1864", "Oslo", "Yes" ], [ "Nippon Kaiji Kyokai ( ClassNK )", "NK", "1899", "Tokyo", "Yes" ], [ "Russian Maritime Register of Shipping ( Российский морской регистр судоходства )", "RS", "1913", "Saint Petersburg", "Yes" ], [ "Hellenic Register of Shipping", "HR", "1919", "Piraeus", "No" ], [ "Polish Register of Shipping ( Polski Rejestr Statków )", "PRS", "1936", "Gdańsk", "Yes" ], [ "Bulgarian Register of Shipping ( Български Корабен Регистър )", "BRS ( БКР )", "1950", "Varna", "No" ], [ "Dromon Bureau of Shipping", "DBS", "2003", "Piraeus", "No" ], [ "China Classification Society", "CCS", "1956", "Beijing", "Yes" ], [ "Korean Register of Shipping", "KR", "1960", "Busan", "Yes" ], [ "Registro Internacional Naval", "RINAVE", "1973", "Lisbon", "No" ], [ "Indian Register of Shipping", "IRCLASS ( IRS )", "1975", "Mumbai", "Yes" ], [ "International Register of Shipping", "IRS", "1993", "Miami", "No" ], [ "Shipping Register of Ukraine ( Регістр судноплавства України )", "RU ( РУ )", "1998", "Kiev", "No" ], [ "Maritime Bureau of Africa", "MBA", "2014", "Cape Town", "No" ], [ "Overseas Marine Certification Services", "OMCS", "2004", "Panama", "No" ] ]
{ "intro": "A classification society (however called) is a non-governmental organization that establishes and maintains technical standards for the construction and operation of ships and offshore structures. Classification societies certify that the construction of a vessel comply with relevant standards and carry out regular surveys in service to ensure continuing compliance with the standards. Currently, more than 50 organizations describe their activities as including marine classification, twelve of which are members of the International Association of Classification Societies. A classification certificate issued by a classification society recognised by the proposed ship register is required for a ship's owner to be able to register the ship and to obtain marine insurance on the ship, and may be required to be produced before a ship's entry into some ports or waterways, and may be of interest to charterers and potential buyers. To avoid liability, classification societies explicitly disclaim responsibility for the safety, fitness for purpose, or seaworthiness of the ship, but is a verification only that the vessel is in compliance with the classification standards of the society issuing the classification certificate. Classification societies also issue International Load Line Certificates in accordance with the legislation of participating States giving effect to the International Convention on Load Lines (CLL 66/88).", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of classification societies", "title": "Classification society", "uid": "Classification_society_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_society" }
6,838
6839
List_of_tallest_buildings_in_South_Korea_1
[ [ "Name", "Height m ( ft )", "Floors", "Period", "City" ], [ "Central Government Complex Seoul", "94 m ( 308 ft )", "19", "1969-1971", "Seoul" ], [ "31 Building", "114 m ( 374 ft )", "31", "1971-1978", "Seoul" ], [ "Lotte Hotel Seoul", "138 m ( 453 ft )", "37", "1978-1983", "Seoul" ], [ "63 Building", "249 m ( 817 ft )", "61", "1983-2002", "Seoul" ], [ "Mok-dong Hyperion I Tower A", "256 m ( 840 ft )", "69", "2002-2003", "Seoul" ], [ "Samsung Tower Palace 3 Tower G", "264 m ( 866 ft )", "69", "2003-2011", "Seoul" ], [ "Haeundae Doosan We 've the Zenith Tower A", "300 m ( 980 ft )", "80", "2011-2013", "Busan" ], [ "Northeast Asia Trade Tower", "305 m ( 1,001 ft )", "68", "2013-2017", "Incheon" ], [ "Lotte World Tower", "555 m ( 1,821 ft )", "123", "2017-present", "Seoul" ] ]
{ "intro": "This list of tallest buildings in South Korea ranks skyscrapers in South Korea by height. The tallest building in South Korea is currently the 123-story Lotte World Tower, which rises 555 metres (1,821 ft) and was completed in 22 December 2016. It is also the world's 5th tallest building. There are currently three buildings over 300m under construction in South Korea. The three-building complex Haeundae LCT The Sharp in also under construction in Busan, and will reach 412 metres (1,352 ft). There are various other projects planned over 300 meters, including the 338 metres (1,109 ft) tall Parc1, scheduled to be completed in 2020, the 510 metres (1,673 ft) tall Busan Lotte Tower currently on hold, as well as the 569 metres (1,867 ft) tall Hyundai Global Business Center, which will break ground in 2019.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Timeline of tallest buildings in South Korea", "title": "List of tallest buildings in South Korea", "uid": "List_of_tallest_buildings_in_South_Korea_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_South_Korea" }
6,839
6840
List_of_territorial_disputes_11
[ [ "Territory", "Former claimants", "Dispute started", "Dispute settled", "Notes" ], [ "Tiran and Sanafir Islands", "Saudi Arabia Egypt", "1906", "2017", "These islands were transferred to Saudi Arabia in 2017" ], [ "Bay of Bengal Maritime Boundary between Bangladesh and India", "India Bangladesh", "1974", "2014", "India and Bangladesh had engaged in eight rounds of bilateral negotiations starting 1974 but it remained inconclusive until 2009 . In October 2009 , Bangladesh served India with notice of arbitration proceedings under the UNCLOS . The Arbitration Tribunal delivered the ruling on 7 July 2014 and settled the dispute" ], [ "Indo-Bangladesh enclaves , adverse possessions and undemarcated land boundaries", "India Bangladesh", "1947", "2015", "Following Partition of Bengal ( 1947 ) , the issues of adverse possessions , enclaves and unmarked boundary arose . Inside the main part of Bangladesh , there were 111 Indian enclaves ( 17,160.63 acres ) , while inside the main part of India , there were 51 Bangladeshi enclaves ( 7,110.02 acres ) . In 1974 Bangladesh approved a proposed treaty , Land Boundary Agreement , to exchange all enclaves within each other 's territories , but India did not ratify it . Another agreement was agreed upon in 2011 to exchange enclaves and adverse possessions . With respect to adverse possessions , India received 2,777.038 acres of land and transferred 2,267.682 acres to Bangladesh . India ratified the agreement by constitutional amendment in May 2015" ], [ "Muhurichar river island", "India Bangladesh", "1974", "2011", "Historically controlled by India but claimed by Bangladesh , disputed from approximately 1974 . An agreement was reached on the demarcation of the border in the area in 2011 , and in 2019 the Indian government confirmed that it no longer had any outstanding boundary dispute with Bangladesh" ], [ "South Talpatti/New Moore/Purbasha Island", "India Bangladesh", "c. 1975", "2010", "This former dispute over a small island never more than two meters above sea level was contested from the island 's appearance in the 1970s to its disappearance , likely due to climate change , in the first decade of the 2000s . Though land disputes no longer exist , the maritime boundary was not settled until 2014" ], [ "Sakhalin Island", "Russian Empire Empire of Japan", "1845", "1875", "Japan unilaterally proclaimed sovereignty over the whole island in 1845 , but its claims were ignored by the Russian Empire . The 1855 Treaty of Shimoda acknowledged that both Russia and Japan had joint rights of occupation to Sakhalin , without setting a definite territorial demarcation . As the island became settled in the 1860s and 1870s , this ambiguity led to increasing friction between settlers . Attempts by the Tokugawa shogunate to purchase the entire island from the Russian Empire failed , and the new Meiji government was unable to negotiate a partition of the island into separate territories . In 1875 by the Treaty of Saint Petersburg , Japan agreed to give up its claims on Sakhalin in exchange for undisputed ownership of the Kuril Islands . In 1905 under the Treaty of Portsmouth Japan gained Sakhalin to the 60th parallel , but lost it again in 1945" ], [ "Pamir Mountains", "Tajikistan China", "1877", "2011", "The Tajik Government ceded 1,158 square kilometres ( 447 sq mi ) to the PRC , while PRC relinquished its 28,000 square miles ( 73,000 km ) claim over the remaining territory with final ratification of a treaty in January 2011" ], [ "Palmas Island ( modern-day Miangas Island )", "Philippine Islands Dutch East Indies", "1906", "1928", "Dispute between the United States and the Netherlands over the Palmas island located south of the Philippines , which was then American territory . The Netherlands believed that the islands were part of the Dutch East Indies . The territorial dispute was solved through the Island of Palmas case which decided that the Palmas Island belongs to the Netherlands . Palmas Island , now Miangas Island , is a part of modern Indonesia" ], [ "Yalu River ( disputed sovereignty of certain islands )", "China North Korea South Korea", "1949", "2005", "The allocation to North Korea of all of the large islands in the lower Yalu River , including Pidan and Sindo at the mouth , is now clear . The river 's maritime rights remain shared between the two nations" ], [ "Shaksgam Valley", "Pakistan ( still claimed by : India China )", "1947", "1963", "Pakistan relinquished its claim to PR China ; India did not" ], [ "Sinai Peninsula", "Israel Egypt", "1967", "1982", "During the Six-Day War Israel claimed Sinai . It was returned in 1982 under the terms of the 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty" ], [ "Taba", "Israel Egypt", "1979", "1989", "When Egypt and Israel were negotiating the exact position of the border in preparation for the 1979 peace treaty , Israel claimed that Taba had been on the Ottoman side of a border agreed between the Ottomans and British Egypt in 1906 and had , therefore , been in error in its two previous agreements . Although most of Sinai was returned to Egypt in 1982 , Taba was the last portion to be returned . The issue was submitted to an international commission . In 1988 , the commission ruled in Egypt 's favour , and Israel returned Taba to Egypt in 1989" ], [ "Turtle Islands", "Philippine Islands North Borneo", "", "1930", "Dispute between the United States and the United Kingdom over the Turtle Islands located south of the Philippines , which was then American territory . In a 1930 treaty the United Kingdom acknowledge American sovereignty over the islands and was agreed upon that the British would remain administering the island until the United States express interest to take over control over the islands after a one-year notice . When the Philippines gained full independence from the United States in 1946 , the Philippines invoked the treaty and the British turned over the islands to the Philippines in 1947" ], [ "West Bank , including East Jerusalem", "Israel Jordan", "1967", "1988", "During the Six-Day War Israel conquered these territories from Jordan . Jordan later renounced the claim on the territory , supporting instead its inclusion in a future Palestine" ], [ "Ligitan and Sipadan", "Malaysia Indonesia", "1969", "2002", "The 2002 International Court of Justice ruling awarded both islands to Malaysia , but left unsettled the maritime boundary immediately southwest and west of the islands between Malaysia and Indonesia" ], [ "Hawar Islands", "Qatar Bahrain", "1971", "2001", "Formerly disputed between Qatar and Bahrain , it was settled by the International Court of Justice ( ICJ ) in The Hague . In the June 2001 decision , Bahrain kept the Hawar Islands and Qit'at Jaradah but dropped claims to Janan Island and Zubarah on mainland Qatar , while Qatar retained significant maritime areas and their resources . The agreement has furthered the goal of definitively establishing the border with Saudi Arabia and Saudi-led mediation efforts continue" ], [ "Pulau Batek / Fatu Sinai ( de )", "Indonesia East Timor", "2002", "2004", "Ceded by Timor-Leste to Indonesia in August 2004" ], [ "Saudi Arabia-Yemen border demarcation dispute", "Saudi Arabia Yemen", "1934", "2000", "Settled by the Treaty of Jeddah ( 2000 )" ] ]
{ "intro": "Territorial disputes have occurred throughout history, over lands around the world. Bold indicates one claimant's full control; italics indicates one or more claimants' partial control.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Historical disputes , subsequently settled -- Asia and the Pacific", "title": "List of territorial disputes", "uid": "List_of_territorial_disputes_11", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_territorial_disputes" }
6,840
6841
List_of_Argentine_films_of_2001_0
[ [ "Title", "Director", "Actors", "Genre", "Comments" ], [ "Un Amor en Moisés Ville", "Daniel Barone", "Víctor Laplace", "Drama", "" ], [ "El Amor y el espanto", "Juan Carlos Desanzo", "Víctor Laplace", "Drama", "A fictitious event in the life of Jorge Luis Borges" ], [ "Animalada", "Sergio Bizzio", "Carlos Roffé", "Black comedy", "A wealthy man falls in love with a sheep" ], [ "Antigua mia vida", "Héctor Olivera", "Ana Belén , Cecilia Roth", "Drama", "About the troubled relationships of two upper class women in Buenos Aires" ], [ "El Armario", "Gustavo Corrado", "Jean Pierre Reguerraz , Pamela Rementería", "", "" ], [ "Arregui , la noticia del día", "", "Enrique Pinti , Carmen Maura", "Comedy", "A tragicomedy about corruption" ], [ "Bolivia", "Israel Adrián Caetano", "Freddy Flores", "Drama", "The film takes place in a café in the suburb of Villa Crespo" ], [ "La Ciénaga", "Lucrecia Martel", "Graciela Borges , Mercedes Morán , Martín Adjemián", "Drama", "About life in a self-pitying bourgeois family" ], [ "Déjala correr", "Alberto Lecchi", "Nicolás Cabré , Fabián Vena , Pablo Rago , Florencia Bertotti , Gabriel Goity , Julieta Díaz", "Comedy", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "A list of films produced in Argentina in 2001:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "2001", "title": "List of Argentine films of 2001", "uid": "List_of_Argentine_films_of_2001_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Argentine_films_of_2001" }
6,841
6842
1983_NFL_Draft_0
[ [ "Original NFL team", "Player", "Pos", "College", "Conf" ], [ "Atlanta Falcons", "Arthur Cox", "TE", "Texas Southern", "SWAC" ], [ "Atlanta Falcons", "David Frye", "LB", "Purdue", "Big Ten" ], [ "Baltimore Colts", "John Miller", "LB", "Mississippi State", "SEC" ], [ "Buffalo Bills", "Joe Dufek", "QB", "Yale", "Ivy" ], [ "Chicago Bears", "Dennis McKinnon", "WR", "Florida State", "Ind" ], [ "Cleveland Browns", "Roger Ruzek", "K", "Weber State", "Big Sky" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Raul Allegre", "K", "Texas", "SWC" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Bill Bates", "S", "Tennessee", "SEC" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Broderick Thompson", "OT", "Kansas", "Big Eight" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "Mark Tuinei", "DT", "Hawaii", "WAC" ], [ "Dallas Cowboys", "John Warren", "P", "Tennessee", "SEC" ], [ "Detroit Lions", "Jeff Chadwick", "WR", "Grand Valley State", "GLIAC" ], [ "Houston Oilers", "Brian Sochia", "DT", "Northwestern Oklahoma State", "OIC" ], [ "Los Angeles Rams", "Mike McDonald", "LS", "USC", "Pac-10" ], [ "New England Patriots", "Ed Reynolds", "LB", "Virginia", "ACC" ], [ "New England Patriots", "Clarence Weathers", "WR", "Delaware State", "MEAC" ], [ "New York Giants", "Zeke Mowatt", "TE", "Florida State", "Ind" ], [ "New York Jets", "Ted Banker", "G", "Southeast Missouri State", "MIAA" ], [ "Seattle Seahawks", "Paul Moyer", "S", "Arizona State", "Pac-10" ], [ "Philadelphia Eagles", "Major Everett", "FB", "Mississippi College", "Gulf South" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1983 NFL Draft was the procedure by which National Football League teams selected amateur college football players. It is officially known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting. The draft was held April 26-27, 1983, at the New York Sheraton Hotel in New York City, New York. No teams elected to claim any players in the supplemental draft that year. The draft is frequently referred to as the quarterback class of 1983, because six quarterbacks were taken in the first round - John Elway, Todd Blackledge, Jim Kelly, Tony Eason, Ken O'Brien, and Dan Marino - the highest number of first round picks for the position. Of these quarterbacks, Elway, Kelly, Eason, and Marino played in the Super Bowl, Elway, Kelly, O'Brien, and Marino were selected to play in the Pro Bowl, and Elway, Kelly, and Marino have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. All six quarterbacks were drafted by American Football Conference (AFC) teams, with every member of the five-team AFC East (the Baltimore Colts, Miami Dolphins, Buffalo Bills, New York Jets, and New England Patriots) selecting a quarterback. In eleven of the sixteen years following this draft, the AFC was represented in the Super Bowl by a team led by one of these quarterbacks: five with the Denver Broncos and Elway, four with the Bills and Kelly, one with the Dolphins and Marino, and one with the Patriots and Eason. They met with little success in the Super Bowl, however, compiling a 2-9 record among them, with an 0-9 record for their first 14 years in the league. The only two wins were by Elway in XXXII and XXXIII during his final two seasons in 1997 and 1998. Three of the most lopsided Super Bowl losses in history also came at the hands of quarterbacks from the Class of '83: Elway, a 55-10 loss to the San Francisco 49ers in XXIV; Eason, a 46-10 loss to the Chicago Bears in XX; and Kelly, a 52-17 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in XXVII. Marino would only reach the Super Bowl once in a 38-16 loss to San Francisco in XIX following the end of Marino's second season.", "section_text": "† = Pro Bowler [ 6 ]", "section_title": "Notable undrafted players", "title": "1983 NFL Draft", "uid": "1983_NFL_Draft_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_NFL_Draft" }
6,842
6843
List_of_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_-_paintings_(Okinawa)_0
[ [ "Property", "Date", "Municipality", "Ownership", "Comments" ], [ "Hakutaku , by Ji Ryō 自了筆白沢之図 Ji Ryō hitsu Hakutaku-no-zu", "1630s/40s", "Naha", "institutional ( kept at the Shuri Castle Park Management Centre ( 首里城公園管理センター ) )", "Ji Ryō is the art name of Gusukuma Seihō ( 1614-1644 ) , son of a Shuri pechin" ], [ "Flowers and birds , colour on silk , by Sonoku 絹本着色花鳥図孫億筆 kinuhon chakushoku kachō zu Sonoku hitsu", "early Qing dynasty", "Kumejima", "private ( kept at the Kumejima Museum )", "Chinese painter Sonoku , active in Fuzhou in the second half of the seventeenth century , exerted considerable influence on Ryūkyūan painting after local painters Ishimine Denbaku ( 石嶺伝莫 ) and Uehara Shinshira ( 上原真知ら ) crossed to China and received instruction from him in 1683 ; Sonoku 's painting of flowers and birds was presented in thanks to the Kikumura family after the shipwreck of the Imperial Chinese mission off Kumejima in 1756" ], [ "Flowers and birds , colour on silk , by In Genryō 絹本着色花鳥図 殷元良 筆 kinuhon chakushoku kachō-zu In Genryō hitsu", "C18", "Naha", "Okinawa Prefecture ( kept at the Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum )", "In Genryō ( 1718-1767 ) was born in Shuri and summoned to the Ryūkyū court on account of his talent in painting aged 12 ; from 1752 he spent two years in China ; after the death of Yamaguchi Sōki ( 山口宗季 ) , In Genryō was the leading court painter ; most of his works are now lost ; the shape of the branches of the plum and the distribution of its flowers , combining vigour with delicacy , are characteristic of the Southern School and thence of Nanga" ], [ "Pheasant in the snow , colour on paper , by In Genryō 紙本着色雪中雉子の図 殷元良 筆 shihon chakushoku setchū kiji no zu In Genryō hitsu", "C18", "Naha", "Okinawa Prefecture ( kept at the Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum )", "there is no snowfall in Okinawa , but in the shoin of Shuri Castle In Genryō studied Chinese exemplars of the subject of flowers and birds in the snow" ], [ "Bamboo , ink on paper , by In Genryō 紙本墨画竹の図 殷元良 筆 shihon bokuga take no zu In Genryō hitsu", "1763", "Naha", "Okinawa Prefecture ( kept at the Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum )", "ink wash paintings on the subject of bamboo provided suitable decoration for the tokonoma of the warrior family residences of Shuri" ], [ "Mission to the Ryūkyūs , colour on paper 紙本着色奉使琉球図 shihon chakushoku hōshi Ryūkyū zu", "Edo period", "Naha", "Okinawa Prefecture ( kept at the Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum )", "emakimono with twenty views of one of the Imperial Chinese missions on its journey from the port of Fuzhou to that of Naha and back again" ], [ "Procession on a Mission to the Ryūkyūs , colour on paper 紙本着色冊封使行列図 shihon chakushoku sakuhōshi gyōretsu zu", "Edo period", "Naha", "Okinawa Prefecture ( kept at the Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum )", "emakimono depicting some 600 figures , 380 Ryukyuans and 220 envoys" ], [ "Divine cat , by Yamaguchi Sōki 神猫図 山口宗季 筆 shinbyō zu Yamaguchi Sōki hitsu", "c. 1725", "Naha", "Naha City ( kept at the Naha City Museum of History )", "the reputation of Yamaguchi Sōki ( 1672-1743 ) was such that he received commissions for paintings of flowers and birds from the Shimazu clan in Satsuma and Konoe family in Kyoto" ], [ "Portrait of Tōnin Taku , colour on paper 紙本着色東任鐸 ( 知念里之子親雲上政行 ) 画像附一、教訓十箇条ー、掛物入箱 shihon chakushoku Tōnin Taku ( Chinen sato-nushi-peeichin Seigyō ) gazō tsuketari ichi , kyōkun jūkajō ichi , kakemono iribako", "c. 1839", "Ishigaki", "private ( kept at the Ishigaki City Yaeyama Museum )", "accompanied by a scroll with ten precepts and a storage case ; portrait of Tōnin Taku ( 1778-1861 ) , village pechin , aged 61" ], [ "Portrait of Miyahira Chōen , colour on paper 紙本着色宮平長延画像 shihon chakushoku Miyahira Chōen gazō", "c. 1845", "Ishigaki", "private ( kept at the Ishigaki City Yaeyama Museum )", "portrait of Miyahira Chōen ( 1674-1749 ) aged 71" ], [ "Portrait of Kikumura Kiyoshi Satoshi , colour on paper 紙本着色喜久村絜聡 ( 片目地頭代 ) 像 shihon chakushoku Kikumura Kiyoshi Satoshi ( Katami Jitōde ) zō", "c. 1759", "Kumejima", "private ( kept at the Kumejima Museum )", "thought to have been painted when the sitter was 47 ; the Kikumura family served as local officials on Kumejima" ] ]
