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Harry Glickman
[ [ "Harry Glickman", "sport", "Basketball" ], [ "Harry Glickman", "family name", "Glickman" ] ]
American basketball executive and co-founder of the Portland Trail Blazers
(The WHL would fold in 1974, largely as a result of losing major market teams in Los Angeles and Vancouver to the National Hockey League (NHL) and others, including Denver and Phoenix, to the World Hockey Association (which later merged with the NHL). The Buckaroos ultimately folded in 1975, after moving to a different...
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Harry Glickman
[ [ "Harry Glickman", "sport", "Basketball" ], [ "Harry Glickman", "family name", "Glickman" ] ]
American basketball executive and co-founder of the Portland Trail Blazers
American Basketball League, but the league folded before he could do so. In 1970, Glickman, working without any investor support, won an expansion franchise with the National Basketball Association, subject to coming up with $3.8 million in a matter of days. Glickman soon rounded up 3 wealthy real estate developers led...
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Harry Glickman
[ [ "Harry Glickman", "sport", "Basketball" ], [ "Harry Glickman", "family name", "Glickman" ] ]
American basketball executive and co-founder of the Portland Trail Blazers
basketball operations as the General Manager of the franchise from its inception in 1970 until his retirement in 1987, and continues as the Blazers' president emeritus. After Paul Allen brought the club, Glickman's son Marshall was promoted to Senior Vice-President. After his Blazer career, Glickman served his son Mars...
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Harry Glickman
[ [ "Harry Glickman", "sport", "Basketball" ], [ "Harry Glickman", "family name", "Glickman" ] ]
American basketball executive and co-founder of the Portland Trail Blazers
Sports Hall of Fame in 1986 for his contribution to sports in Oregon. He was cited as Portland, Oregon's First Citizen of the Year in 1992. On February 15, 2019, Glickman was named as one of two 2019 recipients of the John Bunn Award (with Del Harris), awarded by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a lifet...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of birth", "Tehran" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of death", "London" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Writer" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Singer" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "educated at", "University of Tehran" ...
writer, editor and singer
Shushā Guppy (; née Shamsi Assār (); 24 December 1935 – 21 March 2008) was a writer, editor and, under the name of "Shusha", a singer of Persian and Western folk songs. She lived in London from the early 1960s. Early life Her father, Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Mohammad-Kāzem Assār (), was a distinguished Shia theologian an...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of death", "London" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Writer" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Singer" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
Sartre and Albert Camus. She was encouraged by Jacques Prévert to record an album of Persian folk songs. She married the writer and explorer Nicholas Guppy in 1961. They had two sons, Darius and Constantine Guppy, and were divorced in 1976. At the time of her marriage she moved to London, where she became fluent in Eng...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Singer" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
album released in France fourteen years earlier. By now, influenced by the Folk Revival, she was writing and singing some of her own songs, as well as covering the works of many contemporary singer-songwriters. She gave successful concerts in Britain, America and continental Europe, and appeared on television and radio...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "country of citizenship", "Iran" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
her narration was replaced by James Mason and it was released as People of the Wind. The following year the film was nominated for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar and also for a Golden Globe. The film follows the annual migration of the nomadic Bakhtiari tribes in southern Iran. The soundtrack was later released in ...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Writer" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
of Sydney Carter (1981) Durable Fire (1983) Strange Affair (1986) Refugee (1995 - CD on Sharrow Records) Shusha / This is the Day (2001 - reissue on CD) Writer and editor Guppy promoted Persian culture and history, and was a commentator on relations between the West and the Islamic world. Guppy's first book, The Blindf...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of death", "London" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "employer", "The Paris Review" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "country of citizenship", "Iran" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
excesses of Shah Reza Pahlavi led to his overthrow, describing a country with an Islamic way of life without dogmatism or fanaticism. Her last book, The Secret of Laughter (2005), is a collection of Persian fairy tales from Iran’s oral tradition. Many had never previously been published in written form. For twenty year...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "country of citizenship", "Iran" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "cause of death", "Cancer" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
Secret of Laughter: Magical Tales from Classical Persia, I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2005, . See also Music of Iran List of Iranian musicians References Biographical details Shusha, Discography Roger Scruton, Shusha Guppy, Obituary, Monday, March 24 2008, The Guardian Obituaries Note: This obituary incorrectly refers to Shams...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "country of citizenship", "Iran" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
am having to dictate what is certainly my last piece of journalism." Shusha Guppy, ASHA Foundation. Shusha Guppy speaks in the documentary film on Omar Khayyām, Intoxicating Rhymes and Sobering Wine, (1 min). Shusha Guppy on her return to Iran, Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4, 16 March 2006. (8 min 35 sec). Shusha Guppy, Sch...
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Shusha Guppy
[ [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of birth", "Tehran" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "occupation", "Singer" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "educated at", "University of Paris" ], [ "Shusha Guppy", "place of burial", "Behesht-e Zahra" ] ]
writer, editor and singer
Soul Feature, BBC Radio World Service, Friday 27 June 2008 — rebroadcast from November 2007, (26 min 30 sec). Shusha Guppy, 'The Book of Kings' published in Parnassus (magazine), Vol. 30. Shusha Guppy's song, Natalya, referred to in the obituary of Natalya Gorbanevskaya. Category:1935 births Category:2008 deaths Catego...
