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The Slovak Red Cross Museum (Slovakian: Múzeum Slovenského Červeného kríža) or simply SCK Museum is a specialized museum of the Slovak Red Cross with a nationwide scope. The museum operates under the authority of the Supreme Board of the Slovak Red Cross as an independent entity registered in the Slovak Ministry of Culture's Museum register. Its mission is to document, research, preserve, collect, interpret and exhibit significant objects and themes in the areas of Red Cross history and humanitarian history in the territory of what is now the Slovak Republic. It is also Slovak's largest archive on humanitarian history of Slovakia. | Place | Building | Museum |
Joyce McMullan is former Gaelic footballer for Donegal. He was a member of the team that won Donegal's first All-Ireland title in 1992, and was selected as an All Star in 1990. Born in County Donegal, Ireland, McMullan played football with his local club Four Masters in Donegal and was a member of the Donegal senior football team from 1983 to 1999. | Agent | Athlete | GaelicGamesPlayer |
Fra' Bonaventura Bisi (9 October 1601 – 5 December 1659) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. He was also called Il Pittorino or Padre Pittorini, as a Franciscan monk in the convent of S. Francesco in Bologna. He was a pupil of Lucio Massari, and made miniature copies from the works of Correggio, Titian, and Guido Reni among others, which were collected in the cabinet of his patron, Alfonso IV of Modena. He also etched a few plates after Parmigianino, Reni, and an original Holy Family, with St. John and St. Elisabeth, (1631). He died at Bologna. | Agent | Artist | Painter |
The Prince William Parkway is a road in Prince William County, Virginia. The road carries two designations. Between U.S. Route 1 in Woodbridge and Dumfries Road (Virginia State Route 234) near Manassas it carries State Route 294 (formerly SR 3000). At Dumfries Road, the Prince William Parkway assumes the SR 234 designation until ending at I-66 near Gainesville. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | Road |
The 1936 Wisconsin Badgers football team represented the University of Wisconsin–Madison in the 1936 college football season. | SportsSeason | SportsTeamSeason | NCAATeamSeason |
The Punjab cricket team represents the Punjab region in Pakistan first-class cricket. Punjab teams played in the Quaid-i-Azam Trophy from its inception in 1953-54 to 1957-58, then in the Pentangular Trophy and Quaid-i-Azam Trophy from 1972-73 to 1978-79, then in the Pentangular Cup from 2007-08 to 2011-12. Apart from Punjab itself, Punjab A, Punjab B, Punjab Greens and Punjab Whites also contested the Quaid-i-Azam Trophy. Punjab won the Trophy in 1956-57, Punjab A won in 1974-75, and Punjab won the Pentangular Cup in 2011-12. | Agent | SportsTeam | CricketTeam |
Albert Andrew Watrous (February 1, 1899 – December 3, 1983) was an American professional golfer who played on the PGA Tour in the 1920s and 1930s. | Agent | Athlete | GolfPlayer |
The Victoria Titans were an Australian basketball team, that played in Melbourne, in the National Basketball League. The team was the result of a merger of two Melbourne clubs (the South East Melbourne Magic and the North Melbourne Giants) for the inaugural NBL summer season of 1998/99. The \"Titans\" moniker also symbolised this merger as a Titan, in mythology, is a \"magical giant\". The Titans appeared in two Grand Finals series, but failed to win any championships. The Titans lost two games to one against the Adelaide 36ers in their first season, and were defeated two games to nil against the Perth Wildcats in 2000. After the 2001–02 season, the financially struggling Titans went into financial administration. The club was eventually sold and rebranded as the Victoria Giants. | Agent | SportsTeam | BasketballTeam |
Blessed Annunciata Astoria Cocchetti (9 May 1800 - 23 March 1882) was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Suore di Santa Dorotea di Cemmo - an order dedicated to the educational needs of the poor in Brescia and the surrounding cities. Cocchetti assumed her vows as a religious in 1843 and was close with Blessed Luca Passi who established a congregation similar to hers. Cocchetti received beatification in Saint Peter's Basilica from Pope John Paul II on 21 April 1991. She remains the patron of her order and of educators in general. | Agent | Cleric | Saint |
Prudencio Indurain Larraya (born 9 June 1968) is a Spanish retired road racing cyclist. He has competed in four editions of the Tour de France. He is brother of another retired professional cyclist, Miguel Indurain. In 2011 he entered on politics as he was nominated as candidate for the Navarrese People's Union in the 2011 parliamentary election. | Agent | Athlete | Cyclist |
The Capitalinos de San Juan was a Puerto Rican basketball team based in San Juan, Puerto Rico. They played in the Baloncesto Superior Nacional (BSN). The Capitalinos are the first Puerto Rican basketball champions, the team was very successful having won five championships from the 1930s through the 1950s. For a long period beginning in the late 1970s until the early 1990s, the franchise did not operate. The Capitalinos returned during the 1990s, posting poor win-loss records. In 1998, producer and entrepreneur Angelo Medina acquired the Capitalinos and the Tiburones de Aguadilla, merging them into a new version of the Cangrejeros de Santurce. | Agent | SportsTeam | BasketballTeam |
Seobusan Yutongjigu Station (Hangul: 서부산유통지구역; hanja: 西釜山流通地區驛) is a station of the BGLRT Line of Busan Metro in Daejeo-dong, Gangseo District, Busan, South Korea. | Place | Station | RailwayStation |
Saint Heliodorus (Italian: Sant'Eliodoro; died c. 390 AD) was the first bishop of Altinum (Altino) in the 4th century. He was born in Dalmatia. Like Chromatius, he was a disciple of Valerianus, the bishop of Aquileia. He accompanied Saint Jerome on his voyage to the Holy Land, and is mentioned in Jerome's letters. After the death of his mother, Heliodorus went to Italy and was made bishop of Altino. He attempted to counter Arianism in his see, and assisted at the Council of Aquileia (381). Saint Nepotian, a nephew of Saint Heliodorus, was ordained by the bishop after leaving his position as an officer in the imperial bodyguard. A legend, composed around the 10th century and incorporating elements from other saints’ hagiographies, states that Liberalis of Treviso was educated in the Christian faith by Heliodorus. The legend goes on to state that, faced with growing opposition from both Arianism and paganism in the see, Heliodorus retired as bishop and lived as a hermit on a desert island in the lagoons near Altino, entrusting the see to a man named Ambrose. Worried about Ambrose’s ability to handle the rise of Arianism in the see, Liberalis decided to find Heliodorus and convince him to come back to his see, but died on the way, and was later venerated as a saint. | Agent | Cleric | Saint |
