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Richard Pillard
Richard Colestock Pillard (born 11 October 1933) is a professor of psychiatry at the Boston University School of Medicine. He was the first openly gay psychiatrist in the United States.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2005-11-09T08:21:20Z
2005-11-09T08:22:11Z
1,120,212
Kenryaku
Kenryaku (建暦) was a Japanese era name (年号, nengō, lit. "year name") after Jōgen and before Kempo. This period spanned the years from March 1211 through December 1213. The reigning emperor was Juntoku-tennō (順徳天皇).
[ "Time" ]
2004-10-31T11:44:13Z
2005-01-04T04:08:39Z
62,044,547
Holy Cross Church, Copenhagen
The Holy Cross Church (Danish: Hellig Kors Kirke) is a Church of Denmark parish church located at the corner of Kapelvej (No. 38) and Hans Tavsens Gade in the Nørrebro district of Copenhagen, Denmark. The church was built in 1887–1890 to a National Romantic design by Hermann Baagøe Storck.
[ "Religion" ]
2019-10-12T21:29:32Z
2019-10-12T21:30:37Z
37,597,294
St. Jude Church, Kidangoor
Yoodhapuram shrine, in the name of St. Jude, is in Kerala, India. It is situated at Kidangoor around one kilometer from Angamally towards Manjapra. Angamaly is one of the prominent hubs of Syro Malabar Catholics with the proximity of blessed pilgrim center Malayatoor in the name of St. Thomas. The foundation stone for St. Jude Thaddeus Roman Catholic Church was laid on 26 July 1999. This landmark church is under the Archdiocese of Verapoly.
[ "Religion" ]
2012-11-10T13:35:29Z
2012-11-10T23:58:33Z
11,542,568
Charles W. Bell
Charles Webster Bell (June 11, 1857 – April 19, 1927) was an American politician who served one term as a U.S. Representative from California from 1913 to 1915.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2007-06-01T18:31:24Z
2007-09-10T02:53:32Z
68,359,392
Erold Naomab
Erold Naomab (born 2 April 1977) is a Namibian academic. He is the vice-chancellor of the Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST).
[ "People" ]
2021-07-30T07:24:38Z
2021-07-30T07:28:38Z
51,576,527
Design for inspection
Design for inspection (DFI) is an engineering principle that proposes that inspection methods and measurement instruments used to certify manufacturing conformity, should be considered early in the design of products. Production processes should be designed in such a way that features of the product are easy to inspect with readily available measurement instruments, and so that measurement uncertainty is considered in the tolerance that are applied. The concept can be applied in almost all engineering disciplines. DFI describes the process of designing or engineering a product in order to facilitate the measurement in order to reduce the overall costs of manufacturing and delivering products that satisfy customers. The role of inspection in the manufacturing process is to ensure that the manufacturing process is producing components that meet the specification requirements.
[ "Engineering" ]
2016-09-11T16:39:02Z
2016-09-11T16:41:53Z
30,821,352
Ralph Kinnard
Ralph Kinnard (born Ralf Graessner, in Germany) is an American film director and acting coach. He has won “Best Director” at the L.A. Arpa Foundation for Film, Music and Art and “Best Foreign Film”, NYC Downtown Film Festival, participated in Marche du Film del Cannes Film Festival “As you like it” (A MÍ ME GUSTA). The feature was also part of the official selection of the Kolkata International Film Festival 2009, the Mérida Film Festival (Mérida, Venezuela) 2009, the Havana Film Festival 2009 and the Margarita Film Festival 2009. He received the “MARA DE ORO” for best movie director in 2009.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2011-02-10T21:57:24Z
2011-02-10T22:03:09Z
3,260,100
List of Jewish American mathematicians
This is a list of notable Jewish American mathematicians. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans. Abraham Adrian Albert (1905-1972), abstract algebra Kenneth Appel (1932-2013), four-color problem Lipman Bers (1914-1993), non-linear elliptic equations Paul Cohen (1934-2007), set theorist; Fields Medal (1966) Jesse Douglas (1897-1965), mathematician; Fields Medal (1936), Bôcher Memorial Prize (1943) Samuel Eilenberg (1913-1988), category theory; Wolf Prize (1986), Steele Prize (1987) Yakov Eliashberg (born 1946), symplectic topology and partial differential equations Charles Fefferman (born 1949), mathematician; Fields Medal (1978), Bôcher Prize (2008) William Feller (1906-1970), probability theory Michael Freedman (born 1951), mathematician; Fields Medal (1986) Hillel Furstenberg (born 1935), mathematician; Wolf Prize (2006/07), Abel Prize (2020) Michael Golomb (1909-2008), theory of approximation Michael Harris (born 1954), mathematician E. Morton Jellinek (1890-1963), biostatistician Edward Kasner (1878-1955), mathematician Sergiu Klainerman (born 1950), hyperbolic differential equations and general relativity, MacArthur Fellow (1991), Guggenheim Fellow (1997), Bôcher Memorial Prize(1999) Cornelius Lanczos (1893-1974), mathematician and mathematical physicist Peter Lax (born 1926), mathematician; Wolf Prize (1987), Steele Prize (1993), Abel Prize (2005) Emma Lehmer (1906-2007), mathematician Grigory Margulis (born 1946), mathematician; Fields Medal (1978), Wolf Prize (2005), Abel Prize (2020) Barry Mazur (born 1937), mathematician; Cole Prize (1982), Chern Medal (2022) John von Neumann (1903-1957), mathematician Ken Ribet (born 1948), algebraic number theory and algebraic geometry Peter Sarnak (born 1953), analytic number theory; Pólya Prize (1998), Cole Prize (2005), Wolf Prize (2014) Yakov Sinai (born 1935), dynamical systems; Wolf Prize (1997), Steele Prize (2013), Abel Prize (2014) Isadore Singer (1924-2021), mathematician; Bôcher Prize (1969), Steele Prize (2000), Abel Prize (2004) Robert M. Solovay (born 1938), mathematician; Paris Kanellakis Award (2003) Elias Stein (1931-2018), harmonic analysis; Wolf Prize (1999), Steele Prize (2002) Edward Witten (born 1951), theoretical physics; Fields Medal (1990)
[ "Mathematics" ]
2005-11-28T02:20:30Z
2006-01-06T03:35:00Z
24,855,171
Chris Huebner
Christopher Kennedy Huebner (born 1969) is an associate professor of theology and philosophy at Canadian Mennonite University, as well as co-editor of Herald Press's Polyglossia series. Huebner was born and raised in Winnipeg. He received a Bachelor of Theology degree from Canadian Mennonite Bible College in 1992, as well as Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in philosophy from the University of Manitoba in 1992 and 1995 respectively. He received a Doctor of Philosophy degree in theology and ethics from Duke University in 2002 with the dissertation Unhandling History: Anti-Theory, Ethics, and the Practice of Witness. Prior to teaching at CMU, he was a part-time instructor in philosophy at the University of Manitoba; an instructor in religion and philosophy at Meredith College; and an instructor in the university writing program at Duke University.