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Tono River
[ [ "Tono River", "country", "East Timor" ], [ "Tono River", "instance of", "River" ] ]
river in East Timor
The Tono River is the main river in Oecusse District, an exclave of East Timor. The river flows north, through the center of the district into the Sawu Sea, reaching the sea near Lifau. The area is the main rice producing place in Oecusse. In June 2017 the Noefefan Bridge was inaugurated over the Tono River. The 380-me...
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Lyric Suite
[ [ "Lyric Suite", "composer", "Alban Berg" ] ]
string quartet music by Alban Berg
Lyric Suite may refer to: Lyric Suite (Berg), a six-movement work for string quartet by Alban Berg (1925–26) Lyric Suite (Grieg), an orchestration of four of the six piano pieces from Book V of Edvard Grieg's Lyric Pieces, Op. 54 Lyric Suite, Op. 30, a four-movement work for string trio by Bernard Stevens (1958) Lyric ...
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Psalm 82
[ [ "Psalm 82", "instance of", "Psalm" ], [ "Psalm 82", "part of", "Psalms" ], [ "Psalm 82", "follows", "Psalm 81" ] ]
psalm
Psalm 82 is the 82nd psalm in the biblical Book of Psalms, subtitled "A Psalm of Asaph". In the Greek Septuagint version of the Bible, and in its Latin translation in the Vulgate, this psalm is Psalm 81 in a slightly different numbering system. Uses Judaism Psalm 82 is the psalm of the day in the Shir Shel Yom on Tuesd...
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Psalm 82
[ [ "Psalm 82", "instance of", "Psalm" ] ]
psalm
"sons of God" were ancient Hebrew and Ancient Near East motifs for angels, or the divine council referred to here in Psalm 82. has "sons of God" who illicitly sire the Nephilim. has "Day star" and v13 "the stars of God". Both of which are polemics against Satan, the chief rebel of the sons of God. Hence one interpretat...
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Zeke Wilson
[ [ "Zeke Wilson", "place of birth", "Benton, Alabama" ], [ "Zeke Wilson", "position played on team / speciality", "Pitcher" ], [ "Zeke Wilson", "sport", "Baseball" ] ]
Major League Baseball pitcher (1869-1928)
Frank Ealton "Zeke" Wilson (December 24, 1869 – April 26, 1928) was a professional baseball pitcher. He played five seasons in Major League Baseball from 1895 to 1899, for the Boston Beaneaters, Cleveland Spiders and St. Louis Perfectos. References External links Category:Major League Baseball pitchers Category:Boston ...
[ "Frank Ealton Wilson" ]
İstersen Remixes
[ [ "İstersen Remixes", "instance of", "Album" ], [ "İstersen Remixes", "performer", "Buray" ], [ "İstersen Remixes", "follows", "1 Şişe Aşk" ] ]
album by Buray
İstersen Remixes is the first remix album by Cypriot-Turkish singer Buray. It was released on 30 October 2015 by Sony Music. Release and content Following the high demands for a remix album after the release of his first studio album 1 Şişe Aşk, Buray released remixed versions of the album's lead single, "İstersen", as...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ] ]
film
Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip () is a 2002 Filipino romantic comedy and fantasy film directed by Wenn Deramas and produced by Star Cinema. The cast was led by Jolina Magdangal, with Leandro Muñoz and Rafael Rosell in his introducing film. It is Magdangal's first solo starring film and her first and only film opposite Mu...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ] ]
film
Beauty Rio Locsin as Helen Aljon Valdenibro as Niño Others Karla Estrada as Bebang/Bisaya Justine Cuyugan as Wen/Ilokano Marvin Martinez as Shawie Michael Pamular as Age Athenea Pla as Korinna Nicole Hofer as Silk sister Cy Jaravata as Silk sister Don Laurel as Gym instructor boyfriend Roderick Lindayag as Pulis boyfri...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ] ]
film
Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip registered the highest box office receipts compared to its competitions. For the box office success of the film, Magdangal received the citation Princess of Philippine Movies in the 33rd Box Office Entertainment Awards. Critical response The film received positive reviews from moviegoers an...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ] ]
film
tight budget but I do appreciate the fact that it is inventive, creative and very energetic – with its every scene well-planned and well-thought of... It is a far cry from those usual small-budgeted run-of-the-mill Tagalog pictures that are downright stupid and assault the sensibilities of the viewers... Kung Ikaw ay I...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ] ]
film
successful films in the past in F.L.A.M.E.S.: The Movie (1997), Kung Ayaw Mo, Huwag Mo! (1998), Labs Kita... Okey Ka Lang? (1998), and Hey Babe! (1999). Despite this, Magdangal's pairing with Rosell and Munoz in Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip received positive feedbacks from moviegoers. Soundtrack Panaginip Music: Lorie ...
