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29,733,503 | Chedoke Hospital | The Chedoke Hospital was a non-acute care hospital in Hamilton, Canada. It was operated by Hamilton Health Sciences. In 1906 the Mountain Sanatorium was founded to provide care for people from Hamilton and the surrounding communities who were ill with tuberculosis. In 1961 the sanatorium changed its mandate, expanded its services and became a general hospital called the Chedoke General and Children's Hospital. In 1971 this name was changed to Chedoke Hospitals. | [
"Life"
] | 2010-11-24T13:45:34Z | 2010-11-24T13:46:05Z |
214,885 | Edsel Ford | Edsel Bryant Ford (November 6, 1893 – May 26, 1943) was an American business executive and philanthropist who was the only child of pioneering industrialist Henry Ford and his wife, Clara Jane Bryant Ford. He was the president of Ford Motor Company from 1919 until his death in 1943. He worked closely with his father, as sole heir to the business, but was keen to develop cars more exciting than the Model T ("Tin Lizzie"), in line with his personal tastes. Even as president, he had trouble persuading his father to allow any departure from this formula. Only a change in market conditions enabled him to develop the more fashionable Model A in 1927. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2003-04-23T04:26:37Z | 2003-06-03T23:27:09Z |
10,602,145 | Martin Werner | Martín Werner Wainfeld is a Mexican businessman and a director of Grupo Aeroportuario Centro Norte, S.A.B. de C.V. He was previously co-head of investment banking in Latin America at Goldman Sachs. | [
"Economy"
] | 2007-04-11T19:01:47Z | 2007-04-12T16:52:01Z |
61,604,027 | Toofaan | Toofaan (transl. Storm) is a 2021 Indian Hindi-language sports drama film directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra. It stars Farhan Akhtar, Paresh Rawal, Mrunal Thakur and Hussain Dalal. In the film, Aziz Ali is an orphaned extortionist in Dongri who beats up shopkeepers for money. He later picks up boxing and trains in the sport, earning the titular moniker on his road to fame until his downfall and subsequent redemption. | [
"Sports"
] | 2019-08-25T16:39:53Z | 2019-08-25T16:54:43Z |
66,259,587 | List of statutory instruments of the United Kingdom, 2015 | This is an incomplete list of statutory instruments made in the United Kingdom in the year 2015. SI 2015/962: Energy Efficiency (Private Rented Property) (England and Wales) Regulations 2015, known also as the MEES Regulations ("minimum energy efficiency standard")
SI 2015/1583: Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (General Duties of Self-Employed Persons) (Prescribed Undertakings) Regulations 2015
SI 2015/1833: Modern Slavery Act 2015 (Transparency in Supply Chains) Regulations 2015
== References == | [
"Law"
] | 2021-01-01T17:44:14Z | 2021-06-02T04:33:06Z |
4,425,142 | Libyan Arab Air Cargo | Libyan Air Cargo is an inactive cargo airline based in Tripoli, Libya. It is the cargo division of Libyan Airlines, operating all-cargo services. Its main base is Tripoli International Airport. It serves destinations throughout Africa, Europe, and Asia. | [
"Business"
] | 2006-03-17T20:24:56Z | 2006-03-17T20:27:38Z |
1,131,302 | Harry Elkins Widener | Harry Elkins Widener (January 3, 1885 – April 15, 1912) was an American businessman and bibliophile, and a member of the Widener family. His mother built Harvard University's Widener Memorial Library in his memory, after his death on the foundering of the RMS Titanic. | [
"Human_behavior"
] | 2004-11-04T10:16:32Z | 2005-11-21T23:29:12Z |
40,748,332 | Edward D'Avenant | The Venerable Edward Davenant or D’Avenant, DD (1596–1679) was an English churchman and academic, Archdeacon of Berkshire from 1631 to 1634, known also as a mathematician. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2013-10-09T10:21:26Z | 2013-10-09T10:22:41Z |
70,975,791 | Man Kok Tsui | Man Kok Tsui (Chinese: 萬角咀) is the name of a cape and a nearby village of Lantau Island, Hong Kong. | [
"Geography"
] | 2022-06-09T08:31:27Z | 2022-06-09T08:35:51Z |
160,716 | Quintus Sertorius | Quintus Sertorius (c. 126 BC – 73 or 72 BC) was a Roman general and statesman who led a large-scale rebellion against the Roman Senate on the Iberian Peninsula. Sertorius became the independent ruler of Hispania for most of a decade until his assassination. Sertorius first became prominent during the Cimbrian War fighting under Gaius Marius, and then served Rome in the Social War. Unsuccessful in his attempt for the plebeian tribunate c. 88 BC due to the hostility of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, after Sulla's consulship in 88 BC he joined with Cinna and Marius during the short civil war in 87 BC. He led in the assault on Rome and played a role in restraining the reprisals that followed. | [
"History"
] | 2002-12-22T18:30:17Z | 2002-12-22T18:33:41Z |
43,532,278 | Cougar Software | Cougar Software developed budgeting, planning and forecasting software for real estate investors in the commercial real estate industry globally. Cougar Software was founded in Australia in 1992. It later moved to Toronto. The company had offices in Canada, Australia, United Kingdom and the United States. In February 2015, Cougar was acquired by MRI Software of Solon, Ohio. | [
"Technology"
] | 2014-08-11T22:14:16Z | 2014-08-11T22:17:52Z |
1,094,795 | Quarry Bay | Quarry Bay is an area beneath Mount Parker in the Eastern District of Hong Kong Island, in Hong Kong. Quarry Bay is bordered by Sai Wan Ho to the east, Mount Parker to the south, North Point to the west, and Victoria Harbour to the north. Quarry Bay is a residential and business district in Hong Kong. One Island East, the seventh tallest building in Hong Kong, is located in Quarry Bay. Some government departments such as the Accounting and Financial Reporting Council have relocated their offices from Central and Wan Chai to Quarry Bay over the years, and some multinational companies have their offices located in the district, such as Ernst & Young, BNP Paribas, LVMH and Boston Consulting Group, etc. | [
"Geography"
] | 2004-10-23T09:22:36Z | 2004-10-23T09:47:50Z |
54,420,169 | Situka | Situka (A Call for Action) is a Ugandan feature film about two lovers: Amanio (Hellen Lukoma), an ambitious young woman with a passion for politics, who inspires her boyfriend Muganga (Bobi Wine), an industrious young daredevil, to stand up for justice in society. Situka explores relevant social issues, inspiring young people to be more involved in their communities, rather than expecting the government to provide for them. | [