King Peak is a 2,848 metres (9,344 ft) peak in British Columbia, Canada, rising to a prominence of 918 metres (3,012 ft) above Grizzly Pass. Its line parent is Normandy Mountain, 28 kilometres (17 mi) away.It is part of the Canadian Rockies. | Place | NaturalPlace | Mountain |
The southern pochard (Netta erythrophthalma) is a species of duck. There are two subspecies, the South American (southern) pochard N. e. erythrophthalma (Wied-Neuwied, 1833) and the African (southern) pochard N. e. brunnea (Eyton, 1838). The South American pochard has a fragmented range and is found from Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Argentina to Chile. Here it occurs in a wide variety of shallow fresh waters with submerged vegetation, from the lowlands up to 3,700 metres. The African pochard occurs from the Cape to the Ethiopian highlands on water bodies with or without emergent vegetation. They are suspected to have been strong migrants in the past but the construction of numerous farm dams seems to allow them a more sedentary lifestyle. They reach highest concentrations in Africa's central plateaus and in the south-western winter rainfall region. This bird is sociable and gregarious. It has been seen in groups of up to 5,000. The clutch consists of six to fifteen eggs. | Species | Animal | Bird |
Maximos V Hakim (Arabic: ماكسيموس الخامس حكيم; May 18, 1908, in Tanta, Egypt – June 29, 2001, Beirut, Lebanon) was elected Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, and Alexandria and Jerusalem of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church in 1967 and served until 2000. He guided the church through tubulent changes in the Middle East and rapid expansion in the Western hemisphere. | Agent | Cleric | ChristianBishop |
Olyra longicaudata is a species of longtail catfish native to India where it occurs in Darjelling Himalaya in Assam, and Myanmar, where it occurs in Tenassarim. This species grows to a length of 11 cm (4.3 in) in standard length. | Species | Animal | Fish |
The yellow-breasted chat (Icteria virens) is a large songbird, widely considered the most atypical member of the New World warbler family, though the long-standing suspicion is that it does not actually belong there. Its placement is not definitely resolved. It is the only member of the genus Icteria. | Species | Animal | Bird |
The End Of A Tune (released 1988 in Oslo, Norway by Cadence Jazz Records – CJR 10360) is a studio album (LP) by the Norwegian guitarist Thorgeir Stubø. | Work | MusicalWork | Album |
Daniel Pieter 'Reniel' Hugo (born 19 July 1990 in Bellville, South Africa) is a South African rugby union player, currently playing with the Cheetahs in Super Rugby and the Free State Cheetahs in Currie Cup rugby. He mainly plays as a lock, but can also play as a loose forward. | Agent | Athlete | RugbyPlayer |
Michele Cantu (born June 24, 1988 in Monterrey, Nuevo León) is a Mexican figure skater. She is the 2006 Mexican national champion. Cantu's older sister Ana Cecilia Cantu is also an elite senior-level skater. | Agent | WinterSportPlayer | FigureSkater |
Alibey Dam (Turkish: Alibey Barajı) is a dam in Istanbul Province, Turkey, built between 1975 and 1983. | Place | Infrastructure | Dam |
Amadeo Roger \"Mike\" Bucchianeri (January 9, 1917 – February 19, 1992) was an American football guard in the National Football League for the Green Bay Packers. He played college football at Indiana University. Mike Bucchianeri began his football career at Monongahela High School where he graduated in 1937. Born January 9, 1917, the son of a coalminer, he went on to college at Indiana University playing football four years as an interior lineman as well as earning a Bachelor of Education degree in 1941. It was Mike Bucchianeri who kicked the decisive two extra points in the North’s 14-12 victory over the South in the 1940 Blue-Gray Game. For this achievement, he was named Most Valuable Player. He was an All-American and played in the 1941 Chicago Tribune All-Star Game. Drafted by the Green Bay Packers in 1941, Mike suffered a serious head injury near the end of the season and spent two years with the Packers’ affiliate team in Wilmington, Delaware to hone his kicking skills and serve as an assistant line coach. Mike returned to Green Bay and helped the Packers win their sixth world championship over the New York Giants in 1944 and retired in 1945. Following his playing career, Bucchianeri became a line coach at St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin and a high school referee. In 1955, he became the offensive line coach at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. While playing as a rookie for the Green Bay Packers, Mike was employed by the Green Bay Drop Forge Company, moving from the shop to automotive sales in Detroit, Michigan. He returned to Green Bay as Farm Implement Sales Manager. Mike retired in 1983 and moved to Ocala, Florida. Mike was inducted into the Mid-Mon Valley All Sports Hall of Fame in 1999 and the Ringgold Rams Hall of Fame in 2010. | Agent | GridironFootballPlayer | AmericanFootballPlayer |
Seiji Saito (斉藤 誠司 Saitō Seiji) is a Japanese footballer who plays for Bahrain First League side Sitra Club. | Agent | Athlete | SoccerPlayer |
Water Park Station (Hangul: 워터파크역) is a station of the Incheon Airport Maglev in Unseo-dong, Jung District, Incheon, South Korea. | Place | Station | RailwayStation |
Tunkhannock Creek is a 42.3-mile-long (68.1 km) tributary of the Susquehanna River in northeastern Pennsylvania, United States. English translations of the Lenni-Lenape Tunkhannock vary, including \"meeting of the waters\", \"small stream\", \"wilderness stream\", and \"wooded stream\". Most sources note, however, that hanna, as in Susque-, Toby-, Loyal-, Tunkhannock, and Lackawanna, suggests \"moving water.\" Tunkhannock Creek is traced northeast along PA Highway 92 to its source of Cheraine Pond near Jackson. It has an East Branch that rises in Herrick Township to the east and north of Elk Mountain and a South Branch that rises near Montdale in Scott Township. Tunkhannock Creek's major tributaries include, Nine Partners Creek, East Branch Tunkhannock Creek Horton Creek, Martins Creek, Hop Bottom Creek, and East Branch Tunkhannock Creek. The 2,400-foot-long (730 m) Erie Lackawanna Railway Tunkhannock Viaduct (called locally the \"Nicholson Bridge\"), featuring high, multiple concrete arches, passes over the creek near Nicholson. Tunkhannock Creek empties into the Susquehanna at Tunkhannock in Wyoming County. | Place | Stream | River |
Strahinja Milošević (Serbian Cyrillic: Страхиња Милошевић; born September 25, 1985) is a Serbian professional basketball player for Baloncesto Sevilla of the Liga ACB. While playing for Partizan, from 2007 to 2010, Milošević won three consecutive Adriatic League, Basketball League of Serbia and Radivoj Korać Cup titles. He also won three medals at the Summer Universiade. | Agent | Athlete | BasketballPlayer |