[ "Ethics" ]
2009-10-27T01:37:32Z
2009-10-27T23:38:40Z
85,039
Aradia
Aradia is one of the principal figures in the American folklorist Charles Godfrey Leland's 1899 work Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches, which he believed to be a genuine religious text used by a group of pagan witches in Tuscany, a claim that has subsequently been disputed by other folklorists and historians. In Leland's Gospel, Aradia is portrayed as a messiah who was sent to Earth in order to teach the oppressed peasants how to perform witchcraft to use against the Roman Catholic Church and the upper classes. The folklorist Sabina Magliocco has theorised that prior to being used in Leland's Gospel, Aradia was originally a supernatural figure in Italian folklore, who was later merged with other folkloric figures such as sa Rejusta of Sardinia. Since the publication of Leland's Gospel, Aradia has become "arguably one of the central figures of the modern pagan witchcraft revival" and as such has featured in various forms of Neopaganism, including Wicca and Stregheria, as an actual deity. Raven Grimassi, founder of the Wiccan-inspired tradition of Stregheria, claims that Aradia was a historical figure named Aradia di Toscano, who led a group of "Diana-worshipping witches" in 14th-century Tuscany.
[ "Universe" ]
2002-09-13T21:57:32Z
2002-09-13T21:57:49Z
7,368,823
Hyegwan
Hyegwan (Japanese: Ekan (慧灌, year of birth and death unknown; 7th century CE) was a priest who came across the sea from Goguryeo to Japan in the Asuka period. He is known for introducing the Chinese Buddhist school of Sanlun to Japan. Hyegwan studied under Jizang and learned Sanron. In 625 (the 33rd year of Empress Suiko), he was dispatched to Japan by an order of King Yeongnyu of Goguryeo, and became the founding patriarch of Japanese Sanron. He lived at Gangō-ji (元興寺 Gangō temple) by an Imperial command.
[ "Time" ]
2006-10-09T18:47:26Z
2006-10-09T18:48:10Z
19,685,029
4-poster
A 4-poster or four poster is an automotive test system specifically designed for the testing of vehicles. These test systems consist of 4 hydraulic actuators on top of which the wheels of the vehicle are placed. Movements of the actuators simulate the road surface and forces exerted by the road on the wheels. The movements of the system are tightly controlled by a digital test controller. During the research phase of a vehicle, a 4-poster system is used to test newly designed suspension systems and their durability.
[ "Engineering" ]
2008-10-09T11:49:29Z
2008-10-09T11:54:39Z
21,668,036
Trade Arabia
Trade Arabia is a Bahrain-based online business news and information portal covering various trade and industry sectors in the Persian Gulf region, Middle East and the Levant.
[ "Internet" ]
2009-02-23T09:13:37Z
2009-02-23T09:15:01Z
1,138,165
Classifier (linguistics)
A classifier (abbreviated clf or cl) is a word or affix that accompanies nouns and can be considered to "classify" a noun depending on some characteristics (e.g. humanness, animacy, sex, shape, social status) of its referent. Classifiers in this sense are specifically called noun classifiers because some languages in Papua as well as the Americas have verbal classifiers which categorize the referent of its argument. In languages that have classifiers, they are often used when the noun is being counted, that is, when it appears with a numeral. In such languages, a phrase such as "three people" is often required to be expressed as "three X (of) people", where X is a classifier appropriate to the noun for "people"; compare to "three blades of grass".
[ "Science" ]
2004-11-06T12:56:32Z
2004-11-06T12:59:14Z
30,315,333
St. Mary Magdalen Church (New York City)
The Church of St. Mary Magdalen is a former Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, in Manhattan, New York City. The church was originally established in 1873 to serve a German Catholic population. It was a mid-block gable-fronted brick single-cell building with Romanesque details located at 529 E 17th Street. In 1877 the parish added a rectory at 527 E 17th Street and a school at 523 E 17th Street. The next year, the Sisters of St. Dominic began operating the school.
[ "Entities" ]
2011-01-05T00:59:49Z
2011-01-05T05:44:31Z
1,612,484
Extension of Island line to Western District
The Extension of Island line to Western District (previously known as West Island line) is a three-station western extension of the Hong Kong MTR's Island line. Construction of the line began on 10 August 2009, and the two westernmost stations on line opened on 28 December 2014; the intermediary Sai Ying Pun station opened on 29 March 2015. The first train went into service that day at 6:00 a.m. Hong Kong time.
[ "Geography" ]
2005-03-16T07:51:16Z
2008-08-05T06:54:44Z
18,804,873
Astor Theatre, Perth
The Astor Theatre is located at 659 Beaufort Street, Mount Lawley, Western Australia. It comprises a single, two and three-storey masonry inter-war Art Deco style theatre and retail building.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2008-08-11T03:26:11Z
2008-08-12T04:04:50Z
2,439,584
Ross Martin
Ross Martin (born Martin Rosenblatt, March 22, 1920 – July 3, 1981) was an American radio, voice, stage, film, and television actor. Martin was best known for portraying Artemus Gordon on the CBS Western series The Wild Wild West, which aired from 1965 to 1969. He was the voice of Doctor Paul Williams in 1972's Sealab 2020, additional characters in 1973's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids, and additional character voices in 1978's Jana of the Jungle.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2005-08-12T19:33:52Z
2005-08-12T19:44:06Z
11,949,191
21 July 2005 London bombings trial
On 15 January 2007 six men appeared at Woolwich Crown Court in connection with the attempted 21 July 2005 London bombings on London public transport. On 9 July 2007 the jury found Muktar Said Ibrahim, Yassin Omar, Hussain Osman, and Ramzi Mohammed guilty of conspiracy to murder, and each man was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 40 years. The jury failed to agree on verdicts on two other defendants, and a retrial started on 12 November 2007.