"Nature"
] | 2017-06-29T10:59:22Z | 2017-06-29T11:19:11Z |
3,620,975 | David Cage | David De Gruttola (born June 9, 1969), known by his pseudonym David Cage, is a French video game designer, writer and musician. He is the founder of the game development studio Quantic Dream. Cage wrote and directed Heavy Rain, Beyond: Two Souls, and Detroit: Become Human. | [
"Internet"
] | 2006-01-05T01:18:12Z | 2006-01-05T14:55:44Z |
2,346,514 | Wellington Barracks | Wellington Barracks is a military barracks in Westminster, central London, for the Foot Guards battalions on public duties in that area. The building is located about 300 yards (270 m) from Buckingham Palace, allowing the guard to be able to reach the palace very quickly in an emergency, and lies between Birdcage Walk and Petty France. Three companies are based at the barracks, as well as all of the Foot Guards bands and the regimental headquarters. | [
"Government"
] | 2005-07-31T07:10:26Z | 2005-07-31T20:25:40Z |
279,546 | Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek | The Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek ("ny" means "new" in Danish; "Glyptotek" comes from the Greek root glyphein, to carve, and theke, storing place), commonly known simply as Glyptoteket, is an art museum in Copenhagen, Denmark. The collection represents the private art collection of Carl Jacobsen (1842–1914), the son of the founder of the Carlsberg Breweries. Primarily a sculpture museum, as indicated by the name, the focal point of the museum is antique sculpture from the ancient cultures around the Mediterranean, including Egypt, Rome and Greece, as well as more modern sculptures such as a collection of Auguste Rodin's works, considered to be the most important outside France. However, the museum is equally noted for its collection of paintings that includes an extensive collection of French impressionists and Post-impressionists as well as Danish Golden Age paintings. The French Collection includes works by painters such as Jacques-Louis David, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Degas and Cézanne, as well as those by Post-impressionists such as van Gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec and Bonnard. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2003-07-27T04:46:09Z | 2003-07-27T04:49:25Z |
44,473,609 | Jane Bunn | Jane Bunn is an Australian meteorologist and weather presenter. Bunn is the weather presenter on Seven News Melbourne. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2014-11-22T07:06:59Z | 2014-11-22T07:07:24Z |
9,883,452 | St Martin Outwich | St Martin Outwich was a parish church in the City of London, on the corner of Threadneedle Street and Bishopsgate. Of medieval origin, it was rebuilt at the end of the 18th century and demolished in 1874. | [
"Entities"
] | 2007-03-05T23:22:44Z | 2007-03-05T23:23:35Z |
61,700,856 | Storkline Furniture Corporation Factory | The Storkline Furniture Corporation Factory was a historic factory building at 4400-4418 W. 26th Street in the South Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. The Storkline Furniture Corporation, a nationally popular children's furniture company, produced all of its furniture at the factory. Founded in 1915 as the Glass Novelty Company, the corporation renamed itself after its most popular product in the 1920s and built a new factory in 1925. Chicago architect Sidney Minchin designed the brick building, incorporating Sullivanesque terra cotta decorations in the facade. As one of the only companies specializing in children's furniture, Storkline dominated the market in the 1920s and 1930s, and it saw continued success in the following decades. | [
"Entities"
] | 2019-09-05T17:39:46Z | 2020-10-04T10:23:11Z |
3,868,734 | Gary Ross | Gary Ross (born November 3, 1956) is an American screenwriter, director, and producer. He is best known for writing and directing the fantasy comedy-drama film Pleasantville (1998), the sports drama film Seabiscuit (2003), the sci-fi action film The Hunger Games (2012), and the heist comedy film Ocean's 8 (2018). Ross has been nominated for four Academy Awards. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2006-01-27T23:29:51Z | 2006-01-27T23:32:59Z |
2,316,761 | Operation Vistula | Operation Vistula (Polish: Akcja Wisła; Ukrainian: Опера́ція «Ві́сла») was the codename for the 1947 forced resettlement of close to 150,000 Ukrainians (including Rusyns, Boykos and Lemkos) from the south-eastern provinces of post-war Poland, to the Recovered Territories in the west of the country. The action was carried out by the Soviet-installed Polish communist authorities to remove material support to the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. The Ukrainian Insurgent Army continued its guerilla activities until 1947 in Subcarpathian and Lublin Voivodeships with no hope for any peaceful resolution; Operation Vistula brought an end to the hostilities. In a period of three months beginning on 28 April 1947 and with Soviet approval and aid about 141,000 civilians residing around Bieszczady and Low Beskids were forcibly resettled to former German territories, ceded to Poland at the Yalta Conference at the end of World War II. The operation was named after the Vistula River, Wisła in Polish; some Polish and Ukrainian politicians as well as historians condemned the operation following the 1989 fall of communism in Eastern Europe and described it as ethnic cleansing. | [
"Politics"
] | 2005-07-27T02:06:17Z | 2005-07-27T02:50:29Z |
56,081,938 | Robert Naorem | Robert Naorem is an Indian fashion entrepreneur, designer and makeup artist from Manipur, India. He is known for his
contribution towards the handloom and textile of Manipur. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2017-12-18T19:53:08Z | 2017-12-19T20:05:13Z |
22,193,400 | Fritz Gosslau | Fritz Gosslau (25 March 1898 – 1 December 1965) was a German engineer, known for his work on the V-1 flying bomb. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2009-03-29T18:28:31Z | 2009-04-04T18:42:36Z |
11,831,908 | Downtown Independent | The Downtown Independent (formerly the ImaginAsian Center) was a one screen theater and cinema located at 251 S. Main Street in the Little Tokyo area of Los Angeles, California. It was operated by the Downtown Independent and owned by Orange County, California's Cinema Properties Group. The venue is slightly less than 10,000 square feet (930 m2) and had stadium seating for 222. Film premieres at the theater include The Miracle Song, Goodbye Promise and Regular Show: The Movie. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2007-06-18T13:45:43Z | 2007-06-18T14:07:42Z |