Majlis-e Ahrar-e Islam (Urdu: مجلس احرارلأسلام), also known in short as Ahrar, was a radical conservative Sunni Muslim Deobandi political party in the Indian subcontinent during the British Raj (prior to the Partition of India) founded December 29, 1929 at Lahore. Chaudhry Afzal Haq, Syed Ata Ullah Shah Bukhari, Habib-ur-Rehman Ludhianvi, Mazhar Ali Azhar, Zafar Ali Khan and Dawood Ghaznavi were the founder's of the party. The Ahrar was composed of Indian Muslims by the Khilafat Movement, which cleaved closer to the Congress Party. The party was associated with opposition to Muhammad Ali Jinnah and establishment of an independent Pakistan as well as persecution of the Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam. This culminated in the 1953 Lahore riots; in 1954 Majlis-e-Ahrar was banned. The associated Islamist religious movement Tehreek-e-Khatme Nabuwwat remains. | Agent | Organisation | PoliticalParty |
Blink Bonny (1854–1862) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. In a career that lasted from 1856 to 1858, she ran twenty times and won fourteen races. She was the leading British two-year-old of 1856, when she won eight races including the Gimcrack Stakes at York. In 1857 Blink Bonny won five of her seven races and became the second filly, after Eleanor, to defeat the colts in the Epsom Derby. In the same season, racing against her own sex, she won the Epsom Oaks, the Lancashire Oaks, and the Park Hill Stakes. Having retired from racing in 1858, Blink Bonny showed exceptional promise as a broodmare, producing three top class racehorses before her premature death in 1862. Blink Bonny was one of only six fillies to win the Derby, and has been regarded by both contemporary and modern authorities as one of the best fillies in Thoroughbred racing history. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
Prince Kazimierz Nestor Sapieha (1757–1798) was a Polish-Lithuanian noble (szlachcic) and one the creators of the Constitution of May 3. | Agent | Person | Noble |
Francis Wingrove (20 April 1863 – 27 May 1892) was an Australian cricketer. He played one first-class cricket match for Victoria in 1886. | Agent | Athlete | Cricketer |
Jake Bernstein is President of Network Press, Inc. in Santa Cruz, California. Bernstein claims expertise in seasonal trading and has developed methods of trading in futures markets, and has been a featured speaker at many investment conferences and trading seminars. In 1999, Bernstein was fined by the National Futures Association $200,000 and permanently barred from NFA membership for using misleading and deceptive Promotional Material. | Agent | Politician | President |
The 2016 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship final was a hurling match which was played at Croke Park on 17 March 2016 to determine the winners of the 2015–16 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the 46th season of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion clubs of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Ruairí Óg, Cushendall of Antrim and Na Piarsaigh of Limerick.Both sides were contesting their first ever All-Ireland final. Na Piarsaigh captained by Cathal King made history as they became the first Limerick club to win the All-Ireland senior hurling club title.Goals from Adrian Breen and Kevin Downes in the first and 26th minutes put them into a 2-12 to 0-6 interval lead. | Event | SportsEvent | FootballMatch |
Jean Dubuisson (September 18, 1914 – October 22, 2011) was a French architect who is regarded as one of the leading practitioners of the French post-World War II years. | Agent | Person | Architect |
The Legislative Council of Burma was the legislative body of British Burma from 1897 to 1936. | Agent | Organisation | Legislature |
Ahtanum View Corrections Center was Washington's Convalescent Hospital for Convicts until the Dept. of Corrections closed the facility in 2010 due to budget cuts. It was where inmates with long-term care issues were incarcerated. These can be issues relating to age or long-term health-care needs. Since this facility closed, the inmates were relocated to a new medical housing unit at Coyote Ridge Corrections Center in Connell, Washington, as well as other prison facilities in the state depending on the level of medical care the individual inmates required at the time of transfer. Located in Yakima, Washington, Ahtanum View is no longer open, except for the work release next door to the closed facility. | Place | Building | Prison |
Thomas William Waterall (24 October 1884 – 8 November 1951) was an English footballer. He played as an outside left in the Football League and Southern League. Waterall started his working life as a miner, becoming a professional footballer for the first time in 1906. After spells in the Football League with Notts County, Bradford Park Avenue and Leicester Fosse, Waterall joined Southern League side Watford in July 1914. He did not play any part in Watford's first five fixtures of the 1914–15 season, but was everpresent thereafter, and scored a hat-trick on his second appearance for the club, in a 3–0 away win against Millwall. Watford went on to win the Southern League that season. After the resumption of peacetime football following the First World War, he spent two furthers seasons as a regular in the team. He was a part of the side that finished second in the Southern League on goal average in 1919–20, and the following season Waterall played in Watford's first ever Football League fixture, a 2–1 away win at Queens Park Rangers on 28 August 1920. At the end of the 1920–21 season, Waterall joined Gillingham on a free transfer. Two of his brothers, Albert and Ike were professional footballers; both started their careers at Notts County. Albert later played for Stockport County and Ike for Millwall. | Agent | Athlete | SoccerPlayer |
Sir George Munro, 1st of Newmore (1602–1693) was a 17th-century Scottish soldier and member of parliament from the Clan Munro, Ross-shire, Scotland. He was seated at Newmore Castle. Between 1629 and 1634 Munro held command in the Swedish army during the Thirty Years' War, and from 1642 in the Scottish Covenanter army during the Irish Confederate Wars before changing his allegiance to the Royalist cause of Charles I of England in 1648 during the Scottish Civil War and Irish Confederate Wars. | Agent | Person | MilitaryPerson |
The ruins of Alt-Eberstein are the remains of the former Schloss Eberstein (Eberstein Castle), located on a hill near the town of Ebersteinburg and directly upstream of the modern city of Baden-Baden, in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The original structure was built in 1100 as the primary residence of the Counts of Eberstein, but by the end of the 16th century had been abandoned and much of the castle was torn down to provide materials for other structures. Presently it is a German national monument and a State Palace of Baden-Wuerttemberg. | Place | Building | Castle |
The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia is the provincial art gallery for the province of Nova Scotia. It is located in the central downtown region of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada with a branch gallery in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia is the largest art museum in Atlantic Canada. | Place | Building | Museum |
