title stringlengths 1 250 ⌀ | triples list | description stringlengths 1 695 ⌀ | text stringlengths 275 46.3k | alias list |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Daniela Escobar | [
[
"Daniela Escobar",
"family name",
"Escobar"
]
] | Brazilian actress | film Diário de um Novo Mundo. Daniela Escobar is considered one of the best actresses of the new generation. Her most memorable performance remains the one she gave in O Clone novel 2001, where she played a mother who suffered and struggled to regain the trust of her daughter, a drug addict. In 2005 she participated in... | [] |
Daniela Escobar | [
[
"Daniela Escobar",
"occupation",
"Actor"
],
[
"Daniela Escobar",
"country of citizenship",
"Brazil"
],
[
"Daniela Escobar",
"family name",
"Escobar"
]
] | Brazilian actress | America, as Daniela had already been in the US before in 1997, at that time studying theater, at John Starsberg Studios. Back to Brazil in 2010 she founded a production company, based in São Paulo, in partnership with an American friend. In the year 2010, Daniela Escobar could again be seen in theater, along with actor... | [] |
Daniela Escobar | [
[
"Daniela Escobar",
"spouse",
"Jayme Monjardim"
]
] | Brazilian actress | of the novel Ti Ti Ti Daguilene as the mother of Stefany's character, Sophie Charlotte. She Can currently be seen on TV in the novel 18h, A Vida da Gente, where she plays Suzana, foster mother of the character Alice, played by actress Sthefany Brito. In 2013, will novel Flor do Caribe, playing the biologist Natália. In... | [] |
Quetzal file format | [
[
"Quetzal file format",
"instance of",
"File format"
]
] | file format | Quetzal is a standardised file format for the saved state of Z-machine games, invented by Martin Frost. Prior to the introduction of Quetzal, each Z-machine interpreter saved games in its own format; Quetzal enabled players to save a game using one interpreter and restore it with another. Use of the format is strongly ... | [
".sav",
".glksave"
] |
The Crime at Blossoms | [
[
"The Crime at Blossoms",
"instance of",
"Film"
],
[
"The Crime at Blossoms",
"publication date",
"1933"
],
[
"The Crime at Blossoms",
"director",
"Maclean Rogers"
],
[
"The Crime at Blossoms",
"screenwriter",
"Mordaunt Shairp"
],
[
"The Crime at ... | 1933 film by Maclean Rogers | The Crime at Blossoms is a 1933 British crime film directed by Maclean Rogers and starring Hugh Wakefield and Joyce Bland. It was remade by Rogers in 1949 as Dark Secret. After moving into a picturesque country cottage, a woman becomes increasingly concerned about the fate of the previous owner who she believes was mur... | [
"Crime at Blossoms"
] |
York Peppermint Pattie | [
[
"York Peppermint Pattie",
"owned by",
"The Hershey Company"
],
[
"York Peppermint Pattie",
"subclass of",
"Confectionery"
]
] | Confection produced by Hershey | York Peppermint Pattie is an American dark chocolate enrobed peppermint confection introduced in 1940 and currently produced by The Hershey Company. The confectionery features strongly contrasting flavors, with a particularly bitter dark chocolate surrounding a sugary center with a strong peppermint flavor. Although ch... | [] |
York Peppermint Pattie | [
[
"York Peppermint Pattie",
"subclass of",
"Confectionery"
]
] | Confection produced by Hershey | If the candy didn't break clean in the middle, it was a second." History The York Peppermint Pattie was first produced in York, Pennsylvania by Henry Kessler at his York Cone Company in 1940 and sold in the Northeastern United States, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Florida. In 1972, the York Cone Company was acquired by ... | [] |
Great Basses Reef Lighthouse | [
[
"Great Basses Reef Lighthouse",
"instance of",
"Lighthouse"
],
[
"Great Basses Reef Lighthouse",
"country",
"Sri Lanka"
]
] | lighthouse in Sri Lanka | Great Basses Reef Lighthouse is an offshore lighthouse in the south of Sri Lanka, and it is operated and maintained by the Sri Lanka Ports Authority. It is located on a reef 13 km off the coast of Yala National Park, near Little Basses Reef Lighthouse. It is accessible only by boat. The two Basses lighthouses, 'Great' ... | [] |
Great Basses Reef Lighthouse | [
[
"Great Basses Reef Lighthouse",
"instance of",
"Lighthouse"
]
] | lighthouse in Sri Lanka | new design of the lighthouse by Alexander Gordon and Sir James Nicholas Douglass was put forward in 1867 and approved. The executive engineer in charge was William Douglass, brother of James. Two steam vessels were used, each capable of carrying 120 tonnes of stone and each equipped with lifting gear, as each block wei... | [] |
Great Basses Reef Lighthouse | [
[
"Great Basses Reef Lighthouse",
"instance of",
"Lighthouse"
]
] | lighthouse in Sri Lanka | involved. It withstood the force of the 2004 tsunami with only modest damage; it was repaired with assistance from the UK lighthouse authorities Trinity House and The Northern Lighthouse Board. The reef is the site of the Great Basses wreck, an early 18th-century wreck of an Indian ship, carrying a treasure of silver r... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"place of birth",
"Rotherhithe"
],
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Actor"
],
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Singer"
],
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Comedian"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | Walter William Bygraves (16 October 1922 – 31 August 2012), best known by the stage name Max Bygraves, was an English comedian, singer, actor and variety performer. He appeared on his own television shows, sometimes performing comedy sketches between songs. He made twenty Royal Variety Performance appearances and prese... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"place of birth",