34,767,179 | Richard Becon | Richard Becon or Beacon (fl. 1594), was an English administrator and Law Officer in Ireland. He was also a political author, best known for his pamphlet Solon his follie, on the government of Ireland. | [
"Government"
] | 2012-02-17T01:30:46Z | 2012-02-17T01:37:47Z |
1,589,731 | Ray Hill (British activist) | Raymond Hill (2 December 1939 – 14 May 2022) was a former leading figure in the British far right who went on to become a well-known informant. A sometime deputy leader of the British Movement and a founder member of the British National Party, Hill also secretly worked for Searchlight in feeding information about the groups' activities. | [
"Politics"
] | 2005-03-10T11:06:46Z | 2005-03-10T11:27:08Z |
51,685 | Auxiliary verb | An auxiliary verb (abbreviated aux) is a verb that adds functional or grammatical meaning to the clause in which it occurs, so as to express tense, aspect, modality, voice, emphasis, etc. Auxiliary verbs usually accompany an infinitive verb or a participle, which respectively provide the main semantic content of the clause. An example is the verb have in the sentence I have finished my lunch. Here, the auxiliary have helps to express the perfect aspect along with the participle, finished. Some sentences contain a chain of two or more auxiliary verbs. | [
"Science"
] | 2002-05-08T09:37:20Z | 2002-05-11T13:24:50Z |
53,895,737 | Bangladesh Institute of Philatelic Studies | The Bangladesh Institute of Philatelic Studies is a research institution in Bangladesh that researches postage stamps of Bangladesh. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2017-04-27T12:47:30Z | 2017-04-27T13:42:48Z |
72,585,133 | Wei Rongjue | Wei Rongjue (born September 4, 1916) was a Chinese physicist and professor at Nanjing University. In 1952, he was appointed chairman of the physics department at Nanjing University. He's a member of the Chinese Academy of Science. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2022-12-27T10:06:33Z | 2022-12-27T10:24:44Z |
2,161,725 | Alpine Air Express | Alpine Air Express is an American airline based in Provo, Utah. It operates scheduled and chartered air cargo services on over 100 routes throughout Utah, Montana, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Idaho, California, and Colorado. | [
"Business"
] | 2005-07-03T13:35:56Z | 2005-07-08T02:31:45Z |
16,684,592 | Mazza Gallerie | Mazza Gallerie was an upscale shopping mall which was demolished in 2023 and is currently being rebuilt as a mixed-use development It is located along Wisconsin Avenue in the Friendship Heights neighborhood of northwest Washington, D.C. at the Maryland border. Opened in 1977, it had 300,000 square feet (28,000 m2) of retail space on three levels, a parking garage, and a direct connection to the Friendship Heights station of the Washington Metro. The last retail business closed in December 2022. The building is to be converted to residential apartments with retail on the ground floor. The mall was named after Louise Mazza, whose daughter Olga inherited the land before it was developed. | [
"Entities"
] | 2008-03-30T23:56:43Z | 2008-03-30T23:57:05Z |
35,888,911 | Arctic GmbH | Arctic GmbH, formerly known as Arctic Cooling, is a German, Swiss-founded manufacturer of computer cooling components, mainly CPU and graphics card coolers, case fans and thermal compound. Since 2010, Arctic expanded its business by starting a range of products to cater other consumer demands beyond that of computer cooling hardware. Nowadays, Arctic also offers various consumer products—spanning audio, home entertainment and computer peripherals. In 2012, Arctic was nominated as one of the finalists in the annual PCR Awards. Founded in 2001, Arctic has offices in Germany, Hong Kong and the United States and cooperates with different production facilities in China. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2012-05-21T08:39:38Z | 2012-05-21T08:41:19Z |
9,631,970 | Fairfield Hospital (Sydney) | The Fairfield Hospital is a rural general hospital located in Prairiewood, a western suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Located in the City of Fairfield, it has about 200 beds and provides general medical, physiotherapy, general surgical, obstetric, paediatric, emergency, ambulatory care, and drug health services. In addition to its district hospital level role, Fairfield Hospital hosts two major specialist units. It hosts the major specialist hand surgery unit for South Western Sydney. It is also the major elective orthopaedic surgery site for the area, and is the host of the Whitlam Joint Replacement Centre. | [
"Life"
] | 2007-02-21T18:26:31Z | 2007-05-13T01:50:53Z |
44,973,130 | Boothville House | Boothville is a heritage-listed villa and former maternity hospital at 43 Seventh Avenue, Windsor, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1887 to c. 1900. It is also known as Monte Video. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992. | [
"Life"
] | 2015-01-07T21:01:51Z | 2015-01-07T21:08:49Z |
1,027,926 | Thrilling Cities | Thrilling Cities is the title of a travelogue by the James Bond author and The Sunday Times journalist Ian Fleming. The book was first published in the UK in November 1963 by Jonathan Cape. The cities covered by Fleming were Hong Kong, Macau, Tokyo, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Chicago, New York, Hamburg, Berlin, Vienna, Geneva, Naples and Monte Carlo. Thrilling Cities was initially a series of articles Fleming wrote for The Sunday Times, based on two trips he took. The first trip was in 1959, in which he travelled around the world, and the second was in 1960, in which he drove around Europe. | [
"Human_behavior"
] | 2004-09-29T21:50:39Z | 2004-09-30T23:36:21Z |
61,735,530 | Garvi Gujarat Bhavan | Garvi Gujarat Bhavan is the official Guest house of Government of Gujarat in Delhi. It has been built over 7,066 square meter plot on Akbar Road, New Delhi. It is also the first state guest house in capital to be certified as a Green building. | [
"Government"
] | 2019-09-09T16:14:10Z | 2019-09-22T07:27:11Z |
48,460,642 | Tao Kwok Cheung | Tao Kwok Cheung (Chinese: 陶國璋, born 1955) is a Hong Kong philosophy professor. He was born in Huizhou, Guangdong, and moved to Hong Kong in 1959 at the age of four. He teaches General Education courses in the Chinese University of Hong Kong as a full-time professor since 1990 and retired in 2015 to be a part-time assistant professor. He founded the Philosophia Cultural Society (睿哲文化學會) with other University lecturers in 2001 and is also a council member of Society for Life and Death Education. He publishes articles in a special column "Philosophy in an array of stars" (繁星哲語]) in the Hong Kong Economic Journal and in Ming Pao. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2015-11-04T16:06:14Z | 2015-11-04T16:07:11Z |
