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Q6973412 The National Hot Rod Reunion is a gathering of nostalgia drag racers, street rodders and automotive enthusiasts based on the California Hot Rod Reunion. The first four years of the National Hot Rod Reunion were held in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The event has been held in Ohio, but has returned to Bowling Green where the event has been established as the main site since 2008. |
Q270229 Jéssica de Barros Augusto, ComM (born 8 November 1981) is a Portuguese runner who competes in cross country, road running and in middle-distance and long-distance track events. At club level, she represents Sporting CP.Augusto has enjoyed much success at the European Cross Country Championships. She won the event in 2010, was the runner-up in 2008, and shared in the team gold on three occasions. She was the first European-born runner to finish at the 2010 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, although she was 21st overall. She has represented Portugal in three World Championships in Athletics and at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and the 2012 London Olympics.She has won medals on the track at minor championships, including golds at the 2007 Summer Universiade and 2009 Lusophony Games. In road running, her greatest achievement is a win at the 2009 Great North Run, where she set a half marathon best of 1:09:08. She has also won at the Cursa Bombers, and finished second at both the São Silvestre de Lisboa and Great South Run. |
Q13643640 The discography of Linda Ronstadt, an American rock, pop and country artist, consists of 28 studio albums, 1 live album, numerous compilation albums, and 63 singles. After recording three albums with her folk rock band, The Stone Poneys, Ronstadt debuted on Capitol Records as a solo artist with 1969's Hand Sown ... Home Grown.Between 1970 and 1973, Ronstadt released three studio albums: two on the Capitol label, Silk Purse (1970) and Linda Ronstadt (1971); and one on the Asylum label, Don't Cry Now (1973). Developing a Country Rock sound similar to that of Eagles, Ronstadt recorded 1974's Grammy-winning Heart Like a Wheel, which sold over two million U. S. copies and spawned the #1 hits "When Will I Be Loved" and "You're No Good". Her next album was 1975's Prisoner in Disguise, which followed a similar musical format and contained a Top Five cover of "Heat Wave". Hasten Down the Wind in 1976 featured two Ronstadt-composed originals and established Ronstadt as the first ever female recording artist to score three million-selling albums. Its biggest hits were a remake of Buddy Holly's "That'll Be The Day" and a reworking of Willie Nelson's "Crazy". The album won Ronstadt her second Grammy Award. Her 1977 release, Simple Dreams, followed a more Rock-oriented format. It went Triple platinum in America alone and produced two simultaneous Top Five hits: the Platinum-certified "Blue Bayou" and "It's So Easy". Additional hits from the album included "Poor Poor Pitiful Me", "Tumbling Dice", and the Top 10 Country hit "I Never Will Marry".The following year, Living in the USA included a cover of Chuck Berry's "Back in the U.S.A.". It also contained a soulful Top 10 remake of the Motown classic "Ooh Baby Baby" which crossed over to R&B radio. In addition to the conventional Asylum release that is listed below, special limited-edition releases were also made of this album in red vinyl and picture disc. "Just One Look" was the album's third hit single.Ronstadt's first disc of the 1980s was the New Wave-styled Mad Love. It debuted at #5 on the Billboard album chart and quickly became her seventh million-selling album in a row. It produced Top 10 singles with "How Do I Make You" and the scorching "Hurt So Bad". "Get Closer", regarded as her final Rock album, followed in 1982. Four music videos were filmed for this album, all were popular on the fledgling MTV cable channel.On April 24th, 1980, Ronstadt recorded a concert at Hollywood’s Television Center Studios for HBO, to coincide with the release of Mad Love. 12 hand-picked performances by Ronstadt were later released in her only live album, Live in Hollywood on February 1, 2019.In 1983, Ronstadt changed musical directions towards big band jazz and traditional pop music, recording What's New, which was certified Triple Platinum in the United States. It was succeeded by 1984's Lush Life and 1986's For Sentimental Reasons (both Platinum-certified).To celebrate her Mexican American heritage, Ronstadt recorded the Spanish-language album Canciones de Mi Padre in 1987, selling more than two million copies in the U. S. and winning Ronstadt another Grammy Award. It stands as the biggest-selling non-English language record in history. The same year, she also teamed with Emmylou Harris and Dolly Parton for the collaboration album Trio, which spawned four Top 10 Country music hits, including the #1 single, "To Know Him Is To Love Him". Her 1989 release, titled Cry Like a Rainstorm, Howl Like the Wind, was Ronstadt's first pop music album in seven years. It produced two Grammy Award-winning duets with Aaron Neville on the Billboard Hot 100: the Gold-certified number 2 hit "Don't Know Much" and the number 11 hit "All My Life". Both songs were long-running #1 Adult Contemporary hits.After releasing two less successful Spanish albums in the early 1990s, Ronstadt returned to something more contemporary with 1993's New Age-styled Winter Light. It was followed by her 1995 return to Country Rock: Feels Like Home. Her Grammy-winning album of children's lullabies was issued in 1996 and had strong sales. Her 1998 release, We Ran, featured more Rock-oriented album material. In 1999, Ronstadt reunited with Harris and Parton for Trio II, which won Ronstadt her eleventh competitive Grammy Award and nineteenth Gold album. That year she also recorded a Southwestern-inspired release with Harris, Western Wall: The Tucson Sessions.Her 2004 release, Hummin' to Myself, was Ronstadt's fourth album of traditional jazz standards . In 2006, she made what turned out to be her final studio album – Adieu False Heart – mixing Cajun music with rock in a collaboration with Ann Savoy. Ronstadt has sold over 30 million records in the United States according to the Recording Industry Association of America. |
Q4830268 Axel Robert Gabrielsson (20 September 1886 – 1 June 1975) was a Swedish rower who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. Together with his elder brother Charles he was a crew member of the boat Göteborgs that was eliminated in the quarter finals of the coxed fours, inriggers tournament. |
