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Searching for a Former Clarity | [
[
"Searching for a Former Clarity",
"record label",
"Fat Wreck Chords"
],
[
"Searching for a Former Clarity",
"follows",
"Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy"
]
] | 2005 album by Against Me! | rock scene" and said that "How Low", a slower song in which Grace describes attempts to give up drugs, "prov[es] that you can't get this deep into other people's shit without getting a little on yourself." Track listing Total Clarity Against Me! released Total Clarity, a collection of demos and unreleased songs from the Searching for a Former Clarity recording sessions, through Fat Wreck Chords on May 24, 2011. Fat Wreck Chords previously released The Original Cowboy, an album of demos from the band's 2003 album Against Me! as the Eternal Cowboy, in 2009. Track listing Charts Personnel Adapted from | [] |
Searching for a Former Clarity | [
[
"Searching for a Former Clarity",
"tracklist",
"Don't Lose Touch"
]
] | 2005 album by Against Me! | the album liner notes. Band Laura Jane Grace – guitar, lead vocals James Bowman – guitar, backing vocals Andrew Seward – bass guitar, backing vocals Warren Oakes – drums Additional musicians Chris Pumphrey – alto saxophone on "Miami" Rose Hammer – baritone saxophone on "Miami" Geof Manthonre – trumpet on "Miami" J. Robbins – tambourine on "Unprotected Sex with Multiple Partners" and "Don't Lose Touch" Dave Chamberland, Jon Herroon, Mathieu Guilbault, and Olivier Maguire – backing vocals on "Unprotected Sex with Multiple Partners" Genevieve Tremblay – backing vocals on "Unprotected Sex with Multiple Partners" and "How Low" Production J. Robbins | [] |
Bernt Østhus | [
[
"Bernt Østhus",
"country of citizenship",
"Norway"
],
[
"Bernt Østhus",
"occupation",
"Lawyer"
],
[
"Bernt Østhus",
"educated at",
"University of Bergen"
]
] | Norwegian businessman | Bernt Østhus (born December 18, 1970) is a lawyer and investor based in Trondheim, Norway. He graduated from University of Bergen in 1994 and has since worked mainly as a private equity investor. Mr. Østhus served as the Chief Executive Officer of Notar Advokat until 1998 before becoming the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Pretor Advokat AS until 2008. Since January 2005, Mr. Østhus has served as a Managing Partner of Staur Holding AS, a family-owned investment company. He has held several Chairman of the Board positions in companies such as Petricore Ltd, Aqualyng Holding AS, Fram Exploration ASA | [] |
Luiken | [
[
"Luiken",
"instance of",
"Surname"
]
] | family name | Luiken is a Dutch patronymic surname based on the archaic spelling Luik of the given name Luuk, a short form of Lucas, or on the equally archai name Lui (from Ludo or Ludolph). Among variants are Luijken, Luikens and Luyken. People with this surname include: Jan Luyken (1649–1712), Dutch poet, illustrator and engraver (1742–1818), Dutch politician for the Batavian Republic Leda Luss Luyken (born 1952), Greek-American conceptual artist Nicole Luiken (born 1971), Canadian science fiction author Otto Luyken (1884–1953), German gardener Stefanie Luiken (born 1985), Dutch backstroke swimmer See also Luyckx, Dutch surname of the same origin Luik, Estonian surname | [] |
Vanspor | [
[
"Vanspor",
"country",
"Turkey"
]
] | association football club | Vanspor A.Ş. was a football team of Van in eastern Turkey. History They played in the top division of Turkish football between 1994 and 1998, playing once more in 1999–2000 season. After relegation from the first division, Vanspor turned to an economic crisis and were relegated from the 2nd and 3rd divisions between 2000–2002. After relegation from the 3rd division in 2003, the club was renamed as İl Özel İdaresi Vanspor and played in Van Super Amateur. They changed name as Van Tuşba Belediyespor in 2013 and colour as black-yellow. They finally withdrew from Van First Amateur League in 2014–15 | [
"Vanspor AS",
"VANSPOR A.Ş."
] |
Henry Lieberman | [
[
"Henry Lieberman",
"instance of",
"Human"
],
[
"Henry Lieberman",
"occupation",
"Computer scientist"
]
] | American computer scientist | Henry Lieberman is an American computer scientist at the MIT CSAIL in the fields of programming languages, artificial intelligence and human-computer interaction. He received the 2018 ACM Impact Award Intelligent User Interaction for work on mining affect from text and has been applied to the problem of prevention of cyberbullying. He has been a principal research scientist at the Media Lab and Director of the Software Agents Research group. Career Dr. Lieberman was a research scientist from 1972-87 at the Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at MIT, working with influential computer scientists such as Seymour Papert and Carl Hewitt. | [] |
Busses Roar | [
[
"Busses Roar",
"instance of",
"Film"
],
[
"Busses Roar",
"director",
"D. Ross Lederman"
]
] | 1942 film by D. Ross Lederman | Busses Roar is a 1942 film directed by D. Ross Lederman and starring Richard Travis and Julie Bishop. Plot A bungling saboteur attempts to place a bomb on board a bus so that it will explode as the bus passes by some oil wells. The plot is foiled, but not by the authorities. Cast Richard Travis as Sergeant Ryan Julie Bishop as Reba Richards Charles Drake as Eddie Sloan Eleanor Parker as Norma Elisabeth Fraser as Betty Richard Fraser as Dick Remick Peter Whitney as Frederick Hoff Frank Wilcox as Detective Quinn Willie Best as Sunshine Rex Williams as Jerry | [] |
Hausstein | [
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"Mountain"
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[
"Hausstein",
"country",
"Germany"
],
[
"Hausstein",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Schaufling"
],
[
"Hausstein",
"mountain range",
"Bavarian Forest"
]
] | mountain | The Hausstein is a mountain in Bavaria, Germany. The Hausstein ("House-stone") is a mountain in the Anterior Bavarian Forest, southwest of the Lower Bavarian town of Regen, and northeast of the town of Deggendorf, and is located in the municipality of Schaufling, in the district of Deggendorf. On the west side of the mountain, there are two ski lifts for Alpine skiers and others, with up to , which is part of the ski and cross-country centre of Deggendorf-Rusel-Hausstein. North of the mountain is the Rusel; on the south side is located in panoramic position, the Asklepios Clinic of Schaufling. | [] |
Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery | [
[
"Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Karlsruhe"
],
[
"Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery",
"country",
"Germany"
],
[
"Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery",
"instance of",
"Jewish cemetery"
],
[
"Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery",
"country of origin",
"Germany"
]
] | building in Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe Government Region, Bade-Württemberg, Germany | Grötzingen Jewish Cemetery ( or ) is the smallest Jewish burial place in the city of Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is listed as a national heritage site. History Until 1900, the dead of the Jewish community of Grötzingen were buried at Obergrombach Jewish Cemetery northeast of Karlsruhe. The Jewish cemetery of Grötzingen was built in 1905–6 on Junghälden field on Werrabronner Straße. It is now surrounded by modern buildings. The cemetery stretches on a 0.18 acres area and has 13 graves, the oldest datable one being from 1905. The ground of the cemetery is fully covered with screed. References Bibliography | [] |
The Memory Cathedral | [
[
"The Memory Cathedral",
"author",
"Jack Dann"
],
[
"The Memory Cathedral",
"publisher",
"Bantam Books"
]
] | book by Jack Dann | The Memory Cathedral: A Secret History of Leonardo da Vinci is a 1995 historical fantasy fiction novel by Jack Dann. It follows Leonardo da Vinci constructing his flying machine and then travelling to the East. Background It was first published by Bantam Books in December 1995 and has been published in ten languages to date. It won the Australian Aurealis Award for best fantasy novel in 1997, was #1 on The Age bestseller list, and in 1996, a novella based on the novel, "Da Vinci Rising," was awarded the Nebula Award for Best Novella. The Memory Cathedral was also shortlisted | [] |
The Memory Cathedral | [
[
"The Memory Cathedral",
"genre",
"Historical novel"
]
] | book by Jack Dann | for the Audio Book of the Year, which was part of the 1998 Braille & Talking Book Library Awards., and the 1997 Ditmar Award for Best Australian Long Fiction. Synopsis Dann's major historical novel depicts a version of the Renaissance in which Leonardo da Vinci actually constructs a number of his inventions, such as a flying machine, whose designs are well-known from his surviving sketches. He later employs some of his military inventions during a battle in the Middle East, while in the service of a Syrian general - events which Dann projects into a year of da Vinci's life | [] |
Dębowiec, Podkarpackie Voivodeship | [
[
"Dębowiec, Podkarpackie Voivodeship",
"country",
"Poland"
]
] | village in Subcarpathian, Poland | Dębowiec is a village in Jasło County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Dębowiec. It lies approximately south of Jasło and south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has an approximate population of 2,000. Debowiec has a long and rich history. For centuries it was a town, located in southeastern corner of the historic province of Lesser Poland. Until the Partitions of Poland, Debowiec belonged to Biecz County of Krakow Voivodeship. In the early Middle Ages, Debowiec was a gord, located in sparsely inhabited areas of Carpathian foothills. In | [] |
Dębowiec, Podkarpackie Voivodeship | [
[
"Dębowiec, Podkarpackie Voivodeship",
"country",
"Poland"
]
