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Éric Sikora (born February 4, 1968 in Courrières) is a former footballer from France. He spent his whole career at RC Lens. He is of Polish descent. Whilst at Lens Sikora contributed 33 appearances as his side won 1997–98 French Division 1. | Agent | SportsManager | SoccerManager |
Philipp Ludwig Statius Müller (April 25, 1725 – January 5, 1776) was a German zoologist. Statius Müller was born in Esens, and was a professor of natural science at Erlangen. Between 1773 and 1776, he published a German translation of Linnaeus's Natursystem. The supplement in 1776 contained the first scientific classification for a number of species, including the dugong, guanaco, potto, tricolored heron, umbrella cockatoo, red-vented cockatoo, and the enigmatic hoatzin. He was also an entomologist. Müller died in Erlangen. He is not to be confused with Salomon Müller (1804–1864), also an ornithologist, or with Otto Friedrich Müller. Note that the family name is actually spelled without the umlaut, then and now. | Agent | Scientist | Entomologist |
II liiga is the fourth level of professional football league competition in Estonia arranged by the Estonian Football Association. It consists of 28 teams, divided geographically into two divisions with 14 teams respectively in group ida/põhi and West/South. Until 2013 it was third-top league. | Agent | SportsLeague | SoccerLeague |
Blessed Giuseppe Allamano (21 January 1851 – 16 February 1926) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest. He established the Consolata Missionaries (I.M.C.) congregation for males and another for females, known as the Consolata Missionary Sisters. Allamano also served as the rector of the Santuario della Consolata and transformed the shrine into a source of spiritual renewal for the faithful. He was beatified (the last stage before canonization) on 7 October 1990. | Agent | Cleric | Saint |
Nils Arvid Ramm (1 January 1903 – 8 November 1986) was a Swedish heavyweight boxer who won a silver medal at the 1928 Summer Olympics. Previously he won the 1927 European title and finished second in 1925. After the Olympics Ramm turned professional and had a record of 17 wins, 4 losses and one draw before retiring in 1931. | Agent | Boxer | AmateurBoxer |
Kemal Özçelik (born 1924) is a Turkish former equestrian who competed in the 1956 Summer Olympics. | Agent | Athlete | HorseRider |
Scott Goodall (7 November 1935 – 7 March 2016) was a British comics writer. | Agent | Artist | ComicsCreator |
Starrcade '88 was the sixth annual Starrcade professional wrestling pay-per-view event produced under the National Wrestling Alliance banner. It was the first Starrcade event produced by World Championship Wrestling, and it took place on December 26, 1988 from the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk, Virginia. Shortly before the event, Ted Turner bought Jim Crockett Promotions, and the company became WCW. The main event was an over 30 minute bout between Ric Flair and Lex Luger for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. They were once members of the Four Horsemen stable, but Luger began to have issues with the other members, and left the group. Luger started a feud with Flair when Barry Windham, a friend of Luger's, turned on him, and joined the Four Horsemen. Other matches included The Road Warriors against Sting and Dusty Rhodes for the NWA World Tag Team Championship, Barry Windham against Bam Bam Bigelow for the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship, and Mike Rotunda against Rick Steiner for the NWA World Television Championship. | Event | SportsEvent | WrestlingEvent |
The Furness Line, in North West England, runs from Barrow-in-Furness to Ulverston and Grange-over-Sands, connecting with the West Coast Main Line at Carnforth. Along with the Cumbrian Coast Line, which runs north from Barrow to Whitehaven, Workington and Carlisle, it is considered one of the most scenic routes in England. Towns and villages along the routes are listed below. \n* Barrow-in-Furness \n* Roose \n* Dalton-in-Furness \n* Ulverston \n* The now-closed branch line to Lakeside used to diverge here. Part of this route is preserved as the Lakeside & Haverthwaite Railway. \n* Cark and Cartmel \n* Kents Bank \n* Grange-over-Sands \n* Arnside \n* Silverdale \n* Carnforth \n* Lancaster Train services are operated by Northern between Barrow-in-Furness and Lancaster or Manchester Airport. From Lancaster the trains use the West Coast Main Line and then follow the Manchester-Preston Line from Preston (these were previously operated by First TransPennine Express until 31 March 2016). In addition, local services are operated between Lancaster and Barrow, with some continuing to Sellafield or Carlisle via the Cumbrian Coast Line. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | RailwayLine |
Jack Hobbs (foaled 2 March 2012) is a British Thoroughbred racehorse. After winning his only race as a juvenile, he established himself as a potentially top-class colt with a twelve length win in a race at Sandown on his three-year-old debut. He finished second to his stable companion Golden Horn in both the Dante Stakes and the Epsom Derby before winning the Irish Derby by five lengths. He ran twice more in 2015, winning the September Stakes before being beaten when favourite for the Champion Stakes. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
Vic Parsons (born on November 29, 1939) is a retired NASCAR driver from Willowdale, Ontario, Canada (a suburb of Toronto). He competed in nineteen Winston Cup Series events in his career with seven top-tens. | Agent | RacingDriver | NascarDriver |
Socrates Tuttle (November 19, 1819 – February 12, 1885) was the Mayor of Paterson, New Jersey from 1871 to 1872. | Agent | Politician | Congressman |
Joel Maurice Hefley (born April 18, 1935) is a U.S. Republican politician who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives representing the 5th Congressional District of Colorado from 1987 to 2007. His wife, Dr. Lynn Hefley, is, like him, a former member of the Colorado State House of Representatives. They have three daughters. He was born in Ardmore, the seat of Carter County in southeastern Oklahoma, earned his B.A. at Oklahoma Baptist University in Shawnee, and his M.A. at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater. He worked as a management consultant and then as executive director of the Colorado Community Planning and Research Council, a nonprofit organization. He was a member of the Colorado House of Representatives for one term in 1977–78. Hefley was subsequently elected to the Colorado Senate before entering the U.S. House of Representatives. He served as chairman of the House Ethics Committee until 2005. His tenure propelled him from being \"among the most obscure members\" in the House to gaining national attention, when the Committee formally admonished House Majority Leader Tom DeLay three times; Hefley also handled the expulsion case of James Traficant, and oversaw the investigation of Alan Mollohan. Because Hefley had served 3 terms as chairman, he was term limited from serving as chairman in the 109th Congress. When the new Congress opened in January 2005, House Republicans pushed through new rules curtailing the ways ethics investigations can be launched. While Hefley voted for the rules, he criticized the procedure, \"saying he thought the changes were a mistake since they were done without bipartisan discussion.\" Within a month, Rep. Doc Hastings was chosen as Hefley's replacement due to Hefley's chairmanship expiring. On February 16, 2006, Hefley ended speculation as to whether he would seek re-election in 2006, instead retiring after 10 terms in Congress, despite pledging in 1986 that he would not serve longer than three terms (6 years.) | Agent | Politician | Congressman |
Clive Harvey Weeden (born November 22, 1987) is an American-Australian professional basketball player who currently plays for the South West Slammers of the State Basketball League (SBL). He played college basketball for Dartmouth College. | Agent | Athlete | BasketballPlayer |
