input
stringlengths 365
170k
| output
stringlengths 85
28.4k
|
---|---|
### User:
of Commerce degree from Uganda's Makerere University, a Master of Arts in International Studies from the University of Nairobi in Kenya and a Master of Business Administration from the University of London. Senior command Karake was appointed deputy commander of the African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, Sudan in August 2007, and in January 2008 became deputy of the UN mission in Darfur. He left this command in April 2009. In February 2008 a Spanish judge indicted Karake, alleging that when he was Rwanda's intelligence chief between 1994 and 1997 he was responsible for a series of political assassinations andmassacres. Human Rights Watch claimed that forces under his command had killed civilians in 2000 while fighting Ugandan troops in the Congolese town of Kisangani. The United Nations was embarrassed by the allegations of earlier human rights abuses, and agreed to extend Karake's tenure beyond its expiry in October 2008 only after pressure from the United States and the United Kingdom, and when Rwandan President Paul Kagame threatened to withdraw all Rwandan troops from Darfur if Karake was fired. In April 2010 President Kagame announced a shake-up of the military command, and a few days later ordered the arrests of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", {"description":'Rwandan general'}], ["University of London", {}], ["Rwanda", {}], ["Human", {}]]
Relations:[["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", "educated at", "University of London"], ["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", "country of citizenship", "Rwanda"], ["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", "place of birth", "Rwanda"], ["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", "allegiance", "Rwanda"], ["Emmanuel Karenzi Karake", "instance of", "Human"]] |
### User:
Malá Strana (Czech for "Little Side (of the River)", ) or more formally Menší Město pražské () is a district of the city of Prague, Czech Republic, and one of its most historic neighbourhoods. In the Middle Ages, it was a dominant center of the ethnic German (and since 16th century also Italian) citizens of Prague. It also housed many noble palaces while the right-bank towns were comparatively more bourgeois and more Bohemian Czech. Name The name Malá Strana translated into English literally means "Little Side", though it is frequently referred to as "Lesser Town", "Lesser Quarter", or "Lesser Side".This name derives from its position on the left (west) bank of the river Vltava, on the slopes just below the Prague Castle, in opposition to the larger towns of Prague on the right bank, to which it is conjoined by the Charles Bridge. The town was originally called the New Town beneath the Prague Castle () after 1257 when it was founded. After Charles IV founded the New Town of Prague in 1348, the town was renamed the Lesser Town of Prague (). In the 17th century the unofficial name Little Quarter () was first used. History Malá Strana
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Malá Strana", {"description":'neighborhood of Prague', "alias":['Mala Strana', 'Lesser Town']}], ["Czech Republic", {}], ["Vltava", {}]]
Relations:[["Malá Strana", "country", "Czech Republic"], ["Malá Strana", "located in or next to body of water", "Vltava"]] |
### User:
The Son Seals Blues Band is the 1973 debut album by Son Seals, released by Alligator Records. It was produced by Son Seals and Bruce Iglauer and released on CD in 1993. Track listing "Mother-InLaw Blues" – 3:12 "Sitting At My Window" – 4:30 "Look Now, Baby" – 3:24 "Your Love Is Like Cancer" – 4:30 "All Your Love" – 3:34 "Cotton Picking Blues" – 4:38 "Hot Sauce" – 3:04 "How Could She Leave Me" – 3:39 "Going Home Tomorrow" – 3:37 "Now That I'm Down" – 5:58 References Category:1973 debut albums Category:albums produced by Bruce Iglauer Category:Alligator Records albums
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Son Seals Blues Band", {"description":'album by Son Seals'}], ["Album", {}], ["Alligator Records", {}], ["1973", {}], ["Son Seals", {}]]
Relations:[["The Son Seals Blues Band", "instance of", "Album"], ["The Son Seals Blues Band", "record label", "Alligator Records"], ["The Son Seals Blues Band", "publication date", "1973"], ["The Son Seals Blues Band", "performer", "Son Seals"]] |
### User:
Rheinbreitbach is a municipality in the district of Neuwied, in north of Rhineland-Palatinate, bordering North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany. Administratively it belongs to the municipality (Verbandsgemeinde) of Unkel. The town is an officially recognized Fremdenverkehrsort (touristic locality). Geography Rheinbreitbach is located at the north end of the Middle Rhine and at the southern edge of the Siebengebirge. As a whole it is part of the Rhine Westerwald Volcanic Ridge (Rheinwesterwälder Vulkanrücken). The dimensions of its territory are approximately 7 (east–west) by 2 kilometres, its highest point is 375 m, near the summit of the Asberg. Most of the 6,58 km2 area
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Rheinbreitbach", {"description":'municipality in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany'}], ["Germany", {}]]
Relations:[["Rheinbreitbach", "country", "Germany"]] |
### User:
Slade Griffin (born 17 January 1991), also known by the nickname of "Nugget", is a New Zealand international rugby league footballer who plays as a and . He previously played for the Melbourne Storm and the Newcastle Knights in the NRL. He won the 2017 NRL Grand Final with Melbourne. Early life Born in Glen Innes, Australia, Griffin grew up in Greymouth, New Zealand. He was educated at Greymouth High School. Griffin played his junior rugby league for the Cobden-Kohinoor Keas, before being signed by the Melbourne Storm. Playing career Early career From 2009 to 2011, Griffin played for theGrand Final win over the North Queensland Cowboys. He finished the season having played in 14 NRL matches. Two days after the grand final, he signed a 2-year contract with the Newcastle Knights starting in 2018, in a bid for more first-grade opportunity with Australian captain Cameron Smith ahead of him for the starting position at the Storm. 2018 In round 1 of the 2018 season, Griffin made his debut for the Knights in their 19-18 golden point extra-time win over the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles, scoring a try. In June, he made his international debut for New Zealand against
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Slade Griffin", {"description":'New Zealand rugby league footballer'}], ["New Zealand", {}], ["Rugby league", {}]]
Relations:[["Slade Griffin", "country of citizenship", "New Zealand"], ["Slade Griffin", "sport", "Rugby league"]] |
### User:
The Amoranto Sports Complex is located in Quezon City, Philippines. The complex was inaugurated in 1966 by then President Ferdinand Marcos. The facility was constructed at the cost of on a government owned site on Roces Avenue. The facility then consisted of a grandstand, an eight lane track and field oval, bleachers and a gymnasium. The sports facility covers land measuring about . The main stadium has a capacity of 15,000. The sports facility was named after former Quezon City Mayor Norberto Amoranto. The complex's velodrome hosted the cycling events for the 2005 Southeast Asian Games. Renovations Several renovations have
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Amoranto Sports Complex", {"description":'Sports complex in Quezon City,, Philippines'}], ["Velodrome", {}], ["Philippines", {}], ["1966", {}], ["Quezon City", {}]]
Relations:[["Amoranto Sports Complex", "instance of", "Velodrome"], ["Amoranto Sports Complex", "country", "Philippines"], ["Amoranto Sports Complex", "inception", "1966"], ["Amoranto Sports Complex", "location", "Quezon City"]] |
### User:
François Bonvin (November 22, 1817 – December 19, 1887) was a French realist painter. Early life Bonvin was born in humble circumstances in Paris, the son of a police officer and a seamstress. When he was four years old his mother died of tuberculosis and young François was left in the care of an old woman who underfed him. Soon his father married another seamstress and brought the child back into the household. Nine additional children were born (one of whom was Léon Bonvin). The family's resources were severely strained, and to make matters worse his stepmother took to abusingand undernourishing François. The young Bonvin started drawing at an early age. His potential was recognized by a friend of the family, who paid for him to attend a school for drawing instruction at age eleven. Bonvin attended the Ecole de Dessin in Paris from 1828 until 1830, when his father apprenticed him to a printer. Bonvin later studied at the Académie Suisse, but was mostly self-taught as an artist. He considered François Granet, to whom he showed some of his drawings in 1843, his only mentor. Bonvin spent his free time at the Louvre where he especially appreciated theDutch old masters and was welcomed by the collector Louis La Caze. Career Bonvin married a laundress at the age of twenty, at about the same time that he secured a job at the headquarters of the Paris police, where he worked until 1850. It was during this period that he contracted an illness which would trouble him for the rest of his life. Bonvin exhibited three paintings in the Salon of 1849, where he was awarded a third-class medal. He exhibited in the Salon of 1850 with Courbet, and won recognition as a leading realist, painting truthfully the livesof the poor which he knew at first hand. His paintings were well received by critics and by the public. Although his work had elements in common with Courbet's, his modestly scaled paintings were not seen as revolutionary. He was awarded the Légion d'honneur in 1870. His subjects were still life and the everyday activities of common people, painted in a style that is reminiscent of Pieter de Hooch and Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin. It is the latter who is especially recalled by Bonvin's delicate luminosity. In 1881 he underwent an operation which did not restore him to health, and he became
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["François Bonvin", {"description":'French painter (1817-1887)', "alias":['Francois Bonvin', 'Bonvin François', 'François Bonvin (Saint)', 'f.cois bonvin', 'f.s. bonvin', 'F. Bonvin', 'francois bonvin', 'Bonvin']}], ["Paris", {}], ["Painter", {}], ["François", {}], ["Bonvin", {}], ["Léon Bonvin", {}]]
Relations:[["François Bonvin", "place of birth", "Paris"], ["François Bonvin", "occupation", "Painter"], ["François Bonvin", "given name", "François"], ["François Bonvin", "family name", "Bonvin"], ["François Bonvin", "work location", "Paris"], ["François Bonvin", "sibling", "Léon Bonvin"]] |
### User:
Harvard Law School (HLS) is the law school of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1817, it is the oldest continuously operating law school in the United States and one of the most prestigious in the world. Each class in the three-year JD program has approximately 560 students, among the largest of the top 150 ranked law schools in the United States. The first-year class is broken into seven sections of approximately 80 students, who take most first-year classes together. Harvard's uniquely large class size and prestige have led the law school to graduate a great many distinguished alumniin the judiciary, government, and the business world. According to Harvard Law's 2015 ABA-required disclosures, 95% of the Class of 2014 passed the Bar exam. Harvard Law School graduates accounted for more than one-quarter of all Supreme Court clerkships between 2000 and 2010, more than any other law school in the United States. Harvard Law School's founding is traditionally linked to the funding of Harvard's first professorship in law, paid for from a bequest from the estate of Isaac Royall Jr., a colonial American landowner and a slaveholder. Today, HLS is home to the largest academic law library in theworld as well as 391 faculty members. History Bequest by Isaac Royall, founding, and relationship with slavery Harvard Law School's founding is traced to the establishment of a "law department" at Harvard in 1817. Dating the founding to the year of the creation of the law department makes Harvard Law the oldest continuously-operating law school in the nation. William & Mary Law School opened first in 1779, but closed due to the American Civil War, reopening in 1920. The University of Maryland School of Law was chartered in 1816, but did not begin classes until 1824, and also closed duringbest." The value of the land, when fully liquidated in 1809, was $2,938; the Harvard Corporation allocated $400 from the income generated by those funds to create the Royall Professorship of Law in 1815. The Royalls were so involved in the slave trade, that "the labor of slaves underwrote the teaching of law in Cambridge." The dean of the law school traditionally held the Royall chair, deans Elena Kagan and Martha Minow declined the Royall chair due to its origins in the proceeds of slavery. The Royall family coat-of-arms, which shows three stacked wheat sheaves on a blue background, wasthe only remaining slave quarters in the northeast United States. In 2019, the government of Antigua and Barbuda requested reparations from Harvard Law School on the ground that it benefitted from Royall's enslavement of people in the country. Growth and the Langdell curriculum By 1827, the school, with one faculty member, was struggling. Nathan Dane, a prominent alumnus of the college, then endowed the Dane Professorship of Law, insisting that it be given to then Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story. For a while, the school was called "Dane Law School." In 1829, John H. Ashmun, son of Eli Porter Ashmunand brother of George Ashmun, accepted a professorship and closed his Northampton Law School, with many of his students following him to Harvard. Story's belief in the need for an elite law school based on merit and dedicated to public service helped build the school's reputation at the time, although the contours of these beliefs have not been consistent throughout its history. Enrollment remained low through the 19th century as university legal education was considered to be of little added benefit to apprenticeships in legal practice. After first trying lowered admissions standards, in 1848 HLS eliminated admissions requirements entirely. Infaculty and students. Advocates said the case method had a sounder theoretical basis in scientific research and the inductive method. Langdell's graduates became leading professors at other law schools where they introduced the case method. The method was facilitated by casebooks. From its founding in 1900, the Association of American Law Schools promoted the case method in law schools that sought accreditation. 20th century: institutional criticism During the 20th century Harvard Law School was known for its competitiveness. For example, Bob Berring called it "a samurai ring where you can test your swordsmanship against the swordsmanship of the strongest intellectualwarriors from around the nation." When Langdell developed the original law school curriculum, Harvard President Charles Eliot told him to make it "hard and long." An urban legend holds that incoming students are told to "Look to your left, look to your right, because one of you won't be here by the end of the year." Scott Turow's memoir One L and John Jay Osborn's novel The Paper Chase describe such an environment. In addition, Eleanor Kerlow's book Poisoned Ivy: How Egos, Ideology, and Power Politics Almost Ruined Harvard Law School criticized the school for a 1980s political dispute betweennewer and older faculty members over accusations of insensitivity to minority and feminist issues. Divisiveness over such issues as political correctness lent the school the title "Beirut on the Charles." In Broken Contract: A Memoir of Harvard Law School, Richard Kahlenberg criticized the school for driving students away from public interest and toward work in high-paying law firms. Kahlenberg's criticisms are supported by Granfield and Koenig's study, which found that "students [are directed] toward service in the most prestigious law firms, both because they learn that such positions are their destiny and because the recruitment network that results from collectiveeminence makes these jobs extremely easy to obtain." The school has also been criticized for its large first year class sizes (at one point there were 140 students per classroom; in 2001 there were 80), a cold and aloof administration, and an inaccessible faculty. The latter stereotype is a central plot element of The Paper Chase and appears in Legally Blonde. In response to the above criticisms, HLS eventually implemented the once-criticized but now dominant approach pioneered by Dean Robert Hutchins at Yale Law School, of shifting the competitiveness to the admissions process while making law school itself a moreappointed solicitor general of the United States by President Barack Obama and resigned the deanship. On June 11, 2009, Harvard University president, Drew Gilpin Faust named Martha Minow as the new dean. She assumed the position on July 1, 2009. On January 3, 2017, Minow announced that she would conclude her tenure as dean at the end of the academic year. In June 2017, John F. Manning was named as the new dean, effective as of July 1, 2017. In September 2017, the school unveiled a plaque acknowledging the indirect role played by slavery in its history: Reputation The acceptancerate for the JD Class of 2022 was 12.3%. HLS is ranked as the third best law school in the United States by U.S. News & World Report, the most widely referenced rankings publisher in the American legal community. HLS is ranked first, with a perfect overall assessment score of 100.0, by QS World University Rankings. It is also ranked first by the Academic Ranking of World Universities. Employment More than 120 from the last five graduating classes have obtained tenure-track law teaching positions. Adjusted for student body size, this puts Harvard in second place among U.S. law schools, about2 percentage points ahead of Stanford and Chicago (which tied for third place) but behind Yale. According to the Employment Summary for 2014 Graduates, 90% were employed in bar passage required jobs and another 4.4% were employed in J.D. advantage jobs. Costs The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at Harvard Law for the 2017–2018 academic year is $92,200. Shield retirement In 2016, the governing body of the university, the Harvard Corporation, voted to retire the law school's 80 year old arms. The arms, depicting three garbs (the heraldic term for wheat sheaves),was based in part upon the coat of arms of Isaac Royall Jr., a university benefactor who had endowed the first professorship in the law school. The shield had become a source of contention among a group of law school students, who objected to the Royall family's history as slave-owners. The president of the university and dean of the law school, acting upon the recommendation of a committee formed to study the issue, ultimately agreed with its majority decision, that the shield was inconsistent with the values of both the university and the law school. Their recommendation was ultimately adoptedby the Harvard Corporation and on March 15, 2016, the shield was ordered retired. Student organizations and journals Harvard Law School has more than 90 student organizations that are active on campus. These organizations include the student-edited journals, Harvard Law Record, and the HLS Drama Society, which organizes the annual Harvard Law School Parody, the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau as well as other political, social, service, and athletic groups. HLS Student Government is the primary governing, advocacy, and representative body for Law School students. In addition, students are represented at the university level by the Harvard Graduate Council. Harvard Lawmost widely followed authority for legal citation formats in the United States. The student newspaper, the Harvard Law Record, has been published continuously since the 1940s, making it one of the oldest law school newspapers in the country, and has included the exploits of fictional law student Fenno for decades. The Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation, formerly known as the Harvard Law School Corporate Governance Blog, is one of the most widely read law websites in the country. Harvard Law School student journals Harvard Law Review Harvard Business Law Review Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties LawB. Hayes, the 19th president of the United States, graduated from HLS. Additionally, Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States, graduated from HLS and was president of the Harvard Law Review. His wife, Michelle Obama, is also a graduate of Harvard Law School. Past presidential candidates who are HLS graduates, include Michael Dukakis, Ralph Nader and Mitt Romney. Eight sitting U.S. senators are alumni of HLS: Romney, Ted Cruz, Mike Crapo, Tim Kaine, Jack Reed, Chuck Schumer, Tom Cotton, and Mark Warner. Other legal and political leaders who attended HLS include former president of the Republic of ChinaJustice of the Federal Supreme Court of Ethiopia. Deputy Chief Justice Solomon Areda Waktolla is also member of the Court of the Permanent Court of Arbitration. Lobsang Sangay is the first elected sikyong of the Tibetan Government in Exile. In 2004, he earned a S.J.D. degree from Harvard Law School and was a recipient of the 2004 Yong K. Kim' 95 Prize of excellence for his dissertation "Democracy in Distress: Is Exile Polity a Remedy? A Case Study of Tibet's Government-in-exile". Sixteen of the school's graduates have served on the Supreme Court of the United States, more than any otherlaw school. Four of the current nine members of the court graduated from HLS: the chief justice, John Roberts; and associate justices Neil Gorsuch, Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan, who also served as the dean of Harvard Law School from 2003 to 2009. Ruth Bader Ginsburg attended Harvard Law School for two years. Past Supreme Court justices from Harvard Law School include Antonin Scalia, David Souter, Harry Blackmun, William J. Brennan, Louis Brandeis, Felix Frankfurter, Lewis Powell (LLM), and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., among others. Attorneys general Loretta Lynch, Alberto Gonzales, and Janet Reno, among others, and noted federal judgesschool. The book was later turned into a film and a television series (see below). Scott Turow wrote a memoir of his experience as a first-year law student at Harvard, One L. Film and television Several movies and television shows take place at least in part at the school. Most of them have scenes filmed on location at or around Harvard University. They include: Love Story (1970) The Paper Chase (1973) The Paper Chase (1978–1979, 1983–1986 television series) Soul Man (1986) The Firm (1993) A Civil Action (1998) How High (2001) Legally Blonde (2001) Catch Me If You Can (2002)Love Story in Harvard (2004 Korean TV series) Suits (TV Series) (2011–2019) On the Basis of Sex (2018) Many popular movies and television shows also feature characters introduced as Harvard Law School graduates. The central plot point of the TV series Suits is that one of the main characters did not attend Harvard but fakes his graduate status in order to practice law. See also Ames Moot Court Competition Harvard Association for Law & Business Harvard/MIT Cooperative Society List of Harvard University people List of Ivy League law schools References Further reading Chase, Anthony. "The Birth of the Modern LawSchool," American Journal of Legal History (1979) 23#4 pp. 329–48 in JSTOR Coquillette, Daniel R. and Bruce A. Kimball. On the Battlefield of Merit: Harvard Law School, the First Century (Harvard University Press, 2015) 666 pp. Kimball, Bruce A. "The Proliferation of Case Method Teaching in American Law Schools: Mr. Langdell's Emblematic 'Abomination,' 1890–1915," History of Education Quarterly (2006) 46#2 pp. 192–240 in JSTOR Kimball, Bruce A. '"Warn Students That I Entertain Heretical Opinions, Which They Are Not To Take as Law': The Inception of Case Method Teaching in the Classrooms of the Early C.C. Langdell, 1870–1883," Law and History
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Harvard Law School", {"description":'law school in Cambridge, Massachusetts', "alias":['Harvard Law', 'HLS']}], ["Harvard University", {}], ["United States", {}], ["Law school", {}], ["Cambridge, Massachusetts", {}]]
Relations:[["Harvard Law School", "part of", "Harvard University"], ["Harvard Law School", "country", "United States"], ["Harvard Law School", "instance of", "Law school"], ["Harvard Law School", "location", "Cambridge, Massachusetts"], ["Harvard Law School", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Cambridge, Massachusetts"]] |
### User:
The 2015 Illapel earthquake occurred offshore from Illapel (Coquimbo region, Chile) on September 16 at 19:54:33 Chile Standard Time (22:54:33 UTC), with a moment magnitude of 8.3. The initial quake lasted between three and five minutes; it was followed by several aftershocks greater than magnitude six and two that exceeded 7.0 moment magnitude. The Chilean government reported 15 deaths, 6 missing and thousands of people affected. In Buenos Aires, Argentina, a man died from a stroke while he was evacuating a building. Earthquake The earthquake occurred on thrust faults along the boundary of the Nazca and South American plates. Theregion frequently produces large earthquakes, and 15 others of magnitude 7 or higher have taken place within 400 km of the epicenter over the past 100 years. The last big quake that occurred in this region was the 1943 Ovalle earthquake, reaching a magnitude in the range 7.9–8.2; however, comparisons of the associated source time function (the time history of release of seismic moment) show that the 2015 event was significantly larger than the 1943 earthquake, in terms of duration, up-dip rupture extent and tsunami size. This earthquake had an unusual foreshock, just 20 seconds before the main 8.3 earthquake,reaching a magnitude of 7.2. This has been considered as one of the most complex earthquakes to be ever studied in Chile. Damage and range Illapel, an inland city of 30,000 residents, was reported immediately to be without electricity or drinking water. Many towns and small cities in the Coquimbo region saw a lot of damage, where the earthquake was felt with an intensity of VIII Mercalli. The panic took over the great cities like La Serena , Valparaiso and the capital Santiago. Two days after the quake, about 90,000 people were still without electricity. On September 21, officials werereporting over 9,000 people had been left homeless by the quake. Tall buildings swayed and car alarms were set off in Buenos Aires, away, and the earthquake was felt in São Paulo, more than away. The Argentine provinces of Mendoza, San Juan, Córdoba, Tucumán, La Rioja, San Luis and Santa Fe were also affected. Tsunami Tsunami watches, warnings, and advisories were issued in Ecuador, Peru, New Zealand, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Hawaii, California and Japan. The first tsunami waves arrived on the Chilean coast within minutes. A series of waves reaching at least high were observed along the coast of Coquimboand the cities of Coquimbo, Tongoy and Concón nearby to Valparaiso reported flooding; large fishing vessels were swept into the streets of Coquimbo, which reported heavy damage. The port of Coquimbo, along with the Costanera, was heavily damaged. The tsunami also damaged the iconic La Serena monumental lighthouse. In the coastal city of Tongoy, large areas along the sea front were destroyed, along with the Tongoy beach itself, which was heavily affected by both earthquake and tsunami. Across the region at least 500 buildings were destroyed, while dozens of beachfront homes in Los Vilos were damaged or destroyed. A stateof emergency was declared in Coquimbo a day after the tsunami, with troops to be deployed to the area. Evacuations Chilean authorities ordered the immediate evacuation of the coast due to tsunami risk, with many people in coastal areas receiving automatic notices by cellphone shortly after the quake. The undersecretary for the ministry of the interior and public security reported that the evacuation affected one million people across the country. Although causing significant damage, the Illapel earthquake's low death toll relative to the 525 casualties of the significantly more powerful 2010 Chile earthquake was credited, in part, to its occurrence
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["2015 Illapel earthquake", {"description":'8.3 magnitude quake in Chile', "alias":['2015 Chile earthquake']}], ["Earthquake", {}], ["Illapel", {}], ["Chile", {}]]
Relations:[["2015 Illapel earthquake", "instance of", "Earthquake"], ["2015 Illapel earthquake", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Illapel"], ["2015 Illapel earthquake", "country", "Chile"]] |