Q5554693 Getting to the Point is the second studio album by the British blues rock band Savoy Brown. It marks the debut of a vastly different lineup, still led by Kim Simmonds but fronted by new vocalist Chris Youlden.It was released by Decca in 1968 with catalog number SKL 4935 and finds the group taking on more of the songwriting load, as opposed to their debut, which consisted mostly of covers. One of the covers is "You Need Love" by Willie Dixon, which served as a blueprint for "Whole Lotta Love" by Led Zeppelin. Deram released the cd with three bonus tracks in 1990 with catalog number 820 922-2. |
Q5502276 French is Fun is an educational tool for the ZX Spectrum developed and released by CDS Micro Systems in 1983. |
Q6508659 Leadership Initiatives is a non-profit organization located in Washington D.C. working to provide entrepreneurial, leadership, and project management training for university students worldwide through turning their ideas for change in their communities into sustainable development projects. Serving as a platform for ideas of university students while facilitating the partnerships between the students and professionals, Leadership Initiatives creates these possibilities and allows participants to be the agents of change within their communities. |
Q5875783 The Hocking Valley Scenic Railway is a non-profit, 501c3, volunteer-operated tourist railroad attraction that operates out of Nelsonville, Athens County, Ohio. It is also located near the popular Hocking Hills State Park in nearby Hocking County. It uses former trackage of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, which was in turn originally Hocking Valley Railway trackage. The current operation was founded in 1972. |
Q2605497 Homatropine methylbromide (INN; also known as methylhomatropine bromide) is a quaternary ammonium salt of methylhomatropine. It is a peripherally acting anticholinergic medication that inhibits muscarinic acetylcholine receptors and thus the parasympathetic nervous system. It does not cross the blood–brain barrier. It is used to effectively relieve intestinal spasms and abdominal cramps, without producing the adverse effects of less specific anticholinergics.It is used, in addition to papaverine, as a component of mild drugs that help "flush" the bile.Certain preparations of drugs such as hydrocodone are mixed with a small, sub-therapeutic amount of homatropine methylbromide to discourage intentional overdose. |
Q17029943 Venerable is the fourth studio album by Canadian noise rock band KEN mode, released on 15 March 2011 through Profound Lore on compact disc and Init Records on vinyl. Venerable won in the Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year category at the 2012 Juno Awards. |
Q3950323 Sara El-Khouly (Arabic: سارة الخولي; born February 15, 1988 in Cairo, Egypt) is an Egyptian model and beauty queen. She is of part-Croatian descent and grew up in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates. |
Q16031448 John Finnie (1829–22 February 1907) was a Scottish landscape painter and engraver. He was best known in London for his original mezzotint engravings of landscape, and exhibited at the Royal Academy and the Royal Society of Painters, Etchers, and Engravers. When he moved to Towyn in northern Wales he painted numerous landscape paintings of places in the Capel Curig area, such as Snowdon. He was headmaster of the Liverpool Mechanics Institute and School of Art from 1855 until 1896. Several paintings related to him are on display in the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool and the Portsmouth Museum. |
Q12219648 Saleh Abdelaziz Al-Haddad (Arabic: صالح عبدالعزيز الحداد; born 7 April 1986) is a Kuwaiti track and field athlete who specialises in the long jump. He holds the Kuwaiti records for the event with bests of 7.94 m (26 ft 1⁄2 in) indoors and 8.02 m (26 ft 3 1⁄2 in) outdoors. He also holds the national best for the 60 metres, with his time of 6.78 seconds. He represented Kuwait at the global level at the 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships and the 2003 World Youth Championships in Athletics.Al-Haddad has had international success at regional and continental level. His best results were silver medals at the 2006 Asian Games and 2007 Asian Athletics Championships. He has won a medal of each colour during his career at the Asian Indoor Athletics Championships (with a gold coming in 2014). He has had podium finishes in regional events including the Pan Arab Games, Arab Athletics Championships, West Asian Games and GCC Athletics Championships. |
Q12001457 Slettebakken Church (Norwegian: Slettebakken kirke) is a parish church in Bergen municipality in Hordaland county, Norway. It is located in the Slettebakken neighborhood in Årstad borough in the city of Bergen. The church is part of the Slettebakken parish in the Fana deanery in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The large, concrete, modern-style church was built in 1970 by the architect Tore Sveram. The organ from J. H. Jørgensen Organ Company has 16 voices. The church, which seats up to 600 people, was consecrated on 20 December 1970. The church is a landmark in the city due to its unique curved roof line. |
Q20995853 Blondel is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:André Blondel (1863–1938), French scientist and engineerAntoine Blondel (1795–1886), French politicianDavid Blondel (1591–1655), French Protestant clergyman and scholarFrançois Blondel (1618–1686), French mathematician and engineer, author of Cours d'ArchitectureGeorges Blondel (1856-1948), French historianHenri Blondel (1821–1897), French architectJacques-François Blondel (1705–1774), French architectJean Blondel (born 1929), French political scientistJonathan Blondel (born 1984), Belgian footballerLouis Blondel (1885-1967), Swiss archaeologistMaurice Blondel (1861–1949), French Catholic philosopherVincent Blondel (born 1965), Belgian professor of applied mathematics |
Q21598383 Carmen E. Turner (c. 1930-31 - April 11, 1992) was the Under Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution from 1990 until her death in 1992 and General Manager of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority from 1983 to 1990. She was the first African-American woman to lead a major transit agency. |
Q5948306 Juan Carlos Gangas Lubones (born September 19, 1944 in Santiago, Chile) is a former Chilean footballer who played for clubs of Chile and Bolivia. |
Q6962179 Nanna Popham Britton (November 9, 1896 – March 21, 1991) was an American secretary who was a mistress of Warren G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States. In 1927, she revealed that her daughter, Elizabeth, had been fathered by Harding while he was serving in the United States Senate, one year before he was elected to the presidency. Her claim was open to question during her life, but was confirmed by DNA testing in 2015. |