Voltaire Paine Twombly (February 21, 1842 – February 24, 1918) was a Union veteran of the American Civil War and a recipient of the Medal of Honor. He received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Battle of Fort Donelson on February 15, 1862, when he picked up and carried his regiment's national colors after three other members of his regiment were killed or incapacitated by Confederate fire while attempting to secure the flag. Twombly also participated in a number of other engagements in the Civil War, including the Siege of Corinth and Sherman's March to the Sea. After being mustered out of service in 1865, Twombly attended business school and entered into a number of business ventures. In 1880, he entered politics upon being selected to be the treasurer of Van Buren County, Iowa. He served as the mayor of Keosauqua, Iowa from 1884 to early 1885, and as the treasurer of Iowa from 1885 to 1891. | Agent | Person | MilitaryPerson |
Pholcus phalangioides, known as the longbodied cellar spider or the skull spider due to its cephalothorax looking like a human skull, is a spider of the family Pholcidae. Females have a body length of about 9 mm; males are slightly smaller. Its legs are about 5 or 6 times the length of its body (reaching up to 7 cm of leg span in females). Its habit of living on the ceilings of rooms, caves, garages or cellars gives rise to one of its common names. They are considered beneficial in some parts of the world because they kill and eat other spiders, including species that can be considered a problem to humans such as hobo and redback spiders. This is the only spider species described by the Swiss entomologist Johann Kaspar Füssli, who first recorded it for science in 1775. Confusion often arises over its common name, because \"daddy long-legs\" is also applied to two other distantly related arthropods: firstly another arachnid from order Opiliones otherwise known as the harvestman, and an insect less ambiguously called the crane fly. | Species | Animal | Arachnid |
Geoffrey Wade Combe is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. Combe was signed by the Cincinnati Reds as an amateur free agent in 1974. He made Minor League stops with Eugene, Tampa, Three Rivers, Nashville, and finally Indy before making it to the majors on September 2, 1980. Combe had a series of solid seasons in the minors, starting with the Nashville Sounds of the Southern League in 1978 where he posted a 12–6 record and a 1.89 ERA in 66 games. His seven-year minor league career amounted to a record of 44–26 with an ERA of 2.31. In 1979 for the Sounds, he broke the league's record for saves with 27. He was rewarded for his efforts with a spot on the Southern League All-Star team. | Agent | Athlete | BaseballPlayer |
Sarah Barnes is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 soap opera Hollyoaks, played by Loui Batley. She debuted on-screen during the episode airing on 10 October 2005. Sarah was created by executive producer David Hanson as part of the Barnes family. In 2009, Batley quit the serial in order to pursue other projects. Although the character is no longer part of current story lines, she has been central to many key story lines, one of the earliest the high-profile gay storyline involving supercouple John Paul McQueen and Craig Dean. The theme of sexuality was further explored through Sarah, seeing her have relations with Zoe Carpenter and a serious relationship with Lydia Hart, which Batley initially found strange to portray because of Sarah's many relationships with male characters. Other story lines include her embarkment on a modelling career, competing in swimming competitions and her many relationships. According to Batley, Sarah relies on people too much for support and was \"man-crazy\" in her early years. Sarah's final storyline is her death in a skydiving accident, which was a first for a British soap opera. The storyline aired in the second series of Hollyoaks Later and was devised by producer Bryan Kirkwood. Sarah's death won \"Spectacular Scene Of The Year\" at the British Soap Awards in 2010 and the scenes have been praised by certain critics. | Agent | FictionalCharacter | SoapCharacter |
(This article is about the Nambour & Gympie North railway line, which is the existing Sunshine Coast Citytrain service. For proposed railway to Maroochydore, Queensland (CAMCOS), see Maroochydore railway line.) The Nambour & Gympie North railway line (also known as the Sunshine Coast line) refers to the section of Queensland's North Coast line that has regular interurban passenger services, which connect Brisbane with the Sunshine Coast and Gympie. It is the longest line on the Citytrain network. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | RailwayLine |
Kennedy Creek is a tributary of South Branch Tunkhannock Creek in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is approximately 5.3 miles (8.5 km) long and flows through Scott Township and North Abington Township. The watershed of the creek has an area of 6.17 square miles (16.0 km2). The creek is not designated as an impaired waterbody. The surficial geology in its vicinity consists of Wisconsinan Till, alluvium, bedrock, and fill. A number of bridges have been constructed over Kennedy Creek. The watershed of the creek is designated as a Coldwater Fishery and a Migratory Fishery. The creek flows through Lackawanna State Park in its lower reaches. It is crossed by two trails in the park and is utilized for canoeing. | Place | Stream | River |
The U.S. Virgin Islands Paradise Jam is a preseason college basketball tournament that takes place in late November of each year, with the men usually playing the week before Thanksgiving and the women playing Thanksgiving week. It takes place in St. Thomas at the Sports and Fitness Center on the campus of the University of the Virgin Islands. South Carolina is the defending men's champion. Maryland and Rutgers are the defending women's champions in the Reef and Island divisions, respectively. | Agent | SportsLeague | BasketballLeague |
Charles Frederick D'Arcy (2 January 1859 – 1 February 1938) was a Church of Ireland bishop. He was the Bishop of Clogher from 1903 to 1907 when he was translated to become Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin before then becoming the Bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore. He was then briefly the Archbishop of Dublin and finally, from 1920 until his death, Archbishop of Armagh. He was also a theologian, author and botanist. | Agent | Cleric | ChristianBishop |
The Op. 67 mazurkas by Frédéric Chopin are a set of four mazurkas posthumously published in 1855. A typical performance of all four mazurkas lasts around seven minutes. | Work | MusicalWork | ClassicalMusicComposition |
Tadao Ando (安藤 忠雄 Andō Tadao, born September 13, 1941) is a Japanese self-taught architect whose approach to architecture and landscape was categorized by architectural historian Francesco Dal Co as \"critical regionalism\". | Agent | Person | Architect |
London County Council (LCC) was the principal local government body for the County of London throughout its existence from 1889 to 1965, and the first London-wide general municipal authority to be directly elected. It covered the area today known as Inner London and was replaced by the Greater London Council. The LCC was the largest, most significant and most ambitious English municipal authority of its day. | Agent | Organisation | Legislature |
The 2016 MFF Charity Cup is the 5th MFF Charity Cup, an annual Myanmar football match played between the winners of the previous season's Myanmar National League and 2015 General Aung San Shield. The match was contested by Ayeyawady United, the 2015 General Aung San Shield winners, and Yangon United, champions of the 2015 Myanmar National League. It is held at Aung San Stadium on 3 January 2016. This was Yangon United's 3rd Cup appearance and Ayeyawady United's 3rd. | Event | SportsEvent | FootballMatch |