Katarzyna Kostka (1576–1648) was a Polish–Lithuanian noble lady. She married Adam Hieronim Sieniawski around 1598. | Agent | Person | Noble |
Pedro José Domingo de la Calzada Manuel María Lascuráin Paredes (8 May 1856 – 21 July 1952) was a Mexican politician who served as the 34th President of Mexico for less than one hour on February 19, 1913, the shortest presidency in the history of the world. He had earlier served as Mexico's foreign minister for two terms and was the director of a small law school in Mexico City for sixteen years. | Agent | Politician | President |
The A58 motorway is a motorway in the Netherlands. It is approximately 145 kilometers in length. The A58 is located in the Dutch provinces of North Brabant and Zeeland. The A58 connects North Brabant's three major cities Eindhoven, Tilburg and Breda with the cities Goes, Middelburg and Vlissingen in Zeeland. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | Road |
The Liaison Squadron of 1st Air Command (Serbo-Croatian: Eskadrila za vezu 1. vazduhoplovne komande / Ескадрила за везу 1. ваздухопловне команде) was an aviation squadron of Yugoslav Air Force formed in 1952 at Pančevo airfield as Liaison Squadron of 1st Military district (Serbo-Croatian: Eskadrila za vezu 1. vojne oblasti / Ескадрила за везу 1. војне области). Squadron was formed by order from December 17, 1951 on February 1, 1952 as part of 1st Military district . It was equipped with various training and liaison aircraft. Squadron was transformed into Liaison Squadron of 1st Air Command by 1959. It was disbanded after 1959, estimated 1961. | Agent | Organisation | MilitaryUnit |
Leptobrachium pullum is a species of amphibian in the Megophryidae family. It is endemic to Vietnam. Its natural habitats are rivers. Its taxonomic relationship with Leptobrachium mouhoti, recently described from Cambodia, is unclear. | Species | Animal | Amphibian |
Oxyuranus temporalis, or the Central Ranges taipan, is a species of taipan, large, fast, highly venomous Australasian snakes, that was described in 2007 by Australian researchers Paul Doughty, Brad Maryan, Stephen Donnellan and Mark Hutchinson. It was named one of the top five new species of 2007 by the International Institute for Species Exploration at Arizona State University. | Species | Animal | Reptile |
Florent Fortier (born June 1, 1955) is a former professional ice hockey forward. He was drafted by the World Hockey Association's Quebec Nordiques in the tenth round, 137th overall, of the 1975 WHA Amateur Draft. He played four games with the Nordiques during the 1975–76 season, scoring one goal and one assist. | Agent | WinterSportPlayer | IceHockeyPlayer |
Francisco Marto (June 11, 1908 – April 4, 1919), his sister Jacinta Marto (March 11, 1910 – February 20, 1920), also known as Blessed Francisco Marto and Blessed Jacinta Marto, and their cousin Lúcia Santos (1907–2005) were children from Aljustrel near Fátima, Portugal, who said they witnessed three apparitions of an angel in 1916 and several apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1917. Mary was given the title Our Lady of Fátima as a result, and Fátima became a major centre of world Christian pilgrimage. | Agent | Cleric | Saint |
The red-tailed black shark (Epalzeorhynchos bicolor; syn. Labeo bicolor), also known as the redtail shark and redtail sharkminnow, is a species of freshwater fish in the carp family, Cyprinidae. It is endemic to Thailand and currently critically endangered, but common in aquaria, where it is prized for its deep black body and vivid red or orange tail. The red-tailed black sharks seen in the aquarium trade today are all captive bred. It is not closely related to sharks. | Species | Animal | Fish |
Lecithocera castanoma is a moth in the Lecithoceridae family. It was described by Wu in 1997. It is found in Thailand and China (Guangdong). | Species | Animal | Insect |
The Dicle Bridge (Turkish: Dicle Köprüsü; Kurdish: Pira Dehderî) is a historic bridge in Diyarbakır over the river Tigris (Turkish: Dicle) in southeastern Turkey. Completed in 1065, it numbers ten arches with a total length of 178 m (584 ft). Hence, it is locally called also \"On Gözlü Köprü\" / \"Pira Dehderî\" (literally: Ten Arches Bridge). Its another name is the Silvan Bridge due to its position being on the road to Silvan. The bridge was commissioned by Nizamüddin and Müeyyidüddevle during the Kurdish dynasty, Marwanids era (990–1085) in Diyarbakır, and was built by architect Sancaroğlu Ubeydoğlu Yusuf in 1065, as stated in two lines of Kufic script in the inscription mounted on the southern facade of the bridge. The bridge is situated south of the city, 3 km (1.9 mi) outside of Mardinkapı / Deriyê Mêrdînê (literally: Mardin Gate). Its location is the nearest to the city considered the bends and the course of the river as well as the rate of water flow. Built with black volcanic stones, the bridge is 178 m (584 ft) long and 5.60 m (18.4 ft) wide, varying at some places on it. Longest span of the ten arches measures 14.70 m (48.2 ft). Due to its historic characteristic, motorized traffic over the bridge suspended after the construction of the Marwanids Bridge (Turkish: Mervaniler Köprüsü; Kurdish: Pira Merwaniyan), or as initially named Bağıvar Bridge, in November 2009. The new bridge was built about 1 km (0.62 mi) south of Dicle Bridge, far enough not to spoil the landscape view of the old bridge. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | Bridge |
HD 136418 b is an extrasolar planet orbiting the G-type star HD 136418 approximately 320 light years away in the constellation Boötes It has a notable orbit, staying within the known Habitable zone. It also has a star very similar in temperature as the sun. | Place | CelestialBody | Planet |
WBOI is an FM radio station located in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The station operates on the FM radio frequency of 89.1 MHz. It is a National Public Radio member station, owned and operated by Northeast Indiana Public Radio, a non-profit organization. The station has studios and a 604-foot transmitter tower in Fort Wayne's Centennial Park. Effective radiated power is 34,000 watts, covering northeast Indiana, northwest Ohio, and extreme southern Michigan. | Agent | Broadcaster | RadioStation |
Air Alpha Greenland was a subsidiary of Air Alpha, an aircraft company based in Odense, Denmark. Air Alpha Greenland operated flights in Greenland from Ilulissat. The subsidiary was founded in 1994. On 28 July 2006, it was sold to Air Greenland. | Agent | Company | Airline |
The 2013 Internationaux de Tennis de Vendée is a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It is the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It is taking place in Mouilleron-le-Captif, France between 14 and 20 October 2013. | Event | Tournament | TennisTournament |