"Rotherhithe"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | boxer, known as Battling Tom Smith, and a casual dockworker. Brought up Catholic, he attended St Joseph's School, Paradise Street, Rotherhithe, and sang with his school choir at Westminster Cathedral. He left school at 14, working at the Savoy Hotel in London as a pageboy, but was sacked for being too tall. He later pu... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"military branch",
"Royal Air Force"
],
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Comedian"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | 233 High Holborn before serving as a fitter in the Royal Air Force in the Second World War and working as a carpenter. He changed his name to Max Bygraves in honour of comedian Max Miller. Career After the end of the war, Bygraves worked on building sites, while entertaining in pubs in the evenings. He toured in a vari... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Actor"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | good, what does it mean?'... The song was absolutely perfect for Max and its whole secret was 'What the hell does it mean?" He also occasionally worked as an actor, appearing in British films including Bless 'Em All (1948) and Tom Brown's Schooldays (1951). He portrayed the title character in the 1956 film Charley Moon... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"occupation",
"Comedian"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | and 1960s, Bygraves appeared as a guest on several television variety programmes, both in the UK and United States. These included Ed Sullivan, Jack Benny and Jackie Gleason, in America. He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1961 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews while rehearsing his new show, Do Re Mi at Lo... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"record label",
"Pye Records"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | Bob Monkhouse. He would later be succeeded as host in 1987 by Les Dennis. From 1972, Bygraves recorded a series of albums, Sing Along With Max (later Singalongamax), in which he sang medleys of familiar songs aimed at an older audience. The albums, for Pye Records, sold millions of copies and led to spinoff shows and m... | [] |
Max Bygraves | [
[
"Max Bygraves",
"medical condition",
"Alzheimer's disease"
],
[
"Max Bygraves",
"cause of death",
"Alzheimer's disease"
]
] | Singer, comedian, actor (1922-2012) | flown by his grandson Michael became trapped beneath the edge of the cliff. He suffered friction burns on his hands and was in shock when police and firefighters helped him to safety. In 1999, Bygraves underwent treatment for an ear disorder, having cancelled a number of performances on his doctor's advice. He and Blos... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"occupation",
"Teacher"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | Mary Morris Knibb, MBE (28 February 1886 – 21 September 1964) was a Jamaican teacher, social reformer and philanthropist. She founded the Morris Knibb Preparatory School and donated a building which is used as the headquarters of the Moravian Church in Jamaica as well as land for construction of a community center. Mor... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"occupation",
"Teacher"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | Carmel, Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica. In 1893, Morris began teaching as an assistant teacher at the Moravian Day School, in the customary pupil-teacher system of recruitment. Throughout the Caribbean prior to the 1950s, the most promising primary students, began working as assistant teachers to offset the cost of their... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | Alumni Students' Association. Career Between 1907 and 1917, Morris taught at the St. George Girls' School and then taught for almost two years at the Central Branch School. She then became the headmistress of the Wesley School, where she remained until 1928. In 1931, the now married Morris, opened her own school, the M... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | geography, history, Latin, math, reading, spelling, and writing, earning the school the reputation as "one of the leading preparatory schools in the nation". In 1936 or 1937, she co-founded, along with Amy Bailey, Eulalie Domingo and Edith Dalton James, the Jamaica Women’s Liberal Club (LC). The organization was mostly... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | political levels. One of the social protections for which Morris Knibb advocated was marriage. In part because of morality concerns, but in part because common-law arrangements did not protect children adequately, she favored even holding mass weddings so that the costs of the ceremony would be reduced and participatio... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | May Farquharson, Dr. Jai Lal Varma, and Dr. Pengelley and others in founding the Save the Children Fund in 1938. Morris Knibb was one of the leaders in the fight for Jamaican suffrage and as it had been a long-practiced method for women to gain a foothold and show their readiness to vote, she was in favor of women runn... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | serve as an elected official in Jamaica. Her work on the council focused on education and social services. She advocated for creation of after school programs, night schools, and trade education, utilizing existing school and government buildings for the purpose. She donated property located at 15 Byrnes Street to the ... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"place of death",