The discography of Adam Hicks, an American singer-songwriter, consists of one upcoming studio album, one soundtrack album, one singles, three promotional singles, five featured singles, six music videos and two album appearances. His first appearance was as a featured artist with Daniel Curtis Lee in two songs for the soundtrack of Zeke & Luther. His first soundtrack, Lemonade Mouth, peaked at number 4 on the Billboard 200. | Work | MusicalWork | ArtistDiscography |
Little Wonder (1837–1843) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse. In a career that lasted from September 1839 to September 1842 he ran eight times and won only one race. That race, however, was the 1840 Epsom Derby which he won as a 50/1 outsider. Little Wonder was one of the smallest Thoroughbreds to win a major race, standing less than 15 hands high. During his career, there were rumours that he was a \"ringer\", foaled in 1836 but the allegations were never substantiated. He was retired after being injured in a race in 1842 and reportedly died a year later. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
The 1997–98 Slovak Cup was the 29th season of Slovakia's annual knock-out cup competition and the fifth since the independence of Slovakia. It began on 29 July 1997 with Preliminary round and ended on 7 June 1998 with the Final. The winners of the competition earned a place in the qualifying round of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. Slovan Bratislava were the defending champions. | Event | Tournament | SoccerTournament |
(This article is about the Gaelic-language services from BBC Scotland. For the Gaelic-language television service, see BBC Alba (TV channel).) BBC Gàidhlig is the department of BBC Scotland that produces Scottish Gaelic-language (Gàidhlig) programming. This includes TV programmes for BBC Alba, BBC Two Alba, the BBC Radio nan Gàidheal radio station and the BBC Alba website. Its managing editor is Marion MacKinnon. | Agent | Broadcaster | BroadcastNetwork |
Landskrona Citadel (Swedish: Citadellet or Landskrona slott) is situated in Landskrona, Scania, southern Sweden. Its entirety including the very well-preserved moat system, the castle, park and old allotment areas, and central as well as sea-side location makes Landskrona Citadel unique. | Place | Building | Castle |
Route 154 is a state highway in Connecticut running for 28.24 miles (45.45 km). It serves as one of the main thoroughfares in the town of Old Saybrook, intersecting twice with U.S. Route 1. North of I-95, Route 154 runs parallel to Route 9, along to the west bank of the Connecticut River. The route ends in Middletown at Route 9. | Place | RouteOfTransportation | Road |
Paedophoropus is a genus of parasitic sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Eulimidae. | Species | Animal | Mollusca |
Suwon City Hall Station is a subway station of the Bundang Line, the commuter subway line of Korail, the national railway of South Korea. The station was opened in November 2013, as part of the final extension of the Bundang Line. As its name suggests, Suwon City Hall is located right next to the station. | Place | Station | RailwayStation |
Hyperolius baumanni is a species of frog in the Hyperoliidae family.It is found in Ghana and Togo.Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, swamps, intermittent freshwater marshes, rural gardens, and heavily degraded former forest. | Species | Animal | Amphibian |
Bachelor's Double (22 April 1906 – 3 February 1931) was an Irish-bred Thoroughbred racehorse that raced in Ireland and Britain and was a successful sire in the early 20th century. He won the Irish Derby as a three-year-old and also won the City and Suburban Handicap in 1910 and the Kempton Jubilee in 1911. Retired to stud in 1912, he sired the 1921 Epsom Oaks winner Love in Idleness and the inaugural Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Comrade. He died in 1931 in Ireland. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
The Houston Brewing Company is a brewery formerly in the village of Houston in Renfrewshire, Scotland. It was attached to, and operated in common with, the Fox & Hounds public house and, as a result of its size, is classed as a microbrewery. It produces a constant range of seven cask condition ales, alongside a range of seasonal and bottled beers. | Agent | Company | Brewery |
Oslo bishopric is the Church of Norway's bishopric for the municipalities of Oslo, Asker and Bærum. It is one of Norway's five traditional bishoprics and was founded around the year 1070. | Place | ClericalAdministrativeRegion | Diocese |
Kingarvie (1943–1955) was a Canadian Hall of Fame Thoroughbred racehorse. Owned and bred by the renowned automobile pioneer, Col. Sam McLaughlin, he was out of the mare, Forsworn. He was sired by Teddy Wrack who was a son of Bull Dog, a Champion American sire whose progeny included the very important Bull Lea. Trained by Arthur Brent, in his first two races at age two Kingarvie was beaten by fellow future Hall of Fame inductee, Windfields. He then went on a ten-race winning streak that extended into 1946 which included the 87th running of the King's Plate when jockey Johnny Dewhurst rode him to victory. The King's Plate is Canada's most prestigious race. A gelding, Kingarvie continued racing until 1953 when he was retired at age ten. He retired as the first Canadian horse to earn $100,000. In January 1955, Kingarvie suffered injuries during training at Gulfstream Park and had to be euthanized. In 1976 he was part of the inaugural class inducted in the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
Faith Jenkins, (born November 25, 1977) is an American attorney, legal commentator and media personality. On March 11, 2014, she officially joined MSNBC as a legal analyst. She is also a judge on Judge Faith, a daytime court show, where she renders decisions in a television courtroom. | Agent | Person | BeautyQueen |
The Smithsonian Gardens, a division of the Smithsonian Institution, is responsible for the \"landscapes, interiorscapes, and horticulture-related collections and exhibits\", which serve as an outdoor extension of the Smithsonian's museums and learning spaces in Washington, D.C. Established in 1972 as a groundskeeping and horticulture program, Smithsonian Gardens currently manages 180 acres of gardens on the National Mall, 64,000 square feet of greenhouse production space, and the Archives of American Gardens, a research collection of over 60,000 photographs and archival records covering American landscape history from the 1870s to the present. | Place | Building | Museum |
Jennifer Dawes (born 1 September 1990) is a British tumbling trampolinist, representing her nation at international competitions. She competed at world championships, including at the 2009, 2011 and 2013 Trampoline World Championships, and won the bronze medal in 2013 in the team tumbling event. | Agent | Athlete | Gymnast |
Laurence Wilfred \"Laurie\" Baker (2 March 1917 – 1 April 2007) was a British-born Indian architect, renowned for his initiatives in cost-effective energy-efficient architecture and designs that maximized space, ventilation and light and maintained an uncluttered yet striking aesthetic sensibility. Influenced by Mahatma Gandhi and his own experiences in the remote Himalayas, he promoted the revival of regional building practices and use of local materials; and combined this with a design philosophy that emphasized a responsible and prudent use of resources and energy. He was a pioneer of sustainable architecture as well as organic architecture, incorporating in his designs even in the late 1960s, concepts such as rain-water harvesting, minimizing usage of energy-inefficient building materials, minimizing damage to the building site and seamlessly merging with the surroundings. Due to his social and humanitarian efforts to bring architecture and design to the common man, his honest use of materials, his belief in simplicity in design and in life, and his stauch Quaker belief in non-violence, he has been called the \"Gandhi of architecture\". He moved to India in 1945 in part as an architect associated with a leprosy mission and continued to live and work in India for over 50 years. He became an Indian citizen in 1989 and resided in Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), Kerala from 1963 and served as the Director of COSTFORD (Centre of Science and Technology for Rural Development), an organisation to promote low-cost housing. In 1981, the Royal University of the Netherlands conferred an honour (the previous recipient of this honour, in 1980, was Hassan Fathy of Egypt) upon him for outstanding work in a Third World country. In 1983 he was conferred with an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) at Buckingham Palace. In 1990, the Government of India awarded him the Padma Shri for his meritorious service in the field of architecture. In 1992, he was awarded the Roll of Honour by the United Nations. In 1988, he was granted Indian citizenship, the only honour he actively pursued in his life. | Agent | Person | Architect |