[ "Military" ]
2007-06-25T18:43:40Z
2007-06-25T19:48:07Z
880,626
Tokyo Electric Power Company
Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings, Incorporated (Japanese: 東京電力ホールディングス株式会社, Tōkyō Denryoku Hōrudingusu kabushiki gaisha, TEPCO, also known as Tōden (東電) in Japan) is a Japanese electric utility holding company servicing Japan's Kantō region, Yamanashi Prefecture, and the eastern portion of Shizuoka Prefecture. This area includes Tokyo. Its headquarters are located in Uchisaiwaicho, Chiyoda, Tokyo, and international branch offices exist in Washington, D.C., and London. It is a founding member of strategic consortiums related to energy innovation and research; such as JINED, INCJ and MAI. In 2007, TEPCO was forced to shut the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant after the Niigata-Chuetsu-Oki earthquake.
[ "Energy" ]
2004-08-06T01:03:18Z
2004-11-20T11:58:48Z
513,990
LaserActive
The LaserActive (レーザーアクティブ, RēzāAkutibu) is a converged device and fourth-generation home video game console capable of playing LaserDiscs, Compact Discs, console games, and LD-G karaoke discs. It was released by Pioneer Corporation in 1993. In addition to LaserActive games, separately sold add-on modules (called "PACs" by Pioneer) accept Mega Drive/Genesis and PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16 ROM cartridges and CD-ROMs. Pioneer released the LaserActive model CLD-A100 in Japan on August 20, 1993, at a cost of ¥89,800, and in the United States on September 13, 1993, at a cost of $970. An NEC-branded version of the LaserActive player known as the LD-ROM² System, or model PCE-LD1, was released in December 1993, which was priced identically to the original system and also accepted Pioneer's PAC modules.
[ "Technology" ]
2004-03-09T00:00:59Z
2004-07-14T15:57:44Z
3,265,579
Bowery Theatre
The Bowery Theatre was a playhouse on the Bowery in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City. Although it was founded by rich families to compete with the upscale Park Theatre, the Bowery saw its most successful period under the populist, pro-American management of Thomas Hamblin in the 1830s and 1840s. By the 1850s, the theatre came to cater to immigrant groups such as the Irish, Germans, and Chinese. It burned down four times in 17 years, a fire in 1929 destroying it for good. Although the theatre's name changed several times (Thalia Theatre, Fay's Bowery Theatre, etc.
[ "Entities" ]
2005-11-28T18:32:20Z
2005-11-28T18:37:12Z
48,630,660
Saul Maslavi
Saul Maslavi is an Iranian-born American businessperson and CEO, best known for his company Jovani Fashion.
[ "Concepts" ]
2015-11-23T15:08:52Z
2015-11-23T15:10:09Z
22,267,850
Paris of the North
The description Paris of the North has been applied to a large number of locations, including:
[ "Science" ]
2009-04-03T17:26:05Z
2015-07-29T10:32:41Z
61,769,235
Nicole Höchst
Nicole Höchst (born 10 February 1970) is a German politician for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and since 2017 member of the Bundestag. Her positions are described by various interest groups as homophobic and hostile, which Höchst disputes.
[ "Politics" ]
2019-09-13T12:35:23Z
2019-09-13T13:36:36Z
54,318,740
Dennis Latos
Dennis Latos (born March 11, 1992) is an American film director, producer and editor. Dennis directed, produced, and edited the short film, Leylak, which held its world premiere at the 20th Annual Tribeca Film Festival in June 2021 and was awarded a Special Jury Prize for the film.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2017-06-16T16:06:49Z
2017-06-16T16:12:16Z
44,348,759
White Obelisk
The White Obelisk is a large stone monolith found at the ancient Assyrian settlement of Nineveh, northern Iraq. Excavated by the British archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam in 1853, it is one of only two intact obelisks to survive from the Assyrian empire, the other being the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III. Both are now preserved in the British Museum. The White Obelisk dates to the beginning of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and has been variously ascribed to the reigns of Ashurnasirpal I (c. 1040 BC), Tiglath-Pileser II (c. 950 BC) or Ashurnasirpal II (c. 870 BC).
[ "Language" ]
2014-11-09T15:26:26Z
2014-11-09T15:27:39Z
32,832,606
Totality and Infinity
Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority (French: Totalité et Infini: essai sur l'extériorité) is a 1961 book about ethics by the philosopher Emmanuel Levinas. Highly influenced by phenomenology, it is considered one of Levinas's most important works.
[ "Ethics" ]
2011-08-22T18:32:08Z
2011-08-22T19:00:42Z
56,065,666
Mount Austin Road
Mount Austin Road is a street in Victoria Peak, Hong Kong.
[ "Geography" ]
2017-12-16T19:20:20Z
2017-12-16T19:20:31Z
23,199,797
Bombing of Shizuoka in World War II
The bombing of Shizuoka (静岡大空襲, Shizuoka dai-kūshū) on June 19, 1945, was part of the strategic bombing campaign waged by the United States against military and civilian targets and population centers during the Japan home islands campaign in the closing stages of the Pacific War in 1945.
[ "Military" ]
2009-06-13T02:39:25Z
2009-06-14T01:57:58Z
60,932,506
List of Chinese national-type primary schools in Sarawak
This is a list of Chinese national-type primary schools (SJK(C)) in Sarawak, Malaysia. As of June 2022, there are 221 Chinese primary schools with a total of 59,681 students.
[ "Education" ]
2019-06-02T10:24:40Z
2019-06-02T10:58:13Z
74,359,130
Moein Taghavi
Seyed Moein Taghavi (Persian: معین تقوی, born 14 April 1990 in Nur, Iran), also known as Moein Taghavi, is an Iranian wushu athlete. Taghavi has a record of winning domestic competitions, Asian championships and world championships. He also won a gold medal in the Wushu World Cup and won the championship title, but due to the positive announcement of his doping test, the medal won was lost for Taghavi.
[ "Sports" ]
2023-07-15T14:23:43Z
2023-07-15T14:24:32Z
13,830,635
Jalili
Jalili (Persian: جلیلی, Arabic: جليلي) is a Persian and Arabic surname. Notable Iranian people with the surname include: Abolfazl Jalili (born 1957), Iranian film director Omid Djalili (born 1965), British-Iranian comedian and actor Saeed Jalili (born 1965), Iranian politician The name also applies to the Iraqi Jalili or al-Jalili family (Arabic: الجليلي).
[ "Language" ]
2007-10-21T00:00:06Z
2007-10-22T01:52:46Z
55,272,610
The Next Wave (book)
The Next Wave: Using Digital Technology to Further Social and Political Innovation is a 2011 book which is written by Darrell M. West, who is an author and political scientist, now Director of the Brookings Institution. This book is composed of 9 chapters and its topic is a social change with innovation in digital technology. The author shows how changes in nation, society and private life, which are derived from increase in efficiency, are going to be when technology is combined with many parts of government, policies and society, and how we maximize effects of those changes.