"Saint Andrew Parish, Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | first woman to contest a general election in Jamaica. Though she didn't win, she was undaunted, becoming one of the first women sworn in as Justice of the Peace in 1945 and continuing to serve as a councilwoman through the early 1950s. In 1953, she was honored with the Order of the British Empire for her years of socia... | [] |
Mary Morris Knibb | [
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"country of citizenship",
"Jamaica"
],
[
"Mary Morris Knibb",
"family name",
"Knibb"
]
] | Jamaican teacher activist and politician | donated the building which is used as the headquarters of the Moravian Church, 3 Hector Street, Kingston, Jamaica, to the organization. Generations of students have been educated at the Morris Knibb Preparatory School, including many prominent Jamaicans. In 1984, the school was relocated, from its original location nex... | [] |
Electoral Commission of Ghana | [
[
"Electoral Commission of Ghana",
"headquarters location",
"Accra"
]
] | electoral Commission | establish new standards and practices for African election commissionswhich was Held in Accra was titled Colloquium on African Elections: Best Practices and Cross-Sectorial Collaboration. The conference was organized by a number of international election reform organizations including the National Democratic Institute,... | [] |
Ernst von Wolzogen | [
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"occupation",
"Writer"
],
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"given name",
"Ernst"
],
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"family name",
"Wolzogen"
]
] | German writer | Ernst von Wolzogen (23 April 1855 – 30 August 1934) was a cultural critic, a writer and a founder of Cabaret in Germany. Biography Wolzogen came from a noble Austrian family; he studied Literature, Philosophy, and the history of art in Strasbourg and Leipzig. In 1882, he went to Berlin where he worked as an editor at a... | [] |
Ernst von Wolzogen | [
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"occupation",
"Author"
],
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"family name",
"Wolzogen"
]
] | German writer | term Übermensch. He wrote social satires for Überbrettl. After its closure in 1905, he returned to Darmstadt. Wolzogen produced a great many works of humorous fiction. Some of his works include Die Kinder der Exzellenz (1888); Das Lumpengesindel (1892); Ein unbeschriebenes Blatt (1896); Der Kraft-Mayr, 2 vols.(1897); D... | [] |
Ernst von Wolzogen | [
[
"Ernst von Wolzogen",
"place of birth",
"Wrocław"
]
] | German writer | in der Christnacht 1885 Wilkie Collins: Ein Biographisch-Kritischer Versuch, Biography 1886 Heiteres und Weiteres, Poetry 1887 Thüringer Roman 1888 Die Kinder der Excellenz, Novel 1890 Die tolle Komteß, Novel 1890 Er photographiert, Comedy 1892 Das Lumpengesindel, Tragic comedy 1894 Das gute Krokodil und andere Geschic... | [] |
Black Moth Super Rainbow | [
[
"Black Moth Super Rainbow",
"location of formation",
"Pittsburgh"
]
] | American experimental electronic band | Black Moth Super Rainbow (occasionally abbreviated as BMSR) is an American experimental electronic band from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US. The project is currently composed of frontman, singer, and songwriter Tobacco whose vocals are altered via a vocoder, synth players The Seven Fields of Aphelion and Pony Diver, drum... | [] |
Randy Falco | [
[
"Randy Falco",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American businessman | with Lionsgate–all in 2016[46]. After the acquisitions, Univisión generates over 100 million monthly unique visitors, one of the largest market shares for media outlets in the United States. After launching Story House, an independent production unit owned by UCI, its first TV series about cartel kingpin "El Chapo" Net... | [] |
Randy Falco | [
[
"Randy Falco",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American businessman | network had been beaten during sweeps. Advocacy As Univision CEO, Falco undertook a number of advocacy initiatives on behalf of U.S. Hispanics. In August 2012, noting that “more than 20 million Hispanics could play a critical role in electing the new President of the United States,” Falco called upon the Commission on ... | [] |
Randy Falco | [
[
"Randy Falco",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
]
] | American businessman | the networks of Univision enabled the American Red Cross to raise more than $3 million to assist the survivors and victims of the Mexican earthquakes and Hurricane Maria, as well as ongoing support for communities impacted by Hurricanes Irma and Harvey. In addition, Univision employees traveled to Puerto Rico to delive... | [] |
Randy Falco | [
[
"Randy Falco",
"given name",
"Randy"
]
] | American businessman | following his letter to the U.S. president and legislative leaders, and was awarded the “champion award” by KIND in 2015. The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences also recognized Falco for his leadership in the industry with the Board of Trustees’ Award, and Cablefax included Randy in its Greatest Hits of for... | [] |
Randy Falco | [
[
"Randy Falco",
"place of birth",
"The Bronx"
],
[
"Randy Falco",
"given name",
"Randy"
]
] | American businessman | honoree by the National MS Society; inducted into the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame; and was also honored by Ballet Hispanico with its Civic Inspiration Award. Personal life Falco, a native of the Bronx, NY, attended Iona College, where he received his Bachelor of Business Administration in finance in 1975 and his ... | [] |
Intercessors of the Lamb | [
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Nebraska"
],
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"instance of",
"Organization"
]