] | village in Subcarpathian, Poland | the 11th century, Benedictine monks from Tyniec encouraged settlers to come to this corner of Lesser Poland. Debowiec was a village, destroyed in 1241, during the Mongol invasion of Poland. Asiatic hordes returned in 1259–1260 and 1287–1288, bringing further destruction. On August 15, 1349, King Kazimierz Wielki granted Magdeburg rights to Debowiec. By that time, Debowiec had already been a local center of administration, as first mention of a Roman Catholic parish of St. Bartholomew existing here dates back to 1328. According to some sources, Debowiec had been granted town charter as early as 13th century, and in 1349, Kazimierz | [] |
Otto Pollak | [
[
"Otto Pollak",
"given name",
"Otto"
],
[
"Otto Pollak",
"employer",
"University of Pennsylvania"
]
] | American sociologist | Otto Pollak (30 April 1908 – 18 April 1998) was a writer and a professor of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. His most controversial and famous book was The Criminality of Women (1950), in which he suggested that women commit just as much crime as men, but that their crime is more easily hidden. Pollak further argued that the criminal justice system was biased by preconceptions about women and did not convict or sentence women as harshly as men. His empirical work has provided a starting point for criminology on women. His work has also been used in political | [] |
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | [
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"instance of",
"United States district court"
]
] | United States federal district court in Florida | The United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida (in case citations, S.D. Fla. or S.D. Fl.) is the federal United States district court with territorial jurisdiction over the southern part of the state of Florida. Appeals from cases brought in the Southern District of Florida are to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (except for patent claims and claims against the U.S. government under the Tucker Act, which are appealed to the Federal Circuit). History On the same day that Florida was admitted as a state, March 3, 1845, Congress enacted legislation creating | [] |
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | [
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"instance of",
"United States district court"
]
] | United States federal district court in Florida | the United States District Court for the District of Florida, . On February 23, 1847, this District was subdivided into Northern and Southern Districts, by . The statute effecting this division set forth the boundaries of the Districts: [T]hat part of the State of Florida lying south of a line drawn due east and west from the northern point of Charlotte Harbor, including the islands, keys, reefs, shoals, harbors, bays and inlets, south of said line, shall be erected into a new judicial district, to be called the Southern District of Florida; a District Court shall be held in said | [] |
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | [
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"country",
"United States"
]
] | United States federal district court in Florida | Southern District, to consist of one judge, who shall reside at Key West, in said district... On July 30, 1962, the Middle District was created from portions of these districts by . This federal district has the dubious distinction of having had more judges removed through impeachment than any other district, with a total of two, one-third of all federal district judges so removed. Famous cases that have been heard in the district include Bush v. Gore, United States v. Noriega (the prosecution of former Panamanian military leader Manuel Noriega), González v. Reno (the Elián González case), notorious Ponzi schemer | [] |
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | [
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"country",
"United States"
]
] | United States federal district court in Florida | Scott Rothstein, and United States v. José Padilla (the prosecution of José Padilla). Jurisdiction The court's jurisdiction comprises the nine counties of Broward, Highlands, Indian River, Martin, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie. The district includes the South Florida metropolitan area of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach. It comprises and approximately 6.3 million people. Courthouses, corresponding to the five divisions of the district, are located in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Pierce, Key West, Miami, and West Palm Beach. The court's offices are located in Miami. United States Attorney and United States Marshal The United States Attorney for | [] |
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida | [
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida",
"instance of",
"United States district court"
]
] | United States federal district court in Florida | the Southern District of Florida represents the United States in civil and criminal litigation in the court. The current United States Attorney for the district is Ariana Fajardo Orshan. On August 28, 2018, Gadyaces S. Serralta was confirmed to be the United States Marshal. Current judges : Vacancies and pending nominations Former judges Chief judges Succession of seats See also Courts of Florida List of current United States District Judges List of United States federal courthouses in Florida United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida United States District | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"military branch",
"United States Army"
]
] | United States general | Lt. Gen. Douglas Edward Lute (born November 3, 1952) is a U.S. public servant who served as the United States Permanent Representative to NATO from 2013 to 2017. He was nominated for the post by President Obama on May 23, 2013, and assumed his position on September 3, 2013. Lute is a retired United States Army lieutenant general. On May 15, 2007, Lute was appointed by George W. Bush to serve as Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan. The New York Times referred to him as the "War Czar", since he occupied a | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
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"United States"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"educated at",
"United States Military Academy"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"place of birth",
"Michigan City, Indiana"
]
] | United States general | senior advisory position responsible for overseeing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was asked to stay on by new President Barack Obama as Obama's Special Assistant and Senior Coordinator for Afghanistan and Pakistan. After leaving active duty in 2010, Lute remained in his position at the National Security Staff. He is married to Jane Holl Lute, who was the Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security from 2009 to 2013. Education Lute was born in Michigan City, Indiana, on November 3, 1952. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1975. His first assignment was to the | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"military branch",
"United States Army"
]
] | United States general | 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment in Bindlach, Germany, where he commanded C Troop. He earned a MPA degree from the Kennedy School of Government of Harvard University in 1983 and taught in the Department of Social Science at West Point. Second Cavalry Following attendance at the British Army Staff College, he returned to the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment as operations officer, serving both at the squadron and regimental levels. In 1990–91 he deployed and fought with the regiment in Operation Desert Storm, and later served on the staff of the Chief of Staff of the United States Army. Advancement Lute commanded | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | United States general | commanded Multinational Brigade East in Kosovo for six months in 2002 before being assigned to United States European Command in January 2003 as the Deputy Director of Operations. In June 2004, Lute began more than two years as Director of Operations (J-3) at United States Central Command (USCENTCOM), during which he oversaw combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as other operations in the Middle East, Central Asia, and the Horn of Africa. He was appointed to the rank of major general in 2004, and to the rank of lieutenant general in 2006. He assumed the duties of Director | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | United States general | of Operations, the Joint Staff, in September 2006. National Security Council On June 28, 2007, the Senate confirmed Lute to serve as the Deputy National Security Advisor. He remained in the position after his retirement from active duty in 2010. On 10 August 2007, Lute stated that the United States should "consider" reinstating the military draft to relieve the "stressed" volunteer service from multiple tours of duty. This was immediately followed by a comment that it would be a major policy shift and that he did not see a current need for a draft. Awards and decorations During his military | [] |
Douglas Lute | [
[
"Douglas Lute",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"award received",
"Bronze Star Medal"
],
[
"Douglas Lute",
"military branch",
"United States Army"
]
] | United States general | career he received: Defense Superior Service Medal (with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters) Legion of Merit (with Oak Leaf Cluster) Bronze Star Medal Defense Meritorious Service Medal Meritorious Service Medal (with 4 Oak Leaf Clusters) Joint Service Commendation Medal Army Commendation Medal (with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters) Army Achievement Medal Parachutist Badge Ranger Tab Office of the Secretary of Defense Identification Badge Joint Chiefs of Staff Identification Badge Army Staff Identification Badge References External links Text adapted from public domain Joint Chiefs of Staff biography Douglas Lute at SourceWatch Category:Permanent Representatives of the United States to NATO Category:United States Army generals | [] |