[ "Information" ]
2017-09-18T04:12:13Z
2017-09-18T04:14:11Z
50,502,342
Juan Luis Cebrián
Juan Luis Cebrián Echarri (born 30 October 1944) is a Spanish journalist and businessman, the co-founder of El País. He was CEO of Prisa, a Spanish media conglomerate, from 2012 to 2017, until ousted by Joseph Oughourlian.
[ "Internet" ]
2016-05-10T17:09:34Z
2016-05-10T17:10:13Z
51,220,148
Animal (De)liberation
Animal (De)liberation: Should the Consumption of Animal Products Be Banned? is a 2016 book, written by Jan Deckers and published by Ubiquity Press. The book engages with the work of many scholars who have written on the subject, including Carol Adams, Alasdair Cochrane, Gary Francione, Melanie Joy, Martha Nussbaum, and Peter Singer, as well as with the views of non-specialists, including slaughterhouse workers involved with the film Slaughterhouse: The Task of Blood, released by Century Films in 2005.
[ "Ethics" ]
2016-08-01T16:11:55Z
2016-08-02T00:02:43Z
801,219
List of eponyms (L–Z)
An eponym is a person (real or fictitious) whose name has become identified with a particular object or activity. Here is a list of eponyms:
[ "Science" ]
2004-07-09T20:17:01Z
2004-07-11T22:08:10Z
2,263,435
The Gates of Hell
The Gates of Hell (French: La Porte de l'Enfer) is a monumental bronze sculptural group work by French artist Auguste Rodin that depicts a scene from the Inferno, the first section of Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. It stands at 6 metres high, 4 metres wide and 1 metre deep (19.7×13.1×3.3 ft) and contains 180 figures. Several casts of the work were made, which are now in various locations around the world. Rodin's original plaster model is in the Musée D’Orsay, Paris. The figures range from 15 centimetres (6 in) high up to more than one metre (3 ft).
[ "Universe" ]
2005-07-19T06:54:06Z
2005-07-19T06:59:23Z
39,020,962
Angela Tsun
Angela Tsun (born 27 August 1982) is an Australian television and radio presenter. Tsun is currently weekend news presenter on Seven News in Perth. She also currently co-hosts The Dead Set Legends on Mix 94.5.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2013-04-05T12:57:01Z
2013-05-02T02:41:52Z
1,947,066
Genesis 1:3
Genesis 1:3 is the third verse of the first chapter in the Book of Genesis. In it God made light by declaration: God said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light. It is a part of the Torah portion known as Bereshit (Genesis 1:1-6:8). "Let there be light" (like "in the beginning" in Genesis 1:1) has entered into common usage as a phrase. It is the motto (sometimes in its Latin form, fiat lux) for many educational institutions (using light as a metaphor for knowledge).
[ "Universe" ]
2005-05-27T01:45:19Z
2005-05-27T01:46:59Z
24,271,688
Béthanie (Hong Kong)
Béthanie is a historic building complex located in Pok Fu Lam, in Southern District, Hong Kong built in 1875 as a sanatorium by the Paris Foreign Missions Society (French: Missions Étrangères de Paris). Béthanie and the nearby Dairy Farm cowsheds were allocated in 2003 to the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts. After a series of renovations, the complex reopened in 2006 and is now used by the Academy's School of Film and Television. In addition to educational facilities, it includes two performance venues, an exhibition hall, a chapel and a museum. It was declared a monument in 2013.
[ "Geography", "Life" ]
2009-09-08T11:00:47Z
2009-09-08T12:13:32Z
73,929,512
Andrei Barausov
Andrei Ivanovich Barausov (Russian: Андрей Иванович Бараусов; born 5 August 1961), known as The Lensky Maniac (Russian: Ленский маньяк), is a Soviet-Russian serial killer and rapist who murdered at least 7 underage girls in Sakha from 1983 to 1997. Most of these killings remained unsolved until early January 2023, when Barausov, now serving a sentence for serial rape, confessed to them. For his latest crimes, he was sentenced to 21 years imprisonment to be served concurrently with his 2018 conviction, consisting of 18 years.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2023-05-31T20:28:23Z
2023-05-31T20:35:24Z
3,447,186
Jules Lund
Jules Lund (born 24 April 1979) is an Australian television presenter from Melbourne.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2005-12-17T02:29:38Z
2005-12-17T02:30:37Z
730,378
Goddard–Thorn theorem
In mathematics, and in particular in the mathematical background of string theory, the Goddard–Thorn theorem (also called the no-ghost theorem) is a theorem describing properties of a functor that quantizes bosonic strings. It is named after Peter Goddard and Charles Thorn. The name "no-ghost theorem" stems from the fact that in the original statement of the theorem, the natural inner product induced on the output vector space is positive definite. Thus, there were no so-called ghosts (Pauli–Villars ghosts), or vectors of negative norm. The name "no-ghost theorem" is also a word play on the no-go theorem of quantum mechanics.
[ "Science" ]
2004-06-16T15:07:30Z
2004-06-16T16:46:00Z
69,296,374
N. Taylor Phillips
Naphtali Taylor Phillips (December 5, 1868 – April 30, 1955) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2021-11-17T19:22:52Z
2021-11-17T19:38:39Z
561,698
Raid on Bungeling Bay
Raid on Bungeling Bay (バンゲリングベイ lit. : Bungeling Bay) is a shoot 'em up video game developed by Will Wright and published by Broderbund for the Commodore 64 in 1984. It was the first video game designed by Will Wright. The Commodore 64 version was published in the UK by Ariolasoft. The game inspired Wright to develop SimCity in 1989.
[ "Technology" ]
2004-03-29T06:41:55Z
2004-03-30T04:13:13Z
20,355,486
Renji Hospital
Renji Hospital (simplified Chinese: 仁济医院; traditional Chinese: 仁濟醫院; pinyin: Rénjì Yīyuàn) is a general hospital in the Pudong District of Shanghai, China, with the rank of "Grade 3, Class A". The hospital is a university hospital affiliated to the Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine.
[ "Life" ]
2008-11-23T10:04:38Z
2008-11-23T10:06:54Z
26,213,089
Park Avenue Hotel (Detroit)
The Park Avenue Hotel was a hotel in the Cass Corridor of Detroit, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. It was also known as Salvation Army Harbor Light Center and is not to be confused with Park Avenue House, also once known as Park Avenue Hotel. The building was imploded on July 11, 2015.