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Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip
[ [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "instance of", "Film" ], [ "Kung Ikaw Ay Isang Panaginip", "country of origin", "Philippines" ] ]
film
to death in a condo parking in Makati City, Philippines on 7 November 2001. It was reported that Blanca's spirit was allegedly felt in the studio where Magdangal was dubbing her scenes with the actress. Producer Lita Santos later revealed that Blanca admires Magdangal seeing her youth in the latter. Blanca and Magdanga...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "instance of", "Airline" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "headquarters location", "Pasay" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines, Inc. was a cargo airline based in Pasay City, Philippines. The carrier served domestic services from the Philippines with two Boeing 727 freighter aircraft. The airline also had an agreement on selected routes flown by Air Philippines. PEAC was also an affiliate airline of TNT Airways,...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "instance of", "Airline" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
1, 1999, the airline came to a cargo agreement with local airline, Air Philippines. During 2002 the airline operated freighter flights to Hong Kong using A300F type aircraft leased from the Turkish Airline, MNG Airlines, freighter flights to Taipei using a Boeing 727F and domestic freighter flights to Cebu and Clark ut...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "instance of", "Airline" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
airline was added to the European list of banned air carriers until June 25, 2015. By the end of 2010, the company ceased operations. Services Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines (PEAC) served domestic and regional destinations around the Philippines and surrounding region with a fleet of 727 freighter aircraft and a vari...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "instance of", "Airline" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "airline hub", "Ninoy Aquino International Airport" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
the aircraft where returned to Europe. The TNT-PEAC joint-venture also considered re-locating the airline's hub from Manila's Ninoy Aquino International Airport to nearby Olongapo's Subic Bay International Airport. In June 2006, PEAC resumed its three times weekly Angeles-Clark (Angeles City) – Taipei all-cargo service...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "airline hub", "Ninoy Aquino International Airport" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
offers its 727 aircraft for charter services. Philippines Luzon Angeles (Clark International Airport) Legazpi (Legazpi Airport) Manila (Ninoy Aquino International Airport) Puerto Princesa (Puerto Princesa Airport) Tuguegarao (Tuguegarao Airport) Visayas Bacolod (Bacolod-Silay International Airport) Cebu (Mactan-Cebu In...
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Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines
[ [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "country", "Philippines" ], [ "Pacific East Asia Cargo Airlines", "headquarters location", "Pasay" ] ]
cargo airline in Philippines
(Soekarno-Hatta International Airport) References: Fleet (not including Boeing 737 Cargo flights operated on behalf of Air Philippines) References: Former 4 Bae 146 (Lease from TNT Airways) 1 Airbus A300F 1 Boeing 737-200F Accidents and incidents On 21 April 2010, Flight 7815, an Antonov An-12 with registration UP-AN21...
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Domagoj Duvnjak
[ [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "country of citizenship", "Croatia" ], [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "participant in", "2008 Summer Olympics" ], [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "given name", "Domagoj" ], [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "member of sports team", "THW Kiel" ], [ "Domagoj Duvn...
Croatian handball player
Domagoj Duvnjak (born 1 June 1988) is a Croatian professional handball player for THW Kiel and the Croatian national team. He became a member of the Croatia national team at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. He also represented Croatia at the 2012, where Croatia won bronze, and 2016 Olympics. On 26 January 20...
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Domagoj Duvnjak
[ [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "member of sports team", "THW Kiel" ], [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "sport", "Handball" ], [ "Domagoj Duvnjak", "award received", "IHF World Player of the Year" ] ]
Croatian handball player
sport. Awards and accomplishments Club RK Zagreb Croatian League: 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09 Croatian Cup: 2007, 2008, 2009 HSV Hamburg EHF Champions League: 2013 Bundesliga: 2010–11 DHB-Pokal: 2010 DHB-Supercup: 2009, 2010 THW Kiel Bundesliga: 2014–15 DHB-Pokal: 2017, 2019 DHB-Supercup: 2014, 2015 EHF Cup: 2019 Individ...
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Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi
[ [ "Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi", "occupation", "Poet" ], [ "Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi", "occupation", "Composer" ] ]
Iraqi Abbasid prince, singer, composer and poet
Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi () (779–839) was an Abbasid prince, singer, composer and poet. He was the son of the third Abbasid caliph Al-Mahdi and thus the half-brother of the poet and musician ‘Ulayya bint al-Mahdī. He was not a full brother of Al-Mahdi's sons Al-Hadi and Harun al-Rashid, since his mother was not Al-Khayzura...
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Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi
[ [ "Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi", "occupation", "Poet" ], [ "Ibrahim ibn al-Mahdi", "languages spoken, written or signed", "Arabic" ] ]
Iraqi Abbasid prince, singer, composer and poet
() and declared his reigning nephew al-Ma'mun deposed. Ibrahim received the allegiance of the Hashemites. He had to resign in 819, and spent the rest of his life as a poet and a musician. He is remembered as "one of the most gifted musicians of his day, with a phenomenal vocal range", and a promoter of the then innovat...
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Jundiaí
[ [ "Jundiaí", "country", "Brazil" ] ]
city in Brazil
Jundiaí is a municipality in the state of São Paulo, in the Southeast Region of Brazil, located north of São Paulo. The population of the city is 401,896 (2015 est.), with an area of 431.21 km². The elevation is 761 m. The GDP of the city is U$16.6 billion (R$36.6 billion). The budget for 2013 is U$787 million (R$1.63 ...
[ "Jundiai" ]
Jundiaí
[ [ "Jundiaí", "shares border with", "Itatiba" ], [ "Jundiaí", "shares border with", "Jarinu" ], [ "Jundiaí", "shares border with", "Campo Limpo Paulista" ], [ "Jundiaí", "shares border with", "Várzea Paulista" ], [ "Jundiaí", "shares border with...
city in Brazil
borders with Várzea Paulista, Campo Limpo Paulista, Franco da Rocha, Cajamar, Pirapora do Bom Jesus, Cabreúva, Itupeva, Louveira, Vinhedo, Itatiba and Jarinu. The name of the town comes from the Tupi language, and it means the place of the jundiá ("fish with barbs", the Rhamdia quelen species). The city received massiv...