Jovian Hediger | [
[
"Jovian Hediger",
"country of citizenship",
"Switzerland"
],
[
"Jovian Hediger",
"participant in",
"2014 Winter Olympics"
],
[
"Jovian Hediger",
"place of birth",
"Reinach, Aargau"
],
[
"Jovian Hediger",
"family name",
"Hediger"
]
] | Swiss cross-country skier | Jovian Hediger (born December 17, 1990 in Reinach, Aargau) is a Swiss cross-country skier. Hediger competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics for Switzerland. He placed 47th in the qualifying round in the sprint, failing to advance to the knockout stages. As of April 2014, his best showing at the World Championships was 25th through the classical sprint event in 2013. Hediger made his World Cup debut in December 2009. As of April 2014, his best finish is a 6th, in a freestyle sprint event at Toblach in 2013–14. His best World Cup overall finish is 68th, in 2013-14. His best | [] |
Piz Buin | [
[
"Piz Buin",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Piz Buin",
"country",
"Austria"
],
[
"Piz Buin",
"country",
"Switzerland"
]
] | mountain in the Silvretta at the border Vorarlberg / Grisons | Piz Buin () is a mountain in the Silvretta range of the Alps on the border between Austria and Switzerland. It forms the border between the Swiss canton of Graubünden and the Austrian state of Vorarlberg and is the highest peak in Vorarlberg. Its original name in the Romansh language is Piz Buin Grand. A similar but smaller summit nearby is called Piz Buin Pitschen at 3,255 m (10,680 ft). Piz Buin was first climbed on 14 July 1865 by Joseph Anton Specht and Johann Jakob Weilenmann, guided by Jakob Pfitscher and Franz Pöll. Piz Buin Pitschen was climbed three | [] |
Piz Buin | [
[
"Piz Buin",
"country",
"Austria"
],
[
"Piz Buin",
"country",
"Switzerland"
]
] | mountain in the Silvretta at the border Vorarlberg / Grisons | years later. Piz Buin can be reached from the Wiesbadener hut, crossing the Vermunt glacier, climbing up the Wiesbadener ridge and hiking over the Ochsentaler Glacier to the Buin gap. From the gap there is a zigzag walk to the top, with only a 20 m (65 ft) steep step to surmount before reaching the relatively flat summit space, which has an old wooden cross on the very top. The border between Switzerland and Austria crosses the summit from East to West. See also List of mountains of Switzerland References External links Piz Buin on Summitpost Piz Buin on Hikr | [] |
Hoarusib River | [
[
"Hoarusib River",
"instance of",
"River"
],
[
"Hoarusib River",
"country",
"Namibia"
]
] | Ephemeral river in Namibia | The Hoarusib River is an ephemeral river in the Kunene Region region of north-western Namibia. Its source is near the regional capital Opuwo, and the river flows through the Tonnesen and Giraffe Mountains into the Atlantic Ocean. The Hoarusib occasionally carries surface water during the rainy seasons in November and February/March. The catchment area of the Hoarusib is . The name Hoarusib is thought to have originated from the geology of this stretch as the Nama word "!naruseb" means "water which twists and turns through a narrow gorge." It is known for its steep canyon walls of black and red | [] |
Northern sennet | [
[
"Northern sennet",
"taxon rank",
"Species"
],
[
"Northern sennet",
"parent taxon",
"Barracuda"
]
] | species of fish | The northern sennet, Sphyraena borealis, is an ocean-going species of fish in the barracuda family, Sphyraenidae. It was described by the American zoologist James Ellsworth De Kay in 1842. De Kay's description was part of several volumes he published regarding the fauna of New York from 1842-1849. Northern sennet are also known as northern barracuda. While generally considered a gamefish it has only rarely been used as food by humans. Description Like other members of the family Sphyraenidae, northern sennet have elongated bodies, pike-like heads, and large jaws. The lower jaw protrudes slightly from the upper jaw, both of which | [
"Sphyraena borealis"
] |
Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala | [
[
"Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala",
"country of citizenship",
"Egypt"
],
[
"Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala",
"place of death",
"Cairo"
]
] | Prime Minister of Egypt (1930-2008) | Muhammad Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala (1930–2008) (محمد عبد الحليم أبو غزاله) was Defense Minister of Egypt from 1981 to 1989. Abu Ghazala was seated next to Anwar Sadat when the president was assassinated. Early life and education He was born in Zuhur Al Omara Village, Dilingat, Behera governorate, in February 1930. His family descended from "Awlad Aly" tribe. After completing his secondary education, he joined the Egyptian Royal Military Academy, then he received the battalion command diploma from Stalin Academy in the Soviet Union in 1949. He also graduated from Nasser Academy for higher military education (Cairo 1961). On the civilian | [
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"Muhammad Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abd El-Halim Abu-Ghazala"
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Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala | [
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"Cairo"
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"educated at",
"Cairo University"
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[
"Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala",
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"Arabic"
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] | Prime Minister of Egypt (1930-2008) | studies side, he received a bachelor's degree from the faculty of commerce, Cairo University. Abu Ghazala received the diploma of honor from the National War College in the U.S., thus being the first non-American to receive such an award. Besides his native Arabic, Abu Ghazala was also fluent in fluent in English, French and Russian. Career Abd al-Halim Abu Ghazala did not participate in the Six-Day War of 1967 as he was serving in the Western Desert. He was the Second Army's artillery commander during the October War of 1973. After the war he was appointed Chief of Staff of | [
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"Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
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] |
Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala | [
[
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"Cairo"
]
] | Prime Minister of Egypt (1930-2008) | the Artillery Corps. Two years after the October War of 1975, Sadat appointed him as a military attache in Washington on June 27, 1976. There he was the first non-American military to receive a diploma of honor from the Command and General Staff College at Carlisle Barracks. Abu Ghazaleh returned to Cairo three years later as Director of Military Intelligence on May 15, 1979. He was appointed Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces on May 15, 1980, and he was promoted two days later. When the Minister of Defense and military production, Ahmad Badawi, died along with 12 senior | [
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] |
Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala | [
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"military rank",
"Marshal"
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] | Prime Minister of Egypt (1930-2008) | officers in a helicopter crash on 2 March 1981, Anwar Sadat appointed Abu Ghazala minister of defense and military production. Shortly before Anwar Sadat was killed, he obtained the rank of Field Marshal in 1982. He was also involved with Gust Avrakotos and Charlie Wilson in supplying weapons to the Afghan Mujahideen during the Soviet Afghan war. The CIA bought the weapons and passed them through Pakistan's ISI to the Afghan rebel groups. Items included .303 ammo for Lee–Enfield rifles, limpet mines, and urban terrorist devices like bicycle bombs. There were also a number of rockets that some believe was | [
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"Muhammad Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abd El-Halim Abu-Ghazala"
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Abd Al-Halim Abu-Ghazala | [
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"Marshal"
]
] | Prime Minister of Egypt (1930-2008) | first contested Egyptian presidential elections. The Muslim Brotherhood offered him to run as their presidential candidate, but he refused due to their different ideological backgrounds. Field Marshal Abu Ghazaleh wrote his first book under the name “The cannons were launched at noon .. the Egyptian artillery through the Ramadan War”, in which he explained the role of the Egyptian artillery in the October War and revealed his views and his military doctrine towards Israel. Death Abu Ghazala died on 6 September 2008 at El-Galla Military Hospital in Cairo at the age of 78, from throat cancer. References Category:1930 births Category:2008 | [
"Abu ghazala",
"Abd Elhalim Abu Ghazala",
"Abo Ghazala",
"Abu Gazala",
"Abdel Halim Abu Gazala",
"Abd al Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abo gazala",
"Mohamed Abd al-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Muhammad Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abdel-Halim Abu Ghazala",
"Abd El-Halim Abu-Ghazala"
] |
Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed | [
[
"Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed",
"instance of",
"Video game"
],
[
"Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed",
"sport",
"American football"
]
] | 2000 video game | Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed is a sports game developed and published by Midway for the Sony PlayStation. It was released in North America on May 18, 2000. It is to note that it would not be until 2006 before another AFL video game would be released. It is based around the fame of American football champion Kurt Warner. Gameplay Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed differs from other American football video games due to its usage of the arena football system. A few rule changes include that there are half as many players on the field, field goals go back | [] |