30,771,750 | Statkraft osmotic power prototype in Hurum | Statkraft osmotic power prototype is the world's first osmotic power plant, based on the energy of osmosis. The power plant is run by Statkraft. The power plant is located at Tofte in Hurum, Norway, with rooms at the factory area at Södra Cell Tofte cellulose factory. The power plant uses the osmotic gradient that occurs when fresh water and salt water meet, separated by a permeable membrane. The salt water pulls fresh water through the membrane and the pressure increases on the salt water side; this pressure increase can be used to produce electrical power with the use of a normal hydroelectric turbine/generator setup. | [
"Energy"
] | 2011-02-06T18:19:27Z | 2011-02-06T18:19:50Z |
20,437 | Mass transfer | Mass transfer is the net movement of mass from one location (usually meaning stream, phase, fraction, or component) to another. Mass transfer occurs in many processes, such as absorption, evaporation, drying, precipitation, membrane filtration, and distillation. Mass transfer is used by different scientific disciplines for different processes and mechanisms. The phrase is commonly used in engineering for physical processes that involve diffusive and convective transport of chemical species within physical systems. Some common examples of mass transfer processes are the evaporation of water from a pond to the atmosphere, the purification of blood in the kidneys and liver, and the distillation of alcohol. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2002-06-24T17:21:06Z | 2002-06-24T17:37:53Z |
9,351,742 | Mithat Bayrak | Mithat Bayrak (3 March 1929 – 20 April 2014) was a Turkish sports wrestler and trainer, who won two consecutive gold medals in the Welterweight class of Men's Greco-Roman Wrestling at the 1956 Olympics and 1960 Olympics. | [
"Sports"
] | 2007-02-06T19:52:35Z | 2007-02-11T07:32:28Z |
35,945,873 | José Ferrater Mora | José María Ferrater Mora (Catalan: Josep Ferrater i Mora; 30 October 1912 – 30 January 1991) was a Spanish philosopher, essayist and writer. He is considered the most prominent Catalan philosopher of the 20th-century and was the author of over 35 books, including a four-volume Diccionario de filosofía (Dictionary of Philosophy, 1941) and Being and Death: An Outline of Integrationist Philosophy (1962). Subjects he worked on include ontology, history of philosophy, metaphysics, anthropology, the philosophy of history and culture, epistemology, logic, philosophy of science, and ethics. He also directed several films. Ferrater Mora was known for his inclusion of humans and non-human animals within the same moral sphere, or continuum, arguing that the difference was one of degree, not kind. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2012-05-26T20:29:59Z | 2012-05-26T22:25:01Z |
44,641,846 | The Fighting Dervishes of the Desert | The Fighting Dervishes of the Desert is a 1912 American silent film produced by Kalem Company and distributed by General Film Company. It was directed by Sidney Olcott with himself, Gene Gauntier and Jack J. Clark in the leading roles. | [
"Nature"
] | 2014-12-09T00:12:11Z | 2014-12-09T00:15:17Z |
6,325,935 | Vanji language | The Vanji language, also spelt Vanchi and Vanži, is an extinct Iranian language, one of the areal group of Pamir languages. It was spoken in the Vanj River valley in what is now the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region of Tajikistan. In the 19th century the region was forcibly annexed to the Bukharan Emirate and a campaign of violent assimilation undertaken, and by the end of the 19th century, the Vanji language had completely disappeared, displaced by Tajik Persian as a result of assimilation. | [
"Language"
] | 2006-08-08T04:55:36Z | 2006-08-08T05:04:55Z |
3,488,301 | Halide Edib Adıvar | Halide Edib Adıvar (Ottoman Turkish: خالده اديب [hɑːliˈde eˈdib], sometimes spelled Halidé Edib in English; 11 June 1884 – 9 January 1964) was a Turkish novelist, teacher, and a nationalist and feminist intellectual. She was best known for her novels criticizing the low social status of Turkish women and what she saw from her observation as the lack of interest of most women in changing their situation. She was a Pan-Turkist and several of her novels advocated for the Turanism movement. Halide Edib Adıvar is also remembered for her role in the forced assimilation of children orphaned during the Armenian genocide. | [
"Language"
] | 2005-12-21T06:47:49Z | 2005-12-21T06:50:43Z |
7,546,009 | Fraternal myotis | The fraternal myotis (Myotis frater) is a species of vesper bat native to East Asia. | [
"Communication"
] | 2006-10-21T15:07:49Z | 2006-12-04T06:34:19Z |
12,536,251 | Ansorge's free-tailed bat | Ansorge's free-tailed bat (Mops ansorgei) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae native to sub-Saharan Africa. It is named for W.J. Ansorge, who collected the first formally described specimen. | [
"Communication"
] | 2007-07-30T22:13:52Z | 2007-12-08T17:00:24Z |
7,993,688 | United International Bank | United International Bank (Chinese: 國際銀行) was an overseas Chinese bank in the United States, formerly headquartered in New York City. The bank established itself as a locally based community bank serving Chinese Americans and Asian Americans in the New York City area. Most of its clients were newly arrived immigrants and local small business owners who faced difficulties in obtaining financial support from other mainstream banks. In addition to serving the needs of small business owners and entrepreneurs, the bank specialized in financing credit arrangements for import and export trades. Unlike most overseas Chinese banks in the United States whose managements consist mainly of Chinese people, the managerial team of United International Bank included a significant number of non-Asians. | [
"Economy"
] | 2006-11-18T01:28:19Z | 2006-11-18T01:29:35Z |
10,989,170 | Olga Hepnarová | Olga Hepnarová (30 June 1951 – 12 March 1975) was a Czechoslovak rampage killer, who on 10 July 1973, killed eight people with a truck in Prague. Hepnarová was convicted and sentenced to death, and was executed in 1975, the last woman executed in Czechoslovakia. | [
"Human_behavior"
] | 2007-04-30T20:31:14Z | 2007-04-30T20:35:01Z |
