title stringlengths 1 250 ⌀ | triples list | description stringlengths 1 695 ⌀ | text stringlengths 275 46.3k | alias list |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of birth",
"Sutton-in-Ashfield"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | his retirement from county cricket, although he sporadically played other first-class matches for a few years. As a right-arm fast bowler, Crossland claimed 322 wickets in all first-class cricket at an average of 12.48. He claimed ten or more wickets in a match on six occasions. Primarily a tail-end batsman, he scored ... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"occupation",
"Cricketer"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | best players to appear for them, creating an exodus of cricketing talent to the county. Crossland first gained employment as a professional cricketer in 1876, with Enfield Cricket Club. In a single innings match against Burnley that season, he took eight wickets and conceded 88 runs (abbreviated as "eight for 88"). The... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"member of sports team",
"Lancashire County Cricket Club"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | five for 10 in the match from his five overs to help his side win on first innings. In early 1878, Crossland improved upon his previous efforts, taking eight for 28 against Burnley. Lancashire professional Crossland's performances for Enfield drew the attention of Lancashire County Cricket Club, for whom he was qualifi... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | against Surrey at the Oval. Across his other six matches that year, he only claimed three further wickets, and completed the season with thirteen wickets at an average of 7.15. The 1882 season was Crossland's best; though he started with a wicket-less match against the Marylebone Cricket Club. He took seven wickets aga... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | complaints from the crowd, who accused him of throwing. During his bowling spell, he was heckled by the crowd, with shouts of "well-thrown" and "take him off", and he was later surrounded by Surrey supporters when he returned to the changing rooms. The Times addressed the issue in their match report, with a reminder th... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | expertise and the bravery to no-ball a bowler. A week after the match against Surrey, the only Test match of the Australian's tour was played, also at the Oval. In his obituary in Wisden Cricketers' Almanack, it was suggested that were it not for the accusations of throwing against Crossland, he would have been selecte... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | feel sure it would not be allowed in Australia; but, as we all know, throwing in England is just as common as bowling – more's the pity", and it was speculated that the Australian team would have protested had Crossland been chosen for the Test match. In 1883, Middlesex refused to arrange matches with Lancashire due to... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of birth",
"Sutton-in-Ashfield"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | Crossland's qualification for Lancashire was invalid, as they claimed that although he was engaged on the Old Trafford ground staff for the summer, he continued to reside in Sutton-in-Ashfield during the winter. Crossland was summoned to Lord's over the matter, but the Lancashire committee refused to send him, stating ... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | be no-balled during the first match of the year. The match against Derbyshire featured one of the most highly-regarded umpires, Thomas Brownhill from Yorkshire, and Crossland bowled without censure. In June that season, Crossland travelled as part of the Lancashire team to Lord's, to play against the Marylebone Cricket... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of birth",
"Sutton-in-Ashfield"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | much regard for their qualification to play for the county caused some bad-feeling with other counties, most notably Crossland's native Nottinghamshire. The bickering between the counties escalated and in 1883, after receiving a provocative Christmas card from Lancashire, the Nottinghamshire committee sent an aggressiv... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of birth",
"Sutton-in-Ashfield"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | own free will, and without agreement with other counties, to place [their] eleven in an irreproachable position", though Lancashire later clarified that Crossland had only missed the match as he was suffering from a shoulder injury; while Nash's bowling was not suited to the hard pitches those matches were played on. C... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | this, Crossland demanded the umpire retire from the match, and when the opposing captain refused, the match was abandoned. Crossland then announced, via the town crier, that his bowling would "pass unquestioned" in his next county match. Termination of county cricket career In 1885 Lancashire once again were unable to ... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of birth",