Soldotna Airport | [
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Alaska"
],
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
],
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"place served by transport hub",
"Soldotna, Alaska"
],
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"named after",
"Soldotna, Alaska"
]
] | airport in Alaska, United States of America | Soldotna Airport is a city-owned, public use airport located one nautical mile (1.85 km) southeast of the central business district of Soldotna, Alaska. The airport is located along the south bank of the Kenai River in the southeastern corner of Soldotna city limits, and also adjoins the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. Road access to the airport is via Funny River Road, a short distance east of its intersection with the Sterling Highway. The airport covers an area of at an elevation of 113 feet (34 m) above mean sea level. It has one runway designated 7/25 with an asphalt surface | [
"SXQ",
"PASX"
] |
Soldotna Airport | [
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Alaska"
],
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
]
] | airport in Alaska, United States of America | measuring 5,000 by 132 feet (1,524 x 40 m). For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2006, the airport had 15,050 aircraft operations, an average of 41 per day: 80% general aviation, 20% air taxi, and <1% military. At that time there were 47 aircraft based at this airport: 92% single-engine, 2% multi-engine and 6% ultralight. Previous airline service During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Alaska Aeronautical Industries (AAI), a commuter air carrier, was operating scheduled passenger service to Anchorage (ANC) with de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter turboprop aircraft. North Pacific Airlines (NPA), a commuter air carrier, operated | [
"SXQ",
"PASX"
] |
Soldotna Airport | [
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
]
] | airport in Alaska, United States of America | scheduled passenger service to Anchorage during the early and mid 1980s with Beechcraft aircraft. In 1987, South Central Air (SCA), also a commuter air carrier, was operating scheduled passenger service between the airport and Anchorage flying as Western Express on behalf of Western Airlines via a code sharing agreement with Piper Chieftain twin prop aircraft. By 1988, South Central Air was continuing to serve Soldotna on an independent basis with flights to Anchorage and by 1989 service to Anchorage was being operated by another small commuter air carrier, Inlet Airlines. The airport currently does not have any scheduled passenger air | [
"SXQ",
"PASX"
] |
Soldotna Airport | [
[
"Soldotna Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
]
] | airport in Alaska, United States of America | service. The airport also served as the hub for Rediske Air, a local air taxi air carrier. Aviation accidents and incidents On February 4, 1985, North Pacific Airlines Flight 1802, a Beechcraft BE65-A-80 Queen Air N50NP, on a regularly scheduled flight from Anchorage to Soldotna, crashed southwest of the airport while on approach to land. All nine on board (seven passengers and two flight crew) were killed. On July 7, 2013, an air taxi crashed, killing all ten people on board. The single-engine de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter, registered to Rediske Air of nearby Nikiski, had a pilot and nine | [
"SXQ",
"PASX"
] |
Tambun | [
[
"Tambun",
"country",
"Malaysia"
],
[
"Tambun",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Perak"
]
] | human settlement in Malaysia | Tambun (Chinese: 打扪 Dǎ mén) is a major town in Kinta District, Perak, Malaysia. The Lost World of Tambun, a waterpark, is located here. Famous goods Pomelos Tambun is notable for its pomelo produce, which is sought after by locals and tourists alike. Many planters were Hakkas from southern China. The fruit was originally brought in from Southern China together with the travelling Chinese as a good source of Vitamin C on extended ship journeys. The plant adapted well to Tambun-Ampang-Piah region's dark and ferrous soil conditions. Most pomelo farms harvest twice a year in conjunction with Chinese New Year | [] |
LGALS13 | [
[
"LGALS13",
"instance of",
"Gene"
]
] | protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens | Placental protein 13 (PP13) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the LGALS13 gene. Structure and function Function It is composed of two identical subunits which are held together by disulfide bonds. The monomer of this protein has structural similarity to several members of the beta-galactoside-binding S-type lectin family, but it could not bind beta-galactoside. This is because the ligand binding site is lack of key residue for binding beta-galactoside. It is a galectin-like protein. The ligand of this protein is still unknown. Clinical significance PP13 levels that are low in the first trimester of pregnancy confers a | [
"GAL13",
"PLAC8",
"PP13",
"galectin 13"
] |
Cerro La Campana | [
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"country",
"Chile"
]
] | mountain in La Campana National Park in central Chile | Cerro la Campana, the Bell mountain, is a mountain in La Campana National Park in central Chile. The Pacific and the mountain Aconcagua are visible from the summit on clear days. Due to the area's expanding human population, considerable deforestation occurred on the previously heavily wooded areas of this mountain from approximately 1900 AD onwards. One of the significant tree species extant on Cerro La Campana is the Chilean Wine Palm, Jubaea chilensis; this endangered palm prehistorically had a much wider distribution. When the second survey voyage of HMS Beagle arrived at Valparaiso on 23 July 1834, Charles Darwin took | [] |
Cerro La Campana | [
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"mountain range",
"Andes"
]
] | mountain in La Campana National Park in central Chile | residence ashore to explore the area. On 14 August he obtained horses and set off with a companion "on a geological excursion" to the base of the Andes. They reached the Hacienda de San Isidro, sited at the foot of Cerro La Campana, and on the morning of 16 August after being given a guide and fresh horses they began their ascent. In his notes on the vegetation seen on the way up, including a sort of bamboo, he described the process by which sap resembling honey was obtained from the palms. In the evening they camped at a spring | [] |
Cerro La Campana | [
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"country",
"Chile"
],
[
"Cerro La Campana",
"mountain range",
"Andes"
]
] | mountain in La Campana National Park in central Chile | named the Agua del Guanaco, then on the next morning climbed the "rough mass" of fragmented greenstone to the summit, where they spent the day. A plaque on the path to the top commemorates Darwin's ascent. Darwin enjoyed the day thoroughly, writing "Chile & its boundaries the Andes & the Pacifick were seen as in a Map. .... Who can avoid admiring the wonderful force which has upheaved these mountains, & even more so the countless ages which it must have required to have broken through, removed & levelled whole masses of them?" All over the mountain he had seen | [] |
H Magnum | [
[
"H Magnum",
"country of citizenship",
"France"
],
[
"H Magnum",
"place of birth",
"Ivory Coast"
]
] | French Ivorian rapper | Guy-Hervé Imboua, better known by his stage name H Magnum, is a French rapper of Ivorian origin signed to the LoudSchool Production record label. Guy-Hervé Imboua was born in Yopougon, Ivory Coast, and immigrated at the age of 9 year old to France and resided in the 20th arrondissement of Paris. He started rapping in various bands, notably Aconit, a collective of young rappers from Saint-Blaise region, and appeared in various compilations. He later joined the rap collective L'Injection Lyricale. Gaining fame, he opened for Akon on 11 April 2009 at Bercy and performed alongside IAM at Zénith de Paris | [] |
Chen Xingxu | [
[
"Chen Xingxu",
"occupation",
"Actor"
],
[
"Chen Xingxu",
"country of citizenship",
"China"
],
[
"Chen Xingxu",
"place of birth",
"Shenyang"
],
[
"Chen Xingxu",
"educated at",
"Central Academy of Drama"
]
] | Chinese actor | Chen Xingxu (, born 31 March 1996) is a Chinese actor. He is known for his roles as Yang Kang in The Legend of the Condor Heroes (2017) and Gu Xiaowu / Li Chengyin in Goodbye My Princess (2019). Early life and education Chen Xingxu was born on 31 March 1996 in Shenyang, Liaoning, China. He was recruited by a scout when he was 3 years old in the park, and began to shoot advertisements. He shot his first TV series at the age of 4. Chen enrolled in the Performance Department (Acting Department) of the Central Academy of Drama | [] |
Chen Xingxu | [
[
"Chen Xingxu",
"occupation",
"Actor"
]
] | Chinese actor | in 2014 and graduated in 2018. Career 2001–2010: Beginnings as child actor Chen first appeared as child actor in the 2001 TV series A Passionate Life which stars Golden Horse award winning actress-Lü Liping. In 2005, he participated in the military war drama The Door to the Wind. In 2006, he starred as Pan Dongzi in the modern children TV series Sparkling Red Star. In 2007, he starred in the historical series The Legend of Meng Li Ju, playing the role of young crown prince. In 2010, he starred in the romance film The Love of Hawthorn Tree. 2017–present: Rising | [] |
Poltava | [
[
"Poltava",
"country of registry",
"Russia"
]