] | organization | The Hermit Intercessors of the Lamb was a Roman Catholic Association of priests, brothers, nuns, and lay people, based in Nebraska, United States. The 1998 canonical organization was suppressed by Omaha Archbishop George Joseph Lucas in 2010 and no longer exists. The 1980 legal organization, Intercessors of the Lamb, I... | [] |
Intercessors of the Lamb | [
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Nebraska"
],
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"instance of",
"Organization"
]
] | organization | the society's recognition as an Institute of Consecrated Life. A separate legal entity, Intercessors of the Lamb, Inc., was incorporated in 1980 with the full permission of Archbishop Sheehan. The corporation manages the business affairs of the community and received its tax-exempt status in 1980. It continues today as... | [] |
Intercessors of the Lamb | [
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"instance of",
"Organization"
]
] | organization | an Omaha priest, Fr. Gregory Baxter as temporary trustee of the Association. Arbp. Lucas wished to bring the organization into conformity with Catholic canon law. Because most of the directors of the civil Board refused to allow the reforms, Lucas decreed the suppression of Hermit Association of the Intercessors of the... | [] |
Intercessors of the Lamb | [
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Nebraska"
]
] | organization | the former campus of Dana College in Blair, Nebraska, as "the Intercessor Relief Community." Several other members decided to leave religious life and by 2012, the Relief community consisted of nine sisters. The priests went back into various parishes and the brothers left the group. A new community endorsed by the Arc... | [] |
Intercessors of the Lamb | [
[
"Intercessors of the Lamb",
"instance of",
"Organization"
]
] | organization | of the Lamb, Inc. is a Christian organization dedicated to form contemplatives, nationally and internationally, through individualized and group retreats, spiritual direction, conferences, workshops, prayer seminars, and communal intercessory prayer ministry. Intercessors of the Lamb, Inc. also offers literature, broch... | [] |
Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet | [
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"noble title",
"Baronet"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Michael"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Charles"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"occupation",
"Socialite"
],
[... | British baronet | Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Baronet (3 May 1907– 3 March 1980) was a British socialite who was Lord Lieutenant first of Caernarvonshire and then of Gwynedd. Family Duff was the only son of Sir Robert George Vivian Duff, 2nd Baronet, of Vaynol (d.1914), and his wife, Lady Juliet Lowther (1881-1965), only... | [
"Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt.",
"Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt."
] |
Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet | [
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Michael"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"honorific prefix",
"Sir"
]
] | British baronet | Vaynol New Hall, which had been built in 1800. The medieval Vaynol Old Hall, also on the estate, was occupied by the farm manager and later the estate manager. In 1928, Sir Michael assumed the additional surname of Assheton-Smith, only to renounce it in 1945. He served as High Sheriff of Anglesey for 1950. He then serv... | [
"Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt.",
"Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt."
] |
Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet | [
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Michael"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Charles"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"honorific prefix",
"Sir"
]
] | British baronet | he bumped into the Queen herself in a neighbour's hall. He also wrote a light novel, The Power Of A Parasol. Marriages Sir Michael Duff-Assheton-Smith, as he then was, married first, on 5 March 1935, Hon Millicent Joan Marjoribanks (born 1906), daughter of the 3rd and last Baron Tweedmouth. They divorced in July 1936, ... | [
"Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt.",
"Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt."
] |
Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet | [
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Charles"
]
] | British baronet | eldest daughter of the Henry Manners, 8th Duke of Rutland. They adopted a son, Charles David Duff (b. 1950), who became a theatre historian. A documentary screened on BBC Two Wales in 2005 ('Faenol: Secrets Behind the Wall') featured Charles Duff discussing his childhood, the bisexuality of his adoptive parents, their ... | [
"Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt.",
"Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt."
] |
Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet | [
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Michael"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"given name",
"Charles"
],
[
"Sir Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"honorific prefix",
"Sir"
]
] | British baronet | of great conviviality and energy and joy." However, by the time Charles was in his teens, Sir Michael had come to believe that his second marriage and the adoption of his son had been grave errors, and according to Charles Duff, "he started to demonise both my mother and myself." Although appearances were maintained, n... | [
"Sir Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt.",
"Michael Duff, 3rd Baronet",
"Charles Michael Robert Vivian Duff, 3rd Bt."