{ "intro": "This list is of the Cultural Properties of Japan designated in the category of paintings (絵画, kaiga) for the Prefecture of Okinawa.", "section_text": "As of 1 May 2018 , eleven properties have been designated at a prefectural level . [ 4 ] [ 5 ]", "section_title": "Prefectural Cultural Properties", "title": "List of Cultural Properties of Japan - paintings (Okinawa)", "uid": "List_of_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_-_paintings_(Okinawa)_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cultural_Properties_of_Japan_-_paintings_(Okinawa)" }
6,843
6844
List_of_battles_involving_the_Kingdom_of_Scotland_0
[ [ "Battle", "Date", "Location", "Allies", "Enemies", "Result" ], [ "Battle of Dollar", "875", "Stirlingshire , Scotland", "None", "Denmark", "Defeat" ], [ "Battle of Brunanburh", "937", "Uncertain", "Kingdom of Dublin Kingdom of Strathclyde", "Kingdom of England", "Defeat" ], [ "Battle of Bauds", "962", "Banffshire , Scotland", "None", "Norsemen", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of Barry", "1010", "Angus , Scotland", "None", "Denmark", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of Carham", "1016 or 1018", "Northumberland , England", "Kingdom of Strathclyde", "Kingdom of England", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of Alnwick", "13 November 1093", "Northumberland , England", "None", "Kingdom of England", "Defeat" ], [ "Battle of Clitheroe", "10 June 1138", "Lancashire , England", "None", "Kingdom of England", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of the Standard", "22 August 1138", "Yorkshire , England", "None", "Kingdom of England", "Defeat" ], [ "Battle of Renfrew", "1164", "near Renfrew , Scotland", "None", "Kingdom of the Isles", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of Alnwick", "13 July 1174", "Northumberland , England", "None", "Kingdom of England", "Defeat" ], [ "Battle of Enbo", "1259", "Dornock , Scotland", "None", "Denmark", "Victory" ], [ "Battle of Largs", "2 October 1263", "Ayrshire , Scotland", "None", "Kingdom of Norway", "Inconclusive" ], [ "Battle of Ronaldsway", "8 October 1275", "Isle of Man", "None", "Manx rebels", "Victory" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a chronological list of the battles involving the Kingdom of Scotland. The list gives the name, the date, the present-day location of the battles, the Scottish allies and enemies, and the result of these conflicts following this legend:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Early battles ( 875–1275 )", "title": "List of battles involving the Kingdom of Scotland", "uid": "List_of_battles_involving_the_Kingdom_of_Scotland_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battles_involving_the_Kingdom_of_Scotland" }
6,844
6845
List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts_1
[ [ "Franchise", "Most recent title", "Division", "Seasons since win" ], [ "Charlotte Hornets", "None", "Southeast", "29" ], [ "Memphis Grizzlies", "None", "Southwest", "24" ], [ "Philadelphia 76ers", "2000-01", "Atlantic", "18" ], [ "Sacramento Kings", "2002-03", "Pacific", "16" ], [ "Minnesota Timberwolves", "2003-04", "Northwest", "15" ], [ "Brooklyn Nets", "2005-06", "Atlantic", "13" ], [ "Phoenix Suns", "2006-07", "Pacific", "12" ], [ "New Orleans Pelicans", "2007-08", "Southwest", "11" ], [ "Detroit Pistons", "2007-08", "Central", "11" ], [ "Dallas Mavericks", "2009-10", "Southwest", "9" ], [ "Los Angeles Lakers", "2011-12", "Pacific", "7" ], [ "Chicago Bulls", "2011-12", "Central", "7" ], [ "New York Knicks", "2012-13", "Atlantic", "6" ], [ "Indiana Pacers", "2013-14", "Central", "5" ], [ "Los Angeles Clippers", "2013-14", "Pacific", "5" ], [ "Atlanta Hawks", "2014-15", "Southeast", "4" ], [ "Oklahoma City Thunder", "2015-16", "Northwest", "3" ], [ "Boston Celtics", "2016-17", "Atlantic", "2" ], [ "San Antonio Spurs", "2016-17", "Southwest", "2" ], [ "Utah Jazz", "2016-17", "Northwest", "2" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of National Basketball Association (NBA) franchise post-season appearance droughts. This list includes the all-time and the active consecutive non-playoffs. Aside from the NBA playoff appearance droughts, this list also includes droughts of series wins, appearances in the NBA Finals and NBA championship wins. The oldest such franchise is the Suns (51 seasons), while the Royals/Kings and the Hawks have even longer championship droughts (68 and 61 seasons, respectively). Six franchises have never been to the NBA Finals, the highest number among the major North American sports. The oldest such team is the Braves/Clippers franchise (49 seasons); the Kings and the Hawks have appearance droughts that are even longer (69 and 59 seasons, respectively). The longest a franchise has gone without appearing in the playoffs at all is 15 seasons: the Braves/Clippers franchise from 1977 to 1991. Of the 19 franchises that have won an NBA championship, 8 have droughts of 36 seasons or more, which is to say that the past 36 championships have been shared among only 11 franchises: the Lakers (8), Bulls (6), Spurs (5), Celtics (3), Pistons (3), Heat (3), Warriors (3), Rockets (2), Mavericks (1), Cavaliers (1), and Raptors (1). By contrast, the other three major North American sports have each had at least 16 franchises become champions over the same period of time.", "section_text": "Updated through the 2018–19 season . 0^0 Longest drought in team history 0♦0 2018–19 Division Champion Left click once on Seasons since win column heading then once on Division column headingto show teams listed in order of division championships .", "section_title": "Active droughts -- NBA Division Championship droughts", "title": "List of NBA franchise post-season droughts", "uid": "List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts" }
6,845
6846
National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan_29
[ [ "", "Name on the Register", "Date listed", "Location", "City or town", "Description" ], [ "1", "Cadillac Public Library", "September 28 , 2007 ( # 07001020 )", "127 Beech St. 44°15′07″N 85°23′55″W / 44.251944°N 85.398611°W / 44.251944 ; -85.398611 ( Cadillac Public Library )", "Cadillac", "The Cadillac Public Library , now the Wexford County Historical Society Museum , was constructed as a Carnegie Library in 1906 at a cost of $ 30,000" ], [ "2", "Frank J. Cobbs House", "March 31 , 1988 ( # 88000376 )", "407 E. Chapin St. 44°15′01″N 85°23′38″W / 44.250278°N 85.393889°W / 44.250278 ; -85.393889 ( Frank J. Cobbs House )", "Cadillac", "Frank J. Cobbs was the son of Jonathan W. Cobbs , who , with William W. Mitchell , founded the lumbering firm of Cobbs & Mitchell which was a large employer in Cadillac for decades . Frank J. Cobbs built this house in 1898 , the year he was married and his father died , leaving the management of Cobbs & Mitchell to Frank" ], [ "3", "Cobbs and Mitchell Building", "July 19 , 2010 ( # 10000479 )", "100 East Chapin St. 44°14′54″N 85°23′52″W / 44.248333°N 85.397778°W / 44.248333 ; -85.397778 ( Cobbs and Mitchell Building )", "Cadillac", "Cobbs & Mitchell was among the largest lumbering firms in Michigan , at its high point , using 100,000 feet of raw lumber daily . In 1905 , Cobbs & Mitchell hired George D. Mason of Detroit to design this brick and limestone building as a showplace for their products . The building is finished throughout using nine varieties of wood native to Michigan : elm , white maple , bird's-eye maple , sap birch , red birch , curly red birch , red beech , red oak and hemlock" ], [ "4", "Elks Temple Building", "September 29 , 1988 ( # 88001835 )", "122 S. Mitchell St. 44°14′58″N 85°23′57″W / 44.249444°N 85.399167°W / 44.249444 ; -85.399167 ( Elks Temple Building )", "Cadillac", "The Cadillac Elks Temple , built in 1910 , was designed by the Grand Rapids architectural firm of Osgood & Osgood , who specialized in designing similar buildings for fraternal organizations" ], [ "5", "Masonic Temple Building", "July 22 , 1994 ( # 94000747 )", "122-126 N. Mitchell St. 44°15′05″N 85°24′00″W / 44.251389°N 85.4°W / 44.251389 ; -85.4 ( Masonic Temple Building )", "Cadillac", "The Cadillac Masonic Temple , built in 1899 , is a three-story Romanesque brick and stone commercial building measuring 75 feet ( 23 m ) by 100 feet ( 30 m )" ], [ "6", "Charles T. Mitchell House", "December 1 , 1986 ( # 86003369 )", "118 N. Shelby St. 44°15′06″N 85°23′53″W / 44.251667°N 85.398056°W / 44.251667 ; -85.398056 ( Charles T. Mitchell House )", "Cadillac", "In 1874 , Cadillac founder George Mitchell built this house in the Second Empire style , including ornate carved woodwork inside and a mansard roof outside . Mitchell lived there until 1878 ; in 1922 , his great-nephew Charles T. Mitchell purchased the house , and in 1926 , completely renovated it to reflect the then-current Prairie School trend in architecture" ], [ "7", "Old Cadillac City Hall", "June 26 , 1986 ( # 86001380 )", "201 Mitchell St. 44°15′05″N 85°24′02″W / 44.251389°N 85.400556°W / 44.251389 ; -85.400556 ( Old Cadillac City Hall )", "Cadillac", "The Cadillac City Hall was built in 1901 and used for city offices until 1977" ], [ "8", "Shay Locomotive", "October 26 , 1981 ( # 81000321 )", "Cass St. 44°14′56″N 85°24′00″W / 44.248889°N 85.4°W / 44.248889 ; -85.4 ( Shay Locomotive )", "Cadillac", "This engine is a Shay locomotive engine designed by local logger Ephraim Shay . The Shay locomotive was small and powerful , and was built to operate on temporary tracks to haul logs . It was geared to operate on steep grades and articulated to handle sharp curves" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of properties on the National Register of Historic Places in the U.S. state of Michigan.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Wexford County", "title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Michigan", "uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan_29", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Michigan" }
6,846
6847
Universo_2000_0
[ [ "Winner ( wager )", "Loser ( wager )", "Location", "Event", "Date" ], [ "Universo 2000 ( mask )", "Perro Aguayo ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Juicio Final", "March 30 , 2001" ], [ "Universo 2000 ( mask )", "Bulldog ( mask )", "Mexico City", "Live event", "September 20 , 2002" ], [ "Universo 2000 ( mask )", "Pierroth Jr. ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Sin Piedad", "December 5 , 2003" ], [ "El Canek ( mask )", "Universo 2000 ( mask )", "Mexico City", "CMLL 71st Anniversary Show", "September 17 , 2004" ], [ "Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Héctor Garza ( hair )", "Mexico City", "CMLL 72nd Anniversary Show", "September 16 , 2005" ], [ "Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Halloween ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Juicio Final", "December 2 , 2005" ], [ "Perro Aguayo Jr. ( hair )", "Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Homenaje a Dos Leyendas", "March 17 , 2006" ], [ "Shocker and Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Marco Corelone and Kenzo Suzuki ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Sin Piedad", "December 15 , 2006" ], [ "Marco Corleone ( hair )", "Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Homenaje a Dos Leyendas", "March 30 , 2007" ], [ "Rayo de Jalisco Jr. ( hair )", "Universo 2000 ( hair )", "Mexico City", "Todo x el Todo live event", "June 22 , 2013" ] ]
{ "intro": "Andrés Reyes González (April 18, 1963 - May 1, 2018) was a Mexican professional wrestler, or luchador, who was best known under the ring name Universo 2000. Reyes made his professional wrestling debut in 1985 and worked for Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (AAA) and, International Wrestling Revolution Group (IWRG). Reyes was a part of a wrestling family that includes his brothers Carmelo (who wrestles as Cien Caras) and Jesús (Máscara Año 2000) as well as his nephew that wrestles under the name Máscara Año 2000 Jr. Together with his brothers he formed a group called Los Hermanos Dinamita , also known as Los Capos when they teamed up with Apolo Dantés. Reyes was the only three-time CMLL World Heavyweight Champion in the history of the championship. He was originally an Enmascarado, a masked wrestler, but lost his mask in a match against El Canek on September 17, 2004.", "section_text": "See also : Luchas de Apuestas", "section_title": "Luchas de Apuestas record", "title": "Universo 2000", "uid": "Universo_2000_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universo_2000" }
6,847
6848
2001_in_Australian_television_5
[ [ "Program", "Channel", "Debut date" ], [ "Fat Dog Mendoza", "Nickelodeon", "2 January" ], [ "Yvon of the Yukon", "Nickelodeon", "2 January" ], [ "Maury Maury", "Arena", "March" ], [ "Custer 's Last Stand Up / Custer 's Last Stand Up", "Nickelodeon", "16 March" ], [ "Looney Tunes", "Boomerang", "3 April" ], [ "Merrie Melodies", "Boomerang", "3 April" ], [ "Tom and Jerry", "Boomerang", "3 April" ], [ "As Told by Ginger As Told by Ginger", "Nickelodeon", "7 April" ], [ "Toonami", "Cartoon Network", "7 July" ], [ "The Oblongs", "Oh !", "17 July" ], [ "Being Eve Being Eve", "Nickelodeon", "24 August" ], [ "Invader Zim Invader Zim", "Nickelodeon", "Q3/Q4" ], [ "Samurai Jack", "Cartoon Network", "2001" ], [ "The Tidings", "Fox Kids", "2001" ], [ "Cardcaptors", "Cartoon Network", "2001" ], [ "Mobile Suit Gundam Wing", "Cartoon Network", "2001" ], [ "/ / Rainbow Fish", "Disney Channel", "2001" ], [ "Theodore Tugboat", "Disney Channel", "2001" ], [ "Super Duper Sumos", "Fox Kids", "2001" ], [ "Dinozaurs", "Fox Kids", "2001" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of programs which made their premiere on an Australian television network that had previously premiered on another Australian television network. The networks involved in the switch of allegiances are predominantly both free-to-air networks or both subscription television networks. Programs that have their free-to-air/subscription television premiere, after previously premiering on the opposite platform (free-to air to subscription/subscription to free-to air) are not included. In some cases, programs may still air on the original television network. This occurs predominantly with programs shared between subscription television networks.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Debuts -- Subscription television", "title": "2001 in Australian television", "uid": "2001_in_Australian_television_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_in_Australian_television" }
6,848
6849
2012_CECAFA_Cup_scorers_3
[ [ "Name", "Team", "Red", "Yellow" ], [ "Adeyum Saleh Ahmed", "Zanzibar", "1", "1" ], [ "Joackins Atudo", "Kenya", "0", "2" ], [ "Robel Girma", "Ethiopia", "0", "2" ], [ "Aggrey Morris", "Zanzibar", "0", "2" ], [ "Faris Abdallah", "Sudan", "0", "1" ], [ "Sami Abdallah", "Sudan", "0", "1" ], [ "Deng Atiti", "South Sudan", "0", "1" ], [ "Azizi Saweji Azizi", "Zanzibar", "0", "1" ], [ "Mike Baraza", "Kenya", "0", "1" ], [ "Hamdani Bariyanga", "Rwanda", "0", "1" ], [ "John Bocco", "Tanzania", "0", "1" ], [ "Chala Deriba", "Ethiopia", "0", "1" ], [ "Rodrick Gonani", "Malawi", "0", "1" ], [ "Dennis Iguma", "Uganda", "0", "1" ], [ "Henry Kalungi", "Uganda", "0", "1" ], [ "Amri Kiemba", "Tanzania", "0", "1" ], [ "Anthony Modo Kimani", "Kenya", "0", "1" ], [ "Anthony Muki Kimani", "Kenya", "0", "1" ], [ "Bernard Mang'oli", "Kenya", "0", "1" ], [ "Jimmy Mbaraga", "Rwanda", "0", "1" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following are the statistics for the 2012 CECAFA Cup, which took place in Kampala, Uganda from 24 November to 8 December 2012. All statistics are correct as of 20:00 UTC+3 on 8 December 2012. Goals scored from penalty shoot-outs are not counted.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Disciplinary record -- By individual", "title": "2012 CECAFA Cup statistics", "uid": "2012_CECAFA_Cup_scorers_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_CECAFA_Cup_statistics" }
6,849
6850
Super_Bowl_3
[ [ "Stadium", "Location", "No . hosted", "Years hosted" ], [ "Mercedes-Benz Superdome , formerly Louisiana Superdome", "New Orleans , Louisiana", "7 ( 8 )", "1978 , 1981 , 1986 , 1990 , 1997 , 2002 , 2013 , 2024" ], [ "Hard Rock Stadium , formerly Joe Robbie Stadium , Pro Player Stadium , Dolphin Stadium , and Sun Life Stadium", "Miami Gardens , Florida", "6", "1989 , 1995 , 1999 , 2007 , 2010 , 2020" ], [ "Orange Bowl", "Miami , Florida", "5", "1968 , 1969 , 1971 , 1976 , 1979" ], [ "Rose Bowl", "Pasadena , California", "5", "1977 , 1980 , 1983 , 1987 , 1993" ], [ "Tulane Stadium", "New Orleans , Louisiana", "3", "1970 , 1972 , 1975" ], [ "Qualcomm Stadium , formerly Jack Murphy Stadium , now known as SDCCU Stadium", "San Diego , California", "3", "1988 , 1998 , 2003" ], [ "Raymond James Stadium", "Tampa , Florida", "2 ( 3 )", "2001 , 2009 , 2021" ], [ "State Farm Stadium , formerly University of Phoenix Stadium", "Glendale , Arizona", "2 ( 3 )", "2008 , 2015 , 2023" ], [ "Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum", "Los Angeles , California", "2", "1967 , 1973" ], [ "Tampa Stadium", "Tampa , Florida", "2", "1984 , 1991" ], [ "Georgia Dome", "Atlanta , Georgia", "2", "1994 , 2000" ], [ "NRG Stadium , formerly Reliant Stadium", "Houston , Texas", "2", "2004 , 2017" ], [ "Rice Stadium", "Houston , Texas", "1", "1974" ], [ "Pontiac Silverdome", "Pontiac , Michigan", "1", "1982" ], [ "Stanford Stadium", "Stanford , California", "1", "1985" ], [ "Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome", "Minneapolis , Minnesota", "1", "1992" ], [ "Sun Devil Stadium", "Tempe , Arizona", "1", "1996" ], [ "Alltel Stadium , formerly Jacksonville Municipal Stadium and EverBank Field , now TIAA Bank Field", "Jacksonville , Florida", "1", "2005" ], [ "Ford Field", "Detroit , Michigan", "1", "2006" ], [ "AT & T Stadium", "Arlington , Texas", "1", "2011" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Super Bowl is the annual championship game of the National Football League (NFL) played between mid-January and early February. It is the culmination of a regular season that begins in the late summer of the previous year. The game was created as part of the merger agreement between the NFL and its rival the American Football League (AFL). It was agreed that the two champion teams would begin playing in an annual AFL-NFL World Championship Game until the merger officially began in 1970. The first game was played on January 15, 1967 after both leagues had completed their respective 1966 seasons. After the merger, each league was re-designated as a conference, and the game has since been played between the conference champions to determine the NFL's league champion. The NFL restricts the use of its Super Bowl trademark, and it is frequently referred to as the big game or other generic terms by non-sponsoring corporations. The New England Patriots and the Pittsburgh Steelers have the most Super Bowl championship titles with six each. The Patriots have the most Super Bowl appearances with 11. The National Football Conference (NFC) and the American Football Conference (AFC) are tied with 27 Super Bowl wins each. The Super Bowl is the second-largest day for U.S. food consumption, after Thanksgiving Day. In addition, the Super Bowl has frequently been the most-watched American television broadcast of the year; the seven most-watched broadcasts in American television history are Super Bowls.", "section_text": "A total of 26 different stadiums , six of which no longer exist and one of which does not yet exist , either have hosted or are scheduled to host Super Bowls . The years listed in the table below are the years the game was actually played ( will be played [ ˇ ] ) rather than what NFL season it is considered to have been .", "section_title": "Venues -- Host stadiums", "title": "Super Bowl", "uid": "Super_Bowl_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl" }