257,230 | Thomas Heath (classicist) | Sir Thomas Little Heath (; 5 October 1861 – 16 March 1940) was a British civil servant, mathematician, classical scholar, historian of ancient Greek mathematics, translator, and mountaineer. He was educated at Clifton College. Heath translated works of Euclid of Alexandria, Apollonius of Perga, Aristarchus of Samos, and Archimedes of Syracuse into English. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2003-07-03T00:53:20Z | 2003-07-03T00:56:07Z |
5,742,746 | 3 Fonteinen | 3 Fonteinen is a Belgian brewery, specialized in geuze and kriek. The brewery is situated in Beersel, near Brussels and produces classic versions of both kriek and geuze. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2006-06-28T08:10:38Z | 2006-06-28T08:11:38Z |
73,275,234 | Gay Abel-Bey | Gay Abel-Bey is an American film director, producer, writer, editor, and academic. She currently teaches at New York University. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2023-03-12T22:48:54Z | 2023-03-12T23:30:12Z |
44,402,153 | Ifeoma Okoye | Ifeoma Mokwugo Okoye born on 21st December (possibly in 1937) is a Nigerian novelist. She has been referred to by fans as "the most important female novelist from Nigeria after Flora Nwapa and Buchi Emecheta," according to Oyekan Owomoyela. She was born in Anambra State in Eastern Region, Nigeria. She went to school at St. Monica's College in Ogbunike to receive a teaching certificate in 1959. She then graduated from the University of Nigeria in Nsukka to earn a Bachelor of Arts honours degree in English in 1977. | [
"People"
] | 2014-11-14T23:02:57Z | 2014-11-15T02:22:15Z |
56,452,498 | Khaleda Adib Chowdhury | Khaleda Adib Chowdhury (c. 1937 – 28 May 2008) was a Bangladeshi writer. She was the recipient of 1993 Bangla Academy Literary Award. | [
"Education"
] | 2018-01-30T19:45:24Z | 2018-04-19T14:55:24Z |
1,591,233 | KD Avia | KD Avia, sometimes called Kaliningrad Avia, was an airline based in Kaliningrad, Russia. It operated scheduled services within Russia, CIS and Europe. Its main base was Khrabrovo Airport, Kaliningrad. | [
"Business"
] | 2005-03-10T21:07:56Z | 2005-05-06T19:51:36Z |
3,804,772 | David Messas | Rabbi David Messas (15 July 1934 in Meknes, Morocco – 20 November 2011 Paris) was the son of Rabbi Chalom Messas, the former Chief Rabbi of Morocco who subsequently became the sefardic Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem. He married Dolly Berdugo. He was Chief rabbi of Geneva for several years, Chief Rabbi of Paris for several terms and was at the same time Head of the Rabbinical Council. He headed the École Maïmonide in Boulogne-Billancourt. He has been the Chief Rabbi of Paris since 1995. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2006-01-22T05:14:43Z | 2006-02-14T16:51:44Z |
5,288,052 | Deokjeokdo | Deokjeokdo (Korean: 덕적도) or Deokjeok Island is the largest island of Deokjeok-myeon, Ongjin County, Incheon, South Korea. | [
"Geography"
] | 2006-05-25T16:18:36Z | 2006-05-25T16:40:22Z |
31,072,254 | Walkers of Warrington | Walkers of Warrington was a brewery in Warrington, England. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2011-03-03T21:55:31Z | 2014-08-12T19:54:59Z |
23,558,213 | Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou | The Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou (HEGP) (Georges Pompidou European Hospital) is a French hospital located in Paris. The HEGP is under the aegis of the Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP). Opened in 2001, the HEGP is the last-born Parisian hospital resulting from the merger of three older hospitals of the 15th district (Boucicaut Hospital, Broussais Hospital and Laënnec Hospital). The hospital architect was Aymeric Zublena. The HEGP is located near the city gate called the Porte de Sèvres, in the southwestern part of the 15th arrondissement. | [
"Life"
] | 2009-07-10T07:52:57Z | 2009-07-10T08:01:48Z |
655,849 | Jean, Cardinal of Lorraine | Jean de Lorraine (9 April 1498 – c. 18 May 1550) was the third son of the ruling Duke of Lorraine, and a French cardinal, who was (at one time or another) archbishop of Reims (1532–1538), Lyon (1537–1539), and Narbonne (1524–1550), bishop of Metz, and Administrator of the dioceses of Toul, Verdun, Thérouanne, Luçon, Albi, Valence, Nantes and Agen (1538–1550). He was a personal friend, companion, and advisor of King Francis I of France. Jean de Lorraine was the richest prelate in the reign of Francis I, as well as the most flagrant pluralist. He is one of several cardinals known as the Cardinal de Lorraine. | [
"History"
] | 2004-05-15T10:24:25Z | 2004-05-15T10:24:48Z |
4,387,206 | German adverbial phrases | An adverb is a word that modifies the meaning of a verb, and an adverbial phrase is a combination of words that perform the same function. The German language includes several different kinds of adverbial phrases. | [
"Science"
] | 2006-03-14T07:51:02Z | 2006-03-14T09:35:32Z |
57,514,177 | Tunji Olaopa | Tunji Olaopa, (born 20 December 1959 in Aáwé, Oyo State) is a Nigerian political scientist and public administrator. He is the Executive Vice Chairman of Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy, Bodija, Ibadan and a professor of Public Policy at the Lead City University, Ibadan, Oyo State. | [
"People"
] | 2018-05-26T00:53:17Z | 2018-05-26T15:47:20Z |
7,147,749 | British Gas | British Gas (trading as Scottish Gas in Scotland) is an energy and home services provider in the United Kingdom. It is the trading name of British Gas Services Limited and British Gas New Heating Limited, both subsidiaries of Centrica. Serving around ten million homes in the United Kingdom, British Gas was the largest energy supplier in the country until 2024 when it was overtaken by Octopus Energy. It remains the largest gas supplier. It is considered one of the Big Six dominating the gas and electricity market in the United Kingdom. | [
"Energy"
] | 2006-09-25T12:59:47Z | 2006-10-03T17:39:01Z |
54,358,227 | Nicolas Guisnée | Nicolas Guisnée (died 2 September 1718) was a French mathematician. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2017-06-21T14:11:01Z | 2017-06-21T14:13:03Z |
49,947,926 | Jim Middleton (journalist) | Jim Middleton is an Australian journalist and was a senior advisor to former South Australian Senator Tim Storer. Middleton graduated from the University of Western Australia before joining the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) in 1970. Middleton was involved in the transformation of radio station 2JJ into the national Triple J brand, networked nationally around Australia. He served as the ABC's North America correspondent until 1988, when he became the ABC's chief political correspondent in Canberra. In 2008, Middleton left his political role in Canberra to join the Australia Network, presenting Newsline and The World. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2016-03-26T00:50:54Z | 2016-03-26T02:08:56Z |