[ "Jundiai" ]
Jundiaí
[ [ "Jundiaí", "country", "Brazil" ] ]
city in Brazil
(soccer) club. The team, which plays at Jayme Cintra Stadium, was the champion of Copa do Brasil 2005 (Cup of Brazil). Transportation The Jundiaí Airport serves the city and region for small airplanes. Jundiaí has a connection in the Jundiaí station with Companhia Paulista de Trens Metropolitanos (CPTM). It has a syste...
[ "Jundiai" ]
Ernest George Mardon
[ [ "Ernest George Mardon", "date of birth", "1928" ], [ "Ernest George Mardon", "given name", "Ernest" ], [ "Ernest George Mardon", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ], [ "Ernest George Mardon", "employer", "University of Lethbridge" ], [ "Ernest G...
Canadian historian
Ernest George Mardon (1928 – 6 March 2016) was an English professor who worked at the University of Lethbridge. He has several dozen books, mostly on the history of Alberta, Canada. Born in Houston, Texas in 1928 to Professor Austin Mardon and Marie Dickey, Dr. Ernest G. Mardon was educated at Gordonstoun, Scotland, be...
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Ernest George Mardon
[ [ "Ernest George Mardon", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ], [ "Ernest George Mardon", "employer", "University of Lethbridge" ], [ "Ernest George Mardon", "family name", "Mardon" ] ]
Canadian historian
rank of lieutenant. He moved to Canada in 1954 as Bureau Manager for United Press International. He taught high school in Morinville, and then did Doctoral work in Medieval English at the University of Ottawa. Among the first Faculty of the University of Lethbridge, Dr. Mardon was also a visiting professor at several o...
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Ernest George Mardon
[ [ "Ernest George Mardon", "employer", "University of Lethbridge" ] ]
Canadian historian
Selected works Narrative Unity of the Cursor Mundi (1967, 2 ed. 2012) The Founding Faculty of the University of Lethbridge (1968) When Kitty met the Ghost (1991, 2 ed. 2012) The Girl Who Could Walk Through Walls (1991) Alberta Mormon Politicians/The Mormon Contribution to Alberta Politics (1991, 2 ed. 2011) Early Saint...
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For Common Cause
[ [ "For Common Cause", "headquarters location", "London" ] ]
organization
For Common Cause is a London-based charity that claims to combat inequality by crowdfunding skills, money, and equipment for people in need to build their own livelihoods. Volunteers and donors work with beneficiaries first-hand to see any personal impact. For Common Cause identifies people on benefits who have complet...
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For Common Cause
[ [ "For Common Cause", "instance of", "Organization" ] ]
organization
is managed by its governing document, a deed of trust, and constitutes a limited company, limited by guarantee by the Companies Act 2006. For Common Cause as of 2015 has 260 volunteers who support the beneficiaries to get their business off the ground, and 150 registered beneficiaries. Funds come from individuals, a 5%...
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For Common Cause
[ [ "For Common Cause", "headquarters location", "London" ] ]
organization
credit card processing, foreign currency exchange, transaction costs, and Gift Aid processing costs. For Common Cause had an income of £91,062 and spent £58,172 in 2013. Publicity For Common Cause participated in the first annual Grass Roots Enterprise conference in 2013. For Common Cause featured in MEP Syed Kamall's ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
Jusuf "Juka" Prazina (; 7 September 1962 – 3/4 December 1993) was a Bosnian gangster and paramilitary warlord during the Bosnian War. A troubled teen, Prazina's youth allegedly contained numerous stays in various jails and correctional facilities of the former Yugoslavia. By the 1980s he had become involved in organize...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "country of citizenship", "Bosnia and Herzegovina" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
(VRS), and he was rewarded for his contribution to the city's defense by appointment to the head of the government's special forces. Prazina proved problematic for the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Following a warrant for his arrest in October, Prazina stationed himself on Mount Igman and coordinated ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
and lived on the Dalmatian coast before traveling through a number of European countries and finally relocating to Belgium. He was found dead in a canal near the German border by two hitch-hikers on 31 December 1993. In 2001, documents detailing wartime conversations between then president of Croatia Franjo Tuđman and ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
(causing him to have a limp and reduced range of motion on his left hand for the rest of his life), Prazina ultimately survived and continued his activities. By the time the Yugoslav Wars were underway, Prazina had been arrested and jailed five times, and was a well-known figure in Sarajevo's underworld. Siege of Saraj...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
3,000 men outside the city's Druga Gimnazija high school (in the neighbourhood where he grew up on Sutjeska Street) and declare their intention to "defend Sarajevo." Juka's Wolves, as the group was called, were thoroughly armed with sawed-off shotguns and AK-47s (provided in part through a connection with the Croatian ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ], [ "Jusuf Prazina", "country of citizenship", "Bosnia and Herzegovina" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
(and due to a variety of factors, including a pre-war policy that strove for a peaceful resolution and an international arms embargo), the central government under Alija Izetbegović and its formal army was relatively unorganized and unprepared. Because of this, the assistance of well-armed groups such as Prazina's priv...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
and the areas under his control (most notably Alipašino polje) were considered impenetrable to the enemy. On a number of occasions he participated in actions orchestrated by the leaders of other military units more closely affiliated with the central government (such as Dragan Vikić), many of whom he had good relations...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
built around him. At a time when many Sarajevans had to risk their lives for humanitarian food provisions, Prazina handed out candy to children on the street (albeit usually accompanied by the cameras of foreign news services). When Prazina captured a Serb sniper on the rooftop of a six-story building and accidentally ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
Increasingly troubled and unable to cope with Izetbegović's subtle plots to remove him from the center of power, his mental health reportedly further worsened when his pregnant wife Žaklina was wounded. After a short government-approved leave from the city to accompany his wife for medical treatment, he returned to Sar...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
group of his followers gathered outside the police station and demanded he be released. Escape to Igman No longer safe in Sarajevo, Prazina decided to establish himself on Mt. Igman above the city. His announced intentions were to come down from the mountains, break the siege of the city, and overthrow his enemies in t...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
had revealed his intentions of joining the HVO and their willingness to accept him; revelations which played a role in their refusal to follow him. Despite this lack of support from his former comrades, the consequences of his defeat at the hands of Zuka and the ARBiH made HVO held territory in Herzegovina a logical de...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
General Stjepan Šiber would later recount to Sarajevo media a brief encounter he had with him in a Zagreb hotel lobby in early May 1993. He stated that a jean-clad Prazina approached him, expressed regret for his actions and asked to be forgiven and reinstated to the ARBiH. Šiber assured Prazina he would do what he cou...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
investigation on 15 December 1998. Legacy Collaboration with VRS Throughout his time in Sarajevo, Prazina collaborated with Republika Srpska officials in a variety of criminal activities. He often exchanged money, people, and prisoners of war with VRS authorities in the occupied territories around Sarajevo. With their ...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
Prazina's legacy among the Bosniak citizens of Sarajevo, who once considered him among the most positive figures of the Bosnian war. War crimes in Sarajevo Prazina was accused of committing various war crimes over the course of the war. An order from president Izetbegović placed Prazina beyond the control of the milita...