"Sutton-in-Ashfield"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | upon objections raised by Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, the Marylebone Cricket Club ruled that he had breached his residency qualification by returning to live in Sutton-in-Ashfield during the winter period. Due to this, he was not allowed to play for Lancashire, effectively ending his first-class career. Nash r... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"place of death",
"Blackburn"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
],
[
"Jack Crossland",
"member of sports team",
"Lancashire County Cricket Club"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | Lancashire after his expulsion from their county side, playing for a variety of club sides; East Lancashire from 1885 to 1889, Church and Oswaldtwistle in 1890 and Colne in 1891. He also worked in a coal pit at Clayton-le-Moors. He died on 26 September 1903 in Blackburn. His burial was paid for by Lancashire County Cri... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | majority of experts having no hesitation in describing him as a rank thrower." Grace was scarcely kinder, noting that he was "inclined to think that he ought to have been no-balled in every over." Despite the widespread opinion against his action, the umpires, themselves professional, were reluctant to no-ball him. The... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Jack Crossland | [
[
"Jack Crossland",
"sport",
"Cricket"
]
] | English professional cricketer (1852-1903) | the proper authorities decline [to signify] their disapproval of it." As a batsman, he was an aggressive tail-ender, while he was considered a good fielder with a long throw. In all first-class matches, Crossland claimed 322 wickets at an average of 10.95. He took ten wickets in a match on six occasions, and five wicke... | [
"John Crossland"
] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"present in work",
"Book of Baruch"
],
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | Baruch ben Neriah (Hebrew: ברוך בן נריה Bārūḵ ben Nêrîyāh, "'Blessed' (Bārūḵ), son (ben) of 'My Candle is Jah' (Nêrîyāh)"; c. 6th century BC) was the scribe, disciple, secretary, and devoted friend of the Biblical prophet Jeremiah. He is traditionally credited with authoring the deuterocanonical Book of Baruch. Life Ac... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | true to the teachings and ideals of the great prophet, although like his master he was at times almost overwhelmed with despondency. While Jeremiah was in hiding to avoid the wrath of King Jehoakim, he commanded Baruch to read his prophecies of warning to the people gathered in the Temple in Jerusalem on a day of fasti... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | middle of the siege of Jerusalem, Jeremiah purchased an estate in Anathoth on which the Babylonian armies had encamped (as a symbol of faith in the eventual restoration of Jerusalem), and, according to Josephus, Baruch continued to reside with him at Mizpah. Reportedly, Baruch had influence on Jeremiah; on his advice J... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"present in work",
"Book of Baruch"
],
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | latter's conquest of Egypt. Baruch's prominence, by reason of his intimate association with Jeremiah, led later generations to exalt his reputation still further. To him were attributed the Book of Baruch and two other Jewish books. Historicity In 1975, a clay bulla purportedly containing Baruch's seal and name appeare... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"present in work",
"Book of Jeremiah"
],
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | Deuteronomist, who is generally thought to have either written or edited the books from Deuteronomy to II Kings, was Baruch ben Neriah. He defended this assertion by comparing a number of different phrases in the Book of Jeremiah with phrases in other books. Some reject this claim on the grounds that it goes beyond the... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | to the few who harkened to the word of God. A Midrash in the Sifre regarded Baruch as identical with the Ethiopian Ebed-melech, who rescued Jeremiah from the dungeon; and states that he received his appellation Baruch ("blessed") because of his piety, which contrasted with the loose life of the court, as the skin of an... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student",
"Ezra"
]
] | biblical character | him: "Baruch, of what avail is a hedge where there is no vineyard, or a shepherd where there are no sheep?" Baruch, therefore, found consolation in the fact that when Israel was exiled to Babylonia there was no longer occasion for prophecy. The Seder Olam (xx.), however, and the Talmud, include Baruch among the Prophet... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | curious identification of a prophet with a magician, such as Zoroaster was held to be, among the Jews, Christians, and Arabs. De Sacy explains it on the ground that in Arabic the name of the prophet Jeremiah is almost identical with that of the city of Urmiah, where, it is said, Zoroaster lived. However, this may be, t... | [] |
Baruch ben Neriah | [