Colonel Ibrahim Taiwo was a Military Governor of Kwara State from July 1975 to February 1976 during the military regime of General Murtala Mohammed.He assisted in establishment of the University of Ilorin, which was founded by decree August, 1975. | Agent | Politician | Governor |
Sonia Rolland (born 11 February 1981) is a French actress and was Miss France in the year 2000. She also competed in the Miss Universe competition. She was the first African-born winner of the Miss France pageant. Born in Kigali, Rwanda, to a Rwandan mother and a French father, Rolland and her family fled the country due to safety concerns with the Rwandan Genocide instigating, especially since her mother is Tutsi. In 1990 they moved to the neighboring country of Burundi. With the growing unrest that led to the Burundi Civil War, they immigrated to France in 1994. At the age 13 with her family, Rolland was settled in Burgundy in the small town of Cluny.she is a distant family of Kamanda Alain In October 1999, Sonia Rolland won the \"Miss Burgundy\" beauty contest that allowed her to compete for the Miss France 2000 title and at the age of 18 she was the first woman of African descent to win. At the Miss Universe 2000 pageant, which took place in Cyprus, Rolland was a top 10 semi-finalist, placing 9th overall. Rolland once lived in Paris with Christophe Rocancourt, an impostor, confidence man and gentleman thief who scammed affluent people by masquerading as a French member of the Rockefeller family. They had a daughter together, named Tess. They announced their split on 10 April 2008. Rolland has another daughter, Kahina, with actor and director Jalil Lespert, who is her partner since 2009 At twenty years old after serious acting lessons with renowned actor Alain Delon, Rolland embarked for a new career as an actress. Following an unsettling incident during which she was attacked in the metro she took kickboxing classes that later proved advantageous as they helped her land the role of Léa in the television series Léa Parker that ran for two seasons from 2004 to 2006. | Agent | Person | BeautyQueen |
The 1911 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final was a Gaelic football match played at Jones's Road on 14 January 1912 to determine the winners of the 1911 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, the 25th season of the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champions of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Cork of Munster who were represented by Lees and Antrim of Ulster who were represented by Seaghan an Diomáis, with Cork winning by 6-6 to 1-2. The All-Ireland final between Cork and Antrim was notable for a number of firsts. Not only was it the first appearance by an Ulster team in the All-Ireland final but it was also the first ever, and to date the only, championship meeting of Cork and Antrim. Antrim started well by scoring the first goal of the game. Charlie Paye replied while Billy Mackessy followed with a goal at the start of the second half. The final quarter saw Cork score four goals in all, including two more from Mackessy who recorded the very first All-Ireland hat-trick. Some commentators claimed that one of Cork's six goals should have been awarded as a point. Cork's All-Ireland victory was their first since 1890. The win gave them their second All-Ireland title over all and put them joint fourth on the all-time roll of honour along with Limerick. The 19-point winning margin for Cork remains a record for an All-Ireland final. | Event | SportsEvent | FootballMatch |
Northeast Airlines (NEA) - formerly BKS Air Transport - was an airline based in the United Kingdom that operated as BKS from 1951 until 1970. NEA's operations and fleet were merged into British Airways in 1976. | Agent | Company | Airline |
Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead is a play written by Bert V. Royal. An \"unauthorized parody,\" the play imagines characters from the popular comic strip Peanuts as degenerate teenagers. Drug use, child sexual abuse, suicide, eating disorders, teen violence, rebellion, sexual relations and identity are among the issues covered in this parody of the works of Charles M. Schulz. The show cleverly disguises the identity of each character, so that the issues of the play draw more focus than attempting to guess \"who's who\". However, the use of these famous characters is what gives the show its emotional punch: even these beloved child characters must some day grow up and deal with a harsh reality as they find their place in the world. | Work | WrittenWork | Play |
Sir Frederick Henry Royce, 1st Baronet, OBE (27 March 1863 – 22 April 1933) was an English engineer and car designer who, with Charles Rolls and Claude Johnson, founded the Rolls-Royce company. | Agent | Person | Engineer |
Kenny Frank Rose (born June 9, 1962) is a former professional American football linebacker in the National Football League for the New York Jets, Cleveland Browns, and the Philadelphia Eagles. Rose graduated from Christian Brothers High School (Sacramento, California). He attended the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and played alongside Randall Cunningham, among others. Undrafted by the National Football League, Ken caught on with the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League. Following two seasons there, he played a season with the Tampa Bay Bandits of the United States Football League. However, Rose dreamed of playing in the NFL and attended several training camps in the mid-1980s, only to be rejected each time. He received an opportunity with the New York Jets in 1987 during the strike by the players union, and became one of the few \"scabs\" to stay on the roster when the regular players returned to work. Rose remained with the Jets through 1989. In 1990, he split playing time with the Cleveland Browns and the Philadelphia Eagles, released by the Browns (along with head coach Bud Carson) after the seventh game and signing with the Eagles for their final 8 regular-season games. Rose remained with the Eagles through the 1994 season. | Agent | GridironFootballPlayer | AmericanFootballPlayer |
General Lucio Blanco International Airport (IATA: REX, ICAO: MMRX) is an international airport located at Reynosa, Tamaulipas, Mexico, near the U.S.-Mexico border. It handles national and international air traffic for the city of Reynosa. In 2014, the airport handled 472,027 passengers, and in 2015 it handled 507,186 passengers. The airport is named in honor of General Lucio Blanco, a major figure of the Mexican Revolution of 1910 to 1920. | Place | Infrastructure | Airport |
Park Chung-hwi (Hangul: 박정휘; 1908 – ?) was a South Korean football player and manager. The South Korea national football team manager was first established in May 1948 with the appointment of Park Chung-hwi. | Agent | SportsManager | SoccerManager |
Manning Clark's History of Australia - The Musical is an Australian musical written by Tim Robertson and Don Watson with John Romeril with music by Martin Armiger and George Dreyfus with David King. The musical interweaves the life of historian Manning Clark from 1915 to 1988 with Australian history from 1788 to 1915, utilising drama, melodrama, music, song, comedy and circus. | Work | MusicalWork | Musical |