] |
Trylon and Perisphere | [
[
"Trylon and Perisphere",
"significant event",
"1939 New York World's Fair"
]
] | World's Fair structure | The Trylon and Perisphere were two monumental modernistic structures designed by architects Wallace Harrison and J. Andre Fouilhoux that were together known as the Theme Center of the 1939 New York World's Fair. The Perisphere was a tremendous sphere, 180 feet in diameter, connected to the spire-shaped Trylon by what w... | [] |
Trylon and Perisphere | [
[
"Trylon and Perisphere",
"country",
"United States"
]
] | World's Fair structure | framing and plaster board facades. Both buildings were subsequently razed and scrapped after the closing of the fair, their materials to be used in World War II armaments. Legacy The Trylon and Perisphere became the central symbol of the 1939 World's Fair, its image reproduced by the millions on a wide range of promoti... | [] |
Longniddry | [
[
"Longniddry",
"instance of",
"Village"
],
[
"Longniddry",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"East Lothian"
]
] | village in East Lothian, Scotland, UK | Longniddry (, ) is a village in East Lothian, Scotland, with a population of 2,613 (2001 census). The Scottish Women's Rural Institute was founded here in 1917. Features Longniddry is primarily a dormitory village for commuters, with good transport links by road and rail (Longniddry railway station is on the North Berw... | [] |
Longniddry | [
[
"Longniddry",
"instance of",
"Village"
],
[
"Longniddry",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"East Lothian"
]
] | village in East Lothian, Scotland, UK | 1961. Like many coastal towns in East Lothian, Longniddry has a sandy beach beside the golf course. This stretch of local coastline is lined with dunes and known as Longniddry Bents. History The 18th century Gosford House, which is the seat of the Earl of Wemyss and March, stands on the eastern edge of the village. In ... | [] |
Longniddry | [
[
"Longniddry",
"instance of",
"Village"
],
[
"Longniddry",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"East Lothian"
]
] | village in East Lothian, Scotland, UK | Tuscany, Italy. Notable people John Knox, main figure in the Scottish Reformation and disciple of John Calvin was tutor to the sons of the Douglas family who lived at the west side of the village. Hugh MacDiarmid, the Scottish poet, lived in Longniddry for a short while. James Bond actor Pierce Brosnan lived in Longnid... | [] |
Xing Yong | [
[
"Xing Yong",
"place of birth",
"Xiong County"
]
] | Han dynasty and Three Kingdoms official | Xing Yong (died 223), courtesy name Zi'ang, was a government official of the state of Cao Wei during the Three Kingdoms period of China. He previously served under the warlord Cao Cao in the late Eastern Han dynasty. Early life Xing Yong was from Mo County (鄚縣), Hejian Commandery (河間郡), which is located south of presen... | [] |
Zoran Njeguš | [
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"occupation",
"Football player"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"place of birth",
"Belgrade"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"country of citizenship",
"Serbia"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"given name",
"Zoran"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"member of sports team",... | Serbian footballer and manager | Zoran Njeguš (Serbian Cyrillic: Зоран Његуш; born 25 June 1973) is a Serbian retired professional football player and a former manager. Over the course of his career, he played for Sloboda Užice, Red Star Belgrade, Atlético Madrid, and Sevilla. He played for Yugoslavia's national football team seven times, although his... | [] |
Zoran Njeguš | [
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"place of birth",
"Belgrade"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"member of sports team",
"Red Star Belgrade"
],
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"member of sports team",
"Atlético Madrid"
]
] | Serbian footballer and manager | Red Star's 1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup campaign up to their elimination against Barcelona in the second round. Atlético Madrid On 8 May 1998, Njeguš joined Spanish club Atlético Madrid in a 7.5 million DM transfer from Red Star Belgrade. He was coach Arrigo Sacchi's first pick of that year's summer transfer window. H... | [] |
Zoran Njeguš | [
[
"Zoran Njeguš",
"sport",
"Association football"
]
] | Serbian footballer and manager | Branko Brnović as his defensive midfield picks, with the latter being called up to the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Although Njeguš was not called up for that World Cup, he started under coach Milan "Bard" Živadinović in Yugoslavia's first post-World Cup friendly at the Castelão in front of approximately 70,000 people against ... | [] |
Sarah Chayes | [
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"educated at",
"Harvard University"
],
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"educated at",
"Phillips Academy"
],
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"father",
"Abram Chayes"
],
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"mother",
"Antonia Handler Chayes"
]
] | American journalist | Sarah Chayes is a former senior associate in the Democracy and Rule of Law Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, leaving in order to pursue a new writing project. A former award-winning reporter for National Public Radio, she also served as special advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Sta... | [] |
Sarah Chayes | [
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"member of",
"Peace Corps"
]
] | American journalist | magna cum laude. She was awarded the Radcliffe College History Prize. She then served in the Peace Corps in Morocco, returning to Harvard to earn a master's degree in History, specializing in the Medieval Islamic period. Besides English, she speaks Pashto, French, and Arabic. Career Chayes began her reporting career fr... | [] |
Sarah Chayes | [
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"educated at",
"Harvard University"
],
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"educated at",
"Phillips Academy"
],
[
"Sarah Chayes",
"member of",
"Peace Corps"
]
] | American journalist | 8, 2009 Sarah Chayes interview from Democracy Now!, October 10, 2006 Sarah Chayes interview by Rachel Maddow on MSNBC, June 29, 2009 Sarah Chayes interview by Jane Lindholm, Vermont Public Radio, November 16, 2009 Sarah Chayes interview by Leonard Lopate on WNYC, April 12, 2010 Sarah Chayes interview by Rachel Maddow o... | [] |
Shri Hanuman Chalisa | [
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"instance of",
"Film"
],
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"instance of",
"Short film"
],
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"director",