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Jusuf Prazina
[ [ "Jusuf Prazina", "place of birth", "Sarajevo" ], [ "Jusuf Prazina", "country of citizenship", "Bosnia and Herzegovina" ] ]
Bosniak Criminal & Paramilitary Leader
one case, while on Mt. Igman, Prazina personally beat one fleeing civilian's head against the hood of a car. Within the city, Prazina's Wolves were known for appropriating apartments and abducting and abusing their owners. Furthermore, as part of black market activities, Prazina's unit frequently raided the city's shop...
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Tetris Plus
[ [ "Tetris Plus", "instance of", "Video game" ], [ "Tetris Plus", "genre", "Puzzle video game" ], [ "Tetris Plus", "publication date", "1996" ], [ "Tetris Plus", "inspired by", "Tetris" ] ]
1996 video game
is a puzzle video game developed by Natsume and published by Jaleco for arcades in 1996, and was ported to the Game Boy, Sega Saturn, and PlayStation later that year. The game would be followed by a sequel, Tetris Plus 2, in 1997. Ports were to be developed for the Atari Jaguar and Nintendo 64 but these never released....
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Tetris Plus
[ [ "Tetris Plus", "inspired by", "Tetris" ] ]
1996 video game
the ability to remember high-scores, unlike the original Game Boy game. Puzzle Mode is a twist on the classic gameplay that provides a new scenario. Also included is an editor for making Puzzle levels, and Link capability for competitive multiplayer in either game mode. The console versions also have a two-player Versu...
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Tetris Plus
[ [ "Tetris Plus", "publication date", "1996" ], [ "Tetris Plus", "publisher", "Blue Planet Software" ], [ "Tetris Plus", "inspired by", "Tetris" ] ]
1996 video game
taking away workable space. The player is able to make the ceiling go back up, however, if they can clear three or four rows at once. The ceiling will also destroy any placed blocks that are in its way. This can be used as a garbage disposal, by having it remove any unwanted pieces until the piece the player wants show...
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Tetris Plus
[ [ "Tetris Plus", "inspired by", "Tetris" ] ]
1996 video game
the United States for the following two years. The PlayStation version sold well enough to be re-released for the Greatest Hits budget range. Reception Critical response to the Sega Saturn version was generally unenthusiastic. GameSpot editor Peter Criscuola referred to it as "a feeble attempt at reviving a legend", Ga...
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Tetris Plus
[ [ "Tetris Plus", "inspired by", "Tetris" ] ]
1996 video game
and Sushi-X "a rewarding title with multiple levels of fun with the same classic challenge." The Puzzle Mode was met with disapproval for various reasons: Criscuola said it was too easy, Fulljames said it was frustratingly hard, Scary Larry said it didn't differ enough from the original Tetris, and a Next Generation cr...
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Schleppi Run
[ [ "Schleppi Run", "country", "United States" ], [ "Schleppi Run", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ohio" ] ]
river in the United States of America
Schleppi Run is a tributary of the Rocky Fork Creek that flows through Franklin County, Ohio. The United States Geological Survey’s Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) classifies Schleppi Run as a stream with an identification number of 2704511. The feature name was entered into the GNIS system in September 2011...
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Joseph Morvan
[ [ "Joseph Morvan", "country of citizenship", "France" ], [ "Joseph Morvan", "given name", "Joseph" ], [ "Joseph Morvan", "participant in", "Tour de France" ], [ "Joseph Morvan", "place of birth", "Moustoir-Ac" ], [ "Joseph Morvan", "place of de...
Road bicycle racer
Joseph Morvan (Moustoir-Ac, 3 December 1924 – Colpo, 26 July 1999) was a French professional road bicycle racer. Morvan had his most successful year in 1956, when he won Paris–Bourges and stage in the Tour de France. Major results 1949 Manche-Océan 1951 Manche-Océan Quimper 1955 Manche-Océan Comfort-Meillant 1956 Le Bo...