[
"Baruch ben Neriah",
"student of",
"Jeremiah"
]
] | biblical character | Those who regard Baruch and Ebed-melech as identical find this deduction is evident. See also List of biblical figures identified in extra-biblical sources References Sources Wright, J. Edward, Baruch ben Neriah: From Biblical Scribe to Apocalyptic Seer (University of South Carolina Press, 2003) Avigad, Nahman, "Jerahm... | [] |
Tajikistan–Turkey relations | [
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Tajikistan"
],
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Turkey"
]
] | Bilateral relations between Turkey and Tajikistan | Tajik–Turkish relations are friendly and cooperative and underlined with a legal basis of more than 30 treaties and protocols which have been signed between two countries since 1991. Modern relations Turkey recognized the independence of Tajikistan on 16 December 1991 and established diplomatic relations on 29 January ... | [
"Turkey–Tajikistan relations"
] |
Tajikistan–Turkey relations | [
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Tajikistan"
],
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Turkey"
]
] | Bilateral relations between Turkey and Tajikistan | During this period the Turkish embassy in Dushanbe was the only diplomatic mission which remained open and the visit of Turkish Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel was the only high level visit to Tajikistan. Tajik President Emomali Rahmon made a 19–22 January 2006 official visit to Turkey. Turkish Presidential visit to Du... | [
"Turkey–Tajikistan relations"
] |
Tajikistan–Turkey relations | [
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Tajikistan"
],
[
"Tajikistan–Turkey relations",
"country",
"Turkey"
]
] | Bilateral relations between Turkey and Tajikistan | of mass destruction,” before concentrating on Afghanistan (as he had done in his preceding visit to Kyrgyzstan) by stating, “Afghanistan’s stability and peace is very important for Central Asia and the rest of the world. Tajikistan, which shares a land border of 1,400 kilometres with Afghanistan, has always played a co... | [
"Turkey–Tajikistan relations"
] |
Dragon Valor | [
[
"Dragon Valor",
"genre",
"Action role-playing game"
],
[
"Dragon Valor",
"publisher",
"Namco"
],
[
"Dragon Valor",
"country of origin",
"Japan"
]
] | 1999 video game | is an action role-playing game developed and released by Namco for the Sony PlayStation on December 2, 1999 in Japan. It is the third game in the Dragon Buster series, and features platform and hack and slash elements. In the Dragon Valor world, dragons are monsters with immense power; the player's role as a Dragon Val... | [] |
D'Arcy Thompson Zoology Museum | [
[
"D'Arcy Thompson Zoology Museum",
"location",
"University of Dundee"
]
] | university museum, zoology collection in Dundee , Scotland | The D'Arcy Thompson Zoology Museum is a museum of zoology at the University of Dundee in Scotland. The museum is named after the Scottish biologist and mathematician D'Arcy Thompson (1860–1948), who founded it in the 1880s. The museum has a collection of birds, fish, insects, mammals, and reptiles from around the world... | [] |
Andrew Howard | [
[
"Andrew Howard",
"occupation",
"Actor"
],
[
"Andrew Howard",
"given name",
"Andrew"
]
] | Welsh actor | Andrew Howard is a Welsh theatre, television and film actor. Training Howard trained at Cygnet Training Theatre in Exeter in the late 1980s, touring in productions of A Christmas Carol, Twelfth Night, Beggar's Opera and Peer Gynt among others. Career Stage On stage roles included Alex DeLarge in A Clockwork Orange, Pee... | [] |
Andrew Howard | [
[
"Andrew Howard",
"occupation",
"Actor"
]
] | Welsh actor | Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close in the 2003 TV movie The Lion in Winter. He played "Bad" Frank Phillips in History Channel's Hatfields & McCoys. In 2001, Howard was awarded best actor at the Tokyo International Film Festival for his portrayal of Jon in Mr In-Between. He co-wrote the screenplay for Shooters, a 2002 Brit... | [] |
Andrew Howard | [
[
"Andrew Howard",
"occupation",
"Actor"
],
[
"Andrew Howard",
"occupation",
"Screenwriter"
]
] | Welsh actor | Festival and the Jack Nance Breakthrough Performance Award at the New York Film Festival Downtown. In 2011, he starred in Limitless, a film by Neil Burger originally titled The Dark Fields. In 2014, he played a supporting role as the lead Russian henchman, Maxim, in Taken 3. Since 2015, he has appeared in the televisio... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of birth",
"Aabenraa"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | Ernst Rudolf Johannes Reuter (29 July 1889 – 29 September 1953) was the German mayor of West Berlin from 1948 to 1953, during the time of the Cold War. Biography Early years Reuter was born in Apenrade (Aabenraa), Province of Schleswig-Holstein (now in Denmark). He spent his childhood days in Leer where a public square... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member of political party",
"Social Democratic Party of Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member of political party",