] | Gangut-class battleship | have been baptized in 1390 by Cyprian, Metropolitan of Kiev, who had just regained his title of Metropolitan of Kiev and all Russia (rather than the Metropolitan of Russia Minor and Lithuania) and on 6 March 1390 permanently moved to Muscovy. In 1482 Poltava was razed by the Crimean Khan Mengli I Giray. Early Modern period In 1537 Ografena Vasylivna Glinska (Baibuza) passed Poltava to her son-in-law Mykhailo Ivanovych Hrybunov-Baibuza. After the Union of Lublin in 1569, the territory around Poltava became part of the Crown of Poland. In 1630 Poltava was passed to a Polish magnate, Bartholomew Obalkowski. In | [
"Russian battleship Poltava"
] |
Poltava | [
[
"Poltava",
"country of registry",
"Russia"
]
] | Gangut-class battleship | part of the Cossack Hetmanate. The city suffered from the Great Turkish War when in 1695 Petro Ivanenko led an anti-Muscovite uprising with the help of Crimean Tatars, who ravaged the local monastery. The same year the Poltava Regiment actively participated in the Azov campaigns which resulted in the taking of the Turkish fortress of Kyzy-Kermen (today the city of Beryslav, Kherson Oblast). On 8 July (New Style) or 27 June (Old Style) 1709 the battle of Poltava took place near the city during the Great Northern War. The battle ended in a decisive victory of Peter I of Russia | [
"Russian battleship Poltava"
] |
Poltava | [
[
"Poltava",
"country of registry",
"Russia"
]
] | Gangut-class battleship | seat of bishops of the newly created Eparchy (Diocese) of Slaviansk and Kherson. This large new diocese included the lands of the Novorossiya Governorate and the Azov Governorate north of the Black Sea. Since much of that area had only recently been seized from the Ottoman Empire by Russia, and a large number of Orthodox Greek settlers had been invited to settle in the region, the Imperial Government selected a renowned Greek scholar, Eugenios Voulgaris, to preside over the new diocese. After his retirement in 1779, he was replaced by another Greek theologian, Nikephoros Theotokis. In 1779 the city established | [
"Russian battleship Poltava"
] |
Poltava | [
[
"Poltava",
"country of registry",
"Russia"
]
] | Gangut-class battleship | Gymnasium was established. On 20 June 1808 some 54 families of craftsmen were invited to the city from German principalities and settled in the newly established German Sloboda neighborhood with about 50 clay-made houses. In 1810 there were 8,328 people living in Poltava; that same year, the city's first theater was built. In August 1812, on orders of Little Russia Governor General Lobanov-Rostovsky, the famed Ukrainian writer and statesman Ivan Kotlyarevsky formed the 5th Poltava Cavalry Cossack Regiment. By 1860 Poltava had around 30,000 inhabitants, a district school, a gymnasium, an Institute for Noble Maidens, a spiritual academy, a cadet | [
"Russian battleship Poltava"
] |
Tilyar Lake | [
[
"Tilyar Lake",
"instance of",
"Lake"
]
] | lake in India | Tilyar Lake is one of the major tourist attractions in the Indian state of Haryana. It is 70 kilometers from New Delhi on the Delhi – Fazilka highway and is located close to the city of Rohtak in Haryana. The Tilyar Lake is only 42 km from Delhi border and Tilyar Zoo at Rohtak is well maintained (entry fee: INR10 - adults, INR5 - kids) and worth visiting specially for families. Fishing is permissible at Tilyar Lake after paying INR200 fishing fee. The lake lies in a area and forms an integral part of the tourist setup, making it one | [] |
Tilyar Lake | [
[
"Tilyar Lake",
"instance of",
"Lake"
]
] | lake in India | of the greenest stretches in the adjoining area. The spacious lawns and the scenery on view make this resort a great place to relax, and people visit from as far away as Mumbai. It is also an excellent spot for watching a variety of birds that flock on the little island located in the middle of the lake. Entry to Tilyar lake is free. The lake complex also houses Rohtak Zoo. Mini zoo Haryana had many mini zoos spread across the state. In 2001 the Government of Haryana decided to shut these down and replace them with well developed viable | [] |
Tilyar Lake | [
[
"Tilyar Lake",
"instance of",
"Lake"
]
] | lake in India | zoos, this included setting up the zoo at Rohtak within Tilyar Lake complex. As a result, enclosures for housing animals and aviaries for birds were built. Visitor facilities such as landscaping, walkways & trials, gardens, hillocks, lakes, artificial waterfalls, cafe, visitor toilets & resting shelters, watch towers, drinking water facilities etc. were created. Entry is only INR 10 for adults and INR 5 for kids. The following animals have been housed in this zoo: Tiger Leopard Fox Hyena Wolf Gharial Mugger Hippopotamus Himalayan black bear Jackal Otter Pig-tailed monkey Baboon Bonnet macaque Gray langur Sambhar Blackbuck Chinkara Indian hog deer | [] |
Thomas T. Riley | [
[
"Thomas T. Riley",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American politician | Thomas Thomas Riley was the United States Ambassador to Morocco for 5 years. He was sworn in on December 21, 2003, and arrived at his post in January 2004. King Mohammed VI awarded Ambassador Riley the "Grand Croix du Ordre du Ouissam El Alaouite" (Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite). In January 2009 following the inauguration of a new President, all Ambassadors automatically tender their resignations. Ambassador Riley was selected as the recipient of the State Department's 2009 Sue M. Cobb Award for Exemplary Diplomatic Service, the only award given by the State Department to a political-appointee Ambassador. | [] |
Thomas T. Riley | [
[
"Thomas T. Riley",
"educated at",
"Harvard Business School"
],
[
"Thomas T. Riley",
"educated at",
"Stanford University"
],
[
"Thomas T. Riley",
"place of birth",
"San Mateo, California"
]
] | American politician | Thomas Riley was Senior VP and Managing Director International for Savvis, Inc. until 2011. He then joined BrightSource Energy, an Oakland, California-based global provider of utility scale solar technology, as senior adviser for International business development. Early life Riley was born in San Mateo, California. After receiving his BS in Industrial Engineering from Stanford University, he worked as an engineer at Boeing for one year. Riley then attended Harvard Business School where he received his MBA, and then went on to work at TRW Mission in London and Paris. He returned to the US after 4 years and cofounded a | [] |
Thomas T. Riley | [
[
"Thomas T. Riley",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American politician | company selling construction equipment to East Africa (Somalia, Kenya, Djibouti, Sudan). In 1984, he began an almost 20-year career in Silicon Valley, as Product Manager for an advanced electric utility meter at Robinton Products; as president of Unity Systems, manufacturer of an automated home and building control system; as founder and president of Web State, an online training company; and as president of ActivePhoto, an online digital image service. Riley is the holder of United States Patent 5303767 for an energy management system. Riley is married to Nancy Vieira da Rosa Riley, a former tax attorney and author of the | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
],
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | Islamophobia in the United Kingdom refers to a set of discourses, behaviours and structures which express feelings of anxiety, fear, hostility and rejection towards Islam or Muslims in the United Kingdom. Islamophobia can manifest itself through discrimination in the workforce, negative coverage in the media, and violence against Muslims. As of 2017, arson attacks against mosques and vehicle ramming have statistically risen against Muslims, predominately in England and Scotland. In employment Many studies and surveys have concluded that Muslims face discrimination in the work force. Research in 2014 by Dr Nabil Khattab and Professor Ron Johnston using data from the | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | to be unemployed than White non-Muslim women when adjusting for those same factors. A September 2017 Social Mobility Commission report concluded that Muslims were being held back in the workplace by widespread Islamophobia, racism and discrimination. Despite outperforming their non-Muslim counterparts in education, Muslims were roughly half as likely to hold higher managerial, administrative, and professional occupations. Almost 50% of Muslim households are considered to be in poverty, compared with less than 20% in the overall population. The report listed barriers to success including negative stereotypes about Muslims, a lack of Muslim staff or role models in the classroom, bullying, | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
],
