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John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
commissioner from Washington County, the heart of Mascara's former district. Irey attacked Murtha for his criticism of the Iraq war. Even though Irey was Murtha's strongest Republican opponent in decades, she polled well behind Murtha throughout the campaign. A poll by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on October 12, 2006, showed Murtha with a commanding lead over Irey, 57%–30%. In the November election, Murtha won 61%–39%. On June 9, 2006, Murtha informed Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi that he would run for Majority Leader if the Democrats gained control of the House in the 2006 midterm elections. Despite Murtha receiving Pelosi's support, current
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer was elected to the post. On March 18, 2008, Murtha endorsed Hillary Clinton, former First Lady and then Senator from New York, in her bid for the presidency. On February 6, 2010, two days before his death, Murtha became the longest serving Pennsylvania congressman in history. Although he was not sworn into office until February 20, 1974, House of Representatives rules state that Murtha's service began at his election because the seat was vacant. In 2009, Murtha heard details from Fort Benning U.S. Army soldiers on how their current uniforms and equipment were not providing camouflage
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
in Iraq and Afghanistan during a personal visit. Murtha immediately took action and convinced the army to fix the camouflage problem, resulting in MultiCam being selected by the Secretary of the Army John McHugh for all incoming soldiers deploying to Afghanistan in 2010, only weeks after Murtha had died. Abscam investigation In 1980, during his fourth term as a Congressman, Murtha became embroiled in the Abscam investigation, which targeted dozens of congressmen. The investigation entailed FBI operatives posing as intermediaries for Saudi nationals hoping to bribe their way through the immigration process into the United States. Murtha met with these
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
operatives and was videotaped. He did agree to testify against Frank Thompson (D-NJ) and John Murphy (D-NY), the two Congressmen mentioned as participants in the deal at the same meeting and who were later videotaped placing the cash bribes in their trousers. The FBI videotaped Murtha responding to an offer of $50,000, with Murtha saying, "I'm not interested... at this point. [If] we do business for a while, maybe I'll be interested, maybe I won't," right after Murtha had offered to provide names of businesses and banks in his district where money could be invested legally. The U.S. Attorney's Office
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
reasoned that Murtha's intent was to obtain investment in his district. Full length viewing of the tape shows Murtha citing prospective investment opportunities that could return "500 or 1000" miners to work. Earmarks and campaign contributions Murtha was targeted by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington as one of the 20 most corrupt members of Congress. In September 2006, the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) listed Murtha under Five Members to Watch in its Second Annual Most Corrupt Members of Congress Report. The report cited Murtha's steering of defense appropriations to clients of KSA Consulting, which
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
employed his brother Robert, and the PMA Group, founded by Paul Magliocchetti, a former senior staffer on the Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Defense. In 2008, Esquire Magazine named him one of the 10 worst members of Congress because of his opposition to ethics reform and the $100 million a year he brought to his district in earmarks. The Wall Street Journal has called him "one of Congress's most unapologetic earmarkers." According to the Pennsylvania Report, Murtha was one of "Pennsylvania's most powerful congressmen" and a "master of crossing the aisle and bringing pork into his district." In February 2009, CQ
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
Politics reported that Murtha was one of 104 U.S. representatives to earmark funds in the 2008 Defense appropriations spending bill for a lobbying group that had contributed to his past election campaigns. The spending bill, which was managed by Murtha in his capacity as chairman of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, secured $38.1 million for clients of the PMA Group in the single fiscal law. The PMA Group was under investigation by the FBI. In March 2009, the Washington Post reported that a Pennsylvania defense research center regularly consulted with two "handlers" close to Murtha while it received nearly
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
$250 million in federal funding via Murtha's earmarks. The center then channeled a significant portion of the funding to companies that were among Murtha's campaign supporters. Views on the 2003 Iraq War Murtha voted for the October 2002 resolution that authorized the use of force against Iraq. However, he later began expressing doubts about the war. On March 17, 2004, when Republicans offered a "War in Iraq Anniversary Resolution" that "affirms that the United States and the world have been made safer with the removal of Saddam Hussein and his regime from power in Iraq," when J. D. Hayworth called
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
for a recorded vote, Murtha voted against it. Still, in early 2005 Murtha argued against the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. "A premature withdrawal of our troops based on a political timetable could rapidly devolve into a civil war which would leave America's foreign policy in disarray as countries question not only America's judgment but also its perseverance," he stated. In 2006, after Murtha became a leading critic of the Iraq War, a conservative website, the Cybercast News Service (part of L. Brent Bozell III's Media Research Center) published an article that "quoted Murtha opponents as questioning the circumstances
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
surrounding the awarding of his two Purple Hearts." The attack recalled the "swiftboating" tactic used against Senator John Kerry two years early. A Murtha spokesman called the allegations "an attempt to distract attention from what's happening in Iraq." 2005 Resolution on removing American forces from Iraq On November 17, 2005, Murtha submitted H.J. Res. 73 in the House of Representatives, calling for the redeployment of U.S. troops in Iraq, saying, "The U.S. cannot accomplish anything further in Iraq militarily. It is time to bring them home." The bill cited lack of progress towards stabilizing Iraq, the possibility that a draft
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
would be required to sustain sufficient troop numbers, Iraqi disapproval of US forces and approval of attacks on the soldiers, and the increasing costs of the war. The bill proposed that deployment to Iraq be suspended and that US Marines establish an "over-the-horizon" presence in nearby countries. Murtha's comments forced a heated debate on the floor of the House on November 18. Republicans led by Duncan Hunter of California, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, responded by proposing their own resolution (H. Res. 571), which many Republicans said was intended to demonstrate that those calling for immediate troop withdrawal
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
from Iraq were "out of the mainstream." Murtha himself took the floor during debate on the resolution after the Democrats yielded all their time to him, and denounced the Hunter resolution as a sham. As expected, Hunter's resolution was defeated, with only three congressmen voting aye. Jean Schmidt and the "coward" controversy On November 19, 2005, during debate on adopting the rule for the resolution, Congresswoman Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio) made a statement attributed to Danny Bubp, an Ohio state Representative and Marine Corps reservist. The statement, "He also asked me to give Congressman Murtha a message: that cowards cut and
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
run; Marines never do," was seen as an unwarranted "cheap shot" against Murtha, and outraged Democrats brought House business to a halt for ten minutes until Schmidt herself asked and received permission to withdraw her comments. Bubp has since stated that he never mentioned Murtha when making the quoted comment. He added that he would never question the courage of a fellow Marine. Bubp later said, "I don't want to be interjected into this. I wish (Congresswoman Schmidt) never used my name." Haditha, Iraq, killings The Haditha incident occurred on November 19, 2005, and since then there have been differing
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
accounts of exactly what took place. In November 2005 Murtha announced that a military investigation into the Haditha killings had concluded that U.S. Marines had intentionally killed innocent civilians. Referring to the first report about Haditha in Time magazine, Murtha said: It's much worse than reported in Time magazine. There was no fire fight. There was no IED that killed these innocent people. Our troops overreacted because of the pressure on them and they killed innocent civilians in cold blood. And that's what the report is going to tell. The Marine Corps responded to Murtha's announcement by stating that "there
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
is an ongoing investigation; therefore, any comment at this time would be inappropriate and could undermine the investigatory and possible legal process." Murtha was criticized by conservatives for presenting a version of events as simple fact before an official investigation had been concluded. In August 2006, Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich filed a lawsuit against Murtha for character defamation during an ongoing investigation into the Haditha incident. In April 2009 this suit was dismissed by a federal appeals court, which ruled that Murtha could not be sued because he was acting in his official role as a lawmaker when he made
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