6,843,853 | Thomas's nectar bat | Thomas's nectar bat (Hsunycteris thomasi) is a bat species from South and Central America. Thomas's nectar bat pollinates the vine Marcgravia. == References == | [
"Communication"
] | 2006-09-04T21:09:17Z | 2006-09-05T19:35:35Z |
68,333,887 | DynaMo | DynaMo was a British children's educational programme created in 1998. It was broadcast by the BBC on the BBC Learning Zone. The programme was hosted by the eponymous cartoon dog DynaMo with his friend SlowMo to teach children aged 5–9 about English, maths, science and history. The programme was broadcast on BBC television from 3 October 1998 to 24 September 2001. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2021-07-27T08:31:59Z | 2021-07-27T08:33:30Z |
797,834 | Irina Khakamada | Irina Mutsuovna Khakamada (Russian: Ири́на Муцу́овна Хакама́да, IPA: [ɪˈrʲinə mʊˈtsuəvnə xəkɐˈmadə]; born 13 April 1955) is a Russian economist, political activist, journalist, teacher, publicist, and politician who ran in the 2004 Russian presidential election. Khakamada was a former member (deputy) of the lower house (the State Duma) of the Russian parliament for three convocations (electoral terms, 1993–2003) and vice-chair of the house; co-chair of a political party Union of Right Forces (1999–2003), presidential candidate of the Russian Federation (2004), member of the Presidential Council for the Development of Civil Society and Human Rights (2012–2018). In 1995, Time named Khakamada a 21st-century politician among 100 well-known women in the world. In 2002, Khakamada served as a rapporteur from Russia at the 57th session of the UN General Assembly. 2005 she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. | [
"Military"
] | 2004-07-08T20:53:32Z | 2004-07-22T11:37:27Z |
77,401,153 | Online portfolio selection | Online portfolio selection (OPS) is an algorithm based trading strategy which sequentially allocates capital among a group of assets to optimise returns on investments. Proponents say the benefit is that it is designed so that the investor never loses money on stocks. It 2015 it was used by the Securities and Exchange Board of India. | [
"Business"
] | 2024-07-21T06:58:58Z | 2024-07-21T11:53:06Z |
62,821,243 | Law and Order Society | The Law and Order Society was a temperance and Sabbath observance organization founded in 1881 in Philadelphia in the United States. It campaigned for the enforcement of the liquor laws in that city, the proper observance of the Sabbath, and against "white slavery" (prostitution), but it did not aim to reform prostitutes. It claimed in 1917 to have reduced the number of saloons and similar establishments in Philadelphia from 6,000 to 1,910. | [
"Universe"
] | 2020-01-13T21:01:09Z | 2020-01-13T21:01:21Z |
36,174,786 | Kids Run Free | Kids Run Free is a British charity organization based in Warwickshire founded by Martine Verweij and Catherine O'Carroll in December of 2010. | [
"Health"
] | 2012-06-18T09:33:46Z | 2012-06-18T10:25:15Z |
1,138,076 | Barney Barnato | Barney Barnato (born Barnet Isaacs; 21 February 1851 – 14 June 1897) was a British Randlord and diamond magnate who was one of the entrepreneurs who gained control of diamond mining, and later, gold mining in South Africa from the 1870s up to World War I. He was known as a rival of Cecil Rhodes. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2004-11-06T12:32:00Z | 2004-11-06T12:33:02Z |
72,543,214 | Slater (Archer character) | This is a list of characters on Archer, an American animated spy comedy television series created by Adam Reed for the FX network. | [
"Information"
] | 2022-12-21T14:29:11Z | 2023-06-06T17:34:11Z |
48,272,302 | Carona Shoes | Carona Shoes, originally known as the Carona Sahu Shoe Company, was incorporated in 1953 and managed by the Sahu family until 1984. In 1984, the company headquarters in D N Road, Mumbai (near Fort) was engulfed by fire. In the same year, the company was acquired by the Khataus after which it got the present name. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2015-10-18T17:20:26Z | 2015-10-18T19:52:28Z |
62,670,490 | Real estate business | Real estate business is the profession of buying, selling, managing or renting real estate (land, buildings, or housing). | [
"Business"
] | 2019-12-26T17:05:01Z | 2019-12-27T16:27:52Z |
31,161,203 | Bockfest | Bockfest is an annual beer festival held in Over-the-Rhine, Cincinnati, Ohio on the first full weekend of March. It is the oldest German-style bock beer festival in the United States. It drew an estimated 20,000 attendees in 2013 and 30,000 in 2014. Bockfest originated from the 1992 special release of a beer by Hudepohl Brewing Company. Hudepohl released a bock beer under the name of the Christian Moerlein Brewing Company, the largest pre-prohibition brewery in Cincinnati. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2011-03-12T10:45:56Z | 2011-03-12T10:46:25Z |
68,591,763 | SJVN | SJVN, formerly known as Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam, is an Indian public sector undertaking in the Navratna Category which is involved in hydroelectric power generation and transmission. It was incorporated in 1988 as Nathpa Jhakri Power Corporation, a joint venture between the Government of India and the Government of Himachal Pradesh. The company has a total operating hydropower capacity of 1972 MW through its three hydropower plants—Nathpa Jhakri and Rampur and Naitwar Mori. In addition, it has an installed capacity of 97.6 MW of wind power and 396.9 MW of solar power. Beginning with a single project and single state operation, India’s largest 1500 MW Nathpa Jhakri Hydro Power Station in Himachal Pradesh, the company has commissioned twelve generation projects totaling 2466.5 MW of installed capacity and 86 km 400 KV Transmission Line. | [
"Energy"
] | 2021-08-29T06:10:09Z | 2021-08-29T06:14:00Z |
566,927 | Marsham Towers | The Marsham Towers were three government buildings at the corner of Marsham Street and Great Peter Street in Westminster, London. They served as the headquarters of the Department of the Environment. | [
"Entities",
"Government"
] | 2004-03-31T16:28:01Z | 2004-03-31T16:39:58Z |