### User:
Yaroslav Svorak (; born 7 February 1989 in Ternopil, Ukrainian SSR) is a professional Ukrainian football forward. Career He is a product of the Volyn Lutsk School System, and began his career in the Ukrainian Premier League with FC Volyn Lutsk.In 2007, he signed with FC Karpaty Lviv, and played in the Ukrainian Second League with FC Karpaty-2 Lviv.He was loaned to the Belarusian Premier League in 2011 to play with FC Dnepr Mogilev.For the remainder of the season he played in the Ukrainian First League with FC Krymteplytsia Molodizhne.He returned to Belarus in 2012 to sign with FC SlaviaMozyr, and later with Nyva Ternopil. In 2017, he went overseas to play in the Canadian Soccer League with FC Vorkuta. References External links Profile on Football Squads Category:1989 births Category:Living people Category:Ukrainian footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Ukrainian expatriate footballers Category:Expatriate footballers in Belarus Category:Expatriate soccer players in Canada Category:FC Volyn Lutsk players Category:FC Karpaty Lviv players Category:FC Karpaty-2 Lviv players Category:FC Dnepr Mogilev players Category:FC Krymteplytsia Molodizhne players Category:FC Slavia Mozyr players Category:FC Nyva Ternopil players Category:FC Vorkuta players Category:Ukrainian Premier League players Category:Belarusian Premier League players Category:Canadian Soccer League (2006–present) players Category:Ukrainian expatriate sportspeople in Canada Category:Ukrainian Second
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Yaroslav Svorak", {"description":'Ukrainian footballer'}], ["Ternopil", {}], ["FC Karpaty Lviv", {}], ["FC Volyn Lutsk", {}], ["FC Dnepr Mogilev", {}], ["FC Krymteplytsia Molodizhne", {}], ["FC Nyva Ternopil", {}], ["FC Slavia Mozyr", {}], ["Association football", {}]]
Relations:[["Yaroslav Svorak", "place of birth", "Ternopil"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Karpaty Lviv"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Volyn Lutsk"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Dnepr Mogilev"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Krymteplytsia Molodizhne"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Nyva Ternopil"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "member of sports team", "FC Slavia Mozyr"], ["Yaroslav Svorak", "sport", "Association football"]] |
### User:
Boldizsár Csiky (born October 3, 1937) is a Romanian composer of Hungarian ethnicity. He was born in Târgu Mureș and began his musical studies at the Târgu Music School (1954–1955) before further study at the Conservatory in Cluj (1955–1961). He was awarded the Composers' Union Award in 1971, Romanian Academy Award in 1980 and the "Bartók - Pásztory" award at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest in 1984. He was Director of Târgu Mureș Symphony Hall between 1990–1997 and professor of chamber music at the Music School in Târgu Mureș (1961–1970) References Category:1937 births Category:Romanian composers Category:People from Târgu
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Boldizsár Csiky", {"description":'Romanian musician', "alias":['Boldizsar Csiky']}], ["Târgu Mureș", {}], ["Composer", {}]]
Relations:[["Boldizsár Csiky", "place of birth", "Târgu Mureș"], ["Boldizsár Csiky", "occupation", "Composer"]] |
### User:
The Star Reporter is a 1932 British crime drama, directed by Michael Powell and starring Harold French and Garry Marsh. The screenplay was adapted from a story by popular thriller writer Philip MacDonald. The Star Reporter is one of eleven quota quickies directed by Powell between 1931 and 1936 of which no print is known to survive. The film is not held in the BFI National Archive, and is classed as "missing, believed lost". Powell later recalled that the film was brought in on a budget of £3,700, and that he had rented a hand-held camera for £8 and travelledto Southampton to film a docking ocean liner for use in an intercut scene. He said "The Star Reporter was fun and I was not ashamed of it". The film was shown in the UK as the support feature to the Jean Harlow vehicle Platinum Blonde, and Powell also remembered his amusement when a critic observed sniffily that his film lacked the polish of the main feature, reasoning that this was perhaps to be expected when comparing his budget with the $600,000 which had reportedly been spent on the Harlow picture. Plot Major Starr (French) is an ambitious newspaper reporterdiamond in an audacious smash-and-grab raid but the crime is witnessed by Starr and Lady Susan, who happen to be passing at the time. Starr heads off in pursuit of Mandel and corners him on a rooftop. There is a struggle and Mandel falls to his death. With the scam foiled and the diamond retrieved, Starr proposes to Lady Susan, who is happy to accept. Cast Harold French as Major Starr Garry Marsh as Mandel Isla Bevan as Lady Susan Loman Spencer Trevor as Lord Longbourne Anthony Holles as Bonzo Noel Dainton as Colonel Elsa Graves as Oliver Philip Morantas Jeff Reception Surviving contemporary reviews indicate a positive reception for the film. Today's Cinema assessed it as: "cleverly directed on the lines of swift action, snappy dialogue and varied settings", while the London Evening News reviewer enthused: "'At the end of a long and not very inspiring day of seeing new films, I saw a little picture Star Reporter which jolted my tired brain into renewed enthusiasm. Star Reporter packs into three-quarters of an hour as much story as most films that last an hour and a half...(it) tells an exciting crook story with a smoothness of direction anda crispness of acting and cutting which would be a credit to the most ambitious picture." Picturegoer Weekly predicted, wrongly as it turned out: "It is all very ingenious and is chiefly notable for the introduction of Isla Bevan, a new star, who looks like making good" (Bevan's film career in fact encompassed only five more programmers, and was over by 1936) and added "the picture generally is quite fairly entertaining, if one is not too critical". References External links Category:1932 films Category:1930s crime drama films Category:British films Category:Films directed by Michael Powell Category:Films by Powell and Pressburger Category:Lost British
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Star Reporter", {"description":'1932 film by Michael Powell', "alias":['Star Reporter']}], ["Film", {}], ["Michael Powell", {}], ["Harold French", {}], ["Garry Marsh", {}], ["1932", {}], ["Philip MacDonald", {}]]
Relations:[["The Star Reporter", "instance of", "Film"], ["The Star Reporter", "director", "Michael Powell"], ["The Star Reporter", "cast member", "Harold French"], ["The Star Reporter", "cast member", "Garry Marsh"], ["The Star Reporter", "publication date", "1932"], ["The Star Reporter", "screenwriter", "Philip MacDonald"]] |
### User:
Mount Darwin is a town in Mashonaland Central province in Zimbabwe. Location The town lies in Mount Darwin District, in Mashonaland Central Province in north-eastern Zimbabwe. It is located approximately , by road, northeast of Harare, the capital and largest city in that country. Overview In addition to the offices of Mount Darwin Town Council, the town is also the location of the Mount Darwin District Administration. The town has a public hospital, Mount Darwin District Hospital, and a mission hospital, Karanda Mission Hospital. Karanda attends to anywhere from 10 to 20 surgeries and between 200 and 300 outpatients daily.the town's population was estimated at 6,350. The next national population census in Zimbabwe is scheduled from 18 August 2012 through 28 August 2012. Notable people The following notable people are associated with Mount Darwin: Joice Mujuru – A politician; she was born here James Makamba – A businessman; he maintains a home in Mount Darwin Savior Kasukuwere – A politician; he was born here. See also Shona people Manyika people Bindura Chitungwiza Mutare Chimoio External links Location of Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe At Google Maps Website of Karanda Hospital References Category:Populated places in Zimbabwe Category:Populated places in Mashonaland Central Province
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe", {"description":'human settlement'}], ["Zimbabwe", {}], ["Mount Darwin District", {}]]
Relations:[["Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe", "country", "Zimbabwe"], ["Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Mount Darwin District"]] |
### User:
Hadiach (, , ), sometimes spelled Hadyach, Gadyach, Gadiach, Haditch, or Hadziacz, is a city of regional significance in Poltava Oblast (province) in the central-east part of Ukraine. Located on the Psel River, the city is an administrative center of the Hadiach Raion (district), though administratively it does not belong to the raion. Overview Hadiach was granted city rights in 1634. It was a city of Kiev Voivodeship, Cossack Hetmanate, and Poltava Governorate. At times of Cossack Hetmanate, Hadiach was a residence of Ukrainian Hetman Ivan Briukhovetsky, election of which saw division of the Hetmanate along the Dnieper river (seeThe Ruin (Ukrainian history)). Hadiach is one of the main points of interest to Hasidic Jews visiting Ukraine due to the old cemetery that is on the river running through the city, where Shneur Zalman of Liadi is buried. Book featuring Hadiach The main characters in Nikolai Gogol's story Ivan Fyodorovich Shponka and His Aunt are from Hadiach (Gadyach in the 1957 translation by David Magarshack). Residents Mykhailo Drahomanov (1841-1895), political theorist, economist, historian, philosopher, and ethnographer Olena Pchilka, mother of Lesya Ukrayinka and a sister of Drahomanov Gallery See also Treaty of Hadiach Hadiach Regiment and Zinkiv Regiment References
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Hadiach", {"description":'city in Poltava Oblast (province) of Ukraine'}], ["Ukraine", {}], ["Poltava Oblast", {}], ["Hadiach Raion", {}], ["Cossack Hetmanate", {}]]
Relations:[["Hadiach", "country", "Ukraine"], ["Hadiach", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Poltava Oblast"], ["Hadiach", "capital of", "Hadiach Raion"], ["Hadiach", "capital of", "Cossack Hetmanate"]] |
### User:
The 1990 World Snooker Championship (also referred to as the 1990 Embassy World Snooker Championship for the purposes of sponsorship) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 13 and 29 April 1990 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. The final was contested by Stephen Hendry and Jimmy White. Hendry led 9–7 after the first day's play and won the first four frames of the second day to lead 13–7, before White reduced the gap to four frames. At 16–12 Hendry compiled breaks of 81 and 71 to win the match 18–12, to win his first worldtitle. In so doing, Hendry became the youngest ever world champion at the age of 21 years and 106 days. The tournament was sponsored by cigarette manufacturer Embassy. Tournament summary In beating John Parrott at the semi-final stage, Hendry replaced Steve Davis as snooker's world number 1. For the first time since 1982, Davis failed to reach the final, losing 14–16 to Jimmy White in the semi-final. It was the first time White had beaten Davis at the Crucible after Davis beat White in four previous encounters. 1982 champion Alex Higgins returned to the Crucible after missing out the previous
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["1990 World Snooker Championship", {"description":'snooker tournament', "alias":['59th World Snooker Championship']}], ["World Snooker Championship", {}], ["Crucible Theatre", {}], ["Sheffield", {}], ["Stephen Hendry", {}], ["Snooker", {}]]
Relations:[["1990 World Snooker Championship", "part of", "World Snooker Championship"], ["1990 World Snooker Championship", "location", "Crucible Theatre"], ["1990 World Snooker Championship", "location", "Sheffield"], ["1990 World Snooker Championship", "winner", "Stephen Hendry"], ["1990 World Snooker Championship", "sport", "Snooker"], ["1990 World Snooker Championship", "sports season of league or competition", "World Snooker Championship"]] |
### User:
Armond Armstead (born August 3, 1990) is a former defensive tackle for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League and the New England Patriots of the National Football League. He played college football at USC. He was signed by the Argonauts as an undrafted free agent in 2012. High school football Armstead played high school football at Pleasant Grove High in Elk Grove, California. His honors included Super Prep All-American, Prep Star All-American, Super Prep All-Farwest, Prep Star All-West, Long Beach Press-Telegram Best in the West honorable mention, Tacoma News Tribune Western 100, Cal-Hi Sports All-State first team, All-Northernheart attack and damaged his future earning potential. He went undrafted in the 2012 NFL Draft. Professional football Toronto Argonauts In 2012, Armstead was signed by the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League. In his rookie CFL season, Armstead compiled 43 defensive tackles, 2 special teams tackles, and 6 quarterback sacks. He was also named as a CFL All-star, and went on to win the 100th Grey Cup with the Argonauts that season. On January 4, 2013, Armstead was released by the Argonauts per request in order to pursue an NFL career. New England Patriots On January 22, 2013,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Armond Armstead", {"description":'American football player'}], ["Toronto Argonauts", {}], ["Defensive tackle", {}]]
Relations:[["Armond Armstead", "member of sports team", "Toronto Argonauts"], ["Armond Armstead", "position played on team / speciality", "Defensive tackle"]] |
### User:
Gertrud Kristina Blixt-Sigurdsen, née Blixt, (11 January 1923 – 27 March 2015) was a Swedish Social Democratic politician and Member of Parliament, who served as Minister of Social Affairs from 1985 to 1989. Sigurdsen started her political career as ombudsman in the Swedish Trade Union Confederation in 1949. On 3 November 1973 she was made Minister of Aid within the Ministry for Foreign Affairs in the cabinet of Olof Palme. She held the office until the Social Democrats lost the election in 1976. When Olof Palme and the Social Democratic party came to power again on 8 October 1982, she
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Gertrud Sigurdsen", {"description":'Swedish politician'}], ["Politician", {}]]
Relations:[["Gertrud Sigurdsen", "occupation", "Politician"]] |
### User:
"Amy Foster" is a short story by Joseph Conrad written in 1901, first published in the Illustrated London News (December 1901), and collected in Typhoon and Other Stories (1903). Plot A poor emigrant from Central Europe sailing from Hamburg to America is shipwrecked off the coast of England. The residents of nearby villages, at first unaware of the sinking, and hence of the possibility of survivors, regard him as a dangerous tramp and madman. He speaks no English; his strange foreign language frightens them, and they offer him no assistance. Eventually "Yanko Goorall" (as rendered in English spelling) is givenshelter and employment by an eccentric old local, Mr. Swaffer. Yanko learns a little English. He explains that his given name Yanko means "little John" and that he was a mountaineer (a resident of a mountain area — a Goorall), hence his surname. The story's narrator reveals that Yanko hailed from the Carpathian Mountains. Yanko falls in love with Amy Foster, a servant girl who has shown him some kindness. To the community's disapproval, they marry. The couple live in a cottage given to Yanko by Swaffer for having saved his granddaughter's life. Yanko and Amy have a son whomAmy calls Johnny (after Little John). Amy, a simple woman, is troubled by Yanko's behavior, particularly his trying to teach their son to pray with him in his "disturbing" language. Several months later Yanko falls severely ill and, suffering from a fever, begins raving in his native language. Amy, frightened, takes their child and flees for her life. Next morning Yanko dies of heart failure. It transpires that he had simply been asking in his native language for water. Interpretation Yanko Goorall shares similarities with Conrad himself. Like Yanko, Conrad is a foreigner living in England, far from his nativeland; the pivotal scene of Amy being scared by the fevered Yanko is based on an incident during Conrad's 1896 honeymoon in France when, in a fevered delirium, he reverted to his native Polish, frightening his wife Jessie. According to Zdzisław Najder, "Amy Foster" was inspired partly by an anecdote in Ford Madox Ford's The Cinque Ports (1900), wherein a shipwrecked sailor from a German merchant ship, unable to communicate in English, and driven away by the local country people, finally found shelter in a pigsty. "Amy Foster" is believed to reflect Conrad's own social alienation in English society. EdwardSaid has remarked that "It is difficult to read ‘Amy Foster’ without thinking that Conrad must have feared dying a similar death, inconsolable, alone, talking away in a language no one could understand". In 1997 "Amy Foster" was made into the film, Swept from the Sea. References Notes Further reading Gustav Morf, The Polish Shades and Ghosts of Joseph Conrad, Astra Books, 1976 Zdzisław Najder, Joseph Conrad: A Life, translated by Halina Najder, Rochester, New York, Camden House, 2007, . John Gerard Peters, The Cambridge Introduction to Joseph Conrad, Cambridge University Press, 2006. External links Edward Said, "Between Worlds: Edward
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Amy Foster", {"description":'Irish sprinter'}], ["Amy", {}]]
Relations:[["Amy Foster", "given name", "Amy"]] |
### User:
Levine Andrade (1954 – 20 November 2018) was an Indian-born British musician (violin & viola), and conductor. Early life Levine was born in Bombay to his parents Bonaventure and Juliana, and emigrated to England. Following a scholarship to the Yehudi Menuhin School at the age of 9 he became one of its first twelve members and was tutored by Robert Masters and Yehudi Menuhin. At the age of 11, BBC Television made a full documentary about him in their series "Life of a Child". Just before leaving the school he took up the viola, which he studied with Patrick Irelandwho was coaching chamber music at the school. Arditti Quartet Andrade became one of the founder members of the Arditti Quartet with Irvine Arditti, Lennox Mackenzie and John Senter, inspired by their mutual interest in 20th-century music. In the seventeen years he played with them, the quartet had an unparalleled career, performing at almost every major music festival throughout the world to critical acclaim. They were asked to play the opening recital for the new Concert Hall of the Louvre Museum in Paris, and the live recording of that concert was awarded one of France's highest recording awards. He lefthis very busy touring schedule in 1990 to spend more time with his wife and four children to work in London as a freelance musician. 2008–2018 work Levine conducted music for film, television, radio and record albums, as well as founding the London Telefilmonic Orchestra to play for various films and television commercials, including the Marlene Dietrich parody for Specsavers in the UK. He also wrote a film score for Strings, a film based on the true-life story of a Bosnian cellist. He was also brought into the 1997 re-recording of Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" by Beatles producer,George Martin, for the Diana, Princess of Wales Tribute single. Awards Ernst von Siemens Music Prize 1999 as part of the Arditti Quartet for "lifetime achievement" in music Film credits The Road Home (2010 film)|The Road Home (2010) Song for a Raggy Boy (2003) The Great Water (2004) Chatarra (1991) Musical credits Baby the Stars Shine Bright by Everything but the Girl "Divinity" by The Isness Laughing Stock by Talk Talk "Candle in the Wind 1997" by Elton John Whitbourn: Luminosity & Other Choral Works (2010) "Codex" by Radiohead References External links Levine Andrade on Discogs Category:British session musicians Category:1954
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Levine Andrade", {"description":'Indian born British musician'}], ["Yehudi Menuhin School", {}], ["Musician", {}], ["Viola", {}], ["Andrade", {}]]
Relations:[["Levine Andrade", "educated at", "Yehudi Menuhin School"], ["Levine Andrade", "occupation", "Musician"], ["Levine Andrade", "instrument", "Viola"], ["Levine Andrade", "family name", "Andrade"]] |
### User:
Song Exploder is a music podcast created by Hrishikesh Hirway, who hosted it from its 2014 inception until late 2018 and again from December 2019 onwards. In January 2019, Thao Nguyen became guest host for the year, with Christian Koons serving as producer, and Hirway moving to executive producer. The biweekly show features musicians talking about the creative process behind an individual song while "deconstructing" the song into its component parts. The songs highlighted on the program have ranged from pop to hardcore punk to television theme songs, film scores and video game music. The podcast launched on the MaximumFun network, went independent in February 2015 and joined Radiotopia in June 2015. Format Each episode begins with the host introducing the show's featured musician (or musicians) and giving a brief history of the musical act or television program with which they are associated. The artist then discusses the creative process used in the creation of a particular song. This may include anything from songwriting to recording to post-production. The discussion is interspersed with short clips of separate tracks from the song isolated to illustrate the topics being discussed – for example, the drum track might be played to demonstrate
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Song Exploder", {"description":'music podcast'}], ["Hrishikesh Hirway", {}], ["Music podcast", {}], ["Radiotopia", {}]]
Relations:[["Song Exploder", "presenter", "Hrishikesh Hirway"], ["Song Exploder", "genre", "Music podcast"], ["Song Exploder", "part of", "Radiotopia"]] |
### User:
Hilton Edward Buckney (5 June 1910 – 27 September 1987) was an Australian Rules footballer from Tasmania who played in the 1920s and 1930s. He played with the Lefroy Football Club in the TFL for most of his career and captained his state at the 1933 Sydney Carnival. In 1932 Buckney played 11 games for Hawthorn in the VFL and kicked three goals. He debuted in Round 4 versus Carlton at Princes Park. References Holmesby, Russell and Main, Jim (2011). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers. 9th ed. Melbourne: Bas Publishing. Category:1910 births Category:Lefroy Football Club players Category:Hawthorn Football Club players
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Hilton Buckney", {"description":'Australian rules footballer'}], ["Edward", {}], ["Hawthorn Football Club", {}]]
Relations:[["Hilton Buckney", "given name", "Edward"], ["Hilton Buckney", "member of sports team", "Hawthorn Football Club"]] |
### User:
Ganh Da Dia (Gành Đá Dĩa or Ghềnh Đá Dĩa in Vietnamese, literally means The Sea Cliff of Stone Plates) is a seashore area of uniformly interlocking basalt rock columns located along the coast in An Ninh Dong Commune, Tuy An District, Phu Yen Province, Vietnam. The area is about 100 meters wide and 250 meters long, composed of an estimated 35,000 columns of basalt rocks. The rocks are dark lava columns with roughly flat surfaces of different shapes - round, pentagon, hexagon, polygon etc. Ghenh Da Dia looks like a gigantic beehive or a pile of dinner plates, hence
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Ganh Da Dia", {"description":'reef in Vietnam'}], ["Vietnam", {}]]
Relations:[["Ganh Da Dia", "country", "Vietnam"]] |
### User:
The Liberian Development Foundation (LDF), is a 501(c)(3) non-profit tax-exempt organization whose mission is to assist in the creation and funding of socio-economic and human development programs in Liberia. History The Liberian Development Foundation was founded in 1982, by the Catholic Society of African Mission to promote socio-economic and human development in Liberia. The country erupted into civil wars from 1989 to 2003 (First and Second Liberian Civil War). During this 14-year period, many Liberians were killed, brutally beaten, robbed, and raped. Liberia experienced all the ills of war. The war took the lives of approximately 250,000 Liberians and displaced
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Liberian Development Foundation", {"description":'organization'}], ["Organization", {}]]
Relations:[["Liberian Development Foundation", "instance of", "Organization"]] |
### User:
Charles Frederick Hartt (23 August 1840 in Fredericton, New Brunswick – 18 March 1878) was a Canadian-American geologist, paleontologist and naturalist who specialized in the geology of Brazil. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick Hartt graduated from Acadia College in Wolfville, Nova Scotia, in 1860, and by his graduation he had made extensive geological explorations in Nova Scotia. In 1860, he accompanied his father, Jarvis William Hartt, to St. John, New Brunswick, where they established a high school for young women in which Charles Frederick taught for a year. Hartt also studied the geology of New Brunswick, and devoted special attentionto the Devonian shales, in which he discovered an abundance of land plants and insects. Exploration in Brazil In 1861, Hartt started to work as a student assistant for Louis Agassiz at the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University. This work lasted until 1864, when he received an appointment on the geological survey of New Brunswick. In 1865 he accompanied Agassiz to Brazil in the Thayer Expedition. A creationist, Agassiz believed he could find geological proof of his theory concerning glacial action in Brazil that would knock down the evolutionist theory of Charles Darwin. Hartt fell in love with Brazil,and spent 15 months exploring the coastal regions from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro. The large zoological collections he made were later used to prepare his Geology and Physical Geography of Brazil (Boston, 1870). In 1868 he was elected professor of natural history at Vassar College, but later in the same year he accepted a post at Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York, and planned to return to Brazil. Charles married Lucy Cornelia Lynde of Buffalo, New York, in 1869. They had two children, Mary and Rollin. Both children became writers. In all, Hartt participated in four expeditions to Brazil(the Morgan Expeditions) from 1870 to 1878. He collected a great deal of data about the land and the people, contributing to new knowledge about the flora, the fauna, minerals, geography, linguistics and ethnography. He was an accomplished draftsman and illustrator and musician. In his last voyage he collected more than 500,000 specimens, which were donated to the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro, where he worked as the founder and director of the section of geology from 1866 to 1867. In 1875, following a suggestion by Hartt, the Emperor Dom Pedro II (1825–1891) established the Imperial Geological Commission. TheCommission was closed down after two years of work after losing the Emperor's support. Hartt was joined by his wife and children in Brazil in 1875, but they returned to the United States without him when his wife got pregnant. He died in Rio de Janeiro, after contracting yellow fever, at the age of 38. One of his students, the American geologist Orville Adalbert Derby (1851–1915), succeeded him at the National Museum, after having accompanied him in two of the Morgan Expeditions (1870 and 1871) and having worked with him at the Imperial Commission. Publications Thayer Expedition (1870) Geology andphysical geography of Brazil (1870) Amazonian Tortoise Myths (1875) Notes on the Manufacture of Pottery Among Savage Races (1873) Bibliography Sanjad, N. Charles Frederick Hartt and the institutionalization of the natural sciences in Brazil. Hist. cienc. saude-Manguinhos, vol.11 no.2, Rio de Janeiro May/Aug. 2004. Lopes, M. M. C. F. 1994 Hartt's contribution to Brazilian museums of natural history'. Earth Sciences History, 13(2), pp. 174–9. Freitas, M.V. Hartt: Expedições pelo Brasil Imperial Metalivros, 2002. References External links The Museu Nacional and its European employees. Jens Andermann The Man Who Abandoned Himself to Nature. Boletim Informativo UFMG (In Portuguese) Contributions of Charles
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Charles Frederick Hartt", {"description":'Canadian-American geologist, paleontologist and naturalist'}], ["Geologist", {}], ["Fredericton", {}], ["Charles", {}], ["Hartt", {}], ["Harvard University", {}], ["Rio de Janeiro", {}], ["Cornell University", {}], ["Yellow fever", {}]]
Relations:[["Charles Frederick Hartt", "occupation", "Geologist"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "place of birth", "Fredericton"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "given name", "Charles"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "family name", "Hartt"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "employer", "Harvard University"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "place of death", "Rio de Janeiro"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "employer", "Cornell University"], ["Charles Frederick Hartt", "cause of death", "Yellow fever"]] |