6,850
6851
2013_Korea_National_League_0
[ [ "Team", "Location", "Stadium", "Stadium capacity" ], [ "Busan Transportation Corporation", "Busan", "Busan Gudeok Stadium", "24,363" ], [ "Changwon City", "Changwon", "Changwon Football Center", "15,500" ], [ "Cheonan City", "Cheonan", "Cheonan Stadium", "32,000" ], [ "Gangneung City", "Gangneung", "Gangneung Stadium", "22,333" ], [ "Gimhae City", "Gimhae", "Gimhae Stadium", "30,000" ], [ "Gyeongju Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power", "Gyeongju", "Gyeongju Civic Stadium", "12,199" ], [ "Incheon Korail", "Incheon", "Incheon Munhak Stadium", "49,084" ], [ "Mokpo City", "Mokpo", "Mokpo International Football Center", "5,952" ], [ "Ulsan Hyundai Mipo Dockyard Dolphin", "Ulsan", "Ulsan Stadium", "19,665" ], [ "Yongin City", "Yongin", "Yongin Football Center", "12,000" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2013 Korea National League season was the eleventh season of the Korea National League. The 2013 season operated with ten clubs because four clubs were dropped out from the league. Goyang KB Kookmin Bank FC had merged with Ansan H FC. Ansan H FC moved to Goyang and changed club name to Goyang Hi FC at a time. Ansan H FC, Suwon City FC and Chungju Hummel FC participated in the newly-formed 2013 K League Challenge. The postseason playoff consisted of four teams. The league began on 9 March 2013 and ended on 23 November 2013 with the final playoff game.", "section_text": "BusanChangwonCheonanGangneungGimhaeGyeongjuIncheonMokpoUlsanYongin Location of teams in 2013 Korea National League Busan Transportation Corporation FC Changwon City FC Cheonan City FC Gangneung City FC Gimhae City FC Gyeongju Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power FC Incheon Korail FC Mokpo City FC Ulsan Hyundai Mipo Dockyard Dolphin FC Yongin City FC", "section_title": "2013 season teams", "title": "2013 Korea National League", "uid": "2013_Korea_National_League_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Korea_National_League" }
6,851
6852
Rider_deaths_in_motorcycle_racing_3
[ [ "Year", "Rider", "Series" ], [ "1939", "Norman Wainwright", "North West 200" ], [ "1949", "P. L. Phillips", "North West 200" ], [ "1951", "William Bennison", "North West 200" ], [ "1955", "Julian Crossley", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1956", "Bill Aislabie", "North West 200" ], [ "1956", "Derek Ennett", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1961", "Carl Todd", "Killinchy 150" ], [ "1961", "Ron Miles", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1970", "Andy Manship", "North West 200" ], [ "1973", "Graham Fish", "North West 200" ], [ "1974", "Norman Connor", "Killinchy 150" ], [ "1977", "Geoff Barry", "Killinchy 150" ], [ "1977", "George Oates", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1977", "John Molyneux", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1978", "Monty Swann", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1978", "John Williams", "Ulster Grand Prix" ], [ "1979", "Brian Hamilton", "North West 200" ], [ "1979", "Tom Herron", "North West 200" ], [ "1979", "Frank Kennedy", "North West 200" ], [ "1980", "Mervyn Robinson", "North West 200" ] ]
{ "intro": "This article lists motorcycle riders who have died competing at motorcycle racing events. This article lists rider deaths in all series, at any level.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "North West 200 and Irish Road Racing", "title": "Rider deaths in motorcycle racing", "uid": "Rider_deaths_in_motorcycle_racing_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rider_deaths_in_motorcycle_racing" }
6,852
6853
List_of_National_Monuments_in_County_Waterford_0
[ [ "NM #", "Monument name", "Description", "Townland", "Location" ], [ "131", "Ardmore Cathedral", "Cathedral , Round Tower & Oratory", "Ardmore", "51°56′56″N 7°43′34″W / 51.948782°N 7.72606°W / 51.948782 ; -7.72606" ], [ "384", "Ballynageeragh Portal Tomb", "Portal Tomb", "Ballynageeragh", "52°10′40″N 7°16′37″W / 52.177695°N 7.276892°W / 52.177695 ; -7.276892" ], [ "330", "Kiltera Ogham Stones", "Ogham Stones", "Dromore", "52°04′28″N 7°50′56″W / 52.074442°N 7.848787°W / 52.074442 ; -7.848787" ], [ "154", "Drumlohan Souterrain and Ogham Stones", "Souterrain & Ogham Stones", "Drumlohan", "52°09′48″N 7°27′55″W / 52.163319°N 7.465368°W / 52.163319 ; -7.465368" ], [ "569", "Dungarvan Castle", "Castle", "Dungarvan", "52°05′21″N 7°36′58″W / 52.089277°N 7.616229°W / 52.089277 ; -7.616229" ], [ "398", "Gaulstown Portal Tomb", "Portal Tomb", "Gaulstown", "52°12′21″N 7°12′38″W / 52.205853°N 7.210504°W / 52.205853 ; -7.210504" ], [ "421", "Knockeen Portal Tomb", "Portal Tomb", "Knockeen", "52°12′26″N 7°09′34″W / 52.2072°N 7.1595°W / 52.2072 ; -7.1595" ], [ "237", "Matthewstown Passage Tomb", "Passage Tomb", "Matthewstown", "52°10′33″N 7°13′38″W / 52.175879°N 7.227260°W / 52.175879 ; -7.227260" ], [ "132", "Mothel Abbey", "Priory ( Augustinian )", "Mothel", "52°17′54″N 7°25′07″W / 52.298456°N 7.418558°W / 52.298456 ; -7.418558" ], [ "671", "Double Tower", "Town Defences", "Waterford", "52°15′23″N 7°06′43″W / 52.256421°N 7.111968°W / 52.256421 ; -7.111968" ], [ "661", "Reginald 's Tower", "Town Defences", "Waterford", "52°15′38″N 7°06′19″W / 52.260462°N 7.10539°W / 52.260462 ; -7.10539" ], [ "205", "French Church , Waterford", "Friary Church ( Franciscan )", "Waterford", "52°15′38″N 7°06′24″W / 52.260471°N 7.10662°W / 52.260471 ; -7.10662" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Irish state has officially approved the following List of National Monuments in County Waterford. In the Republic of Ireland, a structure or site may be deemed to be a National Monument, and therefore worthy of state protection, if it is of national importance. If the land adjoining the monument is essential to protect it, this land may also be protected.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "National Monuments", "title": "List of National Monuments in County Waterford", "uid": "List_of_National_Monuments_in_County_Waterford_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Monuments_in_County_Waterford" }
6,853
6854
Shortest_tennis_match_records_1
[ [ "Year", "Grand Slam", "Round", "Winner", "Loser" ], [ "1969", "Australian Open", "First round", "Margaret Court", "Judith Gohn" ], [ "1969", "French Open", "First round", "Kazuko Sawamatsu", "Monique Van Haver" ], [ "1969", "French Open", "Third round", "Julie Heldman", "Raquel Giscafré" ], [ "1969", "Wimbledon", "Third round", "Karen Krantzcke", "Pam Teeguarden" ], [ "1970", "Australian Open", "Second round", "Margaret Court", "Caroline Langsford" ], [ "1970", "French Open", "First round", "Helga Hösl", "Katalin Borka" ], [ "1970", "French Open", "Third round", "Billie Jean King", "Odile de Roubin" ], [ "1970", "Wimbledon", "Second round", "Peggy Michel", "Alena Palmeova" ], [ "1970", "Wimbledon", "Second round", "Judy Dalton", "Susan Northen" ], [ "1971", "Australian Open", "First round", "Patricia Coleman", "Helen Taylor" ], [ "1971", "French Open", "First round", "Julie Heldman", "Sharon Van Brandis" ], [ "1971", "Wimbledon", "First round", "Rosie Casals", "Rosy Darmon" ], [ "1971", "Wimbledon", "Second round", "Margaret Court", "Lorraine Robinson" ], [ "1972", "French Open", "First round", "Vlasta Vopičková", "Michele Gurdal" ], [ "1972", "US Open", "Second round", "Margaret Court", "Barbara Hawcroft" ], [ "1973", "Australian Open", "Second round", "Margaret Court", "Nathalie Fuchs" ], [ "1974", "Australian Open", "First round", "Wendy Turnbull", "Brenda Dale" ], [ "1974", "Australian Open", "Second round", "Chris Evert", "Katerleen Szeman" ], [ "1974", "Australian Open", "Second round", "Evonne Goolagong", "Miki Yokobori" ], [ "1974", "French Open", "First round", "Marie Neumannová", "Nicole Bimes" ] ]
{ "intro": "This article covers records concerning the shortest-ever tennis matches both in terms of number of games and duration in terms of time. Matches affected by a retirement or default are not listed.", "section_text": "In women 's tennis , matches featuring a minimum number of games are a more frequent occurrence . The following are women 's Grand Slam singles matches in the Open era which have lasted 12 games ( 6–0 , 6–0 ) [ citation needed ] without retirements or defaults .", "section_title": "Fewest games -- Women", "title": "Shortest tennis match records", "uid": "Shortest_tennis_match_records_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortest_tennis_match_records" }
6,854
6855
2005_Nationwide_Tour_0
[ [ "Week", "Tournament", "State/Country", "Winner" ], [ "Jan 27-30", "BellSouth Panama Championship", "Panama", "Vance Veazey ( 3 )" ], [ "Feb 17-20", "Jacob 's Creek Open Championship", "Australia", "Steven Bowditch ( 1 )" ], [ "Feb 24-27", "ING New Zealand PGA Championship", "New Zealand", "Peter O'Malley ( 2 )" ], [ "Mar 24-27", "Chitimacha Louisiana Open", "Louisiana", "Ryan Hietala ( 1 )" ], [ "Apr 21-24", "Virginia Beach Open", "Virginia", "Troy Matteson ( 1 )" ], [ "Apr 29 - May 1", "BMW Charity Pro-Am at The Cliffs", "South Carolina", "Shane Bertsch ( 2 )" ], [ "May 5-8", "Rex Hospital Open", "North Carolina", "Eric Axley ( 1 )" ], [ "May 12-15", "Rheem Classic", "Arkansas", "Chris Couch ( 4 )" ], [ "May 19-22", "Henrico County Open", "Virginia", "Chad Collins ( 1 )" ], [ "Jun 2-5", "Chattanooga Classic", "Tennessee", "Jason Schultz ( 1 )" ], [ "Jun 9-12", "LaSalle Bank Open", "Illinois", "Chris Couch ( 5 )" ], [ "Jun 16-19", "Knoxville Open", "Tennessee", "Kim Felton ( 1 )" ], [ "Jun 23-26", "Northeast Pennsylvania Classic", "Pennsylvania", "Greg Kraft ( 1 )" ], [ "Jun 30 - Jul 1", "Lake Erie Charity Classic at Peek ' n Peak Resort", "New York", "Esteban Toledo ( 1 )" ], [ "Jul 7-10", "National Mining Association Pete Dye Classic", "West Virginia", "Jason Gore ( 4 )" ], [ "Jul 14-17", "Scholarship America Showdown", "Wisconsin", "Jason Gore ( 5 )" ], [ "Jul 21-24", "Canadian PGA Championship", "Canada", "Jon Mills ( 1 )" ], [ "Jul 28-31", "Preferred Health Systems Wichita Open", "Kansas", "Joe Daley ( 2 )" ], [ "Aug 4-7", "Cox Classic", "Nebraska", "Jason Gore ( 6 )" ], [ "Aug 11-14", "Price Cutter Charity Championship", "Missouri", "Roger Tambellini ( 2 )" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2005 Nationwide Tour season ran from January 27 to October 30. The season consisted of 31 official money golf tournaments, five of which were played outside the United States. The top 21 players on the year-end money list earned their PGA Tour card for 2006.", "section_text": "The number in parentheses after winners ' names show the player 's total number of wins on the Nationwide Tour including that event . No one accumulates many wins on the Nationwide Tour because success at this level soon leads to promotion to the PGA Tour .", "section_title": "Schedule", "title": "2005 Nationwide Tour", "uid": "2005_Nationwide_Tour_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Nationwide_Tour" }
6,855
6856
Juno_Award_for_Breakthrough_Group_of_the_Year_1
[ [ "Year", "Winner", "Nominees" ], [ "1994", "The Waltons", "Junkhouse Sloan The Odds The Tea Party" ], [ "1995", "Moist", "Big Sugar Farmer 's Daughter The Gandharvas Wild Strawberries" ], [ "1996", "Philosopher Kings", "Hemingway Corner Rainbow Butt Monkeys Rymes with Orange Sandbox" ], [ "1997", "The Killjoys", "Limblifter Pluto Starkicker Victor" ], [ "1998", "Leahy", "Bran Van 3000 Matthew Good Band The Age of Electric Wide Mouth Mason" ], [ "1999", "Johnny Favourite Swing Orchestra", "Love Inc. New Meanies The Moffats The Wilkinsons" ], [ "2000", "Sky", "Gob Len Prozzäk Serial Joe" ], [ "2001", "Nickelback", "b4-4 Kittie Sum 41 Templar" ], [ "2002", "Default", "Joydrop Smoother Sugar Jones Wave" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Juno Award for Breakthrough Group of the Year is presented by the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences to the best new musical group in Canada. The award has been given annually since 1974, and was previously called Most Promising Group of the Year (1974-1993), Best New Group (1994-2002), and New Group of the Year (2003-2012).", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Recipients -- Best New Group ( 1994–2002 )", "title": "Juno Award for Breakthrough Group of the Year", "uid": "Juno_Award_for_Breakthrough_Group_of_the_Year_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juno_Award_for_Breakthrough_Group_of_the_Year" }
6,856
6857
Book_censorship_in_Iran_0
[ [ "Title", "Author", "Type of literature" ], [ "The Satanic Verses", "Salman Rushdie", "novel" ], [ "The God Delusion", "Richard Dawkins", "non-fiction" ], [ "The Gods Laugh on Mondays", "Reza Khoshnazar", "novel" ], [ "The Monkey Whose Owner Had Died", "Sadeq Chubak", "short stories" ], [ "The Patient Stone", "Sadeq Chubak", "short stories" ], [ "The Mourners of Bayal", "Gholam-Hossein Saedi", "short stories" ], [ "Dandyl", "Gholam-Hossein Saedi", "short stories" ], [ "Fear and Chills", "Gholam-Hossein Saedi", "short stories" ], [ "The Ball", "Gholam-Hossein Saedi", "short stories" ], [ "Censoring an Iranian Love Story", "Shahriar Mandanipour", "novel" ], [ "Her Eyes", "Bozorg Alavi", "novel" ], [ "A Tombstone on a Grave", "Jalal Al-e-Ahmad", "novel" ], [ "Mourning for Qasem", "Amir Hossein Cheheltan", "novel" ], [ "The Man Lost in Dust", "Nosrat Rahmani", "poetry" ], [ "Complete Poems of Ahmad Shamlu", "Ahmad Shamlu", "poetry" ], [ "A Girl with a Silver String", "Jamal Mirsadeqi", "novel" ], [ "Memories of My Melancholy Whores", "Gabriel García Márquez", "" ], [ "Scorpion on the Railroad Stairways of Andimeshk , or This Train is Bleeding Sir !", "Hossein Mortezaeian Abkenar", "novel" ], [ "The Ceremonies of Impatience", "Yaghub Yadali", "short stories" ], [ "Social History of Iran", "Morteza Ravandi", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "Since the Iranian Revolution in 1979, the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran states regarding freedom of expression: the press is free to express their opinion, unless it is against the foundation of Islam or rights of the people, and the law will explain the details. (article 24, The Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran). The details have been explained, not in legislation of the Islamic Consultative Assembly, but in an act issued by the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution, which names the subjects that do not deserve to be published. For example: Renouncing the fundamentals of religion; promoting corruption; inviting the society to riot against Iran; promoting the ideas of terrorist and illegal groups and corrupted sects; defending monarchy; stimulating conflicts between the various ethnic or religious groups ; creating problems in the unity of the society and the country; mocking and weakening the national pride and nationalistic spirit, and creating an atmosphere of losing national values to the culture and civilization of western or eastern colonizing systems.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Books banned in Iran", "title": "Book censorship in Iran", "uid": "Book_censorship_in_Iran_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_censorship_in_Iran" }
6,857
6858
List_of_National_University_of_Kyiv-Mohyla_Academy_people_2
[ [ "Name", "Relationship to the university", "Notability" ], [ "Alexander Bezborodko", "student of KMA", "Grand Chancellor of Russia" ], [ "Dmytro Troshchynskyi", "student of KMA", "Minister of justice of Russia in 1814" ], [ "Antin Holovaty", "student of KMA", "Founder of the Black Sea Cossack Host" ], [ "Serhiy Kvit", "professor of NaUKMA", "Minister of Education and Science of Ukraine" ], [ "Pavlenko Oleksiy", "student of KTU", "Minister of Agriculture of Ukraine" ], [ "Serhiy Yefremov", "student of KTU", "Secretary of International Affairs for Ukraine" ], [ "Mykola Tomenko", "professor of NaUKMA", "Deputy of the Verkhovna Rada ; Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine in the first cabinet of Yulia Tymoshenko" ], [ "Ostap Semerak", "student of NaUKMA", "Member of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine of 6th convocation ; Minister of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine" ], [ "Andriy Shevchenko ( politician )", "student of NaUKMA", "Deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine" ], [ "Pavlo Sheremeta", "professor of NaUKMA", "Minister of Economical Development and Trade of Ukraine" ], [ "Iryna Vannykova", "student of NaUKMA", "Press secretary of the President of Ukraine Viktor Yuschenko" ], [ "Pyotr Zavadovsky", "student of KMA", "Minister of Education in Russia in 1802" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of notable people associated with the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (NaUKMA), a public research university located in Kyiv, Ukraine. Students, alumni and faculty members of the university and all its predecessor institutions including Kyiv Brotherhood School (KBS), Kyiv-Mohyla Collegium (KMC), Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (KMA) and Kyiv Theological Academy (KTA) are included in this list. Many students and professors of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in the 17th and 18th centuries pursued many activities except church career. They were often also writers, philosophers, theologicians and educators in a broad sense. This is indicated in the list where appropriate.", "section_text": "Alexander Bezborodko , Grand Chancellor of Russia", "section_title": "Politics -- Other prominent political figures", "title": "List of National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy people", "uid": "List_of_National_University_of_Kyiv-Mohyla_Academy_people_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_University_of_Kyiv-Mohyla_Academy_people" }
6,858
6859
1993_in_country_music_3
[ [ "US", "Album", "Artist", "Record Label" ], [ "75", "America , I Believe in You", "Charlie Daniels", "Liberty" ], [ "51", "The Beverly Hillbillies Soundtrack", "Various Artists", "Fox" ], [ "", "Country Dance Mixes", "Various Artists", "Atlantic" ], [ "55", "Delta Dreamland", "Deborah Allen", "Giant" ], [ "", "Dr. Stompin ' Tom…Eh ?", "Stompin ' Tom Connors", "EMI" ], [ "29", "Final Touches", "Conway Twitty", "MCA Nashville" ], [ "51", "Good News", "Kathy Mattea", "Mercury/PolyGram" ], [ "60", "Greatest Hits", "Patty Loveless", "MCA Nashville" ], [ "31", "Greatest Hits : Songs from an Aging Sex Bomb", "K. T. Oslin", "RCA Nashville" ], [ "46", "Heroes", "Mark O'Connor", "Warner Bros" ], [ "30", "High-Tech Redneck", "George Jones", "MCA Nashville" ], [ "53", "Hurry Sundown", "McBride & the Ride", "MCA Nashville" ], [ "28", "Jingle Bell Rock", "Brenda Lee", "MCA" ], [ "", "Kick Along with Stompin ' Tom", "Stompin ' Tom Connors", "EMI" ], [ "56", "Let Go", "Brother Phelps", "Asylum" ], [ "37", "Ricky Lynn Gregg", "Ricky Lynn Gregg", "Liberty" ], [ "67", "Shania Twain", "Shania Twain", "Mercury/PolyGram" ], [ "61", "Shawn Camp", "Shawn Camp", "Reprise" ], [ "27", "Something Up My Sleeve", "Suzy Bogguss", "Liberty" ], [ "62", "Spinning Around the Sun", "Jimmie Dale Gilmore", "Elektra" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1993.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Top new album releases -- Other top albums", "title": "1993 in country music", "uid": "1993_in_country_music_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_in_country_music" }
6,859
6860
List_of_masked_wrestlers_1