The cirl bunting (/ˈsɜːrl/ SURL), Emberiza cirlus, is a passerine bird in the bunting family Emberizidae, a group now separated by most modern authors from the finches, Fringillidae. It breeds across southern Europe, on the Mediterranean islands and in north Africa. It is a resident of these warmer areas, and does not migrate in winter. It is common in all sorts of open areas with some scrub or trees, but has a preference for sunny slopes. Changes in agricultural practice have affected this species very adversely at the northern fringes of its range, and in England, where it once occurred over much of the south of the country, it is now restricted to south Devon. The cirl bunting is the mascot on the signs for the village of Stokeinteignhead. | Species | Animal | Bird |
Liz Sanbourne is a fictional character on the American soap opera Passions, which aired on NBC from 1999 to 2007 and on DirecTV in 2007–08. Developed by the soap's creator and head writer James E. Reilly, Liz was portrayed by Amelia Marshall from October 3, 2001 to February 17, 2006. Arreale Davis and Taquel Graves also played the role in flashbacks in 2003. Reilly approached Marshall about the role after they worked together on Guiding Light. Marshall was attracted to the show due to its inclusion of a racially diverse ensemble on daytime television, and the opportunity to play a darker and more complex character. She characterized Liz as expanding the representation of African-Americans on television and the roles possible for African-American actors. Marshall left the show following significant cuts in its budget. Liz is a member of the Russell family. Introduced as a romantic interest for Antonio Lopez-Fitzgerald, Liz primarily serves as interference in the love triangle between Sheridan Crane and Antonio and his brother Luis Lopez-Fitzgerald. Liz receives more prominence on the show as the antagonist and foil to her adoptive sister Eve Russell. She exposed Eve's past with Julian Crane to the residents of Harmony, and later provided that the relationship between Chad Harris-Crane and Whitney Russell was not incestuous due to her identification as Chad's biological mother. Liz has been widely praised by television critics and the show's cast. Commentators praised the sensationalism of Liz's schemes for revenge against Eve. Marshall received a nomination for Soap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Villainess in a Drama Series – Daytime in the 2005 Soap Opera Digest Awards. Co-stars Tracey Ross and Rodney Van Johnson praised Marshall's performance on the series, and expressed disappointment at her removal. | Agent | FictionalCharacter | SoapCharacter |
New Acoustic Music is a music genre that blends influences from folk, bluegrass, jazz and world music and uses only acoustic instruments. Beginning in the 1970s it has been developed by artists such as Bela Fleck, Leo Kottke, Tim Ware, Tony Rice, Mike Marshall, Darol Anger and others. | TopicalConcept | Genre | MusicGenre |
Jochen Meißner (born 8 May 1943) was a leading single scull rower of West Germany between 1965 and 1972. In this event, he won national titles in 1965–1968 and a European title in 1965; a silver medal at the 1968 Summer Olympics, as well as bronze medals at the world (1966) and European (1969) championships. He also competed in the double sculls at the 1972 Summer Olympics, together with Arthur Heyne, and finished in tenth place. | Agent | Athlete | Rower |
Jack Finck (21 January 1930 – 31 October 2012) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Collingwood in the Victorian Football League (VFL) during the early 1950s. Finck, who Collingwood recruited from Heathmere, was a key position defender. As a result he kicked just eight goals in his career but half of them came in a single match, when he helped his side to defeat Carlton at Princes Park in 1953. Later that year, Finck, having missed out on a premiership in 1952 when Collingwood lost the Grand Final, got another opportunity when he was their full-back in the team which defeated Geelong in the decider. After just four seasons and despite being aged just 24, Finck retired, citing the long commute from Portland for home games. | Agent | Athlete | AustralianRulesFootballPlayer |
Xeromphalina brunneola is a species of agaric fungus in the family Mycenaceae. Found in the western United States where it grows in dense clusters on debarked conifer logs, it was described by mycologist Orson K. Miller in 1968. The type collection was made by Miller near Priest River, Idaho, in September of 1964. The mushroom has a dull orange, convex to nearly flattened cap measuring 0.6–15 mm (0.02–0.59 in) in diameter. The orange-buff gills are narrow, closely spaced, and decurrently attached to the stipe. Spores are elliptical, smooth, amyloid, and measure 5.5–6.6 by 2.5–3.0 µm. | Species | Eukaryote | Fungus |
Kalyan Dombivali Municipal Transport (KDMT) is a public transport company operating in India, run by the Kalyan Dombivali Municipal Corporation. This service serves the twin cities of Kalyan and Dombivali as well as the villages around. It also has routes which serve Vashi and Panvel in Navi Mumbai. It also offers overnight routes to various destinations. It also has routes to Bhiwandi & Saravli MIDC. The company was founded in response to a lack of public transport affecting the area, which had become known as the great bus drought. KDMT came to provide for reliable transport. | Agent | Company | BusCompany |
The National Library of Romania (Romanian: Biblioteca Naţională a României) is the national library of Romania. It is intended to be the repository of all that is published in Romania. | Agent | EducationalInstitution | Library |
Nataša Vojnović (pronounced [nǎtaʃa ʋɔ̂jnɔʋitɕ]) (Serbian Cyrillic: Наташа Војновић) is a Bosnian Serb fashion model, who participated in the Elite Model Look of 1996. | Agent | Person | Model |
Gibson's albatross (Diomedea antipodensis gibsoni), also known as the Auckland Islands wandering albatross or Gibson's wandering albatross, is a large seabird in the great albatross group of the albatross family. The common name and trinomial commemorate John Douglas Gibson, an Australian amateur ornithologist who studied albatrosses off the coast of New South Wales for thirty years. | Species | Animal | Bird |
Clarence Paul \"Sally\" Miles (June 21, 1879 – May 2, 1966) was an American football and baseball player, coach, and college administrator. He served as the head football coach at Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute (VPI)—now known as Virginia Tech—from 1905 to 1906, compiling a record of 14–3–2. Miles also was the head baseball coach at VPI in 1908 and 1913. He served as the school's athletic director from 1920 to 1934. Known as \"Mr. VPI,\" Miles spent nearly 59 years at Virginia Tech in a variety of capacities. His contributions have been recognized by the university by naming a playing field, a football stadium, Miles Stadium, that once stood directly behind the War Memorial Gym (where Payne Hall, Pedrew-Yates Hall, and New Residence Hall East, now stand), a professorship, and a building on the Virginia Tech campus in his honor. Miles died two weeks before the dedication of Clarence P. Miles Hall, a residence hall that houses 217 male students. Miles' nickname \"Sally\" was a shortened form of \"Salskinner,\" which he brought with him from high school. As an undergraduate, Miles was captain of the baseball team. As a graduate student, he was captain of the football team and was named to the first team of the All-Southern team as a tackle. Miles remained on campus to teach German (personal knowledge), chemistry,and to coach football and baseball. Miles' 1905 team is credited with VPI's first-ever victory over the Virginia. Virginia was so incensed by the loss that it refused to play Tech again until 1923. Miles also served as athletic director, treasurer and dean of the college (then a combined version of a provost and admissions director). He helped organize the Southern Conference, serving as its president. Miles tried but failed to earn membership for Virginia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Virginia Tech ultimately joined in ACC in 2004. Miles was inducted into the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 1974. | Agent | Coach | CollegeCoach |