### User:
WPTF (680 AM; "NewsRadio 680") is a radio station broadcasting a news/talk format. Licensed to Raleigh, North Carolina, the station serves the Research Triangle area of North Carolina. The station call letters date back to the former longtime owner of the station, Durham Life Insurance Company, whose motto was "We Protect The Family." Durham Life owned the station from 1927-1992. Its studios are located on Highwoods Boulevard in Raleigh, and the transmitter tower is in Cary, North Carolina. The station is currently owned by Curtis Media Group. Programs on WPTF include local news blocks in morning drive, noon and afternoons,national talk shows like consumer and family finances expert Clark Howard, and the overnight political show Red Eye Radio. In addition, the station also hosts local talk shows including Tom Kearney. When owned by Durham Life Broadcasting (a wholly owned subsidiary of Durham Life Insurance), the station was associated with and operated alongside other DLB properties; WQDR-FM from 1949-1992 and WPTF-TV, the longtime NBC affiliate in the Triangle, from 1977-1992. The TV station is now known as WRDC, "MyRDC," an affiliate of MyNetworkTV, and owned by Sinclair Broadcasting. WPTF is one of two AM radio stations in North Carolina whichseveral 50,000-watt stations to the north, also on 680 kHz, including WRKO in Boston and CFTR in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. During the night the station's signal reaches Charleston, South Carolina with good quality, and can be picked up well south into the Bahamas and other parts of the Caribbean and Venezuela. However, the nighttime coverage is spotty in parts of Virginia. Therefore, WPTF's nighttime signal is stronger to the south as a result. Early history WPTF was originally called WFBQ, and was the second radio station in Raleigh (N. C. State had the first, WLAC, but it did not last),going on the air September 22, 1924 at 1190 AM, broadcasting at 50 watts. The station was owned and operated by the Wynne Radio Company, owned by William A. Wynne, and the offices and broadcasting facilities were located in the Boone Building next to the Wake County Courthouse. After a year of successful operation, the station had its call letters changed to WRCO, for Wynne Radio Company. On August 19, 1926 the station was authorized to increase its power to 100 watts. Being a more powerful station, they moved their operations to the Sir Walter Hotel. The following year theschools that had radio were able to listen to a daily broadcast, with topics that included "Citizenship", "Science", "Social Studies" and "Art, Music and Literature". Although many attempts were made over the next several years, it was not until 1933 that the station increased its power to 5,000 watts. With this authority, WPTF purchased new equipment and moved to Cary, North Carolina, on US Highway 1. In June 1940, WPTF was given authority to operate unlimited hours and a month later was granted a construction permit to install new transmitter equipment and increase its power to 50,000 watts. Almost ato move its flagship to Capitol Broadcasting Company's WRAL-FM. NC State athletic officials cited their desire to be on an FM signal with a multi-year contract and the ability to collect more local advertising revenue, conditions that Curtis Media was unwilling to provide. Some Wolfpack fans around the East Coast were unhappy with the move because it cut the audience of Wolfpack sports, especially at night, because of the reduced power. After the September 2008 death of Jack Boston, Scott Fitzgerald took over North Carolina Morning News. As of September 15, 2008, WPTF began streaming the popular syndicated host RushLimbaugh as well as the rest of their local and syndicated line up. Parent Company Curtis Media announced in August 2009 the acquisition of The North Carolina News Network from Capitol Broadcasting Company of Raleigh. On November 2, 2009, Curtis Media President Phil Zachary said Limbaugh would be leaving WPTF December 31, 2009, after more than 20 years. The show moved to Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia's) new FM talk radio station, 106.1 WRDU (now WTKK), which competes now is now with WPTF. The loss of long-time staples Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity has proved challenging for WPTF. Following themove of the conservative programs to the new FM Talk Radio station, WPTF's ratings were significantly impacted. After having been among Raleigh's most popular stations, these days the station's ratings are considerably lower. In December 2009, Brian Freeman, program director of sister station WSJS in Winston-Salem, North Carolina took over the same duties at WPTF and became the host of North Carolina's Morning News. Starting with the 2011 Daytona 500, WPTF began airing NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series racing. WPTF's format was, in effect, split on March 13, 2012, when much of its talk programming moved to sisterstation WPTK, which was branded as TalkRadio 850 WPTF. WPTF then shifted most of its daytime programming to all-news, retaining the NewsRadio 680 WPTF identity. The station continued to air The Dave Ramsey Show in the late morning hours until it was picked up by WTKK on June 15, 2013; other talk shows still comprise WPTF's nighttime and weekend schedule. WPTF's local coverage is supplemented by the CBS Radio Network, AP Radio, and the co-owned North Carolina News Network. In August 2015, WPTF dropped the split programming from 850 AM. Tony Riggsbee, who retired from WPTF in 2004, had returned
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["WPTF", {"description":'news/talk radio station in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States'}], ["Radio station", {}], ["North Carolina", {}], ["Raleigh, North Carolina", {}], ["1924", {}]]
Relations:[["WPTF", "instance of", "Radio station"], ["WPTF", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "North Carolina"], ["WPTF", "licensed to broadcast to", "Raleigh, North Carolina"], ["WPTF", "inception", "1924"]] |
### User:
Bernhard Joachim Hagen (April 1720 in or near Hamburg (?) – 9 December 1787 in Ansbach) was a German composer, lutenist and violinist. He was the last important composer of lute music in 18th-century Germany. Life Little is known about his youth, but he grew up in a musical family; his brother Peter Albrecht Hagen (also called Peter Albert van Hagen, 1714 - 12 September 1777) studied the violin with Francesco Geminiani, learned to play the lute and organ, and was an organist in Rotterdam. There are several transcriptions of Geminiani's violin works for lute by J.B. Hagen extant. Theyounger Bernhard Joachim Hagen must have learned to play lute and violin early too, for in 1737 he was already employed as an assistant to Bayreuth violin virtuoso and Kapellmeister Johann Pfeiffer; later he was listed officially as a court violinist. He kept this position at the Bayreuth and since 1769 the Ansbach court until his death. Adam Falckenhagen and Charles Durant (Karol Duranowski), also called to the Bayreuth court by Wilhelmine of Bayreuth, may have further trained him in playing the lute. In 1745, Hagen married Anna Fikentscher (born in Bayreuth; died 22 May 1789 in Ansbach). During 1760/1761he visited his brother in Rotterdam and there gave five concerts from November till March. Works Hagen was employed at the Bayreuth court as a violinist and as a lutenist, and his virtuoso lute performances and his compositions for lute were known and appreciated. He is one of the most important composers for lute in the era following Sylvius Leopold Weiss, and far more important than his teachers Falckenhagen and Durant. His style is shaped by the Empfindsamkeit and the beginning of the Sturm und Drang period. There is a clearly discernible influence of Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach in Hagen'smusic. Through margravine Wilhelmine's efforts, lute music flourished in the 18th century one last time before being rediscovered in the 20th century. There are 33 known compositions by Bernhard Joachim Hagen found in the Staats- und Stadtbibliothek Augsburg: 12 Sonatas for Lute solo 6 Trios for Lute, Violin and Violoncello 2 Lute concerti 1 Duo for two Lutes 1 Duo for Lute und Violin Many Lute arrangements of compositions by Geminiani, Locatelli, Arne, and others. The facsimile editions of Hagen's solo lute sonatas (1983) and chamber works (1984) have been published by Joachim Domning for the Roman Trekel Musikverlag. Thereare two excellent CD recording of Hagen's sonatas by the lutenist Robert Barto: Joachim Bernhard Hagen, Solo Works for Lute: Five Sonatas, Locatelli Variations (Naxos 8.554200) Bernhard Joachim Hagen, Sonate à Liuto solo (Symphonia Sy98164) Some of Hagen's works listed in the 1769 Breitkopf catalog (these have no concordances in Augsburg manuscripts) are presumed missing. Influence The lute sonatas of Roman Turovsky-Savchuk (a contemporary lutenist-composer) were written in homage to Hagen. Literature & Sources Ernst Ludwig Gerber: Historisch-biographisches Lexicon der Tonkünstler, Teil 1. (1790) Rainer Trübsbach: Geschichte der Stadt Bayreuth. Druckhaus Bayreuth (1993) Robert Barto: Bernhard Joachim Hagen, Sonate à
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", {"description":'German musician'}], ["Hamburg", {}], ["Ansbach", {}], ["Composer", {}], ["1720", {}], ["Bernhard", {}], ["Germany", {}], ["Lute", {}], ["Violin", {}], ["Adam Falckenhagen", {}]]
Relations:[["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "place of birth", "Hamburg"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "place of death", "Ansbach"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "occupation", "Composer"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "date of birth", "1720"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "given name", "Bernhard"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "country of citizenship", "Germany"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "instrument", "Lute"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "instrument", "Violin"], ["Bernhard Joachim Hagen", "student of", "Adam Falckenhagen"]] |
### User:
The Essentials: Patrice Rushen is the fourteenth album released by keyboardist/singer/songwriter/arranger/musical director, Patrice Rushen. This compilation, released in 2002 is special because it contains: 12 digitally remastered tracks including some of her greatest hits songs such as: "Forget Me Nots", "Haven't You Heard" & "Feels So Real (Won't Let Go)." The album also Includes detailed liner notes with archival photos of Rushen during her time with Elektra Records. Track listing Forget Me Nots Haven't You Heard Feels So Real (Won't Let Go) Hang It Up Look Up! Never Gonna Give You Up (Part I) Get Off (You Fascinate Me) When
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Essentials: Patrice Rushen", {"description":'compilation album by Patrice Rushen'}], ["Patrice Rushen", {}]]
Relations:[["The Essentials: Patrice Rushen", "performer", "Patrice Rushen"]] |
### User:
Corydoras kanei is a small species of catfish from the family Callyichthydae endemic to Brazil where it is found in the Negros River basin. It is externally similar to Corydoras atropersonatus, but its spots are denser and unlike the former, it has caudal markings - markings on its tail fins. Breeding can be accomplished by feeding a mixture of live foods and catfish pellets, after which frequent cold water changes can trigger them to spawn. A gravid female will lay around 60 eggs; heavy oxygenation of the water is likely to be more efficacious at saving fry than using methyleneblue. Fry grow slowly and reach around 2 cm after 8 months. It is not recommended to add different fish into the fry rearing tank. They do not mind lower temperatures and can be kept with species of fish that are endemic to low-temperature habitats, such as Sewellia lineolata. To appreciate this fish, they should be kept in a large group in a well-oxygenated, fairly bright tank which nonetheless has some hiding areas. They will give off a beautiful silvery/blue shine as they swim through the tank. References Category:Corydoras Category:Fish of South America Category:Fish of Brazil Category:Endemic fauna of Brazil
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Corydoras kanei", {"description":'species of catfish'}], ["Species", {}], ["Corydoras", {}]]
Relations:[["Corydoras kanei", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Corydoras kanei", "parent taxon", "Corydoras"]] |
### User:
The Last of Chéri () is a novel written by Colette. It was published in Paris in 1926. It is the sequel to Chéri. Plot summary The Last of Chéri picks up the lives of Cheri and Lea after a six-year break during which World War I has been fought and Cheri returns an uninjured hero. During this time, Edmee and Madame Peloux have become more assertive in home and business as do many women in the burgeoning suffragist movement. Cheri finds himself wandering aimlessly with no focus now that he does not have his former lover Lea nor the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Last of Chéri", {"description":'novel by Colette', "alias":['The Last of Cheri']}], ["Novel", {}], ["Colette", {}]]
Relations:[["The Last of Chéri", "genre", "Novel"], ["The Last of Chéri", "author", "Colette"]] |
### User:
In Norse cosmology, Vanaheimr (Old Norse for 'home of the Vanir') is a location associated with the Vanir, a group of gods themselves associated with fertility, wisdom, and the ability to see the future. Vanaheimr is attested in the Poetic Edda; compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources, and the Prose Edda and (in euhemerized form) Heimskringla; both written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson. In the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, Vanaheimr is described as the location where the god Njörðr was raised. Attestations Vanaheimr is mentioned a single time in the Poetic Edda; ina stanza of the poem Vafþrúðnismál. In Vafþrúðnismál, Gagnráðr (the god Odin in disguise) engages in a game of wits with the jötunn Vafþrúðnir. Gagnráðr asks Vafþrúðnir whence the Van god Njörðr came, for, though he rules over many hofs and hörgrs, Njörðr was not raised among the Æsir. Vafþrúðnir responds that Njörðr was created in Vanaheimr by "wise powers" and references that Njörðr was exchanged as a hostage during the Æsir-Vanir War. In addition, Vafþrúðnir comments that, when the world ends (Ragnarök), Njörðr will return to the "wise Vanir" (Bellows here anglicizes Vanir to Wanes): In chapter 23 ofthe Prose Edda book Gylfaginning, the enthroned figure of High says that Njörðr was raised in Vanaheimr, but was later sent as a hostage to the Æsir. The Heimskringla book Ynglinga saga records an euhemerized account of the origins of Norse mythology. In chapter 1, "Van Home or the Home of the Vanir" is described as located around the Don River (which Snorri writes was once called "Tana Fork" or "Vana Fork"). Chapter 4 describes the Æsir-Vanir War, noting that during a hostage exchange, the Æsir sent the god Hœnir to Vanaheim and there he was immediately made chieftain. Inchapter 15, the king Sveigðir is recorded as having married a woman named Vana in "Vanaland", located in Sweden. The two produced a child, who they named Vanlandi (meaning "Man from the Land of the Vanir"). Theories The existence of Nine Worlds receive mention in some Old Norse texts. These worlds are nowhere specifically listed in sequence, but are generally assumed to include Vanaheimr. Henry Adams Bellows considers the other eight to be Asgard, Álfheimr, Midgard, Jötunheimr, Svartálfaheimr, Niflheim, Múspellsheimr, and possibly Niðavellir. Hilda Ellis Davidson comments that exactly where Vanaheimr fall among the Nine Worlds isn't clear, since "thechief gods Freyr and Njord with a number of others, are represented along with the Æsir in Asgard, but it seems probable that it was in the underworld." Davidson notes a connection between the Vanir and "the land-spirits who dwelt in mounds and hills and in water [...]. Rudolf Simek claims that Snorri "unquestionably" invented the name Vanaheimr as a Vanir counterpart to Asgard, but does not mention the Vafþrúðnismál reference. Notes References Bellows, Henry Adams (Trans.) (1923). The Poetic Edda. American-Scandinavian Foundation Byock, Jesse (Trans.) (2005). The Prose Edda. Penguin Classics. Davidson, Hilda Ellis (1993). The Lost Beliefs of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Vanaheimr", {"description":'home of the Vanir'}], ["Vanir", {}], ["Norse cosmology", {}], ["Norse mythology", {}]]
Relations:[["Vanaheimr", "named after", "Vanir"], ["Vanaheimr", "part of", "Norse cosmology"], ["Vanaheimr", "part of", "Norse mythology"]] |
### User:
Club Atlético Deportivo Paraguayo is an Argentine football club, founded in 1961 by the Paraguayan community living in Buenos Aires. The team currently plays at Primera D, the fourth division of Argentine football league system. The club's building is often used for cultural acts such as speeches about Paraguayan history and performance of traditional Paraguayan dances. The team does not have an own stadium, so they generally play its home games at the venues of Liniers and Atlas. Titles Primera D: 1 1991/92 Team 2019-20 november, 02 of 2019 See also List of football clubs in Argentina Argentine football league
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Deportivo Paraguayo", {"description":'association football club', "alias":['Fundador:capito bellis']}], ["Argentina", {}], ["Buenos Aires", {}]]
Relations:[["Deportivo Paraguayo", "country", "Argentina"], ["Deportivo Paraguayo", "headquarters location", "Buenos Aires"]] |
### User:
Joe Cassells (born 10 October 1954) is an Irish retired Gaelic footballer. His league and championship career with the Meath senior team spanned sixteen seasons from 1974 to 1990. Born in Navan, County Meath, Cassells first excelled as a Gaelic footballer at club level with Navan O'Mahony's. In a club career that spanned three decades he won a record eight county senior championship medals. Cassells also won two county senior championship medals as a hurler. Cassells made his debut on the inter-county scene at the age of seventeen when he was selected for the Meath minor team. He enjoyed onechampionship season with the minor team, ending the year as a Leinster medal winner. Cassells subsequently joined the Meath under-21 team, however, he enjoyed little success in this grade. He made his debut with the Meath senior team during the 1974 championship. Over the course of the next sixteen years, Cassells won back-to-back All-Ireland medals, beginning in 1987 before collecting a second as captain of the team in 1988. He also won four Leinster medals and two National Football League medals. Cassells played his last game for Meath in September 1990. As a regular member of the Leinster inter-provincial teamon a number of occasions, Cassells won back-to-back Railway Cup medals in 1985 and 1986. In retirement from playing, Cassells became involved in team management and coaching. Cassells is the younger brother of trade union leader Peter Cassells. Career statistics Honours Navan O'Mahony's Meath Senior Football Championship (8): 1973, 1979, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990 Meath Senior Hurling Championship (2): 1985, 1986 Meath All-Ireland Senior Football Championship (2): 1987, 1988 (c) Leinster Senior Football Championship (4): 1986 (c), 1987, 1988 (c), 1990 National Football League (2): 1974-75, 1987-88 (c) Centenary Cup (1): 1984 (c) Leinster Minor Football Championship (1):
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Joe Cassells", {"description":'Irish Gaelic football player'}], ["Navan", {}], ["Cassells", {}]]
Relations:[["Joe Cassells", "place of birth", "Navan"], ["Joe Cassells", "family name", "Cassells"]] |
### User:
Grace Ida Foster Herben (born Grace Ida Foster, 19 September 1864 – July 1938) was an American educator and missionary. The daughter of a minister and the wife of another, her career became intertwined with that of Rev. Stephen J. Herben after their marriage. Beforehand she served as the dean of women at Allegheny College, and afterwards she worked with the Northwestern Branch of the Methodist Woman's Foreign Missionary Society. She was a delegate to the 1910 World Missionary Conference, and was the only woman to serve on the New Jersey Council of National Defense during World War I. Earlylife and education Herben was born Grace Ida Foster on 19 September 1864, in Lanark, Illinois. Her father was Rev. John Onesimus Foster, a member of the Rock River Conference and chaplain of the Sons of the American Revolution, and her mother Caroline Amelia Foster (née Bolles). In 1889 she graduated from Northwestern University with a Bachelor of Letters. Career Following her graduation from Northwestern University, Herben served from 1889 to 1891 as the dean of women at Allegheny College. Her 1891 marriage to Rev. Stephen J. Herben largely merged her career with his, with both devoted to the ministry,J. Herben, a Northwestern classmate, on 27 May 1891. They had two children: George Foster Herben, a physician, and Stephen Joseph Herben Jr., a philologist at Bryn Mawr College. Her husband died in February 1937 and she in June of the following year, in Maplewood, New Jersey. In 1906 Herben was accidentally shot by George Foster Herben while target shooting. The bullet lodged above her left knee and was not deemed serious, although her husband's initial refusal to answer questions about the matter led to sensational headlines, such as Lips are Sealed: Rev. Herben's Wife Shot Down. References Bibliography Category:1864
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Grace Foster Herben", {"description":'American educator and missionary (1864-1938)', "alias":['Grace Ida Foster Herben', 'Grace Ida Foster']}], ["Dean of women", {}], ["Allegheny College", {}], ["Northwestern University", {}], ["Lanark, Illinois", {}], ["Maplewood, New Jersey", {}]]
Relations:[["Grace Foster Herben", "position held", "Dean of women"], ["Grace Foster Herben", "employer", "Allegheny College"], ["Grace Foster Herben", "educated at", "Northwestern University"], ["Grace Foster Herben", "place of birth", "Lanark, Illinois"], ["Grace Foster Herben", "place of death", "Maplewood, New Jersey"]] |
### User:
Torah Academy of Bergen County (commonly referred to as TABC) is a four-year yeshiva high school located in Teaneck, in Bergen County, New Jersey. It utilizes a split-schedule day offering both Jewish studies and college preparatory courses. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Secondary Schools since 2005. TABC, as it is commonly known, is run by the Head of School, Rabbi Asher Yablok, the Rosh HaYeshiva, Rabbi Yosef Adler (who is also the Rabbi of Congregation Rinat Yisrael in Teaneck), and the Dean, Arthur J. Poleyeff. Rabbi Ezra Wiener isStatistics, and United States History. The building hosts a second school called the SINAI Special Needs Institute. The program serves children of below to above average intelligence with different degrees of learning disability and a wide variety of behavioral characteristics, whose needs could not be addressed by traditional Jewish day school programs and curricula. The students have separate administrators and teachers from TABC, though they share some classrooms. Extracurricular activities TABC has a number of extracurricular activities, some that do well even on the international level. The school's Mock trial team was the 2005 New Jersey State Champions and receivedthe tournament as the 13th seed and finishing ranked #12 overall. In 2016, TABC again participated in the tournament, entering as the #9 seed. In the first round, TABC defeated the Rabbi Alexander S. Gross Hebrew Academy Warriors on a last second shot, but were defeated in the second round by eventual-champion DRS Wildcats 34-31. References External links Torah Academy of Bergen County Kol Torah Israel Report Category:1982 establishments in New Jersey Category:Boys' schools in New Jersey Category:Educational institutions established in 1982 Category:Jewish day schools in New Jersey Category:Middle States Commission on Secondary Schools Category:Modern Orthodox Jewish day schools in
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Torah Academy of Bergen County", {"description":'yeshiva high school in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States'}], ["New Jersey", {}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Torah Academy of Bergen County", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "New Jersey"], ["Torah Academy of Bergen County", "country", "United States"]] |
### User:
Urraca of Portugal (; (1148 – 1211) was the queen of León from 1165 until 1171 or 1172 as the wife of King Ferdinand II. She was the daughter of the first Portuguese king, Afonso I, and the mother of Alfonso IX. After her marriage to Ferdinand was annulled, the former queen became a nun. Family Urraca was born in Coimbra in 1148. She was the daughter of Afonso I, the first king of Portugal, and Maud of Savoy. She had several siblings, including Sancho I. In May or June 1165, Urraca married Ferdinand II of León. The only sonof this marriage, Alfonso IX, was born in Zamora on 15 August 1171. The marriage of Ferdinand II and Urraca was annulled in 1171 or 1172 by Pope Alexander III because the two were second cousins, great-grandchildren of Alfonso VI of León and Castile. Monasticism After the annulment of her marriage, Urraca became a nun joining the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem and retired to live in the estates that her former husband had given her in the Carta de Arras (wedding tokens) in Zamora. Later, she retired in the Monastery of Santa María de Wamba which belonged tocharters in 1211 when she donated the village of Castrotorafe that she had received from her husband the king in 1165 as a wedding gift to the Cathedral of Zamora. Death Queen Urraca died in Wamba, Valladolid, in 1211. She was buried at the Monastery of Santa María de Wamba in what is now the province of Valladolid. St Mary's, the former monastic church and the only part remaining of the ancient monastery, contains the Chapel of the Queen: a plaque that was placed there subsequently mentions that Queen Urraca had been interred in this church. References Bibliography Category:1148 births
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Urraca of Portugal", {"description":'portuguese nun from the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem and Queen of León'}], ["Ferdinand II of León", {}], ["Coimbra", {}], ["Nun", {}], ["Valladolid", {}]]
Relations:[["Urraca of Portugal", "spouse", "Ferdinand II of León"], ["Urraca of Portugal", "place of birth", "Coimbra"], ["Urraca of Portugal", "occupation", "Nun"], ["Urraca of Portugal", "place of death", "Valladolid"]] |
### User:
Hanne Kjer Nyboe Bingle (born 1958) is a Danish-born women's rights activist, former London Underground driver, and powerlifter. In 2017, she was included on the BBC's 100 Women list of most influential women. Personal life Hanne Bingle was born in Denmark, and moved to the United Kingdom in the 1980s. She is married to Ian Bingle, who also worked as a London Underground driver. Career Train driver Bingle joined Transport for London in 1998, where she worked as a Customer Services Assistant at Piccadilly Circus tube station. She trained as a London Underground driver, and started driving trains on the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Hanne Bingle", {"description":'Danish-born women's rights activist'}], ["Denmark", {}], ["Train driver", {}], ["1958", {}]]
Relations:[["Hanne Bingle", "country of citizenship", "Denmark"], ["Hanne Bingle", "occupation", "Train driver"], ["Hanne Bingle", "date of birth", "1958"]] |
### User:
Charles A. McClenahan (February 7, 1941 – May 11, 2017) was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates for District 38, which covers Somerset, Wicomico, & Worcester Counties. Background Delegate McClenahan was appointed to the Maryland House of Delegates to replace J. Lowell Stoltzfus who was appointed to the Maryland State Senate. He was defeated in the 2002 primary election by D. Page Elmore. He died on May 11, 2017 at the age of 76. Education He attended Crisfield High School in Crisfield, Maryland, which is in Somerset County, Maryland. Career Prior to joining the Maryland House of Delegates,McClenahan was a project director for the Somerset County Community Action Agency from 1966 until 1976. Since 1979, he has been a partner and chair of Landmark Insurance, Inc. In addition to his career, Delegate McClenahan is also active in many organizations, including being a member of the board of directors for the Lower Shore Sheltered Workshop from 1971 until 1978, the J. Millard Tawes Foundation since 1980, and the United Way of the Lower Eastern Shore since 1986. McClenahan was also the chair of the Committee to Build Somerset County Public Golf Course, a member of the Lower EasternShore Mayors' Association, the Crisfield Area Chamber of Commerce, the Salisbury State University Foundation, and the Tangier Sound Music Festival. He was also a member of the Delmarva Water Transport Committee, and the Delmarva Industrial Developers Association. In the legislature During Delegate McClenahan's tenure in the Maryland General Assembly, he served on the Economic Matters Committee, the Joint Committee on Health Care Delivery and Financing, the Joint Committee on Protocol, and the Joint Committee on Administrative, Executive and Legislative Review. He was also the chair of the Somerset County Delegation and the vice-chair of the Eastern Shore Delegation. Election results2002 Primary Race for Maryland House of Delegates – District 38A Voters to choose one: {| class="wikitable" |- !Name !Votes !Percent !Outcome |- |D. Page Elmore, Rep. |1,909 | 61% | Won |- |Charles A. McClenahan, Rep. |1,223 | 39% | Lost |} 1998 Race for Maryland House of Delegates – District 38 Voters to choose one for Somerset County: {| class="wikitable" |- !Name !Votes !Percent !Outcome |- |Charles A. McClenahan, Rep. |17,112 | 52% | Won |- |Ernest J. Leatherbury Sr., Dem. |15,711 | 48% | Lost |} 1998 Race for Maryland House of Delegates – District 38 Voters
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Charles A. McClenahan", {"description":'American politician'}], ["Charles", {}], ["McClenahan", {}]]
Relations:[["Charles A. McClenahan", "given name", "Charles"], ["Charles A. McClenahan", "family name", "McClenahan"]] |
### User:
The Kapudan Pasha (, modern Turkish: ), was the Grand Admiral of the navy of the Ottoman Empire. He was also known as the (, modern: , "Captain of the Sea"). Typically, he was based at Galata and Gallipoli during the winter and charged with annual sailings during the summer months. The title of Kapudan Pasha itself is only attested from 1567 onwards; earlier designations for the supreme commander of the fleet include ("bey of the sea") and ("head captain"). The title Derya Bey was first granted during the reign of Bayezid I as an official rank within the state