[ [ "Name", "Promotion", "Years active", "Country" ], [ "American Starship ( Starship Coyote & Starship Eagle )", "Jim Crockett Promotions", "1985", "United States" ], [ "The A-Team ( The Atomic Kid Buddy Wayne and the Frog )", "All Star Wrestling", "1987-1988", "Canada" ], [ "The Assassins ( original ) ( Assassin # 1 & Assassin # 2 )", "Florida Championship Wrestling , Georgia Championship Wrestling , National Wrestling Alliance", "1961-1983", "United States" ], [ "The Assassins ( Assassin # 1 and Assassin # 2 )", "World Wrestling Association", "1966-1967", "United States" ], [ "The Blackhearts ( Destruction and Apocalypse )", "All-Japan Pro Wrestling , IWA Japan , Stampede Wrestling", "1989-1991 ; 1993 , 1996-1997", "United States" ], [ "The Blue Infernos ( Blue Inferno I & Blue Inferno II )", "Continental Wrestling Association", "1966-1967", "United States" ], [ "The Colossal Kongs ( Awesome Kong and Krusher Kong )", "Global Wrestling Federation , United States Wrestling Association , World Championship Wrestling", "1991-1993", "United States" ], [ "The Columbian Tigers ( Columbian Tiger I & Columbian Tiger II )", "National Wrestling Alliance", "1974", "United States" ], [ "Los Conquistadores ( original ) ( Conquistador I & Conquistador II )", "World Wrestling Federation", "1987-1989", "United States" ], [ "Los Conquistadores ( Conquistador I & Conquistador II )", "World Wrestling Federation", "2000", "United States" ], [ "Los Conquistadores ( Conquistador I & Conquistador II )", "World Wrestling Federation", "2003", "United States" ], [ "The Council of Trabajadores", "Philippine Wrestling Revolution", "2015-", "Philippines" ], [ "The Cruel Connection ( Cruel Connection I & Cruel Connection II )", "Jim Crockett Promotions", "1987", "United States" ], [ "The Crusaders ( Crusader I & Crusader II )", "Maple Leaf Wrestling", "1973-1974", "Canada" ], [ "The Cyberpunks ( Ice & Fire )", "United States Wrestling Association", "1996", "United States" ], [ "The Ding Dongs ( Ding Dong I & Ding Dong II )", "World Championship Wrestling", "1989", "United States" ], [ "Doom ( Ron Simmons and Butch Reed )", "World Championship Wrestling", "1989-1990", "United States" ], [ "The Executioners ( original ) ( Executioner # 1 and Executioner # 2 )", "World Wide Wrestling Federation", "1976", "United States" ], [ "The Executioners ( Pain and Agony )", "World Wrestling Federation", "1992-1994", "United States" ], [ "The Grapplers ( Grappler # 1 and Grappler # 2 )", "Continental Wrestling Association", "1982-1984", "United States" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of masked wrestlers. The earliest known masked wrestler in the United States was The Masked Marvel who famously crashed the international tournament, which featured many of the top stars of the Farmer Burns-Frank Gotch era, held at the Manhattan Opera House in 1915. In North America, many professional wrestlers have traditionally worn masks after they had been used in an area, or territory, that their popularity and drawing ability diminished, it would be an easy way for a wrestler to begin working in a new area as a fresh face. Sometimes workers wore masks in one territory and unmasked in another territory in order to keep their two identities separate. Several wrestlers used one or two personas for their entire career such as The Destroyer (1962-1984), Mr. Wrestling (1965-1983) and Masked Superstar (1976-1986). Wrestling masks also have a significant cultural importance in lucha libre, and puroresu to a lesser extent; famed luchadores such as Blue Demon, Mil Máscaras and El Santo have achieved an almost iconic status in Mexico. In Japan, masked wrestlers are also very popular. Many are heavily influenced by anime and manga characters such as Tiger Mask and Black Tiger during the 1980s, and Jushin Thunder Liger in the 90s. Many of these stars would appear in World Championship Wrestling during the Monday Night Wars period. In recent years, World Wrestling Entertainment has re-used masked characters for comedic purposes. Edge and Christian donned the masks worn by the WWF's original Los Conquistadores in their feud with World Tag Team Champions The Hardy Boyz in 2000. Under the guise of El Gran Luchadore, Paul London, Shannon Moore, Eddie Guerrero and Kurt Angle each challenged JBL for the WWE Championship in 2004.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List -- Tag teams and stables", "title": "List of masked wrestlers", "uid": "List_of_masked_wrestlers_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_masked_wrestlers" }
6,860
6861
List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records_3
[ [ "Statistic", "Record", "Date" ], [ "Home runs hit", "7", "September 8 , 1998 , July 26 , 2018" ], [ "Runs scored", "26", "June 11 , 1985" ], [ "Hits", "27", "June 11 , 1985" ], [ "Doubles", "11", "June 23 , 1976" ], [ "Triples", "5", "August 2 , 1986" ], [ "Total bases", "45", "June 11 , 1985" ], [ "Runners left on base", "20*", "September 4 , 1922" ], [ "Runners left on base", "20*", "August 14 , 1990" ], [ "Strikeouts", "19", "October 6 , 1991" ], [ "Stolen bases", "11*", "July 12 , 1906" ], [ "Stolen bases", "11*", "August 31 , 1906" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Philadelphia Phillies have participated in 127 seasons in Major League Baseball since their inception in 1883. Through 2009, they have played 19,035 games, winning 9,035 and losing 10,162, for a winning their tenure as members of Major League Baseball's National League. Chuck Klein, the franchise's only batting Triple Crown winner, holds the most franchise records as of the end of the 2009 season, with eight, including career slugging percentage, career on-base plus slugging (OPS), and single-season extra-base hits. He is followed by Billy Hamilton, who holds seven records, including career batting average and the single-season runs record. Several Phillies hold National League and major league records. Pitcher/outfielder John Coleman is the most decorated in this category, holding three major league records, all from the franchise's inaugural season. Coleman set records for losses, earned runs allowed, and hits allowed, all in 1883 when he also set three additional franchise pitching records. Shortstop Jimmy Rollins broke Willie Wilson's record for at-bats in a single season with 716 in 2007, and first baseman Ryan Howard also set the major league record for strikeouts in a single season that same year with 199, before it was broken by Mark Reynolds of the Arizona Diamondbacks the following year. The 1930 Phillies, who went 52-102, set two more National League records, allowing 1,993 hits and 1,193 runs in the regular season.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Team single-game records -- Single-game batting", "title": "List of Philadelphia Phillies team records", "uid": "List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Philadelphia_Phillies_team_records" }
6,861
6862
2006_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_2
[ [ "Rank", "Gymnasts", "Country", "Point" ], [ "1", "Tudorel-Valentin Mavrodineanu , Tania Mihaela Pohoata", "Romania", "20.450" ], [ "2", "Wilkie Satti Sanchez , Giovanna Lecis", "Italy", "20.250" ], [ "3", "Aurélie Joly , Julien Chaninet", "France", "20.200" ], [ "4", "Cristina Antonescu , Mircea Brinzea", "Romania", "20.150" ], [ "5", "Huang Jinxuan , He Shijian", "China", "19.550" ], [ "6", "Israel Carrasco , Saray Martin", "Spain", "19.400" ], [ "7", "Margarita Stoyanova , Radoslov Zhivkov", "Bulgaria", "19.400" ], [ "8", "Fan Jie , Ni Zhen Hua", "China", "19.250" ] ]
{ "intro": "9th Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships were held in Nanjing, China from June 1 to June 3, 2006.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Results -- Mixed Pair", "title": "2006 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships", "uid": "2006_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships" }
6,862
6863
List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters_9
[ [ "Name", "Chartered", "Institution", "Location" ], [ "Iota Alpha", "December 11 , 1971", "James Madison University", "Harrisonburg , Virginia" ], [ "Iota Beta", "1972", "Trenton , New Jersey City-Wide", "Trenton , New Jersey" ], [ "Iota Gamma", "1972", "Texas", "Texas" ], [ "Iota Delta", "1972", "Henderson State University", "Arkadelphia , Arkansas" ], [ "Iota Epsilon", "1972", "Eureka College", "Eureka , Illinois" ], [ "Iota Zeta", "1972", "Illinois Wesleyan University", "Bloomington , Illinois" ], [ "Iota Eta", "April 22 , 1972", "Texas Christian University", "Fort Worth , Texas" ], [ "Iota Theta", "1972", "Louisiana State University", "Baton Rouge , Louisiana" ], [ "Iota Iota", "May 7 , 1972", "Catholic University of America", "Washington , D.C" ], [ "Iota Kappa", "1972", "Arizona State University", "Tempe , Arizona" ], [ "Iota Lambda", "1972", "University of Alabama at Birmingham", "Birmingham , Alabama" ], [ "Iota Mu", "1972", "Northwestern State University", "Natchitoches , Louisiana" ], [ "Iota Nu", "April 23 , 1972", "Mobile , Alabama City-Wide ( University of South Alabama , Spring Hill College , University of Mobile )", "Mobile , Alabama" ], [ "Iota Xi", "1972", "California University of Pennsylvania", "California , Pennsylvania" ], [ "Iota Omicron", "1972", "University of Central Oklahoma", "Edmond , Oklahoma" ], [ "Iota Pi", "1972", "Florida International University & Johnson & Wales University", "Miami , Florida" ], [ "Iota Rho", "December 2 , 1972", "University of North Carolina at Charlotte", "Charlotte , North Carolina" ], [ "Iota Sigma", "1973", "Mercer University", "Macon , Georgia" ], [ "Iota Tau", "1973", "Middle Tennessee State University", "Murfreesboro , Tennessee" ], [ "Iota Upsilon", "1973", "Austin Peay State University", "Clarksville , Tennessee" ] ]
{ "intro": "Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. was founded on January 13, 1913 at Howard University, and began to expand its membership early on when it chartered Beta Chapter at Wilberforce University in 1914, Gamma Chapter at the University of Pennsylvania in 1918 and Delta Chapter at the University of Iowa in 1919. Delta Sigma Theta continues to Charter new chapters at both the Collegiate and Alumnae level. Individual Chapters are Chartered, not Founded, as only the Perpetual body was founded, and the founding occurred in 1913. Delta Sigma Theta has more than 940 Chapters located in the United States, England, Japan (Tokyo and Okinawa), Germany, the Virgin Islands, Liberia, Bermuda, Jamaica, The Bahamas, South Korea and Nigeria. The sorority's chapters are organized into seven regions and further sub-divided by state. While initially Alumnae / Graduate Chapters were named using the Greek Alphabet, the perpetual body of Delta Sigma Theta voted at the Twenty-Fourth National Convention, held in Detroit, Michigan on December 26-30, 1956, to abandon this practice. Following the vote, the Greek Letter names for the Alumnae Chapters are no longer in use or recognized by the Grand Chapter. Alumnae Chapters are instead named using their Geographic Location. This list includes Active, Inactive, Reassigned, and Retired undergraduate Chapters.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Chapters Beginning With `` Iota ''", "title": "List of Delta Sigma Theta chapters", "uid": "List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters_9", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Delta_Sigma_Theta_chapters" }
6,863
6864
List_of_airports_in_the_Ottawa_area_1
[ [ "Airport name", "ICAO / TC LID / IATA", "Location" ], [ "Arnprior Airport", "CNP3", "Arnprior" ], [ "Carleton Place Airport", "CNR6", "Carleton Place" ], [ "Carp Airport", "CYRP ( YRP )", "Carp" ], [ "Kars/Rideau Valley Air Park", "CPL3", "Kars" ], [ "Ottawa/Casselman ( Shea Field ) Aerodrome", "CSF7", "Ottawa" ], [ "Ottawa/Embrun Aerodrome", "CPR2", "Embrun" ], [ "Ottawa/Manotick ( Hope Field ) Aerodrome", "CHF2", "Manotick" ], [ "Ottawa/Rockcliffe Airport", "CYRO ( YRO )", "Ottawa" ], [ "Pendleton Airport", "CNF3", "Pendleton" ], [ "Smiths Falls-Montague Airport", "CYSH ( YSH )", "Smiths Falls" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following active airports serve the area around Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, lying under or adjacent to Ottawa's terminal control area:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Land airports -- Other", "title": "List of airports in the Ottawa area", "uid": "List_of_airports_in_the_Ottawa_area_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airports_in_the_Ottawa_area" }
6,864
6865
Mixed_team_at_the_1900_Summer_Olympics_0
[ [ "Medal", "Name", "Sport", "Event" ], [ "Gold", "Charles Bennett ( GBR ) John Rimmer ( GBR ) Sidney Robinson ( GBR ) Stan Rowley ( AUS ) Alfred Tysoe ( GBR )", "Athletics", "5000 metre team race" ], [ "Gold", "Denis St. George Daly ( GBR ) Foxhall Parker Keene ( USA ) Frank Mackey ( USA ) Alfred Rawlinson ( GBR )", "Polo", "" ], [ "Gold", "François Brandt ( NED ) Hermanus Brockmann ( NED ) Roelof Klein ( NED ) Unknown French athlete ( FRA )", "Rowing", "Coxed pair" ], [ "Gold", "Frédéric Blanchy ( FRA ) E. William Exshaw ( GBR ) Jacques Le Lavasseur ( FRA )", "Sailing", "2-3 ton ( race 1 )" ], [ "Gold", "Frédéric Blanchy ( FRA ) E. William Exshaw ( GBR ) Jacques Le Lavasseur ( FRA )", "Sailing", "2-3 ton ( race 2 )" ], [ "Gold", "Edgar Aabye ( DEN ) August Nilsson ( SWE ) Eugen Schmidt ( DEN ) Gustaf Söderström ( SWE ) Karl Staaf ( SWE ) Charles Winckler ( DEN )", "Tug of war", "" ], [ "Silver", "Walter McCreery ( USA ) Frederick Freake ( GBR ) Walter Buckmaster ( GBR ) Jean de Madre ( FRA )", "Polo", "" ], [ "Silver", "Max Décugis ( FRA ) Basil Spalding de Garmendia ( USA )", "Tennis", "men 's doubles" ], [ "Silver", "Hélène Prévost ( FRA ) Harold Mahony ( GBR )", "Tennis", "mixed doubles" ], [ "Bronze", "Frederick Agnew Gill ( GBR ) Robert Fournier-Sarlovèze ( FRA ) Edouard Alphonse de Rothschild ( FRA ) Maurice Raoul-Duval ( FRA )", "Polo", "" ], [ "Bronze", "Marion Jones ( USA ) Laurence Doherty ( GBR )", "Tennis", "mixed doubles" ], [ "Bronze", "Hedwiga Rosenbaumová ( BOH ) Archibald Warden ( GBR )", "Tennis", "mixed doubles" ] ]
{ "intro": "Early Olympic Games allowed for individuals in a team to be from different nations. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) now groups their results together under the mixed team designation (IOC code ZZX). During the 1900 Summer Olympics, several teams comprising international members won 12 medals in 7 different events.", "section_text": "François Brandt ( left ) , Roelof Klein and their coxswain , an unknown French boy , at the 1900 Olympics", "section_title": "Medalists", "title": "Mixed team at the 1900 Summer Olympics", "uid": "Mixed_team_at_the_1900_Summer_Olympics_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixed_team_at_the_1900_Summer_Olympics" }
6,865
6866
Montenegrin_First_League_11
[ [ "Club", "City", "Finishing in 2018-19", "First season in top division", "Stadium", "Official website" ], [ "FK Budućnost", "Podgorica", "2nd", "1946-47", "Stadion pod Goricom ( 15,230 )", "fk-buducnost.me" ], [ "OFK Grbalj", "Radanovići", "6th", "2006-07", "Stadion Donja Sutvara ( 1,500 )", "ofkgrbalj.me" ], [ "FK Iskra", "Danilovgrad", "5th", "2015-16", "Braća Velašević Stadium ( 2,500 )", "" ], [ "FK Kom", "Podgorica", "2nd in Druga CFL", "2003-04", "Stadion Zlatica ( 1,200 )", "" ], [ "OFK Petrovac", "Petrovac", "7th", "2006-07", "Stadion pod Malim brdom ( 1,630 )", "ofkpetrovac.com" ], [ "FK Podgorica", "Podgorica", "1st in Druga CFL", "2019-20", "DG Arena ( 4,000 )", "" ], [ "FK Rudar", "Pljevlja", "8th", "1993-94", "Stadion pod Golubinjom ( 5,140 )", "fkrudarpljevlja.com" ], [ "FK Sutjeska", "Nikšić", "1st", "1964-65", "Stadion kraj Bistrice ( 5,214 )", "fksutjeska.me" ], [ "OFK Titograd", "Podgorica", "4th", "2006-07", "Mladost Stadium ( 1,250 )", "ofktitograd.me" ], [ "FK Zeta", "Golubovci", "3rd", "2000-01", "Stadion Trešnjica ( 4,000 )", "fkzeta.net" ] ]
{ "intro": "The First League of Montenegro (Montenegrin: Prva crnogorska fudbalska liga - Prva CFL - 1. CFL; pronounced [pr̂ːvaː t͡srnǒɡorskaː fûdbaːlskaː lǐːɡa]) is the top football league in Montenegro. Founded in 2006, competition is headed by the Football Association of Montenegro. 10 teams participate in this league. The winner of the Montenegrin First League starts the qualifications for the UEFA Champions League from the second round. The second and third placed team and Montenegrin Cup winner play in the qualifying rounds of the UEFA Europa League. The last placed team is directly relegated to the Montenegrin Second League, and the two others are playing in Montenegrin First League playoffs.", "section_text": "Main article : 2019–20 Montenegrin First League The 2019–20 Montenegrin First League is the 14th season of top-tier football in Montenegro . FK Sutjeska are defending champions title . The season began in August 2019 and will end in May 2020 . At the end of season , last-placed team will directly be relegated , and 9th and 8th club from the table will participate in playoffs . The following 10 clubs complete in First League 2019-20 .", "section_title": "Current season ( 2019-20 )", "title": "Montenegrin First League", "uid": "Montenegrin_First_League_11", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montenegrin_First_League" }
6,866
6867
Erika_Padilla_0
[ [ "Year", "Title", "Role" ], [ "2009", "I Love Betty La Fea", "Herself / Ecomodel" ], [ "2009", "Precious Hearts Romances Presents : Bud Brothers Series", "Jennifer" ], [ "2009", "Dahil May Isang Ikaw", "Jannelle Paez" ], [ "2009", "Precious Hearts Romances Presents : Somewhere In My Heart", "Amy" ], [ "2010", "Habang May Buhay", "Michiko" ], [ "2010", "Kung Tayo ' y Magkakalayo", "Diane" ], [ "2010", "Magkano Ang Iyong Dangal ?", "Jenny" ], [ "2010", "Maalaala Mo Kaya", "Rosa" ], [ "2010-11", "Imortal", "Miriam Villamor" ], [ "2011", "Iskul Bukol", "Joseph Dizon" ], [ "2011", "Reputasyon", "Precious" ], [ "2011", "Maria La Del Barrio", "Liz" ], [ "2011-12", "The Jose and Wally Show Starring Vic Sotto", "Erika" ], [ "2011-2016", "PBA on Sports5", "Herself" ], [ "2012", "A Beautiful Affair", "Dr. Trina Cawagas" ], [ "2013", "Kidlat", "Chichi" ], [ "2013", "Maria Mercedes", "Lou" ], [ "2013", "Killer Karaoke : Pinoy Naman", "Herself - Erika Kalurka" ], [ "2014", "Kambal Sirena", "Gigi" ], [ "2014", "Eat Bulaga Lenten Special : Pangalawang Bukas", "Wife of Jose Manalo" ] ]
{ "intro": "Erika Padilla (born November 22, 1986) is a Filipino actress, TV host, model and sideline reporter.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Filmography -- Television", "title": "Erika Padilla", "uid": "Erika_Padilla_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erika_Padilla" }
6,867
6868
List_of_bus_transit_systems_in_the_United_States_13
[ [ "System", "Locale", "Major city ( s )" ], [ "Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District", "Champaign and Urbana", "Champaign and Urbana" ], [ "Chicago Transit Authority", "Chicago", "Chicago" ], [ "CityLink", "Peoria , Peoria Heights , and West Peoria", "Peoria" ], [ "Connect Transit", "McLean County", "Bloomington and Normal" ], [ "Decatur Public Transit System", "Decatur", "Decatur" ], [ "Madison County Transit", "Madison County", "" ], [ "MetroLINK", "Rock Island County", "Moline and Rock Island" ], [ "Pace", "Northeastern Illinois", "Chicago" ], [ "Quincy Transit Lines", "Quincy", "Quincy" ], [ "River Valley Metro Mass Transit District", "Kankakee County and parts of Will County", "" ], [ "Rockford Mass Transit District", "Rockford metro area", "Rockford" ], [ "Sangamon Mass Transit District", "Springfield", "Springfield" ], [ "St. Clair County Transit District", "St. Clair County", "Belleville" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of presently-operating bus transit systems in the United States with regular service. The list excludes charter buses, private bus operators, paratransit systems, and trolleybus systems. Figures for daily ridership, number of vehicles, and daily vehicle revenue miles are accurate as of 2009 and come from the FTA National Transit Database.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Illinois", "title": "List of bus transit systems in the United States", "uid": "List_of_bus_transit_systems_in_the_United_States_13", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bus_transit_systems_in_the_United_States" }
6,868
6869
List_of_schools_in_Far_North_Queensland_3