Q1242876 A double bind is an emotionally distressing dilemma in communication in which an individual (or group) receives two or more conflicting messages, with one negating the other. This creates a situation in which a successful response to one message results in a failed response to the other (and vice versa), so that the person will automatically be wrong regardless of response. The double bind occurs when the person cannot confront the inherent dilemma, and therefore can neither resolve it nor opt out of the situation.Double bind theory was first described by Gregory Bateson and his colleagues in the 1950s.Double binds are often utilized as a form of control without open coercion—the use of confusion makes them both difficult to respond to as well as to resist..A double bind generally includes different levels of abstraction in the order of messages and these messages can either be stated explicitly or implicitly within the context of the situation, or they can be conveyed by tone of voice or body language. Further complications arise when frequent double binds are part of an ongoing relationship to which the person or group is committed. |
Q7866450 The United States Lighthouse Tender Marigold was a lighthouse tender which served on the Great Lakes. She was launched in 1890 and delivered to the depot in Detroit early in 1891. The tender spent an unremarkable career in service, never needing a major retrofit and being drydocked only for a few minor repairs. She was decommissioned in 1945 and sold into private service in 1946, and spent her last years, having been extensively rebuilt, operating as a dredge under the name Miss Mudhen II. Her last registered owner was Bay Harbor Marina in 1977. She was used sporadically into the early 1980s and was eventually scrapped in the 1990s. Despite persistent rumors her hull was not scuttled. |
Q588113 Ohrady (Hungarian: Csallóközkürt, Hungarian pronunciation:[ˈtʃɒlloːkøzkyrt]) is a village and municipality in the Dunajská Streda District in the Trnava Region of south-west Slovakia. |
Q5501806 "French Kiss" is a house song by American DJ and record producer Lil Louis that became a European and American hit in 1989. The song also was a hit in clubs around the world, and it spent two weeks at number one on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in October 1989. It became a crossover pop hit, peaking at number 50 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was also a mainstream pop hit in the United Kingdom, where it peaked at number two in August 1989.Originally an instrumental song (apart from wordless moans), vocals were recorded after the song was picked up for distribution by major labels. In the United States, the lead vocals on the track were performed by American singer Shawn Christopher, and in Europe vocal duties were performed by a woman known only as "Pasquale". |
Q343563 Tayrac may refer to the following places in France:Tayrac, Aveyron, a commune in the Aveyron departmentTayrac, Lot-et-Garonne, a commune in the Lot-et-Garonne department |
Q7401038 Saint Benedict is the name of the post office at Mount Angel Abbey in Marion County, Oregon, United States.When it moved from Gervais to the town of Mt. Angel in 1884, the postal service would not allow the abbey to establish its own post office as it was less than a mile from the Mount Angel post office. A new abbey was completed on the top of nearby Mount Angel butte in 1903, and Saint Benedict post office was established there in 1914. Mount Angel Abbey was originally named Saint Benedict's Abbey, which in turn was named for Benedict of Nursia, the founder of the Order of Saint Benedict. The ZIP code of the post office is 97373. |
Q6175857 Jeffrey H. Birnbaum (born 1955) is an American journalist and television commentator. He previously worked for The Washington Post and The Washington Times. He also regularly appears as a political analyst for the Fox News Channel and long appeared as a regular panelist on Washington Week. He is currently the head of the public relations division of the lobbying firm BGR Group (Barbour, Griffith & Rogers). |
Q258102 Srijem, Koprivnica-Križevci County is a village in Croatia. |
Q8003531 Willcox High School is a high school in Willcox, Arizona. It is part of the Willcox Unified School District. |
Q5023273 Caloptilia aeolastis is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is known from Brazil. |
Q5648635 Hann Land District is a land district (cadastral division) of Western Australia, located within the Eastern Land Division of the state. It spans roughly 24°00'S - 25°40'S in latitude and 120°00'E - 121°40'E in longitude, east of the rabbit-proof fence. Part of the Canning Stock Route passes through the south-east of the district. It is named in honour of explorer Frank Hann.The district was created on 30 January 1925 and was defined in the Government Gazette: |
Q1127590 The Consorzio ICoN is an interuniversity consortium for Italian Studies established in 1999. It consists of 21 Italian universities and focuses on philology and cultural studies. The consortium is based and administrated at the University of Pisa and is supported by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca). It aims at diffusing Italian language, culture and literature. |
Q7876660 Uchaly (Russian: Учалы) is the name of several inhabited localities in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia.Urban localitiesUchaly (town), a town; administratively incorporated as a town of republic significanceRural localitiesUchaly (rural locality), a selo in Uchalinsky Selsoviet of Uchalinsky District |
Q5737144 Gurab Sar (Persian: گورابسر, also Romanized as Gūrāb Sar and Goorab Sar; also known as Bāzār-e Gūrābsar) is a village in Belesbeneh Rural District, Kuchesfahan District, Rasht County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,058, in 291 families. |
Q18130340 Trismelasmos soma is a moth in the family Cossidae. It was described by Yakovlev in 2011. It is found on Sulawesi. |
Q23020573 Robert J. Kafin (born 1942) is an American lawyer whose practice has been concentrated in the area of environmental law. He is a partner at the international law firm of Proskauer Rose LLP. Kafin is the immediate past chair of the Times Square Alliance, the Business Improvement District in midtown Manhattan and continues to serve on its board of directors and executive committee. He holds a New York City Mayoral appointment as chair of GrowNYC, a non-for-profit organization promoting sustainable urban living. In 2015 he was elected chair of the Adirondack Council, an organization protecting the wild character and ecological integrity of the six million acre Adirondack Park. |