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | and harassment. The report revealed that women wearing headscarfs face particular discrimination once entering the workplace. Professor Jacqueline Stevenson of Sheffield Hallam University which led the research, stated that "Muslims are being excluded, discriminated against or failed at all stages of their transition from education to employment." In education Islamophobia in schools is a growing concern for the United Kingdom, since projections show there may be an estimated 300,000 Muslim teenagers in the education system by 2021. Various incidents have occurred where students were attacked while near school or on campus. Studies show such actions are increasingly common after trigger | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | incidences such as the Manchester bombing. Women and girls who wear headscarves are especially targeted. Made prevalent by the Tell Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks (MAMA) organization, it has been reported that around 6% or 53 accounts of reported incidents of Islamophobia have occurred in British educational institutions in 2017. Many of the incidents are associated with bullying and verbal abuse such as calling a fellow peer a “terrorist” or taunting religious garments like that of a hijab. The Muslim Student Survey was sent out from the National Union of Students in 2017 to try to gather data on the subject of | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | Islamophobia in educational environments. In this survey, nearly 33% of Muslim students reported either abuse or crime in their place of study. Most of these reports are believed to be directly related to Islamophobia. It also shows a disconnect when relating to such students since only about four in ten reported Muslim students feel their student governments understand their needs. Even in Wales, teachers in 16 of the 22 local authorities have reached out to an Anti-Racism charity, Show Racism the Red-Card, in response to incidents of racism in their schools. In airports In August 2016, Muslim mental health worker | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | a Muslim mayor. The Vote Leave campaign during leading up to the Brexit vote was also criticized as frequently portraying Muslim immigrants as a threat to future of the country. The government issued Casey Review into Integration and Opportunity which aimed to examine the conditions for immigrants to the United Kingdom was criticized for its over focus of the Muslim community, as well as deeper methodical failings. In 2014, over a third of Muslims in the UK said politicians often make bigoted comments towards Muslims. In addition, current British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has also had a history intertwined with | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | islamophobia writing in his 2007 “The Dream of Rome” that there must be something about Islam that has caused them to be “literally centuries behind.” Furthermore, in 2018 Johnson compared Muslim women wearing veils to “letter boxes” and “bank robbers” leading to a strongpush back by the British media. In October 2017, Conservative MP Bob Blackman was criticised for hosting a parliamentary event attended by far-right Hindu nationalist Tapan Ghosh. The conference was also attended by Home Secretary Amber Rudd and First Secretary of State Damian Green, who distanced themselves from Ghosh's views a week afterwards. Prior to the event, | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | the Conservative Party calling for an urgent inquiry following a number of allegations of Islamophobia. A Conservative councillor Stephen Ardley had been suspended after he allegedly posted Islamophobic comments about the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan. Ardley had said it was "unbelievable" that a Muslim had been elected and went on to describe those who voted for him as "blind". The need for a formal inquiry into Islamophobia in the Conservative Party was described by former Tory cabinet minister Sayeeda Warsi as being "long overdue". In fact, in recent polling, date shows that 60 percent of the party believes that | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | Islam is a general threat to the well-being of Western civilization. In the media The British media began adopting the term 'Islamophobia' in the late 1980s in order to describe the rise in negative feelings towards the Muslim community. A report from the Runnymede Trust later served to more dramatically move the issue into the public light in 1997. The media, particularly the Daily Mail and the Daily Express, have been criticised for inappropriate comments on migrants, immigration and Muslims. A December 2015 survey by City University, London of journalists found an underrepresentation of Muslims in the field. Only 0.4% | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | of British journalists identified as Muslim or Hindu, 31.6% were Christian, and 61.1% had "no religion." Cited in a report covering the ethics of the British Press, Lord Justice Leveson wrote that “the evidence demonstrates that sections of the press betray a tendency, which is far from being universal or even preponderant, to portray Muslims in a negative light.” An academic paper by Katy Sian published in the journal South Asian Popular Culture in 2011 explored the question of how "forced conversion narratives" arose around the Sikh diaspora in the United Kingdom. Sian, who reports that claims of conversion through | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | courtship on campuses are widespread in the UK, says that rather than relying on actual evidence they primarily rest on the word of "a friend of a friend" or on personal anecdote. According to Sian, the narrative is similar to accusations of "white slavery" lodged against the Jewish community and foreigners to the UK and the US, with the former having ties to anti-semitism that mirror the Islamophobia betrayed by the modern narrative. Sian expanded on these views in 2013's Mistaken Identities, Forced Conversions, and Postcolonial Formations. On 16 June 2017, BBC Radio 4 acknowledged a complaint that it failed | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
],
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | to be put into segregation and more likely to have restraint used against them. Almost a third of Muslim prisoners (29%) did not have prison jobs or attend education courses, compared with 17% of Christian prisoners. Runnymede stated that the discrepancy in treatment particularly affects rehabilitation. Defining Islamophobia in the United Kingdom Resulting from a lack of widespread acceptance and consensus, in May 2019 the British Government failed to adopt a concrete definition for islamophobia. In an interview with the All Party Parliamentary Group on Muslims, Professor Peter Hopkins of the Centre for Hate Studies at Leicester University stated that | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | by not adopting a concrete definition for islamophobia it may “encourage some people to continue to deny that Islamophobia is an issue in society.” Stereotypes In June 2004, prior to the 7/7 attacks on the London Underground, the Commission on British Muslims and Islamophobia, warned that increased attacks against individuals and mosques, was resulting in bitterness that created violent "time-bombs". Hate crimes Some Muslims have been victims of violence because of their religion. In 2005, The Guardian commissioned an ICM poll which indicated an increase in anti-Muslim incidents, particularly after the London bombings in July 2005. Another survey of Muslims, | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | this by the Open Society Institute, found that of those polled 32% believed they had suffered religious discrimination at airports, and 80% said they had experienced Islamophobia. In January 2010, a report by the University of Exeter's European Muslim research centre noted that the number of anti-Muslim hate crimes has increased, ranging from "death threats and murder to persistent low-level assaults, such as spitting and name-calling," for which the media and politicians have been blamed with fueling anti-Muslim hatred. The Islamophobic incidents it described include: "Neil Lewington, a violent extremist nationalist convicted in July 2009 of a bomb plot; Terence | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | in demonstrations in English cities with large Muslim populations. The EDL is a far-right, anti-Islam street protest movement which opposes what it considers to be a spread of Islamism, Sharia law and Islamic extremism in the United Kingdom. The EDL has been described as Islamophobic. It has had confrontations with various groups, including supporters of Unite Against Fascism (UAF) and Anonymous. Co-founder and political activist Tommy Robinson left the group after four years to take on a more peaceful and political approach, and worried about the dangers of right-wing extremism. Of the online islamophic attacks reports received in 2012 by | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
],
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | mosque that local authorities said did not exist. Opposition Several organisations exist in the United Kingdom to combat Islamophobia. Tell MAMA is an organisation that monitors and records hate crimes against Muslims. Following the passage of Executive Order 13769 by U.S. President Donald Trump, protests took place all across the country by non-Muslim Britons in solidarity with British Muslims and Muslim refugees. Following a protest by the EDL in April 2017, the Birmingham Central Mosque held a tea party with the goal of countering those demonstrations and promoting interfaith dialogue. The tea party ended up receiving more participants than the | [] |
Islamophobia in the United Kingdom | [
[
"Islamophobia in the United Kingdom",
"subclass of",
"Islamophobia"
]
] | Prejudice towards Muslims in the United Kingdom | justice for the British Muslim community. Along with working closely with the United Nations, IHRC has produced and submitted numerous articles, reports, and general research on islamophobia to governments and international organizations to offer History Robert Lambert and Graham Edward Geddes have compared Islamophobia and anti-Muslim street violence to that of Paki-bashing, a form of racist violence that was perpetrated against South Asians since the 1960s. Lambert notes that a key difference is that, whereas the National Front and BNP targeted all South Asians (including Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs), the EDL specifically target British Muslims. Lambert also compares the media's | [] |
Ed Danowski | [
[
"Ed Danowski",
"member of sports team",
"New York Giants"
],
[
"Ed Danowski",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Quarterback"
],
[
"Ed Danowski",
"educated at",
"Fordham University"
],
[
"Ed Danowski",
"sport",
"American football"
]
] | American football player and coach | Edward Frank Danowski (September 30, 1911 – February 1, 1997) was an American football player who played quarterback and halfback in the National Football League (NFL). Danowski played for the New York Giants for seven seasons (1934–1939, 1941) and quarterbacked the team when they won the 1934 and 1938 NFL Championship Games. He played college football at Fordham University. He returned to Rose Hill as the head coach for the Rams from 1946 to 1954, amassing a record of 29–44–3 (.401). His 1949 squad reached #20 in the polls. He grew up in Aquebogue, his father, Anton, was a Polish | [