[ [ "Name", "Suburb", "LGA", "Opened", "Closed" ], [ "Almaden State School", "Almaden", "Mareeba", "1906", "1997" ], [ "Bamford State School", "Bamford , near Petford", "Mareeba", "1905", "1935" ], [ "Barrine State School", "Barrine", "Tablelands", "1909", "1958" ], [ "Beatrice River State School", "Beatrice", "Tablelands", "1921", "1946" ], [ "Boogan State School", "Boogan", "Cassowary Coast", "1929", "1979" ], [ "Boonmoo State School", "near Dimbulah", "Mareeba", "1910", "1912" ], [ "Brook 's Road State School", "Millaa Millaa", "Tablelands", "c1943", "1958" ], [ "Cairns Central Girls ' School", "Cairns City", "Cairns", "1914", "1943" ], [ "Cairns Central State School", "Cairns City", "Cairns", "1917", "1994" ], [ "Cairns North State School", "Cairns North", "Cairns", "1878", "2004" ], [ "Cairns Road State School", "Edmonton", "Cairns", "1921", "1963" ], [ "Cairns Special School", "Cairns", "Cairns", "1958", "1990" ], [ "Calcifer State School", "Calcifer , near Chillagoe", "Mareeba", "c.1898", "c.1908" ], [ "Cardross State School", "Cardross , near Chillagoe", "Mareeba", "c.1914", "c.1920" ], [ "Cardstone State School", "Cardstone", "Cassowary Coast", "1959", "1990" ], [ "Carrington State School", "Carrington", "Tablelands", "1891", "1937" ], [ "Cassowary State School", "Cassowary", "Douglas", "1913", "1967" ], [ "Castleton State School", "via Forsayth", "Etheridge", "1894", "1900 ?" ], [ "Charleston State School", "Forsayth", "Etheridge", "1895", "1920" ], [ "Chilverton State School", "via Ravenshoe", "Tablelands", "1916", "1956" ] ]
{ "intro": "nThis is a list of schools in the Far North Queensland region of Queensland, Australia. Prior to 2015, the Queensland education system consisted of primary schools, which accommodated students from kindergarten to Year 7 (ages 5-13), and high schools, which accommodate students from Years 8 to 12 (ages 12-18). However, from 2015, Year 7 became the first year of high school. The region's largest population centre is Cairns. Regional schools are:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "State schools -- Defunct state schools", "title": "List of schools in Far North Queensland", "uid": "List_of_schools_in_Far_North_Queensland_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_in_Far_North_Queensland" }
6,869
6870
Pointing_stick_0
[ [ "Name", "Brand", "Current Models", "Past Models", "Color" ], [ "Acer", "FineTrack", "None", "TravelMate 6410 , 6460 , 6492 , 6492G , 6592 , 6592G , 6593", "Green" ], [ "Asus", "SensePoint", "ASUS pro B8230UA", "S200 , S200N , S300N", "?" ], [ "Casio", "?", "", "Cassiopeia Fiva MPC series", "" ], [ "Dell", "TrackStick , Dual Point", "Latitude : 5490/5495 , 5590 , 7490 Precision : 3530 , 5530 , 7530 , 7730", "Latitude : 13 : E4300 , E4310 , E6320 , E6330 ; 14 : E5400 , E5410 , E5420 , E5430 , E5440 , E5450 , E5470 , 5480 , E6420 , E6430 , 6430u , E7440 , E7450 , E7470 , 7480 ; 15 : E5530 , E5540 , E5550 , E5570 , 5580 , E6500 , E6510 , E6520 , E6540 , Retro Latitude : D400 , D410 , D420 , D430 , D600 , D610 , D620 , D630 , D800 , D810 , D820 , D830 , XT ; Precision : M2300 , M2400 , M4300 , M4400 , M4500 , M4600 , M4700 , M4800 , M6700 , M6800 , M6400 , M6500 , 3510 , 3520 , 5510 , 5520 , 7510 , 7520 , 7710 , 7720 ; Inspiron : 4000 , 8100 , 8200 , 8600 , 9100 ; L", "Blue , black or gray" ], [ "Elonex", "Mouse emulator", "Elonex ONE", "None", "None" ], [ "Fujitsu", "StickPoint , QuickPoint", "None", "Lifebook T2010 , T2020 , S7110 , S7210 , S7220 , B2400/2500/2600 series , E8310 ( optional ) , E8410 ( optional ) , E8420 ( optional ) , U1010/U810/U50 , U820/U2010 , P1100/1500/1600 series , P1620 , P1610 , P1630 , P2120 ,", "Black or blue" ], [ "GPD", "?", "None", "Pocket 1", "?" ], [ "HP", "PointStick", "All EliteBooks excluding 1000 series and Folio ; Some ZBooks excluding Studio series ; ProBook 6450b , 6455b & 6550b", "All EliteBooks excluding 1000 series ; all models ending with p or w ; all models starting with nc , nw or c ; 6445b ( optional ) , 6545b ( optional ) , tc4200 , tc4400 ; Presario models starting with v , 8500", "Black , orange or blue ( older models )" ], [ "Lenovo ( formerly IBM )", "TrackPoint", "All ThinkPads , excluding chromebooks ; Travel Keyboard with Ultranav", "Most ThinkPads , Space Saver II , Model M13 , Model M4-1 , Trackpoint IV , Trackpoint USB Keyboard , TransNote , Trackpoint Mouse", "Red" ], [ "NEC", "NX Point", "None", "EasyNote MX45 , MX65 , S5", "None" ], [ "Nintendo", "C-Stick", "New Nintendo 3DS , New Nintendo 3DS XL and New Nintendo 2DS XL", "None", "Gray" ], [ "Samsung", "Pointing stick", "Series 6 , Ativ Q", "Series 4", "All colors" ], [ "Sony", "Pointing stick", "Sony PS3 Wireless Keyboard", "Sony Vaio Duo 11 , Sony Vaio P series , BX series , C1 series , U8 series , UX series", "None" ], [ "Sprintek", "FlexPoint", "SK8702/SK8703 for Laptop/Tablet PC/Netbook/Industrial Keyboard", "None", "None" ], [ "Toshiba", "AccuPoint", "Tecra R Series , Z Series and W Series , Portege Z Series and R Series", "Portégé ( not current models 06/2007 ) , 300-7000 series , T3000 series ; Tecra series 500-9000 , A7 , A8 , A9 , A10 , A11 , M2 , M5 , M9 , M10 , M11 , S Series ; Satellite Pro series 400-4000 , T2000 ; Satellite 100-4000 series , Libretto 50CT , 70CT , 100CT", "Green , blue" ], [ "Unicomp", "Pointing stick", "EnduraPro ( for desktop )", "On-The-Stick , Mighty Mouse", "Red" ] ]
{ "intro": "A pointing stick (or nub) is a small joystick used as a pointing device typically mounted centrally in a computer keyboard. Like other pointing devices such as mice, touchpads or trackballs, operating system software translates manipulation of the device into movements of the pointer or cursor on the monitor. Unlike other pointing devices, it reacts to force or strain rather than to gross movement, so it is called an isometric[clarification needed] pointing device. IBM introduced it commercially in 1992 on its laptops, under the name TrackPoint. The pointing stick senses applied force by using two pairs of resistive strain gauges. A pointing stick can be used by pushing with the fingers in the general direction the user wants the cursor to move. The velocity of the pointer depends on the applied force so increasing pressure causes faster movement. The relation between pressure and cursor or pointer speed can be adjusted, just as mouse speed is adjusted. On a QWERTY keyboard, the stick is typically embedded between the G, H and B keys, and the mouse buttons are placed just below the space bar. The mouse buttons can be operated right-handed or left-handed due to their placement below the keyboard along the centerline. This pointing device has also appeared next to screens on compact-sized laptops such as the Toshiba Libretto and Sony VAIO UX.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Naming and brands", "title": "Pointing stick", "uid": "Pointing_stick_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointing_stick" }
6,870
6871
Premier_of_KwaZulu-Natal_0
[ [ "No", "Name", "Took office", "Party" ], [ "1", "Frank Mdlalose", "11 May 1994", "Inkatha Freedom Party" ], [ "2", "Ben Ngubane", "1 March 1997 ( acting until 19 March )", "Inkatha Freedom Party" ], [ "3", "Lionel Mtshali", "10 February 1999", "Inkatha Freedom Party" ], [ "4", "S'bu Ndebele", "23 April 2004", "African National Congress" ], [ "5", "Zweli Mkhize", "6 May 2009", "African National Congress" ], [ "6", "Senzo Mchunu", "22 August 2013", "African National Congress" ], [ "7", "Willies Mchunu", "24 May 2016", "African National Congress" ], [ "8", "Sihle Zikalala", "27 May 2019", "African National Congress" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Premier of KwaZulu-Natal is the head of government of the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa. The current Premier of KwaZulu-Natal is Sihle Zikalala, a member of the African National Congress, who was elected in the 2019 election. He took office on 27 May 2019.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List", "title": "Premier of KwaZulu-Natal", "uid": "Premier_of_KwaZulu-Natal_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premier_of_KwaZulu-Natal" }
6,871
6872
List_of_Brussels_Metro_stations_3
[ [ "#", "Name in French", "Name in Dutch", "Opened", "Interchange" ], [ "1", "Roi Baudouin", "Koning Boudewijn", "1998", "None" ], [ "2", "Heysel", "Heizel", "1985", "Line 7" ], [ "3", "Houba-Brugmann", "Houba-Brugmann", "1985", "None" ], [ "4", "Stuyvenbergh", "Stuyvenbergh", "1985", "None" ], [ "5", "Bockstael", "Bockstael", "1982", "None" ], [ "6", "Pannenhuis", "Pannenhuis", "1982", "None" ], [ "7", "Belgica", "Belgica", "1982", "None" ], [ "8", "Simonis ( Leopold II )", "Simonis ( Leopold II )", "1982", "Line 2" ], [ "9", "Osseghem", "Ossegem", "1982", "Line 2" ], [ "10", "Beekkant", "Beekkant", "1981", "Line 1 , Line 2 , Line 5" ], [ "11", "Gare de l'Ouest", "Weststation", "1982", "Belgian Rail , Line 1 , Line 2 , Line 5" ], [ "12", "Delacroix", "Delacroix", "2006", "Line 2" ], [ "13", "Clemenceau", "Clemenceau", "1993", "Line 2" ], [ "14", "Gare du Midi", "Zuidstation", "1988", "Belgian Rail , Thalys , Eurostar , ICE , Line 2 , Line 3 , Line 4" ], [ "15", "Porte de Hal", "Hallepoort", "1988", "Line 2" ], [ "16", "Hôtel des Monnaies", "Munthof", "1988", "Line 2" ], [ "17", "Louise", "Louiza", "1988", "Line 2" ], [ "18", "Porte de Namur", "Naamsepoort", "1988", "Line 2" ], [ "19", "Trône", "Troon", "1988", "Line 2" ], [ "20", "Arts-Loi", "Kunst-Wet", "1988", "Line 1 , Line 2 , Line 5" ] ]
{ "intro": "This list of Brussels metro and premetro stations includes all the underground stations in the Brussels metro and premetro network, arranged by line. The premetro refers to sections of the Brussels tramway network which run underground and at metro frequency.", "section_text": "[ vte ] Brussels Metro line 6 Legend Westbound Eastbound Roi Baudouin/Koning Boudewijn 7 Heysel/Heizel Premetro lines Houba-Brugmann Stuyvenbergh Bockstael Pannenhuis Belgica Simonis ( L.II ) / ( E. ) Ribaucourt Yser/IJzer Osseghem/Ossegem Rogier 34 51 Beekkant Botanique/Kruidtuin Madou 51 Brussels-West1 Arts-Loi/Kunst-Wet 51 1Gare de l'Ouest/ Weststation Trône/Troon Delacroix Porte de Namur/Naamsepoort Louise/Louiza Clemenceau Hôtel des Monnaies/Munthof 34 Brussels-South2 Porte de Hal/Hallepoort 34 2Gare du Midi/Zuidstation Line 6 replaces the former Line 1A between Beekkant and King Baudouin since 4 April 2009 . It also runs under the Brussels small ring as does Line 2 .", "section_title": "Line 6", "title": "List of Brussels Metro stations", "uid": "List_of_Brussels_Metro_stations_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Brussels_Metro_stations" }
6,872
6873
Storylines_of_Shortland_Street_3
[ [ "Date", "Bride", "Groom", "Notes" ], [ "9 September 1992", "May McKenna", "George Bently", "Michael believed George was marrying his mother for her money , however , this was not the case" ], [ "1993", "Carrie Burton", "Declan Kennedy", "Off-screen wedding that took place in Las Vegas" ], [ "1993 ( 1 )", "Alex McKenna", "Michael McKenna", "Vow renewal to celebrate their reconciliation" ], [ "10 November 1993", "Leonard Dodds", "Gina Rossi", "" ], [ "8 December 1993", "Talita Palele", "Sam Aleni", "The two married so their families could not split them apart" ], [ "14 September 1994", "Marjorie Neilson", "Laurie Brasch", "A mixed-faith ceremony presided over by a Catholic priest but containing the Jewish rite of Breaking the glass" ], [ "10 January 1995", "Kirsty Knight", "Lionel Skeggins", "Second attempt at a wedding" ], [ "1995", "Carla Crozier", "Bernie Leach", "Offscreen wedding" ], [ "24 July 1995", "Rachel McKenna", "Nick Harrison", "A marriage of convenience in order to benefit from student income while at university" ], [ "25 December 1995 ( 1 )", "Carmen Roberts", "Guy Warner", "After Carmen seemingly survived a truck crash the night before , Carmen and Guy agreed that they would never legally marry and made personal vows to each other instead . Sadly Carmen died from an undiagnosed brain hemorrhage mere moments later" ], [ "14 February 1996", "Tiffany Pratt", "Chris Warner", "" ], [ "1997 ( approx )", "Alison Raynor", "Chris Warner", "Off screen wedding in the States" ], [ "28 May 1997", "Ellen Crozier", "David Kearney", "The marriage marked the shows 5th anniversary" ], [ "24 July 1997", "Jenny Harrison", "Ian Seymour", "" ], [ "20 February 1998", "Tiffany Pratt", "Johnny Marinovich", "" ], [ "11 March 1999", "Mackenzie Choat", "Lionel Skeggins", "Groom was presumed lost at sea hours after the wedding" ], [ "1999 ( 1 )", "Josie Bergman", "Luke Billingham", "Took personal and private vows to each other since they were unable to legally wed" ], [ "18 June 1999", "Josie Bergman", "Luke Billingham", "This was the couple 's legal wedding" ], [ "1999", "Rachel McKenna", "Daniel Buchanan", "Married off-screen in the states" ], [ "7 April 2000", "Moira Crombie", "Dean Cochrane", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "N/A", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Marriages -- Marriages", "title": "Storylines of Shortland Street", "uid": "Storylines_of_Shortland_Street_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storylines_of_Shortland_Street" }
6,873
6874
2013_Bangladesh_Premier_League_player_auction_0
[ [ "Player", "Team", "Winning bid", "Base price" ], [ "Shakib Al Hasan", "Dhaka Gladiators", "$ 365,000", "$ 50,000" ], [ "Imran Nazir", "Chittagong Kings", "$ 280,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Shahid Afridi", "Dhaka Gladiators", "$ 275,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Nasir Hossain", "Rangpur Riders", "$ 208,137", "$ 30,000" ], [ "Azhar Mahmood", "Barisal Burners", "$ 206,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Mushfiqur Rahim", "Sylhet Royals", "$ 205,000", "$ 50,000" ], [ "Tamim Iqbal", "Duronto Rajshahi", "$ 165,000", "$ 50,000" ], [ "Sohag Gazi", "Sylhet Royals", "$ 141,000", "$ 30,000" ], [ "Mashrafe Mortaza", "Dhaka Gladiators", "$ 141,000", "$ 30,000" ], [ "Ziaur Rahman", "Duronto Rajshahi", "$ 137,000", "$ 30,000" ], [ "Mominul Haque", "Sylhet Royals", "$ 127,000", "$ 20,000" ], [ "Brad Hodge", "Barisal Burners", "$ 125,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Ravi Bopara", "Chittagong Kings", "$ 125,000", "$ 50,000" ], [ "Mahmudullah", "Chittagong Kings", "$ 125,000", "$ 50,000" ], [ "Anamul Haque", "Dhaka Gladiators", "$ 121,000", "$ 30,000" ], [ "Abul Hasan", "Duronto Rajshahi", "$ 121,000", "$ 20,000" ], [ "Enamul Haque Jr", "Chittagong Kings", "$ 120,000", "$ 20,000" ], [ "Saeed Ajmal", "Barisal Burners", "$ 115,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Dwayne Bravo", "Chittagong Kings", "$ 115,000", "$ 75,000" ], [ "Andre Russell", "Sylhet Royals", "$ 115,000", "$ 75,000" ] ]
{ "intro": "The players auction for the 2013 Bangladesh Premier League was held on December 20, 2012 at the Radisson Blu Water Garden Hotel, Dhaka. Domestic players were set a base price between $10,000 and $50,000, while international players were set a base price between $15,000 and $75,000.No Indian players included in 2013 BPL edition.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Sold players", "title": "2013 Bangladesh Premier League player auction", "uid": "2013_Bangladesh_Premier_League_player_auction_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_Bangladesh_Premier_League_player_auction" }
6,874
6875
List_of_submissions_to_the_29th_Academy_Awards_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film_0
[ [ "Submitting country", "Film title used in nomination", "Original title", "Language ( s )", "Director ( s )", "Result" ], [ "Denmark", "Qivitoq", "Qivitoq", "Danish", "Erik Balling", "Nominated" ], [ "France", "Gervaise", "Gervaise", "French", "René Clément", "Nominated" ], [ "West Germany", "The Captain of Köpenick", "Der Hauptmann von Köpenick", "German", "Helmut Käutner", "Nominated" ], [ "Italy", "La Strada", "La strada", "Italian", "Federico Fellini", "Won Academy Award" ], [ "Japan", "The Burmese Harp", "ビルマの竪琴 ( Biruma no tategoto )", "Japanese", "Kon Ichikawa", "Nominated" ], [ "Philippines", "Anak dalita", "Anak dalita", "Tagalog", "Lamberto V. Avellana", "Not Nominated" ], [ "Spain", "Afternoon of the Bulls", "Tarde de toros", "Spanish", "Ladislao Vajda", "Not Nominated" ], [ "Sweden", "The Staffan Stolle Story", "Ratataa", "Swedish", "Hasse Ekman", "Not Nominated" ] ]
{ "intro": "In 1956, the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) asked individual countries to submit their best films of the year for the inaugural Best Foreign Language Film Oscar. In previous years, the Foreign Language Oscar was not a regular award, and there were no nominees - a winner was simply announced at the Oscar ceremony. Eight countries from Western Europe and East Asia submitted films for consideration for the first award, and five of these were selected as Oscar nominees. The inaugural winner, Italy's La Strada, was announced at the Oscar ceremony, which took place on March 27, 1957.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Submissions", "title": "List of submissions to the 29th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film", "uid": "List_of_submissions_to_the_29th_Academy_Awards_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_submissions_to_the_29th_Academy_Awards_for_Best_Foreign_Language_Film" }
6,875
6876
Russia_in_the_Junior_Eurovision_Song_Contest_0
[ [ "Year", "Artist", "Song", "Language", "Place", "Points" ], [ "2005", "Vladislav Krutskikh", "Doroga k solntsu ( Дорога к солнцу )", "Russian", "9", "66" ], [ "2006", "Tolmachevy Twins", "Vesenniy jazz ( Весенний джаз )", "Russian", "1", "154" ], [ "2007", "Alexandra Golovchenko", "Otlichnitsa ( Отличница )", "Russian", "6", "105" ], [ "2008", "Mikhail Puntov", "Spit angel ( Спит ангел )", "Russian", "7", "73" ], [ "2009", "Ekaterina Ryabova", "Malenkiy prints ( Маленький принц )", "Russian", "2", "116" ], [ "2010", "Liza Drozd & Sasha Lazin", "Boy and Girl", "Russian , English", "2", "119" ], [ "2011", "Ekaterina Ryabova", "Romeo and Juliet", "Russian", "4", "99" ], [ "2012", "Lerika", "Sensation", "Russian , English", "4", "88" ], [ "2013", "Dayana Kirillova", "Dream On", "Russian", "4", "106" ], [ "2014", "Alisa Kozhikina", "Dreamer", "Russian , English", "5", "96" ], [ "2015", "Mikhail Smirnov", "Mechta ( Dream ) ( Мечта )", "Russian , English", "6", "80" ], [ "2016", "Water of Life Project", "Water of Life", "Russian , English", "4", "202" ], [ "2017", "Polina Bogusevich", "Wings", "Russian , English", "1", "188" ], [ "2018", "Anna Filipchuk", "Unbreakable", "Russian , English", "10", "122" ], [ "2019", "Tatyana Mezhentseva and Denberel Oorzhak", "A Time for Us", "Russian , English", "13", "72" ] ]
{ "intro": "Russia first competed in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2005. Their first win came in 2006, when the Tomachevy Twins won for Russia with Vesenniy Jazz. Their second win came in 2017, when Polina Bogusevich won for Russia with Wings. Their worst result as of date has been achieved by Tatyana Mezhentseva and Denberel Oorzhak with the song A Time for Us in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019 where they placed 13th. RTR has represented Russia at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. The broadcaster has selected Ekaterina Ryabova to represent Russia at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2009 in Kiev with the song Malenkiy prints. Ekaterina Ryabova represented Russia once again in 2011 with the song Kak Romeo i Dzhulyetta. She was also the first returning artist in the history of the Junior Eurovision.", "section_text": "Here is a list of all and songs and their respective performers that have represented Russia in the contest : [ 2 ] Table key Winner Second place Third place Last place", "section_title": "Contestants", "title": "Russia in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest", "uid": "Russia_in_the_Junior_Eurovision_Song_Contest_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia_in_the_Junior_Eurovision_Song_Contest" }
6,876
6877
1952_Yugoslav_Second_League_0
[ [ "Team", "Location", "Federal subject", "Position in 1950" ], [ "Budućnost", "Titograd", "SR Montenegro", "003 3rd" ], [ "Dinamo Pančevo", "Pančevo", "SAP Vojvodina", "009 9th" ], [ "Kvarner", "Rijeka", "SR Croatia", "010 10th" ], [ "Metalac Zagreb", "Zagreb", "SR Croatia", "006 6th" ], [ "Napredak", "Kruševac", "SR Serbia", "N/A" ], [ "Odred Ljubljana", "Ljubljana", "SR Slovenia", "008 8th" ], [ "Proleter Osijek", "Osijek", "SR Croatia", "007 7th" ], [ "Radnički Belgrade", "Belgrade", "SR Serbia", "005 5th" ], [ "Rudar Trbovlje", "Trbovlje", "SR Slovenia", "014 14th" ], [ "Sloga", "Rankovićevo", "SR Serbia", "N/A" ], [ "Spartak", "Subotica", "SAP Vojvodina", "N/A" ], [ "Velež", "Mostar", "SR Bosnia and Herzegovina", "004 4th" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1952 Yugoslav Second League season would be the 6th season of the Second Federal League (Serbo-Croatian: Druga savezna liga), the second level association football competition of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946. It was cancelled before the start of the competition and the clubs were relocated to third level.", "section_text": "A total of twelve teams were supposed to contest the league , including nine sides from the 1951 season , two clubs relegated from the 1951 Yugoslav First League and one side promoted from the third tier leagues played in the 1951 season . Spartak Subotica and Napredak Kruševac were relegated from the 1951 Yugoslav First League after finishing in the 11th and 12th place of the league table . Rudar Trbovlje and Sloga Rankovićevo secured their status after additional play-off . BelgradeLjubljanaMostarOsijekPančevoRijekaZagrebTitogradTrbovljeSuboticaKruševacRankovićevo Locations of teams ' home cities in the 1952 Yugoslav Second League", "section_title": "Teams", "title": "1952 Yugoslav Second League", "uid": "1952_Yugoslav_Second_League_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1952_Yugoslav_Second_League" }
