title stringlengths 1 250 ⌀ | triples list | description stringlengths 1 695 ⌀ | text stringlengths 275 46.3k | alias list |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Stanislaus Francis Perry | [
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"country of citizenship",
"Canada"
],
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"member of political party",
"Liberal Party of Canada"
],
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"work location",
"Ottawa"
],
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"place of birth... | Canadian farmer and politician in Prince Edward Island | Brunswick (1881) and Miscouche, Prince Edward Island (1884) although he boycotted the second event because he wanted the event to be held in Tignish. Death He died in office in Ottawa in 1898 and was buried in Tignish. Personal life He was the grandfather of Nova Scotia Premier Angus Lewis Macdonald and is a direct anc... | [
"Stanislas-François Poirier"
] |
Gmina Biała Rawska | [
[
"Gmina Biała Rawska",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Rawa County"
],
[
"Gmina Biała Rawska",
"country",
"Poland"
],
[
"Gmina Biała Rawska",
"capital",
"Biała Rawska"
]
] | urban-rural gmina of Poland | __NOTOC__ Gmina Biała Rawska is an urban-rural gmina (administrative district) in Rawa County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. Its seat is the town of Biała Rawska, which lies approximately east of Rawa Mazowiecka and east of the regional capital Łódź. The gmina covers an area of , and as of 2006 its total populat... | [] |
Gmina Biała Rawska | [
[
"Gmina Biała Rawska",
"capital",
"Biała Rawska"
]
] | urban-rural gmina of Poland | Wieś, Białogórne, Błażejewice, Bronisławów, Byki, Chodnów, Chrząszczew, Chrząszczewek, Dańków, Franklin, Franopol, Galiny, Gołyń, Gośliny, Grzymkowice, Janów, Jelitów, Józefów, Konstantynów, Koprzywna, Krukówka, Lesiew, Marchaty, Marianów, Narty, Niemirowice, Orla Góra, Ossa, Pachy, Pągów, Podlesie, Podsędkowice, Porad... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Foxborough, Massachusetts"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"occupant",
"New England Patriots"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadi... | stadium | Foxboro Stadium, originally Schaefer Stadium and later Sullivan Stadium, was an outdoor stadium located in Foxborough, Massachusetts, United States. It opened in 1971 and served as the home of the New England Patriots of the National Football League (NFL) until 2002 and also as the home venue for the New England Revolu... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"occupant",
"New England Patriots"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | History The stadium opened in August 1971 as Schaefer primarily as the home venue for the renamed New England Patriots of the National Football League. The team was known as the Boston Patriots for its first eleven seasons 1960–70, and had played in various stadiums in the Boston area. seasons, 1963–1968, the Patriots ... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | Boston College in Chestnut Hill, and the 1970 season, their first in the NFL, at Harvard Stadium in Boston's Allston neighborhood. The site was selected when the owners of Bay State Raceway donated the land, midway between Boston and Providence, Rhode Island. The general contractor who built the stadium was a Massachus... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | funding from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or the town of Foxborough; indeed, it was one of the few major league stadiums of that era that was entirely privately funded. Seating capacity Playing surface Like the majority of outdoor sports venues built in North America in the 1970s, Foxboro Stadium was designed for ... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | example of the sale of naming rights. When this agreement expired after the 1982 season, Anheuser-Busch took over the rights. Instead of putting the name of one of its brands of beer on the stadium, Anheuser-Busch agreed to name it in honor of the Sullivan family, then the majority owners of the Patriots. The name Sull... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | stadium. Notable events Soccer The venue hosted numerous significant soccer matches, including six games in the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Foxboro Stadium was the last stadium where Diego Maradona scored a World Cup goal in a game against Greece, and where he last played in an official FIFA World Cup match against Nigeria on... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | Association finals Other events The stadium was also the venue at times for the home football games of Boston College and hosted numerous other outdoor events, primarily concerts, along with music festivals, including The Monsters of Rock Festival Tour and The Vans Warped Tour, as well as the WWF King of the Ring tourn... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | well as Boz Scaggs, The Eagles, and Fleetwood Mac on July 25, 1976. Sullivan Stadium hosted The Who's 25th anniversary tour on July 12 and 14, 1989. Paul McCartney brought the Flowers In the Dirt Tour to the stadium on July 24 and 26, 1990. New Kids on The Block brought The Magic Summer Tour to the stadium on July 29 a... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | Stadium Tour to the stadium on September 11, 1992, with Faith No More as their opening act. Elton John performed at the venue in front of 62,000 on US Bicentennial on July 4, 1976. John again appeared in a Face to Face concert with Billy Joel on July 18, 1994. Madonna performed her "Who's That Girl" tour there on July ... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | one of the nights their inflatable pig was torn to shreds). They also played a three-night sold-out stand in May 1994 on their The Division Bell Tour which was recorded and readily available on bootleg. (The second night was filmed by MTV for promotional purposes.) The Dave Matthews Band played seven shows at the stadi... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | were held in the stadium. Closing By the late 1990s, Foxboro Stadium had become functionally obsolete by modern NFL standards. Despite excellent sight lines to view game action or concerts and having fewer of the issues that multi-sport multi-purpose stadiums in other cities had, the stadium was otherwise outmoded. The... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | stadium officials were forced to augment the permanent toilets with rented portable toilets for the rest of the stadium's existence. It also lacked luxury boxes, an increasingly important source of revenue for other teams in the league. Most patrons had to sit on backless aluminum benches (or bring in their own stadium... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | outside of beneath the stands. Additionally, the Sullivan family had lost millions promoting the Jackson Victory Tour in 1984. Due to their relatively modest wealth compared to other NFL owners, they pledged the stadium as collateral for the tour. Knowing that the revenue from the Patriots would not be nearly enough to... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | 1989. The stadium, however, lapsed into bankruptcy and was bought by paper magnate Robert Kraft. When Kiam and Sullivan tried to sell the team to interests in Jacksonville, Kraft effectively stymied the deal by refusing to let the team out of an ironclad commitment to serve as the stadium's main tenant until 2001. As a... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | Orthwein then put the team on the market, but the wording of the operating covenant required any potential buyer to negotiate with Kraft. With this in mind, Kraft swooped in and bought the team himself. With the 1996 purchase of the land containing the Bay State Raceway, Kraft had the ability to place a new and private... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadium"
]
] | stadium | the stadium would instead play host to the first season of the Tom Brady and Bill Belichick era, with the team making a run to get into the playoffs and going on to win their first Super Bowl. As a result, the stadium was not demolished until late January 2002, after the conclusion of the 2001 postseason. The last game... | [] |
Foxboro Stadium | [
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Foxborough, Massachusetts"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"occupant",
"New England Patriots"
],
[
"Foxboro Stadium",
"instance of",
"Stadi... | stadium | former site became parking lots for its successor, Gillette Stadium, before being developed into the open-air shopping center Patriot Place. References Category:1971 establishments in Massachusetts Category:1994 FIFA World Cup stadiums Category:2002 disestablishments in Massachusetts Category:American football venues i... | [] |
David Vincent Stratton | [
[
"David Vincent Stratton",
"given name",
"Vincent"
],
[
"David Vincent Stratton",
"occupation",
"Engineer"
],
[
"David Vincent Stratton",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"David Vincent Stratton",
"place of birth",
"South Dakota"
],
[
... | American businessman | David Vincent Stratton (October 14, 1884 – February 25, 1968) was an industrial engineer. He was vice president of the Great Lakes Aircraft Company in 1930 and in 1931 was president of the Johnson Motor Company. He made important contributions to shipbuilding in the United States by the development of time and motion s... | [
"D. V. Stratton"
] |
Julio Prieto Martín | [
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"CD Castellón"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"Atlético Madrid"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"Atlético Madrid"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"place of birth",
"Ma... | Spanish footballer | Julio Prieto Martín (born 21 November 1960) is a Spanish former footballer who played as a midfielder. During a 14-year professional career he played 305 La Liga matches over 11 seasons (32 goals), mainly in representation of Atlético Madrid. Club career Born in Madrid, Prieto played mainly for hometown club Atlético M... | [
"Julio Prieto Martin"
] |
Julio Prieto Martín | [
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"RC Celta de Vigo"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"Atlético Madrid"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"member of sports team",
"Atlético Madrid"
],
[
"Julio Prieto Martín",
"place of birth",
... | Spanish footballer | year at Atlético with seven goals in 32 games in an eventual third-place finish. After helping them to two major titles he was part of the team that reached the final of the 1986 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, appearing in the decisive match against FC Dynamo Kyiv (0–3 loss). Prieto signed for RC Celta de Vigo in summer 1987, ... | [
"Julio Prieto Martin"
] |
Viviane Jacques | [
[
"Viviane Jacques",
"country of citizenship",
"Brazil"
],
[
"Viviane Jacques",
"participant in",
"2008 Summer Olympics"
],
[
"Viviane Jacques",
"participant in",
"2004 Summer Olympics"
],
[
"Viviane Jacques",
"participant in",
"2000 Summer Olympics"
],
... | Brazilian handball player | Viviane Jacques (born 1977) is a Brazilian handball player. She was born in Rio de Janeiro. She competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, where the Brazilian team placed 8th, and also at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. References External links Category:1977 births C... | [] |
Kristaps Sotnieks | [
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"place of birth",
"Riga"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"member of sports team",
"Dinamo Riga"
]