Q24037303 Cracking The Code is the third studio album (and fifth album) released by Stephen Dale Petit, released on 15 September 2013 and recorded primarily at Blackbird Studios in Nashville. It was recorded by Grammy award-winning producer Vance Powell and consists of eleven original songs. The album features appearances from several notable guests including Howlin’ Wolf guitarist Hubert Sumlin, Dr. John, former Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor and Patrick Carney of The Black Keys. Hubert Sumlin's contribution proved to be the last music he made prior to his death on 4 December 2011.Recorded in analogue to tape, Petit described the album as "vinyl-centric", with the track running order chosen specifically to fit the Side A and Side B vinyl format. |
Q24884871 Mottron is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:Laurent MottronPierre Mottron |
Q27899036 Curt Christoph von Koppelow or Cort Christopher von Caplau (variants: Koppelöu, Kaplan, Coplou, Coppelouwe) (1624–1705) was a German-Norwegian nobleman and officer in the Dano-Norwegian army. Von Koppelow was the commander of Munkholmen fortress in Trondheim, Norway between 1700 and 1704. He was the father to Norwegian General Major Jürgen Christoph von KoppelowAs a young German nobleman from the House of Koppelow in Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Curt Christoph was invited in 1658 to serve under Danish field marshall Hans Schack. He participated in the Battle of Nyborg, which concluded the Dano-Swedish War (1658–60) with a decisive victory for Denmark-Norway and its continental allies.In 1662 Curt Christoph served in the Nordenfjeldske cavalry regiment as a cornet (second lieutenant), and then later served in Brockenhuus' cavalry until September 1, 1675. He was promoted to the position of lieutenant in Recke's cavalry squadron in April 1676 while fighting in the Scanian War. In June 1676 von Koppelow, riding with Bülow's cavalry squadron, crossed into Bohuslän, Sweden as part of Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve's Denmark–Norway invasion force. Von Koppelow's cavalry squadron participated in the defeat of the Swedish Army at the Battle of Uddevalla and at the Battle of Marstrand.Subsequent to the Scanian War von Koppelow was promoted to major, commanding the Gauldal dragoon regiment of the Dano-Norwegian army from 1689 until 1699. |
Q7628 1676 (MDCLXXVI)was a leap year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar and a leap year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar, the 1676th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 676th year of the 2nd millennium, the 76th year of the 17th century, and the 7th year of the 1670s decade. As of the start of 1676, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923. |
Q1867712 Oketo is a city in Marshall County, Kansas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 66. |
Q372519 John Dennis Spellman (December 29, 1926 – January 16, 2018) was an American politician who was the 18th Governor of Washington between 1981 and 1985 and the first King County Executive from 1969 to 1981.Spellman was elected governor in 1980 amid large gains for Republicans across the country. During his tenure, the Washington State economy suffered due to the early 1980s recession. Spellman was defeated in his reelection campaign in 1984. To date, he is the last Republican to have held the office of Governor of Washington. |
Q1982848 New Norfolk is a town on the Derwent River, in the south-east of Tasmania, Australia. At the 2011 census, New Norfolk had a population of 5,543.Situated 32 kilometres (20 mi) north-west of Hobart on the Lyell Highway, New Norfolk is a modern Australian regional centre which retains evidence of its pioneer heritage. Two examples of this heritage are Tasmania's oldest Anglican church, St. Matthews (built in 1823) and one of Australia's oldest hotels, The Bush Inn (Tasmania), trading continuously in the same building (built in 1815) since issue of the first licence on 29 September 1825. Many private homes from the 1808 to the early 1820s have also survived, such as Glen Derwent, Stanton, Valleyfield, and Woodbridge. |
Q873578 Mitoyo (三豊市, Mitoyo-shi) is a city located in Kagawa Prefecture, Japan.As of April 2017, the city has an estimated population of 65,713 and a population density of 300 persons per km². The total area is 222.71 km².The modern city of Mitoyo was established on January 1, 2006, from the merger of all seven towns from the former Mitoyo District: Mino, Nio, Saita, Takase, Takuma, Toyonaka and Yamamoto.Tsushima Shrine, located in Mitoyo, is only accessible one day a year in early August.Mitoyo City has a sister city relationship with Waupaca, Wisconsin. |
Q7881772 Umpqua Holdings Corporation, d.b.a. Umpqua Bank, is a financial holding company based in downtown Portland, Oregon, United States. Headquarters are in the Umpqua Bank Plaza, formerly the headquarters of Benj. Franklin Savings and Loan. The firm has three principal operating subsidiaries: Umpqua Bank (the Bank), Umpqua Investments (formerly Strand, Atkinson, Williams and York (Investments)), and Pivotus Ventures.The company’s main operating segments are personal banking and lending, business banking and lending, and wealth management. The bank serves consumers and businesses in the community.As of 2015, Umpqua Bank had $24 billion in assets and $18 billion in deposits and was ranked among the largest 60 banks in the nation. Its parent company, Umpqua Holdings, is publicly traded. As of 2016, Umpqua Bank was the largest Oregon-based bank and had 350 branches in Oregon, Washington, California, Nevada and Idaho. |
Q4755042 Andrea Day (born September 19, 1968) was a reporter at WNYW-FOX 5 New York City from 1997 through 2011, where she appeared on both Good Day New York and "FOX 5 News at 10." Currently, she is a freelance reporter handling the financial crime and punishment beat for CNBC and a mother of 4. |
Q8907 ¿¡Revolución!? is a 2006 political documentary directed by Quebec journalist and filmmaker Charles Gervais. It examines the Bolivarian Revolution led by Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. It was produced by Télé-Québec, the Quebec government's public television network.As part of the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal film festival, first screenings occurred on November 10 and 14, 2006 at the Cinéma ONF in Montreal. The general opening happened on December 8, 2006, at Cinéma Ex-Centris, also in Montreal. This version showed the original Spanish spoken by the subjects, as well as narration and subtitles in French. |
Q7071994 The SCDA O-1 was an Italian semi-rigid airship, the only true semi-rigid airship to serve with the United States Navy. |
Q6405575 Kieruzele [kʲɛruˈzɛlɛ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczerców, within Bełchatów County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) south of Szczerców, 20 km (12 mi) south-west of Bełchatów, and 62 km (39 mi) south-west of the regional capital Łódź. |