6,877
6878
Men's_10,000_metres_world_record_progression_0
[ [ "Time", "Athlete", "Date", "Place" ], [ "39:25.0", "Gertrud Schmidt ( GER )", "1966", "?" ], [ "39:10.0", "Hannelore Middeke ( GER )", "1966", "?" ], [ "38:06.4", "Ann O'Brien ( IRL )", "1967-03-26", "Gormanstown , Ireland" ], [ "35:30.5", "Paola Pigni ( ITA )", "1970-05-09", "Milan , Italy" ], [ "34:51.0", "Kathy Gibbons ( USA )", "1971-06-12", "Phoenix , United States" ], [ "35:00.4", "Julie Brown ( USA )", "1975-03-29", "Los Angeles , United States" ], [ "34:01.4", "Christa Vahlensieck ( FRG )", "1975-08-20", "Wolfsburg , Germany" ], [ "33:34.2", "Loa Olafsson ( DEN )", "1977-03-19", "Hvidovre , Denmark" ], [ "33:15.09", "Peg Neppel ( USA )", "1977-06-09", "Los Angeles , United States" ], [ "32:43.2", "Natalia Mărăşescu ( ROM )", "1978-01-22", "Băile Felix , Romania" ], [ "32:45.40", "Loa Olafsson ( DEN )", "1978-04-06", "Copenhagen , Denmark" ], [ "32:30.80", "Olga Krentser ( URS )", "1981-08-07", "Moscow , Soviet Union" ] ]
{ "intro": "The official world records in the 10,000 metres are held by Kenenisa Bekele with 26:17.53 minutes for men and Almaz Ayana from Ethiopia with 29:17.45 minutes for women. The first world record in the men's 10,000 metres was recognized by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1912. The first ratified record, Jean Bouin's time of 30:58.8 minutes, had been run the year before. As of June 21, 2009, 37 men's world records have been ratified by the IAAF in the event. The first world record in the women's 10,000 metres was recognized by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1981. As of June 21, 2009, eight women's world records have been ratified by the IAAF in the event. Before the event was recognised by the IAAF as an official world record event the 3000 metres was the most common international women's long-distance track event, although women did sometimes compete over 10,000 m before its addition to the World Championships and Olympic programme in 1987 and 1988, respectively.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Women -- Pre-recognition", "title": "10,000 metres world record progression", "uid": "Men's_10,000_metres_world_record_progression_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10,000_metres_world_record_progression" }
6,878
6879
Arabic_script_0
[ [ "Alphabet", "# Chars", "Languages", "Region", "Derived from" ], [ "Arabic alphabet", "28", "Arabic", "North Africa , West Asia", "Aramaic alphabet , Syriac alphabet , Nabataean alphabet" ], [ "Ajami script", "33", "Hausa language , Swahili", "West Africa", "Arabic" ], [ "Arebica", "30", "Bosnian", "Southeastern Europe", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Arwi alphabet", "41", "Tamil", "Southern India , Sri Lanka", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Belarusian Arabic alphabet", "32", "Belarusian", "Eastern Europe", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Berber Arabic alphabet ( s )", "", "various Berber languages", "North Africa", "Arabic" ], [ "Chagatai alphabet ( s )", "32", "Chagatai", "Central Asia", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Galal alphabet", "32", "Somali", "Horn of Africa", "Arabic" ], [ "Jawi script", "36", "Malay", "Peninsular Malay", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Kashmiri alphabet", "44", "Kashmiri", "South Asia", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Kazakh Arabic alphabet", "35", "Kazakh", "Central Asia , China", "Perso-Arabic/Chagatai" ], [ "Khowar alphabet", "60", "Khowar", "South Asia", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Kyrgyz Arabic alphabet", "33", "Kyrgyz", "", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Kuryan alphabet", "44", "Korean language", "East Asia , South Korea", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Nasta'liq script", "", "Urdu and others", "", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Pashto alphabet", "45", "Pashto", "Afghanistan and Pakistan", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Pegon alphabet", "35", "Javanese , Sundanese", "Indonesia", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Persian alphabet", "32", "Persian", "Iran", "Arabic" ], [ "Saraiki alphabet", "45", "Saraiki", "Pakistan", "Perso-Arabic" ], [ "Shahmukhi script", "37", "Punjabi", "Pakistan", "Perso-Arabic" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Arabic script is a writing system used for writing Arabic and several other languages of Asia and Africa, such as Persian, Kurdish, Azerbaijani, Sindhi, Balochi, Pashto, Lurish, Urdu and Mandinka. Until the 16th century, it was also used to write some texts in Spanish. Additionally, prior to the language reform in 1928, it was the writing system of Turkish. It is the second-most widely used writing system in the world by the number of countries using it and the third by the number of users, after Latin and Chinese characters. The Arabic script is written from right to left in a cursive style. In most cases, the letters transcribe consonants or consonants and a few vowels, so most Arabic alphabets are abjads. The script was first used to write texts in Arabic, most notably the Qurʼān, the holy book of Islam. With the spread of Islam, it came to be used as the primary script for many language families, leading to the addition of new letters and other symbols, with some versions, such as Kurdish, Uyghur and old Bosnian being abugidas or true alphabets. It is also the basis for the tradition of Arabic calligraphy.", "section_text": "Most Common Non-Classical Arabic Consonant Phonemes/Graphemes Language Family Austron . Dravid Turkic Indic ( Indo-European ) Iranian ( Indo-European ) Arabic ( Semitic ) Language/Script Jawi Pegon Arwi Uyghur Sindhi Punjabi Urdu Persian Balochi Kurdish Pashto Moroccan Tunisian Algerian Hejazi Najdi Egyptian Palestinian Iraqi Gulf /p/ ڤ‎ ڣ‎ پ‎ پ‎ / ب‎ /g/ ݢ‎ ࢴ‎ گ‎ ګ‎ ڭ‎ / گ‎ ڨ‎ / ڧـ ـڧـ ـٯ‎ / ق‎ ق‎ ج‎ چ‎ / ج‎ گ‎ / ك‎ ق / گ‎ /t͡ʃ/ چ‎ Ø چ‎ ڜ‎ تش‎ چ‎ /v/ ۏ‎ ف‎ و‎ ۋ‎ و‎ Ø ڤ‎ Ø ڥ‎ / ڢ‎ / ف‎ ڤ‎ / ف‎ /ʒ/ Ø ژ‎ Ø ژ‎ its usage depends on the dialect /ŋ/ ڠ‎ ࢳ‎ ڭ‎ ڱ‎ ں‎ ن‎ Ø Ø /ɳ/ Ø Ø ڹ‎ Ø ڻ‎ Ø ڼ‎ Ø /ɲ/ ڽ‎ ۑ‎ ݧ‎ Ø Ø Ø ٻ‎ – B̤ē , used to represent a voiced bilabial implosive /ɓ/ in Hausa , Sindhi and Saraiki . پ‎ – Pe , used to represent the phoneme /p/ in Persian , Pashto , Khowar , Sindhi , Urdu , Kurdish ; it is not used in most Arabic varieties ( except Mesopotamian and Gulf ) and it is normalized as /b/ ; e.g. , pepsi > bibsi . ݐ‎ – used to represent the equivalent of the Latin letter Ƴ ( palatalized glottal stop /ʔʲ/ ) in some African languages such as Fulfulde . ڀ‎ – represents an aspirated voiced bilabial plosive /bʱ/ in Sindhi . ٺ‎ – Ṭhē , represents the aspirated voiceless retroflex plosive /ʈʰ/ in Sindhi . ټ‎ – ṭē , used to represent the phoneme /ʈ/ in Pashto . ٽ‎ – Ṭe , used to represent the phoneme ( a voiceless retroflex plosive /ʈ/ ) in Sindhi ﭦ‎ – Ṭe , used to represent Ṭ ( a voiceless retroflex plosive /ʈ/ ) in Urdu . ٿ‎ – Teheh , used in Sindhi and Rajasthani ( when written in Sindhi alphabet ) ; used to represent the phoneme /t͡ɕʰ/ ( pinyin q ) in Chinese Xiao'erjing . ڄ‎ – represents the `` ц '' voiceless dental affricate /t͡s/ phoneme in Bosnian . ڃ‎ – represents the `` ћ '' voiceless alveolo-palatal affricate /t͡ɕ/ phoneme in Bosnian . چ‎ – Che , used to represent /t͡ʃ/ ( `` ch '' ) . It is used in Persian , Pashto , Urdu and Kurdish . /ʒ/ in Egypt . څ‎ – Ce , used to represent the phoneme /t͡s/ in Pashto . ݗ‎ – represents the `` ђ '' voiced alveolo-palatal affricate /d͡ʑ/ phoneme in Bosnian . ځ‎ – źim , used to represent the phoneme /d͡z/ in Pashto . ݙ‎ – used in Saraiki to represent a Voiced alveolar implosive /ɗ̢/ . ڊ‎ – used in Saraiki to represent a voiced retroflex implosive /ᶑ/ . ڈ‎ – Ḍal , used to represent a Ḍ ( a voiced retroflex plosive /ɖ/ ) in Urdu . ڌ‎ – Dhal used to represent the phoneme /d̪ʱ/ in Sindhi ډ‎ – Ḍal , used to represent the phoneme /ɖ/ in Pashto . ڑ‎ – Ṛe , represents a retroflex flap /ɽ/ in Urdu . ړ‎ – `` ṛe '' represents a retroflex lateral flap in Pashto . ݫ‎ – used in Ormuri to represent a voiced alveolo-palatal fricative /ʑ/ , as well as in Torwali . ژ‎ – Že/zhe , used to represent the voiced postalveolar fricative /ʒ/ in , Persian , Pashto , Kurdish , Urdu , Punjabi and Uyghur . ږ‎ – ǵe / ẓ̌e , used to represent the phoneme /ʐ/ /ɡ/ /ʝ/ in Pashto . ڕ‎ – used in Kurdish to represent rr /r/ in Soranî dialect . ݭ‎ – used in Kalami to represent a voiceless retroflex fricative /ʂ/ , and in Ormuri to represent a voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative /ɕ/ . ݜ‎ – used in Shina to represent a voiceless retroflex fricative /ʂ/ . ښ‎ – x̌īn /ṣ̌īn , used to represent the phoneme /x/ /ʂ/ /ç/ in Pashto . ڜ‎ — used to represent Spanish words with /t͡ʃ/ in Morocco . ڨ‎ – Ga , used to represent the voiced velar plosive /ɡ/ in Algerian and Tunisian . گ‎ – Gaf , represents a voiced velar plosive /ɡ/ in Persian , Pashto , Kyrgyz , Kazakh , Kurdish , Uyghur , Mesopotamian , Urdu and Ottoman Turkish . ګ‎ – Gaf , used to represent the phoneme /ɡ/ in Pashto . ݢ‎ or ڬ‎ – Gaf , represents a voiced velar plosive /ɡ/ in the Jawi script of Malay . ࢴ‎ – Gaf , represents a voiced velar plosive /ɡ/ in the Pegon script of Indonesian . ڭ‎ – Ng , used to represent the /ŋ/ phone in Ottoman Turkish , Kazakh , Kyrgyz , and Uyghur , and to represent the /ɡ/ in Morocco and in many dialects of Algerian . أي‎ – Ee , used to represent the phoneme /eː/ in Somali . ﺉ‎ – E , used to represent the phoneme /e/ in Somali . ىٓ‎ – Ii , used to represent the phoneme /iː/ in Somali and Saraiki . ؤ‎ – O , used to represent the phoneme /o/ in Somali . ې‎ – Pasta Ye , used to represent the phoneme /e/ in Pashto and Uyghur . ی‎ – Nārīna Ye , used to represent the phoneme [ ɑj ] and phoneme /j/ in Pashto . ۍ‎ – x̌əźīna ye Ye , used to represent the phoneme [ əi ] in Pashto . ئ‎ – FāiliyaYe , used to represent the phoneme [ əi ] and /j/ in Pashto and Saraiki . أو‎ – Oo , used to represent the phoneme /oː/ in Somali . ﻭٓ‎ – Uu , used to represent the phoneme /uː/ in Somali . ڳ‎ – represents a voiced velar implosive /ɠ/ in Sindhi and Saraiki ڱ‎ – represents the Velar nasal /ŋ/ phoneme in Sindhi . ﮎ‎ – Khē , represents /kʰ/ in Sindhi . ݣ – used to represent the phoneme /ŋ/ ( pinyin ng ) in Chinese . ڼ‎ – represents the retroflex nasal /ɳ/ phoneme in Pashto . ڻ‎ – represents the retroflex nasal /ɳ/ phoneme in Sindhi . ݨ‎ – used in Saraiki to represent /ɲ/ . ڽ‎ – Nya /ɲ/ in the Jawi script . ۑ‎ – Nya /ɲ/ in the Pegon script . ڠ‎ – Nga /ŋ/ in the Jawi script and Pegon script and Gain /g/ in Khowar alphabet . ڵ‎ – used in Kurdish to represent ll /ɫ/ in Soranî dialect . ݪ‎ – used in Marwari to represent a retroflex lateral flap /ɺ̢/ , and in Kalami to represent a voiceless lateral fricative /ɬ/ . ڥ‎ – Vi , used in Algerian and Tunisian when written in Arabic script to represent the sound /v/ . ڤ‎ – Ve , used in by some Arabic speakers to represent the phoneme /v/ in loanwords , and in the Kurdish language when written in Arabic script to represent the sound /v/ . Also used as pa /p/ in the Jawi script and Pegon script . ۏ‎ – Va in the Jawi script . ۋ‎ – represents a voiced labiodental fricative /v/ in Kyrgyz , Uyghur , and Old Tatar ; and /w , ʊw , ʉw/ in Kazakh ; also formerly used in Nogai . ۆ‎ – represents `` O '' /o/ in Kurdish , and in Uyghur it represents the sound similar to the French eu andœu /ø/ sound . It represents the `` у '' close back rounded vowel /u/ phoneme in Bosnian . ێ‎ – represents Ê or É /e/ in Kurdish . ھ‎ – Dochashmi he ( two-eyed hāʼ ) , used in combination to represent aspirated consonants /ʰ/ in Urdu . ے‎ – Baṛī ye ( 'big yāʼ ' ) , represents `` ai '' or `` e '' in Urdu /ɛː/ , /eː/ and Punjabi . ڞ – used to represent the phoneme /tsʰ/ ( pinyin c ) in Chinese . ط – used to represent the phoneme /t͡s/ ( pinyin z ) in Chinese . ۉ‎ – represents the `` o '' open-mid back rounded vowel /ɔ/ phoneme in Bosnian . ݩ‎ – represents the `` њ '' palatal nasal /ɲ/ phoneme in Bosnian . ڵ‎ – represents the `` љ '' palatal lateral approximant /ʎ/ phoneme in Bosnian . اٖى‎ – represents the `` и '' close front unrounded vowel /i/ phoneme in Bosnian .", "section_title": "Special letters", "title": "Arabic script", "uid": "Arabic_script_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_script" }
6,879
6880
2015_in_sports_5
[ [ "Date", "Sport", "Venue/Event", "Status", "Winner/s" ], [ "1-6", "Multi-sport", "2015 Games of the Small States of Europe", "International", "Iceland" ], [ "2-20", "Rugby union", "2015 World Rugby Under 20 Championship", "International", "New Zealand" ], [ "4", "Athletics", "Golden Gala", "International", "United States" ], [ "4-7", "3x3 ( basketball )", "2015 FIBA 3x3 U18 World Championships", "International", "Men : New Zealand Women : France" ], [ "5-16", "Multi-sport", "2015 Southeast Asian Games", "International", "Thailand" ], [ "5-13 September", "Basketball", "2015 WNBA season", "Domestic", "Eastern Conference ( WNBA ) : New York Liberty Western Conference ( WNBA ) : Minnesota Lynx" ], [ "6", "Association football", "2015 UEFA Champions League Final", "Continental", "Barcelona" ], [ "6", "Horse racing", "2015 Epsom Derby", "Domestic", "Horse : Golden Horn Jockey : Frankie Dettori Trainer : John Gosden" ], [ "6", "Horse racing", "2015 Belmont Stakes", "Domestic", "Horse : American Pharoah Jockey : Victor Espinoza Trainer : Bob Baffert Triple Crown winner" ], [ "6-11", "Fencing", "2015 European Fencing Championships", "Continental", "Italy , Russia , and France ( 3 gold medals ) Overall : Italy" ], [ "6-14", "Weightlifting", "2015 Junior World Weightlifting Championships", "International", "China" ], [ "6-5 July", "Association football", "2015 FIFA Women 's World Cup", "International", "United States" ], [ "7", "Athletics", "British Grand Prix ( Birmingham )", "International", "Kenya" ], [ "7", "Formula One", "2015 Canadian Grand Prix", "International", "Lewis Hamilton ( Mercedes )" ], [ "7-14", "Amateur boxing", "2015 ASBC Asian Confederation Junior Boxing Championships", "Continental", "Uzbekistan" ], [ "8-10", "Baseball", "2015 Major League Baseball Draft", "Domestic", "# 1 pick : Dansby Swanson ( to the Arizona Diamondbacks from Vanderbilt )" ], [ "8-14", "Archery", "2015 World Archery Youth Championships", "International", "South Korea" ], [ "9-14", "Water polo", "2015 FINA Women 's Water Polo World League", "International", "United States" ], [ "11", "Athletics", "Bislett Games", "International", "Kenya" ], [ "11-14", "Golf", "Senior Players Championship", "International", "Bernhard Langer" ] ]
{ "intro": "2015 in sports describes the year's events in world sport. This year, some sporting events listed below are qualifying ones, for athletes, to compete at the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro. From July 2015 to May 2016, the venues for the 2016 Summer Olympics and Paralympics will be tested, by hosting various events in them.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Calendar by month -- June", "title": "2015 in sports", "uid": "2015_in_sports_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015_in_sports" }
6,880
6881
IG_postcode_area_0
[ [ "Postcode district", "Post town", "Coverage", "Local authority area" ], [ "IG1", "ILFORD", "Ilford , Cranbrook , Loxford", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG2", "ILFORD", "Gants Hill , Newbury Park , Aldborough Hatch", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG3", "ILFORD", "Seven Kings , Goodmayes", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG4", "ILFORD", "Redbridge", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG5", "ILFORD", "Clayhall", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG6", "ILFORD", "Barkingside , Fullwell Cross , Hainault ( south ) , Fairlop", "Redbridge" ], [ "IG7", "CHIGWELL", "Chigwell , Chigwell Row , Hainault ( north )", "Epping Forest , Redbridge" ], [ "IG8", "WOODFORD GREEN", "Woodford Green , Woodford Bridge , Highams Park ( part )", "Redbridge , Waltham Forest" ], [ "IG9", "BUCKHURST HILL", "Buckhurst Hill", "Epping Forest" ], [ "IG10", "LOUGHTON", "Loughton , High Beach ( part )", "Epping Forest" ], [ "IG11", "BARKING", "Barking , Creekmouth", "Barking and Dagenham" ] ]
{ "intro": "The IG postcode area, also known as the Ilford postcode area, is a group of 11 postcode districts in England, which are subdivisions of six post towns. These cover parts of east London and southwest Essex. The area served includes much of the London Borough of Redbridge, the western part of the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham (namely Barking) and the southwestern part of the Epping Forest district of Essex, while the western part of IG8 covers a small part of the London Borough of Waltham Forest. The 'IG' is used instead of 'IL', as the latter could be confused with 'L11-L19' or 'LL1-9'. G was chosen in preference to J (or F as within the word Ilford) to reflect Chigwell and Barking in its area. Mail is assigned to local Delivery Offices at Romford along with the E and RM postcode area mail.", "section_text": "The approximate coverage of the postcode districts :", "section_title": "Coverage", "title": "IG postcode area", "uid": "IG_postcode_area_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IG_postcode_area" }
6,881
6882
Washington_Wizards_draft_history_0
[ [ "Year", "Round", "Pick", "Name", "From" ], [ "2019", "1", "9", "Rui Hachimura", "Gonzaga University" ], [ "2018", "1", "15", "Troy Brown Jr", "University of Oregon" ], [ "2018", "2", "44", "Issuf Sanon", "Olimpija Ljubljana ( Slovenia )" ], [ "2015", "1", "19", "Jerian Grant", "University of Notre Dame" ], [ "2015", "2", "49", "Aaron White", "University of Iowa" ], [ "2014", "2", "46", "Jordan Clarkson", "University of Missouri" ], [ "2013", "1", "3", "Otto Porter", "Georgetown University" ], [ "2013", "2", "54", "Arsalan Kazemi", "University of Oregon" ], [ "2012", "1", "3", "Bradley Beal", "University of Florida" ], [ "2012", "2", "32", "Tomáš Satoranský", "Banca Cívica ( Spain )" ], [ "2011", "1", "6", "Jan Veselý", "Partizan ( Serbia )" ], [ "2011", "1", "18", "Chris Singleton", "Florida State University" ], [ "2011", "2", "34", "Shelvin Mack", "Butler University" ], [ "2010", "1", "1", "John Wall", "University of Kentucky" ], [ "2010", "1", "30", "Lazar Hayward", "Marquette University" ], [ "2010", "2", "35", "Nemanja Bjelica", "Red Star Belgrade ( Serbia )" ], [ "2009", "2", "32", "Jermaine Taylor", "University of Central Florida" ], [ "2008", "1", "18", "JaVale McGee", "University of Nevada , Reno" ], [ "2008", "2", "47", "Henry Walker", "Kansas State University" ], [ "2007", "1", "16", "Nick Young", "University of Southern California" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Washington Wizards (formerly known as the Chicago Packers, the Chicago Zephyrs, the Baltimore Bullets, the Capital Bullets, and the Washington Bullets) have selected the following players in the National Basketball Association Draft.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "As Washington Wizards ( 1997–present )", "title": "Washington Wizards draft history", "uid": "Washington_Wizards_draft_history_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Wizards_draft_history" }
6,882
6883
ADX_Florence_0