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Louis Monrose
[ [ "Louis Monrose", "father", "Claude Louis Séraphin Barizain" ], [ "Louis Monrose", "student of", "Claude Louis Séraphin Barizain" ], [ "Louis Monrose", "student", "Lucie Manvel" ], [ "Louis Monrose", "student", "Lucien Guitry" ], [ "Louis Monrose"...
French actor
Antoine-Martial Louis Barizain also called Louis Monrose or Monrose (1811–1883) was a 19th-century French actor. The actor Claude Louis Séraphin Barizain (1783-1843) was his father. The actress Mademoiselle Monrose was his step sister due to her marriage with his brother, Eugène (Barizain). He was appointed a professor...
[ "Antoine-Martial-Louis Barizain" ]
Clémence Poésy
[ [ "Clémence Poésy", "occupation", "Actor" ], [ "Clémence Poésy", "place of birth", "L'Haÿ-les-Roses" ], [ "Clémence Poésy", "family name", "Guichard" ] ]
French actress
Clémence Guichard (born 30 October 1982), known professionally as Clémence Poésy (), is a French actress and fashion model. After starting on the stage as a child, Poésy studied drama and has been active in both film and television since 1999, including some English-language productions. She is known for the roles of F...
[ "Clemence Poesy" ]
Clémence Poésy
[ [ "Clémence Poésy", "family name", "Guichard" ] ]
French actress
mother's maiden name as her stage name. She was sent to an alternative school in Meudon. Her father gave Poésy her first acting job when she was a child; then she had two lines at age 14. She has a younger sister, Maëlle Poésy-Guichard, who is also an actress. Acting career After leaving La Source, the bilingual, alter...
[ "Clemence Poesy" ]
Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "occupation", "Nurse" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "employer", "United States Army Nurse Corps" ], [ "M...
U.S. Army Nurse
Maude C. Davison (27 March 1885 – 11 June 1956) was a Canadian-born, American nurse. After a career in Canada, she moved to the United States. She served as the Chief Nurse of the United States Army Nurse Corps in the Philippines during World War II. She received numerous awards for her military service in borth World ...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "place of birth", "Cannington, Ontario" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "educated at", "Ontario Agricultural Colle...
U.S. Army Nurse
born on 27 March 1885 in Cannington, Ontario, Canada to Janet (or Jeannette) Campbell. In 1894, her mother, who had immigrated from Scotland, married Abraham Sidders. She graduated in 1909 from the Ontario Agricultural College with a certificate from the MacDonald School of Home Economics. Career Campbell began her car...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "occupation", "Nurse" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "employer", "United States Army Nurse Corps" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "military branch", "United States Army Nurse Corps...
U.S. Army Nurse
Hospital Training School for Nurses. In 1917, she graduated having earned her RN designation. The following year, she joined the Nurse Reserves of the United States Army Nurse Corps and began working as a staff nurse at the base hospital of Camp Fremont in Palo Alto, California. After serving at Letterman General Hospi...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "educated at", "Columbia University" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "occupation", "Nurse" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "conflict", "World War II" ] ]
U.S. Army Nurse
Nurse Corps. Between 1921 and 1922, she was deployed to Coblenz, Germany, serving with the Allied Occupation Forces assisting with Russian famine refugees, influenza victims and war casualties. Returning to the United States, in 1924, she was promoted to first lieutenant after passing the Chief Nursing Examination. Dav...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "occupation", "Nurse" ] ]
U.S. Army Nurse
Island in the Philippines. She was promoted to captain in 1941 and placed as chief nurse of the nursing corps of the Philippine Department. Most of the nurses in the Far East Command were serving under Davison with her second-in-command, Josephine Nesbit, at Sternberg Hospital on the south side of Manila Bay. When the ...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "occupation", "Nurse" ] ]
U.S. Army Nurse
randomly, the nurses saw through her ruse, noting that those who were ill, wounded or fatigued or might not withstand the pressure of imprisonment were chosen. Upon the Allied surrender in May 1942, Davison led her 66 remaining nurses to their captivity at Santo Tomas Internment Camp in Manila. They joined 11 United St...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ] ]
U.S. Army Nurse
three years, on 3 February 1945, the camp was liberated and Davison was hospitalized because of her poor health. When the nurses arrived in the United States at the end of the month, Davison, who normally weighed weighed only . Her nurses credited Davison with their survival and though she was nominated for the Disting...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "United States" ] ]
U.S. Army Nurse
January 1946. In 1947, Davison married the Reverend Charles W. Jackson, who had served as dean of Long Beach City College. The two had met many years earlier when she was working at the Baptist College and she had rented a room from his family, which had immigrated to the United States, during her nursing studies in Pa...
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Maude C. Davison
[ [ "Maude C. Davison", "country of citizenship", "Canada" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "place of birth", "Cannington, Ontario" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "place of death", "Long Beach, California" ], [ "Maude C. Davison", "conflict", "World War I" ], [ "M...
U.S. Army Nurse
parade in Los Angeles, where she received a special citation of merit. Death and legacy Jackson died on 11 June 1956 at the Veterans Hospital in Long Beach, California following a lengthy illness. She was buried near her mother in the Cedar Vale Cemetery, Cannington, Ontario, Canada. In 2001, she was posthumously recog...
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De Magnete
[ [ "De Magnete", "main subject", "Astronomy" ] ]
book by William Gilbert
no variation. He shows how to measure variation and the sources of common errors. Book 5 Magnetic dip. The angle of inclination (dip) of a compass to the horizon differs according to latitude. He shows how to construct a dip instrument. At the equator it is level and increases towards the poles as he has shown earlier ...