Valentine F. Fitzjohn (2 June 1878 – 1934) was a Scottish professional golfer. He finished tied for second in the 1899 U.S. Open and finished tenth in 1900. | Agent | Athlete | GolfPlayer |
Gwak Mi hee (Korean: 곽미희; born May 10, 1974) is a South Korean cross-country mountain biker and ski mountaineer, who has won all individual races of all Asian Championships of Ski Mountaineering since the first edition. Gwak was born in Yesan, and lives in Seoul. She started cycling in 1997, and became a member of the national team in 2001. | Agent | WinterSportPlayer | Skier |
Pope Lucius II (Latin: Lucius II; died 15 February 1145), born Gherardo Caccianemici dal Orso, was Pope from 9 March 1144 to his death in 1145. His pontificate was notable for the unrest in Rome associated with the Commune of Rome and its attempts to wrest control of the city from the papacy. | Agent | Cleric | Pope |
So Factual (foaled 4 March 1990) was an American-bred Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. He was bred in Kentucky by Khalid Abdullah and sent to race in Europe where he proved to be one of the leading sprinters of his time. As a juvenile he ran three times, winning on his debut and finishing second in the Coventry Stakes. In the following year he won the European Free Handicap but was well beaten in his next two races and was then sold and sent to compete in the United Arab Emirates. In 1994 he won three races in Dubai and was then returned to Europe in the ownership of Godolphin Racing. He reached his peak as a five-year-old in 1995 when he recorded victories in the Cork and Orrery Stakes and the Nunthorpe Stakes. He was retired to stud at the end of the year. | Species | Horse | RaceHorse |
Libystes is a genus of crabs, containing six species: \n* Libystes edwardsi Alcock, 1899 \n* Libystes lepidus Takeda & Miyake, 1970 \n* Libystes nitidus A. Milne-Edwards, 1867 \n* Libystes paucidentatus Stephenson & Campbell, 1960 \n* Libystes vietnamensis Tien, 1969 \n* Libystes villosus Rathbun, 1924 | Species | Animal | Crustacean |
The 2001 Major League Soccer All-Star Game was the 6th Major League Soccer All-Star Game, played on July 28, 2001 at Spartan Stadium in San Jose, CA. The game ended in a 6-6 tie. It is the only MLS All-Star Game that ended in a tie. | Event | SportsEvent | FootballMatch |
Anthony Nathaniel Anderson (born November 12, 1981), also known by his initials as Double A, is an American professional basketball player for the Saint John Mill Rats of the National Basketball League of Canada (NBL). Standing 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m), he plays the point guard position. Anderson has played in the NBL Canada with the Mill Rats for nearly five seasons. As of February 2016, he is the league's all-time leading scorer and is known as one of its most prominent players. Anderson also played for Saint John and their previous incarnation, the Manchester Millrats, in the Premier Basketball League (PBL) and the American Basketball Association (ABA). Anderson played four seasons of college basketball under head coach Steve Lappas at the University of Massachusetts Amherst with the Minutemen. He most notably was named Rookie of the Year for the Atlantic 10 Conference in 2002. He closed his college career at UMass as its second-best three-point shooter in school history, behind only Monty Mack. Anderson attended Lynn English High School in Lynn, Massachusetts before college, where he was one of the top basketball players in the Northeastern Conference. After leaving UMass, Anderson shortly competed as a rookie with the PAWS London Capital following a brief hiatus in his career, in which he only played locally for personal reasons. He later drew the attention of the Millrats, for whom he would play in the 2007–08 season. Anderson then competed in Cyprus and Poland before returning to Manchester. He remained with the team as they relocated to Saint John and the NBL Canada. Midway through his stint with the Mill Rats, Anderson played in Qatar in 2013. His individual accolades in his professional career include ABA All-Star Game MVP, All-ABA First Team, ABA Most Valuable Player, and third and second-team All-PBL. In the NBL Canada, Anderson has appeared on the All-NBL Canada First Team thrice, made the NBL Canada All-Star Game on two occasions, and was named Most Valuable Player in 2014. | Agent | Athlete | BasketballPlayer |
Des Raj Dhugga is an Indian politician and belongs to the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal. He is a member of Punjab Legislative Assembly and represent Sri Hargobindpur. | Agent | Person | OfficeHolder |
The 1844 United States presidential election in Maine took place between November 1 and December 4, 1844, as part of the 1844 United States presidential election. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. Maine voted for the Democratic candidate, James K. Polk, over Whig candidate Henry Clay. Polk won Maine by a margin of 13.35%. | Event | SocietalEvent | Election |
David Carrier (/ˈkæriər/; born 1944) is an American philosopher and art and cultural critic. | Agent | Person | Philosopher |
Linda Karen Reynolds CSC (born 16 May 1965) is an Australian politician. She was elected to the Australian Senate representing the state of Western Australia at the 2013 federal election for the term which began 1 July 2014.Reynolds was elected by being third on the Liberal Senate ticket but her place in the Senate was in doubt after the High Court ordered a fresh half-Senate election in Western Australia as a result of missing ballot papers. However, Reynolds was re-elected and her Senate term commenced on 1 July 2014. Reynolds was the deputy director of the Federal Liberal Party of Australia, brigadier and adjutant general in the Australian Army Reserve and a chief of staff to Senator Chris Ellison. She is a granddaughter of Alfred Reynolds MLA, a former Australian Labor Party member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. | Agent | Politician | MemberOfParliament |
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Bondoukou (Latin: Bondukuen(sis)) is a diocese located in the city of Bondoukou in the Ecclesiastical province of Bouaké in Côte d'Ivoire. It was established on July 3, 1987. It's Cathedral is the Cathédrale Saints Odile in Bondoukou. Bishops of Bondoukou (Roman rite) have been Félix Kouadjo (April 22, 1996 – May 6, 2012) and Alexandre Kouassi (August 28, 1987 – December 12, 1994) | Place | ClericalAdministrativeRegion | Diocese |
Kris Hogg (born June 17, 1986) is a Canadian professional Ice Hockey Forward playing with Ciarko PBS Bank KH Sanok of the Polska Hokej Liga, the top-level league in Poland. Prior to playing professional Ice Hockey, Hogg played Major Junior Ice Hockey for the Kamloops Blazers and Lethbridge Hurricanes of the Western Hockey League. After completing his Major Junior career, Hogg signed with the Phoenix RoadRunners of the ECHL. With the RoadRunners, Hogg played in 4 games during 2007 ECHL Playoffs, accruing one Goal and two Assists. Hogg subsequently played University Ice Hockey for the Lakehead University Thunderwolves of Canadian Interuniversity Sport for four seasons. After completing his University Ice Hockey career, Hogg signed with the Missouri Mavericks of the Central Hockey League on August 24, 2011 for the 2011-12 season. On August 28, 2012, Hogg signed with the Fife Flyers of the Elite Ice Hockey League for the 2012-13 season. On October 6, 2013, Hogg signed with the Utah Grizzlies of the ECHL for the 2013-14 season. On August 23, 2014, Hogg signed with the Tilburg Trappers of the Dutch Eredivisie for the 2014-15 season. On December 31, 2014, it was announced that Hogg had left the Trappers. On January 5, 2015, Hogg returned to the Missouri Mavericks, which was at that point a part of the ECHL. On January 28, 2015, the Mavericks suspended Hogg from its roster, as it was announced on January 29, 2015 that he had joined the team KH Sanok of the Polish PHL. | Agent | WinterSportPlayer | IceHockeyPlayer |