[ [ "Inmate name", "Register number", "Status", "Details" ], [ "Zacarias Moussaoui", "51427-054", "Serving 6 life sentences", "French citizen and Al-Qaeda operative , pleaded guilty to terrorism conspiracy charges in 2005 for playing a key role in planning the September 11 attacks by helping the hijackers obtain flight lessons , money and material used in the attacks" ], [ "Ramzi Yousef", "03911-000", "Serving life plus 240 years", "Convicted in 1994 of terrorism conspiracy and other charges in connection with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing , which killed 6 people and injured more than 1,000 . Yousef was also convicted in 1996 of planning Project Bojinka , a foiled plot conceived by senior Al-Qaeda member Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to bomb twelve planes in a 48-hour period" ], [ "Wadih el-Hage Khalfan Mohamed Khalid al-Fawwaz", "42393-054 44623-054 67497-054", "Serving life sentences", "Al-Qaeda operatives from Lebanon , Tanzania , Kuwait and Saudi Arabia ; convicted in connection with the 1998 United States embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania , Africa , which were conceived by Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden ; the bombings killed 224 people and injured more than 4,000" ], [ "Abu Hamza al-Masri", "67495-054", "Serving a life sentence under the name Mustafa Kamel Mustafa", "Egyptian cleric and former associate of deceased Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden ; extradited from the UK in 2012 ; convicted in 2014 of masterminding the 1998 kidnapping of Westerners in Yemen and conspiring to establish a terrorist training camp in Oregon in 1999" ], [ "Richard Reid", "24079-038", "Serving 3 life sentences plus 110 years", "British national who became an Al-Qaeda operative ; pleaded guilty in 2002 to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction in connection with his 2001 attempt to detonate explosive devices hidden in his shoes on a plane traveling from Paris to Miami ; known as the Shoe Bomber" ], [ "Umar Abdulmutallab", "44107-039", "Serving 4 life sentences plus 50 years", "A Nigerian national and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula operative , follower of the late militant cleric Anwar al-Awlaki ; pleaded guilty in 2011 to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction for trying to detonate an explosive sewn into his underwear on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day 2009 ; known as the Underwear Bomber" ], [ "Ahmed Ressam", "29638-086", "Serving a 37-year sentence ; scheduled for release on December 16 , 2032", "Algerian national convicted in 2001 of terrorism conspiracy for planning to bomb Los Angeles International Airport on December 31 , 1999 , in what is known as one of the 2000 millennium attack plots" ], [ "Simón Trinidad", "27896-016", "Serving a 60-year sentence under the name Juvenal Ovidio Palmera Pineda ; scheduled for release on April 10 , 2056", "Member of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia ( FARC ) , a guerrilla group on the U.S. State Department list of Terrorist Organizations ; convicted in 2007 of terrorism conspiracy for his involvement in the 2003 kidnapping of three American military contractors" ], [ "Adis Medunjanin", "65114-053", "Serving a life sentence", "Al-Qaeda operative ; convicted in 2012 of plotting to conduct coordinated suicide bombings in the New York City subway system in September 2009 ; co-conspirators Najibullah Zazi and Zarein Ahmedzay pleaded guilty" ], [ "Sulaiman Abu Ghaith", "91969-054", "Serving a life sentence", "Al-Qaeda spokesman and son-in-law to Osama Bin Laden . Convicted in March 2014 for conspiring to kill Americans and providing material support to terrorists" ], [ "Mamdouh Mahmud Salim", "42426-054", "Serving a life sentence", "Al-Qaeda co-founder and advisor to Osama Bin Laden . Extradited in 1998 for participating in the U.S. Embassy bombings and sentenced to life in prison for attempted murder during an escape attempt in 2000" ], [ "Shain Duka", "61284-066", "Serving a life sentence", "Convicted in 2008 for conspiring to kill members of the Army at the Fort Dix , New Jersey , army base . His two brothers were also convicted : Eljvir Duka , who is being held at USP Hazelton and Dritan Duka , who is being held at USP Marion" ] ]
{ "intro": "The United States Penitentiary, Administrative Maximum Facility (USP Florence ADMAX) is an American federal prison that provides a higher level of custody than a maximum security prison. It is classed as a supermax or control unit prison, where the safety of inmates and staff is paramount. It is located in unincorporated Fremont County, Colorado, near Florence, and opened in 1994, and it is informally known as the Alcatraz of the Rockies. The Federal Bureau of Prisons needed a unit designed specifically for the secure housing of those prisoners most capable of violence toward staff or other inmates. As of December 2019[update], there are 376 prisoners who spend 23 hours per day in single cells with facilities made of poured concrete to deter self-harm, and 24-hour supervision, carried out intensively with high staff-inmate ratios. Phones are generally banned and only limited broadcast entertainment is permitted. After three years in maximum confinement, some prisoners may be transferred to a less restrictive prison. The aim is to encourage reasonably peaceful behavior from the most violent career prisoners.", "section_text": "This list contains foreign citizens who committed or attempted to commit terrorist attacks against United States citizens and interests . All sentences are without parole .", "section_title": "Notable current inmates -- Foreign terrorists", "title": "ADX Florence", "uid": "ADX_Florence_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADX_Florence" }
6,883
6884
List_of_long_tunnels_by_type_0
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Length in km ( mi )", "Year Completed", "Line" ], [ "Gotthard Base Tunnel", "Switzerland ( Alps )", "57.1 km ( 35.5 mi )", "2016", "Gotthardbahn Luzern / Zürich - Milan" ], [ "Seikan Tunnel", "Japan ( Tsugaru Strait )", "53.9 ( 33.5 )", "1988", "Kaikyo Line ( Hokkaidō Shinkansen )" ], [ "Channel Tunnel", "France/United Kingdom ( English Channel )", "50.5 ( 31.3 )", "1994", "Channel Tunnel" ], [ "Yulhyeon Tunnel", "South Korea ( Gyeonggi )", "50.3 km ( 31.3 mi )", "2016", "Suseo High Speed Railway" ], [ "Songshan Lake Tunnel", "China ( Dongguan )", "35.391 km ( 22.0 mi )", "2016", "Dongguan-Huizhou Intercity Railway" ], [ "Lötschberg Base Tunnel", "Switzerland ( Bernese Alps )", "34.5 ( 21.4 )", "2007", "Lötschbergbahn Brig - Thun ( - Bern - Basel )" ], [ "New Guanjiao Tunnel", "China ( Qinghai )", "32.645 km ( 20.3 mi ) , 2 tubes", "2014", "Qinghai-Tibet Railway" ], [ "Guadarrama Tunnel", "Spain ( Sierra de Guadarrama )", "28.4 km ( 17.6 mi )", "2007", "LAV Madrid - Valladolid" ], [ "West Qinling Tunnel", "China ( Gansu )", "28.236 km ( 17.5 mi ) & 28.236 km ( 17.5 mi ) , 2 tubes", "2016", "Qinghai-Tibet Railway" ], [ "Taihang Tunnel", "China ( Shanxi )", "27.848 km ( 17.304 mi ) & 27.839 km ( 17.298 mi ) , 2 tubes", "2007", "Shijiazhuang-Taiyuan High-Speed Railway" ], [ "Hakkōda Tunnel", "Japan ( Hakkōda Mountains )", "26.5 km ( 16.5 mi )", "2010", "Tōhoku Shinkansen" ], [ "XRL", "Hong Kong ( New Territories , New Kowloon and Kowloon )", "26 km ( 16 mi )", "2018", "Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link Hong Kong Section ( A further 4 km on the opposite side of the Hong Kong-China border . )" ], [ "Iwate-Ichinohe Tunnel", "Japan ( Ōu Mountains )", "25.8 ( 16.0 )", "2002", "Tōhoku Shinkansen" ], [ "Lainzer/Wienerwaldtunnel", "Austria ( Vienna )", "23.844 km ( 14.816 mi )", "2012", "West railway" ], [ "South Lüliangshan Tunnel [ zh ]", "China ( Shanxi )", "23.470 km ( 14.6 mi ) & 23.440 km ( 14.6 mi ) , 2 tubes", "2014", "Watang-Rizhao Railway" ] ]
{ "intro": "This page presents the same tunnels as in list of tunnels by length in separate lists according to the different tunnel types.", "section_text": "Main article : List of longest railway tunnels in the world", "section_title": "Rail", "title": "List of long tunnels by type", "uid": "List_of_long_tunnels_by_type_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_long_tunnels_by_type" }
6,884
6885
List_of_New_York_State_Historic_Markers_in_Warren_County,_New_York_0
[ [ "", "Marker name", "Location", "City or Town", "Marker text" ], [ "1", "Diamond Island", "On Diamond Island in L. George", "Bolton , New York", "In center of lake , military depot of Burgoyne 's Army , attacked , Sept. 1777 , by Americans under Col. Brown ; Later abandoned by enemy" ], [ "2", "Half Way Brook", "On US 9 At Northern End Of City", "Glens Falls , New York", "Midway between Fort Edward and Fort George . On this site about 1755 stood a blockhouse enclosed by a stockade" ], [ "3", "Pass to Trout Brook", "On NYS 8 & NYS 9N About 1 Mile North Of Hague", "Hague , New York", "Through This Pass To Trout Brook Was An Indian Trail Used By Robert Rogers After Battle On Snowshoes , 1758 , On Retreat To Ft. William Henry" ], [ "4", "Fort William Henry", "On Lake Front , L. George Vlge", "Lake George , New York", "Fort Wm . Henry 1755 Built By Sir Wm . Johnson 1757 After A Gallant Defense Col. Monroe In Command Surrendered To The French Under Gen. Montcalm" ], [ "5", "Montcalm 's Camp , 1757", "On US 9 At Lake George Vlge", "Lake George , New York", "On These Grounds Montcalm 's Army Camped During The Siege Of Fort Wm . Henry August 6-9 , 1757" ], [ "6", "The Hospital at Battle Of Lake George", "On State Reservation At Lake George Village", "Lake George , New York", "Many Wounded Soldiers And Some With Smallpox Were Cruelly Murdered By Indians Of Montcalm 's Army" ], [ "7", "Five Mile Run", "On US 9 About 2½ Miles North Of Glens Falls", "Queensbury , New York", "In French And Indian War This Run Was Avoided Because Of Fear Of Attack By Hidden Indians . Name Changed To Meadow Run 1808" ], [ "8", "Military Road", "On US 9 About 4½ Miles North Of Glens Falls", "Queensbury , New York", "Between Fort Edward And Lake George Built By Sir William Johnson During The Summer Of 1755" ], [ "9", "Oneida", "On NYS 9L About 3½ Miles North Of Glens Falls", "Queensbury , New York", "Named For Tom Hammond , A Half Breed Oneida Indian A Thriving Settlement Doing A Large Lumbering Business At Close Of Revolution" ], [ "10", "James Cameron", "On Co. Rd . About 5 Miles West Of Warrensburg", "Thurman , New York", "Pioneer Woodsman Farmer , Justice Of The Peace , Settled In This Valley In 1773 . Buried 100 Feet West Of This Marker" ], [ "11", "Weber Furlong", "The left side of City Hall on 42 Ridge Street Glens Falls , 12801 next to the Sidewalk", "Glens Falls , New York", "Weber Furlong ( 1878 - 1962 ) One of America 's great and influential artists of the twentieth century , Weber Furlong was among the first to champion the Modern art movement . The final years of her life were spent in Glens Falls , where she lived and taught near this site at her Ridge Street studio until her death in 1962 . Placed for the Warren County Bicentennial" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a complete list of New York State Historic Markers in Warren County, New York.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Listings county-wide", "title": "List of New York State Historic Markers in Warren County, New York", "uid": "List_of_New_York_State_Historic_Markers_in_Warren_County,_New_York_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_New_York_State_Historic_Markers_in_Warren_County,_New_York" }
6,885
6886
List_of_Icelandic_films_3
[ [ "Year", "Original title", "English title", "Director" ], [ "2000", "101 Reykjavík", "101 Reykjavík", "Baltasar Kormákur" ], [ "2000", "Englar alheimsins", "Angels of the Universe", "Friðrik Þór Friðriksson" ], [ "2000", "Ikíngut", "Ikíngut", "Gísli Snær Erlingsson" ], [ "2000", "Íslenski draumurinn", "The Icelandic Dream", "Róbert I. Douglas" ], [ "2000", "Dancer in the Dark", "Dancer in the Dark", "Lars von Trier" ], [ "2000", "Myrkrahöfðinginn", "Witchcraft", "Hrafn Gunnlaugsson" ], [ "2000", "Óskabörn þjóðarinnar", "Óskabörn þjóðarinnar", "Jóhann Sigmarsson" ], [ "2001", "Gæsapartí", "Gæsapartí", "Böðvar Bjarki Pétursson" ], [ "2001", "Lalli Johns", "Lalli Johns documentary", "Þorfinnur Guðnason" ], [ "2001", "Mávahlátur", "The Seagull 's Laughter", "Ágúst Guðmundsson" ], [ "2001*", "No Such Thing", "No Such Thing", "Hal Hartley 2001" ], [ "2001", "Málarinn og sálmurinn hans um litinn", "Málarinn og sálmurinn hans um litinn documentary", "Erlendur Sveinsson" ], [ "2001", "Villiljós", "Dramarama", "Dagur Kári Inga Lísa Middleton Ragnar Bragason Ásgrímur Sverrisson Einar Thor" ], [ "2002", "Fálkar", "Falcons", "Friðrik Þór Friðriksson" ], [ "2002", "Gemsar", "Cell", "Mikael Torfason" ], [ "2002", "Hafið", "The Sea", "Baltasar Kormákur" ], [ "2002", "Í faðmi hafsins", "Í faðmi hafsins", "Lýður Árnason Jóakim Reynisson" ], [ "2002", "Í skóm drekans", "In the Shoes of the Dragon documentary", "Hrönn Sveinsdóttir Árni Sveinsson" ], [ "2002", "Leitin að Rajeev", "Leitin að Rajeev documentary", "Birta Fróðadóttir Rúnar Rúnarsson" ], [ "2002", "Maður eins og ég", "A Man Like Me", "Róbert I. Douglas" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of notable films produced in Iceland by Icelanders. Star marked films are films in coproduction with Iceland. Although Arne Mattsson is Swedish, his film is included because it is based on a book by the Icelandic Nobel Prize-winning author Halldór Laxness.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "2000s", "title": "List of Icelandic films", "uid": "List_of_Icelandic_films_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Icelandic_films" }
6,886
6887
List_of_United_States_Army_airfields_2
[ [ "Airfield", "State", "Period of operation", "Current use" ], [ "Bruning Army Air Field", "Nebraska", "1942-1945", "Mid-America Feed Yard" ], [ "Courtland Army Airfield", "Alabama", "1942-1946", "Courtland Airport" ], [ "Dodd Army Airfield", "Texas", "1911-1945", "Fort Sam Houston" ], [ "Dodge City Army Air Field", "Kansas", "1942-1945", "Stanley Feed Yard" ], [ "Gardner Army Airfield", "California", "1941-1945", "Farmland" ], [ "George Field", "Illinois", "", "Lawrenceville-Vincennes International Airport" ], [ "Harris Neck Army Air Field", "Georgia", "1942-1944", "Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge" ], [ "Hobbs Army Airfield", "New Mexico", "1942-1948", "Hobbs Industrial Airpark" ], [ "Lemoore Army Air Field", "California", "1942-1945", "Farmland" ], [ "Lowry Army Airfield", "Colorado", "", "Housing" ], [ "Marfa Army Airfield", "Texas", "", "Marfa Municipal Airport" ], [ "McCook Army Air Field", "Nebraska", "", "Farmland" ], [ "Moore Army Airfield", "Massachusetts", "1929-1995", "State Police driver training facility" ], [ "Miller Field", "New York", "", "Park" ], [ "Muskogee Army Airfield", "Oklahoma", "", "Love-Hatbox Sports Complex" ], [ "Ross Army Airfield", "California", "", "Santa Anita Golf Course" ], [ "Waco Army Airfield", "Texas", "", "TSTC Waco Airport" ], [ "Walnut Ridge Army Air Field", "Arkansas", "1942-1944", "Walnut Ridge Regional Airport" ], [ "Blytheville Army Air Field", "Arkansas", "1942-1948", "Arkansas International Airport" ], [ "Newport Army Air Field", "Arkansas", "1942-1944", "Newport Municipal Airport" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of United States Army airfields.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Closed -- CONUS", "title": "List of United States Army airfields", "uid": "List_of_United_States_Army_airfields_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Army_airfields" }
6,887
6888
Euroleague_Rising_Star_0
[ [ "Season", "Rising Star", "Team" ], [ "2004-05", "Erazem Lorbek", "Climamio Bologna" ], [ "2005-06", "Andrea Bargnani", "Benetton Treviso" ], [ "2006-07", "Rudy Fernández", "DKV Joventut" ], [ "2007-08", "Danilo Gallinari", "Armani Jeans Milano" ], [ "2008-09", "Novica Veličković", "Partizan" ], [ "2009-10", "Ricky Rubio", "Regal FC Barcelona" ], [ "2010-11", "Nikola Mirotić", "Real Madrid" ], [ "2011-12", "Nikola Mirotić ( 2× )", "Real Madrid" ], [ "2012-13", "Kostas Papanikolaou", "Olympiacos" ], [ "2013-14", "Bogdan Bogdanović", "Partizan" ], [ "2014-15", "Bogdan Bogdanović ( 2× )", "Fenerbahçe Ülker" ], [ "2015-16", "Álex Abrines", "FC Barcelona Lassa" ], [ "2016-17", "Luka Dončić", "Real Madrid" ], [ "2017-18", "Luka Dončić ( 2× )", "Real Madrid" ], [ "2018-19", "Goga Bitadze", "Budućnost VOLI" ] ]
{ "intro": "The EuroLeague Rising Star in an annual award of the EuroLeague, which is the top-tier level European-wide professional club basketball league, that is given to the player the EuroLeague deems its top rising star. The award began in the 2004-05 season, and the winner is selected by the EuroLeague's head coaches. Only players who were younger than age 22, on July 1 of the summer before the season started, are eligible for the award.", "section_text": "Nikola Mirotić was the first repeat winner , doing so in 2011 & 2012 . Bogdan Bogdanović was a two-time EuroLeague Rising Star ( 2014 , 2015 ) . Luka Dončić was a repeat EuroLeague Rising Star in 2017 & 2018 .", "section_title": "Winners", "title": "EuroLeague Rising Star", "uid": "Euroleague_Rising_Star_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EuroLeague_Rising_Star" }
6,888
6889
Billy_Unger_0
[ [ "Year", "Title", "Role" ], [ "2007", "Seven 's Eleven : Sweet Toys", "Frankie" ], [ "2007", "National Treasure : Book of Secrets", "Charles Gates" ], [ "2008", "Rock Slyde", "Young Rock Slyde" ], [ "2008", "Crank : High Voltage", "Young Chev Chelios" ], [ "2008", "Cop Dog", "Robby North" ], [ "2008", "Opposite Day", "Sammuel Sammy Benson" ], [ "2010", "Jack and the Beanstalk", "Prince Charming" ], [ "2010", "Monster Mutt", "Zack Taylor" ], [ "2010", "A Turtle 's Tale : Sammy 's Adventures", "Hatchling Sammy" ], [ "2010", "You Again", "Ben Olsen" ], [ "2012", "The Lost Medallion : The Adventures of Billy Stone", "Billy Stone" ], [ "2018", "Paved New World", "Funch" ] ]
{ "intro": "William Brent Unger (born October 15, 1995) is an American actor. He is known for playing Chase on the Disney XD series Lab Rats and Lab Rats: Elite Force. Credited as Billy Unger before 2016, starting with Lab Rats: Elite Force he is credited as William Brent.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Filmography -- Film", "title": "Billy Unger", "uid": "Billy_Unger_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billy_Unger" }
6,889
6890
List_of_French-language_films_2
[ [ "Year", "French title", "English title", "Directed by" ], [ "1922", "La Belle au Bois Dormant", "", "Stéphane Passet" ], [ "1924", "L'heureuse Mort [ fr ]", "Happy Death", "Serge Nadejdine [ fr ]" ], [ "1924", "Âme d'artiste", "Heart of an Actress", "Germaine Dulac" ], [ "1925", "Visages d'enfants", "Faces of Children ; Mother ( UK )", "Jacques Feyder" ], [ "1928", "La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc", "The Passion of Joan of Arc", "Carl Theodor Dreyer" ], [ "1928", "L'Argent", "Money", "Marcel L'Herbier" ], [ "1929", "L'arpète [ fr ]", "", "Émile-Bernard Donatien" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of French-language films, films mostly spoken in the French language.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "1920s", "title": "List of French-language films", "uid": "List_of_French-language_films_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_French-language_films" }
6,890
6891
2011_Major_League_Soccer_season_0
[ [ "Team", "Head Coach", "Captain", "Kit manufacturer", "Shirt sponsor" ], [ "Chicago Fire", "Frank Klopas", "Logan Pause", "Adidas", "" ], [ "Chivas USA", "Robin Fraser", "Simon Elliott", "Adidas", "Corona" ], [ "Colorado Rapids", "Gary Smith", "Pablo Mastroeni", "Adidas", "" ], [ "Columbus Crew", "Robert Warzycha", "Chad Marshall", "Adidas", "" ], [ "D.C. United", "Ben Olsen", "Josh Wolff", "Adidas", "Volkswagen" ], [ "FC Dallas", "Schellas Hyndman", "Daniel Hernández", "Adidas", "" ], [ "Houston Dynamo", "Dominic Kinnear", "Brian Ching", "Adidas", "Greenstar" ], [ "Los Angeles Galaxy", "Bruce Arena", "Landon Donovan", "Adidas", "Herbalife" ], [ "New England Revolution", "Steve Nicol", "Shalrie Joseph", "Adidas", "UnitedHealthcare" ], [ "New York Red Bulls", "Hans Backe", "Thierry Henry", "Adidas", "Red Bull" ], [ "Philadelphia Union", "Piotr Nowak", "Faryd Mondragón", "Adidas", "Bimbo" ], [ "Portland Timbers", "John Spencer", "Jack Jewsbury", "Adidas", "Alaska Airlines" ], [ "Real Salt Lake", "Jason Kreis", "Kyle Beckerman", "Adidas", "XanGo" ], [ "San Jose Earthquakes", "Frank Yallop", "Ramiro Corrales", "Adidas", "Amway Global" ], [ "Seattle Sounders FC", "Sigi Schmid", "Kasey Keller", "Adidas", "Xbox" ], [ "Sporting Kansas City", "Peter Vermes", "Davy Arnaud", "Adidas", "" ], [ "Toronto FC", "Aron Winter", "Torsten Frings", "Adidas", "Bank of Montreal" ], [ "Vancouver Whitecaps FC", "Tom Soehn", "Jay DeMerit", "Adidas", "Bell Canada" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2011 Major League Soccer season was the 99th season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer, the 33rd with a national first-division league, in the United States and Canada, and the 16th season of Major League Soccer. The season marked the arrival of two new league clubs, Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps FC, whose cities previously had clubs of similar name play in the USSF D2 Pro League. Those two new West Coast clubs led to a realignment of the league's conferences, with Houston Dynamo moving to the Eastern Conference to create two conferences of nine teams each. Each team played a balanced 34-match regular season schedule, playing every team twice (once at home and once away). The regular season began on March 15, when the Los Angeles Galaxy defeated the Seattle Sounders FC 1-0 at Qwest Field, and concluded with the host Houston Dynamo defeating the Los Angeles Galaxy 3-1 on October 23 at Robertson Stadium. The season also featured the 2011 MLS All-Star Game on July 27, when Manchester United defeated the MLS All-Stars 4-0 at Red Bull Arena (hosted by the New York Red Bulls). The 2011 MLS Cup Playoffs ran from October 26 until November 20, when the Los Angeles Galaxy claimed their third MLS championship by defeating Houston Dynamo 1-0 in MLS Cup 2011 at Home Depot Center in Carson, California.", "section_text": "Both of the new teams to MLS received jersey sponsors , while several existing teams saw changes in jersey sponsorships for the 2011 season . Alaska Airlines signed on as the first MLS shirt sponsor for the Portland Timbers . Bell Canada became the first shirt sponsor for Vancouver Whitecaps FC in its MLS incarnation . Glidden declined to renew its jersey sponsorship of the Columbus Crew , [ 14 ] which has not yet found a replacement . Greenstar are the new shirt sponsor for the Houston Dynamo , [ 15 ] replacing Amigo Energy . Bimbo will serve as the first ever shirt sponsor for the Philadelphia Union . [ 16 ] Chivas USA continue to be sponsored by Grupo Modelo , but this sponsorship is now through its Corona beer brand , as opposed to the Extra convenience store brand as used in 2010 . [ 17 ] UnitedHealthcare became the first ever kit sponsor for New England Revolution . [ 18 ]", "section_title": "Teams -- Personnel and sponsoring", "title": "2011 Major League Soccer season", "uid": "2011_Major_League_Soccer_season_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_Major_League_Soccer_season" }