guilty to one count of negligent dereliction of duty. Sun-Sentinel story and correction In a speech at Florida International University on June 24, 2006, Murtha said that the military presence in Iraq was hurting U.S. credibility, citing a poll by the Pew Research Center indicating that people in several countries considered the U.S. in Iraq to be a greater threat to world peace than either Iran or North Korea. When the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported the speech on June 25, it asserted without further evidence that it was Murtha's own view that the U.S. was a greater threat to world
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
peace: "American presence in Iraq is more dangerous to world peace than nuclear threats from North Korea or Iran, U.S. Representative John Murtha, D-Pa., said to a crowd of more than 200 in North Miami Saturday afternoon." The Sun-Sentinel story was picked up by the wire services and the Drudge Report website, leading several conservative pundits, including Bill O'Reilly Tucker Carlson, and Newt Gingrich, to comment. After the Sun-Sentinel issued a correction, O'Reilly publicly apologized. 2008 presidential election After having endorsed Hillary Clinton, commenting on the prospects for the election of Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign, Murtha became
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
the subject of controversy after deriding many of his own constituents as "racists" who would not vote for Obama because he is black. In response to the outrage at his comments, he apologized but then reiterated the point by saying, "[T]here's still folks that have a problem voting for someone because they are black. This whole area, years ago, was really redneck." Political views Murtha generally opposed gun control, earning an A from the National Rifle Association. In 2004, he was one of only two congressmen to vote for a measure proposing reinstatement of the draft. Murtha voted for the
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
Affordable Healthcare for America Act (HR 3692), which passed in the House 220–215 on November 7, 2009. He said of the bill, "For nearly a century, both Democrats and Republicans have failed to enact comprehensive health care reform. Today's historic vote moves us closer to solving America's health care crisis." However, Murtha did not support allowing abortions as part of health care reform. He voted for the Stupak–Pitts Amendment to the health care bill that prohibits elective abortions for people covered by the public healthcare plan and to prohibit people receiving federal assistance from purchasing a private healthcare plan that
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
includes abortions, except when the woman's life is in danger. He also voted for a bill to prohibit pregnant minors from crossing state borders to obtain abortions. In August 2009, Murtha refused Republican challenger Tim Burns' invitation to attend a town hall meeting focused on healthcare (at the time, Murtha had not yet hosted a town hall meeting); however, Murtha had held several conference call sessions with his constituents focused on healthcare. Murtha, a anti-abortion Democrat, did not receive favorable ratings from abortion and reproductive health interest groups. Planned Parenthood, whose stated purpose is "to provide comprehensive reproductive and complementary
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
health care," gave him a rating of 50% in 2009. He received a rating of 50% from the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association, which advocates "access to voluntary, comprehensive and culturally sensitive family planning and reproductive health care services and ... reproductive freedom for all." Death and legacy Murtha was first hospitalized with gallbladder problems for a few days in December 2009 and had surgery on January 28, 2010, at Bethesda Naval Hospital. Longtime friend and fellow Pennsylvania Democratic representative Bob Brady said Murtha's large intestine was damaged during the normally routine laparoscopic surgery, causing an infection. Due
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
to the complication, Murtha was again hospitalized two days later, and died on the afternoon of February 8, 2010, in the Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, Virginia, with his family by his side. He was buried on February 16, 2010, at Grandview Cemetery in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said in a statement on the day of his death, "With the passing of John Murtha, America has lost a great patriot." House Republican Leader John Boehner said, "Our nation has lost a decorated veteran." On April 9, 2010, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus signed an official
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
memo to the Chief of Naval Operations, designating the naming of an amphibious transport dock (LPD), a type of naval warship, as the (LPD-26). The Navy Times said the official announcement "added fuel to an already smoldering backlash online." In October 2011, it was revealed that the FBI had investigated Murtha for possible ethics violations. No charges were ever filed. A special election was held to fill the seat left vacant by the late congressman, taking place on May 18 to coincide with that state's primaries for Senate and governor. The Democratic candidate, Mark Critz, defeated Republican candidate Tim Burns
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
to win Murtha's seat. John Murtha Congressional Papers The University of Pittsburgh houses The John P. Murtha Congressional Papers containing the documentation of Representative Murtha and his duties while in office. The collection contains correspondence, legislative files, reports, subjects covering the Defense Department, the Department of the Interior, economic development, energy, and labor. The collection also contains photographic and audio-video materials, memorabilia and awards. See also 2010 Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district special election List of United States Congress members who died in office References External links Profile at SourceWatch FBI Records: The Vault - John Murtha (over 1,100 pages) Books
|
[] |
John Murtha
|
[
[
"John Murtha",
"family name",
"Murtha"
]
] |
Wisconsin politician
|
by Murtha Articles Murray, Shailagh (November 25, 2005). "The About-Face of a Hawkish Democrat". Washington Post, pg. A02. Murtha, John John Murtha's Iraq Exit Strategy November 17, 2005. H. Res. 557, the "War in Iraq Anniversary resolution" 'Unwinnable' comment draws GOP fire (CNN) Murtha calls for change in U.S. Iraq policy (Associated Press) FBI files on John Murtha Rep. Murtha says Rumsfeld, Cheney should resign Washington Post: Confessions of a "Defeatocrat" Rep. John Murtha, Iraq War Critic, Dies at 77 – video by Democracy Now! John Murtha Passes Away (MyJohnstownPA) Collection John Murtha collection at the University of Pittsburgh Category:1932
|
[] |
Trust in God
|
[
[
"Trust in God",
"instance of",
"Studio album"
],
[
"Trust in God",
"performer",
"Al Green"
],
[
"Trust in God",
"genre",
"Gospel music"
]
] |
1984 studio album by Al Green
|
Trust in God is the 19th studio album by soul singer Al Green, released in 1984. It is a collection of cover songs, performed in the style of gospel music, recorded after his conversion to Christianity. Track listing "Don't It Make You Wanna Go Home" (Joe South) - 3:07 "Up the Ladder to the Roof" (Vincent DiMirco) - 3:33 "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" (Nickolas Ashford, Valerie Simpson) - 2:23 "Trust in God" (Al Green, Johnny Brown) - 4:11 "No Not One" (Green) - 4:09 "Lean on Me" (Bill Withers) - 2:09 "Never Met Anybody Like You" (Green) - 2:52
|
[] |
Trust in God
|
[
[
"Trust in God",
"performer",
"Al Green"
]
] |
1984 studio album by Al Green
|
"Holy Spirit" (Lindy Hearne) - 3:07 "Trust in God (Reprise)" (Green, Brown) - 1:33 "All We Need Is a Little More Love" (Green) - 3:32 Personnel Al Green – lead and backing vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, percussion, string arrangements Moses Dillard – electric guitar Mabon Hodges – electric guitar Gerard Minnies – electric guitar Johnny Brown – Rhodes, organ Jesse Butler – Rhodes, acoustic piano, organ, synthesizer Jerry Peters – synthesizer Paul Zaleski – synthesizer Reuben Fairfax, Jr. – bass Ray Griffin – bass Tim Dancy – drums, percussion Steve Potts – drums Paul Jordan – string arrangements Andrea
|
[] |
Emily M. Bender
|
[
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"educated at",
"Stanford University"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"educated at",
"Stanford University"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"employer",
"University of Washington"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"occupation",
"Linguist"
]
] |
American linguist
|
Emily M. Bender is an American linguist who works on multilingual grammar engineering. She has constructed the LinGO Grammar Matrix, an open-source starter kit for the development of broad-coverage precision HPSG grammars. In 2013 she published Linguistic Fundamentals for Natural Language Processing: 100 Essentials from Morphology and Syntax, which explains basic linguistic principles in a way that makes them accessible to NLP practitioners. Bender received her PhD from Stanford University in 2000 for her research on syntactic variation and linguistic competence in African American Vernacular English (AAVE). She currently holds several positions at the University of Washington, where she has
|
[
"Emily Bender"
] |
Emily M. Bender
|
[
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"field of work",
"Computational linguistics"
]
] |
American linguist
|
been faculty since 2003, including professor in the Department of Linguistics, adjunct professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, faculty director of the Master of Science in Computational Linguistics, and director of the Computational Linguistics Laboratory. Bender is the current holder of the Howard and Frances Nostrand Endowed Professorship. Key publications (2002) Bender, Emily M., Dan Flickinger, and Stephan Oepen. The grammar matrix: An open-source starter-kit for the rapid development of cross-linguistically consistent broad-coverage precision grammars. Proceedings of the 2002 workshop on Grammar engineering and evaluation-Volume 15. (2002) Siegel, Melanie and Emily M. Bender. Efficient deep processing of
|