[ "Entities" ]
2010-02-15T23:13:59Z
2010-03-07T16:42:14Z
50,678,570
Colegio Bolivar
Colegio Bolivar is a private, non–denominational, American school located in Cali, Colombia. Founded in 1947 to serve the dependents of expatriate personnel assigned to Cali, the school's population has shifted over the years from a majority of expatriate students to a majority of Colombian nationals. The community, including just over 1,300 students, is divided into four school sections: Preprimary, Primary, Middle, and High. Each is led by its own principal and has its own faculty and facilities. The school, whose primary language of instruction is English, is college preparatory, with almost 99% of the graduates continuing onto higher education in Colombia and abroad.
[ "Education" ]
2016-05-30T19:19:13Z
2016-05-30T19:48:51Z
1,840,376
Disneyland Resort station
Disneyland Resort (Chinese: 迪士尼) is a station on the Hong Kong MTR Disneyland Resort line. It was built to serve the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort and Theme Park, and is located in Penny's Bay.
[ "Geography" ]
2005-05-09T02:48:52Z
2005-05-26T07:16:06Z
33,468,655
Sambe language
Sambe is a presumably extinct Plateau language of Nigeria once spoken in the village of the same name. The Sambe people have shifted to Ninzo. Sambe is unusual in contrasting /k͡p/ and /k͡pʷ/, a rare distinction in the world’s languages. For example, /k͡pùk͡pʷɛ̀/ "cough" /kə́k͡pɛ/ "choose" == References ==
[ "Language" ]
2011-10-20T01:27:37Z
2011-11-12T08:54:42Z
31,715,159
Chris Smith (broadcaster)
Christopher Smith (born 22 July 1962) is an Australian journalist and former talkback radio broadcaster. Smith attended Patrician Brothers' College, Fairfield. He presented the 2GB Sydney afternoon show until December 2022. As of 2024. Smith hosts a show on ADH TV.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2011-05-08T15:55:56Z
2011-05-08T15:56:45Z
28,230,674
Zoggs
Zoggs is a brand of swimming goggles, training aids, swimwear and other related products. The company launched in Sydney, Australia in 1992 and was the first brand to offer UV protection and split yoke straps as standard features on all goggles.
[ "Concepts" ]
2010-08-02T08:18:30Z
2010-08-02T08:19:17Z
1,200,886
List of Singapore Airlines destinations
Singapore Airlines flies to 76 international destinations in 32 countries on six continents (as of April 2024) from its primary hub in Singapore Changi Airport. India is served by eight, the highest number of destinations. After the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997, Singapore Airlines discontinued flying to Berlin, Darwin, Cairns, Hangzhou, Kagoshima, and Sendai. Toronto was discontinued in 1994. During the SARS outbreak in 2003/04, Singapore Airlines discontinued flying to Brussels, Las Vegas, Chicago, Hiroshima, Kaohsiung, Mauritius, Vienna, Madrid, Seattle, Shenzhen and Surabaya.
[ "Business" ]
2004-11-23T10:31:56Z
2004-11-23T10:38:57Z
15,229,935
Aizawa Seishisai
Aizawa Seishisai (会沢 正志斎, July 5, 1782 – August 27, 1863), born Aizawa Yasushi (会沢 安), was a Japanese samurai (retainer of the Mito Domain) and a nationalist thinker of the Mito school during the late shogunate period. In 1799 he became involved in the compilation of the Dai Nihon-shi (Great History of Japan) being undertaken by the Mito school. In 1825 he wrote his Shinron ("New Theses"), a collection of essays that dealt with issues such as Tokugawa defence policy and how the ships were a threat to Japan. Aizawa also tried to describe conditions in the West and theorize why those states had gained so much control; in his opinion Westerners used religion to inculcate conformity in the masses. He also claimed that Christianity was used by the colonial powers to subvert native cultures and governments by creating a fifth column that would collaborate with and facilitate military conquest by Europeans.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2008-01-15T10:03:05Z
2008-01-15T10:04:39Z
11,040,161
Beneficial Bank
Beneficial Mutual Bancorp, Inc. operated Beneficial Bank, a full-service bank whose assets totaled approximately $5 billion upon its acquisition by WSFS in 2019. Founded in 1853, Beneficial was the oldest and largest bank headquartered in Philadelphia, with more than 58 locations throughout Pennsylvania and South Jersey. The bank provided financial services including personal and business banking, mortgages and loans, wealth management, business and insurance services.
[ "Economy" ]
2007-05-03T17:25:05Z
2008-01-16T14:26:57Z
76,230,447
Zhang Zulin
Zhang Zulin (Chinese: 张祖林; born June 1959) is a former Chinese politician who spent his entire career in southwest China's Yunnan province. As of March 2023 he was under investigation by China's top graft busters. Previously he served as vice governor of Yunnan. He was a delegate to the 11th National People's Congress.
[ "Education" ]
2024-03-02T14:41:06Z
2024-03-04T14:23:13Z
17,447,655
InfoMania
InfoMania (stylized as infoMania) is an American half-hour weekly satirical news-show that aired on the Current TV television network from 2007 to 2011. The program was initially hosted by Conor Knighton and later Brett Erlich, with features by Ben Hoffman, Sergio Cilli, Sarah Haskins, Bryan Safi, Erin Gibson, and Ellen Fox.
[ "Internet" ]
2008-05-15T22:54:23Z
2008-05-15T23:27:36Z
64,503,766
Tong Binggang
Tong Binggang (Chinese: 童秉纲; September 28, 1927 – July 9, 2020) was a Chinese physicist. He was an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
[ "Knowledge" ]
2020-07-09T13:57:20Z
2020-07-09T15:45:14Z
59,097,776
Paddington General Hospital
Paddington General Hospital was a health facility in Harrow Road, Paddington, London.
[ "Life" ]
2018-11-18T23:29:39Z
2018-11-18T23:35:51Z
13,817,147
Administrative Council for Economic Defense
The Administrative Council for Economic Defense (in Portuguese, Conselho Administrativo de Defesa Econômica, often referred to as Cade or CADE) is Brazil's national competition regulator and an agency of the government of Brazil. Its stated goals are "guiding, inspecting, preventing and investigating economic power abuse by exercising a custodial role in its prevention and repression".