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Sabam Siagian
[ [ "Sabam Siagian", "occupation", "Journalist" ], [ "Sabam Siagian", "country of citizenship", "Indonesia" ], [ "Sabam Siagian", "employer", "The Jakarta Post" ], [ "Sabam Siagian", "place of birth", "Jakarta" ], [ "Sabam Siagian", "place of dea...
Indonesian journalist
Sabam Pandapotan Siagian (4 May 1932 – 3 June 2016) was an Indonesian journalist. He served as the first editor in chief of The Jakarta Post. Siagian departed the Jakarta Post in 1991 upon his appointment as Ambassador of Indonesia to Australia. From 1991 to 1995, while ambassador, Sabam lived in Canberra. He criticise...
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Machineries of Empire
[ [ "Machineries of Empire", "author", "Yoon Ha Lee" ], [ "Machineries of Empire", "genre", "Military science fiction" ], [ "Machineries of Empire", "genre", "Space opera" ] ]
trilogy of military science fiction/space opera novels by Yoon Ha Lee
Machineries of Empire is a trilogy of military science fiction/science fantasy/space opera novels by the American writer Yoon Ha Lee and published by Solaris Books. It consists of Ninefox Gambit (2016), Raven Stratagem (2017) and Revenant Gun (2018). The trilogy follows the young infantry captain Kel Cheris and the tra...
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Massimo Marchese
[ [ "Massimo Marchese", "country of citizenship", "Italy" ], [ "Massimo Marchese", "place of birth", "Savona" ] ]
Italian lutenist
Massimo Marchese (born in Savona, Italy) is an Italian musician, lutenist, theorbist and recording artist. Biography Born in Savona in the Italian region of Liguria, Marchese was a student of Jakob Lindberg at the Royal College of Music in London. Collaborations He collaborated with the pipa player Jiao Xiangwen and th...
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Massimo Marchese
[ [ "Massimo Marchese", "country of citizenship", "Italy" ] ]
Italian lutenist
Gabriele Fallamero, and Roman Turovsky-Savchuk. Partial discography Roman Turovsky-Savchuk - "Dialogues with Time" (daVinci Edition C00028, 2017) Francesco Spinacino - Intavolatura di Leuto, Libri I e II (Tactus, 2006) Franciscus Bossinensis - Petrarca ed il cantare a Leuro (Tactus, 2007) The journeys of Rubens - Music...
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Árpád Berczik
[ [ "Árpád Berczik", "place of death", "Budapest" ], [ "Árpád Berczik", "occupation", "Writer" ] ]
Hungarian writer
Berczik Árpád (July 8, 1842 in Temesvár – July 16, 1919 in Budapest) was a Hungarian writer. He studied laws and worked for the administration, Kisfaludy Társaság (1873) and Borsszem Jankó. He published his writings in publications such as Pesti Napló (1870–72), but he is mainly known for his theatrical plays. Works Az...
[ "Arpad Berczik" ]
Bernardo Vargas
[ [ "Bernardo Vargas", "member of sports team", "Argentinos Juniors" ], [ "Bernardo Vargas", "member of sports team", "Club América" ], [ "Bernardo Vargas", "member of sports team", "Toronto Falcons" ], [ "Bernardo Vargas", "given name", "Bernardo" ] ]
Argentinian association football player
Bernardo Vargas (born March 31, 1939) is an Argentine former footballer. Career Vargas played with Talleres Cordoba in 1958. In 1960, he played in the Argentine Primera División with Racing, and later with Argentinos Juniors. In 1964, he played in the Mexican Primera División with Club América. In 1965, he played in th...
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Pyramid G1-d
[ [ "Pyramid G1-d", "country", "Egypt" ] ]
building in Egypt
purpose of the pyramid is under debate by scholars. Some possible explanations are that it is for the king's Ka, or it represents the king as the ruler of Upper Egypt, or it is for the viscera of the King, or it is a dummy room for the Sed festival, or it has a solar function. Zahi Hawass, who led the uncovering of the...
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Kingfisher First Nation
[ [ "Kingfisher First Nation", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ontario" ] ]
human settlement in Ontario, Canada
Kingfisher First Nation (Oji-Cree language: ᑮᐡᑭᒪᓂᐦᓰᐋᐧᐴᕽ (Giishkimanisiiwaaboong, "At Kingfisher-waters"); unpointed: ᑭᐡᑭᒪᓂᓯᐊᐧᐳᐠ) is an Oji-Cree First Nation reserve located north of Sioux Lookout, Ontario. It is accessible by air all year and by waterway in summer and ice roads in winter. As of December 2009, the First...
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Kingfisher First Nation
[ [ "Kingfisher First Nation", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ontario" ] ]
human settlement in Ontario, Canada
Beaver House, located approximately 12 kilometres southwest of the present Kingfisher Lake reserve. Big Beaver House was frequented by Kingfisher Lake people for trading fur, community activity and freight hauling employment. In 1929 to 1930, the leaders of Kingfisher Lake First Nation were required to gather at Big Tr...
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Kingfisher First Nation
[ [ "Kingfisher First Nation", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ontario" ] ]
human settlement in Ontario, Canada
of Chief Eddie Mamakwa, Deputy Chief Verna Aganash and three Councillors: Amos Mamakwa, Esther Sakakeep, and Samuel Sturgeon. The First Nation is part of the Shibogama First Nations Council, a Regional Chiefs Council, and the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, a Tribal Political Organization representing majority of the First Nati...