[
"Emily Bender"
] |
Emily M. Bender
|
[
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"educated at",
"Stanford University"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"educated at",
"Stanford University"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"employer",
"University of Washington"
],
[
"Emily M. Bender",
"occupation",
"Linguist"
]
] |
American linguist
|
Japanese. Proceedings of the 3rd workshop on Asian language resources and international standardization-Volume 12. (2000) Bender, Emily M. Syntactic variation and linguistic competence: The case of AAVE copula absence. Stanford University. (2000) Bender, Emily M. The syntax of Mandarin Bă: Reconsidering the verbal analysis. Journal of East Asian Linguistics. (1999) Sag, Ivan, Thomas Wasow, and Emily M. Bender. Syntactic theory: A formal introduction. Center for the Study of Language and Information. External links Personal page at University of Washington Faculty page at University of Washington Article by Emily Bender in The Linguist List's Famous Linguists series References Category:Living people Category:Linguists
|
[
"Emily Bender"
] |
Slađa Guduraš
|
[
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"country of citizenship",
"Bosnia and Herzegovina"
],
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"place of birth",
"Banja Luka"
]
] |
Bosnian pop star
|
Slađana "Slađa" Guduraš (11 August 1987 – 10 December 2014) was a Bosnian recording artist, bit actress and nurse from Banja Luka. Her short-lived musical career ended when she died in a road accident aged 27 while en route to Belgrade. Her disappearance and death were featured prominently in Bosnian and Serbian media. Early life Guduraš was born in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina into a Bosnian Serb family. Her mother is Jelka Pantić. Career In her short career, Guduraš had only one single; "Silikoni i kubici" (Silicone and Volume) in 2013 featuring Serbian rapper Juice. The music video for
|
[] |
Slađa Guduraš
|
[
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"occupation",
"Singer"
]
] |
Bosnian pop star
|
Facebook in over a day. Initially it was assumed that her abusive ex-boyfriend Dragan Perić from Bijeljina had something to do with her disappearance. Perić reportedly threatened Guduraš by saying she "would end up like Ksenija Pajčin," a singer who had been murdered by her ex-boyfriend in 2010, and that he would commit suicide. They had been in a relationship from 2013 until November 2014, when Guduraš walked in on Perić kissing male hair stylist Aleksandar Kapriš. Another incident occurred the week before she went missing when Perić attacked her at the hotel Hollywood in Sarajevo. On 16 December 2014,
|
[] |
Slađa Guduraš
|
[
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"place of death",
"Sremska Mitrovica"
]
] |
Bosnian pop star
|
a crashed Volkswagen Golf with Bosnian license plates was found in a canal in Sremska Mitrovica. Guduraš's body was found inside and it is believed that she swerved off the road on 10 December and crashed into the canal. The car was not seen for six days due to the area being densely overgrown with shrubbery. The autopsy results released 19 December confirmed that the body found in the car was that of Guduraš. Her death made her a new member of the 27 Club. In the days following her death several of her friends said they believe she "foresaw"
|
[] |
Slađa Guduraš
|
[
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"country of citizenship",
"Bosnia and Herzegovina"
],
[
"Slađa Guduraš",
"occupation",
"Singer"
]
] |
Bosnian pop star
|
her own death. Singer Miki Mećava, who had done a talk show with her on 3 December and slept over at the same hotel in Sarajevo, said that she was afraid of being murdered. She would not leave the hotel to go to restaurants with a group of friends because she was afraid that someone would murder her. Not long before her death, she relocated to Belgrade and had her own apartment there. Guduraš was buried in the town cemetery in Srbac, Bosnia and Herzegovina on 20 December 2014. She was not married and had no children. References Category:1987 births
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"member of sports team",
"St. Louis Cardinals"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"member of sports team",
"Detroit Tigers"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"place of birth",
"Houston"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"sport",
"Baseball"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
Henry George "Heinie" Schuble (November 1, 1906 – October 2, 1990) was an American baseball infielder. He played professional baseball for 11 years from 1926 to 1936, including seven seasons in Major League Baseball with the St. Louis Cardinals (1927 and 1936) and Detroit Tigers (1929–1935). He appeared in 332 major league games (172 at shortstop, 106 at third base) and compiled a .251 batting average and .296 on-base percentage. Early years Schuble was born in Houston, Texas, in 1906. Professional baseball Schuble began playing professional baseball in 1925 as a second baseman with the Mount Pleasant Cats of the
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"place of birth",
"Houston"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
East Texas League. He moved on in 1926 to play as a second baseman in the Texas Association with the Palestine Pals and Temple Surgeons and in the Texas League with the Houston Buffaloes. On July 2, 1926, in his first game for Temple, he hit a home run, a triple, and a single in four at bats. On September 15, 1926, Schuble was traded by the Houston Buffaloes to the Syracuse Stars. He reported to Syracuse in March 1927, but began the 1927 season with the Danville Veterans of the Three-Eye League before moving up to the St. Louis
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"member of sports team",
"Detroit Tigers"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"place of birth",
"Houston"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
Cardinals following an injury to St. Louis shortstop Tommy Thevenow. He made his major league debut with the Cardinals on July 8, 1927, and appeared in 65 games, 62 of them as the team's starting shortstop. He compiled a .257 batting average in 218 at bats. After spending three months with the Cardinals in 1927, Schuble returned to the Houston Buffaloes in the Texas League in 1928, appearing in 157 games with a .285 batting average. On August 31, 1928, the Buffaloes sold Schuble and pitcher Frank Barnes for $50,000 to the Detroit Tigers, effective at the end of the
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
1928 season. During the 1929 season, Schuble appeared in 92 games and committed 46 errors in 86 games at shortstop. His .233 batting average and "erratic work in the field" resulted in his being optioned to the Beaumont Exporters (Texas League) in January 1930. His fielding in 1929 was so poor that he was given the nickname "Kid Boots". During the 1930 season, Schuble appeared in 145 games for Beaumont, principally as a shortstop, compiled a .320 batting average, but committed a career high 55 errors. During one stretch in 1930, he struck out 18 consecutive times. In February 1931,
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
Schuble spent spring training with the Tigers, competing with Bill Akers for a roster spot as a backup infielder. Harry Bullion in the Detroit Free Press wrote at the time: "If Schuble possessed half the fielding ability that he does genuine nerve, dynamite would be necessary to blow him out of a regular job. Nothing fazes the kid. He can juggle a grounder or throw a ball away and feel no more concern than if he made a perfect stop and play on it." Schuble was sent back to Beaumont for the 1932 season, but he was moved from shortstop
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
to third base, where he committed 43 errors and saw his batting average dip 45 points to .275. Schuble returned to the Tigers in 1932 and had the best season of his major league career. He appeared in 102 games for the 1932 Tigers, including 72 as the team's starting third baseman and 16 as the starting shortstop. He committed only 19 errors and compiled a career high .271 batting average and a .319 on-base percentage. Schuble was reputed to be the fastest player on the 1932 Tigers and ranked eighth in the American League with 14 stolen bases in
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"member of sports team",
"St. Louis Cardinals"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"place of birth",
"Houston"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Shortstop"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
1932. Schuble remained with the Tigers through the 1935, but was used as a utility infielder and pinch runner after the 1932 season. Schuble spent most of the 1936 season in the minor leagues with the Houston Buffaloes and Rochester Red Wings. He also appeared in two games for the 1936 St. Louis Cardinals. He did not have an at bat for the Cardinals and played only one inning in the field. Schuble appeared in 332 major league games, including 172 at shortstop and 106 at third base. In 1,010 plate appearances, he had 235 hits, including 70 extra base
|
[] |
Heinie Schuble
|
[
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"place of death",
"Baytown, Texas"
],
[
"Heinie Schuble",
"sport",
"Baseball"
]
] |
American baseball player
|
hits, and scored 235 runs. He accumulated a .251 career batting average with 11 home runs, 114 RBI and .367 slugging percentage. Family and later years Schuble was married on June 5, 1927, to Agnes Shaw in front of 6,000 spectators, in a pre-game ceremony at home plate, while he was a minor league player in Danville, Illinois. After retiring from baseball, Schuble worked as an electrician at the Humble Oil and Refining Co. plant in Baytown, Texas. He began working at Humble Oil in 1945 and moved to Baytown in 1948. Schuble died in 1990 at age 83 in
|
[] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"given name",
"Samantha"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Australia women's national soccer team"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