[ "Ethics" ]
2007-10-20T03:16:28Z
2007-10-20T03:19:25Z
42,401,305
Anthony Aufrère
Anthony Aufrère (30 November 1757 at Hoveton, Norfolk – 29 November 1833 in Pisa, Italy) was an English antiquary, barrister and translator.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2014-04-04T16:26:19Z
2014-04-04T16:35:56Z
56,244,532
Muhammad Abdul Hye
Muhammad Abdul Hye (26 November 1919 – 3 June 1969) also known as Muhammad Abdul Hai was a Bengali educationist, litterateur, researcher and linguist who was and is remembered as a notable figure in the Bengali language movement. He was awarded Bangla Academy Literary Award in 1961 and Ekushey Padak in 1996 by the Government of Bangladesh.
[ "Education" ]
2018-01-08T05:24:35Z
2018-01-08T13:17:12Z
2,395,447
Robert Hood Saunders
Robert Hood Saunders, CBE, QC (May 30, 1903 – January 16, 1955) was mayor of Toronto from 1945 to 1948, and then president of the Canadian National Exhibition, and chairman of the Ontario Hydro (formally named the Hydro Electric Power Commission of Ontario (HEPCO)). He was also a member of the Orange Order in Canada.
[ "Energy" ]
2005-08-07T00:02:58Z
2005-08-14T22:47:28Z
8,416,237
Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift
Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift is a tactical role-playing game developed and published by Square Enix for the Nintendo DS handheld game console. Releasing in 2007 in Japan and 2008 in the West, the game is a sequel to Final Fantasy Tactics Advance and forms part of the Ivalice Alliance, a group of games set in the titular fictional universe. The game features cameo appearances from central and supporting characters from Final Fantasy XII, a title set in Ivalice. Tactics A2 follows a young man named Luso Clemens after he is transported through a magical book to the world of Ivalice. Rescued from monsters by a clan leader named Cid and later joined by the thief Adelle, Luso becomes involved in battles between rival clans as he seeks a way home.
[ "Technology" ]
2006-12-13T08:22:17Z
2006-12-14T00:51:29Z
9,293,179
David Orentlicher
David Orentlicher is an educator, physician, attorney, and an American politician. He is a member of the Democratic Party and is the Judge Jack and Lulu Lehman Professor at UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law and co-director of the UNLV Health Law Program. He teaches courses in health care law and constitutional law. Orentlicher also has held visiting or adjunct teaching positions at Princeton University, the University of Chicago Law School, Indiana University: Robert H. McKinney School of Law, University of Iowa College of Law, and Northwestern University Medical School.
[ "Ethics" ]
2007-02-03T20:04:28Z
2007-02-03T20:06:39Z
57,998,556
Sanamahi creation myth
The Sanamahi creation myth is the traditional creation myth of Sanamahism, a religion of the Meitei, Chothe, Komhreng, Kabui, Anāl, and, before their conversion to Christianity, Tangkhul people in Manipur, India.
[ "Universe" ]
2018-07-26T05:23:42Z
2018-07-26T07:33:36Z
890,208
Andrew Fountaine
Andrew Fountaine (7 December 1918 – 14 September 1997) was an activist involved in the British far right. After military service in a number of conflicts, Fountaine joined the Conservative Party and was selected as a parliamentary candidate until his outspoken views resulted in his being disowned by the party. He was subsequently involved with a number of fringe rightist movements before becoming a founding member of the National Front in 1967. He had several roles within the party and was involved in a number of internal feuds until he left in 1979. He briefly led his own splinter party before retiring from politics.
[ "Politics" ]
2004-08-10T13:12:03Z
2004-08-10T14:18:08Z
72,653,278
Katrina Lee
Katrina Lee is an Australian executive director and former television news presenter. Lee is perhaps best known for her association with Network Ten where she was a Logie Award-winning news presenter at TEN-10 in Sydney from the 1970's to the 1990's.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2023-01-03T08:29:08Z
2023-01-03T10:28:22Z
62,124,277
Scheduled monuments in Greater London
The following is a list of Scheduled monuments in Greater London. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is a "nationally important" archaeological site or historic building that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a list (or "schedule") by the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS); Historic England takes the leading role in identifying such sites. Monuments are defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. Scheduled monuments—sometimes referred to as scheduled ancient monuments—can also be protected through listed building procedures, and Historic England considers listed building status to be a better way of protecting buildings and standing structures. A scheduled monument that is later determined to "no longer merit scheduling" can be rescheduled.
[ "Lists" ]
2019-10-21T22:25:16Z
2019-10-22T09:37:05Z
15,245,441
Gormogon (Bones)
The Gormogon is a fictional character featured in a story arc of Season 3 of the Fox drama Bones.
[ "Information" ]
2008-01-16T03:45:44Z
2008-01-16T03:51:20Z
7,694,189
Farmasi Arena
Farmasi Arena is an indoor multi-purpose arena, located in the region of Barra da Tijuca, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is one of the indoor arena with largest capacity in the country, with 15,430 people for sports and up to 18,768 for concerts. The arena was named for the American cosmetics company Jeunesse Global through a naming rights deal closed in 2017 and ended in 2023. Before, the sponsor name was HSBC Arena. The arena was completed in July 2007 and was first known as Arena Olímpica do Rio (Rio Olympic Arena), which it was known as during the 2016 Summer Olympics.
[ "Economy" ]
2006-10-30T15:04:07Z
2006-10-30T15:04:43Z
68,650,415
1989 European Wrestling Championships
The 1989 European Wrestling Championships were held in the men's Freestyle style in Ankara 12 – 14 May 1989; the Greco-Romane style in Oulu 5 – 7 May 1989.
[ "Sports" ]
2021-09-05T11:28:30Z
2021-09-05T16:51:28Z
1,123,637
Joseph Barbera
Joseph Roland Barbera ( bar-BAIR-ə Italian: [barˈbɛːra]; March 24, 1911 – December 18, 2006) was an American animator and cartoonist, best known as the co-founder of the animation studio Hanna-Barbera. Born to Italian immigrants in New York City, Barbera joined Van Beuren Studios in 1927 and subsequently Terrytoons in 1936. In 1937, he moved to California, and while working at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Barbera met William Hanna. The two men began a collaboration that was at first best known for producing Tom and Jerry. In 1957, after MGM dissolved its animation department, they co-founded Hanna-Barbera, which became the most successful television animation studio in the business, producing programs such as The Flintstones, Yogi Bear, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?, Top Cat, The Smurfs, Huckleberry Hound, and The Jetsons.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2004-11-01T08:26:10Z
2004-11-02T00:02:15Z
9,655,412
Magdi Wahba
Magdi Wahba (1925–1991) was an Egyptian university professor, Johnsonian scholar, and lexicographer. He was born in Alexandria in 1925, the son of a high court judge (Mourad Wahba Pasha) and later cabinet minister. His mother had been educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College and Oxford University. The grandson of a Prime Minister (Youssef Wahba Pasha) he belonged to the Egyptian aristocracy of the time but was nonetheless a member of the communist party in his youth. He was a graduate of Cairo University and the Sorbonne where he obtained a Diploma in High Studies in International Law in Paris (1947).