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Kapudan Pasha", {"description":'The admiral of the navy of the Ottoman Empire'}], ["Ottoman Empire", {}]]
Relations:[["Kapudan Pasha", "country", "Ottoman Empire"]] |
### User:
Nancy Louise Huston, OC (born September 16, 1953) is a Canadian-born novelist and essayist who writes primarily in French and translates her own works into English. Biography Huston was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, the city in which she lived until age fifteen, at which time her family moved to Wilton, New Hampshire, where she attended High Mowing School. She studied at Sarah Lawrence College in New York City, where she was given the opportunity to spend a year of her studies in Paris. Arriving in Paris in 1973, Huston obtained a master's degree from the École des hautes étudesen sciences sociales, writing a thesis on swear words under the supervision of Roland Barthes. After many years of marriage to Tzvetan Todorov, with whom she had two children, Huston now shares her life with Swiss painter Guy Oberson. Career Because French was a language acquired at school and university, Huston found that the combination of her eventual command of the language and her distance from it as a non-native speaker helped her to find her literary voice. Since 1980, Huston has published over 45 books of fiction and non-fiction, including theatre and children's books. Some of her publications areShe has 14 non-fiction publications, of which 12 are original publications and two are self-translations. The other ten non-fiction publications have not yet been self-translated. While Huston's often controversial works of non-fiction have been well-received, her fiction has earned her the most critical acclaim. Her first novel, Les variations Goldberg (1981), was awarded the Prix Contrepoint and was shortlisted for the Prix Femina. She translated this novel into English as The Goldberg Variations (1996). Her next major award came in 1993 when she was received the Canadian Governor General's Award for Fiction in French for Cantique des Plaines (1993). Thiswas initially contested as it was a translation of Plainsong (1993), but Huston demonstrated that it was an adaptation and kept the prize. A subsequent novel, La virevolte (1994), won the Prix "L" and the Prix Louis-Hémon. It was published in English in 1996 as Slow Emergencies. Huston's novel, Instruments des ténèbres, has been her most successful novel yet, being shortlisted for the Prix Femina, and the Governor General's Award. It was awarded the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens, as well as both the Prix des lectrices (Elle Québec) and the Prix du livre Inter in 1997. In 1998, she wasnominated for a Governor General's Award for her novel L'Empreinte de l'ange. The next year she was nominated for a Governor General's Award for translating the work into English as The Mark of the Angel. In 1999, she appeared in the film Set Me Free (Emporte-moi), also collaborating on the screenplay. Her works have been translated into many languages from Chinese to Russian. In 2005, she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada, and she received the Prix Femina in 2006 for the novel Lignes de faille and which, as Fault Lines, has been published by Atlantic Books– [no English self-translation as of yet] Theatre Angela et Marina (2002) [with Valérie Grail – no English self-translation] Jocaste reine (2009) [no English self-translation] Non-fiction Jouer au papa et à l'amant (1979) [no English self-translation] Dire et interdire : éléments de jurologie (1980) [no English self-translation] Mosaïque de la pornographie : Marie-Thérèse et les autres (1982) [no English self-translation] Journal de la création (1990)[no English self-translation] Tombeau de Romain Gary (1995) [no English self-translation] Pour un patriotisme de l'ambiguïté (1995) [no English self-translation] Nord perdu : suivi de Douze France (1999) Losing north: musings on land, tongue and self(2002) [self-translation of Nord perdu : suivi de Douze France] Professeurs de désespoir (2004) [no English self-translation] Passions d'Annie Leclerc (2007) [no English self-translation] L'espèce fabulatrice (2008) The Tale-Tellers: A Short Study of Humankind (2008) [self-translation of L'espèce fabulatrice] Correspondence À l'amour comme à la guerre (1984) [no English version] Lettres parisiennes : autopsie de l'exil [with Leila Sebbar] (1986) [no English version] Selected texts Désirs et réalités : textes choisis 1978–1994 (1995) [no English version] Âmes et corps : textes choisis 1981–2003 (2004) [no English version] Children's fiction Véra veut la vérité (1992) [with Léa & Willi Glasauer –English version as "Vera learns the Truth"] Dora demande des détails (1997) [with Léa & Pascale Bougeault – no English version] Les souliers d'or (1998) [no English self-translation] Filmography Stolen Life (1998) (as screenwriter) Notes References Eugene Benson and William Toye, eds. The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature, Second Edition. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1997: 564–565. External links Nancy Huston, dea ex machina Nancy Huston entry at Canadian Encyclopedia Nancy Huston Biography Category:1953 births Category:Canadian women novelists Category:Canadian translators Category:Exophonic writers Category:French–English translators Category:Governor General's Award-winning fiction writers Category:Living people Category:Officers of the Order of Canada Category:Prix Femina winners Category:Prix
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Nancy Huston", {"description":'Canadian-born novelist and essayist who writes primarily in French', "alias":['Louise Beausire']}], ["Novelist", {}], ["Canada", {}], ["Calgary", {}], ["Sarah Lawrence College", {}], ["High Mowing School", {}], ["Tzvetan Todorov", {}], ["Prix Femina", {}], ["Prix Goncourt des Lycéens", {}], ["Prix du Livre Inter", {}], ["France", {}]]
Relations:[["Nancy Huston", "occupation", "Novelist"], ["Nancy Huston", "country of citizenship", "Canada"], ["Nancy Huston", "place of birth", "Calgary"], ["Nancy Huston", "educated at", "Sarah Lawrence College"], ["Nancy Huston", "educated at", "High Mowing School"], ["Nancy Huston", "spouse", "Tzvetan Todorov"], ["Nancy Huston", "award received", "Prix Femina"], ["Nancy Huston", "award received", "Prix Goncourt des Lycéens"], ["Nancy Huston", "award received", "Prix du Livre Inter"], ["Nancy Huston", "country of citizenship", "France"]] |
### User:
The Book of Lights is a 1981 novel by Chaim Potok about a young rabbi and student of Kabbalah whose service as a United States military chaplain in Korea and Japan after the Korean War challenges his thinking about the meaning of faith in a world of "light" from many sources. Synopsis The novel's central character is Gershon Loran, a young rabbi who is "the product of a parochial New York Jewish upbringing," who is "irresistibly drawn to the study of the Jewish mysticism known as Kabbalah." Raised by an aunt and uncle after his parents are killed in 1937,"psychological fiction" or "psychological realism," the novel takes place during the years 1950–57. It is divided into three periods: Gershon's rabbinical school days in New York City; service as a chaplain in Korea; time spent in Japan, including visits to Hiroshima and Kyoto, along with Arthur Leiden, a classmate from rabbinical school. Background The Book of Lights, like many of Potok's novels, explores "the tension between tradition and modernity, and the clash between Jewish culture and contemporary Western civilization, which he calls 'core-to-core culture confrontation.' Potok writes that the inspiration for this novel came from his own service as anArmy Chaplain in Korea and Japan. Potok writes: What about a confrontation where the end result is no answers at all, but only questions? That's what The Book of Lights is all about. Admittedly a rather difficult book, deliberately so because of the difficult problems it deals with. I spent fifteen and a half months of my life in Korea and a little bit of that in Japan, courtesy of the United States military in which I became a chaplain. I came into that experience with a very neat coherent picture of what I was as an American and whatof God's world in a pagan land. Potok's experiences as a military chaplain in Asia after the war inform some of his descriptions of war and its aftermath in this novel—including the dropping of the atomic bombs and the suffering of its victims—but would later form the basis of his 1992 work, I Am the Clay, where the idea of the cruelty and futility of war takes center stage. Title The novel's title is a translation of a classic kabbalistic text, "Sefer HaZohar," commonly referred to simply as the "Zohar." However, "light" in the novel takes on a number ofmeanings other than the light of mysticism or faith: even the light of the atomic bomb that the father of Gershon's friend Arthur helped to create. As one scholarly reviewer puts it, "Pervasive light imagery provides a thematic structure for the novel." Publication The novel was first published October 16, 1981, by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. It was released as a paperback by Fawcett Crest in November 1982. Reception The novel was widely discussed within religious circles as one that asked profoundly important questions about God and about ourselves in a world where we begin to encounter, sometimes for thefirst time, those of other faiths. In Diana Eck's God: A spiritual journey from Bozeman to Banaras, she describes the scene in the novel where Gershon and Leiden watch a religious Buddhist in a shrine in Japan, prompting Gershon to ask his friend whether he thinks that God is listening to this man's prayers. "If he is", Gershon asks, "then what are we [Jews] all about?" As Eck puts it, Adaptation In response to a request from Carol Rocamora, Producer/Director of the Philadelphia Festival of New Plays, Potok wrote stage adaptations of a number of his works, including The Playof Lights, a two-act play based on this novel. The play was produced by the Festival at the Harold Prince Theater, Annandale Center, in May 1992, receiving mixed reviews. It was directed by Rocamora, and starred Benjamin White as Gershon, and Matt Servito as Arthur. Reviewer Clifford A. Ridley described the script as a transformation of the book into a play "of satisfying dramatic shape," but noted that the pacing of the play, "with its frequent and seemingly interminable pauses, is simply too much of... well, of nothing at all." The play was also performed in 1993 in Florida, atthe Hollywood Performing Arts Theater. It received a very favorable review in the South Florida Sun Sentinel, where it was described as "a drama of aura and far-reaching ambition... disturbing theater... [that] raises more questions than it answers, perhaps Potok's purpose; but it provides an evening of thoughtful play-going." See also The Chosen (Potok novel) My Name is Asher Lev Wanderings: Chaim Potok's History of the Jews References External links Potok biography, Jewish Virtual Library Audio interview with Chaim Potok Category:1981 American novels Category:Jewish American novels Category:Novels by Chaim Potok Category:Korean War novels Category:Novels about the military Category:Novels about religion
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Book of Lights", {"description":'novel by Chaim Potok'}], ["Chaim Potok", {}], ["Novel", {}], ["United States", {}], ["Alfred A. Knopf", {}], ["Religion", {}]]
Relations:[["The Book of Lights", "author", "Chaim Potok"], ["The Book of Lights", "genre", "Novel"], ["The Book of Lights", "country of origin", "United States"], ["The Book of Lights", "publisher", "Alfred A. Knopf"], ["The Book of Lights", "main subject", "Religion"]] |
### User:
"The Problem of the Covered Bridge" (1974) is a mystery short story by Edward D. Hoch which was first published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (Dec 1974 issue). It is part of a sub-type of the locked room mystery known as an impossible crime story. It introduces the characters of Dr. Sam Hawthorn, Sheriff Lens, and the town of Northmont. It is included in Hoch's book Diagnosis: Impossible: The Problems of Dr. Sam Hawthorne (Crippen & Landru, 1996). It is also included in All but Impossible!, the famous anthology edited by Hoch. Hoch was inspired while looking at a watercolor
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["The Problem of the Covered Bridge", {"description":'book by Edward D. Hoch'}], ["Edward D. Hoch", {}], ["Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine", {}], ["Short story", {}]]
Relations:[["The Problem of the Covered Bridge", "author", "Edward D. Hoch"], ["The Problem of the Covered Bridge", "publisher", "Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine"], ["The Problem of the Covered Bridge", "genre", "Short story"]] |
### User:
Richard Buell Ogilvie (February 22, 1923 – May 10, 1988) was the 35th governor of Illinois and served from 1969 to 1973. A wounded combat veteran of World War II, he became known as the mafia-fighting sheriff of Cook County, Illinois, in the 1960s before becoming governor. Education and military service Ogilive graduated from high school in Port Chester, New York, in 1940. While attending Yale University, he enlisted in the United States Army in 1942. As a tank commander in France, he was wounded and received the Purple Heart and two Battle Stars. Discharged in 1945, he resumed studiesat Yale and in 1947, he earned a Bachelor of Arts majoring in American history. In 1949, he earned a Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Chicago-Kent College of Law. From 1950 to 1954, he practiced law in Chicago and served as an assistant United States Attorney from 1954–1955. From 1958 to 1961, he served as a special assistant to the United States Attorney General heading an office fighting organized crime in Chicago and the Chicago Mafia. Pre-gubernatorial political career Ogilvie was elected sheriff of Cook County, Illinois' most populous county, in 1962; he served in this position until 1967. While sheriff,he was elected President of the Cook County Board of Commissioners and served from 1967 to 1969, when he resigned upon being elected Governor of Illinois. As of , he was the last Republican to serve as the chief executive of Cook County. Governor of Illinois In 1968, he was elected governor as a Republican, with 51.2% of the vote, narrowly beating incumbent Democrat Sam Shapiro. His lieutenant governor was Democrat and future U.S. Senator Paul Simon, the only time that Illinois elected a Governor and Lt. Governor of different parties. (However, on at least two other occasions there wasGeneral Services Agency. Post governorship President Richard Nixon considered Oglivie as a nominee to become Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In 1979, Governor Ogilvie was appointed as Trustee for the Milwaukee Road, a railroad that had entered bankruptcy. He oversaw its sale and reorganization into the Wisconsin Central Railroad. Oglivie was the publisher of a revived Chicago Daily News in 1979, 18 months after its demise in 1978. In 1987, he was appointed by then-Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole to chair a committee studying the proposed termination of Amtrak's federal subsidy. Until his death in 1988, he wasa partner in the distinguished Chicago law firm of Isham Lincoln & Beale, one of whose founders was Abraham Lincoln's son, Robert Todd Lincoln. Death and legacy After his death in Chicago on May 10, 1988, Governor Ogilvie was cremated and interred in Rosehill Mausoleum, Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago. In 1997, Chicago & North Western Station, the downtown terminus for Metra commuter trains to many of Chicago's northern and western suburbs, was renamed Ogilvie Transportation Center in his honor, two years after the C&NW's assets have been purchased and incorporated into Union Pacific. The modern railroad station uses the former C&NWtrainshed. Wisconsin Central Ltd. also had an EMD SD45 locomotive named in his honor (WC 7513). Ogilvie had been a longtime supporter of rail transport, and had created the Regional Transportation Authority, Metra's parent agency. Awards Richard B. Ogilvie was inducted as a Laureate of The Lincoln Academy of Illinois and awarded the Order of Lincoln (the State’s highest honor) by the Governor of Illinois in 1973 in the area of Government. In popular culture Ogilvie is referenced in the news broadcast that serves as a backdrop for Simon & Garfunkel's "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," which reports that Ogilvie, inhis position as Cook County Sheriff, asked Martin Luther King, Jr. to call off an open-housing march in the Chicago suburb of Cicero. The track was conceived by musician Paul Simon, who coincidentally shares his name with the man who served as lieutenant governor of Illinois under Ogilvie's gubernatorial tenure and later represented Illinois in the U.S. Senate. In the first-season episode "Home Again" of the alternate history science fiction TV series For All Mankind, Ogilvie is referenced as being the governor of Illinois in 1974 and that his support for the Equal Rights Amendment plays a role in the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Richard B. Ogilvie", {"description":'U.S. politician, governor of Illinois (1923-1988)', "alias":['Richard Buell Ogilvie']}], ["United States", {}], ["Governor of Illinois", {}], ["Yale University", {}], ["Purple Heart", {}], ["Richard", {}], ["World War II", {}], ["Chicago", {}], ["Chicago-Kent College of Law", {}], ["Rosehill Cemetery", {}]]
Relations:[["Richard B. Ogilvie", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "position held", "Governor of Illinois"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "educated at", "Yale University"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "award received", "Purple Heart"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "given name", "Richard"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "conflict", "World War II"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "place of death", "Chicago"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "educated at", "Chicago-Kent College of Law"], ["Richard B. Ogilvie", "place of burial", "Rosehill Cemetery"]] |
### User:
(1944) Marriage of Affection (1944) Peter Voss, Thief of Millions (1946) The Court Concert (1948) The Beautiful Galatea (1950) Torreani (1951) When the Heath Dreams at Night (1952) Christina (1953) Everything for Father (1953) As Long as You Live (1955) The Dark Star (1955) The Rose of Stamboul (1953) The Wishing-Table (1956) The Glass Tower (1957) Freddy, the Guitar and the Sea (1959) Rommel Calls Cairo (1959) Freddy and the Melody of the Night (1960) We Will Never Part (1960) Twenty Girls and the Teachers (1971) References External links Category:1903 births Category:1972 deaths Category:People from Sangerhausen Category:German male film actors
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Werner Stock", {"description":'actor'}], ["Sangerhausen", {}]]
Relations:[["Werner Stock", "place of birth", "Sangerhausen"]] |
### User:
Mick Richard Morris (March 9, 1978 – June 3, 2013) better known as MickDeth, was an American bassist and guitarist. He was a part of the bands Eighteen Visions, Clear and Misfits cover band, Die Die My Darling. Biography He was raised in Utah, along with his three sisters and brother, by his grandparents. At an early age, he adopted the straight edge lifestyle, having grown up in an environment where drugs were very prominent in his life and family. With such things surrounding his world, Morris decided that he did not want a part of it, ever. As Mickmade mention, "Living in Salt Lake City, if you wear anything 'satanic'—even Straight edge because in Salt Lake, that is considered a gang—you can be kicked out of school." Morris attended Highland High School. During his time at Highland High School, he was in the band Elsewhere. Morris dropped out of high school to pursue his music career, originally supposed to graduate in 1996. Though he returned to get his diploma, and graduated when he was 20, in 1998. MickDeth got into music early on in life. Ever since he saw Metallica's video for their 1989 single "One", he knewhe wanted to play music. His father was always supportive of him, playing the guitar himself. He picked up the guitar when he was twelve years old. Morris has been listening to classic rock, punk, 1980s metal, thrash and death metal, hardcore, and gangster rap. He had been getting tattoos since he turned twenty. His first tattoo was "Drug Free" on his forearm in Milwaukee on Clear's second tour. He stated that he has almost 100 skulls and 200 letters on his body. His most notable tattoos were "Lifeless" across his knuckles, paying tribute to a fellow SLC band, anda portrait of Dimebag Darrell on his calf done by Kat Von D (which was briefly shown on the show Miami Ink). When Morris moved to California, he held a job at Paul Frank from 2000 until 2003 (when Eighteen Visions became a full-time band). He has modeled for To Die For Clothing as well as Shockhound.com. Morris was also a judge for the seventh annual Independent Music Awards. Clear Clear (originally XclearX) was a straight edge hardcore band from the mid 1990s out of Salt Lake City. MickDeth had always been a fan of the band, going to allof their shows. One day in 1997, Morris received a phone call and was asked to try out for the band when their previous guitarist left. They wrote and recorded a full-length, Deeper Than Blood, which was released in 1999. After Josh left Clear, they added a replacement guitarists and did another tour. After that tour, Mick announced that it was his turn to part ways with the band, mostly for musical differences and stating that they were not really writing songs anymore. Once Mick left the band in 2000, Clear decided not to continue on without him. In Februarynever played bass in his life. During his time in Eighteen Visions, Mick recorded five albums with them. They toured the world, gaining fame and fans. After recording Obsession, they signed to major label Epic Records. On April 9, 2007, Mick announced that Eighteen Visions was no longer. Other bands Elsewhere Elsewhere was a shoegazing, goth rock band from Salt Lake City that started in high school. Mick has described it to be similar to The Cure and Joy Division. They were on the label Eden's Watchtower. Die Die My Darling Die Die My Darling is a Misfits cover bandAmong Sheep DVDs. Post Eighteen Visions Since the breakup of Eighteen Visions, Mick has toured with Hatebreed as their guitar tech on Ozzfest in 2007, on their spring–summer tour of 2008 and their Mexico City show in early 2009. He was working for shockhound (a part of Hot Topic) and he sold clothes as well as occasionally his old equipment on eBay and craigslist. Dethless Clothing In 2007, Mick started Dethless Clothing. A couple of months after the breakup of Eighteen Visions, Dethless seemed to be finished before it really took off due to personal and financial restraints. On February
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["MickDeth", {"description":'American musician'}], ["Guitarist", {}], ["Salt Lake City", {}], ["Guitar", {}]]
Relations:[["MickDeth", "occupation", "Guitarist"], ["MickDeth", "place of birth", "Salt Lake City"], ["MickDeth", "place of death", "Salt Lake City"], ["MickDeth", "instrument", "Guitar"]] |
### User:
Gebr. Heller Maschinenfabrik GmbH is a German manufacturer of milling machines, manufacturing systems and crankshaft and camshaft machines. The company's headquarters is located in Nürtingen in the Stuttgart region of South Germany. The company's customers come from a variety of industries including automotive manufacturers and their suppliers, machine building industry, contract manufacturers, power engineering, tool and die manufacturing as well as aerospace companies. History On 7 February 1894, 25-year-old Herman Heller (1869–1931) founded the company „Hermann Heller Handelsgeschäft und Produktion von geschützten Artikeln und Uhrmacherwerkzeug“ – which traded and manufactured patented products and watchmaker's tools. Initially, staff comprised seven craftsmenUK and Brazil. In 1982, HELLER opened production facilities in Chicago, IL in the United States. In the year 2000, the company was awarded certification to ISO 9001, QS 9000, TES and VDA 6.4 standards. In the same year, HELLER doubled the production capacity of the company's production plant in the US and introduced a new internal milling machine for the machining of crankshafts. In 2007, HELLER introduced the ModuleLine manufacturing system and presented the H series of machining centres at EMO in Hanover. In 2009, the company launched the F series for simultaneous 5-axis machining and in 2010 presentedNANOSLIDE® process into a global application for mass production and industrialization. Products 4-axis machining centres from the H and MCH series 5-axis machining centres from the F and MCH-C series 5-axis machining centres for milling and turning operations from the C series Flexible manufacturing systems Special solutions for crankshaft and camshaft machining CBC CylinderBoreCoating: Turnkey solutions for crankcases Organisational structure HELLER operates production facilities around the globe, e.g. in Germany, UK, Brazil, United States and China. HELLER Services GmbH based in Nürtingen is a wholly owned subsidiary specialising in services and training. Additionally, HELLER is operating subsidiaries and representations inall relevant markets around the globe. Recently, HELLER has been expanding its presence in the Asian market. Two examples are the TechnologyCenter in Pune/India founded in 2009 and the company's subsidiaries in Shanghai and Beijing. In 2013, a new production facility was opened in Changzhou, China. With a staff of more than 2,500 worldwide, HELLER is generating a turnover of approx. EUR 559m (2015). HELLER staff also include approx. 190 apprentices. This corresponds to a percentage of trainees of more than 7% at the company's facilities in Nürtingen. References External links HELLER UK HELLER USA HELLER Brasil Category:Engineering companies of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Gebr. Heller", {"description":'company'}], ["Nürtingen", {}], ["1894", {}], ["Germany", {}], ["Manufacturing", {}]]
Relations:[["Gebr. Heller", "headquarters location", "Nürtingen"], ["Gebr. Heller", "inception", "1894"], ["Gebr. Heller", "country", "Germany"], ["Gebr. Heller", "industry", "Manufacturing"]] |
### User:
Zashkovychi () is a village (selo) in the Lviv Oblast (province) of Western Ukraine. The village is small and has an area of 2,14 km2 and population of the village is around 552 persons. Local government is administered by Zavydovytska village council. Geography It is located in the Horodok Raion (district) at a distance of from the Highway in Ukraine () – Lviv – Sambir – Uzhhorod. A distance from Zashkovychi to the district center Horodok is , to the regional center of Lviv is and to the Komarno. History About the village Zakovychi in writing first mention exists of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Zashkovychi", {"description":'village in Horodok Raion, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine'}], ["Ukraine", {}]]
Relations:[["Zashkovychi", "country", "Ukraine"]] |
### User:
Garik Martirosyan (, , born February 13, 1974 in Yerevan, Soviet Union) is a Russian entertainer, comedian, TV host, actor and singer of Armenian origin. He's the co-producer and host of the Comedy Club Russia which airs on Russian TV channel TNT. He is also one of 4 hosts of Prozhektorperiskhilton broadcast on Channel One. Biography Garik Martirosyan was born on February 14, 1974 in Yerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union. In 2002 he graduated from Yerevan State Medical University with a degree in neurology. Worked three years in a psychological hospital. From 1993 to 2002 was a member (captain from1997) of the New Armenians team of the Russian TV show KVN. In 2003 with the help of fellow New Armenians Artur Djanibekyan and Artash Sarksyan he founded Comedy Club. Together with Larisa Dolina he won the Two Stars TV show. He hosted the first two seasons of Minute of Fame, Russian version of America's Got Talent on Channel One. He and his wife Zhanna Levina met in Sochi, Russia and have a daughter Jasmine, who was born in 2004. Politics In March 2007 his brother Levon Martirosyan announced that Garik Martirosyan intends to participate in the pre-election campaign of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Garik Martirosyan", {"description":'Armenian comedian'}], ["Comedian", {}], ["Actor", {}], ["Yerevan", {}], ["Soviet Union", {}], ["Russia", {}], ["Yerevan State Medical University", {}], ["Martirosyan", {}], ["Armenians", {}], ["KVN", {}], ["Levon Martirosyan", {}]]
Relations:[["Garik Martirosyan", "occupation", "Comedian"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "occupation", "Actor"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "place of birth", "Yerevan"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "country of citizenship", "Soviet Union"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "country of citizenship", "Russia"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "educated at", "Yerevan State Medical University"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "family name", "Martirosyan"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "ethnic group", "Armenians"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "genre", "KVN"], ["Garik Martirosyan", "sibling", "Levon Martirosyan"]] |