Samantha May "Sam" Kerr (born 10 September 1993) is an Australian soccer player who plays for Chelsea in the English FA Women's Super League. She is the current captain of the Australia women's national soccer team (the Matildas). , Kerr is the all-time leading scorer in both the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) in the United States and the Australian W-League. Kerr started her career at age 15 with Perth Glory where she played from 2008–2012, before transferring to Sydney FC. In 2013, she joined the Western New York Flash for the inaugural season of the NWSL and helped lead
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Red Stars"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
the team to win the NWSL Shield. She later played for Sky Blue FC and the Chicago Red Stars in the same league. Kerr earned her first senior international cap in 2009 at the age of 15 and has represented Australia at the 2010, 2014, and 2018 AFC Women's Asian Cup tournaments. On the world stage, she has been in the Australian squad since 2009 and competed at the 2011, 2015, and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cups as well as the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. Kerr was awarded the 2017 Julie Dolan Medal as the best player in Australia
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"place of birth",
"Fremantle"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
hat trick at a World Cup tournament. Kerr is known for her "speed, skill, tenacity," and backflip goal celebrations. Early life Kerr was born in East Fremantle, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia on Australia's west coast. Her Anglo-Indian father, Roger Kerr, was born in Calcutta to an English father (a featherweight boxer) and an Indian mother who played basketball. Kerr's mother, Roxanne, was born in Australia and also comes from an athletic family. Her father and uncles were professional footballers in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) and another uncle J. J. Miller was a champion jockey who won
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"sibling",
"Daniel Kerr"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
the Melbourne Cup in 1966 with Galilee. Kerr played Australian rules football as a young child. Both her father and older brother, Daniel Kerr, were professional Australian rules footballers. She played the sport until switching to soccer at the age of 12 due in large part to gender restrictions. Despite facing some struggles transitioning from Australian rules football to soccer, at age 13, she was spotted by Perth Glory striker Bobby Despotovski who described her athleticism and raw talent as "exceptional". At age 15, she made her W-League and international debuts. Club career Western Knights, 2006–2008 Kerr first started playing
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
of a match against Adelaide United on 14 January 2011 lifting Perth to a 2–1 victory. Western New York Flash, 2013–2014 In 2013, Kerr signed with the Western New York Flash for the inaugural season of the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) in the United States. She made 19 starts in her 21 appearances for the club and scored six goals. After defeating Sky Blue FC 2–0 in the semi-finals, the Flash lost 2–0 to Portland in the final. Kerr returned to the Flash for the 2014 season. Head coach Aaran Lines said of Kerr, "With her attributes – her
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Red Stars"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
record when she scored 4 goals in a single game after being down 3–0 to Seattle Reign at halftime. Sky Blue eventually won the match 5–4. At the age of 23, Kerr sat atop the all-time NWSL goalscoring table. Kerr won the NWSL Golden Boot and MVP award after finishing the 2017 season with a record-breaking 17 goals. Chicago Red Stars, 2018–19 On 18 January 2018, Kerr was traded to the Chicago Red Stars along with Nikki Stanton by the Sky Blue FC in a three-team trade with the Chicago Red Stars and Houston Dash. She got off to a
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Red Stars"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
end of the 2019 season, Kerr and the Chicago Red Stars made their first appearance in the NWSL Championship against the North Carolina Courage. Several days prior to the championship game, Kerr was named the 2019 NWSL MVP, the first, and currently only, NWSL player to ever receive the award twice. Kerr also received, for the third year in a row, the NWSL Golden Boot, leading the league with 18 goals and five assists, despite missing some games over the summer to play with Australia in the World Cup. Kerr was also named Player of the Year by the National
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
Women's Soccer League Players Association, who presented their own awards for the first time. At the end of the 2019 season Kerr announced that she was considering moving to a European team and had multiple offers. Chelsea, 2019–Present On 13 November 2019, Chelsea announced Kerr would be joining the club for the second half of the 2019–20 FA WSL season on a 2.5 year contract. Kerr made her Chelsea debut against Reading on 5 January 2020 and scored her first goal against Arsenal on 19 January. International career In February 2009, fifteen-year-old Kerr made her international debut for Australia's senior
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
national team in a friendly against Italy as a 76th minute substitute. She scored her first international goal at the age of 16 during the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup final against North Korea. 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup, Germany In May 2010, Kerr was named to the Matildas squad to compete at the 2010 AFC Women's Asian Cup, the qualifying tournament for the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup in Germany. After scoring in the second match of the group against South Korea, she scored the opening goal of the final against North Korea before seeing Australia taking out the
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
title via the penalty shoot-out. The same year, she represented Australia at the 2010 Peace Queen Cup. In 2011 at age 17, Kerr was named to Australia's 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup squad by head coach Tom Sermanni as one of seven players who were under twenty years of age. She made her World Cup debut coming on as a substitute in the 79th minute of Australia's first group stage match against Brazil. She was a starter for the team's second group stage match against Equatorial Guinea helping Australia win 3–2 and the team's final group stage match and 2–1
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
win against Norway. Australia finished second place in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated 3–1 by Sweden. 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup, Canada After injuring her knee in December 2014 and undergoing surgery, Kerr worked hard with fitness coach Aaron Holt to recover ahead of the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada. During the Matilda's first group stage match against the United States, Kerr was the team's starting striker. The United States won 3–1. During the team's second group stage match, she helped Australia defeat Nigeria 2–0. During the match, Kerr was elbowed
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
in the face by Ugo Njoku, which ultimately resulted in a three-game suspension for Njoku. Kerr recovered and started during Australia's final group stage match against Sweden, a 1–1 draw. Australia's finished second in their group and advanced to the round of 16 where they defeated Brazil 1–0. Though Australia reached the quarterfinals for the first time ever, they were defeated by 2011 champions Japan 1–0. 2016–2018 In July 2017, Kerr was the top goalscorer at the inaugural Tournament of Nations in the United States. She scored a hat-trick in Australia's 4–2 victory over Japan, and also scored a goal
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"participant in",
"2019 FIFA Women's World Cup"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
against Brazil, leading Australia to win the tournament. Prior to this tournament, Kerr had scored 8 goals in her first 49 games for the national team. Her hat-trick against Japan was the beginning of a run of 11 goals in 6 games. Kerr was named 2017 AFC Women's Footballer of the Year. 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, France In February 2019, Kerr was named captain of the national team by newly appointed head coach Ante Milicic. Two months later, she was one of five nominees for the BBC Women's Footballer of the Year award. During the team's first group stage
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"participant in",
"2019 FIFA Women's World Cup"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
match at the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup in France, she opened up an early lead against Italy after scoring a goal off a penalty kick rebound, though Australia ultimately lost 1–2 in stoppage time. Kerr's goal was her first at a World Cup tournament and she celebrated by punching the corner flag to honor Tim Cahill, the all-time leading goalscorer for the men's national team. During the team's second group stage match against Brazil, though Kerr was in an offside position when Monica Hickmann Alves headed the ball into her own goal, video assistant referees (VAR) deemed that Kerr
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
wasn't interfering and the goal was counted for Australia. Australia won 3–2. Kerr scored four goals in the team's 4–1 win against Jamaica and was named Player of the Match. She is the first Australian footballer — male or female — to score a hat-trick at a World Cup tournament and the tenth footballer to score four goals. Australia finished second in their group and advanced to the knockout stage where they were defeated by Norway in a penalty shoot-out. Kerr's five goals at the tournament ranked fourth highest behind Ellen White of England and Americans Alex Morgan and Megan
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Western New York Flash"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
Rapinoe who all scored six. Career statistics International goals Honours Club Sydney FC W-League: 2012–13 Western New York Flash NWSL Shield: 2013 Perth Glory W-League: 2014 Chelsea FA Women's League Cup: 2019–20 International Australia AFC Women's Asian Cup: 2010 AFF U-16 Women's Championship: 2009 Tournament of Nations: 2017 Cup of Nations: 2019 Individual FFA Female U20 Footballer of the Year: 2010, 2014 PFA Women's Footballer of the Year: 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019 Julie Dolan Medal: 2016–17 and 2017–18 W-League Golden Boot: 2017–18 and 2018–19 Football Media Association (FMA) International Player of the Year: 2013, 2014 NWSL Player of the Week:
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"participant in",
"2019 FIFA Women's World Cup"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
featured on the cover of the July 2011 issue of Australian FourFourTwo along with four of her national team teammates: Melissa Barbieri, Kyah Simon, Thea Slatyer, and Sarah Walsh. In March 2018, she was featured in Vogue Australia as a 2018 Game Changer. In 2019, she was featured on the cover of the Australian version of the FIFA 19 video game. Kerr has an endorsement deal with Nike. In 2019, she starred in a commercial, Dream Further, that aired during the Champion's League Final and 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup and also featured Gerard Piqué, Alex Scott, Neymar Jr., Crystal
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Red Stars"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"sibling",
"Daniel Kerr"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
Dunn, and Lieke Martens. The same year, her trademark backflip was featured in the Nike ad, Dream Crazier along with other women athletes like Serena Williams, Megan Rapinoe, and Diana Taurasi and aired during the 91st Academy Awards. She is a brand ambassador for Coca Cola-owned Powerade. Personal life Kerr is in a relationship with her former Perth Glory and Chicago Red Stars teammate Nikki Stanton. A supporter of the West Coast Eagles along with her brother Daniel Kerr, she was made the club's number-one ticket holder in 2019 and 2020. See also List of FIFA Women's World Cup hat-tricks
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Sam Kerr
|
[
[
"Sam Kerr",
"country of citizenship",
"Australia"
],
[
"Sam Kerr",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Red Stars"
]
] |
Australian women's soccer player
|
coming of age, Little, Various (2019), Stand Up for the Future, Penguin Random House, Williams, Jean (2007), A Beautiful Game: International Perspectives on Women's Football , A&C Black, External links Australia player profile Chelsea player profile Perth Glory player profile NWSL player profile Chicago Red Stars player profile Sky Blue FC player profile (archived) Category:1993 births Category:Living people Category:Australian women's soccer players Category:Sportspeople from Perth, Western Australia Category:Perth Glory FC (W-League) players Category:Sydney FC (W-League) players Category:Australian people of English descent Category:Australian people of Anglo-Indian descent Category:2011 FIFA Women's World Cup players Category:2015 FIFA Women's World Cup players Category:2019 FIFA
|
[
"Samantha Kerr",
"Samantha May Kerr"
] |
Minor Raja
|
[
[
"Minor Raja",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] |
1991 film
|
Minor Raja is a 1991 Telugu comedy film, produced by Venigalla Rambabu, K. P. Panakala Rao under the Rakesh Productions banner and directed by Katragadda Ravi Teja. It stars Rajendra Prasad, Shobana and Rekha in the lead roles, with music composed by Vidyasagar. The film is remake of the Tamil film Mallu Vetti Minor (1990). The film was recorded as a flop at the box office. Plot Minor Raja (Rajendra Prasad), was a rich man and wayward village playboy, who spent his time in brothels like his father. Santhana Lakshmi (Shobhana) and Minor Raja fell in love with each other.
|
[] |
Nocturna Artificialia
|
[
[
"Nocturna Artificialia",
"instance of",
"Film"
],
[
"Nocturna Artificialia",
"director",
"Brothers Quay"
]
] |
1979 film by Brothers Quay
|
Nocturna Artificialia is the first credited film directed and produced by the Brothers Quay, Timothy and Stephen. "This British fraternal directing team is known for their avant-garde puppet films." Rather than dialog, this film uses shadows and music to create the dream-like state of the main character and his journey on a red tram at night. Plot The story is told in eight parts and begins with a man in his apartment. He sees a red tram out his window and leaves his apartment to wait for the next tram to come by. As he sees the next tram approaching
|
[] |
Nocturna Artificialia
|
[
[
"Nocturna Artificialia",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] |
1979 film by Brothers Quay
|
chair and hits his head on the ground. He tries to get up, but fails. More time passes (as can be seen as the light from outside rises and falls) and he is still motionless on the ground as the movie ends. Themes There are many different themes seen throughout the short film. These themes include "impressions of a man, a tram and an unidentified city at night (the opening titles identify a specific Brussels street, but the ambiance seems East European)." Much of it seems to be a dream that comes from his fixation with specific objects on the
|
[] |
Nocturna Artificialia
|
[
[
"Nocturna Artificialia",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] |
1979 film by Brothers Quay
|
tram. There is a more general view of the streets he wanders at night, but even when he seems to wake up at the end of the film (after experiencing some kind of revelation), he finds tramlines running through the middle of his room. Everything in the film is glimpsed and only half-heard by sound and music, as there is no dialogue. Suspense is created through movement of the tram and (sometimes awkward) angles of the camera. The film tends to shift focus with continuous shadows moving across things around the man's apartment and the tram itself. This personifies the
|
[] |
Nocturna Artificialia
|
[
[
"Nocturna Artificialia",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] |
1979 film by Brothers Quay
|
objects by giving them a somewhat eerie life. Religious imagery can also be seen as a theme in the film. At one point the tram passes through the inside of a cathedral, "and then down a street named after the Crucifixion, but these elements seem as half-awake and half-remembered as everything else. Despite being presented in multiple languages, the eight inter-titles are calculatedly cryptic It's a Surrealist film in the term's original sense - in that its imaginary landscape is equally populated by conscious and unconscious elements and little distinction is drawn between them." Release details This short film in
|
[] |
Columbus Wardogs
|
[
[
"Columbus Wardogs",
"inception",
"2000"
]
] |
arena football team
|
The Columbus Wardogs were an arena football team in af2 that played their home games in the Columbus Civic Center in Columbus, Georgia from 2001 through 2004. The team's majority owner was Birmingham, Alabama businessman Ed Randle, a high-ranking executive with Primerica. Beginnings In 1998, Columbus Civic Center general manager Tony Ford contacted the Arena Football League about expanding into Columbus but was informed that the market was too small. In 2000, the Arena Football League launched its developmental league known as af2 which featured franchises in smaller cities. On May 3, 2000, af2 commissioner Mary Ellen Garling toured the
|
[] |
Columbus Wardogs
|
[
[
"Columbus Wardogs",
"inception",
"2000"
]
] |
arena football team
|
Columbus Civic Center and announced she hoped the league could expand into Columbus for the 2001 season. In October, an ownership group, which included Primerica executive Ed Randle as majority owner and Mike Sammond, a former Columbus sportscaster with WRBL TV who helped launch the league's Birmingham Steeldogs a year earlier, were approved and granted an af2 expansion franchise for the city. The Columbus Civic Center hosted a press conference on October 30, 2000, to formally announce the new franchise. The following month, Nashville Kats assistant coach Joe Campbell was introduced as the team's first head coach. The Wardogs' name
|
[] |
Columbus Wardogs
|
[
[
"Columbus Wardogs",
"inception",
"2000"
]
] |
arena football team
|
the Mississippi Coast Coliseum caused by Hurricane Katrina. Disotell announced plans to build a new 12,000-seat arena for his team in Pearl, Mississippi, (a suburb of Jackson) but ultimately he was unable to secure funding and never played. Season-by-season Notable players Troy Bergeron – wide receiver Rob Keefe – defensive specialist Kyle Rowley – quarterback References External links Columbus Wardogs on ArenaFan.com Category:Defunct af2 teams Category:Sports in Columbus, Georgia Category:American football teams in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:2000 establishments in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:2004 disestablishments in Georgia (U.S. state) Category:American football teams established in 2000 Category:American football teams disestablished in 2004
|
[] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
],
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"publisher",
"Marc-Michel Rey"
],
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"genre",
"Epistolary novel"
]
] |
book
|
Julie, or the New Heloise (), original entitled Lettres de Deux Amans, Habitans d'une petite Ville au pied des Alpes ("Letters from two lovers, living in a small town at the foot of the Alps"), is an epistolary novel by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, published in 1761 by Marc-Michel Rey in Amsterdam. The novel's subtitle points to the history of Héloïse d'Argenteuil and Peter Abelard, a medieval story of passion and Christian renunciation. The novel was put on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum. Overview Although Rousseau wrote the work as a novel, a philosophical theory about authenticity permeates through it, as he explores
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
dans la nouvelle Héloïse : texte et intertexte : actes du colloque de Genève, 10-11-12 juin 1999, Éd. Jacques Berchtold, François Rosset, Droz, Genève, 2002 Jean-Marie Carzou, La Conception de la nature humaine dans la Nouvelle Héloïse, Sauret, Paris, 1966 Charles Dédéyan, Jean-Jacques Rousseau : la Nouvelle Héloïse, ou, l’éternel retour, Nizet, Saint-Genouph, 2002 Charles Dédéyan, La Nouvelle Héloïse de Jean-Jacques Rousseau : étude d’ensemble, SEDES-CDU, Paris, 1990 Maurice R Funke, From saint to psychotic: the crisis of human identity in the late 18th century : a comparative study of Clarissa, La Nouvelle Héloise, Die Leiden des jungen Werthers, P.