[ "People" ]
2007-02-22T22:55:12Z
2007-02-25T21:01:52Z
3,062,202
Philip Lehman
Philip Lehman (November 9, 1861 – March 21, 1947) was an American investment banker.
[ "Economy" ]
2005-11-02T13:46:30Z
2005-11-03T00:40:33Z
63,116,177
Scheduled monuments in Nottinghamshire
This is a list of scheduled monuments in Nottingamshire, a county in England. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is a "nationally important" archaeological site or historic building that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a list (or "schedule") by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport; English Heritage takes the leading role in identifying such sites. Scheduled monuments are defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. There are about 20,000 Scheduled Monument entries on the list, which is maintained by English Heritage; more than one site can be included in a single entry. While a scheduled monument can also be recognised as a listed building, English Heritage considers listed building status as a better way of protecting buildings than scheduled monument status.
[ "Lists" ]
2020-02-15T11:43:26Z
2020-02-15T11:47:32Z
43,347,315
Dogfan
Dogfan, also known as Doewan, was a saint and martyr who lived in 5th century Wales. He is venerated in the Anglican Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, True Orthodox Church, and Roman Catholic Church, on 13 July.
[ "History" ]
2014-07-20T04:40:34Z
2014-07-22T11:11:14Z
36,389,682
The Heat (film)
The Heat is a 2013 American buddy cop action comedy film directed by Paul Feig and written by Katie Dippold. It stars Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy with Demián Bichir, Marlon Wayans, Michael Rapaport, and Jane Curtin in supporting roles. The film centers on FBI Special Agent Sarah Ashburn and Boston Detective Shannon Mullins, who must take down a mobster in Boston. The film was released in the United States on June 28, 2013. It received mixed to positive reviews from critics and was a success at the box office, grossing $229 million worldwide against a $43 million budget.
[ "Information" ]
2012-07-11T00:49:03Z
2012-07-11T00:50:23Z
56,775,970
Hondros (film)
Hondros is a 2017 American documentary film about American war photographer Chris Hondros. It was written by Greg Campbell and Jenny Golden, directed and produced by Campbell, and executive produced by Jake Gyllenhaal and Jamie Lee Curtis. The film premiered on 21 April 2017 at Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the Audience Award, Documentary First Place. It had a limited theatrical release in the United States on 2 March 2018. Hondros was killed in a mortar attack by government forces in Misrata while covering the 2011 Libyan civil war.
[ "Nature" ]
2018-03-07T15:28:42Z
2018-03-07T15:49:31Z
15,531,221
2008 Société Générale trading loss
In January 2008, the bank Société Générale lost approximately €4.9 billion closing out positions over three days of trading beginning January 21, 2008, a period in which the market was experiencing a large drop in equity indices. The bank states these positions were fraudulent transactions created by Jérôme Kerviel, a trader with the company. The police stated they lacked evidence to charge him with fraud and charged him with breach of trust and illegally accessing computers. Kerviel states his actions were known to his superiors and that the losses were caused by panic selling by the bank. Société Générale's own wrongs were later established by a French jurisdiction, which led the Cour de cassation to cancel the €4.9 billion sanction on Kerviel.
[ "Economy" ]
2008-02-01T04:24:16Z
2008-02-01T16:12:25Z
10,307,594
Giovanni Capitello
Giovanni Familiare Capitello (born August 27, 1979, in Brooklyn, New York) is an American actor / filmmaker.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2007-03-27T18:09:32Z
2007-03-27T18:12:58Z
2,983,151
We Have All the Time in the World
"We Have All the Time in the World" is a James Bond theme song performed by Louis Armstrong. Its music was composed by John Barry and the lyrics by Hal David. It is a secondary musical theme in the 1969 Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, the title theme being the instrumental "On Her Majesty's Secret Service", also composed by Barry. The song title is taken from Bond's final words in both the novel and the film, spoken after the death of Tracy Bond, his wife. As Armstrong was too ill to play his trumpet, it was therefore played by another musician (Herb Alpert most likely, based on his ties to Hal David and Burt Bacharach, and having played on the Casino Royale theme).
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2005-10-24T00:12:57Z
2005-11-14T11:45:15Z
50,566,605
Basilica of Jesus the Adolescent
The Basilica of Jesus the Adolescent, also known as the Salesian church (Arabic: كنيسة السالزيان; Hebrew: כנסייה הסלזיאנית) is a Catholic church in Nazareth in Israel, belonging to the Salesians of Don Bosco. The church is located next to the school of the Salesians. In Gothic style, was built between 1906 and 1923 on a hill called "Mount of the Start" which overlooks the city, where, according to tradition, Jesus spent his youth. From the terrace of the church there is an exceptional view of the old city of Nazareth.
[ "Religion" ]
2016-05-17T20:16:28Z
2016-05-17T20:16:43Z
66,021,513
Canada Education Savings Act
The Canada Education Savings Act (French: Loi canadienne sur l’épargne-études, CESA) is an Act of the Parliament of Canada. It is intended to provide financial assistance for post-secondary education savings. The first version of the law was assented to on 15 December 2004. Most sections of the act entered into force on 1 July 2005.
[ "Law" ]
2020-12-05T17:44:56Z
2020-12-05T17:45:27Z
6,185,783
Edmund Leach
Sir Edmund Ronald Leach FRAI FBA (7 November 1910 – 6 January 1989) was a British social anthropologist and academic. He served as provost of King's College, Cambridge from 1966 to 1979. He was also president of the Royal Anthropological Institute from 1971 to 1975.
[ "Humanities" ]
2005-01-20T13:13:23Z
2005-01-20T13:20:21Z
593,083
G. E. M. Anscombe
Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe (; 18 March 1919 – 5 January 2001), usually cited as G. E. M. Anscombe or Elizabeth Anscombe, was a British analytic philosopher. She wrote on the philosophy of mind, philosophy of action, philosophical logic, philosophy of language, and ethics. She was a prominent figure of analytical Thomism, a Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford, and a professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge. Anscombe was a student of Ludwig Wittgenstein and became an authority on his work and edited and translated many books drawn from his writings, above all his Philosophical Investigations. Anscombe's 1958 article "Modern Moral Philosophy" introduced the term consequentialism into the language of analytic philosophy, and had a seminal influence on contemporary virtue ethics.