"Charuvi Agrawal"
]
] | 2013 film by Charuvi Agrawal | Shri Hanuman Chalisa is a 2013 Indian computer animated short film rendition of Hanuman Chalisa produced by Charuvi Design Labs and directed by Charuvi Agrawal. It is based on Hanuman Chalisa originally composed by poet Tulsidas. It won the Best Animation Film award the Jaipur Film Fest. The film is a visual depiction ... | [] |
Shri Hanuman Chalisa | [
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 2013 film by Charuvi Agrawal | film Shri Hanuman Chalisa illustrates the 40 verses composed by Tulsidas in 3D format. It consists of scenes about the God Hanuman of Hindu mythology. It contains narration and stylised images in 3D digital format, interpreting the Chalisa in a new medium, while retaining the original story. The film includes a musical... | [] |
Shri Hanuman Chalisa | [
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"country of origin",
"India"
],
[
"Shri Hanuman Chalisa",
"instance of",
"Film"
]
] | 2013 film by Charuvi Agrawal | Tiwari, Arijit Singh,Kunal Ganjawala, Siddharth Mahadevan Screenings Shri Hanuman Chalisa was screened at various festivals around the world, including the SIGGRAPH Computer Animation Festival in 2011. and the Palm Springs International ShortFest, the Edinburgh International Film Festival, the Anima Mundi, the Toronto ... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"place of birth",
"Warsaw"
],
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"occupation",
"Screenwriter"
],
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"educated at",
"Jagiellonian University"
],
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"given name",
"Krzysztof"
],
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi"... | Polish producer and film director | Krzysztof Zanussi (born 17 June 1939) is a Polish film and theatre director, producer and screenwriter. He is a professor of European film at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland where he conducts a summer workshop. He is also a professor at the Krzysztof Kieślowski Film School of the University of Sil... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"given name",
"Krzysztof"
]
] | Polish producer and film director | in Łódź (1967). He is a director of the Polish Film Studio TOR and has received several prizes and awards, including the David di Donatello Prize of the Accademia del Cinema Italiano, the Cavalier's Cross of the Polonia Restituta Order, and the Cavalier de L'Ordre des Sciences et Lettres. Krzysztof Zanussi has written ... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"country of citizenship",
"Poland"
]
] | Polish producer and film director | Factor (1980) () received the Jury Prize at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. During the 1980s, he spent much of his time in the West. Among the films that he made during this time was a film entitled From A Far Country: Pope John Paul II (1981) about the life of Karol Wojtyła in the context of the complicated history of ... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"country of citizenship",
"Poland"
]
] | Polish producer and film director | film The Supplement was entered into the 24th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the FIPRESCI Special Mention. Zanussi has described his 1996 film, At Full Gallop, as his most autobiographical work. It follows the director through several years of his boyhood in Poland under post-World War II Communism. Za... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"country of citizenship",
"Poland"
]
] | Polish producer and film director | inter-religious European festivals costining of Terni Film Festival in Italy, Sacrofilm festival of Zamosc in Poland and Journées Cinema et Réconciliation of Notre Dame de La Salette in France. Selected filmography (Struktura kryształu, 1969) Family Life (Życie rodzinne, 1971) (Za ścianą, 1971, TV film) The Illuminatio... | [] |
Krzysztof Zanussi | [
[
"Krzysztof Zanussi",
"given name",
"Krzysztof"
]
] | Polish producer and film director | film) The Young Magician (1987) (1988) Inventory (1989) (1991, TV series) (1991) (1992, TV film) (1992) Weekend Stories (1996) At Full Gallop (1996) (1997) Life as a Fatal Sexually Transmitted Disease (2000) The Supplement (2001) Persona Non Grata (2005) Black Sun (2007) And a Warm Heart (2008) Jacquinot: A Forgotten H... | [] |
Central School Campus | [
[
"Central School Campus",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Missouri"
],
[
"Central School Campus",
"instance of",
"Building"
]
] | building in Missouri, United States | Central School Campus, also known as Central School and DeSoto High School, is a historic school complex located at De Soto, Jefferson County, Missouri. The Central School was built about 1882, and remodeled into its current form in 1950. It is a 2 1/2- to 3-story rectangular brick building. The DeSoto High School was ... | [] |
National Committee for a Free Germany | [
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"instance of",
"Organization"
],
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"country",
"Germany"
]
] | German anti-Nazi organization operating in the Soviet Union during World War II | The National Committee for a Free Germany (, or NKFD) was a German anti-Nazi organization that operated in the Soviet Union during World War II. History The rise of the Nazi Party to power in Germany in 1933 led to the outlawing of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and persecutions of its members, many of whom fled ... | [
"NKFD"
] |
National Committee for a Free Germany | [
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"instance of",
"Organization"
],
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"country",
"Germany"
]
] | German anti-Nazi organization operating in the Soviet Union during World War II | of them still believed in the final victory of the Wehrmacht. With the German defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad, the number of German POWs rose and their belief in a victorious Germany was damaged, hence they were more open to the idea of a membership in an anti-Nazi organization. At the beginning of June 1943, Alfred... | [
"NKFD"
] |
National Committee for a Free Germany | [
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"instance of",
"Organization"
],
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"country",
"Germany"
]
] | German anti-Nazi organization operating in the Soviet Union during World War II | Carl von Clausewitz and Graf Yorck were depicted as exemplary Germans. The National Committee for a Free Germany (NKFD) was founded in Krasnogorsk, near Moscow on 12 July 1943; its president was the exiled German communist writer Erich Weinert, with his deputies Lieutenant Heinrich Graf von Einsiedel and Major Karl Het... | [