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
],
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"country of origin",
"France"
]
] |
book
|
Lang, New York, 1983 James Fleming Jones, La Nouvelle Héloïse, Rousseau and utopia, Droz, Genève, 1977 Peggy Kamuf, Fictions of Feminine Desire: Disclosures of Héloïse, U of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1982 François van Laere, Une Lecture du temps dans la Nouvelle Héloïse, La Baconnière, Neuchâtel, 1968 Laurence Mall, Origines et retraites dans La nouvelle Héloïse, P. Lang, New York, 1997 William Mead, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, ou le Romancier enchaîné ; étude de la nouvelle Héloïse, Presses universitaires de France, Paris, 1966 Daniel Mornet, La Nouvelle Héloïse de J.-J. Rousseau ; étude et analyse, Mellottée Paris, 1929 Perry Reisewitz, L’Illusion salutaire :
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"country of origin",
"France"
]
] |
book
|
Jean-Jacques Rousseaus Nouvelle Héloïse als ästhetische Fortschreibung der philosophischen Anthropologie der Discours, Romanistischer Verlag, Bonn, 2000 Yannick Séité, Du Livre au lire : La nouvelle Héloïse, roman des lumières, Champion, Paris, 2002 Étienne Servais, Le Genre romanesque en France depuis l’apparition de la Nouvelle Héloïse jusqu’aux approches de la Révolution, M. Lamertin, Bruxelles, 1922 Anne Tilleul, La Vertu du beau : essai sur La nouvelle Héloïse, Humanitas nouvelle optique, Montréal, 1989 Articles Nouchine Behbahani, Paysages rêvés, paysages vécus dans La Nouvelle Héloïse de J. J. Rousseau, Voltaire Foundation at the Taylor Institution, Oxford, 1989, Jacques Berchtold, “L’Impossible Virginité du jardin
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
verbal : les Leçons de la nature selon la Lettre IV, 11 de La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Éd. et préf. Jürgen Söring, Peter Gasser, Rousseauismus: Naturevangelium und Literatur, Frankfurt, Peter Lang, 1999, pp. 53–83 Nadine Bérenguier, “Le ‘Dangereux Dépôt’: Virginité et contrat dans Julie ou La Nouvelle Héloïse ”, Eighteenth-Century Fiction, July 1997, n° 9 (4), pp. 447–63 André Blanc, “Le Jardin de Julie”, Dix-huitième Siècle, 1982, n° 14, pp. 357–76 Luciano Bulber, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau, peintre de la nature-état d’âme dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Kwartalnik Neofilologiczny, 1988, n° 35 (4), pp. 415–29 Henri Coulet, “Couples dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Littératures, Fall
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
223–32 R. J. Howells, “Deux histoires, un discours : La Nouvelle Héloïse et le récit des amours d’Émile et Sophie dans l’Émile”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1987, n° 249, pp. 267–94 François Jost, “La Nouvelle Héloïse, Roman Suisse”, Revue de Littérature Comparée, 1962, n° 35, pp. 538–65 Tanguy L’Aminot, “L’Amour courtois dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Piau-Gillot, Colette Éd. Desné, Roland Éd. L’Aminot, Tanguy Éd. Modernité et pérennité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Champion, Paris, 2002, pp. 241–57 Claude Labrosse, “Nouveauté de La Nouvelle Héloïse," Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Jan–Apr 2001, n° 13 (2–3), pp. 235–46 J.-L. Lecercle, “L’Inconscient et création littéraire
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
: sur La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Études Littéraires, 1969, n° 1, pp. 197–204 Annie Leclerc, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau : l’Amour au pays des chimères”, Magazine Littéraire, Par 1995, n° 331, pp. 31–34 Pierre Rétat, Litteratures, “L’Économie rustique de Clarens”, 1989 Fall; 21: 59–68 Laurence Mall, “Les Aberrations de l’errance : le Voyage dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Australian Journal of French Studies, 1994, n° 31 (2), pp. 175–87 Francine Markovits, “Rousseau et l’éthique de Clarens : une économie des relations humaines”, Stanford French Review, 1991, n° 15 (3), pp. 323–48 Ourida Mostefai, Lectures de La Nouvelle Héloïse, N. Amer. Assn. for the Study
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Ottawa, 1993 Philip Knee, “Wolmar comme médiateur politique”, pp. 117–27 Guy Lafrance, “L’Éthique de La Nouvelle Héloïse et du Vicaire Savoyard“, pp. 141–50 Jim MacAdam, “Reading Julie Amour-propre-ly”, pp. 107–16 Laurence Mall, pp. 163–73”, “L’Intérieur et l’extérieur : Étude des lettres parisiennes dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, pp. 163–73 Jean Roussel, pp. 61–72”, “La Nouvelle Héloïse et la politique : de l’écart à l’emblème”, pp. 61–72 Teresa Sousa de Almeida, “La Circulation des lettres dans le roman ou le Partage des pouvoirs”, pp. 175–84 Jean Terrasse, pp. 129–39”, “Jean-Jacques, Saint-Preux et Wolmar : aspects de la relation pédagogique”,
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
“L’Idéal politique et l’idée de Nation dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, politique et nation, Intro. Robert Thiéry, Paris, Champion, 2001, XXIV, pp. 101–08 Norbert Sclippa, “La Nouvelle Héloïse et l’aristocratie”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1991, n° 284, pp. 1–71 Norbert Sclippa, “La Nouvelle Héloïse, la noblesse et la bourgeoisie”, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1989, n° 265, pp. 1617–19 Jean-Paul Sermain, “La Nouvelle Héloïse ou l’invention du roman-poème””, Éd. Colette Piau-Gillot, Roland Desné, Tanguy L’Aminot, Modernité et pérennité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Paris, Champion, 2002, pp. 227–40 Jean Sgard, “De Cunégonde à Julie”, Recherches et
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Julie, or the New Heloise
|
[
[
"Julie, or the New Heloise",
"author",
"Jean-Jacques Rousseau"
]
] |
book
|
Travaux, 1996, n° 51, pp. 121–30 Lieve Spaas, “D’un Clarens à l’autre : structures du désir sexuel dans La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1991, n° 284, pp. 73–82 Jean Starobinski, “Jean-Jacques Rousseau : Jours uniques, plaisirs redoublés”, Thèmes et figures du siècle des Lumières : mélanges offerts à Roland Mortier, Éd. Raymond Trousson Michèle Mat-Hasquin, Jacques Lemaire, Ralph Heyndels, Genève, Droz, 1980, pp. 285–97 Raymond Trousson, “De Jacques à Jean-Jacques ou du bon usage de La Nouvelle Héloïse“, Éd. Elio Mosele, Intro. Pierre Brunel, George Sand et son temps, I–III. Slatkine, Genève, 1994, pp. 749–66
|
[
"Nouvelle Heloïse"
] |
Gardiner Kane
|
[
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"member of political party",
"Democratic Unionist Party"
],
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"place of birth",
"Ballymoney"
]
] |
Northern Irish politician (born 1947)
|
Andrew Gardiner Kane, known as Gardiner Kane (born 25 November 1947) is a former Unionist politician in Northern Ireland. Born in Ballymoney, Kane joined the Royal Ulster Constabulary in 1974 and served until 1984. He joined the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), and was elected to Moyle District Council in 1985, serving as its Chair in 1990 and 1996. In 1996 he was an unsuccessful candidate in the Northern Ireland Forum election in North Antrim. He was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly, representing North Antrim at the 1998 election. Kane was accused of indecently assaulting a former council worker in