George Russell Davis (December 13, 1861 – June 13, 1933) was an American jurist who served as an Associate Justice on the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court from 1897 until 1905. An attorney by trade, he was active in Republican politics and became a personal friend of William McKinley. Shortly after McKinley became President of the United States, Davis requested and received appointment to the Arizona bench. After his time as a judge in Arizona Territory, Davis moved to California where he worked as an attorney and served one term as a judge for the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. | Agent | Person | Judge |
The 1992 UEFA Cup Final was played on 29 April 1992 and 13 May 1992 between Ajax of the Netherlands and Torino of Italy. Ajax won on away goals after a 2–2 draw in the first leg in Turin and a 0–0 draw in the second in Amsterdam. | Event | SportsEvent | FootballMatch |
Ferry Field (known as Regents Field before 1902) was the home field for the University of Michigan football team from 1893 to 1905. It was located along South State Street in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where Schembechler Hall stands today. The Board of Regents of the University of Michigan authorized $3,000 in 1890 (equivalent to $80,000 in 2017) for the purchase of land to build a new football field. The following May, they added $4,500 more (equivalent to $120,000 in 2017) \"for the purpose of fitting up the athletic field.\" The facility was simply named \"the Athletic Field\" upon completion. The first home game at the Athletic Field was a 6–0 victory over the Detroit Athletic Club on October 7, 1893. The following year in 1894, the Athletic Association change the name of the field to Regents Field, which it would be known as until 1902. In 1902, Detroit businessman Dexter Ferry donated the land immediately north of Regents Field to the university. In June 1902, Regents Field was renamed Ferry Field. When it opened, Ferry Field had a single wooden bleacher section that seated 400 people. The bleachers burned down in 1895 and were replaced the following year with a new covered grandstand seating 800. Because of the demand for tickets, additional open bleachers seating about 6,000 were built adjoining the covered grandstand. The Athletic Association also had \"one thousand circus seats and materials for sloping platforms which will permit 8,000 more people to view a football game.\" Bleachers were later constructed along the south side of the field and the end zones, bringing capacity to over 15,000. The largest crowd ever at Ferry Field was for the second to last game at the old stadium. By one account, 17,000 fans watched the Wolverines defeat Wisconsin in the 1905 homecoming game. In the 1890s a three dollar membership in the Athletic Association gained students admission to all athletic events. By 1904 a general admission ticket cost $3.00. Michigan compiled an overall record of 87–2–3 at Ferry Field from 1893 to 1905. Between 1901 and 1904, Fielding H. Yost's \"Point-a-Minute\" teams went 44–0 at Ferry Field, outscoring their opponents 2,821 to 42. In 1904, the Wolverines beat the undefeated University of Chicago team (coached by Amos Alonzo Stagg) at Ferry Field. Portions of the game and several panoramic shots of the field were filmed by the Edison Manufacturing Company in one of the earliest successful attempts to film a football game. (See External links to view the film.) | Place | SportFacility | Stadium |
Restoule Lake is a lake found in the Almaguin Highlands region of the Parry Sound District in the province of Ontario, Canada.It is one of the larger lakes in the area and contains many islands. It was discovered by fur traders. The lake is named after native chief Joseph Restoule. The Grawbrager family were the first to settle there in 1840. Restoule Provincial Park is located on the north shore of the lake. | Place | BodyOfWater | Lake |
Oklahoma Tax Commission v. Sac & Fox Nation, 508 U.S. 114 (1993), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that absent explicit congressional direction to the contrary, it must be presumed that a State does not have jurisdiction to tax tribal members who live and work in Indian country, whether the particular territory consists of a formal or informal reservation, allotted lands, or dependent Indian communities. The Sac and Fox Nation is an Indian (Native American) tribe that governs itself under the Indian Self-Determination Act and imposes taxes based on that authority. The State of Oklahoma sought to impose income and motor vehicle taxes on tribal members. The tribe brought suit to prevent the state from imposing those taxes. Both the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court held that Oklahoma, without a clear authorization from Congress, was prohibited from imposing taxes on tribal members in Indian country. This case, together with several other cases, are known as the \"Oklahoma tax cases\" in Native American case law. | UnitOfWork | LegalCase | SupremeCourtOfTheUnitedStatesCase |
Prima Games is the largest publishing company of video game strategy guides in the United States. A division of Random House, it is an imprint of the Random House Information Group, based in Roseville, California. They normally feature in-depth walkthroughs to completing the gameand the characters. | Agent | Company | Publisher |
Yudi Khoedirun (born September 5, 1987) is an Indonesian footballer who currently plays for Persiba Balikpapan as a defender. | Agent | Athlete | SoccerPlayer |
Thomson Geer is an independent Australian commercial law firm founded in 1885. Its predecessor firms included Thomsons Lawyers and Herbert Geer. The firm operates a full commercial law service as a fully integrated national firm with offices in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide. It is one of the top ten firms in the country by revenue, and the seventh largest firm in Australia by headcount. | Agent | Company | LawFirm |
Cannon Fodder 2: Once More unto the Breach, also known as Cannon Fodder 2 is an action-strategy shoot 'em up game developed by Sensible Software and published by Virgin Interactive for the Amiga and DOS in November 1994. The game is the sequel to Cannon Fodder, a successful game released for multiple formats in 1993. The game is a combination of action and strategy involving a small number of soldiers battling through a time-travel scenario. The protagonists are heavily outnumbered and easily killed. The player must rely on strategy and heavy secondary weapons to overcome enemies, their vehicles and installations. The game retained the mechanics and gameplay of its predecessor but introduced new levels, settings and graphics. Former journalist Stuart Campbell designed the game's levels, making them harder and more tactically demanding, as well as introducing a multitude of pop culture references in the level titles. The development of the game's plot was hampered by budget constraints and the resulting lack of explanation confused reviewers. Critics enjoyed the gameplay retained from the original Cannon Fodder but were disappointed at the lack of new mechanics or weapons, comparing the game to a data disk. Reviewers praised the game's level design, though less so those of its alien planet. Critics gave Cannon Fodder 2 positive reviews but lower scores than its predecessor and gave mixed criticism of the new theme music and increased difficulty. | Work | Software | VideoGame |