"NKFD"
] |
National Committee for a Free Germany | [
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"country",
"Germany"
]
] | German anti-Nazi organization operating in the Soviet Union during World War II | the Soviet Union and consisted partly of communists, it used conservative symbols and ideology. For example, the old flag colors of Imperial Germany (black, white and red) were used instead of the Weimar German (black, red and gold), as they were expected to be more popular among officers and soldiers of the conservati... | [
"NKFD"
] |
National Committee for a Free Germany | [
[
"National Committee for a Free Germany",
"country",
"Germany"
]
] | German anti-Nazi organization operating in the Soviet Union during World War II | and executed. As the Red Army entered Germany, some NKFD members were appointed as officials in the local government of the Soviet occupation zone. Publications Freies Deutschland was the weekly newspaper of the NKFD, published from 1943 to 1945. Post-War After the defeat of Nazi Germany, NKFD members mostly returned t... | [
"NKFD"
] |
Weird Loners | [
[
"Weird Loners",
"instance of",
"Television series"
]
] | television series | Weird Loners is an American comedy television series created by Michael J. Weithorn. The 6-episode first season was ordered straight-to-series by the Fox network in 2014. The series is executive produced by Weithorn and Jake Kasdan. The series premiered on March 31, 2015. On May 11, 2015, Fox canceled Weird Loners afte... | [] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"given name",
"Charles"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | Charles Grice "Lefty" Driesell (born December 25, 1931) is an American retired college basketball coach. He was the first coach to win more than 100 games at four different NCAA Division I schools, Driesell led the programs of Davidson College, the University of Maryland, James Madison University, and Georgia State Uni... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"place of birth",
"Norfolk, Virginia"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"educated at",
"Duke University"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"educated at",
"Granby High School"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | played college basketball at Duke University. Early life Driesell was born on December 25, 1931 in Norfolk, Virginia to Frank Driesell, a jeweler who had emigrated from Germany. In the fourth grade, Driesell received the nickname "Lefty" for his left handedness. He attended Granby High School and quickly became a star ... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | University, where he played center on the basketball team under head coach Harold Bradley. Driesell graduated with a bachelor's degree in education in 1954. Coaching career After college in 1954, Driesell took an office job with Ford Motor Company. Driesell also found time to renew his playing career by joining the Vir... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | him its junior varsity position for both football and basketball. After convincing his wife he could offset a significant pay cut by also selling World Book Encyclopedias part-time, he accepted the job and produced back-to-back unbeaten football teams and a city basketball champion in his first two years. Driesell was ... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | college basketball program in the middle of a still unrivaled dynasty. While Driesell fell short of that overreaching goal, he was successful in leading the Terrapins to eight NCAA Tournament appearances, a National Invitation Tournament (NIT) championship, two Atlantic Coast Conference regular season championships, an... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | 1974, he signed a can't miss prospect sure to dominate college basketball, 6' 10" center Moses Malone. Instead, Malone opted to join the ABA Utah Stars, becoming the first modern era player to proceed directly from high school into professional basketball; by the time he retired, he'd become a 16-time ABA and NBA All-S... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | Boston Celtics as potentially as great or greater than fellow ACC legend at rival University of North Carolina Michael Jordan, then emerging as an NBA sensation. He died tragically the night of his selection. At Maryland, Driesell began the now nationwide tradition of Midnight Madness. According to longstanding NCAA ru... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | Driesell held a one-mile run at the track around Byrd Stadium, where a crowd of 1,000 fans had gathered after learning of the unorthodox practice session. The event soon became a tradition to build excitement for the basketball team's upcoming season. Midnight Madness has been adopted by many national programs such as ... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | kind of hero. All we did was try to get the kids out. It was just lucky that we were fishing right in front of the houses." For these actions, Driesell was awarded the NCAA Award of Valor. In the 1974 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament, Maryland was defeated by North Carolina State University in overtime 103-100, eliminat... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | a cocaine-induced heart attack. A subsequent investigation revealed that Bias had exhausted all his athletic eligibility yet was still 21 credits short of a degree. On October 29, Driesell resigned as head coach and took a position as an assistant athletic director. He also worked as a television analyst during college... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | Association regular season championships, one tournament championship, and an appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Georgia State Driesell then moved to Georgia State, which he led to four Atlantic Sun Conference regular season championships and one tournament championship in six years. He retired from coaching on January... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | NCAA Award of Valor for helping save lives from a July 12, 1973 structure fire. In 1995, Driesell was inducted into the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. On April 2, 2007, Driesell was inducted as a member of the second class of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame. The University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fa... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | 2011, Driesell was inducted into the Southern Conference Hall of Fame. In 2003, Georgia State University dedicated their basketball court to Driesell. On April 2, 2010, the first annual Lefty Driesell Award for the best defensive player in NCAA Division I basketball was bestowed upon its first recipient, Jarvis Varnado... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"educated at",