6,891
6892
2008_A_Lyga_0
[ [ "Club", "Location", "Stadium", "Capacity" ], [ "Atlantas", "Klaipėda", "Žalgiris Stadium", "5,000" ], [ "Ekranas", "Panevėžys", "Aukštaitija Stadium", "9,940" ], [ "FBK Kaunas", "Kaunas", "S.Dariaus ir S.Girėno Stadium", "8,500" ], [ "Sūduva", "Marijampolė", "Sūduva Stadium", "4,000" ], [ "Šiauliai", "Šiauliai", "Savivaldybė Stadium", "2,430" ], [ "Šilutė", "Šilutė", "Šilutė Stadium", "3,000" ], [ "Vėtra", "Vilnius", "Vėtra Stadium", "5,900" ], [ "Žalgiris", "Vilnius", "Žalgiris Stadium", "15,030" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Lithuanian A Lyga 2008 was the 19th season of top-tier football in Lithuania. The season started on 29 March 2008 and ended on 16 November 2008. The league had to reduce the number of its teams from ten to nine prior to this season due to lacking of team able to earn promotion (see below). Shortly before the start of the season, Vilnius withdrew from participating in the league because of unknown reasons, leaving the league with 8 competing teams.", "section_text": "KaunasAtlantasSūduvaEkranasŠiauliaiŠilutėVėtraŽalgiris Location of teams in the A Lyga 2008", "section_title": "Clubs", "title": "2008 A Lyga", "uid": "2008_A_Lyga_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008_A_Lyga" }
6,892
6893
List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni_18
[ [ "Name", "Degree ( s )", "Notability" ], [ "Elsa Alcala", "J.D", "Judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals , Place 8 ; former Houston prosecutor and state district and intermediate appeals judge" ], [ "Ben Barnes", "", "Former Texas speaker of the House ( 1965-1969 ) and Lieutenant Governor of Texas ( 1969-1973 )" ], [ "Dan Bartlett", "BA", "White House communications director for President George W. Bush" ], [ "Pat M. Baskin", "Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in Government", "Member of the Midland City Council 1968-1972 ; judge of the 142nd District Court 1980-1992" ], [ "Steven Best", "", "Professor of philosophy and spokesperson for the Animal Liberation Front" ], [ "William H. Bledsoe", "Attended briefly c. 1889", "Lawyer and member of both houses of the Texas legislature from Lubbock , 1915-1929" ], [ "Ed Blizzard", "BA", "Prominent pharmaceutical injury attorney" ], [ "Bill Blythe", "BA", "Republican state representative from Harris County , 1971-1983" ], [ "Louis H. Bruni", "", "County judge of Webb County from 2003 to 2006 ; former member of the Laredo City Council ; businessman" ], [ "Esther Buckley", "BSc", "Member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights , 1983-1992 ; educator in Laredo , Texas" ], [ "George C. Butte", "MA", "Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1924 ; member of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands , 1932-1936" ], [ "Frank Kell Cahoon", "BSc", "Midland oilman ; former Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives" ], [ "J. Allen Carnes", "Bachelor 's degree in Finance", "Mayor of Uvalde , Texas , since 2012 ; unsuccessful candidate for Texas Commissioner of Agriculture in 2014" ], [ "John Carona", "B.B.A", "Member of the Texas Senate from District 16 , 1996-2015" ], [ "Liz Carpenter", "BJ", "Former press secretary to First Lady Lady Bird Johnson" ], [ "Waggoner Carr", "", "Law school , former speaker of Texas House of Representatives and Attorney General of Texas" ], [ "Warlick Carr", "", "Law school , prominent Lubbock attorney" ], [ "Carlos Cascos", "Accounting", "Secretary of State of Texas , beginning 2015 ; outgoing county judge of Cameron County , Texas , 2007-2015" ], [ "Carter Casteel", "Bachelor of Arts", "Educator , lawyer , politician from New Braunfels" ], [ "Nellie Connally", "", "Former first lady of Texas" ] ]
{ "intro": "This list of University of Texas at Austin alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of the University of Texas at Austin. The institution is a major research university in Downtown Austin, Texas, US and is the flagship institution of the University of Texas System. Founded in 1883, the university has had the fifth largest single-campus enrollment in the nation as of Fall 2006 (and had the largest enrollment in the country from 1997 to 2003), with over 50,000 undergraduate and graduate students and 16,500 faculty and staff. It currently holds the second largest enrollment of all colleges in the state of Texas.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Government , law , and public policy -- Other U.S. political and legal figures", "title": "List of University of Texas at Austin alumni", "uid": "List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni_18", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_University_of_Texas_at_Austin_alumni" }
6,893
6894
List_of_programs_broadcast_by_Adult_Swim_7
[ [ "Title", "Originally aired", "Description" ], [ "Mind Game", "2018", "2004 animated film written and directed by Masaaki Yuasa . Premiered April 1 , 2018 . Presented in its original Japanese language audio with English subtitles on Toonami as part of an April Fools ' event" ], [ "Children Who Chase Lost Voices", "2016", "2011 animated film directed by Makoto Shinkai . Premiered November 5 , 2016 on Toonami" ], [ "Dragon Ball Z : Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan", "2014", "1993 animated film based on the Dragon Ball Z anime series . Premiered December 21 , 2014 on Toonami" ], [ "Fullmetal Alchemist : The Sacred Star of Milos", "2014", "2011 animated film based on the Fullmetal Alchemist : Brotherhood anime series . Premiered December 14 , 2014 on Toonami" ], [ "Dragon Ball Z : Cooler 's Revenge", "2014", "1991 animated film based on the Dragon Ball Z anime series . Premiered May 24 , 2014 on Toonami" ], [ "Trigun : Badlands Rumble", "2013", "2010 animated film set in the same universe as the 1998 Trigun anime series . Premiered December 28 , 2013 on Toonami" ], [ "Fullmetal Alchemist the Movie : Conqueror of Shamballa", "2013", "2005 animated film sequel of the original 2003 Fullmetal Alchemist anime series . Premiered December 21 , 2013 on Toonami" ], [ "Summer Wars", "2013", "2009 animated film by director Mamoru Hosoda . Premiered December 14 , 2013 on Toonami" ], [ "Akira", "2013", "1988 animated film based on the manga series of the same name . Premiered December 7 , 2013 on Toonami" ], [ "Evangelion 2.22 You Can ( Not ) Advance", "2013", "2009 animated movie remake of the Neon Genesis Evangelion TV series . Sequel to Evangelion 1.11 . Premiered August 31 , 2013 on Toonami" ], [ "Evangelion 1.11 You Are ( Not ) Alone", "2013", "2007 animated movie remake of the Neon Genesis Evangelion TV series . Premiered March 17 , 2013 . The first film broadcast on Toonami since its revival in 2012" ], [ "Black Dynamite", "2012", "2009 live-action movie that inspired the Adult Swim series . Aired on September 2 , 2012" ], [ "Bleach : The DiamondDust Rebellion", "2009", "Aired on December 5 , 2009 . First anime film to air on Adult Swim in high definition" ], [ "Bleach : Memories of Nobody", "2009", "Aired on September 5 , 2009" ], [ "G.I . Joe : Resolute", "2009", "90-minute movie that aired April 25 , 2009" ], [ "The Room", "2009", "First aired on April 1 , 2009 as part of an April Fools ' Day prank . In 2010 it aired again on April Fools ' Day ; featuring Space Ghost interviewing Tommy Wiseau in the same format as Space Ghost Coast to Coast as bumps . The movie aired again on April 1 , 2011 , for the third year in a row . On April 1 , 2012 , part of the opening was aired , before cutting to T.O.M . from Toonami , opening an announced night of the block" ], [ "Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters", "2008", "Feature film based on Aqua Teen Hunger Force , and was the first film adaption of an Adult Swim series . It was released in theaters on April 13 , 2007 . The film made its official television debut on March 31 , 2008 on Adult Swim" ], [ "InuYasha the Movie : Fire on the Mystic Island", "2006", "Premiered December 23 , 2006" ], [ "InuYasha the Movie : Swords of an Honorable Ruler", "2006", "Premiered August 12 , 2006" ], [ "Escaflowne : The Movie", "2005", "Premiered September 10 , 2005" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of television programs formerly or currently broadcast on Cartoon Network's late night block, Adult Swim in the United States. Although both networks share the same channel space, Adult Swim is classified as a separate entity for the purposes of Nielsen ratings.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Films", "title": "List of programs broadcast by Adult Swim", "uid": "List_of_programs_broadcast_by_Adult_Swim_7", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_programs_broadcast_by_Adult_Swim" }
6,894
6895
Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_1
[ [ "Year", "Actor", "Show", "Channel" ], [ "2002", "Shekhar Suman", "Movers And Shakers", "SAB TV" ], [ "2003", "Nikhil Chinappa Annu Kapoor & Pallavi Joshi", "MTV Fresh ! Antakshari - The Great Challenge", "MTV India Zee TV" ], [ "2004", "Sajid Khan", "Ikke Pe Ikka", "Zee TV" ], [ "2005", "Sajid Khan", "Sab Kuch Ho Sakta Hai", "SAB TV" ], [ "2006", "Sangeeta Ghosh & Shabbir Ahluwalia", "Nach Baliye", "Star One" ], [ "2007", "Javed Jaffrey & Naved Jaffrey", "Boogie Woogie", "Sony TV" ], [ "2008", "Ali Asgar ( actor )", "Say Shava Shava", "NDTV Imagine" ], [ "2009", "Meiyang Chang", "Indian Idol 4", "Sony TV" ], [ "2010", "Shahid Kapoor", "Screen Awards", "Star Plus" ], [ "2011", "Ayushmann Khurana", "Just Dance", "Star Plus" ], [ "2012", "Manish Paul", "Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa", "Colors TV" ], [ "2013", "Beverly Kim White", "Thank God It 's Friday", "" ], [ "2014", "Manish Paul", "Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa", "Colors TV" ], [ "2015", "Manish Paul", "Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa", "Colors TV" ], [ "2016", "Manish Paul", "Jhalak Dikhhla Jaa", "Colors TV" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Indian Television Academy Awards, also known as the ITA Awards, is an annual event organised by the Indian Television Academy to honour excellence of Indian Television.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Categories -- Other Awards", "title": "Indian Television Academy Awards", "uid": "Indian_Television_Academy_Awards_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Television_Academy_Awards" }
6,895
6896
List_of_songs_recorded_by_McFly_1
[ [ "Title", "Original Artist", "Album", "Year" ], [ "Baby 's Coming Back", "Jellyfish", "All the Greatest Hits", "2007" ], [ "Black or White", "Michael Jackson", "Radio : ACTIVE Live at Wembley /Nokia Green Room", "2008/-09" ], [ "Build Me Up Buttercup ( with Busted )", "The Foundations", "Crashed The Wedding CD1", "2003" ], [ "Crazy Little Thing Called Love", "Queen", "Room On The 3rd Floor CD1", "2004" ], [ "Deck The Halls", "Traditional Christmas Carol", "Room On The 3rd Floor CD2", "2004" ], [ "Do n't Stop Me Now", "Queen", "Motion in the Ocean", "2006" ], [ "Dynamite", "Taio Cruz", "Radio 1 's Live Lounge - Volume 5", "2010" ], [ "Fight For Your Right", "Beastie Boys", "The Greatest Bits : B-Sides & Rarities", "2007" ], [ "Help !", "The Beatles", "Obviously CD2", "2004" ], [ "I Kissed A Girl", "Katy Perry", "Do Ya/Stay with Me", "2008" ], [ "I Predict A Riot", "Kaiser Chiefs", "Ultraviolet/The Ballad of Paul K CD2", "2005" ], [ "I Got ta Feeling", "The Black Eyed Peas", "European Tour", "2009" ], [ "Lola ( with Busted )", "The Kinks", "5 Colours in Her Hair CD1", "2004" ], [ "Mr Brightside", "The Killers", "I Wan na Hold You CD1", "2005" ], [ "My Generation ( with Roger Daltrey )", "The Who", "Recorded for Teenage Cancer Trust . Released exclusively through the HMV 's download site", "2005" ], [ "Pinball Wizard", "The Who", "I 'll Be OK CD2", "2005" ], [ "Pass Out", "Tinie Tempah", "Above The Noise Tour", "2011" ], [ "The Promise", "Girls Aloud", "Played live during the Up Close ... and this time it 's personal Tour", "2009" ], [ "Rockin ' Robin", "Bobby Day", "Sorry 's Not Good Enough/Friday Night", "2006" ], [ "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town", "J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie", "The Greatest Bits : B-Sides & Rarities", "2007" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of all songs performed by the British band McFly.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Cover songs", "title": "List of songs recorded by McFly", "uid": "List_of_songs_recorded_by_McFly_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_recorded_by_McFly" }
6,896
6897
5000_metres_1
[ [ "Year", "Time", "Athlete", "Location" ], [ "2019", "14:20.36", "Hellen Obiri ( KEN )", "London" ], [ "2018", "14:21.75", "Hellen Obiri ( KEN )", "Rabat" ], [ "2017", "14:18.37", "Hellen Obiri ( KEN )", "Rome" ], [ "2016", "14:12.59", "Almaz Ayana ( ETH )", "Rome" ], [ "2015", "14:14.32", "Almaz Ayana ( ETH )", "Shanghai" ], [ "2014", "14:28.88", "Genzebe Dibaba ( ETH )", "Monaco" ], [ "2013", "14:23.68", "Tirunesh Dibaba ( ETH )", "Paris" ], [ "2012", "14:35.62", "Vivian Cheruiyot ( KEN )", "Rome" ], [ "2011", "14:20.87", "Vivian Cheruiyot ( KEN )", "Stockholm" ], [ "2010", "14:24.79i", "Meseret Defar ( ETH )", "Stockholm" ], [ "2009", "14:24.37i", "Meseret Defar ( ETH )", "Stockholm" ], [ "2008", "14:11.15", "Tirunesh Dibaba ( ETH )", "Oslo" ], [ "2007", "14:16.63", "Meseret Defar ( ETH )", "Oslo" ], [ "2006", "14:24.53", "Meseret Defar ( ETH )", "New York City" ], [ "2005", "14:28.98", "Meseret Defar ( ETH )", "Brussels" ], [ "2004", "14:24.68", "Elvan Abeylegesse ( TUR )", "Bergen" ], [ "2003", "14:29.32", "Berhane Adere ( ETH )", "Oslo" ], [ "2002", "14:31.42", "Paula Radcliffe ( GBR )", "Manchester" ], [ "2001", "14:29.32", "Olga Yegorova ( RUS )", "Berlin" ], [ "2000", "14:30.88", "Getenesh Wami ( ETH )", "Heusden" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 5000 metres or 5000-metre run (approximately 3.1 mi or 16,404 ft) is a common long-distance running event in track and field. It is one of the track events in the Olympic Games and the World Championships in Athletics, run over 12.5 laps of a standard track. The same distance in road running is called a 5K run. The 5000 m has been present on the Olympic programme since 1912 for men and since 1996 for women. Prior to 1996, women had competed in an Olympic 3000 metres race since 1984. The 5000 m has been held at each of the World Championships in Athletics in men's competition and since 1995 in women's. The event is almost the same length as the dolichos race held at the Ancient Olympic Games, introduced in 720 BCE. While mainly run as an outdoor event, the 5000 m is sometimes run on an indoor track. The IAAF keeps official records for both outdoor and indoor 5000-metre track events.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Women", "title": "5000 metres", "uid": "5000_metres_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5000_metres" }
6,897
6898
List_of_Belgian_football_transfers_summer_2009_4
[ [ "Date", "Name", "Moving from", "Moving to", "Fee" ], [ "May 2 , 2009", "Franck Defays", "Charleroi", "F91 Dudelange", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 2 , 2009", "Christophe Grégoire", "Charleroi", "Willem II", "Loan Return" ], [ "May 4 , 2009", "Steven de Petter", "Dender", "Westerlo", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 4 , 2009", "Sherjill MacDonald", "West Bromwich Albion", "Germinal Beerschot", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 13 , 2009", "Mathieu Cornet", "Standard", "Germinal Beerschot", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 16 , 2009", "Nana Asare", "Mechelen", "FC Utrecht", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 22 , 2009", "Dario Smoje", "Gent", "Panionios", "Free" ], [ "May 25 , 2009", "Elimane Coulibaly", "Kortrijk", "Gent", "Free" ], [ "May 25 , 2009", "Jonas De Roeck", "Gent", "Augsburg", "Free" ], [ "May 26 , 2009", "Yoni Buyens", "Lierse", "Mechelen", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 26 , 2009", "Aymar Moro", "Lille", "Mechelen", "Undisclosed" ], [ "May 28 , 2009", "Marc Hendrikx", "Sint-Truiden", "Eupen", "Free" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Belgian football transfers for the 2009 summer transfer window. Only transfers involving a team from the Jupiler League are listed. The summer transfer window opened on 1 July 2009, although some transfers took place prior to that date; The first non-free non-loan move was completed on 3 January 2009. Players without a club may join one at any time, regardless if during or between transfer windows. The transfer window ended on 31 August 2009, although a few completed transfers were only announced a few days later.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Sorted by date -- May 2009", "title": "List of Belgian football transfers summer 2009", "uid": "List_of_Belgian_football_transfers_summer_2009_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Belgian_football_transfers_summer_2009" }
6,898
6899
VSI_Tampa_Bay_FC_0
[ [ "No", "Position", "Player", "Nation" ], [ "1", "Goalkeeper", "Alex Horwath", "United States" ], [ "2", "Defender", "Jamie McGuinness", "England" ], [ "3", "Defender", "Bitielo Jean Jacques", "Haiti" ], [ "4", "Midfielder", "Antonio Neto", "Brazil" ], [ "5", "Defender", "Troy Cole", "United States" ], [ "6", "Defender", "Kyle Hoffer", "United States" ], [ "7", "Midfielder", "Douglas Dos Santos", "Brazil" ], [ "8", "Defender", "Alex Freitas", "Brazil" ], [ "9", "Forward", "Andriy Budnyi", "Ukraine" ], [ "10", "Forward", "Karamba Janneh", "Gambia" ], [ "11", "Midfielder", "Tony Donatelli", "United States" ], [ "12", "Midfielder", "Christian Silva", "United States" ], [ "13", "Midfielder", "Sébastien Thurière", "Haiti" ], [ "14", "Defender", "Richard Dixon", "Jamaica" ], [ "15", "Midfielder", "Darren Toby", "Trinidad and Tobago" ], [ "16", "Midfielder", "Dominic Cutrofello", "United States" ], [ "17", "Midfielder", "J. T. Noone", "United States" ], [ "18", "Defender", "Sean Reynolds", "United States" ], [ "19", "Goalkeeper", "Jeremy Crumpton", "United States" ], [ "20", "Midfielder", "Shawn Chin", "United States" ] ]
{ "intro": "VSI Tampa Bay FC was an American soccer team based in Plant City, Florida. They played in USL Pro, the third tier of the American soccer pyramid, in the 2013 season. VSI Tampa Bay FC were owned by VisionPro Sports Institute and were affiliated with a women's team in the W-League, an amateur team in the USL Premier Development League (PDL), and a youth team in the Super-20 League. All the teams folded in 2013.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Final roster", "title": "VSI Tampa Bay FC", "uid": "VSI_Tampa_Bay_FC_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VSI_Tampa_Bay_FC" }
6,899