A total solar eclipse will occur on April 20, 2061. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth. A total solar eclipse occurs when the Moon's apparent diameter is larger than the Sun's, blocking all direct sunlight, turning day into darkness. Totality occurs in a narrow path across Earth's surface, with the partial solar eclipse visible over a surrounding region thousands of kilometres wide. | Event | NaturalEvent | SolarEclipse |
The Mercedes-Benz M113 (and similar M155) engine is a gasoline-fueled, 4-stroke, spark-ignition internal-combustion V8 automobile piston engine family used in the 2000s (decade). It is based on the similar M112 V6 introduced in 1998. The standard Mercedes-Benz M113s are built in Untertürkheim, Germany, while the AMG versions are assembled at AMG's Affalterbach, Germany plant. M113s have aluminum engine blocks and aluminum SOHC cylinder heads with two spark plugs per cylinder. The cylinders are lined with silicon/aluminum, and the heads have 3 valves per cylinder. Other features include SFI fuel injection, fracture-split forged steel connecting rods, a one-piece cast camshaft, and a magnesium intake manifold. | Device | Engine | AutomobileEngine |
Oxytate subvirens, is a species of spider of the genus Oxytate. It is endemic to Sri Lanka. | Species | Animal | Arachnid |
The National Theatre of Opera and Ballet of Albania (Albanian: Teatri Kombetar i Operas dhe i Baletit) or TKOB is a theatre in Tirana, Albania. The National Theatre of Opera and Ballet is the largest theater in the country, and has two entities year round, music and dance. | Place | Venue | Theatre |
Mario Becerril Serrano (born August 1917) is a Mexican former equestrian who competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics. | Agent | Athlete | HorseRider |
The Nunatsiavut Assembly is the legislative branch of the government of Nunatsiavut, Canada. | Agent | Organisation | Legislature |
Anodonthyla emilei is a species of microhylid frog. The frog was discovered in Ranomafana National Park in Madagascar in 2003. The species has the most divergent call of all Anodonthyla species. | Species | Animal | Amphibian |
Schwarzenfels Castle (German: Burg Schwarzenfels) is a ruined castle in the village of Schwarzenfels in Hesse, Germany. | Place | Building | Castle |
Mount St. Mary's University (also known as The Mount) is a private, liberal arts, Catholic university in the Catoctin Mountains near historic Emmitsburg, Maryland. The undergraduate university is divided into four schools: the College of Liberal Arts, the Richard J. Bolte School of Business, the School of Education & Human Services, and the School of Natural Science and Mathematics. The university has more than 40 majors, minors, concentrations and special programs, including bachelor's/master's combinations in partnership with other universities. The university also offers eight master's degree programs and six postgraduate certificate programs. The campus includes the second largest Catholic seminary in the United States, where future priests study in the Ordination/Master of Divinity program. Lay students can pursue a Master of Theology Arts at the seminary. Dr. Karl Einolf served briefly as acting university president, following the recent resignation of Mr. Simon Newman. The current, two-year interim president is Brigadier General (ret.) Timothy Trainor PhD, former academic dean of the United States Military Academy. The seminary's rector and president is Monsignor Andrew R. Baker. The chancellor of the seminary is the current Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore, the Most Reverend William E. Lori. | Agent | EducationalInstitution | University |
The 1884–85 season was the seventh season in the history of West Bromwich Albion Football Club. It was their third and final season at the Four Acres and their last season as an amateur club. Continuing the trial of various coloured kits during the club's early years, the players wore cardinal red and blue halved shirts. The club reached the FA Cup quarter-final for the first time, played in the semi-finals of the Staffordshire Senior Cup and Birmingham Charity Cup and were eliminated from the Birmingham Senior Cup at the third round stage. | SportsSeason | SportsTeamSeason | SoccerClubSeason |
The parish church of St Peter ad Vincula (meaning Saint Peter in Chains) in the village of Pennal in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, is notable as the site of the last senate meeting held by the renegade Welsh prince, Owain Glyndŵr. It was founded in the 6th century, supposedly by St Tannwg and St Eithrias, and is the only church in Wales with this dedication. It is now part of the benefice of Bro Ystumanner in the diocese of Bangor. It is thought that the church was so named by Glyndŵr in competition with the chapel of St Peter ad Vincula in the Tower of London, one of the chapels royal of his rival, King Henry IV of England. Pennal was regarded with honour because of its status as one of the 21 llysoedd, the courts of the native Welsh Princes of Gwynedd. A copy of Glyndŵr's \"Pennal Letter\" of 1406, a letter to King Charles VI of France, setting out his plans for an independent Wales, originated from Pennal. While the original letter remains in the Archives Nationales in Paris, a copy is displayed at the Parliament House in Machynlleth, and at the National Library of Wales. The letter was briefly returned to Wales from France for an exhibition at the National Library of Wales in 2000, and a campaign has since sprung up for it to be returned permanently to Wales and put on show at the National Assembly building in Cardiff. A memorial garden was created in the churchyard for the native Welsh princes, during the rectorship of Rev Geraint ap Iorwerth, who was responsible for the church from 1989 until 2012. On his departure, he claimed that the church had become \"cosy club for members who abide by the rules, accepting of their place in the hierarchy\". He had previously been the centre of controversy when he burned pages from the King James Bible as part of an \"art experiment\". The garden contains a bronze statue of Owain Glyndŵr, made by Dave Haynes of Bethesda, which was unveiled in 2004. Local celebrity Robert Plant, who had made a donation towards the cost of the statue, attended the opening ceremony. Other notable donors included Ray Gravell and Julia Ormond. The church is a Grade II listed building, much of which dates from the 18th century, the original medieval church having been rebuilt in 1700. The porch is built of stone from nearby Llugwy Quarry. The interior includes stained glass windows by Holland & Holt (1872) and by Ernest Penwarden (1923). | Place | Building | HistoricBuilding |
Kateřina Němcová (born November 14, 1990 in Prague, Czechoslovakia) is a Czech chess Woman Grandmaster and Women's Czech chess champion. She came second in the World Youth Chess Championship of 2007 and won the European Youth Chess Championship of 2008. Nowadays she is a member of United States Chess Federation. Kateřina attends Webster University where she is a member of Susan Polgar and Paul Truong's SPICE (Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence Program). Her highest rating is 2382, which she achieved in April 2013. | Agent | Athlete | ChessPlayer |