|
[
"Andrew Gardiner Kane"
] |
Gardiner Kane
|
[
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"member of political party",
"Democratic Unionist Party"
],
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"member of",
"Orange Order"
],
[
"Gardiner Kane",
"place of birth",
"Ballymoney"
]
] |
Northern Irish politician (born 1947)
|
October 2002. He left the DUP soon afterwards, citing ill health, and stood down from his council seat soon afterwards, prompting a by-election. Kane contested the 2003 Assembly election as an independent, but took only 623 votes and was not elected. In 2004, Kane was cleared of the sexual assault charge, but was convicted of common assault. Gardiner Kane is an active member of the all Loyal Orders, namely the Orange Order, Apprentice Boys of Derry, and Royal Black Institution References Category:1947 births Category:Living people Category:People from Ballymoney Category:Royal Ulster Constabulary officers Category:Councillors in County Antrim Category:Democratic Unionist Party MLAs
|
[
"Andrew Gardiner Kane"
] |
DeMario Minter
|
[
[
"DeMario Minter",
"member of sports team",
"Arizona Cardinals"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"member of sports team",
"Cleveland Browns"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"member of sports team",
"Kansas City Chiefs"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"place of birth",
"Stone Mountain, Georgia"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Cornerback"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"educated at",
"Stephenson High School"
],
[
"DeMario Minter",
"sport",
"American football"
]
] |
player of American football
|
DeMario Minter (born February 20, 1984) is a former American football cornerback. He was originally drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the fifth round of the 2006 NFL Draft. He played college football at Georgia. Minter has also been a member of the Kansas City Chiefs, Arizona Cardinals and Florida Tuskers. Early years Minter played high school football at Stephenson High School in Stone Mountain, Georgia, College career Minter played college football for the Georgia Bulldogs and garnered First Team All-SEC honors by the Associated Press in 2005. Professional career Cleveland Browns In 2006, during a pre-training camp workout with
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"occupation",
"Pianist"
],
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"given name",
"Howard"
],
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"named after",
"Howard Pyle"
]
] |
American musician
|
Howard Pyle Wyeth (April 22, 1944 – March 27, 1996), also known as Howie Wyeth, was an American drummer and pianist. Wyeth is remembered for work with the saxophonist James Moody, the rockabilly singer Robert Gordon, the electric guitarist Link Wray, the rhythm and blues singer Don Covay, and the folk singer Christine Lavin. Best known as a drummer for Bob Dylan, he was a member of the Wyeth family of American artists. Family Wyeth was born in Jersey City, New Jersey. His mother Caroline Pyle, Howard Pyle’s niece, was interested in the Wyeth family, flirted with some of them,
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"given name",
"Howard"
],
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"named after",
"Howard Pyle"
]
] |
American musician
|
McCoys, at least eleven artists are among the family and in-laws. Wyeth was the namesake of his great-uncle Howard Pyle (1853–1911), the artist and illustrator for Harper's Weekly and the author of The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood and four volumes of children's stories about King Arthur. His grandfather N. C. Wyeth was a student of Howard Pyle and a prominent illustrator of children's books for Charles Scribner's Sons. His grandmother Ellen Bernard Thompson Pyle was an illustrator of children for The Saturday Evening Post who married Walter Pyle, Howard's younger brother. He was the nephew of the painters Andrew
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"educated at",
"Syracuse University"
],
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"instrument",
"Piano"
]
] |
American musician
|
Wyeth, Henriette Wyeth and Carolyn Wyeth. Early years Wyeth was the son of music lovers—his father enjoyed playing ragtime. He learned drums by age 4 and soon on a piano could repeat songs he had heard. He attended the Wilmington Friends School where his music teacher helped him decide to be a musician. Fats Waller was Wyeth's greatest influence, leading him to learn stride piano and music theory. He studied percussion with Alan Abel of the Philadelphia Orchestra, and received a bachelor's in music at Syracuse University in 1966. Wyeth played at various times in the bands the Dogs and
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"instrument",
"Piano"
]
] |
American musician
|
the Worms after moving to New York City in 1969. In 1972 on a solo album by John Herald co-produced by Bob Neuwirth for Paramount, Wyeth played with Amos Garret, Steven Soles, Ned Albright and Rob Stoner. Desire Stoner brought Wyeth to drum on Desire in July 1975, a decision that satisfied Dylan who said, "Your drummer sounds great, it sounds great." The songs were co-written with Jacques Levy, and the personnel were Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano), Vinnie Bell (bouzouki), Scarlet Rivera (violin), Dom Cortese (accordion), Stoner (bass, background vocals), Wyeth (drums), Luther Rix (congas), and Emmylou Harris, Ronee
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] |
American musician
|
Rolling Thunder Revue in New York in 1975. The revue toured the United States during the end of 1975 and first half of 1976, and at two of those shows recorded the live album Hard Rain released in 1976. They are the musical performers in the Hard Rain documentary by TVTV shown on NBC in 1976, and in the film Renaldo and Clara released in 1978. About one hundred people traveled including supporting personnel. The recording artists were Dylan and Joan Baez (vocal & guitar), Blakley (vocal), Gary Burke (drums), T-Bone Burnett (guitar), David Mansfield (steel-guitar, mandolin, violin, dobro), Roger
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"instrument",
"Piano"
]
] |
American musician
|
McGuinn (guitar, vocal), Neuwirth (guitar, vocal), Rivera (violin), Rix (drums, percussion, congas), Mick Ronson (guitar), Soles (guitar, vocal), Stoner (bass) and Wyeth (piano, drums). Joni Mitchell, who flew in to sing for one show, nearly left, but when she told Wyeth goodbye, he was hurt, "And I suddenly realized, more than anybody Wyeth's reaction was so heartfelt, his expression of it was so open. Like it's just his soul is so beautiful. And I stayed." Isaac Hayes, Richie Havens, Carlos Santana, Ringo Starr, Stephen Stills and Stevie Wonder joined the band, who named themselves Guam, for a show in Houston.