Q6434268 Kottakkal Chandrasekharan is a senior Kathakali artiste known for his portrayal of the virtuous pachcha and anti-heroic Kathi roles in the classical dance-drama from Kerala in south India. Born at Naduvattam near Pattambi in Palakkad district in 1945, he is a prominent disciple of the late Padma Shri Vazhenkada Kunchu Nair and Kottakkal Krishnankutty Nair. His father is A.M. Kumaraswami Bhattathiripad and mother is P.V. Parukkutty Warassiar.Chandrasekharan, who is a product of PSV Natyasangham in Kottakkal, has been its principal since 1996. His is noted for his exceptionalportrayal of roles like Nalan, Bahukan, Bhiman, Arjunan, Ravanan, Duryodhanan and Keechakan. He has performed Kathakali in all famous temples and clubs of Kerala and has participated in 'Kathakali Maholsavam', Asiad (1982) and other places of India like Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Surat, Bangalore, Bhopal, Andhra Pradesh (Puttaparthy) and Madras. He has performed in Loka Malayala Mela, Festival of India (UK in 1983, specially invited by British Council), foreign countries like Malayasia, Singapore, Indonasia (Ramayana Mela), China, Korea, Hong Kong and Switzerland.He has won the Central Sangeet Natak Akademi award. He has received many other awards, consolation prize from Eranakulam Kathakali Club in 1963, Vazhenkata Kunchu Nair Award (Kollam), V.S. Sarma Endowment (Kerala Kalamandalam), Thulaseevanam Award of 1990 (Thiruvananthapuram), Alappuzha District Kathakali Club Award, S.B.T. Arya Circle Award (Kottakkal), etc. and also received the Honourship of 'Natyathilakam' and Veerasrunkhala in 1994 from Rajarajeswari Temple, Thaliparambu.Chandrasekharan lives in Kottakkal with Wife Susheela, son Jithesh and daughter Jyolsna.(Contact: Chandrakantham, Kottakkal.P.O, Malappuram Dist, Kerala-676503, India) |
Q5504858 Fritz Baumann Petersen is a Greenlandic politician and member of the Siumut party. He has served as a member of the municipal council for the former Sisimiut Municipality. |
Q8021535 William Joseph Gleeson (1893 - 18 November 1975) was an Irish hurler who played as a midfielder for the Limerick senior team.Gleeson made his first appearance for the team during the 1915 championship and became a regular player over the next decade. During that time he won two All-Ireland winner's medals and three Munster winner's medalsAt club level, Gleeson played with Fedamore and Young Irelands and won four county championship winners' medals in a career that spanned three decades.Gleeson also won a Railway Cup winners' medal when he was chosen on the first two Munster inter-provincial teams and also represented Ireland in the Tailteann Games.In retirement from playing Gleeson enjoyed a distinguished career as a referee while he was also a long-serving representative with the Munster Council. |
Q4758317 Andrew Proudfit (August 3, 1820 – November 12, 1883) was an American politician and businessman.Proudfit was born in Argyle, New York. In 1843, Proudfit and his family moved to Brookfield, Wisconsin Territory. He worked in the grain and bank business. Proudfit served as chairman of the Delafield Town Board. In 1854, Proudfit moved to Madison, Wisconsin. Proudfit served in the Wisconsin Senate in 1858 and 1859. Proudfit also served as mayor of Madison from 1869 to 1871. Proudfit died at his home in Madison, Wisconsin. |
Q6574127 This is a list of the Indiana state historical markers in Miami County.This is intended to be a complete list of the official state historical markers placed in Miami County, Indiana, United States by the Indiana Historical Bureau. The locations of the historical markers and their latitude and longitude coordinates are included below when available, along with their names, years of placement, and topics as recorded by the Historical Bureau. There are 2 historical markers located in Miami County. |
Q1259847 Džuboks (Serbian Cyrillic: Џубокс, trans. Jukebox) was a Yugoslav music magazine. Founded in 1966, it was the first magazine in SFR Yugoslavia dedicated predominantly to rock music, and the first rock music magazine to be published in a communist country. |
Q12594025 Ansan OK Savings Bank Rush & Cash (Korean: 안산 OK저축은행 러시앤캐시) is a South Korean professional volleyball team founded in 2013. They are based in Ansan and are members of the Korea Volleyball Federation (KOVO). Their home arena is Sangnoksu Gymnasium in Ansan. |
Q939797 Sakae Kubo (久保 栄, Kubo Sakae, December 28, 1900 – March 15, 1958) was a Japanese playwright and director. Kubo studied and translated German literature at Tokyo Imperial University and then soon he became the disciple of another famous playwright and theatre director, Kaoru Osanai. From his mentor, Kubo had adopted Shingeki theater, a new type of drama that developed in Japan in the early 20th century under the influence of Western-style theater. To honor the death of his teacher, Kubo began to write one of his most famous works, which was The Land of Volcanic Ash: A Play in Two Parts, translated by David Goodman. This play was most recognized for its focus on socialism that was depicted in pre-war Japan. It is seen as realist drama, for it describes the struggles of a reform-minded intellectual in the Hokkaido countryside which took place during the Soviet famine of 1932–33. |
Q19879887 Francesca Amfitheatrof is a jewelry designer, known for her designs for Tiffany & Co. |
Q29255950 Maud-Éva Copy (born 6 November 1992) is a French handball player who plays for Brest Bretagne Handball. |
Q1736225 Trieste Cathedral (Italian: Basilica cattedrale di San Giusto Martire), dedicated to Saint Justus, is a Roman Catholic cathedral and the main church of Trieste, in northern Italy. It is the seat of the Bishop of Trieste.In 1899 Pope Leo XIII granted it the status of a basilica minor. |
Q5621533 Gustavus Augustus Northcott was the Republican President of the West Virginia Senate from Cabell County and served from 1905 to 1907. He was the brother of Elliott Northcott, a federal judge. |
Q4044146 Methanospirillaceae are a family of microbes within Methanomicrobiales.This family contains only one genus, Methanospirillum. All its species are methanogeic archaea. The cells are bar-shaped and can form long filaments. Most produce energy via the reduction of carbon dioxide with hydrogen, but some species can also use formate as a substrate. They are Gram-negative and move using flagella on the sides of the cells. They are strictly anaerobic, and found in wetland soil and anaerobic stages of water treatment systems. |
Q6289960 Joshua Jones is a British stop-motion children's television series produced by Bumper Films in 1992. Bumper Films also created Rocky Hollow and Fireman Sam.The series was about a cheerful gypsy fellow named Joshua Jones who lived on a canal boat with his canine companion Fairport. They take trips up and down Clearwater Canal, delivering items and carrying out tasks for the folks at Biggott's Wharf and generally having a fun time on the water.Joshua's bosses are Bapu Karia, a retired Indian admiral, Dakasha "Datsa" Karia, Mr Cashmore's co-worker and Bapu's daughter-in-law, and the get-rich-quick Wilton Cashmore.Joshua's friends are Joe Laski, the Hungarian farmer who owns a horse named Trojan, Ravi Karia, Mrs. Karia's son (the admiral's grandson) and Fiona, Mr. Cashmore's not-so-money-hungry daughter.His co-workers are: Sharon, a dizzy blonde girl who owns a catering van, Spanner, Sharon's lazy boyfriend and Daphne Peacock, the vet who takes care of sick and injured animals. |