] | Latvian ice hockey player | Kristaps Sotnieks (born January 29, 1987) is a Latvian professional ice-hockey defenseman. He currently plays for Dinamo Riga in the Kontinental Hockey League (KHL). Playing career In his first season in senior hockey in 2004/05 Sotnieks mostly played for the reserves squad of HK Riga 2000 which played in the Latvian h... | [] |
Kristaps Sotnieks | [
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"place of birth",
"Riga"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"country of citizenship",
"Latvia"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"country for sport",
"Latvia"
]
] | Latvian ice hockey player | youngsters like Sotnieks to get through on the main team. In 2005 Sotnieks played in five matches for Latvia at the U18 World Championships. The next season Sotnieks was already a regular player in the main team of Riga 2000 which won bronze medals in the Belarusian Extraliga. In 42 matches he scored one goal, gave 4 a... | [] |
Kristaps Sotnieks | [
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"place of birth",
"Riga"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"country of citizenship",
"Latvia"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"member of sports team",
"Dinamo Riga"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
... | Latvian ice hockey player | Latvian hockey league with Sotnieks as one of the most reliable defenders on the team. In 2005, 2006 and 2007 as a member of Riga 2000 Sotnieks won Latvian league titles. When Dinamo Riga was formed in 2008 Sotnieks wasn't among the players who were expected to be playing regularly for the side which included former NH... | [] |
Kristaps Sotnieks | [
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"place of birth",
"Riga"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"country of citizenship",
"Latvia"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"participant in",
"2010 Winter Olympics"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
],
[
"Kristaps Sotnieks"... | Latvian ice hockey player | was expected to be a leading defender for HK Riga 2000 (the farm club of Dinamo) playing in the Belarusian league. However, Sotnieks became a regular for Dinamo. As of 17 February 2009, he has played 43 matches for Dinamo in the KHL, scoring two goals. In February 2009 Sotnieks played for Latvia national ice hockey tea... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"continent",
"North America"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"mountain range",
"Front Range"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
... | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Mount Evans is the highest peak in the namesake Mount Evans Wilderness in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The prominent 14,271-foot (4,350 m) fourteener is located southwest by south (bearing 214°) of Idaho Springs in Clear Creek County, Colorado, United States, on the drainage divide between A... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | other directions. Mount Evans dominates the Denver metropolitan area skyline, rising over above the area. Mount Evans can be seen from points south of Castle Rock, up to ( south) and as far north as Fort Collins ( north), and from areas near Limon ( east). In the early days of Colorado tourism, Mount Evans and Denver w... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Geography Mount Evans is the highest peak in a massif. The peak is west of Denver, "as the crow flies", and approximately by road, via Idaho Springs. Other peaks in the massif are: Mount Spalding (), northwest Gray Wolf Mountain (), north-northwest The Sawtooth (), west Mount Bierstadt (), west-southwest Mount Warren (... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"continent",
"North America"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Creek, 0.5 miles north the Chicago Lakes at the head of Chicago Creek, 2 miles north Abyss Lake at the head of Lake Fork, 1 mile west-southwest The Mount Evans Scenic Byway consists of State Highway 103 from Idaho Springs, Colorado on I-70 about to Echo Lake, and Colorado 5 from Echo Lake , ending at a parking area and... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | which it connects, via Clear Creek County Road 103 and Jefferson County Road 66, to Bergen Park from which Colorado 74 leads to Evergreen Colorado. The Guanella Pass Scenic Byway passes within west of Mount Evans, linking Georgetown and I-70 with Grant and US 285, to the south. A marked hiking trail roughly parallels t... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in protected area",
"Arapaho National Forest"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Most of the Mount Evans massif is now part of the Mount Evans Wilderness area in Arapaho National Forest and Pike National Forest. The exception is a narrow corridor along the highway from Echo Lake that is excluded from the wilderness. Summit Lake Park and Echo Lake Park, are part of the historic Denver Mountain Parks... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | his guide, William Newton Byers, approached the mountain along Chicago Creek from Idaho Springs in 1863, and spent several days painting sketches of the mountain from the Chicago Lakes before climbing to Summit Lake and onward to the summit. Bierstadt's sketch, Mountain Lake, accurately portrays the view of Mount Spald... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Chicago Lakes in 1873, where he took numerous photographs; the summit of Mount Evans is barely visible in several of these, peeking over the col between upper Chicago Lake and Summit Lake. The Hayden survey reported that Mount Rosalie was 14,330 feet above sea level, measured by triangulation. In 1895, 30 years after h... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Evans Scenic Byway is part of a larger story of the Denver Mountain Parks system. It ultimately began when the City and County of Denver initiated the construction of a series of automobile "scenic loops" to allow Denverites to explore the mountains. One road circuit, Circle G, was to traverse the ridge to Squaw Pass o... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | the Genesee saddle to Bergen Park was finished in 1915, while the Denver Mountain Parks committee worked to make Mt. Evans a National Park, going as far as getting support in Congress for the construction of a "cement road" to the mountain. The first mile was paid for by Denver with the understanding that the State Hig... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Service, who currently held claim to the mountain. Already in bitter struggle to prevent the formation of a National Park Service, Chief Forester Graves adamantly blocked the relinquishment of this area of National Forest, in exchange for Forest Service development of the area including the immediate construction of a ... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | Public Roads provided the plan to construct 9.41 miles of road from Soda Pass (now called Squaw Pass) to Echo Lake beginning in 1919. By 1920, the road had only managed to be constructed to Chief Mountain. By October 1 of 1921, the Bureau of Public Roads had completed construction to Echo Lake. The first survey for the... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | construction (steam shovels performing only half as effective at high altitude, difficulty of hauling coal and water, horse suicide, etc.) the last 600 feet were finally built by hand, being completed in 1930. The ruins of the Crest House (1941–1942) sit nearby. Once containing both a restaurant and a gift shop, it bur... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"country",
"United States"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | highest recorded in the United States but did not cause any damage because it was above tree line. Flora The slopes of Mount Evans include several distinct environments. Below Echo Lake, the montane forest is dominated by lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) and in some areas, blue spruce (Picea pungens), with patches of qu... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Colorado"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"mountain range",
"Front Range"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | on the east slope of Mount Goliath () contains at least one tree that sprouted in the year 403 AD. For many years, these were the oldest known trees in Colorado, but in 1992, trees dating to 442 BC were found in the southern Front Range and South Park. The Mount Goliath Natural Area, jointly managed by the United State... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | such as Rocky Mountain Columbine (Aquilegia saximontana) and various species of dwarf alpine sunflowers. Toward the summit, the vegetation shrinks until the largest plants are little more than compact green cushions in the cracks between the rocks. Here, Alpine Forget-me-not (Myosotis alpestris) plants with hundreds of... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | underlain by an extensive area of permafrost. Fauna The top predators found in the area are mountain lions (Puma concolor), anywhere on the mountain, and black bears (Ursus americanus), generally below tree line. These prey on bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) and mountain goats (Oreamnos americanus), as well as one of t... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | the Chicago Lakes, Lincoln Lake and Abyss Lake are tarns located in cirques or glacial canyons surrounding Mount Evans. Echo Lake was dammed by a lateral moraine of the glacier that formed Chicago Canyon. Prior to glaciation, Mount Evans, Long's Peak and several other summits were monadnocks in an upland Peneplain. Gla... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | scientific research. Arthur H. Compton conducted pioneering research on cosmic rays on the mountain in 1931, shortly after the road to the summit was completed. The University of Denver built a pair of A-frame buildings on the summit to house cosmic-ray researchers. By the 1950s, Mount Evans, the Aiguille du Midi, the ... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | reality of time dilation, one of the key predictions of Einstein's theory of relativity. In the summer of 1948, MIT, Cornell, Princeton, NYU and the universities of Michigan and Chicago and Denver conducted an intensive experimental program on the mountain and at Echo Lake. Bruno Rossi and Giuseppe Cocconi were among t... | [] |
Mount Evans | [
[
"Mount Evans",
"instance of",
"Mountain"
],
[
"Mount Evans",
"continent",
"North America"
]
] | mountain in the U.S. state of Colorado | in the life sciences. In 1940, for example, it was the site of a significant study of high-altitude physiology. Pioneering studies on the effects of altitude training on track athletes were conducted on Mount Evans in 1966. Mount Evans Road is also noteworthy as a high-altitude vehicle testing venue for auto manufactur... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"employer",
"BBC"
],
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"father",
"Michael Gilbert"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | Harriett Sarah Gilbert (born 25 August 1948) is an English writer, academic and broadcaster, particularly of arts and book programmes on the BBC World Service. She is the daughter of the writer Michael Gilbert. Besides World Book Club on the World Service, she also presents A Good Read on BBC Radio 4. Before the progra... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"employer",
"BBC"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | collection of autobiographical writing. After graduating from drama school, her first acting role was as Mother Elephant in a production of Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories for primary schools. The other peak of her success was playing a secretary murdered on page five of a BBC radio drama. She also worked as a nanny,... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"occupation",