"Edward Frank Danowski"
] |
Ed Danowski | [
[
"Ed Danowski",
"member of sports team",
"New York Giants"
],
[
"Ed Danowski",
"sport",
"American football"
]
] | American football player and coach | immigrant. His son, John Danowski, is the head lacrosse coach at Duke University as well as the longtime coach of the Hofstra Pride, and his grandson, Matt Danowski, is second in Division I in total points in NCAA lacrosse history. Ed was inducted into the Suffolk Sports Hall of Fame on Long Island, New York, in the Football Category with the Class of 1991. Head coaching record See also History of the New York Giants (1925–78) References External links Category:1911 births Category:1997 deaths Category:American football quarterbacks Category:American football running backs Category:Fordham Rams football coaches Category:Fordham Rams football players Category:New York | [
"Edward Frank Danowski"
] |
Sinikka Bohlin | [
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"date of birth",
"1947"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"member of political party",
"Swedish Social Democratic Party"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"country of citizenship",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"position held",
"President of the Nordic Council"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"given name",
"Sinikka"
],
[
"Sinikka Bohlin",
"place of birth",
"Finland"
]
] | Swedish politician | Sinikka Bohlin (born 1947), is a Swedish social democratic politician who has been a member of the Riksdag in 1988–2010. She served as President of the Nordic Council in 2009. Bohlin was born in Finland to a Finnish father and a Karelian-Belarusian mother, and moved to Sweden in 1968. References External links Category:1947 births Category:Living people Category:Swedish Social Democratic Party politicians Category:Women members of the Riksdag Category:Members of the Riksdag 1998–2002 Category:Members of the Riksdag 2002–2006 Category:Members of the Riksdag 2006–2010 Category:Swedish people of Belarusian descent Category:Swedish people of Finnish descent Category:20th-century women politicians Category:21st-century Swedish women politicians Category:Swedish people | [] |
Wuggubun Community | [
[
"Wuggubun Community",
"country",
"Australia"
],
[
"Wuggubun Community",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Western Australia"
]
] | human settlement in Western Australia | Wuggubun is a small Aboriginal community, located in the Kimberley Region of Western Australia, within the Shire of Wyndham-East Kimberley. Governance The community is managed through its incorporated body, Wuggubun Aboriginal Corporation, incorporated under the Aboriginal Councils and Associations Act 1976 on 8 August 1990. Town planning Wuggubun Layout Plan No.1 has been prepared in accordance with State Planning Policy 3.2 Aboriginal Settlements. Layout Plan No.1 is yet to be endorsed by the community. As such the Layout Plan exists only as a draft. Notes External links Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations Category:Towns in Western Australia Category:Kimberley (Western | [] |
Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli | [
[
"Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli",
"given name",
"Juan"
]
] | Spanish noble | Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli, Grandee of Spain, (in full, ), (1485 – 20 January 1544) was a Spanish nobleman. He was the son of Don Luis de la Cerda, 1st Duke of Medinaceli by third wife Catalina Bique de Orejón. Since his parents only married In Articulo Mortis in 1501, he was considered a bastard for the first half of his life but was legitimated by the Catholic Monarchs as the eldest surviving male issue from the first Duke. He took part in the battles for the incorporation of the Kingdom of Navarre into the unified | [] |
Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli | [
[
"Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli",
"given name",
"Juan"
]
] | Spanish noble | Kingdom of Spain on behalf of King Ferdinand II of Aragon. He also was a courtier under Queen Isabella I of Castile till 1504, of her daughter Queen Joanna of Castile The Mad, and later supported her son King Charles I since 1516. He was rewarded with a grandeeship in 1520. Descendants Juan de la Cerda married Mencía Manuel de Portugal, daughter of Dom Affonso de Portugal, 1st Count of Faro, with whom he had three children. In 1512, he married for a second time, with María de Silva (1494 – 16 August 1544), daughter of Don Juan de Silva, | [] |
Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli | [
[
"Juan de la Cerda, 2nd Duke of Medinaceli",
"given name",
"Juan"
]
] | Spanish noble | 3rd Count of Cifuentes with whom he had four more children. By Mencía Manuel de Portugal: Isabel Mencía Manuel de la Cerda (d. 1550), who married Pedro Zapata de Ayala. Luis de la Cerda y Portugal Gastón de la Cerda y Portugal By María de Silva: Juan de la Cerda y Silva Fernando de la Cerda y Silva (1516–1579), who married Ana de Thieulloye Catalina de la Cerda, who married Lorenzo Gómez de Mendoza, 4th Count of Coruña Luisa de la Cerda, who married Arias Pardo de Saavedra Illegitimate: Francisco de la Cerda (d. 1544) Diego de la Cerda Sources | [] |
Roger Leenhardt | [
[
"Roger Leenhardt",
"country of citizenship",
"France"
],
[
"Roger Leenhardt",
"given name",
"Roger"
]
] | French film producer | Roger Leenhardt (23 July 1903 – 4 December 1985) was a French writer and filmmaker. Early life Born in a bourgeois Protestant family, this brilliant student of philosophy was very soon fascinated by cinema. Through a cousin, he started working for the newsreel program Éclair Journal and in 1934 set up his own production company with René Zuber, "Les Films du Compas," later known as, "Roger Leenhardt Films.” Career As a critic in the journal Esprit, he was considered one of the most perceptive observers of pre-war France and strongly influenced André Bazin and the entire "Nouvelle Vague.” Thanks to | [] |
Roger Leenhardt | [
[
"Roger Leenhardt",
"given name",
"Roger"
]
] | French film producer | than 60 short films and the production of a similar number. There are two main categories of his work: Portraits of great writers (e.g. François Mauriac, Paul Valéry, Victor Hugo, etc.), and portraits of famous painters (e.g., Monet, Pissarro, Bazile, etc.). He also made a film on the origins of photography (Daguerre ou la Naissance de la photographie, 1964) and another on the invention of cinema (Naissance du cinéma, 1946), a masterpiece of pedagogical and intelligence. Privileging his artist vision, Leenhardt made only three feature-length fiction films: (1948), (1961), and, for television, Une fille dans la montagne (1964). Moreover, Roger | [] |
Murai Jun | [
[
"Murai Jun",
"date of birth",
"1897"
],
[
"Murai Jun",
"date of death",
"1970"
]
] | Japanese founder of a religious movement | Murai Jun (村井ジュン, 1897 - 1970) was the founder of what is regarded today as the largest indigenous church in Japan - Iesu no Mitama Kyōkai, was born into a Methodist family in Tokyo and later studied theology at Aoyama College. While he was studying there, something troubled him deeply to the point of anticipating suicide. Hence Murai planned to jump overboard a ferry near Okayama Prefecture during 1918. However, when he was about to jump overboard, he felt that the Holy Spirit's presence suddenly overwhelmed him and he began speaking in tongues. That experience gave him new courage to | [] |
Little Salkeld | [
[
"Little Salkeld",
"instance of",
"Village"
],
[
"Little Salkeld",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Hunsonby"
],
[
"Little Salkeld",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Eden District"
]
] | village in Cumbria, England | Little Salkeld is a small village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Hunsonby, in the Eden district of Cumbria, England, a few miles to the north east of Penrith. In 1931 the civil parish had a population of 91. On the 1 April 1934 the civil parish was merged with Hunsonby and Winskill to create Hunsonby. History The manor at Little Salkeld was confirmed by King Edward I in 1292. It is believed to be the original home of the Salkeld family of landowners. Places of interest Little Salkeld Watermill, built in 1745, is a traditional English | [
"Little Salkeld, Cumbria"
] |
Little Salkeld | [
[
"Little Salkeld",
"instance of",
"Village"
]
] | village in Cumbria, England | 18th century water mill. It is Cumbria's only watermill still in full operation. Its organic bread and all-purpose flours are available in specialist shops throughout the UK. It operates regular tours and has an award-winning organic vegetarian cafe. Salkeld Hall is the village's largest house; built in the 16th century incorporating earlier walls. It is privately owned. The village contains a vicarage but no church - it was built for Addingham parish church one mile to the north near Glassonby. Popular with walkers it is the closest village to Lacy's Caves and Long Meg and Her Daughters. Transport Little Salkeld | [
"Little Salkeld, Cumbria"
] |
1986–87 Atlanta Hawks season | [
[
"1986–87 Atlanta Hawks season",
"season of club or team",
"Atlanta Hawks"
]
] | season of National Basketball Association team the Atlanta Hawks | vs. opponents Game log Playoffs East First Round (2) Atlanta Hawks vs. (7) Indiana Pacers: Hawks win series 3-1 Game 1 @ The Omni, Atlanta (April 24): Atlanta 110, Indiana 94 Game 2 @ The Omni, Atlanta (April 26): Atlanta 94, Indiana 93 Game 3 @ Market Square Arena, Indianapolis (April 29): Indiana 96, Atlanta 87 Game 4 @ Market Square Arena, Indianapolis (May 1): Atlanta 101, Indiana 97 Last Playoff Meeting: Not available (first playoff series) East Conference Semifinals (2) Atlanta Hawks vs. (3) Detroit Pistons: ''Pistons win series 4-1 Game 1 @ The Omni, Atlanta (May 3): Detroit | [] |