5,854,699 | Cameron Ling | Cameron Ling (born 27 February 1981) is a former Australian rules footballer and three-time premiership player who played for the Geelong Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). A tagger at 1.89 metres (6 ft 2 in) and 94 kilograms (207 lb), Ling was also a premiership-winning captain at the club in 2011. He is now a commentator on AFL football for the Seven Network and a special comments commentator on AFL football for ABC Radio Grandstand. He is also a member of the selection panel for the AFL All-Australian team and the AFL Rising Star Award. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2006-07-06T15:21:05Z | 2006-08-31T12:03:08Z |
18,203,534 | Operation Cannonball | Operation Cannonball is an American Central Intelligence Agency operation disclosed in 2008. Beginning in 2006, it was intended as part of an effort to capture Osama bin Laden and eliminate Al Qaeda forces in Pakistan. There was reportedly "mounting frustration" among Pentagon officials due to the ongoing delay and deployment of special forces units, as originally planned in the Cannonball program. The operation was reportedly hampered by conflicts between CIA offices, leading to large delays in the deployment of the program. Partially to blame for the presently failed deployment of the program was conflict among United States intelligence agencies, along with resources having been diverted to the War in Iraq. | [
"Law"
] | 2008-06-30T06:27:10Z | 2008-06-30T06:30:14Z |
2,245,297 | Hamara Youth Access Point | The Hamara Youth Access Point (Hyap) is a drop-in centre for teens in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, operated by the Hamara Healthy Living Centre, an Islamic charity partly funded by the UK government. The drop-in centre was frequented by several of the suspects in the 7 July 2005 London bombings. | [
"Military"
] | 2005-07-16T08:12:59Z | 2005-07-19T15:19:59Z |
26,532,764 | Lazare Carnot | Lazare Nicolas Marguerite, Comte Carnot (French pronunciation: [lazaʁ nikɔla maʁɡəʁit kaʁno]; 13 May 1753 – 2 August 1823) was a French mathematician, physicist, military officer, politician and a leading member of the Committee of Public Safety during the French Revolution. His military reforms, which included the introduction of mass conscription (levée en masse), were instrumental in transforming the French Revolutionary Army into an effective fighting force. Carnot was elected to the National Convention in 1792, and a year later he became a member of the Committee of Public Safety, where he directed the French war effort as one of the Ministers of War during the War of the First Coalition. He oversaw the reorganization of the army, imposed discipline, and significantly expanded the French force through the imposition of mass conscription. Credited with France's renewed military success from 1793 to 1794, Carnot came to be known as the "Organizer of Victory". | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2002-09-19T19:14:55Z | 2002-09-19T19:20:11Z |
28,809,357 | Li Ji (archaeologist) | Li Ji (Chinese: 李濟; July 12, 1896 – August 1, 1979), also commonly romanized as Li Chi, was an influential Chinese archaeologist. He is considered to be one of the foremost figures in modern Chinese archaeology and his work was instrumental in proving the historical authenticity of the Shang dynasty. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2010-09-13T14:43:54Z | 2010-09-13T14:46:15Z |
936,661 | Bombing of Berlin in World War II | Berlin, the capital of Nazi Germany, was subject to 363 air raids during the Second World War. It was bombed by the RAF Bomber Command between 1940 and 1945, the United States Army Air Forces' Eighth Air Force between 1943 and 1945, and the French Air Force in 1940 and between 1944 and 1945 as part of the Allied campaign of strategic bombing of Germany. It was also attacked by aircraft of the Red Air Force in 1941 and particularly in 1945, as Soviet forces closed on the city. British bombers dropped 45,517 tons of bombs, while American aircraft dropped 22,090.3 tons. As the bombings continued, more and more people fled the city. | [
"Military"
] | 2004-08-28T01:44:54Z | 2004-08-28T01:54:54Z |
2,982,688 | X-Men Origins: Wolverine | X-Men Origins: Wolverine is a 2009 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics fictional character Wolverine. It is the fourth installment of the X-Men film series, the first installment of the Wolverine trilogy within the series, and a spin-off/prequel to X-Men (2000). The film was directed by Gavin Hood, written by David Benioff and Skip Woods, and produced by Hugh Jackman, who stars as the titular character, alongside Liev Schreiber, Danny Huston, Dominic Monaghan, and Ryan Reynolds. The film's plot details Wolverine's childhood as James Howlett, his time with Major William Stryker's Team X, the bonding of Wolverine's skeleton with the indestructible metal adamantium during the Weapon X program and his relationship with his half-brother Victor Creed. The film was mostly shot in Australia and New Zealand, with Canada also serving as a location. | [
"Nature"
] | 2005-10-23T23:09:10Z | 2005-10-23T23:13:34Z |
2,015,702 | Janet Radcliffe Richards | Janet Radcliffe Richards (born 1944) is a British philosopher specialising in bioethics and feminism and Professor of Practical Philosophy at the University of Oxford. She is the author of The Sceptical Feminist (1980), Philosophical Problems of Equality (1995), Human Nature after Darwin (2000), and The Ethics of Transplants (2012). | [
"Ethics"
] | 2005-06-09T18:03:18Z | 2005-06-09T18:03:47Z |
39,751,913 | 16 June 2013 Iraq attacks | On 16 June 2013, a series of coordinated bombings and shootings struck across several cities in Iraq, killing at least 54 people and injuring more than 170 others. | [
"Military"
] | 2013-06-23T00:50:33Z | 2013-06-23T01:06:37Z |
62,596,431 | Methodist University Hospital | Methodist University Hospital is a hospital located in Memphis, Tennessee which is a part of Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare. It is affiliated with University of Tennessee Health Science Center as a teaching hospital. The hospital focuses on oncology, cardiology, head and neck surgery, neurology and transplants. It is the largest and most comprehensive hospital in the Methodist Healthcare system. | [
"Life"
] | 2019-12-16T10:07:50Z | 2019-12-16T10:08:38Z |