"Journalist"
],
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"father",
"Michael Gilbert"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | father, the writer Michael Gilbert, gave her about writing was: "For God's sake, don't use adverbs." Her brother is the journalist Gerard Gilbert of The Independent. Career From 1983 to 1988 she was literary editor of the New Statesman and, before that, of City Limits (1981–83). She has also contributed to Time Out, Th... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"employer",
"BBC"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | Gilbert presents one programme on BBC World Service radio: World Book Club, broadcast on the first Saturday in each month. Guests on the latter have included the Nobel laureates Doris Lessing, Toni Morrison, V. S. Naipaul, Orhan Pamuk, Wole Soyinka and Derek Walcott. About presenting for the World Service, Gilbert has ... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"employer",
"BBC"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | arts documentary series Close Up. In 2008 she stood in as presenter of the arts programme The Ticket. She previously presented the World Service's dedicated book programme The Word. Besides this she has presented arts programmes for BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3 and BBC Four television. Writer and broadcaster Michael Rosen ... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"occupation",
"Novelist"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | The Riding Mistress. Her non-fiction books include A Women's History of Sex and The Sexual Imagination from Acker to Zola. She scripted the short animated film The Stain (1991) viewable at the Internet Archive. Although she has not published a novel since 1983 she hopes to return to writing, possibly using her time at ... | [] |
Harriett Gilbert | [
[
"Harriett Gilbert",
"employer",
"BBC"
]
] | English writer, academic and broadcaster | Virago (1985). – autobiographical essay A Women's History of Sex – Pandora (1987) (illustrated by Christine Roche). The Sexual Imagination: From Acker to Zola – A Feminist Companion – Jonathan Cape (1993). (published in the US as Fetishes, Florentine Girdles, and Other Explorations into the Sexual Imagination – Harperc... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"instance of",
"Stanley Cup"
],
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | The 1918 Stanley Cup Finals was contested by the National Hockey League (NHL) champion Toronto and the Pacific Coast Hockey Association (PCHA) champion Vancouver Millionaires. In a series held entirely in Toronto, the Toronto team won the series by three games to two in the best-of-five game series to win the Stanley C... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | to oust Toronto Blueshirts owner Eddie Livingstone. The remaining clubs then met in November 1918 to form the NHL, using the same constitution and playing rules of the NHA. The NHL took the NHA's place in competing for the Cup in a playoff series with the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. The Toronto NHL players were a... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | team at the time used no nickname; and it was often referred to at the time as the "Blueshirts', the nickname of the NHA franchise, as it was announced by the NHA that the franchise had been sold, although this had not been agreed to by Eddie Livingstone, who wanted to resume his franchise, or be compensated under his ... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | Meanwhile, Vancouver finished the 1917–18 PCHA regular season in second place with a 9–9 record behind the 11–7 Seattle Metropolitans. However, Vancouver beat Seattle in that league's two-game, total-goals finals, 3–1, with a 1–0 game two victory. Game summaries As with the three previous NHA-PCHA Cup Final series, the... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | to be a major factor in the series. The PCHA allowed forward passing (adopted in the 1913–14 season) and played with seven players per side; the NHL did not adopt forward passing until the following season, and only played with six players. In every game, the winner was the one playing under its league's rules. The Tor... | [] |
1918 Stanley Cup Finals | [
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"instance of",
"Stanley Cup"
],
[
"1918 Stanley Cup Finals",
"location",
"Toronto"
]
] | series of ice hockey games to determine seasonal champion | in a 2–1 victory. The Torontos outscored the Millionaires by a combined total of 13–7 in the three games played under NHL rules. Conversely, Vancouver recorded a 14–5 margin in the games under PCHA rules. Toronto goaltender Hap Holmes recorded a 4.20 goals-against average during the series, while Alf Skinner led Toront... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"place of birth",
"Manjacaze"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"occupation",
"Sculptor"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | Alberto Mabungulane Chissano (25 January 1935 – 19 February 1994) was a Mozambican sculptor best known for his work using indigenous woods, and sculptures in rock, stone and iron. He is considered to be one of Mozambique's most important and influential artists, together with the painter Malangatana Ngwenya. Life and a... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"place of birth",
"Manjacaze"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | was strongly influenced by his maternal grandmother, who taught him rites and traditions such as how to divine through the use of ossicles and snail shells, as well as traditional herbal medicine. At the age of 12, he felt that Manjacaze was too limited an area for his aspirations, so he left for the capital, Lourenço ... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"place of death",