### User:
{{Automatic taxobox | fossil_range = Early Cretaceous, Barremian | image = vallibonavenatrix_cani.jpg | image_caption = Reconstruction of the animal based on its fossil remains and those of its close relatives| taxon = Vallibonavenatrix | authority = Malafaia et al., 2019 | type_species = Vallibonavenatrix cani| type_species_authority = Malafaia et al., 2019 }}Vallibonavenatrix (meaning "Vallibona huntress" after the town near where its remains were found) is a genus of spinosaurid theropod dinosaur from the Arcillas de Morella Formation of Castellón, Spain. The type and only species is Vallibonavenatrix cani. The holotype is a partial skeleton consisting of one cervical vertebra, six
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Vallibonavenatrix", {"description":'Genus of spinosaurid theropod dinosaur'}], ["Genus", {}]]
Relations:[["Vallibonavenatrix", "taxon rank", "Genus"]] |
### User:
Stagmatophora pilana is a moth in the family Cosmopterigidae. It is found in South Africa. The wingspan is about 13 mm. The forewings are dark purplish-fuscous with a slender irregular white streak along the dorsum from the base to beyond the tornus, posteriorly partially suffused with brownish-ochreous, edged above by two raised black dots at one-fourth, and at the middle of the wing, the second edged anteriorly with white. There is a short black apical dash, partially edged above with white. The hindwings are grey, thinly scaled towards the base. References Natural History Museum Lepidoptera generic names catalog Category:Moths described
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Stagmatophora pilana", {"description":'species of insect'}], ["Stagmatophora", {}]]
Relations:[["Stagmatophora pilana", "parent taxon", "Stagmatophora"]] |
### User:
Sakshi Gulati is an Indian model and film actress. She was the Femina Miss India 2007 runner-up. She made her acting debut in Hindi cinema with Ram Gopal Varma's 2008 film Contract. She then appeared in films such as The Film Emotional Atyachar (2010), and the Telugu film Katha Screenplay Darsakatvam Appalaraju (2011). She finished shooting for a Hindi romantic comedy movie and a Telugu movie, Chitrangada on Sri Vighnesh Karthik Cinema banner in G. Ashok's direction. Early life Born into a Punjabi family, Sakshi hails from an Army background. She holds Economics (hons) degree from the University of Delhi.She then underwent training in acting, Kathak and Salsa. Sakshi is a trained swimmer, horse rider and a voracious reader. Apart from Femina Miss India 2007, Sakshi has been a top model and has walked the ramp for Wills lifestyle Fashion Week and top fashion designers like Manav Gangwani, Neeta Lulla, Ashima Leena and Nishka Lulla. She has appeared in many print campaigns for brands like Samsung, Benetton, and Delhi Times. Sakshi has also done video ads for brands like Pond's and Diva Sarees. Filmography References Category:People from Meerut Category:Female models from Uttar Pradesh Category:Indian television actresses Category:Actresses in Hindi
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Sakshi Gulati", {"description":'Indian model and film actress (born 1983)'}], ["India", {}], ["Meerut", {}]]
Relations:[["Sakshi Gulati", "country of citizenship", "India"], ["Sakshi Gulati", "place of birth", "Meerut"]] |
### User:
The Office of Public Works (OPW) () (legally the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland, though the full title is rarely used) is an Irish Government agency whose primary function is to support the implementation of Government policy and advise the Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform and the Minister of State at that Department, principally in the disciplines of property (including heritage properties) and flood risk management. The OPW has a central role in driving the Government's property asset management reform process in respect of its own portfolio and that of the wider public service. Role The OPW operatesas part of the Irish Executive, the branch of the British Government in Ireland. The OPW had responsibility for the majority of heritage sites within the Republic of Ireland prior to 1996. In 1996 the management of most of these sites was transferred to a separate agency, Dúchas - The Heritage Service, which adopted a stylised version of the traditional OPW logo, with the OPW changing its logo to match its new focus on its buildings and maintenance functions. In 2003 Dúchas was wound up and most of its functions are now operated by the National Parks and Wildlife Service
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Office of Public Works", {"description":'Irish Government agency'}], ["Government agency", {}], ["Republic of Ireland", {}]]
Relations:[["Office of Public Works", "instance of", "Government agency"], ["Office of Public Works", "country", "Republic of Ireland"]] |
### User:
"Raise Your Glass" is a song by American singer Pink from her first greatest hits compilation Greatest Hits... So Far!!! (2010). The song was written by Pink, Max Martin and Karl "Shellback" Schuster, and produced by the latter two, who are responsible for many of Pink's hits. The song celebrates the first decade since Pink's debut in 2000, and is dedicated to her fans who have been supporting her over the years. The song was released as the album's lead single on October 5, 2010, by Jive Records gaining both critical and commercial success, being acclaimed by most music criticsand described as a party anthem, and reaching the top-ten in several countries, including the United States, where it became her third number-one single. In 2011, "Raise Your Glass" was ranked at number thirteen on the "Top 40 Year End Chart" based on Mediabase. The song was featured in a commercial for the 2011 film Bridesmaids, and in the theatrical trailers for the films What's Your Number? and New Year's Eve. Background "Raise Your Glass" was announced as the lead single from Pink's then-upcoming greatest hits compilation on October 1, 2010. The song follows a strong pop style, in muchsimilar fashion to her previous work with producer Max Martin. Pink describes the song as a "celebration for people who feel left out from the popular crowd." In an interview for MTV, Pink comments on the song: "I don't know if it's going to be huge, but it is new. I did three new songs. It was good timing. I had been on the road for two years and I hadn't written anything and I wanted to write a song about underdogs. Instead of going and becoming a cover girl, I kind of just hit the road and pounded thewith a giggling self-depreciation, a sneer and a smile." Chart performance In the United States, "Raise Your Glass" recharged Pink's chart performance, becoming her tenth Top 10 hit and her third number one hit. It put Pink third on the list of female artists with most Top 10 hits in the 2000s, behind Rihanna, who has collected 18 Top 10 hits since 2005 and Beyoncé, with 14. It took the song eight weeks to hit the Hot 100's apex, where it stayed for a single week. "Raise Your Glass" has also become Pink's fifth number one on Adult Pop Songs,formats Digital/CD Single "Raise Your Glass" – 3:23 "U + Ur Hand" (From Funhouse Tour: Live in Australia) – 4:14 Remixes Raise Your Glass (Jump Smokers Extended Mix) - 4:19 Raise Your Glass (Jump Smokers Radio Edit) - 4:04 Raise Your Glass (JMRX Club Mix) - 6:41 Credits and personnel Songwriting – Pink, Max Martin, Shellback Production and recording – Max Martin, Shellback Keyboards – Max Martin Drums, guitar and bass – Shellback Gang vocals – Pink, Carey Hart, Max Martin, Shellback Assistant recording – Sal "El Rey" Ojeda Additional recording – Michael Ilbert Mixing – Serban Ghenea Mix engineer– John Hanes Assistant mix engineer – Tim Roberts Source: Charts and certifications Weekly charts Certifications !scope="col" colspan="3"| Streaming |- Year-end charts Release history References Category:2010 singles Category:Pink (singer) songs Category:Billboard Dance/Mix Show Airplay number-one singles Category:Songs written by Max Martin Category:Song recordings produced by Max Martin Category:Songs written by Shellback (record producer) Category:Number-one singles in Australia Category:Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles Category:Billboard Mainstream Top 40 (Pop Songs) number-one singles Category:Billboard Adult Top 40 number-one singles Category:Song recordings produced by Shellback (record producer) Category:Music videos directed by Dave Meyers (director) Category:LaFace Records singles Category:Jive Records singles Category:Sony Music singles Category:2010
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Raise Your Glass", {"description":'single'}], ["Max Martin", {}], ["United States", {}], ["CD single", {}], ["LaFace Records", {}]]
Relations:[["Raise Your Glass", "producer", "Max Martin"], ["Raise Your Glass", "lyrics by", "Max Martin"], ["Raise Your Glass", "country of origin", "United States"], ["Raise Your Glass", "distribution format", "CD single"], ["Raise Your Glass", "record label", "LaFace Records"]] |
### User:
Zachary Mortensen (born October 5, 1972, in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American film producer, writer and founder of the production company Ghost Robot. Biography Zachary Mortensen is the founder of Ghost Robot, a production and management company in New York City. In 2006 Mortensen produced the feature films Choking Man by iconoclastic music video director Steve Barron, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and Dr. Bronner's Magic Soapbox, a film about E. H. Bronner by director Sara Lamm, which premiered at the Mill Valley Film Festival. "Dr. Bronner's Magic Soapbox" was released in theaters in the summer of 2007by Balcony Releasing. Mortensen's feature film Road by director Leslie McCleave premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival in 2005 where it was awarded outstanding performance for the two leads, Catherine Kellner and Ebon Moss-Bachrach and was released theatrically in 2006 by 7th Art Releasing. In 2001, Mortensen produced the feature documentary Hell House by director George Ratliff which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and was released theatrically in fall 2002. Mortensen produced the award winning documentary features Breath Control: The History of the Human Beat Box and The Federation of Black Cowboys. He also produced the theatricaldocumentary Stoked: The Rise and Fall of Gator directed by Helen Stickler. Mortensen produced The New Arrival by Amy Talkington, which was the first motion picture using 360-degree video technology. The movie was a collaboration between Intel Corporation, Atom Films, and BeHere, the company behind the revolutionary technology, and it premiered at the market at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000. The following year, Mortensen produced the first commercially released Music video created entirely with Machinima software. That video was In the Waiting Line by the band Zero 7, directed by Tommy Pallotta. In 1997–98, Mortensen was the Director ofProduction at Caipirinha Productions, where he supervised the post-production and distribution of the critically acclaimed documentary feature Modulations. Mortensen is the writer and creator of the scifi comic series The Gatecrashers which was drawn by Sutu the artist behind the award-winning web series Nawlz. The Gatecrashers first book A Night of Gatecrashing was named to The Village Voice'''s best Comics and Graphic Novels of 2014. Mortensen continues to produce feature films, commercials, music videos, and television. Selected filmographyCreative Control (film) (2016) producerThanksgiving (2014) producerUnity of All Things (2013) producerBirth Story: Ina May Gaskin and the Farm Midwives (2013) producerFirst Winter(2012) producerLove Letter (2011) executive producerAgainst The Current (2008) co-executive producerCropsey (2008) producerDr. Bronner's Magic Soapbox (2006) producerChoking Man (2006) producerRoad (2005) producerPhileine zegt sorry (2003) line producerIn the Waiting Line (2003) producerThe Federation of Black Cowboys (2003) producerStoked: The Rise and Fall of Gator (2002) producerBreath Control: The History of the Human Beat Box (2002) producerDestiny (2002) (V) producerTrappedinfreedom (2002) producerHell House (2001) producerThe New Arrival (2000) producerSecond Skins (1998) producer March 29, 1979 (1997) producer Highball (1997) line producer Vertical City (1996) line producer America's Most Wanted producer, 4 episodes Bittersweet Motel (2000) production manager: "The Great Went"
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Zachary Mortensen", {"description":'American film producer'}], ["Zachary", {}], ["Madison, Wisconsin", {}], ["Film producer", {}], ["Mortensen", {}], ["Human", {}]]
Relations:[["Zachary Mortensen", "given name", "Zachary"], ["Zachary Mortensen", "place of birth", "Madison, Wisconsin"], ["Zachary Mortensen", "occupation", "Film producer"], ["Zachary Mortensen", "family name", "Mortensen"], ["Zachary Mortensen", "instance of", "Human"]] |
### User:
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong/Tatung (, ) is a Latin diocese in the Ecclesiastical province of Taiyuan in PR China. It has its cathedral episcopal see Cathedral of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in the city of Datong but is vacant. History Established on March 14, 1922 as Apostolic Prefecture of Datongfu 大同府, on territory split off from the Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Shansi 山西北境) Promoted on June 17, 1932 as Apostolic Vicariate of Datongfu 大同府 Promoted on April 11, 1946 as Diocese of Datong 大同, ceasing to be exempt and becoming a suffragan. Ordinaries (all Roman Rite; sofar all missionary members of the Latin congregation Scheutists, C.I.C.M.) Apostolic Prefect of Datongfu 大同府 Father Joseph Hoogers, C.I.C.M. (March 3, 1923–1932), previously Ecclesiastical Superior of the Mission sui iuris of I-li 伊犁 (imperial China) (1918.06.08 – 1922) Apostolic Vicar of Datongfu 大同府 Franciscus Joosten, C.I.C.M. (June 21, 1932 – April 11, 1946 see below), Titular Bishop of Germanicopolis (in Isauria) (1932.06.14 – 1946.04.11) Suffragan Bishops of Datong 大同 Franciscus Joosten, C.I.C.M. (see above April 11, 1946 – 1947) Apostolic Administrator Alphonse Van Buggenhout (范普厚), C.I.C.M. (1950.03.31 – 1951), later Secretary General of the Chinese Regional Bishops’ Conference 1967 –
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong", {"description":'diocese of the Catholic Church', "alias":['Dioecesis Tatomensis']}], ["1922", {}], ["China", {}], ["Roman Rite", {}], ["Datong", {}]]
Relations:[["Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong", "inception", "1922"], ["Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong", "country", "China"], ["Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong", "Catholic rite", "Roman Rite"], ["Roman Catholic Diocese of Datong", "headquarters location", "Datong"]] |
### User:
Turbonilla macandreae is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies. Nomenclature Replacement name for Turbonilla speciosa H. Adams, 1869, not A. Adams, 1860 Distribution This species occurs in the following locations: European waters (ERMS scope) References Adams H. 1871. Descriptions of twenty-six new species of shells collected by Robert M'Andrew, Esq., in the Red Sea. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1870: 788-793 External links To Biodiversity Heritage Library (1 publication) To CLEMAM To Encyclopedia of Life To World Register of Marine Species macandreae Category:Gastropods described in 1871
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Turbonilla macandreae", {"description":'species of mollusc'}], ["Species", {}], ["Turbonilla", {}]]
Relations:[["Turbonilla macandreae", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Turbonilla macandreae", "parent taxon", "Turbonilla"]] |
### User:
Liz W. Garcia is an American television producer and writer. Career As a writer her credits include Dawson's Creek, Wonderfalls and Cold Case (also executive story editor and consulting producer). Garcia's film credits include working as a production assistant on the 1988 film Return of the Killer Tomatoes. She was also an assistant to Ed Decter and John J. Strauss in the 2002 film The New Guy. In 2010, she co-created the TNT series Memphis Beat starring Jason Lee. She co-created the series with her husband, actor Joshua Harto. The series ended the following year after two seasons. Garcia wrote
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Liz W. Garcia", {"description":'Television producer and writer'}], ["Liz", {}], ["Joshua Harto", {}], ["Television producer", {}]]
Relations:[["Liz W. Garcia", "given name", "Liz"], ["Liz W. Garcia", "spouse", "Joshua Harto"], ["Liz W. Garcia", "occupation", "Television producer"]] |
### User:
Marcus Plautius Silvanus was a Roman politician and general active during the Principate. He was consul in 2 BC as the colleague of the emperor Augustus. Biography Marcus Plautius Silvanus was a member of the gens Plautia, the son of another Marcus Plautius Silvanus and Urgulania. She was probably of Etruscan descent, and the close friend of the empress Livia. It is suggested by Ronald Syme extrapolating from Tacitus that it was Urgulania's influence over Livia that allowed Silvanus to climb the cursus honorum, enabling him to reach the consulate in 2 BC alongside Augustus. Silvanus was then made proconsulmarried Fabia Numantina, but their marriage was over prior to AD 24, as by then he was married to Apronia, daughter of Lucius Apronius. He was accused of murdering Apronia by throwing her out of a window. The murder was investigated by emperor Tiberius himself. Urgulania then sent her grandson a dagger, encouraging him to commit suicide, which he duly did. Shortly after the murder of Apronia, Fabia Numantina was "charged with having caused her husband's insanity by magical incantations and potions", but was acquitted. Aulus Plautius Urgulanius. Died at the age of nine. Publius Plautius Pulcher. Friend and companionof his nephew Claudius Drusus. Quaestor to Tiberius, and augur; governor of Sicilia. Plautia Urgulanilla, first wife of the emperor Claudius. He is also the first cousin of Aulus Plautius (suffect consul 1 BC), who was the father of Aulus Plautius, leader of the Invasion of Britannia in 43AD. Mausoleum of the Plautii The mausoleum in which Marcus Plautius Silvanus was interred still stands in modern Tivoli, Italy. A large inscription outlining Silvanus' achievements is still in place, and includes his wife, Lartia and one of his sons, Aulus Plautius Urgulanius, alongside the separate, very detailed stone of his adoptedgrandson Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus. The Latin inscription reads: "M Plautius M F A N/ Silvanus/ Cos VIIvir Epulon/ huic senatus triumphalia/ ornamenta decrevit/ ob res in Ilyrico/ bene gestas/ Lartia CN F Uxor/ A Plautius M F/ Urgulanius/ vixit ann IX." The mausoleum was famously painted as 'The Lucano Bridge and Mausoleum Plauti', and engraved from two different places by Giovanni Battista Piranesi, and amongst others, by Franz Knebel and Onorato Carlandi. It also featured on Spode ceramics, the design called 'Bridge of Lucano' during the early 19th century. See also Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus Urgulania Bellum Batonianum orGreat Illyrian Revolt For details of mausoleum: http://www.tibursuperbum.it/eng/monumenti/TombaPlauzi.htm Sources Cassius Dio, (2007) Roman History. Velleius Paterculus, (2011) Roman History. Publius Cornelius Tacitus, Annales. Inscription of the Tomb of the Plautii, Abdale, J.R, (2019) The Great Illyrian Revolt: Rome's Forgotten War in the Balkans, AD6-9. Pen and Sword. Dzino, D. (2010) The Failure of Greater Illyricum., published online Cambridge.org. Lenski, N. (1999) "From Assimilation and Revolt in the Territory of Isauria, from the Sixth Century BC to the Sixth Century AD," Journal of Economics and Social History of the Orient, Vol 42, no. 4, pp. 413-465. (Jstor) Mitchell, S, (1976) "LegioVII and the Garrison of Augustan Galatia", Classical Quarterly no. 26, pp. 298-308. Syme, Ronald, (1933) "Some Notes on the Legions under Augustus," Journal of Roman Studies, Vol 23, pp. 14-33. (Jstor) Syme, Ronald, (1934) Galatia and Pamphylia under Augustus: The Governorship of Piso, Quirinus and Silvanus. Klio no. 27, p122-148. Syme, Ronald, (1939) The Roman Revolution., Clarendon Press, Oxford. Syme, Ronald, (1986) The Augustan Aristocracy., Clarendon Press, Oxford. Lily Ross Taylor, (1956) "Trebula Suffenas and the Plautii Silvani", in Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, vol. 24.(Jstor) Wilkes, J.J, (1969) Dalmatia., Routledge, 1969. References Category:Imperial Roman consuls Category:Roman
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", {"description":'ancient Roman politician'}], ["Politician", {}], ["Fabia Numantina", {}], ["Plautia Urgulanilla", {}], ["Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus", {}], ["Rome", {}]]
Relations:[["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", "occupation", "Politician"], ["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", "spouse", "Fabia Numantina"], ["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", "sibling", "Plautia Urgulanilla"], ["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", "child", "Tiberius Plautius Silvanus Aelianus"], ["Marcus Plautius Silvanus", "place of death", "Rome"]] |
### User:
Saint Candida the Elder () (died 78 AD) was an early Christian saint and resident of Naples, Italy. Candida was an elderly woman who hospitably welcomed Saint Peter the Apostle, when he was passing through Naples on his way to Rome. The woman was cured of an illness by Saint Peter and converted to Christianity. She was baptized by Peter and later converted Aspren, the first bishop of Naples, to Christianity. She is one of the patron saints of Naples. Notes Category:78 deaths Category:1st-century Christian saints Category:Year of birth unknown Category:1st-century Christian female saints Category:People from Naples Category:1st-century Roman women
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Candida the Elder", {"description":'Christian martyr'}], ["Naples", {}], ["Saint", {}]]
Relations:[["Candida the Elder", "place of birth", "Naples"], ["Candida the Elder", "place of death", "Naples"], ["Candida the Elder", "canonization status", "Saint"]] |
### User:
Anna Bongiorni (born 15 September 1993) is an Italian sprinter. She competed in the 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics in Beijing, China. She is the daughter of the Italian former sprinter Giovanni Bongiorni. Biography She has won 5 medals internationally. Holds 2 national category records: 4×100 m relay (under-20) and 60 m (under-18). In the national career she won 10 titles: two absolute in relay (4×100 and 4×200 m), 5 medals won overall, 6 youths (2 times the 100 m student and the same 4×100 m from cadet, once the coupled 100–200m from promises) and 2 University (100 and 200 m). National records 4×100 m relay: 48.90 ( Doha, 4 October 2019), she ran third leg in the team with Johanelis Herrera, Gloria Hooper, Irene Siragusa - current holder Achievements Senior National titles She won two national championships at individual senior level. Italian Athletics Indoor Championships 60 metres: 2017, 2018 See also Italian all-time lists - 100 metres References External links Anna Bongiorni at FIDAL Category:1993 births Category:Living people Category:Italian female sprinters Category:World Athletics Championships athletes for Italy Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics Category:Universiade medalists in
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Anna Bongiorni", {"description":'Italian athletics competitor'}], ["Giovanni Bongiorni", {}], ["Bongiorni", {}], ["Italy", {}]]
Relations:[["Anna Bongiorni", "father", "Giovanni Bongiorni"], ["Anna Bongiorni", "family name", "Bongiorni"], ["Anna Bongiorni", "country of citizenship", "Italy"]] |
### User:
Gwennap (, meaning "the Parish of [Saint] Wenappa") is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is about five miles (8 km) south-east of Redruth. In the 18th and early 19th centuries Gwennap parish was the richest copper mining district in Cornwall, and was called the "richest square mile in the Old World". It is the location of the Great County Adit, and once-famous mines such as Consolidated Mines, Poldice mine and Wheal Busy. Today it forms part of area A6i (the Gwennap Mining District) of the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape World Heritage Site.of population growth caused by mining and then thoroughly restored in the 19th century. The tower is detached. In 1882, following the removal of the centre gallery, which was said to be an eyesore, The Cornishman newspaper described the church as one of the prettiest in Cornwall. It was later described by Charles Henderson, as "few Cornish churches are less interesting than Gwennap". , There is a Cornish cross in the churchyard which was moved to the vicarage garden in the 1840s from Chapel Moor. It has a crude crucifixus figure and a small Latin cross on the front andover to tin production could not survive the rising cost of coal and the fluctuations of mineral prices, causing a second wave of closures in the mid-1870s. Few mines survived the troubled times of the late 19th century, but Tresavean was one success story. Brought back to life as a tin mine in 1908 it was the second deepest mine in Cornwall at when it closed in 1928. Other mines that were resurrected in the 20th century include Wheal Gorland, worked for tungsten before the World War I, Wheal Busy, Mount Wellington, Whiteworks, Poldice, Parc an Chy, and Wheal Jane.The last mine to work commercially was South Crofty Mine at Pool near Redruth which ceased operation in March 1998 bringing to a close over two thousand years of mining in the Gwennap area. Notable people Gwennap was the birthplace of John Verran, Premier of South Australia, and of John Lawn, a New Zealand gold miner. References Further reading James, C. C. A History of the Parish of Gwennap in Cornwall. Penzance: C. C. James, 1949 External links Gwennap Genealogy Records On-Line Gwennap Parish Council Category:Villages in Cornwall Category:Civil parishes in Cornwall Category:Mining in Cornwall Category:Grade II* listed buildings in
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Gwennap", {"description":'village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, UK', "alias":['Gwennap, Cornwall', 'Gwennap CP', 'Gwennap civil parish']}], ["United Kingdom", {}], ["Village", {}], ["Civil parish", {}], ["Cornwall", {}]]
Relations:[["Gwennap", "country", "United Kingdom"], ["Gwennap", "instance of", "Village"], ["Gwennap", "instance of", "Civil parish"], ["Gwennap", "historic county", "Cornwall"]] |
### User:
Pamela Ryder (born 1949) is an American writer. Ryder is the author of Correction of Drift: A Novel in Stories (Fiction Collective 2), A Tendency to Be Gone: Stories (Dzanc Books), and Paradise Field: A Novel in Stories (Fiction Collective 2). Her fiction has also been published in many literary journals, including Black Warrior Review, Conjunctions, Prairie Schooner, The Quarterly, Shenandoah, and Unsaid. Selected works Correction of Drift: A Novel in Stories (Fiction Collective 2, 2008), Regarding Correction of Drift, Irving Malin writes: “I have tried to explicate the remarkable results of Ryder's language—it is, after all, the real mystery.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Pamela Ryder", {"description":'writer'}], ["1949", {}]]
Relations:[["Pamela Ryder", "date of birth", "1949"]] |