"Communist Party of Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member of political party",... | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Reuter opposed Kaiser Wilhelm's regime at the start of the First World War. After being drafted, Reuter was wounded and captured by Russians during the Bolshevik Revolution. In captivity, Reuter joined the Bolsheviks and organized his fellow prisoners into a soviet. In 1917... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member of political party",
"Social Democratic Party of Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member of political party",
"Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"member ... | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | endorsing an open rebellion in March 1921 in central Germany and placed himself hereby in opposition to the leader of the party, Paul Levi. Although Reuter was seen as a favorite of Lenin, he was expelled from the party in 1922. He moved briefly to the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD), and then ret... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | subway system. From 1931 until 1933, Reuter was the mayor of Magdeburg where he fought lack of housing and jobs due to the economic crisis. He also was elected as a member of the Reichstag. In 1933, with the Nazis now in power, he was forced to resign his positions and was brought to the concentration camp (KZ) Lichten... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | to the Government. Post-war Berlin After the end of World War II, Reuter returned to Berlin, and was elected in 1946 to the Magistrate (governing body) where he oversaw initially the Transportation Department. In 1947 he was elected Lord Mayor (Oberbürgermeister) of Berlin but in the deepening crisis of the Cold War, t... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]... | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | In response to the threat, the citizens in the western sectors had to come together. Ernst Reuter became their spokesman and leader, a symbolic figure of the "Free" Berlin. Memorable is Reuter’s speech in front of the burned-out Reichstag building on 9 September 1948, facing a crowd of 300,000 where he appealed to the ... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | grand coalition government with the next two largest parties to demonstrate West Berlin’s unity. Reuter's appeal to the West did not go unheard. The airlift saved the city from starvation, and Reuter became only the second German postwar politician (after Konrad Adenauer) to be placed on the cover of Time magazine. He ... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of burial",
"Waldfriedhof Zehlendorf"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | Free University of Berlin was founded, as the University of Berlin was in the Soviet sector and under communist rule. In 1953 Reuter established the "Bürgermeister-Reuter-Stiftung" (Mayor Reuter Foundation) to assist refugees coming to West-Berlin. A few weeks after the uprising of 17 June 1953 in East Berlin, Reuter d... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | two children, Hella (1920–1983), and (Gerd Edzard) Harry (1921–1992) who became a British citizen and a professor of mathematics. Harry's son Timothy was a distinguished mediaeval historian. In 1927 Reuter divorced Charlotte and remarried. He and his second wife Hanna had one son, Edzard, who became the CEO of Daimler-... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]... | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | The Association names the winners of the annual "Ernst-Reuter-Preis" for excellent dissertations from the university and provideds “Ernst-Reuter-Stipends” for studies abroad. Former places where Reuter lived received memorial plaques: Hardenbergstraße 35 (Berlin-Charlottenburg), and Bülowstraße 33 (Berlin-Zehlendorf). ... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | ... Schaut auf diese Stadt und erkennt, dass ihr diese Stadt und dieses Volk nicht preisgeben dürft, nicht preisgeben könnt!" (People of this world... look upon this city and see that you should not, cannot abandon this city and this people) —Reuter’s speech from 9 September 1948 (German) Publications Ernst Reuter: Rat... | [] |
Ernst Reuter | [
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"place of death",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"work location",
"Berlin"
],
[
"Ernst Reuter",
"family name",
"Reuter"
]
] | German mayor of West Berlin (1889-1953) | Ein Leben für die Freiheit (Eine Biographie in Bildern und Dokumenten). München: Kindler Verlag, 1957 Ernst Reuter. Schriften - Reden. Hg. v. Hans E. Hirschfeld und Hans J. Reichardt. Vorwort von Willy Brandt. Bd. 1-4. Frankfurt am Main; Berlin; Wien 1972-1975. David E. Barclay: Schaut auf diese Stadt / Der unbekannte ... | [] |
Mumbai Tigers F.C. | [
[
"Mumbai Tigers F.C.",
"owned by",
"Dodsal Group"
]
] | football club | Mumbai Tigers Football Club was an Indian football club was located in Mumbai, Maharashtra. The club were formed in May 2012 as Dodsal Football Club with the aim of becoming the biggest football club in India and one of the biggest in Asia. History Towards the end of May 2012 it was announced that Indian owned company ... | [
"Dodsal F.C."
] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | Wesley Clint "Big Nasty" Malott (born October 26, 1976) is an American professional ten-pin bowler who resides in Pflugerville, Texas. He has won ten PBA Tour titles in 14 full seasons on the PBA tour. He won his lone major championship at the 2012–13 U.S. Open, and has finished runner-up in five other major PBA tourna... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | in PBA Tour events. Wes is a Pro Staff member for Roto Grip bowling balls, Dexter shoes and Vise Grips. PBA career After winning one title each in the 2005–06, 2006–07 and 2007–08 seasons, Malott had his big breakout in the 2008–09 season. In a close race, Malott won the 2008–09 PBA Player of the Year Award over Norm D... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | At the 2009 PBA World Series of Bowling in Allen Park, MI, Malott made the TV finals in two of the seven events: the PBA Shark Championship and PBA World Championship, but failed to win either tournament. In the World Championship, he was denied his first major title when he was upset by newcomer Tom Smallwood, 244-228... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | shut out since 2004–05), he did finish second on the Tour in average (221.33) and fifth in points, while making five TV finals appearances. Malott won a title in the 2011–12 season in the Mark Roth-Marshall Holman Exempt Doubles Championship with partner Norm Duke. In the 2012–13 season, he finished runner-up in the US... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | Championship at the 2013 World Series of Bowling, marking the first time since 2008–09 that he won multiple titles in a single season. He also posted a career-high 228.09 average in Tour events. Malott and partner Norm Duke won their second Mark Roth-Marshall Holman Doubles Championship in 2015. The win gave Malott ten... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | the PBA League and Mark Roth-Marshall Holman Doubles Championship during the same week in Portland. Malott was the anchor bowler for the winning Portland Lumberjacks team in the 2019 PBA League tournament, and he won the Mark Roth League MVP award. Excluding a couple of meaningless tenth frame fill balls, Malott rolled... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | games in two of his five matches. Since that inaugural event, the King of Bowling has taken the form of a challenge match, most often a best two-of-three, and has been held in conjunction with a regularly scheduled PBA Tour event. Malott's challenger is chosen via PBA fan vote. Malott has never lost the King of Bowling... | [] |
Wes Malott | [
[
"Wes Malott",
"family name",
"Malott"
]
] | American ten-pin bowler | events, Malott has beaten Tommy Jones, Belmonte and E. J. Tackett (in a three-way match), Parker Bohn III, Rhino Page, Walter Ray Williams Jr., Patrick Allen and Chris Barnes. Career highlights PBA Titles (majors in boldface) 2005–06 – Mile High Classic 2006–07 – Discover Card Windy City Classic 2007–08 – Earl Anthony ... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Wyoming"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
... | genus of reptiles (fossil) | Acrocanthosaurus ( ; meaning "high-spined lizard") is a genus of theropod dinosaur that existed in what is now North America during the Aptian and early Albian stages of the Early Cretaceous. Like most dinosaur genera, Acrocanthosaurus contains only a single species, A. atokensis. Its fossil remains are found mainly in... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | most likely supported a ridge of muscle over the animal's neck, back, and hips. Acrocanthosaurus was one of the largest theropods, reaching in length, and weighing up to . Large theropod footprints discovered in Texas may have been made by Acrocanthosaurus, although there is no direct association with skeletal remains.... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"parent taxon",
"Allosauroidea"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | dinosaurs, its femur was longer than its tibia and metatarsals, suggesting that Acrocanthosaurus was not a fast runner. Unsurprisingly, the hind leg bones of Acrocanthosaurus were proportionally more robust than its smaller relative Allosaurus. Its feet had four digits each, although as is typical for theropods, the fi... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | neck vertebrae, among other features. It was originally placed in the family Allosauridae with Allosaurus, an arrangement also supported by studies as late as 2000. Most studies have found it to be a member of the related family Carcharodontosauridae. At the time of its discovery, Acrocanthosaurus and most other large ... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | the long spines on its vertebrae suggested a relationship with Spinosaurus. This interpretation of Acrocanthosaurus as a spinosaurid persisted into the 1980s, and was repeated in the semi-technical dinosaur books of the time. Tall spined vertebrae from the Early Cretaceous of England were once considered to be very sim... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | synonym of Acrocanthosaurus. These vertebrae were later assigned to the new genus Becklespinax, separate from both Acrocanthosaurus and Altispinax. Most cladistic analyses including Acrocanthosaurus have found it to be a carcharodontosaurid, usually in a basal position relative to the African Carcharodontosaurus and Gi... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | (at the time united as the supercontinent Gondwana). If Acrocanthosaurus was a carcharodontosaurid, then dispersal would also have occurred into North America. All known carcharodontosaurids lived during the early-to-middle Cretaceous Period. The following cladogram after Novas et al., 2013, shows the placement of Acro... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | Willis Stovall and Wann Langston Jr. Langston had proposed the name "Acracanthus atokaensis" for the genus and species in his unpublished 1947 master's thesis, but the name was changed to Acrocanthosaurus atokensis for formal publication. The holotype and paratype (OMNH 10146 and OMNH 10147), discovered in the early 19... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | Twin Mountains Formation of Texas and currently part of the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History collection. An even more complete skeleton (NCSM 14345, nicknamed "Fran") was recovered from the Antlers Formation of Oklahoma by Cephis Hall and Sid Love, prepared by the Black Hills Institute in South Dakota, and is n... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Wyoming"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | same size, while the holotype and SMU 74646 are significantly smaller. The presence of Acrocanthosaurus in the Cloverly Formation was established in 2012 with the description of another partial skeleton, UM 20796. This specimen, consisting of parts of two vertebrae, partial pubic bones, a femur, a partial fibula, and f... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Wyoming"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
... | genus of reptiles (fossil) | Cloverly Formation. Acrocanthosaurus may be known from less complete remains outside of Oklahoma, Texas, and Wyoming. A tooth from southern Arizona has been referred to the genus, and matching tooth marks have been found in sauropod bones from the same area. Several teeth from the Arundel Formation of Maryland have bee... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | was determined by orienting the endocast so that the lateral semicircular canal was parallel to the ground, as it usually is when an animal is in an alert posture. Possible footprints The Glen Rose Formation of central Texas preserves many dinosaur footprints, including large, three-toed theropod prints. The most famou... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | say what animal made the prints, since no fossil bones have been associated with the trackways. However, scientists have long considered it likely that the footprints belong to Acrocanthosaurus. A 2001 study compared the Glen Rose footprints to the feet of various large theropods but could not confidently assign them t... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Oklahoma"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Wyoming"
],
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Maryland"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | be expected if a large predator were hanging onto its side. Pathology The skull of the Acrocanthosaurus atokensis holotype shows light exostotic material on the squamosal. The neural spine of the eleventh vertebra was fractured and healed while the neural spine of its third tail vertebra had an unusual hook-like struct... | [] |
Acrocanthosaurus | [
[
"Acrocanthosaurus",
"location of discovery",
"Texas"
]
] | genus of reptiles (fossil) | to estimate their age. Based on changes in ammonite taxa, the boundary between the Aptian and Albian stages of the Early Cretaceous has been located within the Glen Rose Formation of Texas, which may contain Acrocanthosaurus footprints and lies just above the Twin Mountains Formation. This indicates that the Twin Mount... | [] |
Susan Grabel | [
[
"Susan Grabel",
"given name",
"Susan"
],
[
"Susan Grabel",
"occupation",
"Artist"
]
] | American artist | Susan Grabel is an American feminist artist. She was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. She spent part of her early adulthood in Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, where she nurtured her artistic pursuits. Grabel has described her work as being inspired by the realities of aging and the female body, and specializes in ... | [] |
Miroirs | [
[
"Miroirs",
"composer",
"Maurice Ravel"
],
[
"Miroirs",
"instrumentation",
"Piano"
],
[
"Miroirs",
"inception",
"1905"
],
[
"Miroirs",
"publication date",
"1906"
]
] | musical composition for piano by Maurice Ravel | Miroirs (French for "Mirrors") is a five-movement suite for solo piano written by French composer Maurice Ravel between 1904 and 1905. First performed by Ricardo Viñes in 1906, Miroirs contains five movements, each dedicated to a fellow member of the French avant-garde artist group Les Apaches. History Around 1900, Mau... | [] |
Miroirs | [
[
"Miroirs",
"publication date",
"1906"
],
[
"Miroirs",
"has part",
"Alborada del gracioso"
]
] | musical composition for piano by Maurice Ravel | following year. It was first published by Eugène Demets in 1906. The third and fourth movements were subsequently orchestrated by Ravel, while the fifth was orchestrated by Percy Grainger, among others. Structure Miroirs has five movements, each dedicated to a member of Les Apaches: Orchestrated versions "Une barque su... | [] |
Ryan Turner | [
[
"Ryan Turner",
"position played on team / speciality",
"Midfielder"
]
] | American association footballer | Ryan Turner is a retired American soccer midfielder who played professionally in the USL A-League. Turner played for the Santos Soccer Club in Arizona which went to the finals of the McGuire Cup (U-19 U.S. Youth National Championship). Turner attended the University of Notre Dame. He played three years for the Fighting... | [] |
Don Chezina | [
[
"Don Chezina",
"occupation",
"Singer"
],
[
"Don Chezina",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American reggaeton artist | Don Chezina (born Ricardo Garcia Ortiz in 1976) is a singer, producer, and talent scout of Rap, Reggae, and reggaeton music. He is known for his high, nasal voice and fast rapping along with his most famous song "Tra Tra Tra", which in 1998 became one of the first reggaeton songs to become popular in the United States.... | [
"papisongo"
] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"place of birth",
"Görlitz"
],
[