Jamie Harris (born 28 June 1979) is a Welsh professional footballer currently playing for Leinster Senior League side Glebe North F.C. Harris began his football career at hometown club Swansea City in 1996. He impressed in a trial game against Swindon Town and manager Jan Molby offered him a two-year contract; he later went out on loan to Merthyr Tydfil to gain some first-team experience. When his contract at Swansea expired, he had short spells at Rhayader Town and Haverfordwest County. He moved to Bohemians (Bohs) in 1999 and scored on his debut away to Waterford United in a 2–0 victory. He spent one season at Bohs, making 24 league appearances and scoring four league goals before moving to St Patrick's Athletic. He signed for Dunfermline on 28 January 2007 on a free transfer, having previously been at League of Ireland side Shelbourne with whom he won three league titles. In 2008, he signed with St Patrick's Athletic after an impressive spell at Dunfermline. His late grandfather Rory Keane was a Republic of Ireland international player. | Agent | Athlete | SoccerPlayer |
The Deux-Montagnes line is a commuter railway line in Greater Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is owned by the Agence métropolitaine de transport (AMT), the umbrella organization that plans, integrates, and coordinates public transport services across this region. The line was created in 1918 as a Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR) service. Canadian National Railway (CN) ran the line starting in 1923 following the merger of CNoR into CN. CN transferred the Deux-Montagnes Line to the Société de transport de la communauté urbaine de Montréal (STCUM) on July 1, 1982. The line was refurbished from 1992 to 1995. It was transferred to the AMT on January 1, 1996. There are 25 inbound and 24 outbound departures each weekday. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | RailwayLine |
The National Art Museum of the Republic of Belarus (Belarusian: Нацыянальны мастацкі музей Рэспублікі Беларусь) is a museum in Minsk, Belarus. It is the largest museum in the country. More than twenty seven thousand works of art – creating twenty miscellaneous collections and comprising two main representative ones: the one of national art and the other of monuments of art of the countries and nations of the world – can be found on exposition, at the branches of the Museum and its depositories. | Place | Building | Museum |
A Raisin in the Sun is a play by Lorraine Hansberry that debuted on Broadway in 1959. The title comes from the poem \"Harlem\" (also known as \"A Dream Deferred\") by Langston Hughes. The story tells of a black family's experiences in the Washington Park Subdivision of Chicago's Woodlawn neighborhood as they attempt to \"better\" themselves with an insurance payout following the death of the father. The New York Drama Critics' Circle named it the best play of 1959. | Work | WrittenWork | Play |
The 104th Infantry Regiment traces its history to 14 November 1639, when it was first mustered as the Springfield Train Band in Springfield, Massachusetts. In 1662 the unit was formed into the Hampshire Regiment of the Massachusetts Militia. It later served in the Continental Army during the American Revolution, with Union forces in the American Civil War, and as a federalized Massachusetts National Guard regiment with the U.S. Army during Spanish–American War, Mexican Border Campaign, World War I and World War II. The last active element of the regiment, the 1st Battalion, was deactivated in 2005 and the soldiers and lineage transferred to the 1st Battalion, 181st Infantry Regiment. | Agent | Organisation | MilitaryUnit |
Cosmology of Kyoto is a visual novel adventure game developed by Softedge and published by Yano Electric. It was released for Japan in 1993, and then in North America, for the Macintosh in 1994 and then for the PC in 1995. It is a game where the player, from a first-person perspective, explores ancient Kyoto city during 10th-11th century Japan. The game lacks a clear goal, but is instead nonlinear and emphasizes open exploration, giving players the freedom to explore the city and discover many pathways, buildings, situations, stories and secrets. The game deals with historical, horror, religious and educational themes, and features karma and reincarnation gameplay mechanics. Released on CD-ROM, the dialogues in the game are fully voiced in Japanese, with English subtitles in the localized North American version. The game was not a commercial success, but was critically acclaimed and attracted a cult following. | Work | Software | VideoGame |
Orlando Vernada Woolridge (December 16, 1959 – May 31, 2012) was an American professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1981–1994. He was known for his scoring ability, especially on slam dunks. | Agent | Athlete | BasketballPlayer |
Araucaria nemorosa (Boise araucaria) is a species of conifer in the Araucariaceae family. It is found only in New Caledonia, an island possession of France in the South Pacific. It is mostly found as a small understory tree, typically growing to no more than 15 meters (though rarely reaching 30m), and relatively shade tolerant, though it can also grow as an emergent from coastal scrub. It has feathery foliage somewhat less spiky than most other Araucaria species, and is found only on serpentine soil, in coastal locations below 100m in altitude.It is threatened by habitat loss and is a critically endangered species with less than 5000 trees remaining in the wild. Low levels of genetic variation in the remaining population and consequent low germination rates of seed produced, are also a concern. | Species | Plant | Conifer |
Anju Mudkavi (9 July 1966, Mount Abu, Rajasthan) is an Indian cricketer. Mudkavi has captained the Indian under-19 cricket team. A right-handed batsman, Mudkavi has played cricket for Goa and Rajasthan and is also an occasional right arm fast-medium bowler. Mudkavi played his last First class game in the 1995/96 season. | Agent | Athlete | Cricketer |
Sven Michel (born March 30, 1988) is a Swiss curler from Interlaken. He won a gold medal for Switzerland at the 2013 European Curling Championships and skipped Switzerland at the 2014 Winter Olympics. As a junior curler, Michel won the bronze medal at the 2007 World Junior Curling Championships, playing third for Christian von Gunten. Michel won a silver medal at the 2010 European Mixed Curling Championship, playing second for Claudio Pätz. Later in the season, he and partner Alina Pätz won the gold medal at the 2011 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship. Michel would then become one of the top skips in Switzerland, and would represent his country at the 2011 and 2012 European Curling Championships as skip. He also represented Switzerland at the 2013 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, Michel's first world championship appearance, placing 7th. Later that year, Michel led his country to a gold medal at the 2013 European Championships. Michel's recent success propelled him to be selected by the Swiss Curling Association to represent the country at the 2014 Winter Olympics. At the games, he led Switzerland to an 8th place finish with a 3-6 record. Michel won his first World Curling Tour event in September 2011 when he won the 2011 Baden Masters. Since then he has also won the 2012 Baden Masters and the 2014 German Masters. | Agent | WinterSportPlayer | Curler |