### User:
The Lebel Model 1886 rifle (French: Fusil Modèle 1886 dit "Fusil Lebel") also known as the "Fusil Mle 1886 M93", after a bolt modification was added in 1893, is an 8 mm bolt action infantry rifle that entered service in the French Army in 1887. It is a repeating rifle that can hold eight rounds in its forestock tube magazine, one round in the transporter plus one round in the chamber. The Lebel rifle has the distinction of being the first military firearm to use smokeless powder ammunition. The new propellant powder, "Poudre B," was nitrocellulose-based and had been inventeddesign capable of long range performance. In spite of early obsolete features, such as its tube magazine and the shape of 8mm Lebel rimmed ammunition, the Lebel rifle remained the basic weapon of French infantry during World War I (1914–1918). Altogether, 3.45 million Lebel rifles were produced by the three French state factories between 1887 and 1916. Operation, features, and accessories In operation, the bolt is turned up to the vertical position until the two opposed front locking lugs are released from the receiver. At the end of the bolt's opening phase, a ramp on the receiver bridge forces therifle features a magazine cutoff on the right side of the receiver. When activated it prevents feeding cartridges from the magazine. The Mle 1886 Lebel rifle was issued with a long needle-like quadrangular épée bayonet, the Épée-Baïonnette Modèle 1886, with a length of 52 cm. (20 in.). With its X-shaped cross section, the épée bayonet was optimized for thrusting, designed to readily penetrate thick clothing and leather. The bayonet was dubbed "Rosalie" by French soldiers who were issued it during World War I. Origins and development Historically, the Mle 1886 Lebel rifle was the first military firearm to use smokelessGeneral Georges Ernest Boulanger, requested the urgent application of these two technical breakthroughs to the design of a new infantry rifle. He appointed General Tramond in charge of the project which had to be completed within one year. Firstly the 11mm Gras cartridge case was redesigned into an 8mm case, a transformation carried out by Gras and Lt. Colonel Desaleux. The repeating mechanism, derived from the French Mle 1884 Gras-Kropatschek repeating rifle, was implemented by Albert Close and Louis Verdin at the Chatellerault arsenal. The bolt's two opposed front locking lugs, inspired from the two rear locking lugs on theso it would divert away from the shooter's face any hot gases escaping from a ruptured cartridge case. The firing pin and its rear knob had already been modified in 1887 while the stacking rod remained unchanged. Lastly, the fixation of the rear sight onto the barrel was substantially improved during that 1893 modification. The Lebel rifle was manufactured by three government arsenals: Châtellerault, St-Etienne and Tulle. It featured a two-piece stock and a massive receiver designed to withstand the higher pressures developed by the new smokeless powder-based cartridges. Between 1935 and 1940, a carbine-length (17.7 inch barrel) version ofrifles were being loaded with stripper clips at a much faster rate. The tube fed magazine also greatly affected the rifle's balance when being fired which could have been another short coming. Competitors and successors Upon its introduction, the Lebel rifle proved to be vastly superior to the Mauser M-71/84, the German Army's replacement of the Model 1869 Werder. France finished its rearmament program with the Lebel in 1889, just 18 months after Germany had completed its rifle replacement program with 780,000 M-71/84s. The new French rifle alarmed Bismarck. Tests at Spandau arsenal in the winter of 1887-1888 found thatthe Lebel could fire 43 rounds of smokeless powder ammunition per minute compared to just 26 of black-powder ammunition for the M-71/84. The inferiority of the Mauser M71/84 and its 11mm black-powder ammunition was one reason why Bismarck opposed going to war with France that winter, despite being pressed by War Minister Waldersee (another reason was that the new French De Bange field artillery, now equipped with breech loaders after the lessons of the 1870 war, both outnumbered and outperformed the Krupp C64 field guns in their rate of fire). The Mle 1886 rifle proved to be a sturdy and1913, was suspended because of the imminent risk of war with Germany. Instead, and during World War I, the French Army chose the easier and less expensive solution of adopting a gas-operated semi-automatic rifle which incorporated some Lebel parts: the Fusil Mle 1917 RSC, once again in 8mm Lebel caliber. It was manufactured in large numbers (85,000) during 1918 and issued to select soldiers in infantry regiments. However, the Mle 1917 RSC was criticized by infantrymen as being too heavy, too long, and too difficult to maintain in the trenches. Furthermore, it also needed a special five-round clip to operate.in after 1915, the "Balle D a.m." The last type of Lebel military issue ammunition to be introduced was the Cartouche Mle 1932N, using a cupro-nickel, silver-colored, jacketed spitzer boat-tailed lead-cored bullet which was only suitable for Lebel and Berthier rifles marked "N" on top of the receiver and barrel. This 8mm Lebel heavier Balle "N" ammunition had originally been designed to increase the range of the Hotchkiss machine gun. Its manufacturing ceased in France during the late 1960s. 8mm Lebel ammunition was powerful for its time. It ranked slightly higher in muzzle energy than .303 British and slightly lowerby authorized civilians and were featured in catalogs of the French mail-order firm Manufrance printed until 1939. Those "civilian market" Lebels sold by Manufrance were strictly identical in fit and finish to the military issue Lebels, except for the lack of a bayonet lug and no stacking rod. Furthermore, a large game hunting version of the Lebel called the "Lebel-Africain" was also offered for sale by Manufrance during the pre-World War II years. This particular version featured a shorter barrel, a turned-down bolt handle and a slimmer, better finished stock. However, it had to compete as a hunting weapon againstthe bolt-action Mauser and Mannlicher–Schönauer hunting rifles that became available on the French marketplace, in the early 1900s. World War I usage The Lebel rifle was a hard-hitting and solidly built weapon with a reputation for reliability in adverse environments including those of trench warfare. The Lebel rifle was quite accurate up to 300 yards and still deadly at three times that distance, thanks to the spitzer and boat tail "Balle D" bullet. Nevertheless, the Lebel rifle was not without its flaws: The slow-to-reload tube magazine was the Lebel's worst handicap when compared to other military rifles of that period.open sights. Consequently, the APX Mle 1916 and APX Mle 1917 models of the Lebel rifle with adjustable telescopic sights were issued in numbers during WW-1, beginning in late 1916. During World War I, Lebels were supplied to various Allies armies, such as Serbia, Russia, Belgium or United States. The German Empire captured many Lebels, especially after the fall of Lille during the Race to the Sea. The rifles were marked Deutsches Reich and issued to rear units. Post-World War I use Because of negative factors during the late 1920s and 1930s—a depressed economy, reduced war budgets under the PopularFront led by Leon Blum, and neglect at high military levels, notably by then war minister, Marshal Philippe Pétain—the French Army was slow to modernize its infantry weapons. For instance, production of the bolt-action MAS-36 rifle began much too late (in 1937) although its prototype had already been approved in 1929. As a result, MAS-36 rifles to equip French infantry were in short supply when World War II broke out in September 1939. Furthermore, a thoroughly tested French semi-automatic rifle was also ready to be placed into production by 1939. But due to the German occupation of France during theI to replace the rifles lost by Italy after the Caporetto defeat. Other were seen in the hands of Soviet partisans. Likewise, in 1944 the German Wehrmacht had issued some captured M1886 Lebel rifles, given the German identification code Gewehr 301(f), to some of their occupation troops in France, but in limited numbers. In 1945, during the final months of the war, many Lebel rifles were issued to Volkssturm conscripts along with any other available weapons. Some years later, during the Indochina and Algerian Wars, Lebel rifles were issued to auxiliaries or second-lines units. Functional Lebel rifles have been foundin Iraq during the Iraqi insurgency after 2003. Users Used by Yunnan Clique forces France : issued to Volkssturm units. : Iraqi insurgents : Compagnie des Carabiniers du Prince Second Polish Republic Kingdom of Romania Second Spanish Republic : issued to Home Guard units after Dunkirk. : used during WWI : used by Vietnamese National Army and Viet Minh/Viet Cong See also Chauchat List of infantry weapons of World War I Hotchkiss M1914 machine gun Notes References This large illustrated volume (in French) contains the detailed technical history and production statistics for the Lebel rifle as well as detailed technicalEnglish) contains a highly detailed technical "Introduction" chapter describing the Lebel rifle and its ammunition. This volume primarily describes all French semi-automatic rifles since 1898, notably the Mle 1917 and Mle 1918 semi-automatic rifles, the Meunier (A6) rifle as well as the MAS 38-39 to MAS49 and 49/56 series. Contains an informative and detailed page dedicated to the Lebel rifle (by David Fortier). An illustrated chapter in this volume reviews in depth the Lebel and Berthier rifles (and carbines). The author (in French) is justifiably critical of the Lebel's sights. External links Category:8×50mmR Lebel rifles Category:Bolt-action rifles of France Category:Early
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", {"description":'bolt action infantry rifle'}], ["Repeating rifle", {}], ["World War I", {}], ["1940", {}], ["France", {}], ["World War II", {}], ["8×50mmR Lebel", {}]]
Relations:[["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "subclass of", "Repeating rifle"], ["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "conflict", "World War I"], ["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "service retirement", "1940"], ["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "country of origin", "France"], ["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "conflict", "World War II"], ["Lebel Model 1886 rifle", "ammunition", "8×50mmR Lebel"]] |
### User:
Noël Forgeard (born 8 December 1946 in La Ferté-Gaucher) is a French industrialist and former joint CEO of EADS. Appointment From April 1998 until June 2005 Forgeard was CEO of the aircraft manufacturer Airbus SAS. In late 2004 he was nominated as the next French CEO of EADS. This position is shared with a German—then Thomas Enders—in a system that was established at the creation of EADS in 2000. Alleged insider dealing News reports in June 2006 focused on possible insider dealing at EADS. Forgeard made a 2.5 million Euro profit on the sale of EADS shares, with his childrenearning 4.2 million Euro, just weeks before news of Airbus A380 delays was released. Forgeard denied any wrongdoing, claiming that he was a scapegoat in the matter. Forgeard resigned as CEO of EADS on 2 July 2006 and was replaced by Christian Streiff. References External links EADS finally names its new bosses - BBC News, 26 June 2005 EADS and Airbus bosses both quit - BBC News, 2 July 2006 Category:1946 births Category:Living people Category:French chief executives Category:École Polytechnique alumni Category:Mines ParisTech alumni Category:Corps des mines Category:Airbus people Category:Officiers of the Légion d'honneur Category:Honorary Knights Commander of the Order of
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Noël Forgeard", {"description":'French businessman'}], ["La Ferté-Gaucher", {}], ["École Polytechnique", {}], ["Mines ParisTech", {}]]
Relations:[["Noël Forgeard", "place of birth", "La Ferté-Gaucher"], ["Noël Forgeard", "educated at", "École Polytechnique"], ["Noël Forgeard", "educated at", "Mines ParisTech"]] |
### User:
Stephen E. Schwartz (born June 18, 1941) is an atmospheric scientist at Brookhaven National Laboratory. He served from 2004 to 2009 as the Chief Scientist of the Atmospheric Science Program of the United States Department of Energy. He is author of over 100 scientific publications dealing mainly with cloud chemistry and forcing of climate change by atmospheric aerosols. Education Schwartz graduated Magna cum laude from Harvard University, earned his Ph.D. from University of California, Berkeley and was a Fulbright Post-Doctoral Fellow at University of Cambridge. Professional He is a member of a number of professional organizations and has been elected
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Stephen E. Schwartz", {"description":'American atmospheric scientist'}], ["Harvard University", {}], ["University of California, Berkeley", {}], ["United States", {}], ["1941", {}], ["Stephen", {}], ["Brookhaven National Laboratory", {}]]
Relations:[["Stephen E. Schwartz", "educated at", "Harvard University"], ["Stephen E. Schwartz", "educated at", "University of California, Berkeley"], ["Stephen E. Schwartz", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Stephen E. Schwartz", "date of birth", "1941"], ["Stephen E. Schwartz", "given name", "Stephen"], ["Stephen E. Schwartz", "employer", "Brookhaven National Laboratory"]] |
### User:
Catch 22: Based on the Unwritten Story by Seanie Sugrue is a 2016 United States thriller independent film. It premiered at the 2016 Palm Beach International Film Festival and would go on to play numerous others before being acquired for distribution by Toronto-based 108 Media. It was released theatrically on January 17, 2017. Synopsis With Hurricane Sandy looming on the horizon, five hard-lived friends come to from a send-off celebration alongside an unexplained dead girl. What are friends for? Cast Jayce Bartok ... Vince Brock Harris ... Smoke Dónall Ó Héalaí ... Mikey Michael Rabe ... Seanie Al Thompson ...
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Catch 22: Based on the Unwritten Story by Seanie Sugrue", {"description":'2016 film'}], ["United States", {}], ["Film", {}]]
Relations:[["Catch 22: Based on the Unwritten Story by Seanie Sugrue", "country of origin", "United States"], ["Catch 22: Based on the Unwritten Story by Seanie Sugrue", "instance of", "Film"]] |
### User:
Chthonerpeton indistinctum is a species of caecilian in the family Typhlonectidae. It is found in northeastern Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and southeastern Brazil. The common name Argentine caecilian has been coined for it. Description Chthonerpeton indistinctum is a snakelike amphibian with no limbs. It can grow to about . The body has 70 to 80 transverse folds, giving it a segmented appearance. The head has a pair of sensory tentacles between the nostrils and the eyes, and this area of skin is white. The body is black above and dark grey beneath, both with tiny white flecks. The flat, disc-like areasurrounding the cloaca is creamy white. Distribution and habitat C. indistinctum is found in Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina at altitudes ranging up to . It is partially terrestrial and partly aquatic, possibly having annual migrations. When on land, it mostly stays close to the river bank, but occasionally ventures some way from water. Occasionally, it gets washed out to sea on mats of vegetation and has been found alive in the brackish water of estuaries. It is a common species, sometimes occurring in very large numbers, and the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species lists it as being of"Least Concern". Biology This species is viviparous, giving birth to live young. It is considered to have several characteristics which indicate it is more primitive than other, more highly derived species. As caecilians evolved, their chromosomes are thought to have reduced in number. A number of species were karyotyped, and C. indistinctum was found to have a diploid number of 20 as against one of 28 for the more derived Typhlonectes compressicauda, an unexpected result. Further study is expected to clarify the taxonomic relationships between different species of caecilians. References indistinctum Category:Amphibians of Argentina Category:Amphibians of Brazil Category:Amphibians of Paraguay
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Chthonerpeton indistinctum", {"description":'species of amphibian'}], ["Species", {}], ["Chthonerpeton", {}]]
Relations:[["Chthonerpeton indistinctum", "taxon rank", "Species"], ["Chthonerpeton indistinctum", "parent taxon", "Chthonerpeton"]] |
### User:
Yevgeni Vladimirovich Makeyev or Evgeniy Makeev (; born 24 July 1989) is a Russian association football player. He plays as a left-back or centre-back in Armenia for FC Ararat Yerevan. Club career He made his debut in the Russian Premier League on 15 March 2009 in a game against FC Zenit St. Petersburg. Makeyev is able to play as a wide midfielder on either wing, but he is used mainly as a left back. He was released from his contract with FC Rostov by mutual consent on 23 August 2018. On 4 July 2019, he signed a one-year contract withArmenian club FC Ararat Yerevan. International career Makeyev was a part of the Russia U-21 side that was competing in the 2011 European Under-21 Championship qualification. In March 2011, he was called up for the first time to the Russia national football team. He made his national team debut on 29 March 2011 in a friendly against Qatar after coming on as a half time substitute for Yuri Zhirkov. After a period when he was not called up, he played for the national team once again on 18 November 2014 in a friendly against Hungary. Personal life His father VladimirMakeyev played in the Russian First League in the 1990s for FC Zhemchuzhina Sochi, FC Baltika Kaliningrad and FC Chkalovets Novosibirsk. Career statistics Club References External links Profile on the Russian Football Premier League site Profile on the FC Spartak Moscow site Category:1989 births Category:Living people Category:People from Cherepovets Category:Russian footballers Category:Russia under-21 international footballers Category:Russia-2 international footballers Category:Russia international footballers Category:Association football midfielders Category:Association football defenders Category:FC Spartak Moscow players Category:FC Rostov players Category:FC Rotor Volgograd players Category:FC Sheksna Cherepovets players Category:PFC Sochi players Category:FC Ararat Yerevan players Category:Russian Premier League players Category:Armenian Premier League players Category:Russian expatriate footballers
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Yevgeni Makeyev", {"description":'Russian footballer'}], ["Football player", {}], ["Association football", {}], ["Makeyev", {}], ["Russia", {}], ["Russia national football team", {}], ["Cherepovets", {}], ["FC Spartak Moscow", {}]]
Relations:[["Yevgeni Makeyev", "occupation", "Football player"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "sport", "Association football"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "family name", "Makeyev"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "country of citizenship", "Russia"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "member of sports team", "Russia national football team"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "place of birth", "Cherepovets"], ["Yevgeni Makeyev", "member of sports team", "FC Spartak Moscow"]] |
### User:
Left of Cool is the fifth studio album released by Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, released in 1998. History Left of Cool is the first album to feature Jeff Coffin, who had already toured with the band after the departure of Howard Levy. The album cover depicts Future Man, Béla Fleck, and Victor Wooten standing on Coffin's head. On the Live at the Quick DVD, Fleck describes how after the melody for "Big Country" came to him, he called his answering machine and sang it so it would not be lost. A different arrangement of "Sojourn of Arjuna" appears onVictor Wooten's album What Did He Say? released the previous year. Guests include Dave Matthews and Amy Grant. Left of Cool is currently the highest-charting Flecktones album to date, as it reached #191 on The Billboard 200. Reception In his Allmusic review, music critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote "Often, it's enjoyable to just hear them jam; however, for most fans, the greatest pleasure on Left of Cool will be finding the little details within the solos. The opener, "Throwdown at the Hoedown," is one of a handful of cuts that really makes a lasting impression." Track listing Note: the linernotes swap tracks 6 and 7 & 11 and 12. The list below reflects the tracks as they are ordered on the album itself. "Throwdown At The Hoedown" (Béla Fleck) – 5:09 "Communication" (music: B. Fleck/Future Man; lyrics: B. Fleck) – 4:16 "Big Country" (B. Fleck) – 5:31 "Sojourn Of Arjuna" (music: Victor Wooten/Future Man; lyrics: Future Man, adapted from Bhagavad Gita) – 5:27 "Let Me Be The One" (music: V. Wooten/B. Fleck/Future Man; lyrics: B. Fleck) – 4:38 "Trane To Conamarra" (B. Fleck/Jeff Coffin) – 6:48 "Almost 12" (V. Wooten/B. Fleck/Future Man) – 3:15 "Step Quiet" (B. Fleck/Sarah Mason)
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Left of Cool", {"description":'album by Béla Fleck and the Flecktones'}], ["Album", {}], ["Béla Fleck and the Flecktones", {}]]
Relations:[["Left of Cool", "instance of", "Album"], ["Left of Cool", "performer", "Béla Fleck and the Flecktones"]] |
### User:
Oliver Sexsmith "Mike" Crosby (April 27,1920 to October 25, 2014) was an American diplomat who served as United States Ambassador to Guinea. He was the son of the classicist Henry Lamar Crosby. Early life and education The son of Henry Lamar Crosby, Oliver S. Crosby was born April 27, 1920, in Philadelphia. He received a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1946, where he was the last member of the Zelosophic Society, and an M.A. from Johns Hopkins University 1947. From 1942 to 1946 he served in the United States Navy. Between 1952 and 1953 Crosby studied German at
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Oliver S. Crosby", {"description":'United States ambassador to Guinea'}], ["Johns Hopkins University", {}], ["University of Pennsylvania", {}]]
Relations:[["Oliver S. Crosby", "educated at", "Johns Hopkins University"], ["Oliver S. Crosby", "educated at", "University of Pennsylvania"]] |
### User:
Barabatia is a village in Bhadrak district, Odisha. History Geography Demographics As of the 2011 census there were a total of 216 families residing in Barabatia. Barabatia has a population of 1155, of which 571 are males and 584 are females. The population of children ages 0-6 is 117, making up 10.13% of the village's total population. Batabatia's average sex ratio is 1023, which is higher than the Orissa state average of 979. Child Sex Ratio for the Barabatia as per census is 696, lower than Orissa average of 941. Barabatia has a higher literacy rate than Orissa. In 2011,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Barabatia, Bhadrak", {"description":'village in Odisha, India'}], ["Bhadrak district", {}]]
Relations:[["Barabatia, Bhadrak", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Bhadrak district"]] |
### User:
Catanzaro (, or ; ; , or , Katastaríoi Lokrói; ), also known as the "City of the two Seas", is an Italian city of 91,000 inhabitants (2013) and the capital of the Calabria region and of its province. The archbishop's seat was the capital of the province of Calabria Ultra for over 200 years. It houses the University "Magna Græcia", the second largest university in Calabria. Catanzaro is an urban centre, with much activity, including some coastal towns, such as Sellia Marina and Soverato, and the municipalities of Silas, with a total of 156,196 inhabitants. Catanzaro is being consolidatedto form a greater metropolitan area, by the Region of Calabria, and in connection with the town of Lamezia Terme, comprising 10 municipalities. This will lead to the creation of an integrated area involving over 200,000 inhabitants. During the summer months, the Ionian coast from Catanzaro to Soverato is an important tourist attraction, especially for the youth, and is in the presence of several important structures located in the coastal districts of the city and the towns of Copanello and Soverato. Catanzaro is also known as city of the three V's, referring to the three distinct features of the city,namely Saint Vitalian, the patron saint; velvet, because the city has been an important silk center since Byzantine times; and wind (vento in Italian), because of the strong breezes from the Ionian Sea and La Sila. "VVV" was the symbol by which Catanzaro's silk industry was known, identified for both its domestic and foreign markets, and iconic for the finest fabrication of silks, velvets, damasks, and brocades from the city. Geography Catanzaro overlooks the Gulf of Squillace, in the Ionian Sea. The district of Catanzaro stretches from the sea to an elevation of . The historic center is approximately abovesea level. The town dates back to the valley of Fiumarella (formerly known as River Zaro). The Bishopric, St. Tryphon (or San Rocco) and St. John (or castle) marks the city's historical center and is connected to the North Sila. Due to its particular geography, the municipality gets wet from the sea, and is still subjected to a snowy winter. Catanzaro's rivers include the main stream of the Fiumarella (in local dialect Hjiumareddha), which joins with the river Musofalo, and the torrent Corach (formerly called Crotalo). Climate The climate of Catanzaro is typically Mediterranean, temperate, and characterized by a windytrace the origin of Catanzaro to an ancient Greek colony, already in place, which became the land of Scolacium, believed to have been built on the ruins of the ancient city of Trischines. Other hypotheses identify Catanzaro's development to have grown from various settlements scattered in the area of Catanzaro, Marina, Tiriolo (formerly Teure), Santa Maria di Catanzaro, and on the hill Trivonà (Trischines, along the valley of Corach which formed the old "Land of Feaco"). The mouth of the river, according to legend, created the ancient Ulysses Skilletion. In the district of Germaneto along the valley of Corach, aGreek necropolis of the fifth century BC and an ancient Roman settlement were found. Archaeological discoveries show that the municipality was active since the Iron Ages, flourishing with the populations of "Vitulo", so called because they worship the statue of the calf, which the Greeks renamed "Italoi" (worshipers of the calf), and governed by the famous Italian king of the same name, brother of Dardanus and ancestor of the Trojans. Italy gets its name from this figure. According to another legend, Catanzaro was named after two Byzantine generals Cattaro and Zaro who led the coastal city of Magna Graecia Skilletionbegan the construction of a citadel, which later assumed the name of Katantzárion. According to some assumptions, the name is inspired from the development of workshops for creating silk, what the Greeks call "Katartarioi" (Καταρτάριοι) (spinners of silk). At the beginning of the tenth century (circa 903), the Byzantine city was occupied by the Saracens, who founded an emirate and took the Arab name of قطنصار - QaTanSáar. An Arab presence is evidenced by findings at an eighth-century necropolis which had items with Arabic inscriptions. Around the year 1050, Catanzaro rebelled against Saracen dominance and returned to a brief periodof Byzantine control. In 1069, Catanzaro was the last city in Calabria, after many months of resistance, to fall under siege by the Normans of Robert Guiscard, who built the Norman castle, still in existence today. During this era, arts and crafts pioneered, and particularly the processing of silk, which was traded with other regions in Italy, other countries and Eastern Europe. In the 13th century, Emperor Frederick II made Catanzaro a direct possession of the crown. Later the city was the household feud of the Ruffo, Caraffa and Soriano families. The Normans elevated Catanzaro into a noble county, givingit to Peter Ruffo. The latter was lost in a struggle against Manfred of Sicily, but he later returned to the city, when Charles I of Anjou signed the peace of the War of the Vespers. For fourteen years, it was the royal domain of King Ladislao of Naples, and in 1420 it was returned again to Nicholas Ruffo, who gave it as part of a dowry for his daughter Enrichetta who was married to Antonio Centelles. After a rebellion by the rural people, King Alfonso V of Aragon took control of the city. In 1460 there was a warwith the partisans of Centelles. When peace returned, the city was granted new privileges which greatly promoted the development of its silk industry, for which its damasks were known throughout Europe. From this time forward, Catanzaro firmly established itself as an import center for its textile productions. In 1528 Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor gave authorization for Catanzaro to bear the imperial eagle attached to a coat of arms depicting the hill tops of the town. On 23 December 1961, at the Fiumarella viaduct near Catanzaro, there was a serious rail accident, when a train derailed and fell about intothe river below. Seventy-one passengers lost their lives on impact, and 28 others were injured to varying degrees. In 1970 Catanzaro was designated to be the capital of Calabria. Historical names Catanzaro had different names, which correspond to different periods of history through the city: , a Greek settlement , during Roman times , , Saracen period (903–1050 approximately) Rock of Niceforo, Byzantine period , Norman period , under the Kingdom of Naples , under united Italy. Main sights Catanzaro Bridge, a well-known, one-arch bridge (Viaduct Morandi-Bisantis)- one of the tallest in Europe. Duomo (Cathedral). Built over a Norman cathedralTransportation Catanzaro is served by the SS106 Jonica ("Ionian") state road which connects it to the A2 motorway. In the city centre is a line with three stations. A metropolitan service (with c. 1,600,000 users per year, with 20 trains working) is provided by Ferrovie della Calabria, with a total of 11 railway stations in the city, plus others in 12 comuni of the hinterland. The rest of the public transportation system is based on 49 bus lines of AMC (Azienda per la Mobilità Catanzaro). The city has two main railway stations: Catanzaro and Catanzaro Lido. Sports Lega Pro club
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Catanzaro", {"description":'Italian city and capital of the Calabria province'}], ["City", {}], ["Calabria", {}], ["Squillace", {}], ["Tiriolo", {}], ["Italy", {}]]
Relations:[["Catanzaro", "instance of", "City"], ["Catanzaro", "capital of", "Calabria"], ["Catanzaro", "shares border with", "Squillace"], ["Catanzaro", "shares border with", "Tiriolo"], ["Catanzaro", "country", "Italy"]] |
### User:
The Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture is located in the Ponce Historic Zone, across from Plaza Las Delicias. Together with the School of Law, it is one of two semi-autonomous professional colleges of the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico (PCUPR) in the city of Ponce, Puerto Rico. In 2010, the school won an award from the Southern Puerto Rico Chamber of Commerce for Valor del Año en Educacion (Courage of the Year in Education). The school is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). It has a teaching staff of 40 and a student
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture", {"description":'located in the Ponce Historic Zone in Ponce, Puerto Rico'}], ["Ponce, Puerto Rico", {}]]
Relations:[["Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Ponce, Puerto Rico"]] |