Q2094970 Vladislav Druzchenko (Cyrillic: Владислав Дружченко) is a male badminton player from Ukraine. He competed at the 1996, 2000, and 2008 Olympic Games. |
Q7814314 Toll Gate High School is a public high school in Warwick, Rhode Island on Centerville Road. It serves education to grades 9-12 and has approximately 1100 students and 97 teachers. The current timeblock for a school day is 7:24am–1:51pm. |
Q6590029 A list of the films produced in Mexico in 1944 (see 1944 in film): |
Q6905278 Monterey is a neighborhood located in northeastern Roanoke, Virginia, in the United States. It is the most northeastern neighborhood within the city. It is bordered by the neighborhoods of Preston Park on the west, Eastgate on the east, Hollins on the south, and by Roanoke County to the north. Originally included as part of Roanoke County, Wildwood was annexed by the city in 1976. Predominantly rural prior to its annexation, growth within the neighborhood has been suburban in nature since the 1970s. |
Q2078057 United Nations Security Council resolution 761, adopted unanimously on 29 June 1992, after reaffirming resolutions 713 (1991), 721 (1991), 724 (1991), 727 (1992), 740 (1992) 743 (1992), 749 (1992), 752 (1992), 757 (1992), 758 (1992) and 760 (1992), the Council authorised the Secretary-General to immediately deploy additional elements of the United Nations Protection Force in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Yugoslav Wars. The Council authorised the deployment to ensure the security and functioning of Sarajevo International Airport to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid, appealing to all sides to co-operate with the Force in the reopening of the airport. It also called on the parties to observe the ceasefire and co-operate with the Force, international organisations and Member States in providing aid. Resolution 761 increased the Force in Sarajevo to one infantry battalion, while Resolution 764 would increase it to two. The Force would protect the airport since it, and the capital, came under attack from Bosnian Serbs on 5 June 1992. |
Q7028171 Nicholas Jack Wood (born 9 November 1990, in England) is a footballer playing as a defender.He made his Football League debut whilst at Tranmere Rovers on 7 August 2010 in the Football League One clash with Oldham Athletic which ended in a 2–1 defeat at Prenton Park.At the end of the 2010-11 season he was not offered a new contract by the club.On 11 August 2011, Nick Wood signed a 1-month contract with Mansfield Town FC of the Blue Square Bet Premier, following a successful trial period. However, after making one substitute appearance the club announced on 14 September 2011 that he had been released. |
Q6379315 Steve Plouffe (born November 23, 1975) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey goaltender. |
Q7934729 Virginian Railway Yard Historic District is a national historic district located at Princeton, Mercer County, West Virginia. The district includes 14 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 1 contributing structure related to the Virginian Railway property at Princeton. Many date to the founding of the railway in 1905-1909, with others related to a physical improvements campaign in the 1920s. A number of the buildings are a vernacular interpretation of the Romanesque Revival style. They include the Locomotive Erecting Shop, transfer table pit (c. 1905), machine shop foundations, three water pump houses (c. 1910-1920), North Repair Shop (c. 1925), Brick Storehouse (c. 1940), and Car Wheel Shop (c. 1905).It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. |
Q6724199 Mack Norman Cleveland, Jr. (July 9, 1924 – October 17, 2010), was an attorney from Sanford in Seminole County, Florida, who served as a Democrat in both houses of the Florida State Legislature between 1953 and 1965.A Sanford native, Cleveland was the son of Mack Cleveland, Sr. (1898–1980) and the late Lois Shiflet Cleveland. In 1942, he graduated from Seminole High School in Sanford and then attended the University of Florida in Gainesville until called for military duty. Cleveland fought in the United States Army Air Corps in the Pacific Theatre of World War II. During the Korean War, he began service in the United States Air Force Reserve, which extended from 1951 to 1964. As a member of the Florida House of Representatives from 1953 to 1963, Cleveland in 1957 attained the rank of Speaker Pro Tempore. Thereafter, he was a state senator from 1963 to 1965. Cleveland left politics to devote his later years full-time to his law practice. He was the general counsel for his alma mater, Stetson University in DeLand, Florida, where he had been both an undergraduate in the Class of 1949 and recipient of the Juris Doctor degree in 1951. Cleveland spent fifty-six years as a lawyer, having retired in 2007 to Longwood, also in Seminole County. His wife, Mary Anne Cleveland, whom he married in 1984, when he was sixty, said that he was "an old-time lawyer [who] counseled people" and often did not charge for a consultation.After his time as an elected official, Cleveland switched his partisan affiliation to Republican. A long-time member of the First Baptist Church of Sanford, he later joined the Longwood Hills Congregational Church. He was an avid golfer. Cleveland was affiliated with the Chamber of Commerce, the Masonic lodge, the Shriners, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Jaycees.Cleveland died at the age of eighty-six of advanced Parkinson's disease. In addition to his wife, Cleveland was survived by three stepchildren from her previous marriage: Darvin Boothe, Jr., of Tampa, Rebekah Boothe Corley of Sanford, and Robert Boothe of Orlando; a sister, Mary Cleveland McCoy of DeBary, Florida, and five grandchildren.Before his death, Cleveland deposited an oral history on his life with the Florida Legislative Research Center and Museum in Tallahassee. |
Q5521078 Gangatheri is a village and gram panchayat in Assandh, Karnal district, Haryana, India. Its 1991 population was 2628.It is an ancient village that was in the state of Punjab and became part of Haryana after its separation in 1966. It was established in 1165 before the Mughal era by a person called Gangu. |