Televisió de Catalunya (Catalan pronunciation: [təɫəβiziˈo ðə kətəˈɫuɲə], known by the acronym TVC) is the public broadcasting network of Catalonia, one of the seventeen autonomous communities of Spain. It is part of the Corporació Catalana de Ràdio i Televisió, a public corporation created by the Generalitat de Catalunya by a Founding Act in 1983. Slightly more than half of its revenue (52%) comes from public funding through the Generalitat de Catalunya, while the remaining 48% is raised through advertising, sponsorship and merchandise and original productions' sales. It is officially composed by six channels: TV3, TV3 HD, 33/Super3, 3/24, Esport 3 and TV3CAT. While the main language of all these channels is Catalan, Spanish is usually neither sub-titled nor dubbed, as it is generally accepted that all Catalan speakers are by default also Spanish speakers. Some programmes such as Polònia and APM use Spanish extensively, largely for effect. In the Aran Valley, there are programs in Aranese. TVC headquarters are located in Sant Joan Despí, near Barcelona. | Agent | Broadcaster | BroadcastNetwork |
Ennio Capasa (born in Lecce in 1960) is an Italian fashion designer. He is the creator of CoSTUME NATIONAL, the Italian fashion house he founded in 1986 and now an internationally renowned designer label famous for its subtle shapes, dark tones and sartorial detail. | Agent | Artist | FashionDesigner |
Hexaplex radix, the radix murex or root murex, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails. | Species | Animal | Mollusca |
Andrew Cohen (born c. 1969) is an American bartender at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, who won a World Series of Poker bracelet at the 2009 $500 Casino Employees No Limit Hold'em. Cohen entered the 2009 WSOP intending to participate in five events, 3 $1,500 events, the $1,000 \"Stimilus Special\", and the $500 Casino Employees No Limit Hold'em events. After winning his bracelet, he indicated a desire to participate in the Main Event. Cohen was the first bracelet winner ever honored with a new tradition at the WSOP, the bracelet was presented at center stage with the winner's national anthem being performed. Cohen said, \"I told all these guys here, it's not about the money to me, and I'm not even a rich guy. I'm a bartender. And, I don't care about the money. You can always get money. It's the bracelet that counts.\" Prior to the 2009 WSOP, Cohen had played in seven WSOP tournaments but failed to cash in any of them. At the 2007 WSOP, Cohen was responsible for busting ten time champion Doyle Brunson in the Main Event. | Agent | Athlete | PokerPlayer |
The 1913 Toronto Argonauts season was the 30th season for the team since the franchise's inception in 1873. The team finished in third place in the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union with a 3–3–0 record and failed to qualify for the playoffs. | SportsSeason | FootballLeagueSeason | NationalFootballLeagueSeason |
Mouse into Space is a Tom and Jerry animated short film made in 1961, released on April 13, 1962. It was the fifth cartoon in the series to be directed by Gene Deitch and produced by William L. Snyder in Czechoslovakia. | Work | Cartoon | HollywoodCartoon |
James Engle (1757 – January 5, 1821) fought in the American Revolutionary War, was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from Philadelphia County and served as speaker in 1809. | Agent | Politician | Governor |
United States v. Johnson, 68 U.S. 326 (1863), was a United States Supreme Court case. | UnitOfWork | LegalCase | SupremeCourtOfTheUnitedStatesCase |
Sergiano Herbert Cairo (born 29 November 1982), better known as Redouan Cairo is a Surinamese-Dutch kickboxer fighting in the SUPERKOMBAT Fighting Championship where he is the 2013 SUPERKOMBAT World Grand Prix Tournament Runner-up. Also a Mixed martial artist, he is a former WAKO-Pro world cruiser heavyweight K-1 rules -94.1 kg champion. He is ranked #10 light heavyweight kickboxer of the world by Liverkick.com. | Agent | Athlete | MartialArtist |
WVAN-TV channel 9 is a non-commercial educational television station located in Savannah, Georgia, USA. WVAN-TV is part of the Georgia Public Broadcasting public television network and carries programming from PBS, GPB and other sources. The station's transmitter is co-located with sister radio station WSVH (91.1 FM) on a broadcast tower in Pembroke, west of Savannah and just north of Fort Stewart. Although it appears that the call letters stand for SaVANnah, they are actually a tribute to former Georgia governor, Ernest Vandiver. The station's signal travels in about a 45-mile (75 km) radius from the TV antenna site. Like most stations in the Savannah media market, it also serves the extreme southern tip of South Carolina including Beaufort and Hilton Head Island. | Agent | Broadcaster | TelevisionStation |
Andy Runton is the creator of the graphic novel series Owly, first published in 2005 by Top Shelf. Before he worked on Owly he was a graphic designer. His artwork is a reflection of his affection for wildlife. Andy currently resides in Atlanta, GA. In 2005, Runton won the Ignatz Award for Promising New Talent. His work was also nominated for \"Best Publication for a Younger Audience\" in Eisner Awards the same year, which he won in 2006. | Agent | Artist | ComicsCreator |
Thorwald Veneberg (born 16 October 1977 in Amsterdam) is a former Dutch professional road bicycle racer. He rode for UCI ProTeam Rabobank between 2001 and 2007. | Agent | Athlete | Cyclist |
Shiratori Reiko de Gozaimasu! (Japanese: 白鳥麗子でございます! Hepburn: lit. I Am Reiko Shiratori!) is a shōjo romantic comedy manga by Yumiko Suzuki. It was published by Kodansha in the magazine Mimi from 1988 to 1992 and collected in seven tankōbon volumes. The series was adapted as an anime OVA produced by Ajia-do that was released in 1990, an 11-episode live-action television series broadcast on Fuji TV in 1993, and a theatrical movie released in 1995. In 1989, the manga won the Kodansha Manga Award for shōjo. It is the story of Reiko Shiratori, a nouveau-riche girl from the countryside, who enters a Tokyo university to pursue ordinary college student Tetsuya Akimoto. | Work | Comic | Manga |