### User:
Sergiyev Posad () is a city and the administrative center of Sergiyevo-Posadsky District in Moscow Oblast, Russia. Population: It was previously known as Sergiyev Posad (until 1919), Sergiyev (until 1930), Zagorsk (until 1991). History Sergiyev Posad grew in the 15th century around one of the greatest of Russian monasteries, the Trinity Lavra established by St. Sergius of Radonezh, still () one of the largest monasteries in Russia. Town status was granted to Sergiyev Posad in 1742. The town's name, alluding to St. Sergius, has strong religious connotations. Soviet authorities changed it first to just Sergiyev in 1919, and then toZagorsk in 1930, in memory of the revolutionary . The original name was restored in 1991. Administrative and municipal status Within the framework of administrative divisions, Sergiyev Posad serves as the administrative center of Sergiyevo-Posadsky District. As an administrative division, it is, together with twenty-six rural localities, incorporated within Sergiyevo-Posadsky District as the City of Sergiyev Posad. As a municipal division, the City of Sergiyev Posad is incorporated within Sergiyevo-Posadsky Municipal District as Sergiyev Posad Urban Settlement. Economy Tourism associated with the Golden Ring plays a role in the regional economy. There is also an important toy factory. Transportation TheMoscow–Yaroslavl railway and highway pass through the town. Sergiyev Posad Bus Terminal is located in the city. Notable people Andrei Rublev, the artist of the Church icons, living in the 14-15th centuries, the author of Saint Trinity's icon. Daniel Chorniy, the artist of the Church icons, living in the 14-15th centuries. Pavel Florensky, the Russian Orthodox theologian and researcher Vikentii Trofimov, the painter Vladimir Favorsky the graphic artist, woodcut illustrator, painter Aristarkh Lentulov, the artist of Russian avant-garde Boris Kustodiev, the painter. Mikhail Nesterov, the painter. Twin towns – sister cities Sergiyev Posad is twinned with: Cephalonia, Greece Fulda, Germany
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Sergiyev Posad", {"description":'city and the administrative center of Sergiyevo-Posadsky District in Moscow Oblast, Russia'}], ["Russia", {}], ["Sergiyevo-Posadsky District", {}], ["Fulda", {}]]
Relations:[["Sergiyev Posad", "country", "Russia"], ["Sergiyev Posad", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Sergiyevo-Posadsky District"], ["Sergiyev Posad", "capital of", "Sergiyevo-Posadsky District"], ["Sergiyev Posad", "twinned administrative body", "Fulda"]] |
### User:
Reinhard Frank (16 August 1860 - 21 March 1934) was a German lawyer-academic specialising in criminal law and international public law. He was a prolific author of legal text books and became an influential law reformer. In 1920 Frank was appointed Rector (chief administrative officer) of Munich University. Life Provenance and early years Reinhard Karl Albrecht Otto Friedrich Georg Julius Ludwig Hermann Frank (after 1912 "...von Frank") was born at Reddighausen, (Hatzfeld) in the hill country between Cologne and Kassel. His father, Wilhelm Frank (1829-1889), described in at least one source simply as a hammer owner, was a small-scale industrialistwith large ambitions for his son. His mother, born Minna Koch (1838–1863), was the daughter of a district judge (also named Reinhard) and came from a family with a long tradition of mid-level government service. His father was keen that Reinhard Frank should prosper in business, and with this in mind the boy was sent in 1871 to attend the "Realprogymnasium" (an advanced secondary school) in Biedenkopf. He then switched to the "Realgymnasium" in Groß-Umstadt before moving on again to a third school in the area, the prestigious Gymnasium Philippinum at Marburg. The objective was to maximise his chances ofgaining a university place. The academic nature of the secondary schools he had attended meant that he had a received good grounding in Latin, and passing the Abitur (school finals) in 1879 cleared the way for the progression to university-level education. Student years He now enrolled at the University of Marburg to study Philology and Mathematics. Wilhelm Frank had firm ideas about the future direction of his son's career: Reinhard Frank's degree subject selection involved defying his father's wishes that everything he did should be directed toward taking charge, in due course, of the family business. He switched to Jurisprudencecontemporaries, a member of the "Germania Marburg" student fraternity. Graduation and beyond During 1881/82 he studied for two terms at Munich where one of his lecturers was the eminent criminal jurist Joachim Wilhelm Franz Philipp von Holtzendorff, the man whose teaching chair Reinhard Frank would himself occupy after 1913. He then moved on to Kiel where in 1883 he passed his Level 1 National Law Exams. After that he returned to Hessen where he undertook his Referendariat (legal apprenticeship) years in Battenberg and Marburg (along with briefer periods in Hanau and Göttingen). He seems never to have completed the Referendariatstep to the point of sitting for his Level 2 National Law Exams. It was in Marburg that he came to know the distinguished reforming jurist Franz von Liszt who supervised both his doctorate (1886) and his habilitation (1887). Reinhard Frank would throughout his life hold von Liszt in the very highest regard. Frank's doctorate was received in return for a dissertation on the influence of Christian Wolff on philosophy of the natural criminal law propounded by Regnerus Engelhard. Frank expanded and republished the dissertation in 1887, now under the title "Die Wolffsche Strafrechtsphilosophie und ihr Verhältnis zur kriminalpolitischen Aufklärungthose set forth by Adolf Merkel. In 1887, Reinhard Frank set up his own legal practice in Kassel, though it is not clear that he ever pursued this aspect of his career with much vigour. Inheritance Wilhelm Frank died in 1889, leaving his son and heir as the inheritor of the family hammer, which in a period of rapid industrial growth was evidently a lucrative asset. Reinhard Frank now took on the management of the business associated with it. It would be only in 1913 that the hammer operation was merged into the Adolfshütte iron works in Niederscheld which waspart of "Frank’schen Eisenwerke", another company owned by the Frank family. Despite his business commitments, and still aged only 29, he was offered and accepted a full professorship in Criminal Law and Civil Process from the University of Giessen, along the valley to the south of Marburg. He took on the position in succession to Hans Bennecke in 1890. It was also in 1890 that he married his cousin, Antonie Richter (1866–1949), the daughter of a Rüsselheim Protestant minister. The couple's daughter, Luise, married the publisher Werner Siebeck (1891–1934) in 1917. Professorial career During the 1890s Frank rapidly built his1897 was the publication year for several of his books including "Das Strafgesetzbuch für das Deutsche Reich nebst dem Einführungsgesetze" a text book on the German penal code which became mainstream in the universities. Between its first publication in 1897 and Frank's death in 1934 eighteen editions were published. In 1899 he was offered and accepted the teaching chair in Criminal Law at Halle, newly vacated by his old mentor Franz von Liszt (who had moved on to Berlin). Between 1899 and 1902 Reinhard Frank held a full professorship at Halle. Government work He moved on again in 1902, thistime to Tübingen, where he held a full professorship in Criminal Law and Civil Process till 1913. During the first decade of the twentieth century, however, much of his more important work took place on the national stage rather than in the libraries and lecture halls by the banks of the Neckar. The Criminal Justice System had remained unreformed in the constituent territories of Germany since 1871, which a generation later was widely regarded as a problem. Between 1902 and 1914 Reinhard Frank was a leading contributor to correcting it. In 1902 the government recruited him to membership a new1914, that he instead moved to Bavaria having accepted a professorship at the prestigious Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. There he enjoyed a career as an influential research scholar and teacher lasting nearly twenty years. He made the move to Munich at almost exactly the same time as his good friend and fellow professor of Criminal Law, Ernst von Beling, made the same career move from Tübingen to Munich. Von Beling was both a friend and, evidently, an admirer, having dedicated his "Lehre vom Verbrechen" (Loosely, "Criminal Law primer") to Frank. Another close friend and admirer was the Tübingen juristPhilipp Heck who dedicated his Schuldrechtslehrbuch "... in friendship" to Frank. War years During the First World War the focus of Frank's written output shifted towards topics in international and maritime law. Of particular political interest was his justification, published in 1915, of the violation of Belgian neutrality by the Imperial Army in August 1914. After the war reached its dénouement Frank teamed up with Felix Rachfahl to deliver and publish an opinion repudiating as unconstitutional moves to extradite the exiled emperor from his sanctuary in the countryside outside Utrecht. Many years later, in 1929, Reinhard Frank was asked aboutand international public law. At the time the offer came through from Leipzig he may already have been aware that he was in line to be offered the rectorship at Munich which, later that year, he accepted, taking office on 27 November 1920. Although the administrative structures of the two venerable universities differed in many ways, one thing they had in common was that a university rector, at this point, were still appointed for a twelve month term. Frank's successor as Munich University rector, in November 1921, was the Geographer and Geophysicist Erich von Drygalski. Reinhard Frank died at Munich
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Reinhard Frank", {"description":'German professor of criminal law', "alias":['Reinhard von Frank', 'Reinhard Karl Albrecht Otto Friedrich Georg Julius Ludwig Hermann von Frank']}], ["Munich", {}], ["Reinhard", {}], ["University of Marburg", {}], ["Jurist", {}], ["University of Giessen", {}], ["Germany", {}], ["Tübingen", {}], ["Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich", {}]]
Relations:[["Reinhard Frank", "place of death", "Munich"], ["Reinhard Frank", "given name", "Reinhard"], ["Reinhard Frank", "work location", "Munich"], ["Reinhard Frank", "employer", "University of Marburg"], ["Reinhard Frank", "occupation", "Jurist"], ["Reinhard Frank", "employer", "University of Giessen"], ["Reinhard Frank", "country of citizenship", "Germany"], ["Reinhard Frank", "work location", "Tübingen"], ["Reinhard Frank", "employer", "Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich"]] |
### User:
Edit Perényi-Weckinger (5 May 1923 – 1 February 2019) was a Hungarian gymnast who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics and in the 1952 Summer Olympics. She was born in Kispest. Early life At the London Olympics in 1948, she won silver in the team competition, after the Czechs and ahead of the Americans. In 1952, she participated in the JJ. OO in Helsinki, winning the silver medal in the team competition - after the Soviets and ahead of the Czechoslovakia - and the bronze in the team competition with equipment (a modality similar to the current rhythmic gymnastics), being
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Edit Perényi-Weckinger", {"description":'Hungarian gymnast', "alias":['Edit Perenyi-Weckinger']}], ["1952 Summer Olympics", {}], ["1948 Summer Olympics", {}]]
Relations:[["Edit Perényi-Weckinger", "participant in", "1952 Summer Olympics"], ["Edit Perényi-Weckinger", "participant in", "1948 Summer Olympics"]] |
### User:
Tharle Village, also referred to as Tarle Village, is a 2016 Indian Kannada comedy drama film written and directed by KM Raghu. The film uses several actors from the 2015 Raam Reddy film Thithi, Channegowda, Thammegowda, Abhishek H.N., and Singrigowda, but is otherwise unrelated to the film. Synopsis The movie follows several villagers as they go through various exploits and troubles, such as a series of mysterious deaths and an affair. Cast Singrigowda as Nanjappa Channegowda as Gaddappa Thammegowda Abhishek H.N. Reception Reception for Tharle Village has been mixed, with most critics feeling that the movie did not measure upfavorably to Thithi.The Bangalore Mirror rated the movie at three out of five stars, commenting that "Tarle Village (Mischievous Village) lacks the wry humour and realistic portrayal of village life that was Thithi." The New Indian Express also felt that Tharle Village was not Thithi's equivalent, but gave it "a thumbs up for its honesty. The film is offbeat and is for people who miss the rustic past." The Hindu was highly critical of the movie, writing that "K.M. Raghu’s poorly conceived and executed film Tharle Village makes you wonder about the relationship between the characters of a story andthe story itself." Criticism There was concern that Tharle Village, along with other movies that were casting the Thithi actors in similar or nearly identical roles, were exploiting the actors, prompting Thithi screenwriter Eragowda to state that he was "disturbed after seeing how the actors of Thithi have been recently misused and misappropriated in recent Kannada films." Director Raam Reddy commented that he felt that the actors deserve recognition but that "instead of playing characters that are very similar to their fictional roles in Thithi, it would be much more exciting to see them playing original roles in all their
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Tharle Village", {"description":'2016 film'}], ["Film", {}], ["Kannada", {}]]
Relations:[["Tharle Village", "instance of", "Film"], ["Tharle Village", "original language of film or TV show", "Kannada"]] |
### User:
Thomas Mellon Evans (September 8, 1910 – July 17, 1997) was a financier who was one of the early corporate raiders in American business as well as a philanthropist and a prominent Thoroughbred racehorse owner and breeder who won the 1981 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes. Pioneer takeover specialist Born James Evans in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Thomas Mellon Evans and Martha Jarnagin, his mother had his name changed to honor his recently deceased father in 1913. Evans's great-grandmother Elinor was the sister of Thomas Mellon, the father of the wealthy financier, Andrew W. Mellon. Orphaned as a young boy, Thomaswas sent to stay with his mother's relatives in Tennessee before returning to Pittsburgh to live with his mother's sister. She and her husband were affluent enough to provide Thomas with a quality education and he graduated from the Shady Side Academy private school in 1927 and Yale University in 1931. For a few years after finishing university, Thomas Evans held a clerical job at Gulf Oil, owned at the time by the Mellon family. Ambitious, he saved as much money as he could from his salary and together with a small inheritance, set out on his own. In 1939,of Crane Co. and remains the largest individual shareholder in the company. The July 23, 2000, edition of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said that Thomas Mellon Evans was "arguably one of the seminal figures of 20th-century business." Evans' story was told by Diana B. Henriques in her book The White Sharks of Wall Street: Thomas Mellon Evans and the Original Corporate Raiders published by Scribner in 2000 ( - Library of Congress Online Catalog). Buckland Farm In 1956, Evans bought a 495-acre cattle farm in Gainesville, Virginia, and converted it to a Thoroughbred breeding operation under the name Buckland Farm. The
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Thomas Mellon Evans", {"description":'American businessman'}], ["Pittsburgh", {}], ["Financier", {}], ["Yale University", {}], ["Shady Side Academy", {}]]
Relations:[["Thomas Mellon Evans", "place of birth", "Pittsburgh"], ["Thomas Mellon Evans", "occupation", "Financier"], ["Thomas Mellon Evans", "educated at", "Yale University"], ["Thomas Mellon Evans", "educated at", "Shady Side Academy"]] |
### User:
Akanat Promphan (; born 12 January 1986) is a Thai politician and former Democrat MP who served as Private Secretary to Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban in the government of Abhisit Vejjajiva and as a spokesman for the People's Democratic Reform Committee protest movement. Early life and education Akanat was born on 12 January 1986 Bangkok as the second son of Pornthep Techapaibul and Srisakul Promphan, who later divorced. His father, Pornthep, once served as a deputy minister in the government of Chuan Leekpai, while his mother, sister of veteran Democrat politician Niphon Promphan, eventually remarried Suthep Thaugsuban. He attendedSaint Gabriel's College in Bangkok until he was 10, after which he studied in Australia, and then at Charterhouse School in the United Kingdom. He read engineering, economics and management at St John's College, Oxford, receiving a bachelor's and a master's degree. Political career Akanat entered politics shortly after graduating from Oxford, becoming private secretary to his stepfather, Suthep, then Deputy Prime Minister. Akanat was subsequently elected a Democrat Member of Parliament representing Bangkok in the 2011 general elections. At 25, he was the youngest MP elected that year. He and other members of his family received acclaim for his
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Akanat Promphan", {"description":'politician'}], ["Bangkok", {}], ["Politician", {}], ["St John's College, Oxford", {}]]
Relations:[["Akanat Promphan", "place of birth", "Bangkok"], ["Akanat Promphan", "occupation", "Politician"], ["Akanat Promphan", "educated at", "St John's College, Oxford"]] |
### User:
Francesco Saverio Quadrio (1 December 1695 – 21 November 1756) was an Italian scholar, historian, and writer. His most famous work is Della storia e della ragione di ogni poesia, a voluminous history of poetry, theatre, and music. Biography Quadrio was born in Ponte in Valtellina. He joined the Jesuits and trained as a scholar, but finding himself uncomfortable with religious life, became suspicious and despondent, and suffered poor health from mental stress. In 1744, having received permission for a country sojourn, he reached a decision on the high road near Como to leave the order and proceeded to Switzerland,where he lived for some time, refusing offers from Protestant scholarly associations and becoming involved in several controversies. He next moved to Paris, where he met Voltaire. Finally, Pope Benedict XIV, having always treated him with decided forbearance, provided him assistance, and he retired to a convent of Barnabites. He died in Milan. Works His most important work is the seven-volume Della storia e della ragione di ogni poesia (Bologna/Milan, 1739–1752), "an elaborate history of poetry, which," according to the 1863 Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography, "bears the stamp of conscientiousness and unsparing industry, but has been judged inaccurate, and425–563), which has lists of singers, actors, writers, stage designers, costume designers, and inventors of stage machinery, and comments on production, is "invaluable for historians of opera." Quadrio also published, among other works, the Dissertazioni critico-storiche intorno alla Rezia di qua dalle Alpi, oggi detta Valtellina (1755), which testifies to his learning and has a preface explaining his motives in changing his calling. Notes Bibliography Rees, Abraham (1819). The Cyclopaedia; or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Literature. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown [etc.]. Catalog record at HathiTrust. Reynolds, Barbara (1992). "Quadrio, Francesco Saverio", vol. 3, p. 1191,
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", {"description":'Italian scholar'}], ["Ponte in Valtellina", {}], ["Writer", {}], ["Historian", {}], ["Francesco", {}], ["Saverio", {}], ["Milan", {}]]
Relations:[["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "place of birth", "Ponte in Valtellina"], ["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "occupation", "Writer"], ["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "occupation", "Historian"], ["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "given name", "Francesco"], ["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "given name", "Saverio"], ["Francesco Saverio Quadrio", "place of death", "Milan"]] |
### User:
"Endless Slaughter" is a single by American rap rock band Limp Bizkit, released to promote their studio album Stampede of the Disco Elephants, the song was released as a free download on August 1, 2014. Release The song was originally intended to be released on cassette during their European tour. When the cassettes were delayed, the track was made available on their site as a free download. Composition The song itself is divided into four segments that cover a wide range of genres: part one is a two-minute experimental metal segment from which "Endless Slaughter" gets its name, it's the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Endless Slaughter", {"description":'single by Limp Bizkit'}], ["Limp Bizkit", {}], ["Stampede of the Disco Elephants", {}], ["2014", {}]]
Relations:[["Endless Slaughter", "performer", "Limp Bizkit"], ["Endless Slaughter", "part of", "Stampede of the Disco Elephants"], ["Endless Slaughter", "publication date", "2014"]] |
### User:
Giacomo Durando (4 February 1807 – 21 August 1894) was an Italian general and statesman. His brother Giovanni was also a general of the Risorgimento and a senator. Biography Durando was born at Mondovì, in Piedmont. He graduated in law in Turin in 1829. He was implicated in a liberal plot aiming to extort a constitution from king Charles Felix: after having been discovered, he was obliged to take refuge abroad together with his brother, first in Kentucky and then in France. In 1831 he fought in a foreign corps in the Belgian Revolution, and, the following year, he movedLombard volunteers as major-general, and in the campaign of 1849 he was aide-de-camp to the king. He was elected member of the first Piedmontese parliament and was a strenuous supporter of Cavour; during the Sardinian expedition to Crimean he took General La Marmora's place as war minister. In 1855 he was nominated senator, lieutenant-general in 1856 and ambassador at Constantinople in 1856, and minister for foreign affairs in the Rattazzi cabinet two years later. During the Third Italian War of Independence his brother Giovanni commanded the I Corps, which was badly mauled at Custoza. He was president of the Italian
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Giacomo Durando", {"description":'Italian general and statesman (1807-1894)'}], ["Mondovì", {}], ["Ambassador", {}]]
Relations:[["Giacomo Durando", "place of birth", "Mondovì"], ["Giacomo Durando", "position held", "Ambassador"]] |
### User:
Ciénega Creek (English: "Hundred Springs Creek" or "Marsh Creek") is an intermittent stream located in the Basin and Range region of southern Arizona, and is one of the most intact riparian corridors left in the state. It originates in the Canelo Hills and continues northwest about to an area just outside Tucson, where it becomes known as Pantano Wash. Pantano Wash continues through Tucson and eventually connects with the Rillito River. Course From its origin in the Canelo Hills of Santa Cruz County at , Ciénega Creek flows northwesterly through the upper Ciénega basin, a wide alluvial valley separating thenear the surface. Just north of Vail, Ciénega Creek becomes known as Pantano Wash, which continues northwest through Tucson and links up with the Rillito River. Flora and fauna Ciénega Creek is located within the transitional zone between the Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts, and exhibits some features of each region. The creek supports "outstanding examples" of cottonwood-willow gallery forest and mesquite bosque, which are home to many bird species that have become rare due to the loss of riparian habitats. Some of the birds that live along the creek are the Southwestern willow flycatcher, Yellow-billed cuckoo, and Bell's vireo. Importantlowland populations of riparian and xeroriparian amphibians and reptiles are also known to live along the creek. Included in this group are several toads, the checkered garter snake, the Madrean alligator lizard, and the giant spotted whiptail lizard. The Mexican garter snake, which has declined throughout its range in the United States, retains a strong population in Ciénega Creek. The federally endangered Chiricahua leopard frog occurs only in the upper reaches of the creek. The lowland leopard frog and the Sonoran mud turtle inhabit the stream throughout, rounding a full complement of aquatic, native vertebrate species originally inhabiting the ciénegasof southern Arizona. An unstudied molluscan fauna also lives in the stream. Ciénega Creek is one of the few remaining streams in southern Arizona that has not been invaded by non-native fish. Las Cienegas National Conservation Area supports the largest natural population of the federally endangered Gila topminnow in the United States, as well as a healthy population of endangered Gila chub and the longfin dace. Conservation Las Cienegas National Conservation Area was established in 2000 to protect the upper Ciénega basin. Its headquarters is the historic Empire Ranch, which is located about southeast of Tucson, near the town ofghost town of Pantano and the Ciénega Bridge, which was built between 1920 and 1921. In Tucson, much of the Pantano Wash is now part of the Pantano River Park, which includes a paved walkway alongside the wash, as well as restrooms, water fountains, and picnic tables. The Pantano River Park is also home to a Commemorative Tree Park, which will help restore about two miles of riverbank, control floods, erosion and stormwater runoff reduction, carbon sequestration, urban heat, and provide shade. Since 2012, over 100 desert-adapted commemorative trees have been planted along the eastern banks of Pantano Wash. Hundreds
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Ciénega Creek", {"description":'river in the United States of America'}], ["River", {}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Ciénega Creek", "instance of", "River"], ["Ciénega Creek", "country", "United States"]] |
### User:
continents and numerous countries, including the United States. In 1924, Wellcome consolidated all of the company's holdings under a corporate umbrella that he named The Wellcome Foundation Ltd. When he died in 1936, his will vested all of the corporate shares in a new charity entity – the Wellcome Trust. The Trust’s purpose was to use profits from the Wellcome Foundation to advance research in medicine and medical history. In 1955, Sir Henry Dale, one of the Trust's original trustees and its chair for 21 years, and William N. Creasy, president and chair of Burroughs Wellcome Co. USA, created aU.S. extension of the Wellcome Trust called the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. From 1955 to 1993, it operated as a corporate foundation to support scientific research. In 1993 a $400 million gift from the trustees allowed it to become an independent entity with no ties to the Wellcome Foundation or to GlaxoSmithKline, which by 2000 had purchased all shares of Wellcome Foundation. Activities Since its founding, the BWF has funded medical and biological science research across the United States and Canada. This has mainly consisted of individual recognition and funding like the Investigator in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award, the
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Burroughs Wellcome Fund", {"description":'American non-profit medical research organization'}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Burroughs Wellcome Fund", "country", "United States"]] |
### User:
Wenzel von Linhart (6 June 1821, Seelowitz – 22 October 1877, Würzburg) was an Austrian surgeon. He studied medicine in Vienna, where his influences included anatomist Christian Joseph Berres and surgeon Joseph Wattmann. From 1845 to 1849, he was an assistant in the lectures of Johann von Dumreicher, and in 1852 became a privat-docent of operative surgery at the University of Vienna. In 1856 he replaced Adolf Morawek (1816-1855) as professor of the surgical clinic at the University of Würzburg. As a result of his work with the wounded in the Austro-Prussian War (1866), he was named Royal Bavarian Councillorin 1867. During the Franco-Prussian War, he distinguished himself in his role as a Bavarian general physician. Published works An adherent of topographical anatomy, he was a skilled surgeon and considered an excellent teacher. The following are three of his principal writings. Ueber die Schenkelhernie, 1852 - On the femoral hernia. Compendium der chirurgischen Operationslehre, (1856; fourth edition, 1874) - Compendium of surgical operation lectures. Vorlesungen über Unterleibs-Hernien (1866; new edition, 1882) - Lectures on abdominal hernias. References Category:1821 births Category:1877 deaths Category:People from Židlochovice Category:People from the Margraviate of Moravia Category:Moravian-German people Category:Austrian surgeons Category:University of Würzburg faculty Category:Austrian
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Wenzel von Linhart", {"description":'Austrian surgeon'}], ["Würzburg", {}], ["Surgeon", {}], ["Vienna", {}], ["University of Würzburg", {}], ["Židlochovice", {}]]