"Matola"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"occupation",
"Sculptor"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | and Africa. Chissano was a pioneer for a generation of sculptors in the 1970s, a decade that spanned the last years of the colonial period and the beginning of Mozambican independence. He became the most famous and influential sculptor in Mozambique. His sculptures tell a lot about the history of Mozambique, the people... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"place of death",
"Matola"
],
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | a museum, it is a centre for exhibitions, concerts, and other cultural events. In 1982, he was awarded the Nachingwea Medal, a medal presented by the government of Mozambique in recognition of '’extraordinary merit'’. (The medal is named after FRELIMO's main camp in Tanzania during the Mozambican War of Independence). ... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | Chibuto, Gaza, Mozambique 1972 Sociedade Nacional de Belas Artes (National Society of Fine Arts), Lisbon 1975 Several group exhibitions in Mozambique and Nigeria 1980 Inauguration of Museu Nacional de Arte (the National Art Museum), Maputo 1981 International Symposium of Sculptures, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1st and 2nd pr... | [] |
Alberto Chissano | [
[
"Alberto Chissano",
"country of citizenship",
"Mozambique"
]
] | Mozambican sculptor | New Delhi, India 1985 Palazzo Barberini, Rome and the Teatro Municipal, Reggio Emilia, Italy 1986 Havana Biennial, Cuba, 1st Prize 1987 Solidarity week with Mozambique, Zimbabwe 1987 Malangatana & Chissano, Ankara, Turkey 1991 Le Temps Et Le Sang'’ (The Time and the Blood), Réunion 1992 Represents, among others, Mozamb... | [] |
James Henderson Berry | [
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"position held",
"United States senator"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"position held",
"United States senator"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"position held",
... | American politician (1841-1913) | James Henderson Berry (May 15, 1841 – January 30, 1913) was a United States Senator and served as the 14th Governor of Arkansas. Early life James Henderson Berry was born in Jackson County, Alabama, to Isabella Jane (née Orr) and James McFerrin Berry. The family moved to Arkansas in 1848. Berry attended Berryville Acad... | [] |
James Henderson Berry | [
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"place of death",
"Bentonville, Arkansas"
]
] | American politician (1841-1913) | 1882 when he was elected Governor of Arkansas. The Berry administration focused on reducing the state debt and creating a state mental hospital. Berry did not run for reelection. In March 1885, Berry was selected by the legislature to fill the unexpired term of Senator Augustus H. Garland. Berry remained in the U.S. Se... | [] |
James Henderson Berry | [
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"place of birth",
"Jackson County, Alabama"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"place of death",
"Bentonville, Arkansas"
],
[
"James Henderson Berry",
"military branc... | American politician (1841-1913) | Cemetery (present-day Bentonville Cemetery), Bentonville, Arkansas. Personal life In 1865, Berry married E.Q. "Lizzie" Quaile. They had six children. References External links Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture entry: James Henderson Berry 1905 Full Portrait National Governors Association Category:1841 births C... | [] |
Dana Redd | [
[
"Dana Redd",
"educated at",
"Rutgers University"
],
[
"Dana Redd",
"educated at",
"Eustace Preparatory School"
],
[
"Dana Redd",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Dana Redd",
"place of birth",
"Camden, New Jersey"
]
] | American politician; Mayor of Camden, New Jersey | Dana L. Redd (born March 7, 1968) is an American Democratic politician who served as the Mayor of Camden, New Jersey, from 2010 to 2018. Redd served in the New Jersey Senate from January 8, 2008, to January 5, 2010, representing the 5th Legislative District. Education Redd graduated from Bishop Eustace Preparatory Scho... | [] |
Dana Redd | [
[
"Dana Redd",
"instance of",
"Human"
]
] | American politician; Mayor of Camden, New Jersey | Human Services Administration (MHSA) from Lincoln University (Pennsylvania). Elected office Redd served on the Senate's Community and Urban Affairs Committee (as vice-chair), the Budget and Appropriations Committee and the Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee. She also served on the Joint Committee on P... | [] |
Dana Redd | [
[
"Dana Redd",
"educated at",
"Rutgers University"
],
[
"Dana Redd",
"educated at",
"Eustace Preparatory School"
],
[
"Dana Redd",
"place of birth",
"Camden, New Jersey"
]
] | American politician; Mayor of Camden, New Jersey | in June 2009 with 86% of the vote, and was the general favorite in the November election. She won the general election on November 3, 2009, and was re-elected in 2013 for another four-year term. References External links New Jersey Legislature financial disclosure forms 2007 2008 |- |- Category:1968 births Category:Liv... | [] |
John Dolinsek | [
[
"John Dolinsek",
"educated at",
"Arizona State University"
],
[
"John Dolinsek",
"member of sports team",
"Houston Astros"
]
] | American baseball player | John N. Dolinsek (born January 3, 1948 in Santa Rosa, CA) was an outfielder who is most notable for winning the 1969 College World Series Most Outstanding Player award while a junior at Arizona State University. He is one of five players from Arizona State University to win that award. The others are Sal Bando, Ron Dav... | [] |
The Druid of Shannara | [
[
"The Druid of Shannara",
"part of the series",
"Shannara"
],
[
"The Druid of Shannara",
"part of the series",
"Heritage of Shannara"
],
[
"The Druid of Shannara",
"author",
"Terry Brooks"
]