"Werner Finck",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | Werner Finck (2 May 1902 – 31 July 1978) was a German Kabarett comedian, actor and author. Not politically motivated by his own admission but just a "convinced individualist", he became one of Germany's leading cabaret artists under the conditions of the Nazi suppression after 1933. Biography Born in Görlitz in Prussia... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | However, it became obvious that he had "comic bones" and when he met a friend who had contacts in the Berlin Kabarett scene, he found his true calling. Together with artists like Hans Deppe, Rudolf Platte and Robert A. Stemmle he founded the cabaret Die Katakombe with some friends in 1929. Finck acted as conferencier, ... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | sentences. He often defied authority by daring Gestapo informers in the audience to write down every word he said. According to an anecdote, Finck once confronted an officer asking with seeming innocence, "Am I talking too fast? Can you follow me or shall I follow you?" According to his later accounts, Finck was confro... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | defamations. You never know. (...) I must admit though that the Nazis disapproved of me." The way Finck presented his jokes made it very difficult for authorities to nail him down. His exploits made him a legend in his lifetime, to such an extent that when he introduced himself to British and American journalists after... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | for six weeks in Esterwegen concentration camp, where he met Carl von Ossietzky and Julius Leber. The Katakombe ensemble took their arrest in good stride, because they still performed despite their imprisonment. They reasoned that before the cabaret closed down they had performed with anxiety due to the fear of incarce... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"place of death",
"Munich"
],
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | exploits in a cabaret programme entitled Der brave Soldat schweigt ("The Good Soldier Shuts Up" – a pun on Jaroslav Hašek's The Good Soldier Švejk). He witnessed the German surrender as a POW of the U.S. Army in Bad Aibling, Bavaria. From 1945-49, Finck, with Hans Bayer ("Thaddäus Troll"), issued the journal Das Wespen... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"place of death",
"Munich"
],
[
"Werner Finck",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | established the joke political party of the "Radical Centre" in West Berlin. Finck was able to continue his film career, including an appearance in Fassbinder's TV series Eight Hours Don't Make a Day in 1972. He remained active in live performances, notably making a tour of the United States in 1968. Death Finck died i... | [] |
Werner Finck | [
[
"Werner Finck",
"family name",
"Finck"
]
] | German actor (1902-1978) | of Fame of Cabaret, Mainz (posthumous, 2004) Selected filmography Werner Finck made a lot of film and TV appearances in a career spanning about forty years, many of which are but brief appearances that showcased his talent: The Company's in Love (1932) The Hymn of Leuthen (1933) Liebelei (1933) A Woman Who Knows What S... | [] |
Severoiztochen Planning Region | [
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"country",
"Bulgaria"
],
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"capital",
"Varna"
]
] | planning region in Bulgaria | Severoiztochen Planning Region (Northeast Planning Region) is a planning region in Bulgaria.The region includes four provinces: Targovishte Province, Varna Province, Shumen Province and Dobrich Province. Largest cities are Varna (360,000 - city proper; 500,000 - metro area), Dobrich (105,000 - city; 115,000 - agglomera... | [] |
Severoiztochen Planning Region | [
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"country",
"Bulgaria"
],
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"capital",
"Varna"
]
] | planning region in Bulgaria | The Kamchia river flows through the region. Economy One of richest regions of Bulgaria, Severoiztochen is important for the national economy. Its economy is service-oriented and includes tourism. Severoiztochen is the second region most-visited region by foreign tourists after Yugoiztochen. Notable resorts include Gold... | [] |
Severoiztochen Planning Region | [
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"country",
"Bulgaria"
],
[
"Severoiztochen Planning Region",
"capital",
"Varna"
]
] | planning region in Bulgaria | the largest port in Bulgaria and the third largest on the Black Sea. The port of Balchik is a small fishing town. On the Danube, important ports are Silistra - fourth largest on the river, and Tutrakan. Varna is Bulgaria's second financial capital after Sofia; the city produces electronics, ships, food and other goods.... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Paul Whiteman"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"composer",
"George Gershwin"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"narrative location",
"New York City"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | Rhapsody in Blue is a 1924 musical composition by the American composer George Gershwin for solo piano and jazz band, which combines elements of classical music with jazz-influenced effects. The composition was commissioned by the bandleader Paul Whiteman. It was orchestrated by Ferde Grofé several times, including the... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Paul Whiteman"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"composer",
"George Gershwin"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"narrative location",
"New York City"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | piano. The editors of the Cambridge Music Handbooks opined that "The Rhapsody in Blue (1924) established Gershwin's reputation as a serious composer and has since become one of the most popular of all American concert works." History Commission After the success of an experimental classical-jazz concert held with the C... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"composer",