Relations:[["Wenzel von Linhart", "place of death", "Würzburg"], ["Wenzel von Linhart", "occupation", "Surgeon"], ["Wenzel von Linhart", "work location", "Vienna"], ["Wenzel von Linhart", "employer", "University of Würzburg"], ["Wenzel von Linhart", "place of birth", "Židlochovice"]] |
### User:
A Brief History of Seven Killings is the third novel by Jamaican author Marlon James. It was published in 2014 by Riverhead Books. The novel spans several decades and explores the attempted assassination of Bob Marley in Jamaica in 1976 and its aftermath, through the crack wars in New York City in the 1980s and a changed Jamaica in the 1990s. Synopsis The novel has five sections, each named after a musical track and covering the events of a single day: “Original Rockers: December 2, 1976” “Ambush in the Night: December 3, 1976” “Shadow Dancin’: February 15, 1979” “White Lines/Kidsin America: August 14, 1985” “Sound Boy Killing: March 22, 1991” The first part of the novel is set in Kingston, Jamaica, in the build-up to the Smile Jamaica Concert held on 5 December 1976, and describes politically motivated violence between gangs associated with the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and the People's National Party (PNP), especially in the West Kingston neighbourhoods of Tivoli Gardens and Mathews Lane (renamed in the novel as Copenhagen City and Eight Lanes), including involvement of the CIA in the Jamaican politics of the time. As well as Marley (who is referred to as "the Singer"
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["A Brief History of Seven Killings", {"description":'novel by Marlon James'}], ["Novel", {}]]
Relations:[["A Brief History of Seven Killings", "genre", "Novel"]] |
### User:
Lasiodiscus mildbraedii is small tree in the family Rhamnaceae. It occurs locally along the African east coast from South Africa northwards and in the African tropics. It is sometimes a dominant component of tropical forest understorey. Groups of small pale flowers are carried on long stalks in spring. The fruits reach maturity at the end of summer. The leaves have an opposite arrangement as in all members of Lasiodiscus. The leaf texture is somewhat rough and leathery. Leaf undersides are somewhat rufous toned. References Trees of Southern Africa, K C Palgrave, 1984 mildbraedii Category:Flora of Africa Category:Trees of South Africa
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Lasiodiscus mildbraedii", {"description":'species of plant'}], ["Lasiodiscus", {}]]
Relations:[["Lasiodiscus mildbraedii", "parent taxon", "Lasiodiscus"]] |
### User:
Thomas Lee "Tom" Miranda Jr. (born January 21, 1958) is an American bowhunter, trapper, television host and author. He originally gained fame as a fur trapping instructor by producing video trapping lessons. From this venture he embarked on a lengthy career as a television bowhunter and is most known for his television bowhunting adventures seen on ESPN, VERSUS and other cable networks. Has killed an African bull elephant with one shot from a bow. Early life Miranda was born and raised in Columbus, Ohio. The son of Betty Jean (Blanton) a stay at home mom and Thomas Lee Miranda a
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Tom Miranda", {"description":'American hunter'}], ["Columbus, Ohio", {}]]
Relations:[["Tom Miranda", "place of birth", "Columbus, Ohio"]] |
### User:
The Livigno Alps are a mountain range in the Alps of eastern Switzerland and northern Italy, around the Italian village Livigno. They are considered to be part of the Central Eastern Alps. The Livigno Alps are separated from the Bernina Range in the south-west by the Bernina Pass; from the Albula Alps in the north-west by the Upper Engadin valley; from the Sesvenna Range in the north-east by the Ofen Pass and Val Müstair; from the Ortler Alps in the east by the upper Adda River valley (Valtellina) and the Stelvio Pass. The Livigno Alps are drained by the rivers
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Livigno Alps", {"description":'mountain range'}], ["Switzerland", {}], ["Mountain range", {}], ["Alps", {}]]
Relations:[["Livigno Alps", "country", "Switzerland"], ["Livigno Alps", "instance of", "Mountain range"], ["Livigno Alps", "mountain range", "Alps"]] |
### User:
Angelita Lind a.k.a. "The Angel of Puerto Rico" (born January 13, 1959) is a Puerto Rican track and field athlete. Early years Lind was born in the barrio Marin Bajo of Patillas, Puerto Rico into a poor family. She received her primary and secondary education in her hometown. Lind first participated in track and field events in the 7th grade and later continued participating for her high school. However, it wasn't until she became a student at the Inter-American University that she was asked by the Puerto Rican Olympic Committee to represent Puerto Rico in international sports events. International competitionsLind has represented the island and participated in three Central American and Caribbean Games (CAC) and won two gold medals, three silver medals and one bronze medal. She also participated in three Pan American Games and in the 1984 Olympics celebrated in Los Angeles, California. In the CAC of 1982, celebrated in Havana, Cuba, Lind was the standard carrier of the Puerto Rican flag. In those games, she won a gold medal in the 1,500 meter dash with a record time of 4:25.88 and a silver in the 800 meters dash in a controversial race in 2:04.24. In that race,she crossed the finish line with two Cuban runners next to her. Right at the finish line the two Cuban girls ran into each other and they both knocked Angelita down. Lind's feet were crossing the finish line, but because the Cuban fell into Angelita from behind, it was the Cuban who actually crossed the finish line first; after a prolonged discussion which reached the central offices of the International Athletic Federation, it was decided that Lind arrived second. They based their decision on a rule of track and field which states that the first torso across the finish linewins. By this time there had been a lot of trouble between the Government of Puerto Rico, headed by pro-US statehood governor Carlos Romero Barceló, (who withheld economic support from the athletic delegation headed to Cuba), and the Puerto Rican Olympic Committee, presided by German Rieckehoff, which had to appeal directly to the people for donations. Lind's "fall" united the people of Puerto Rico and for the first time, they forgot about the fight between the Olympic Committee and the government and concentrated on the sport - these events also served to inspire future runners. World Masters Athletics Angelita Lindofficially retired in 1992, however on July, 2003 at age 44, she returned to participate in the 1,500 dash in the World Masters Athletics championships, which were celebrated in San Juan, Puerto Rico. She continues to hold the national record for the 800 meters dash and the 1,500 meters dash. Later years She earned her master's degree and is currently a professor of physical education. Lind also serves as assistant athletic director in the department of physical education at the Inter-American University in San German, Puerto Rico. In 2004, she was inducted into the "Puerto Rican Sports Hall of Fame".Achievements See also List of Puerto Ricans History of women in Puerto Rico References External links profile Category:1959 births Category:Living people Category:People from Patillas, Puerto Rico Category:Puerto Rican female sprinters Category:Pan American Games competitors for Puerto Rico Category:Olympic track and field athletes of Puerto Rico Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1979 Pan American Games Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1983 Pan American Games Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1987 Pan American Games Category:Athletes (track and field) at the 1984 Summer Olympics Category:Central American and Caribbean Games gold medalists for Puerto Rico Category:Central American and Caribbean Games silver
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Angelita Lind", {"description":'Puerto Rican Olympic runner'}], ["Angelita", {}], ["Puerto Rico", {}], ["Lind", {}], ["1984 Summer Olympics", {}]]
Relations:[["Angelita Lind", "given name", "Angelita"], ["Angelita Lind", "country of citizenship", "Puerto Rico"], ["Angelita Lind", "family name", "Lind"], ["Angelita Lind", "participant in", "1984 Summer Olympics"]] |
### User:
Carl Roesner (19 June 1804, Vienna - 13 July 1869, Steyr) was an Austrian architect. Life He studied architecture in Vienna and Rome. In 1826, he began work as a proofreader for lectures at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and, in 1835, became a Professor there. He gravitated to the Romanticists and concentrated on sacred art. Wilhelm Stiassny was one of his students. He was also editor of the Allgemeine Bauzeitung (General Construction News). As he worked during the time of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, many of his buildings are now outside Austria. A street in Vienna's Meidling district was
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Carl Roesner", {"description":'Austrian architect', "alias":['Karl Roesner', 'Karl Rösner']}], ["Vienna", {}], ["Steyr", {}], ["Architect", {}], ["Austria", {}], ["Academy of Fine Arts Vienna", {}]]
Relations:[["Carl Roesner", "place of birth", "Vienna"], ["Carl Roesner", "place of death", "Steyr"], ["Carl Roesner", "occupation", "Architect"], ["Carl Roesner", "country of citizenship", "Austria"], ["Carl Roesner", "employer", "Academy of Fine Arts Vienna"]] |
### User:
Tony Grisoni (born 28 October 1952) is a British screenwriter. He lives in London. His first feature film, Queen of Hearts, directed by Jon Amiel, won the Grand Prix at the 1990 Festival du Film de Paris. Life and career He has co-written several of director Terry Gilliam's films, including Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Tideland. Gilliam and Grisoni went to WGA arbitration to get credit for Fear and Loathing; initially only Tod Davies and Alex Cox (who had written a previous version of the screenplay) were credited, despite Gilliam and Grisoni rewriting the entire film from scratch.Award for Best Single Drama. The Man Who Killed Don Quixote was finally released in 2018, featuring a character named Toby Grisoni. He teaches Screenwriting at the London Film School. Filmography Queen of Hearts (1989) The Island on Bird Street (1997) Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998) In This World (2002) The Brothers Grimm (2005) (uncredited) Tideland (2005) Brothers of the Head (2005) Death Defying Acts (2007) Red Riding (2009) The Unloved (2009) Southcliffe (2013) How I Live Now (2013) The Young Pope (2016) Electric Dreams episode "Crazy Diamond" (2017) The City and the City (2018) The Man Who
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Tony Grisoni", {"description":'British screenwriter'}], ["Screenwriter", {}], ["London", {}]]
Relations:[["Tony Grisoni", "occupation", "Screenwriter"], ["Tony Grisoni", "place of birth", "London"]] |
### User:
Justyn Warner, (born June 28, 1987) is a Canadian track athlete specializing in the 100 metres. He is the former Canadian Junior record holder at that distance with a time of 10.26. He anchored the Canadian 4 × 100 m relay team to a third-place finish at the 2012 Summer Olympics, but they were later disqualified for a teammate stepping out his lane. In 2013 he anchored Canada to a bronze in the same event at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics. He is coached by Kevin Tyler. Career Warner is a graduate of Birchmount Park Collegiate Institute in Scarborough,in Beijing, China, in a time of 10.39. Warner received a full scholarship to Texas Christian University where he competed in the NCAA as a Horned Frog under Darryl Anderson. He was a three-time All-American. He graduated TCU in 2009 with a bachelor's degree in Kinesiology. In 2012, Warner qualified in the 100m for the 2012 Summer Olympics by winning his first Canadian championship in 10.15s. That also qualified him to be a member of the 4 × 100 m relay team. At the Olympic Games, Warner finished 13th overall running a personal best of 10.09s twice in both theWorld Championships in Athletics in Moscow, after Great Britain was disqualified for a baton exchange infraction. Personal life Warner trains in Phoenix, Arizona. His hometown is Markham, Ontario, Canada. Warner has a younger brother Ian who graduated from Iowa State University. His younger brother finished right behind him at the 2012 Canadian Olympic Trials with a time of 10.20. Warner has a son, Kaedence, with Canadian hurdler Nikkita Holder. Statistics Personal bests References External links Official Website Profile at Athletics Canada Category:1987 births Category:Living people Category:Black Canadian sportspeople Category:TCU Horned Frogs men's track and field athletes Category:Olympic track and field
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Justyn Warner", {"description":'Canadian sprinter', "alias":['Justyn Paris Ashby Warner']}], ["Canada", {}], ["2012 Summer Olympics", {}]]
Relations:[["Justyn Warner", "country of citizenship", "Canada"], ["Justyn Warner", "participant in", "2012 Summer Olympics"], ["Justyn Warner", "country for sport", "Canada"]] |
### User:
José Campeche y Jordán (December 23, 1751 – November 7, 1809), is the first known Puerto Rican visual artist and considered by art critics as one of the best rococo artists in the Americas. Campeche y Jordán loved to use colors that referenced the landscape of Puerto Rico, as well as the social and political crème de la crème. Early life Campeche was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico. His parents were Tomás Campeche (1701–1780) and María Jordán y Marqués. His father was a freed slave born in Puerto Rico and his mother was a native of the Canary Islands.His father was a gilder who restored and painted religious statues, and had an influence on the young Campeche's interest in the arts. Campeche was trained by Luis Paret y Alcázar, a Spanish court painter banished from Spain. Paintings Campeche distinguished himself with his paintings related to religious themes and of governors and other important figures. His most famous paintings and his best known portraits are of: Juan Alejo de Arizmendi Our Lady of Bethlehem Portrait of Brigadier don Ramón de Castro y Gutiérrez Portrait of Governor don Miguel de Ustariz Saint John the Baptist The Bishop of San Franciscode la Cuerda The Rescue of Don Ramón Power y Giralt in honor of Ramón Power y Giralt The Sacred Family The Virgin of the Rosary The Vision of Saint Anthony Virgen de la Soledad de la Victoria Doña María de los Dolores Gutiérrez del Mazo y Pérez, ca. 1796. Importance Not only did the Puerto Rican society of the time appreciate Campeche's personal and artistic merits but he is now considered to be amongst the most gifted rococo artists in the Americas. His works of art can be found in museums, churches and chapels, such as Capilla del Cristoin San Juan, and in private collections in Puerto Rico and Venezuela. Campeche died in the city of San Juan on November 7, 1809. High-resolution images of works of art from Puerto Rico's museums are being digitized and made available online with the help of the Institute, Google Arts & Culture, Lin Manuel Miranda and other stakeholders. 350 such works were available online by November 7, 2019 including many works by José Campeche. Commemorations There is a "José Campeche room" in the former Dominican Convent in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, where some of his works can be seen. The
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["José Campeche", {"description":'Puerto Rican visual artist (1751-1809)', "alias":['José Campeche y Jordán', 'Jose Campeche y Jordan', 'José de Rivafrecha y Jordán', 'Jose Campeche', 'José Rivafrecha y Jordan', 'José Campeche y Jordan', 'Jose de Rivafrecha y Jordan', 'Jose Rivafrecha y Jordan']}], ["San Juan, Puerto Rico", {}], ["Rococo", {}], ["Painter", {}]]
Relations:[["José Campeche", "place of birth", "San Juan, Puerto Rico"], ["José Campeche", "place of death", "San Juan, Puerto Rico"], ["José Campeche", "movement", "Rococo"], ["José Campeche", "occupation", "Painter"]] |
### User:
Paluma Range is a national park located between Ingham and Townsville, in north Queensland, Australia. The park is 1188 km north of Brisbane. Geography The park contains the Jourama Falls, Crystal Creek and Lake Paluma. Ecology Most of it lies within the Paluma Important Bird Area (IBA), so identified by BirdLife International because it is a southern outlier for many species and contains a significant population of the vulnerable southern cassowary. History On National Parks Day 2010 (Sunday, 28 March 2010), the Queensland State Government announced the addition of 6,510 hectares to the Paluma Range National Park. See also Protected
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Paluma Range National Park", {"description":'national park'}], ["Australia", {}], ["Queensland", {}]]
Relations:[["Paluma Range National Park", "country", "Australia"], ["Paluma Range National Park", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "Queensland"]] |
### User:
Paul Ronald Johan Meijer (born 27 March 1985 in Utrecht) is a Dutch racing driver. He is a former Benelux Formula Renault champion. Career As many formula drivers, Paul started his career in karting at the age of 10. He participated in national and international competitions. In 2001 Paul participated in a Challenge organized by Avaya Communications, with 7 candidates. He won the Challenge and earned a season driving in the first Dutch Toyota Yaris Cup for free. The ex Formula One racing driver Jan Lammers took Paul into the Formula Ford in 2002. With Racing for Holland Paul learned
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Paul Meijer", {"description":'Dutch racing driver'}], ["Utrecht", {}]]
Relations:[["Paul Meijer", "place of birth", "Utrecht"]] |
### User:
Sanapia, born Mary Poafpybitty (ca. 20 May 1895–23 January 1984), was a Comanche medicine woman and spiritual healer. She is believed to be the last of eagle doctors, a Comanche title referring to a person with eagle medicine for healing the sick. She was influenced by traditional Comanche medicine, incorporating elements of Christianity and Peyotism. Early life Sanapia was born Mary Poafpybitty in spring 1895 to David Poafpybitty and Chappy Poafpybitty, both Comanche, living near Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Although it has been written that she was born on May 20, 1895, she was uncertain of her actual birthdate so thisdate was adopted later on. She was sixth of eleven children but the first girl to be born in her family. While she was young, her family struggled to make ends meet and lived in poverty, relying on rations from nearby Fort Sill. She was raised by her maternal grandmother. Spiritual development Although Sanapia did not begin a career as a medicine woman until her mid-teens, from a very young age she received training from her mother and her maternal uncle, an Arapaho chief, both of whom were eagle doctors. Although her father, David, was a Christian and indifferent toComanche spiritual practices, he did not interfere with the religious training of his daughter. She attended Cache Creek Mission School in southern Oklahoma from the age of 7 until 14 and during the summer holidays would develop a knowledge of herbal medicines. Between the ages of 14 and 17 she received full-time training from her mother, uncle, and paternal grandfather to attain the knowledge, ethics, skills and the supernatural powers (paha) to become a medicine woman. The latter, attaining supernatural powers, would be achieved by transferring power through the medium of the hands and mouth, using various methods such asto ward of evil spirits. If the treatment was ineffective, Sanapia would pray apply peyote tea to the patient's face, head, and hands and if the patient needed her deepest powers of healing she would sing a song until she attracted the spirits to help her. Death and legacy Sanapia was buried in the Comanche Indian cemetery near Chandler Creek, Oklahoma. Her activities were documented by David E. Jones in Sanapia, Comanche Medicine Woman, from 1967, with Sanapia's permission. She adopted Jones as her son, otherwise it would be a wrongdoing to pass down information about the traditional healing toan outsider. Sanapia's purpose was for the book to serve as a form of autobiography, to pass the knowledge which she had acquired down to the next generation and to encourage others to follow in her footsteps in being a traditional medicine woman and healer. None of her children, however, were interested enough in spiritual healing to follow in her footsteps. Notes Further reading Jones, David E. Sanapia: Comanche Medicine Woman. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974. . Margolis, Simeon, ed., Johns Hopkins Symptoms and Remedies, Rebus, 1995. Category:1895 births Category:1984 deaths Category:People from Fort Sill, Oklahoma Category:Comanche people
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Sanapia", {"description":'Comanche medicine woman and spiritual healer'}], ["Fort Sill", {}], ["Comanche", {}]]
Relations:[["Sanapia", "place of birth", "Fort Sill"], ["Sanapia", "ethnic group", "Comanche"]] |
### User:
was a after Kōhei and before Enkyū. This period spanned the years from August 1065 through April 1069. The reigning emperors were and . Change of Era 1065 : The new era name was created to mark an event or series of events. The previous era ended and the new one commenced in Kōhei 8, 2nd day of the 8th month of 1065. Events of the Jiryaku Era April 3, 1066 (Jiryaku 2, 6th day of the 3rd month): A broom star appeared in the east at first light. 1068 (Jiryaku 4, 14th day of the 8th month): Ceremonies for262297615 Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ; OCLC 58053128 Pankenier, David W., Zhentao Xu and Yaotiao Jiang. (2008). Archaeoastronomy in East Asia: Historical Observational Records of Comets and Meteor Showers from China, Japan, and Korea. Amherst, New York: Cambria Press. ; OCLC 269455845 Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Nihon Odai Ichiran; ou, Annales des empereurs du Japon. Paris: Royal Asiatic Society, Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland. OCLC 5850691 Varley, H. Paul. (1980). A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns: Jinnō Shōtōki of Kitabatake Chikafusa. New York: Columbia University Press. ; OCLC 6042764 External
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Jiryaku", {"description":'Japanese era from August 1065 to April 1069'}], ["Kōhei", {}], ["Enkyū", {}], ["Japan", {}]]
Relations:[["Jiryaku", "follows", "Kōhei"], ["Jiryaku", "followed by", "Enkyū"], ["Jiryaku", "country", "Japan"]] |
### User:
Alfredo Pián (October 21, 1912 – July 25, 1990) was an Argentinian racing driver. He entered the 1950 Monaco Grand Prix with a Maserati 4CLT run by Scuderia Achille Varzi. During the Saturday practice sessions, Pián, who had the sixth fastest time at that point, spun on an oil patch and crashed against the guard-rail, being thrown out of the cockpit. He sustained leg injuries and was not able to start the race, and the injury ended his career. Complete Formula One World Championship results (key) References Category:1912 births Category:1990 deaths Category:People from Belgrano Department, Santa Fe Category:Argentine racing drivers
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Alfredo Pián", {"description":'Argentine racing driver', "alias":['Alfredo Pian']}], ["Alfredo", {}]]
Relations:[["Alfredo Pián", "given name", "Alfredo"]] |
### User:
Sheila Sen Jasanoff is an Indian American academic and significant contributor to the field of Science and Technology Studies. Early life and education Born in India, Jasanoff attended Radcliffe College, where she studied mathematics as an undergraduate, receiving her bachelor's degree in 1964. She then studied linguistics, receiving her M.A. at the University of Bonn (then part of West Germany). She returned to Harvard to complete a Ph.D. in linguistics in 1973, and a J.D. at Harvard Law School in 1976. She practiced environmental law in Boston from 1976 to 1978. She and her husband then accepted positions at CornellUniversity, where she became a pioneer in the newly emerging field of Science and Technology Studies. In 1998, Jasanoff joined the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University as a professor of public policy. In 2002, she became Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology Studies. Work Jasanoff founded and directs the Program on Science, Technology, and Society at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Her research focuses on science and the state in contemporary democratic societies. Her work is relevant to science & technology studies, comparative politics, law and society, political and legal anthropology,sociology and policy analysis. Jasanoff's research has considerable empirical breadth, spanning the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, the European Union, and India, as well as emerging global regimes in areas such as climate and biotechnology. One line of Jasanoff's work demonstrates how the political culture of different democratic societies influences how they assess evidence and expertise in policymaking. Her first book (with Brickman and Ilgen), Controlling Chemicals (1985), examines the regulation of toxic substances in the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom. The book showed how the routines of decision making in these countries reflected different conceptions ofwhat counts as evidence and of how expertise should operate in a policy context. In Designs on Nature: Science and Democracy in Europe and the United States (2005), she has shown how different societies employ different modes of public reasoning when making decisions involving science and technology. These differences, which in part reflect distinct "civic epistemologies," are deeply embedded in institutions and shape how policy issues are framed and processed by the bureaucratic machinery of modern states. Jasanoff has also contributed to scholarship on the interaction of science and law. Science at the Bar (1995), for example, reached beyond theEarthy Politics, 2004). Jasanoff also has contributed to building Science and Technology Studies as a field. Prior to moving to Harvard, she was the founding chair of the Department of Science & Technology Studies at Cornell University. She is also the founder of the Science & Democracy Network, a group of scholars interested in the study of science and the state in democratic societies that has met annually since 2002. Her research has been recognized with many awards, including the Bernal Prize from the Society for Social Studies of Science, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Albert O. Hirschman Prize fromthe Social Science Research Council. Personal She is married to Jay H. Jasanoff, and has two children, Maya Jasanoff, who is a professor in the Department of History at Harvard, and Alan Jasanoff, who is a professor in the Department of Biological Engineering at MIT References External links Personal Website Harvard Bio Society for Social Studies of Science Science & Democracy Network Sheila Jasanoff, Director, Program on Science, Technology and Society at Harvard Kennedy School Category:Science and technology studies scholars Category:Living people Category:Jewish American social scientists Category:Cornell University faculty Category:Radcliffe College alumni Category:1944 births Category:Harvard Law School alumni Category:John F.
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Sheila Jasanoff", {"description":'American social scientist', "alias":['Professor Sheila Jasanoff']}], ["Sheila", {}], ["Harvard Law School", {}], ["Radcliffe College", {}], ["University of Bonn", {}], ["India", {}], ["Professor", {}], ["Harvard University", {}], ["United States", {}], ["Guggenheim Fellowship", {}], ["Cornell University", {}], ["Maya Jasanoff", {}]]
Relations:[["Sheila Jasanoff", "given name", "Sheila"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "educated at", "Harvard Law School"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "educated at", "Radcliffe College"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "educated at", "University of Bonn"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "place of birth", "India"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "occupation", "Professor"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "educated at", "Harvard University"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "residence", "United States"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "country of citizenship", "United States"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "award received", "Guggenheim Fellowship"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "employer", "Cornell University"], ["Sheila Jasanoff", "child", "Maya Jasanoff"]] |
### User:
The Kostabi World Trade Center was an envisioned building in New York City, United States. Designed by Mark Kostabi in the 1990s, it would have had 160 floors and would have been 2,000 feet (609.6 m) high. It was one of the many ideas for the World Trade Center site. The Floor plates at the base of the building contain more than 200,000 square feet. It was proposed in the late 1990s as the world's tallest building by developer Mark Kostabi. Structural types: highrise, sphere Architectural style: postmodern Material: glass External links Kostabi World Trade Center at SkyscraperPage Category:Unbuilt buildings
### Assistant:
| Nodes:[["Kostabi World Trade Center", {"description":'unbuilt skyscraper in Manhattan, New York'}], ["United States", {}]]
Relations:[["Kostabi World Trade Center", "country", "United States"]] |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.