] | 1991 Book by Terry Brooks | The Druid of Shannara is a fantasy novel by American writer Terry Brooks. The second book of his tetralogy of The Heritage of Shannara, it was first published in 1991. Plot summary The Druid of Shannara takes off where The Scions of Shannara left off, focusing on the story of Walker Boh as he attempts to fulfill the ta... | [] |
The Druid of Shannara | [
[
"The Druid of Shannara",
"part of the series",
"Shannara"
]
] | 1991 Book by Terry Brooks | the state of the Four Lands and makes a beautiful woman out of the elements surrounding him in his garden including a dove for a heart. The King tells his daughter, Quickening, of the task that she must carry out, for there is trouble in a lost city to the north, and the people to take with her. Morgan Leah returns to ... | [] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of birth",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of death",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"position held",
"United States Secreta... | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | For the Director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, see William Morton Meredith. William Morris Meredith (June 8, 1799 – August 17, 1873) was an American lawyer and politician from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He served as the United States Secretary of the Treasury, during President Zachary Taylor's Administratio... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of birth",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of death",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"given name",
"William"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"work location",
"Philadelphia"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | the year he was admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar, 1795, William Tuckey Meredith married the writer and poet Gertrude Gouverneur Meredith (née Ogden) (d.1828). Gertrude was the niece of Lewis Morris, as well as of Gouverneur Morris, and highly educated and respected in her own right, as well as published in Dennie's Por... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"given name",
"William"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | Maryland. William M. Meredith graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1812 (graduation at age 13 not being unusual at the time). After assisting his father in the family's saddlery business, he read law, and was himself admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar. After his mother's death in 1828, William Morris Meredith... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of birth",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of death",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"work location",
"Philadelphia"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | The judge allowed counsel to question jurors as to whether they read the article, and when the judge refused to dismiss a juror who said he was offended by Meredith's questioning, complained such that the judge held both lawyers in contempt of court and ordered them jailed for 30 days, despite considerable public sympa... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of birth",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of death",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"work location",
"Philadelphia"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly, where he served in the minority for five years, from 1824 to 1828, the year of his mother's death (during which his father was grief-stricken and never fully recovered). One of his accomplishments was establishment of a House of Refuge for juvenile offenders, and he served ... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"given name",
"William"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention in 1837. Meredith also served as United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1841 to 1845. During that time, he prosecuted Alexander Holmes for manslaughter in the William Brown case. A successful attorney, particularly after he secured termination of ... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"given name",
"William"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | delegate to a Peace Conference, he worked unsuccessfully to prevent the southern states from seceding from the Union. His brother Sullivan Amory Meredith had served in the Mexican War, and became a Brigadier General of Union Volunteers, commissioned in 1862, and the brothers helped assure Pennsylvania met its quota of ... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of birth",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"place of death",
"Philadelphia"
],
[
"William M. Meredith",
"work location",
"Philadelphia"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | The following year, President Ulysses Grant asked Meredith to travel to Geneva as senior counsel for the United States in an international arbitration proceeding, but he declined the position due to ill health. His last political post was as President of the 1872 Republican National Convention. Death and legacy Meredit... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
William M. Meredith | [
[
"William M. Meredith",
"given name",
"William"
]
] | American politician, lawyer (1799-1873) | remains active today. Meredith received one of only two 1849 Double Eagles while serving as Treasury Secretary. That 1849 Double Eagle is a pattern coin. The other coin is on display at the Smithsonian Institution. The coin was auctioned as part of his estate but its subsequent whereabouts are unknown. References Exter... | [
"William Morris Meredith"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"member of",
"European University Association"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"affiliation",
"European University Association"