"George Gershwin"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | featuring such an extended composition by Gershwin in the concert after he had collaborated with Gershwin in the Scandals of 1922, impressed by the original performance of the one-act opera Blue Monday, which was nevertheless a commercial failure. Gershwin declined on the grounds that, as there would certainly be need ... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"composer",
"George Gershwin"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | reading the January 4 edition of the New York Tribune. An article entitled "What Is American Music?" about the Whiteman concert caught his attention, in which the final paragraph claimed that "George Gershwin is at work on a jazz concerto, Irving Berlin is writing a syncopated tone poem, and Victor Herbert is working o... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Paul Whiteman"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | his visit to a gallery exhibition of James McNeill Whistler paintings, which bear titles such as Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket and Arrangement in Grey and Black (better known as Whistler's Mother). After a few weeks, Gershwin finished his composition and passed the score to Whiteman's arranger Ferde Gr... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"narrative location",
"New York City"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | place in Aeolian Hall in New York City. Many important and influential musicians of the time were present, including Sergei Rachmaninoff, Igor Stravinsky, Fritz Kreisler, Leopold Stokowski, John Philip Sousa, and Willie "the Lion" Smith. The event has since become historic specifically because of its premiere of the rh... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"composer",
"George Gershwin"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | opera". The program was long, including 26 separate musical movements, divided into 2 parts and 11 sections, bearing titles such as "True form of jazz" and "Contrast: legitimate scoring vs. jazzing". Gershwin's latest composition was the second to last piece (before Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1). Many of t... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Paul Whiteman"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | Paul Whiteman Orchestra, most notably on 11 April 1926 at the Royal Albert Hall, with Gershwin in the audience. The concert was recorded (though not issued) by HMV. Responses By the end of 1927, Whiteman's band had played Rhapsody in Blue 84 times, and its recording sold a million copies. To get the whole piece onto tw... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | published in 1942 for full symphony orchestra is scored for solo piano and an orchestra consisting of two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets in B and A, one bass clarinet, two bassoons, two alto saxophones in E, one tenor saxophone in B; three French horns in F, three trumpets in B, three trombones, one tuba; a percussio... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | and Whiteman. A 1925 piano roll captured Gershwin's performance in a two-piano version. Whiteman's orchestra also performed a shortened version of the piece in the 1930 film The King of Jazz featuring Roy Bargy on piano. Whiteman re-recorded the piece for Decca on a 12-inch 78 rpm disc (29051) recorded on October 23, 1... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Oscar Levant"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"publication date",
"1945"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | has become a staple of the concert repertoire. It has direct popular appeal while also being regarded respectfully by classical musicians. On August 21, 1945, a recording by Oscar Levant with the Philadelphia Orchestra (conducted by Eugene Ormandy) entered at its peak position of number 23 on the Cash Box survey (Colum... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"cast member",
"Paul Whiteman"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | piano as did Eric Himy (2004) in a version that featured the uncut original short score. Meanwhile, such two-piano teams as José Iturbi and Amparo Iturbi, France Veri and Michael Jamanis, and Katia and Marielle Labèque, also recorded the piece. Michel Camilo recorded the piece in 2006, winning a Latin Grammy award. Ana... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"instance of",
"Film"
],
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"narrative location",
"New York City"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | Rhapsody). Rhapsody in Blue has been interpreted as a musical portrait of New York City; it is used in this context in a segment from the film Fantasia 2000, in which the piece is used as the lyrical framing for a stylized animation set drawn in the style of famed illustrator Al Hirschfeld. It was also used in the open... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | recalls that he "loved" it. It was also a heavy influence on his Smile album. He also came to think of "Good Vibrations" as "a smaller, psychedelic version of Rhapsody in Blue". Rhapsody in Blue was played simultaneously by 84 pianists at the opening ceremony of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. The piece appear... | [] |
Rhapsody in Blue | [
[
"Rhapsody in Blue",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 1945 film by Irving Rapper | videos, and in the Terminal 1 underground walkway at O'Hare International Airport. Rhapsody in Blue inspired a collaboration between blind savant British pianist Derek Paravicini and composer Matthew King on a new concerto, called Blue premiered at the South Bank Centre in London in 2011. Rhapsody in Blue was used to d... | [] |
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