The Robertson Cup Championship is a best-of-three playoff series held at the end of the North American Hockey League (NAHL) season. The trophy is awarded annually to the Junior A Tier II national playoff champion. The oldest junior hockey trophy in the United States, the Robertson Cup is named in honor of Chuck Robertson, a pioneer of junior hockey in the NAHL and youth hockey in the state of Michigan. Chuck Robertson was the owner of the Paddock Pools Saints when they won a record seven straight NAHL championships from 1976-83. The 2014 Robertson Cup Championship was hosted at the Big Dipper Ice Arena in Fairbanks, Alaska. The Fairbanks Ice Dogs defeated the Austin Bruins in two games to win the 2014 Robertson Cup. The 2015 Robertson Cup Championship will be hosted at the Riverside Ice Arena in Austin, MN and will feature the Austin Bruins vs The Minnesota Wilderness. \n* 2016 - Fairbanks Ice Dogs \n* 2015 - Minnesota Wilderness \n* 2014 - Fairbanks Ice Dogs \n* 2013 - Amarillo Bulls \n* 2012 - Texas Tornado \n* 2011 - Fairbanks Ice Dogs \n* 2010 - Bismarck Bobcats \n* 2009 - St. Louis Bandits \n* 2008 - St. Louis Bandits \n* 2007 - St. Louis Bandits \n* 2006 - Texas Tornado \n* 2005 - Texas Tornado \n* 2004 - Texas Tornado \n* 2003 - Pittsburgh Forge \n* 2002 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 2001 - Texas Tornado \n* 2000 - Danville Wings \n* 1999 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1998 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1997 - Springfield Jr. Blues \n* 1996 - Springfield Jr. Blues \n* 1995 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1994 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1993 - Kalamazoo Jr. K Wings \n* 1992 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1991 - Kalamazoo Jr. K Wings \n* 1990 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1989 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1988 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1987 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1986 - Compuware Ambassadors \n* 1985 - St. Clair Falcons \n* 1984 - St. Clair Falcons \n* 1983 - Paddock Pools \n* 1982 - Paddock Pools \n* 1981 - Paddock Pools \n* 1980 - Paddock Pools \n* 1979 - Paddock Pools \n* 1978 - Paddock Pools \n* 1977 - Paddock Pools \n* 1976 - Little Caesars | Agent | SportsLeague | IceHockeyLeague |
The Gravelly Range, highest peak Black Butte, el. 10,542 feet (3,213 m), is a mountain range southwest of Cameron, Montana in Madison County, Montana. About 310,000 acres total are roadless, separated by roads into nine units, the largest of which is 66,000 acres in size. Nearly all the range is part of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest. In the northern part of the range is the Bureau of Land Management's Axolotl Lakes Wilderness Study Area, 7,804 acres in size, which is part of a larger roadless area of 47,000 acres. The Axolotl Lakes WSA is home to a unique form of indigenous tiger salamander. This part of the Gravellies is characterized by open foothills rising to mixed coniferous forest interspersed with meadows. Some of the highest-elevation pronghorn habitat in Montana is found here. On the eastern slope of the Gravellies, Cave Mountain is home to unique undisturbed grasslands and caves that attract spelunkers. The most rugged part of the range is a 52,870-acre roadless area centered on 10,281' Big Horn Mountain, with deep canyons, cliffs, steep benches, and undulating basins. The largest roadless area in the Gravellies features rolling basins cut by rocky canyons, old Indian campsites along the Gravelly Divide, and westslope cutthroat trout in the remote canyons of the Elk River. The southeastern part of the range, near the Continental Divide, features a chain of lakes that provide homes to nesting trumpeter swans and bald eagles. Grizzly bears have recently been confirmed to be living in the Gravellies. | Place | NaturalPlace | MountainRange |
Navshakti ( Marathi (मराठी) - नवशक्ति ) is a Marathi newspaper based in Mumbai, India. The newspaper has a circulation of 83,910 across the state of Maharashtra. This paper was started by S. Sadanand.P. R. Behere was its first editor. Indian Literature mentions Prabhakar Padhye, editor of Navshakti as a \"formidable editor\" whose \"political and social writing\" stood out in the context of the Marathi language. | Work | PeriodicalLiterature | Newspaper |
The 2015 West Virginia Mountaineers baseball team will represent West Virginia University during the 2015 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Mountaineers will play their home games at the newly constructed Monongalia County Ballpark as a member of the Big 12 Conference. They will be led by head coach Randy Mazey, in his 3rd season at West Virginia. | SportsSeason | SportsTeamSeason | NCAATeamSeason |
The Adan River is a river in India and a principal tributary of the Painganga River. | Place | Stream | River |
Buddleja 'White Ball' is a hybrid cultivar developed by Horticultural Research International, at Boskoop in the Netherlands. One of the parents was the white form of B. davidii var. nanhoensis, 'Alba'. | Species | Plant | CultivatedVariety |
The 2007 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2007 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team's head coach was Tyrone Willingham. It played its home games at Husky Stadium in Seattle, Washington, USA. The 2007 Huskies' schedule was ranked as the most difficult in college football by Jeff Sagarin. The Huskies finished with a record of 4-9, their fourth straight losing season. This, combined with the 2007 team having the worst defense in school history, led to the firings of defensive coordinator Kent Baer and special teams coach Bob Simmons at the end of the season. The Huskies were led by their redshirt freshman quarterback Jake Locker, who made his debut this season, throwing for over 2,000 yards and rushing for 986. Locker accounted for 27 touchdowns. Louis Rankin, who was named the team's offensive most valuable player, rushed for 1,294 yards. | SportsSeason | SportsTeamSeason | NCAATeamSeason |
Sid Smith (born July 24, 1986 in Six Nations, Ontario) is an Iroquois lacrosse player who plays for the Hamilton Nationals in Major League Lacrosse and the Rochester Knighthawks of the National Lacrosse League. | Agent | Athlete | LacrossePlayer |
The Great Eastern Hotel (officially Lalit Great Eastern Hotel) is a colonial era hotel in the Indian city of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta). The hotel was established in 1840 or 1841; at a time when Calcutta, the seat of the East India Company, was the most important city in India. Referred to as \"the Jewel of the East\" in its heyday, Great Eastern Hotel hosted several notable persons visiting the city. After India's independence in 1947, the hotel continued its business but went into decline during the Naxalite era of West Bengal; later the state government took over the management. In 2005 it was sold to a private company and was reopened in November 2013 after an extensive renovation. | Place | Building | Hotel |
Karin Lundgren (4 January 1895 – 16 September 1977) was a Swedish freestyle swimmer. She competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics in the 100 m event, but was eliminated in the first round. She changed her last name after marrying Mr. Heijkenskjöld, but divorced in 1947. | Agent | Athlete | Swimmer |
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