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2011–12 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team
[ [ "2011–12 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team", "sport", "Basketball" ], [ "2011–12 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team", "season of club or team", "Tulsa Golden Hurricane" ] ]
American college basketball season
The 2011–12 Tulsa Golden Hurricane men's basketball team represented the University of Tulsa during the 2011–12 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Golden Hurricane, led by seventh year head coach Doug Wojcik, played their home games at the Reynolds Center and are members of Conference USA. They finished the s...
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Mersing District
[ [ "Mersing District", "country", "Malaysia" ], [ "Mersing District", "instance of", "District" ], [ "Mersing District", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Johor" ], [ "Mersing District", "capital", "Mersing" ] ]
district in Johor, Malaysia
The Mersing District is a district in Johor, Malaysia. The district capital is Mersing Town. Name The “Mersing” name is derived from the Chinese “Mau Sheng Port” (茂盛港) since 1880 and further simplify to Mersing. Mersing's Chinese name was renamed to “Feng Sheng Port” (丰盛港), with the meaning of good harvest. There are a...
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Mersing District
[ [ "Mersing District", "instance of", "District" ], [ "Mersing District", "capital", "Mersing" ] ]
district in Johor, Malaysia
14.6% area of the state. As of 2001, the district has a total residence of 69,947 people. Administrative divisions Mersing District is divided into 10 mukims, which are: Jemaluang Lenggor Mersing Town Padang Endau Penyabong Offshore islands (Pulau Aur, Pulau Rawa, Pulau Tengah, Pulau Pemanggil, Pulau Sibu) Sembrong Ten...
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The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "instance of", "Film" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Basil Rathbone" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Akim Tamiroff" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "John Carradine" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast memb...
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
The Black Sleep is a 1956 American independent horror film directed by Reginald LeBorg, and written by John C. Higgins from a story by Gerald Drayson Adams. It stars Basil Rathbone, Lon Chaney Jr., John Carradine, Bela Lugosi, and Akim Tamiroff. Tor Johnson appears in a supporting role. The film was produced by Aubrey ...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "narrative location", "England" ] ]
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
in England in 1872, the story concerned a prominent, knighted surgeon whose wife has fallen into a coma caused by a deep-seated brain tumor. Due to medicine's state of the art at the time, he does not know how to reach the tumor without risking brain damage or death to the woman he loves, so he undertakes to secretly e...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Basil Rathbone" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Akim Tamiroff" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "John Carradine" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Bela Lugosi" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "ca...
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
seriously degenerated and mutilated states, in a hidden cellar in the gloomy, abandoned country abbey where he conducts his experiments. Cast Basil Rathbone as Sir Joel Cadman Akim Tamiroff as Udu the Gypsy Herbert Rudley as Dr. Gordon Ramsay Patricia Blake as Laurie Munroe Phyllis Stanley as Daphnae Lon Chaney Jr. as ...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "instance of", "Film" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Aubrey Schenck" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "publication date", "1956" ] ]
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
Louanna Gardner as Angelina Cadman Aubrey Schenck as Prison Coroner's Aide (uncredited) Release Produced during 1955, the film was released to theaters in the early summer of 1956. This was just ahead of the TV syndication, through Screen Gems, of two decades of Universal monster movies, under the package title Shock T...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "instance of", "Film" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "cast member", "Basil Rathbone" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "main subject", "Mad scientist" ] ]
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
relying on a completely new cadre of human monsters. Critical reception Amongst contemporary reviews, Variety wrote that the film "plays the horror tale fairly straight so what's happening is not too illogical until the finale wrapup, when all restraint comes off and the melodramatics run amok. ...Basil Rathbone is qui...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
The Black Sleep
[ [ "The Black Sleep", "director", "Reginald Le Borg" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "publication date", "1956" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "main subject", "Mad scientist" ], [ "The Black Sleep", "composer", "Les Baxter" ] ]
1956 film by Reginald Le Borg
past experience proves that this can mean good grosses... Sure, a lot of it is corny, but it is all good fun in a grisly, frightening manner." Home media The Black Sleep was released by Kino on Blu ray in 2016 and contains audio commentary by Tom Weaver and David Schecter. See also List of American films of 1956 Refere...
[ "Black Sleep" ]
Arne Hamarsland
[ [ "Arne Hamarsland", "participant in", "1960 Summer Olympics" ] ]
Norwegian distance runner
Arne Hamarsland (born 24 July 1933) is a Norwegian middle distance runner who specialized in 1500 metres. He represented IL Gular. At the 1960 Summer Olympics he finished ninth in the 1500 m final in 3:45.0 minutes. He also competed at the 1958 European Championships without reaching the final. He became Norwegian cham...
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Gustavo Montoya
[ [ "Gustavo Montoya", "country of citizenship", "Mexico" ], [ "Gustavo Montoya", "occupation", "Artist" ], [ "Gustavo Montoya", "given name", "Gustavo" ], [ "Gustavo Montoya", "place of birth", "Mexico City" ], [ "Gustavo Montoya", "spouse", ...
Mexican artist and painter (1905-2003)
Gustavo Montoya (July 9, 1905 – July 12, 2003) was a Mexican artist considered to be a late adherent to the Mexican School of Painting, most often associated with Mexican muralism. He was born in Mexico City, from a family associated with the Porfirio Díaz regime and who had to hide during part of the Mexican Revolutio...
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