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"occupation",
"Pianist"
]
] |
American musician
|
Revue artists are credited long after they disbanded. Their work is in Masterpieces (1978), The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991 (1991), Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Volume 3 (1994), Best of Bob Dylan (1997), Bob Dylan Live 1975 (The Bootleg Series Volume 5) (2002), and Desire (remastered 2003). Wyeth recorded four albums with Gordon, as well as albums with Don McLean, Leslie West and Moody. He is the drummer on Lavin's Attainable Love released by Philo in 1990 and the pianist on "Warmer Days", a song written by John Popper on the 1990 A&M album Blues Traveler. Later
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"instrument",
"Piano"
]
] |
American musician
|
he led his own groups on piano, playing ragtime, blues and early jazz. Chadds Ford Getaway was Wyeth's one solo recording of ragtime and stride piano. It was remastered by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound and released as a two-CD set in 2003 by Stand Clear Music. Among the fifteen medleys are lesser-known works alongside "Ain't Misbehavin'", made famous by Fats Waller, and Scott Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag". Mansfield and Wyeth played on Chris Harford's Elektra album Be Headed in 1992 with a host of others. After Wyeth's death, Harford released a piano instrumental Ode to Howie Wyeth. Also that
|
[] |
Howard Wyeth
|
[
[
"Howard Wyeth",
"educated at",
"Syracuse University"
]
] |
American musician
|
year, Wyeth played drums on Fishermen's Stew's 7" single release of "Small Life, Hollow Roads, and Fairy Tales" b/w "Fine" released on Berlin's Twang! Records in 1993. Death Wyeth died of cardiac arrest at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan on March 27, 1996. He was 51. See also Wyeth Notes External links Category:1944 births Category:1996 deaths Category:American jazz pianists Category:American rock drummers Category:American rock pianists Category:American male pianists Category:Musicians from Jersey City, New Jersey Category:Musicians from New York City Category:Stride pianists Category:Syracuse University alumni Category:Wyeth family Category:20th-century American drummers Category:American male drummers Category:20th-century American pianists Category:Jazz musicians from New York
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"instance of",
"Marines"
],
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"country",
"Colombia"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
The Colombian Naval Infantry and also referred to as Colombian Marines () is the marine force of the Colombian National Armada. The 24,000-member Colombian Marine Infantry is organized into a single division with four brigades (one amphibious assault brigade and three riverine brigades), each with several battalions plus numerous small security units. History The Naval Infantry is a constituent part of the Navy whose origins date back to the wars of independence. Today's Colombian Marines trace their heritage and military traditions from the Gran Colombia Marine Corps raised in 1822, by orders of Major General Francisco de Paula Santander, with
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"instance of",
"Marines"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
Captain Diego Antonio García, who was appointed commander of the 6th Marine Company raised that year, being appointed Commandant that October. Raised by an order from President Dr. Alfonso López Pumarejo on January 12, 1937, The Colombian Marines started out as a 120-strong Marine Company, located on Naval Base Cartagena. On March 8, 1940, the 1st Marine Battalion was raised, with three companies to cover Bolivar, Putumayo and the San Andres Islands, then in 1943 was assigned to Buenaventura, Barranquilla, Puerto Leguizamo and the eastern plains. In 1944, a heavy weapons company was raised and the battalion was moved to
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"instance of",
"Marines"
],
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"country",
"Colombia"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
facilities adjacent to the San Pedro Claver convent in Cartagena. With the advent of La Violencia, in 1952 the Marines were reassigned to the Eastern Naval Force due to the appearance of subversives in this area, and in a year, with the transfer of personnel from the National Army of Colombia, the number of personnel serving increased. In July 1955, thanks to the instruction of officers and NCOs in the United States in the United States Naval Academy, The Basic School of the United States Marine Corps and the United States Marine Corps School of Infantry and the U.S. mission
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"instance of",
"Marines"
],
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"country",
"Colombia"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
Naval Infantry and to prepare to perform its duties of defending the territorial and maritime integrity of the Colombian nation through basic military training through its Instruction Battalions before moving to the regular units of the Naval Infantry nationwide. The Marines arrived at the Operational Unit Mayor, on January 15, 1984, the presence of the Marines, is in the jurisdiction of the Navy land, archipelagos, islands, coastal and river arteries. Its slogan is “LA VOLUNTAD TODO LO SUPERA” "WILL SURPASSES EVERYTHING" Since then, the Marines have had several changes in line with the operational situation and public order in Colombia.
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"country",
"Colombia"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
Personnel The Colombian Marine Infantry fields approximately 22,000 personnel, among officers and Infantrymen, and it is by far the biggest Corps within the Navy. Ranks & Insignias The tables below display the rank structures and rank insignias for the Colombian Marine Infantry personnel. Organization Marine Infantry Training Base Base de entrenamiento de infanteria de marina "BEIM". Is located in a small town called Coveñas, Sucre Department, in the caribbean north of Colombia. It has 3 battalions for recruits' boot camp training called BINIM 1, BINIM2 and BINIM3 (BINIM, Batallón de Instrucción de Infantería de Marina). A 13-week training program is
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"instance of",
"Marines"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
performed under supervision of the United States Naval Mission by a Gunnery Sergeant of the United States Marine Corps. The BEIM also has an Specialists Center (CIEAN: Centro Internacional de Entrenamiento Anfibio, where professional marines and sub-officers (Coporals - Sergeants) receive special training courses: Drill instructor, Anti-explosives, Canine guide, Personal defense, Shooter and Water survival. The training in this center is also supervised by the Gunnery Sergeant of the US Naval Mission. There is also the Batallón de Comando y Apoyo de IM Nº 6 (BACAIM6) in charge of the watch and security of the surrounding areas of the base
|
[] |
Colombian Naval Infantry
|
[
[
"Colombian Naval Infantry",
"country",
"Colombia"
]
] |
the marine force of the Colombian National Navy
|
and some sectors of the Sucre Department. First Marine Infantry Brigade Brigada de Infantería de Marina No.1 Is a minor operative unit with the main purpose of neutralizing narcoterrorism. Mainly operated in the Caribbean Region of Colombia, in the area of Montes de María. BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 2 BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 3 BATALLÓN DE FUSILEROS DE IM N° 4 BATALLÓN DE CONTRAGUERRILLAS DE IM N° 1 BATALLÓN DE CONTRAGUERRILLAS DE IM N° 2 BATALLÓN DE COMANDO Y APOYO DE IM N° 1 First Riverine Marine Infantry Brigade Brigada Fluvial de Infantería de Marina No.
|
[] |
Enno Dirksen
|
[
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"date of death",
"1850"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"occupation",
"Mathematician"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"doctoral advisor",
"Johann Tobias Mayer"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"doctoral advisor",
"Bernhard Friedrich Thibaut"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"family name",
"Dirksen"
]
] |
German mathematician
|
Enno Dirksen (3 January 1788 – 16 July 1850) was a German mathematician. Early life He was born in Bedekaspel, Germany. Between 1803 and 1807, he obtained private lessons in mathematics, physics, astronomy and navigation from a teacher at the Emden Navigation School. Following this, he taught at local schools in Hatzum (till 1815) and in Hinte. Career On the suggestion of , he enrolled at Göttingen University in 1817 to study mathematics. He pursued his doctorate there advised by Johann Tobias Mayer and Bernhard Friedrich Thibaut. He went to Berlin in 1820 and started working for the astronomer Johann
|
[] |
Enno Dirksen
|
[
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"place of death",
"Paris"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"date of death",
"1850"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"occupation",
"Mathematician"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"member of",
"Prussian Academy of Sciences"
],
[
"Enno Dirksen",
"doctoral student",
"Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi"
]
] |
German mathematician
|
Elert Bode. He habiliated at the Berlin University's mathematics department as an expert in astronomy. In August 1820, he was appointed by the Prussian Ministry as an extraordinary professor in the University. Four years later, in June 1824, he was appointed as a full Professor of Mathematics. The noted mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi was one of the students he advised. He was an elected member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences from 1825. He retired from teaching in 1848–49 due to illness, and moved to Paris. He died there on 16 July 1850. References Category:1788 births Category:1850 deaths Category:University
|
[] |
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