[ "Ethics" ]
2004-04-13T00:42:08Z
2004-04-13T07:22:59Z
14,232,241
Irene of Rome
Saint Irene of Rome (died 288 AD) was a Christian woman in the Roman Empire during the reign of Diocletian. She was the wife of Saint Castulus. According to Christian legend, she attended to Saint Sebastian after he was wounded by Mauretanian archers.
[ "History" ]
2007-11-13T19:42:15Z
2009-09-02T22:32:47Z
7,713,064
Gilles de Rais
Gilles de Rais (c. 1405 – 26 October 1440), Baron de Rais, was a knight and lord from Brittany, Anjou and Poitou, a leader in the French army during the Hundred Years' War, and a companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc. He is best known for his reputation and later conviction as a confessed serial killer of children. In 1429, he formed an alliance with his cousin Georges de La Trémoille, the prominent Grand Chamberlain of France, and was appointed Marshal of France the same year, after the successful military campaigns alongside Joan of Arc, but little is known about the relationship between the two comrades in arms. After the death of his former guardian and maternal grandfather Jean de Craon in 1432, and Georges de La Trémoille's fall from grace in 1433, he gradually withdrew from the war. His family accused him of squandering his patrimony by selling off his lands to the highest bidder to offset his lavish expenses, a profligacy that led to his being placed under interdict by King Charles VII of France in July 1435.
[ "History", "Health" ]
2003-03-19T04:25:37Z
2003-06-28T19:05:16Z
7,971,472
Ysgol Morgan Llwyd
Ysgol Morgan Llwyd is a Welsh-medium comprehensive school in Wrexham, in north-east Wales, UK. It is the first, and is the only Welsh-medium secondary school in Wrexham County Borough. It is named after the seventeenth-century preacher and author Morgan Llwyd. The school has been open at its present location in Cefn Road since 2000. Previously it was located on Stockwell Grove.
[ "Education" ]
2006-11-16T19:51:35Z
2006-11-16T19:52:56Z
52,785,230
Jean-François Jalkh
Jean-François Jalkh (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃fʁɑ̃swa ʒalk]; born 23 May 1957) is a French politician who is the current Member of the European Parliament for the National Rally, representing East France from 2014 to 2019 and France from 2019 to 2024. On 25 April 2017, after the resignation of Marine Le Pen as leader of the National Front, Jalkh was named as the interim leader. He stepped down three days later, on April 28, after being heavily criticised on comments made about Nazi extermination camps (see below). He was replaced by Steeve Briois as Interim Leader. He is known for his "vieille garde" (old guard) views, relating to the pre-de-demonisation platform of the FN, such as calling the use of Zyklon B in the Holocaust "technically impossible" and opposing the expulsion of Jean-Marie Le Pen from the Front National.
[ "Politics" ]
2017-01-05T19:56:16Z
2017-04-25T19:46:30Z
26,824,998
Houston Main Building
The Houston Main Building (HMB) formerly the Prudential Building, was a skyscraper in the Texas Medical Center, Houston, Texas. It originally housed offices of the Prudential Insurance Company, before becoming a part of the MD Anderson Cancer Center. The building was demolished on January 8, 2012. It was designed by Kenneth Franzheim.
[ "Entities" ]
2010-04-04T16:51:40Z
2010-04-04T16:52:02Z
20,232,504
Heráclides César de Souza Araújo
Heráclides César de Souza Araújo (24 June 1886 – 10 August 1962) was a Brazilian scientist known for his research into the control and treatment of leprosy. He served on the World Health Organization (WHO) Expert Panel on Leprosy and on the council of the International Leprosy Association, and received national honours in recognition of his work. Souza Araújo was born in Imbituva, Paraná, Brazil, in 1886. He graduated from the Escola de Farmácia de Ouro Preto in Minas Gerais and enrolled immediately at the Faculdade de Medicina de Rio de Janeiro, finishing there in 1915. While still a student, he also completed the Curso de Applicação offered by the Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (IOC) in 1913.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2008-11-16T04:52:00Z
2008-11-16T05:02:06Z
27,415,357
George Blumenthal House
The George Blumenthal House was a mansion at 50 East 70th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It was constructed for George Blumenthal, wife of Florence Meyer Blumenthal.
[ "Entities" ]
2010-05-20T06:31:35Z
2010-06-14T15:06:29Z
1,142,043
Air Polonia
Air Polonia was the first privately owned low-cost airline in Poland with its headquarters in Warsaw and its largest operations base at Warsaw Frédéric Chopin Airport. On 5 December 2004 Air Polonia ceased operations due to financial difficulties.
[ "Business" ]
2004-11-07T19:25:49Z
2004-11-07T19:26:42Z
20,323,934
Church of Saint-Bruno des Chartreux
The Church of Saint-Bruno des Chartreux (French: Église Saint-Bruno des Chartreux, or the Church of Saint Bruno of the Carthusians) is a Roman Catholic church located in Lyon, France. Until the French Revolution, it was the church of Lyon Charterhouse (chartreuse de Lyon). The cathedral is dedicated to Saint Bruno of Cologne, also known as Saint Bruno of the Carthusians, and is the city's only Baroque church.
[ "Religion" ]
2008-11-21T11:13:07Z
2008-11-21T11:13:36Z
230,661
Alec Issigonis
Sir Alexander Arnold Constantine Issigonis (Greek: σερ Άλεκ, Αλέξανδρος Αρνόλδος Κωνσταντίνος Ισηγόνης) (18 November 1906 – 2 October 1988) was a British-Greek automotive designer. He designed the Mini, launched by the British Motor Corporation in 1959, and voted the second most influential car of the 20th century in 1999.
[ "Engineering" ]
2003-05-20T18:38:26Z
2003-08-13T23:32:47Z
35,033,521
Private Libraries Association
The Private Libraries Association (PLA) is an international society of book collectors with 450 individual members and over 100 institutional members. The majority of members are based in Britain, but there are also members in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2012-03-11T13:54:52Z
2012-03-11T14:00:22Z
19,308,218
Welles Crowther
Welles Remy Crowther (May 17, 1977 – September 11, 2001) was an American equities trader and volunteer firefighter known for saving as many as 18 lives during the September 11 attacks in New York City, during which he lost his own life.
[ "Military" ]
2007-09-12T02:26:34Z
2007-09-12T02:42:35Z