2013 Vegalta Sendai season | [
[
"2013 Vegalta Sendai season",
"season of club or team",
"Vegalta Sendai"
],
[
"2013 Vegalta Sendai season",
"country",
"Japan"
]
] | season of football team | The 2013 Vegalta Sendai season was Vegalta Sendai's fourth consecutive season and sixth season overall in J.League Division 1. As a result of their runner-up finish in the 2012 season, the team competed in the 2013 AFC Champions League. Sendai also competed in the 2013 Emperor's Cup and 2013 J.League Cup. It was manager Makoto Teguramori's last season with the club, having accepted a position as head coach of the Japan U-23 team. In mid-season Vegalta Sendai revealed that the A-League's Graham Arnold would manage the team beginning in 2014 season. Players As of March 5, 2013 Out on loan | [] |
Antonio S. Pedreira | [
[
"Antonio S. Pedreira",
"given name",
"Antonio"
]
] | Puerto Rican activist | Dr. Antonio S. Pedreira (June 13, 1899–October 23, 1939), was a Puerto Rican author and educator. Early years Pedreira (whose full name was Antonio Salvador Pedreira Pizarro) was born into a well-to-do family in San Juan. His father was a Spaniard, and his mother was Puerto Rican. Both died when he was quite young, and he was thereafter raised by his godparents in Caguas. He became interested in the art of writing stories as a child during his primary and secondary school years. He attended the University of Puerto Rico after graduating from high school and earned his teachers certificate. | [] |
Antonio S. Pedreira | [
[
"Antonio S. Pedreira",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Antonio S. Pedreira",
"given name",
"Antonio"
]
] | Puerto Rican activist | Taino and African cultures. In his book he also talks about the cultural survival of the Puerto Rican identity after the island was invaded by the United States. Written works Other works by Pedreira are: Artistas (1930) Hostos, ciudadano de América (1932) La actualidad del jíbaro (1935) El año terrible del 87' (1937) Aftermath Dr. Antonio S. Pedreira died of pneumonia on October 23, 1939 in San Juan. Puerto Rico has honored his memory by naming a school and a main avenue with his name. He was an active member of Phi Eta Mu fraternity, besides that, other associations recognized | [] |
Maritime Museum of BC | [
[
"Maritime Museum of BC",
"instance of",
"Maritime museum"
]
] | maritime museum in Victoria, British Columbia | The Maritime Museum of BC (MMBC) engages people with the maritime culture and history of the Pacific Northwest through rotating exhibits, educational and community-based programs, research services, and more. In 2015 the MMBC completed its relocation from its long-term home in Bastion Square to a Society Office in Nootka Court at 634 Humboldt St., with its collections being stored off-site in a climate-controlled facility. The Society Office houses exhibits that display artefacts from the collection, public research space, a gift shop, and staff offices. Collection and Exhibits The rich collection of some 35,000 artefacts includes 800 models of ships and | [
"Maritime Museum of British Columbia"
] |
Maritime Museum of BC | [
[
"Maritime Museum of BC",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Victoria, British Columbia"
],
[
"Maritime Museum of BC",
"instance of",
"Maritime museum"
]
] | maritime museum in Victoria, British Columbia | and Dorothy, a locally built 1897 fantail cutter currently under restoration. History The Maritime Museum of BC was opened by naval officers in 1955 at Signal Hill in Esquimalt, B.C. and later went through name changes. The Maritime Museum of British Columbia Society was registered in 1957 as a non-profit society and would follow a broader Pacific coastal heritage mandate. The Museum moved in 1963-64 to 28 Bastion Square in downtown Victoria, British Columbia. The corresponding Maritime Museum of British Columbia Foundation was established sixteen years later to develop long-term support for the Society. In 1981 a separate group founded | [
"Maritime Museum of British Columbia"
] |
Maritime Museum of BC | [
[
"Maritime Museum of BC",
"country",
"Canada"
],
[
"Maritime Museum of BC",
"instance of",
"Maritime museum"
]
] | maritime museum in Victoria, British Columbia | the CFB Esquimalt Naval & Military Museum, which continues at Naden on Canadian Forces Base Esquimalt. The Museum’s Bastion Square venue closed in October 2014 because the provincially owned courthouse built in 1889 required seismic upgrading and other structural work. Packing and moving the collection required more than a year, and the Society completed its move to the new location on Humboldt Street in July 2015. Selected items from the collection are displayed along with travelling exhibits. Affiliations The Maritime Museum of BC is affiliated with the B.C. Museums Association, the Canadian Museums Association, the Virtual Museum of Canada and | [
"Maritime Museum of British Columbia"
] |
Sjur Torgersen | [
[
"Sjur Torgersen",
"occupation",
"Diplomat"
],
[
"Sjur Torgersen",
"country of citizenship",
"Norway"
],
[
"Sjur Torgersen",
"family name",
"Torgersen"
]
] | Ambassador, diplomat | Sjur Helge Torgersen (12 March 1946 – 7 September 2005) was a Norwegian diplomat and ambassador. He was a cand.jur. (jurist) by education. After first serving as local magistrate in Mandal, Norway he joined the Norwegian Foreign Service in 1979, after establishing Norway's consular visa office in Islamabad, Pakistan on behalf of the Norwegian Ministry of Justice in 1977. Before completing his admission to the diplomatic ranks he worked for Norwegian Refugee Council providing emergency aid for arriving Afghan refugees in Pakistan after the Russian invasion of Afghanistan. His first posting for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, from 1981 to | [] |
Sjur Torgersen | [
[
"Sjur Torgersen",
"country of citizenship",
"Norway"
]
] | Ambassador, diplomat | 1984, was as Secretary of Embassy at the Norwegian embassy in Jakarta. He was then transferred to West Berlin where he served as military attaché in the allied occupational forces in West Berlin between 1984-1987. In 1989 he returned to Islamabad, Pakistan where he served as charge d'affairs until 1995. Between 1995-1998 he was assistant secretary and sub-director in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. From 1998 to 2003 he served as the Norway´s ambassador to Indonesia. When East Timor became independent in 2002, he received responsibility for that country too, after being heavily involved in supporting the fledgling nation and | [] |
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport | [
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
],
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Wisconsin"
]
] | airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA | Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport is a public airport located southwest of Janesville and north of Beloit in Rock County, Wisconsin, United States. Formerly known as Rock County Airport, it is owned and operated by the Rock County government. The airport has no scheduled commercial passenger service. It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2019–2023, in which it is categorized as a national general aviation facility. Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport was once home to the annual "Southern Wisconsin AirFEST". History Several Rock County farms provided land for contract glider pilot training to | [
"JVL",
"KJVL"
] |
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport | [
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"country",
"United States"
]
] | airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA | the United States Army Air Forces in 1942. Training was provided by Morey Airplane Company using three turf runway locations in three township sections. C-47 Skytrains and Waco CG-4 unpowered Gliders were not used. The production CG-4A gliders were not delivered until after these northern civilian schools were closed. Aircraft furnished by the Army were single engine L type Cessna, Aeronca and Piper. There were no gliders and there was no glider towing. These schools became known as dead stick training. The mission of the school was to train glider pilot students in approaches with the engine off, landing at | [
"JVL",
"KJVL"
] |
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport | [
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
],
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Wisconsin"
]
] | airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA | a mark, night landing and strange field landing. Ground school instruction was in navigation, maintenance, meteorology, instruments, aircraft identification, chemical warfare defense, customs of service and physical training and drill. These schools were inactivated at the end of 1942 or sooner. The farm fields used in Rock County were turned back to the farmers when the schools were closed. None of this glider pilot training in Rock County occurred at or on the current Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport space.--> Facilities and aircraft Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport covers an area of at an elevation of 808 feet (246 m) above mean | [
"JVL",
"KJVL"
] |
Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport | [
[
"Southern Wisconsin Regional Airport",
"instance of",
"Airport"
]
] | airport in Rock County, Wisconsin, USA | sea level. It contains three runways: Runway 14/32: 7,302 x 150 ft (2,226 x 46 m), surface: concrete, with approved ILS and GPS approaches. Runway 4/22: 6,701 x 150 ft (2,042 x 46 m), surface: asphalt, with approved ILS and GPS approaches. Runway 18/36: 5,004 x 75 ft (1,525 x 23 m), surface: asphalt. For the 12-month period ending April 30, 2018, the airport had 34,877 aircraft operations, an average of 96 per day: 82% general aviation, 16% air taxi and 2% military. In November 2018, there were 67 aircraft based at this airport: 37 single-engine, 4 multi-engine, 24 jet | [
"JVL",
"KJVL"
] |
Subsets and Splits