29,664 | Supply and demand | In microeconomics, supply and demand is an economic model of price determination in a market. It postulates that, holding all else equal, the unit price for a particular good or other traded item in a perfectly competitive market, will vary until it settles at the market-clearing price, where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied such that an economic equilibrium is achieved for price and quantity transacted. The concept of supply and demand forms the theoretical basis of modern economics. In situations where a firm has market power, its decision on how much output to bring to market influences the market price, in violation of perfect competition. There, a more complicated model should be used; for example, an oligopoly or differentiated-product model. | [
"Science"
] | 2002-01-24T21:43:20Z | 2002-02-14T08:00:40Z |
894,355 | Quintus Tullius Cicero | Quintus Tullius Cicero ( SISS-ə-roh, Latin: [ˈkɪkɛroː]; 102 BC – 43 BC) was a Roman statesman and military leader, as well as the younger brother of Marcus Tullius Cicero. He was born into a family of the equestrian order, as the son of a wealthy landowner in Arpinum, some 100 kilometres (62 mi) south-east of Rome. He is known for his political career, governorship of Asia, time serving as a general in Gaul under Caesar, and for his relationship with Cicero. | [
"History"
] | 2004-08-12T05:37:12Z | 2004-08-12T05:37:22Z |
25,757,050 | Royal Air Freight | Royal Air Freight (also known as Royal Air Charter) is an American passenger and cargo airline based in Waterford, Michigan, adjacent to the Oakland County International Airport. The airline is licensed and certified to serve the US, Canada and Mexico with charter passenger and air cargo services. Its main base is Oakland County International Airport, located 6 miles west of Pontiac, Michigan. | [
"Business"
] | 2010-01-10T18:38:41Z | 2010-01-10T18:39:17Z |
44,950,821 | Stela of Shamshi-Adad V | The Stela of Shamshi-Adad V is a large Assyrian monolith erected during the reign of Shamshi-Adad V. The stela was discovered in the mid nineteenth century at the ancient site of Kalhu (now known as Nimrud) by the British archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam. Dated to between 824-811 BC, the sculpture is now part of the British Museum's collection of Middle East antiquities. | [
"Language"
] | 2015-01-05T17:20:42Z | 2015-01-05T17:20:59Z |
102,674 | Fall of Constantinople | The fall of Constantinople, also known as the conquest of Constantinople, was the capture of the capital of the Byzantine Empire by the Ottoman Empire. The city was captured on 29 May 1453 as part of the culmination of a 53-day siege which had begun on 6 April. The attacking Ottoman Army, which significantly outnumbered Constantinople's defenders, was commanded by the 21-year-old Sultan Mehmed II (later nicknamed "the Conqueror"), while the Byzantine army was led by Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos. After conquering the city, Mehmed II made Constantinople the new Ottoman capital, replacing Adrianople. The fall of Constantinople and of the Byzantine Empire was a watershed of the Late Middle Ages, marking the effective end of the Roman Empire, a state which began in roughly 27 BC and had lasted nearly 1500 years. | [
"Military"
] | 2002-10-12T01:05:28Z | 2002-10-12T01:07:01Z |
52,577,592 | Worshipping Small Gods | Worshipping Small Gods is a collection of fantasy short stories by American writer Richard Parks. It was first published in trade paperback by Prime Books in January 2007, with a hardcover edition following from the same publisher in May of the same year. | [
"Universe"
] | 2016-12-13T19:22:16Z | 2016-12-13T21:21:45Z |
2,138,170 | Colors (film) | Colors is a 1988 American police procedural action crime film starring Sean Penn and Robert Duvall, and directed by Dennis Hopper. The film takes place in the gang ridden neighborhoods of Los Angeles: late-1980s South Central Los Angeles, Echo Park, Westlake and East Los Angeles. The film centers on Bob Hodges (Duvall), an experienced Los Angeles Police Department C.R.A.S.H. officer, and his rookie partner, Danny McGavin (Penn), who try to stop the gang violence between the Bloods, the Crips, and Hispanic street gangs. Colors relaunched Hopper as a director 19 years after Easy Rider, and inspired discussion over its depiction of gang life and gang violence. | [
"Government"
] | 2005-06-29T18:23:51Z | 2005-06-29T18:39:50Z |
93,085 | Johann Heinrich Lambert | Johann Heinrich Lambert (German: [ˈlambɛɐ̯t]; French: Jean-Henri Lambert; 26 or 28 August 1728 – 25 September 1777) was a polymath from the Republic of Mulhouse, generally identified as either Swiss or French, who made important contributions to the subjects of mathematics, physics (particularly optics), philosophy, astronomy and map projections. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2002-09-27T16:52:52Z | 2002-09-27T16:58:48Z |
40,182,029 | Petros Christodoulou | Petros Christodoulou (Greek: Πέτρος Χριστοδούλου; born 1960) is a Greek economist and banker. | [
"Economy"
] | 2013-08-07T21:19:52Z | 2013-08-07T21:30:43Z |
31,132,363 | One Wrong Move (Without a Trace) | The sixth season of Without a Trace began airing in United States on September 27, 2007. Twelve episodes had been completed before the WGA Strike. A further six episodes were produced after the end of the strike, making this the shortest season of Without a Trace at 18 episodes. This season included a cross-over with CSI: Crime Scene Investigation involving Jack and Gil Grissom tracking a serial killer from Las Vegas to New York. This established Without a Trace as part of the same fictional universe as the tetralogy of CSI shows and Cold Case. | [
"Information"
] | 2011-03-09T15:14:14Z | 2013-10-09T21:14:11Z |
31,888,572 | St Louis Church, Mundamveli | St. Louis Church (Saantiyago Church) is located in Mundamveli, Kochi in the Indian state of Kerala. It is 9 km from the Ernakulam Junction railway station. The church is believed to be more than 150 years old. | [
"Religion"
] | 2011-05-26T09:49:26Z | 2011-05-26T09:55:46Z |
14,447,712 | Johannes Praetorius | Johannes Praetorius or Johann Richter (1537 – 27 October 1616) was a Bohemian German mathematician and astronomer. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2007-11-27T08:24:21Z | 2007-11-27T08:54:19Z |
42,662,363 | John Terence Coppock | John Terry Coppock CBE FBA FRSE (2 June 1921 – 28 June 2000) was a British geographer who was the Ogilvie Professor of Human Geography at University of Edinburgh from 1966 to 1986 and Secretary and Treasurer of the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland from 1986 to 2000. He was a pioneer in three areas of scholarship – agricultural geography, land-use management and computer applications. | [
"People"
] | 2014-05-04T15:10:58Z | 2014-05-04T15:16:06Z |
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