]... | University college in Sweden | Jönköping University (JU), formerly Högskolan i Jönköping is a non-governmental Swedish university college located in the city Jönköping in Småland, Sweden. JU is a member of the European University Association (EUA) and The Association of Swedish Higher Education, SUHF. Organization JU is one of three Swedish private ... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | the parent organization and five wholly owned subsidiaries. Name The university college titles itself as 'Jönköping University' in official Swedish texts, a decision which met criticism in Sweden, in part as it was perceived as an attempt to profile the college as having full university status. The name change was repo... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | and offers undergraduate studies, graduate studies, doctoral studies and contract education through four schools: Jönköping International Business School (JIBS) School of Education and Communication Jönköping School of Engineering School of Health and Welfare Campus The JU Campus is situated in the city centre of Jönkö... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"inception",
"1977"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | teacher's training college started in Jönköping. 1968: The elementary-school teacher's training college becomes "Jönköping Teacher School" and moves house to Västra Torget. The county's central school for the caring profession moves to new premises on Munksjö beach and in 1971 changes its name to "Munksjö School". 1970... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
]
] | University college in Sweden | pre-school teacher's training college merged into the university. A two-year economic education started, become three-year in 1978. The Communication Officer (Informatör) programme started this year, it later became the Media and Communication programme. Some of the caring programmes at the Munksjö School become univer... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | renamed the School of Health Sciences. 1988: First engineering programme starts at Jönköping University College. 1994: Jönköping University Foundation was founded, with three schools; the School of Education and Communication, the School of Engineering and Jönköping International Business School as well as University S... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | Jönköping International Business School. 1996: The first professors' inauguration at Jönköping University. Organized support for student business ventures is started by two students. 1997: The new campus is opened (Stage I) which includes the President's Office, Jönköping International Business School and University Se... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | at the School of Education and Communication. Science Park Jönköping opens near the university and takes over, among other things, the support of student enterprises. 2002: The School of Health Sciences becomes the fourth school within Jönköping University. The Students' House is opened. 2004: The university is given t... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | (JTH). The name is not changed in English. A long term collaboration with Chalmers and KTH (The Royal Institute of Technology) is set up. 2010: The university is given the right to award Licentiate and Doctoral Degrees in Engineering, research area: Industrial Production, Machine design, Material and manufacturing proc... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"country",
"Sweden"
],
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | and study programmes taught in Swedish and in English. Education is within the fields of health, nursing, social work, education, media and communication studies, technology, science and engineering as well as economics, law and informatics. Jönköping University offers courses and study programmes taught in English on ... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | university is also entitled to award licentiate and doctoral degrees in engineering, research area: industrial production. Research The university is entitled to issue licentiate and doctoral degrees in the disciplinary research domain of humanities and social sciences. Within technology, the university can issue licen... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
Jönköping University | [
[
"Jönköping University",
"location",
"Jönköping"
]
] | University college in Sweden | first PhDs were conferred in 2000. Research centres and institutes Jönköping International Business School: Centre for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) Centre for Entrepreneurship and Spatial Economics (CEnSE) Media Management and Transformation Centre (MMT Centre) School of Education and Communication: En... | [
"Jönköping University Foundation"
] |
1924 United States presidential election in Georgia | [
[
"1924 United States presidential election in Georgia",
"instance of",
"Presidential election"
],
[
"1924 United States presidential election in Georgia",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"1924 United States presidential election in Georgia",
"part of",
"1924 United State... | Election in Georgia | The 1924 United States presidential election in Georgia took place on November 4, 1924, as part of the wider United States Presidential election. Voters chose 14 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Background With the exception of a handful of historically... | [
"United States presidential election in Georgia, 1924"
] |
Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse | [
[
"Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse",
"sport",
"Lacrosse"
]
] | men's lacrosse team of Buckell University | The Bucknell Bison men's lacrosse team represents Bucknell University in the Patriot League of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's lacrosse. Bucknell has played lacrosse at the varsity level since 1968. History The Bucknell lacrosse team was founded in 1968, as a member of the Mid-Ameri... | [] |
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