Kellyn Tate (born c. 1976), is an American softball coach and former player. She has been the head softball coach at University of Puget Sound since 2012. She previously held coaching positions at Portland State, Miami (Ohio), Texas Tech, and Penn State. Tate played college softball at the University of Michigan where she was a first-team All-Big Ten Conference player each year from 1996 to 1998. Her career batting average of .357 is the fourth highest in Michigan history. She later played professional softball for the Orlando Wahoos (1998), Akron Racers (1999-2000), WPSL All-Stars (2001), and California Sunbirds (2004). She won the Women's Pro Softball League batting title in 1998 with a .320 batting average. | Agent | Coach | CollegeCoach |
Reformers' Party (Persian: حزب اصلاحطلبان, translit. Ḥezb-e Eṣlāḥṭalabān) was a political party in Iran, established in late years of Qajar dynasty. It was one of the four major parliamentary parties in early 1920s, along with the Communist Party, Socialist Party and Revival Party. The party is an heir to the Moderate Socialists Party, and was founded by its former members joined by some Democrat Party affiliates. The party held the majority in the 4th Parliament. The party's opposition to Reza Khan, lead to losing its majority status in the 5th Parliament after he rigged the elections to have a parliament pliant to his views. | Agent | Organisation | PoliticalParty |
Agent M is an Estonian alternative rock group with new wave and post-punk influences. Their songs are sung in Estonian and English. Agent M started as a studio project of guitarist Marten Vill and a female singer Merili Varik in late 2004. Singles \"7 Surmapattu\" and \"Kus on mu kodu\" gained attention by local radios and a full live band was formed. \n* Members of Agent M photographed performing in Jyrock Festival in Jyväskylä, Finland. The band has released five videos and two of them entered the MTV Baltic playlists. In spring 2007, Agent M was announced as the winner of Baltic New Music Chart. The band released an EP \"Šokolaad\" (Chocolate) in 2006 and a full album Spionaaž (Espionage) in 2007. Band was disbanded in the autumn 2009. | Agent | Group | Band |
Elvin Ernest Hayes (born November 17, 1945) is an American retired professional basketball player and radio analyst for his alma-mater Houston Cougars. He is a member of the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team, and an inductee in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. | Agent | Athlete | BasketballPlayer |
The Karboğazı ambush (Turkish: Karboğazı Baskını), also known as Battle of Karboğazı (Turkish: Karboğazı Savaşı) was a minor ground engagement fought between the Turkish nationalists and the French battalion on Toros Mountains during the Turkish War of Independence. Karboğazı literally means Snow Pass. | Event | SocietalEvent | MilitaryConflict |
Daryle Ray Smith (January 18, 1964 – February 11, 2010) was an American football offensive tackle in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys in 1987 and 1988, the Cleveland Browns in 1989, and the Philadelphia Eagles from 1990 through 1992. He was born and raised in Knoxville, Tennessee and played college football at the University of Tennessee. | Agent | GridironFootballPlayer | AmericanFootballPlayer |
Waiting Room is an Australian band consisting of lead vocalist and actor Alan Fletcher, guitarist Chris Hawker, singer-songwriter Tommy Rando and drummer Jeff Consi. The band play at a public house called The Elephant and Wheelbarrow in Victoria, Australia. for Neighbours Night to meet fans. The band often tour the UK, where Fletcher is well-known because of his role in the Australian soap opera Neighbours. The band released their debut album In the Waiting Room in 2005. With Fletcher's link to Neighbours, a couple of their songs have been about Neighbours characters including Sleeping Alongside Susan which was a remix of Smokie's Living Next Door to Alice. This was in reference to his characters relationship with Izzy Hoyland. Fletcher toured the UK in September and October 2009 with band The X-Rays featuring Johnny Lucas, Chris Hanby and Martin Stewart. | Agent | Group | Band |
Bokjusan is a mountain in the county of Cheorwon, Gangwon-do in South Korea. It has an elevation of 1,152 m (3,780 ft). | Place | NaturalPlace | Mountain |
The Markland Locks and Dam is a concrete dam bridge and locks that span the Ohio River. It is 1395 feet (425.2 m) long, and connects Gallatin County, Kentucky, and Switzerland County, Indiana. The locks and dam were reviewed by the Board of Engineers for River and Harbours to replace the Ohio River locks and dams Number 35, 36, 37, 38 and 39. Then the project was approved by the Secretary of the Army on March 11, 1953. Construction on the locks began in March 1956 and they were placed in operation in May 1959. The dam construction began in April 1959 and was finished in June 1964. Federal Power Commission granted a license for Cinergy to operate a hydroelectric power plant at the dam. Cinergy was later bought by Duke Energy. The plant has a capacity of 81,000 kVA. On September 27, 2009, the 1,200-foot lock failed and the gates \"mismitered\" due to a solenoid malfunction. The lock was repaired and reopened on March 1, 2010. The 1,200-foot lock chamber remained closed for 155 days, but the 600-foot lock continued to lock traffic albeit with delays. | Place | Infrastructure | Dam |
Ronald Charles \"Ron\" Elstob (born 29 November 1924) is a former Australian politician. Born in Toowoomba, Queensland, he was a waterside worker in Adelaide, South Australia, and an official with the Waterside Workers' Federation. In 1977 he was elected to the Australian Senate as a Labor Senator for South Australia. He held the seat until his retirement in 1987. | Agent | Politician | MemberOfParliament |
OCS, or previously known as Orange Cinéma Séries, is a French group of dedicated movies/series TV channels operated by Orange S.A.. The five channels launched on November 13, 2008 as part of the company's new direct-to-home satellite service. OCS is a TV package, available from Bouygues Telecom, CanalSat, Numericable, Orange TV, SFR and Tahiti Nui Satellite. All subscribers of Orange TV, CanalSat, SFR, Numericable, Bougues Telecom or Tahiti Nui Satellite have the option to subscribe to OCS with their TV distributor. OCS is also available through multi device. | Agent | Broadcaster | TelevisionStation |
Caravan magazine is a UK monthly consumer magazine for the touring caravan community. It was Britain’s first caravanning magazine, offering advice and tips on every aspect of the hobby. Every month the magazine features touring and travel articles for the UK and Europe, new gadgets and products with the Caravan Lottery giveaway, show and event news, reviews, and feedback with reader content. Written by caravanners for caravanners, the magazine publishes advice on owning a caravan, from buying a towcar to choosing the right towing mirrors, awnings, gas bottles, and barbecues. | Work | PeriodicalLiterature | Magazine |
Frank R. McGeoy was an architect of Greenwood, Mississippi. He was from Tennessee. A number of his works are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Works include: \n* Murphey-Jennings House, 307 Walnut St. Sumner, MS (McGeoy,Frank R.), NRHP-listed \n* Southworth House, 1108 Mississippi Ave. Greenwood, MS (McGeoy,Frank R.), NRHP-listed \n* Wesley Memorial Methodist Episcopal, 800 Howard St. Greenwood, MS (McGeoy,Frank R.), NRHP-listed \n* Wesley Methodist Church Historic District, roughly bounded by Cotton, Howard, Palace, Weeks Lane, and W. Johnson Greenwood, MS (McGeoy, Frank R.), NRHP-listed \n* Congregation Ahavath Rayim temple within Williams Landing and Eastern Downtown Residential Historic District, Roughly bounded by Front, McLemore and Lamar, Market, and George Sts. Greenwood, MS (McGeoy,Frank R.), NRHP-listed \n* Beaman House, Greenwood \n* 810 Grand Boulevard, in the Grand Boulevard Historic District, Greenwood \n* Sunday School building of the First Methodist Church of Greenwood, 310 W. Washington St. Greenwood, MS (McGeoy,Frank R.), NRHP-listed | Agent | Person | Architect |
Sultanköy Dam is a dam in Turkey. The development was backed by the Turkish State Hydraulic Works. | Place | Infrastructure | Dam |
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