"Duke University"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | support from contemporaries. In 2018, Driesell was selected for induction into the Hall of Fame. He was formally inducted on September 7, 2018. Personal life While a student at Duke University, Driesell eloped with his wife, Joyce on December 14, 1952. The two had met while in the ninth and eighth grades, respectively.... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Lefty Driesell | [
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"member of sports team",
"Duke Blue Devils men's basketball"
],
[
"Lefty Driesell",
"sport",
"Basketball"
]
] | American basketball player and coach | coaching record College See also List of college men's basketball coaches with 600 wins References External links Georgia State bio (archived from 2002) College playing statistics Category:1931 births Category:Living people Category:American men's basketball players Category:American people of German descent Category:A... | [
"Charles Grice Driesell"
] |
Koo Hsien-jung | [
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"country of citizenship",
"Taiwan"
],
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"country of citizenship",
"Japan"
],
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"occupation",
"Politician"
]
] | Japanese politician (1866-1937) | Koo Hsien-jung (; Romaji: Ko Ken’ei; 2 February 1866 – 9 December 1937) was a Taiwanese businessman and politician who enjoyed strong links to the colonial administration of Taiwan under Japanese rule. He founded the Koos Group of companies, the largest business group in Taiwan. Koo was a businessman at the time of the... | [
"Gu Xianrong"
] |
Koo Hsien-jung | [
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"country of citizenship",
"Taiwan"
],
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"country of citizenship",
"Japan"
],
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"child",
"Koo Kwang-ming"
],
[
"Koo Hsien-jung",
"child",
"Koo Chen-fu"
]
] | Japanese politician (1866-1937) | him both to pursue a successful political career (he became the first Taiwanese to be appointed by the emperor to the House of Peers of Japan, in 1934) and to build a collection of businesses that formed the nucleus of today's Koos Group of companies. Koo had four concubines, eight sons and four daughters. His fifth so... | [
"Gu Xianrong"
] |
Xylocopa combusta | [
[
"Xylocopa combusta",
"taxon rank",
"Species"
],
[
"Xylocopa combusta",
"parent taxon",
"Carpenter bee"
]
] | species of insect | Xylocopa combusta is a species of carpenter bee. Description Xylocopa combusta has a black body with black hair on the head and the thorax. Bristles on the pygidial area are reddish. Distribution This species can be found in Sierra Leone, Equatorial Guinea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia, Ethiopia, Tanzania,... | [] |
Son cubano | [
[
"Son cubano",
"instance of",
"Music genre"
]
] | style of dance and music originating in Cuba | Cuba, and also became a second home for trendy and influential bands from New York City. The son experienced a period of transformation from 1925 to 1928, when it evolved from a marginal genre of music to perhaps the most popular type of music in Cuba. A turning point that made this transformation possible occurred whe... | [
"Son Cubano"
] |
Son cubano | [
[
"Son cubano",
"instance of",
"Music genre"
]
] | style of dance and music originating in Cuba | contribution of son is its influence on present day Latin music. Son is specifically considered to be the foundation on which salsa was created. Although the "classic son" continues to be a very important musical foundation for all kinds of Latin music, it is no longer a popular music genre in Cuba. Younger generations... | [
"Son Cubano"
] |
Calday Grange Grammar School | [
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"instance of",
"Grammar school"
],
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"location",
"West Kirby"
]
] | school in Wirral, UK | Calday Grange Grammar School (abbreviated to CGGS; also known as Calday, Calday Grange) is a non-denominational selective state-funded grammar school, founded in 1636, situated on Caldy Hill in the town of West Kirby on the Wirral peninsula, England. The school admits boys from age 11 to 18, and since 1985 girls for th... | [] |
Calday Grange Grammar School | [
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"instance of",
"Grammar school"
]
] | school in Wirral, UK | Cheshire areas. The main site at the top of Caldy Hill is occupied by the school buildings, sports cages and field, with a larger field located over Grammar School Lane. A mile southeast of the main school buildings, along Column Road/Telegraph Road, are the Glasspool Fields Sports Facility including 3 rugby pitches, a... | [] |
Calday Grange Grammar School | [
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"instance of",
"Grammar school"
]
] | school in Wirral, UK | as a free grammar school on the present site by local landowner William Glegg. From when it started with 12 pupils, the school has grown into an establishment of over 1300 students – which includes over 400 male and female students in the Sixth Form. Calday Grange Grammar School became a trust school on 1 January 2009,... | [] |
Calday Grange Grammar School | [
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"instance of",
"Grammar school"
],
[
"Calday Grange Grammar School",
"inception",
"2013"
]
] | school in Wirral, UK | Grammar School was the first Wirral School to convert to Trust Status. In September 2011, the school informed parents that "The School has received notification from Companies House that the Calday Grange Trust Company has been dissolved. This has been notified to the Governing Body who contacted Wirral Local Authority... | [] |
Bidorpitia columna | [
[
"Bidorpitia columna",
"taxon rank",
"Species"
],
[
"Bidorpitia columna",
"parent taxon",
"Bidorpitia"
]
] | species of insect | Bidorpitia columna is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Loja Province, Ecuador. The wingspan is about 14 mm for males and 27 mm for females. The ground colour of the forewings is pale ferruginous to the middle and dark brownish ferruginous in the posterior are, with refractive suffusions and r... | [] |
Amarjeet Kushwaha | [
[
"Amarjeet Kushwaha",
"occupation",
"Politician"
]
] | Indian Politician | Amarjeet Kushwaha (alternatively Amarjit Kushwaha) is an Indian activist, lawyer and politician. He is a leader in the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation. He was the national president of the Revolutionary Youth Association in India. Personal life and education Amarjeet Kushwaha was brought up in th... | [] |
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