Q15917428 The 2013–14 Belgian Basketball Cup or The Base Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 60th season of the annual cup tournament in Belgium. Telenet BC Oostende was the defending champion.The Final Four was held from 19 till 21 April in Paleis 12 in Brussels. It was the first time since 2003 the Belgian Basketbal Cup included a Final Four. Telenet BC Oostende defeated Port of Antwerp Giants 88–79 to win its 14th cup in franchise history. Dušan Djordjević of Oostende was named Final Four MVP. |
Q16466644 Rima (Arabic: ريما) is a Syrian village in the Yabrud District of the Rif Dimashq Governorate. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Rima had a population of 1,034 in the 2004 census. |
Q13164627 Cauby Peixoto (10 February 1931 – 15 May 2016) was a Brazilian singer, whose career lasted from the late 1940s until his death in 2016. He is known for his deep voice and extravagant mannerisms and hairstyles. He had a brief career in the United States in the 1950s, where he presented under the pseudonyms Ron Coby or Coby Dijon. |
Q25933084 Agnete Kirk Thinggaard (born 18 May 1983) is a Danish Olympic dressage rider. Representing Denmark, she competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro where she finished 26th in the individual and 6th in the team competition.Kirk Thinggaard also competed at two editions of Dressage World Cup finals (in 2015 and 2016), achieving 11th and 9th place, respectively.She is the youngest daughter of former Lego CEOs Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, granddaughter of Godtfred Kirk Christiansen and great-granddaughter of the company founder Ole Kirk Christiansen. |
Q27978436 The Men's 200 metre breaststroke competition of the 2016 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) was held on 8 December 2016. |
Q29042959 The 2017 Torneo Internacional Challenger León will be a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It will be the fifteenth edition of the tournament which will be part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour. It will take place in León, Mexico between 28 March and 2 April 2017. |
Q7147224 Patrick Miller of Dalswinton, just north of Dumfries (1731–1815) was a Scottish banker, shareholder in the Carron Company engineering works and inventor. Miller is buried in a tomb against the southern wall of Greyfriars Kirkyard in Edinburgh. |
Q7932479 Vineyard (pronounced "Vinyard") is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Vineyard is located 50 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Blacktown with part of it in the City of Hawkesbury. Vineyard is part of the Greater Western Sydney region. It is bounded in the west by Eastern Creek until its confluence with South Creek, a tributary of the Hawkesbury River. |
Q537985 Edenkoben is a municipality in the Südliche Weinstraße district, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It lies approximately halfway between Landau and Neustadt an der Weinstraße. Edenkoben is one of the towns situated along the German Wine Route. Edenkoben is the seat of the Verbandsgemeinde ("collective municipality") Edenkoben. |
Q744673 Gode (Amharic: ጎዴ, Somali: Godey) is a city in the Somali Region of Ethiopia. Located in the Shabelle Zone, the city has a latitude and longitude of 5°57′N 43°27′E. Gode was the capital of the Somali Region until 1995, when it was moved to Jijiga for political reasons.Gode hosts an airport (IATA code GDE), with regular flights by Ethiopian Airlines. A bridge over the Shebelle River was constructed in 1968 next to this city. |
Q5440887 Federation Of Tackheads is an album by the Parliament-Funkadelic spin off act, Jimmy G and the Tackheads. The band was led by George Clinton's younger brother Jimmy Giles and features various musicians and singers from the P-Funk musical collective.Federation Of Tackheads was released in 1985 by Capitol Records. It was produced by Clinton, Steve Washington, DeWayne "Blackbyrd" McKnight, and Garry Shider. In 2004, EMI in the UK reissued the album Federation Of Tackheads featuring liner notes written by Rickey Vincent, author of Funk: The Music, The People, and the Rhythm of the One. |
Q7875168 USS W. F. Bartlett was a schooner acquired by the United States Navy in 1861.W. L. Bartlett was a wooden-hulled Chesapeake Bay schooner acquired by the U.S. Navy on 13 August 1861 at Baltimore, Maryland. The Navy planned to use W. L. Bartlett and 21 other similar craft as blockships at entrances to inlets leading to the North Carolina sounds. The project — the U.S. Navy's first "stone fleet" venture -— ultimately failed.No record of W. L. Bartlett's ultimate fate has been found. |
Q7380541 The Rural Post Roads Act of 1916 provided federal aid in the United States to the states for the construction of rural post roads, construed to mean any public road over which the United States mail was then transported. |
Q5089561 Chegongmiao station (simplified Chinese: 车公庙站; traditional Chinese: 車公廟站; pinyin: Chēgōngmiào Zhàn; Jyutping: Ce1 Gung1 Miu2 Zaam6; literally: 'Che Kung Temple station'), is a station on Line 1, Line 7, Line 9 and Line 11 of the Shenzhen Metro. It is located underneath Shennan Road, at the west of Xiangmihu Road (Chinese: 香蜜湖路; pinyin: Xiāngmìhú Lù; Jyutping: Hoeng1 Mat6 Wu4 Lou6), in Futian District, Shenzhen, China. It is near China Merchants Bank Tower and Donghai Pacific Mall.It is the first four-line interchange hub in Shenzhen, and the second in mainland China after the Century Avenue station in the Shanghai Metro. The Line 1 platforms opened on 28 December 2004, the Line 11 platforms opened on 28 June 2016 and the Line 7 and Line 9 platforms opened on 28 October 2016. |
Q5626173 Góreczno [ɡuˈrɛt͡ʂnɔ] (German: Bergvorwerk) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Głogówek (Gemeinde Oberglogau), within Prudnik County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland, close to the Czech border. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) south of Głogówek (Glogow), 21 km (13 mi) east of Prudnik, and 41 km (25 mi) south of the regional capital Opole.Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II). However, though most of the area is now bilingual in German and Polish, this village is not because its population of German speakers was thoroughly eliminated after World War II. |
Q5046183 Carrickshock is an Irish Gaelic Athletic Association club situated in the south of County Kilkenny, Ireland. The club was founded in 1928 when the teams from Hugginstown and Knockmoylan were amalgamated in commemoration of the Battle of Carrickshock,1831.Carrickshock have had success in the Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship, winning the competition seven times. Their record of four county titles in a row between 1940 and 1943 remained unbroken until 2009 when Ballyhale Shamrocks won their 4th title in succession.Many players from the club have gone to achieve success with the Kilkenny intercounty team. |
Q16016558 Hugh Phillips was a Consultant Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgeon to the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital. His special surgical interests were in hip and knee reconstruction, following on from Kenneth McKee. He received his Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in 1970 and succeeded Professor Sir Peter Morris as the President on 8 July 2004.Hugh Phillips who lived in Ashwellthorpe was appointed Deputy Lieutenant of Norfolk in 1996. |
Q5210261 Dalbergiella is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae. It belongs to the subfamily Faboideae. |
Q821514 Egon Müller IV (born 20 August 1959), is a German winemaker and owner of the wine producer Weingut Egon Müller, Scharzhof, located just outside Wiltingen. The winery is located in the Mosel wine region, more specifically the Saar district. The winery's prized wines come from the vineyard Scharzhofberg. At present Egon IV, a former student of the University of applied sciences Geisenheim, is in the managing position. The Egon Müller dynasty is member of the First families of wine organisation.Egon III extended the winery in 1954 by purchasing Weingut "Le Gallais". This winery with 2.5 hectares (6.2 acres) vines in Wiltingen, comprising the single vineyards „Kupp“ and „braune Kupp“ hailed originally from family Metz, one of the founders of the Luxembourg-based ARBED. Egon Müller purchased one half and took the part of Madame Rochon at rent. With 35 hl/ha annual bottle production, he is one of the small, but renowned producers in the Mosel region. He is particularly known for the quality of his Rieslings."Weingut Egon Müller Scharzhofberg" is a member of the Verband Deutscher Prädikats- und Qualitätsweingüter and the Primum Familiae Vini. |
Q5544589 George Skelton (1826 – January 9, 1920) was a physician and political figure in Newfoundland. He represented Bonavista Bay in the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly from 1878 to 1885.He was born in Bonavista, the son of doctor John Skelton. Skelton studied medicine in Scotland and practised in Greenspond. He was named a magistrate in 1873. He was defeated when he ran for reelection in 1885 and 1889. From 1890 to 1920, Skelton served in the Legislative Council of Newfoundland. He died in St. John's in 1920. |
Q5441968 Felipe Dulzaides (born in Havana, Cuba) is an artist that through an experimental combination of video, performance, sculpture, sound, photography, drawing, public art, and installation explores a wide range of themes such as chance, crossovers, cultural displacement, the poetic absurdity in between spaces, and metaphorical thinking. Since 2001 he has had numerous solo shows, participated in several biennale events and international group exhibitions.Dulzaides has received numerous awards including the Rome Prize, Art Matters, Creative Work Fund, Artadia, Graham Foundation and the Cintas Fellowship.He was born in Havana into a family of renowned writers and musicians. His father, with whom he shares the same name, was a pianist and a band leader that had an important role for the development of Latin jazz in Havana. |
Q7703994 These are the list of Terrorist attacks in Pakistan since 2011 of January. |
Q3519897 The Bears and the Bees is a Silly Symphonies animated Disney short film. It was released in 1932. |
Q16960798 The 2009 Pan American Race Walking Cup was held in San Salvador, El Salvador on 1–2 May. The track of the Cup runs in the Boulevard del Hipódromo, Zona Rosa.A detailed report was given by Javier Clavelo Robinson.Complete results were published |
Q15693913 Babington Academy, previously known as Babington Community College, is an 11 – 16 secondary school, located in the Beaumont Leys area of Leicester in the English county of Leicestershire.Babington Academy is the lead academy in the Learning Without Limits Academy Trust, which also includes; Lancaster Academy (Leicester), Woodstock Primary Academy and Heatherbrook Primary AcademyThe school relocated to a new building on the same site in September 2014.Babington Community College offers GCSEs and BTECs as programmes of study for pupils. |
Q19240038 In comics, Zola may refer to:Zola (DC Comics), a character in Wonder Woman storiesArnim Zola, a Marvel Comics mad scientist |
Q4787602 Arcticoceras is an extinct ammonoid cephalopod genus from the late Middle Jurassic belonging to the ammonite family Cardioceratidae, more commonly found to high northern latitudes.The Arcticoceras shell is involute, inner whorls sharply ribbed, outer ones becoming smooth. The suture, following the description of the Stephanoceratoidea, is complex, ammonitic, with a dominant 1st lateral lobe and well-developed umbilical lobe. May be derived from Arctocephalites.Arcticoceras is found in northern Alaska, arctic Canada, Greenland, northern and central Russia, as well as in Wyoming, North Dakota, and Utah. Part of the fauna that lived in high latitude (arctic and subarctic) marine waters during the second half of the Middle Jurassic.Arcticoceras kochi and A ishmanae have been found in the boreal Bathonian stage of central East Greenland. Arcticoceras and Arctocephalites are found the Volga River Basin, Sartov Region, and Arctocephalites in the Pechora River Basin indicating an earlier and deeper penetration of arctic water into European Russia than previously thought. |
Q4666813 Abercorn Walk is an upscale shopping center that runs along Abercorn Street in midtown Savannah, Georgia. It is located near the city's more upscale midtown commercial sector. Abercorn Walk resembles a village in which each storefront retains a different style. Originally announced in 2003, Abercorn Walk was built atop a stretch of buildings that had been a church, a funeral home, a car lot and a house. The anchor store, which had been announced the previous year, was The Fresh Market. By the fall of 2004, several other tenants had joined the roster and signed letters of intent. As of 2016, major tenants besides The Fresh Market include Ann Taylor, White House Black Market, Francesca's Collection, Chico's, JoS. A. Bank Clothiers, Talbots, Williams-Sonoma, and Ethan Allen.Abercorn Walk sits across the street from another upscale shopping center, Twelve Oaks du Marché, which opened in 1984 and has a horseshoe shape. This center includes Publix, Cold Stone Creamery, Starbucks, Bonefish Grill, and Pier 1 Imports, among many others. Many locally owned boutiques like Globe Shoe Company have suburban branches at Twelve Oaks. It is built of imitation "Savannah gray" brick and has a copper patina roof. |
Q950111 David Williams (formerly David Dash) is a fictional character from the ABC television series Desperate Housewives, portrayed by Neal McDonough and created by Marc Cherry. The character was introduced in the fifth season as Edie Britt's (Nicollette Sheridan) motivational speaker husband, and is the mystery star for the fifth season. |
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