id
int64 308
78.2M
| title
stringlengths 1
130
| summary
stringlengths 0
7.22k
| categories
sequencelengths 1
4
| created_at
stringlengths 20
20
| updated_at
stringlengths 20
20
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
74,989,340 | Facing Destiny | Facing Destiny (French: Face au destin) is a 1940 French spy drama film directed by Henri Fescourt and starring Jules Berry, George Rigaud and Josseline Gaël. It is based on the 1938 novel of the same title by Charles Robert-Dumas. The film's sets were designed by the art director Claude Bouxin. It was produced and distributed during the Phoney War period. | [
"Nature"
] | 2023-10-05T23:32:57Z | 2023-10-05T23:33:34Z |
3,052,735 | Anthony Hudson (commentator) | Anthony 'Huddo' Hudson (born 10 April 1971) is an Australian sports commentator in television and radio. He mainly commentates Australian rules football. He also writes for News Corp newspapers. Hudson has a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism which he earned in 1993 at RMIT University. Hudson became well known during the 1990s as a commentator for 3AW Football and subsequently the Seven Network and then Network Ten where he cemented his name. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2005-11-01T09:16:25Z | 2005-11-01T09:16:52Z |
993,761 | Rad Racer II | Rad Racer, known as Highway Star in Japan, is a racing video game developed and published by Square for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in 1987. In this game, players drive a Ferrari 328 or a generic Formula One racing machine through a racecourse. The game was released in North America and Europe months after its debut. The title became well known for being one of two titles from Square that made use of stereoscopic 3D, which was made possible by wearing a pair of anaglyph glasses. Square president Masafumi Miyamoto initially conceived the game as an opportunity for developer Nasir Gebelli to demonstrate his 3D programming skills. | [
"Technology"
] | 2004-09-17T16:59:45Z | 2004-09-17T17:01:37Z |
49,093,292 | Belmont, East Barnet | Belmont, originally known as Mount Pleasant, was a house in East Barnet, London, near Cockfosters, that dated back to the sixteenth century. By the end of the nineteenth century it had become Heddon Court and was the home of a preparatory school for boys. The school closed in 1933 and the house was demolished. The site is now occupied by suburban housing. | [
"Entities"
] | 2016-01-13T23:20:40Z | 2016-01-13T23:22:43Z |
62,118,124 | The Malaise of Modernity | The Malaise of Modernity is a book by the Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor based on his 1991 Massey Lecture of the same title. Originally published by House of Anansi Press, it was republished by Harvard University Press with the title The Ethics of Authenticity. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2019-10-21T05:37:41Z | 2022-03-09T04:57:05Z |
7,320,377 | Jason Castriota | Jason Castriota is an automotive designer. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2006-10-06T14:45:38Z | 2006-10-06T14:48:48Z |
49,982,289 | EgyptAir Flight 181 | EgyptAir Flight 181 was a domestic passenger flight from Borg El Arab Airport in Alexandria, Egypt, to Cairo International Airport. On 29 March 2016, the flight was hijacked by an Egyptian man claiming to wear an explosive belt and forced to divert to Larnaca International Airport in Cyprus. Most passengers and crew were released by the hijacker shortly after landing. The hijacker surrendered about seven hours later, and everybody escaped from the aircraft unharmed. The belt was later revealed to have contained mobile phones and no explosives. | [
"Business"
] | 2016-03-29T06:32:07Z | 2016-03-29T06:33:03Z |
1,003,194 | Everyone's Child | Everyone's Child is a 1995 film directed by author Tsitsi Dangarembga who became the first black Zimbabwean woman to direct a feature film. The script is based on the 1989 novel Harvest of Thorns by Shimmer Chinodya and stars Elijah Madzikatire, Momsa Mlambo, and Walter Maparutsa. Produced by Zimbabwe's Media for Development Trust (MFD), Everyone's Child was originally conceived as a training video for community-based orphan care programs. Given the explosive growth of AIDS orphans on the continent--at the time of the project's development, predicted to reach 10,000,000 by the year 2000--it was determined that a feature film would have more of an impact in building awareness on the issue. The soundtrack features 12 original songs by some of Zimbabwe's most popular musicians at the time, including Thomas Mapfumo, Leonard Zhakata and Andy "Tomato Sauce" Brown. | [
"Nature"
] | 2004-09-20T23:56:21Z | 2004-09-22T12:55:13Z |
35,657,674 | George Harvey (FRS) | George Harvey, Esq., (died 29 October 1834) was an English mathematician, known for his scientific and engineering writings, on meteorology, ship building, and colour blindness. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2012-04-29T13:41:23Z | 2012-04-29T13:54:06Z |
50,234,923 | Nándor Fettich | Nándor Fettich (7 January 1900, – 17 May 1971) was a Hungarian archaeologist, goldsmith, and member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2016-04-19T12:48:36Z | 2016-04-19T12:52:01Z |
10,897,986 | Sidibé Aminata Diallo | Sidibé Aminata Diallo (born 1950) is a Malian academic and politician. She is a professor in town planning at the University of Bamako and has previously worked for UNESCO. | [
"People"
] | 2007-04-25T21:22:48Z | 2007-04-25T21:31:23Z |
68,045,177 | Birtle Indian Residential School | The Birtle Indian Residential School was a school within the Canadian Indian residential school system that operated in Birtle, Manitoba from 1888 to 1970.: 355 Operated by the Presbyterian Church in Canada, attendance during the school's operation ranged from 19 to 170 students. | [
"Health"
] | 2021-06-25T17:06:29Z | 2021-06-25T17:06:49Z |
11,377,337 | Adam in rabbinic literature | Allusions in rabbinic literature to the Biblical figure Adam, created according to the Book of Genesis by God in the Garden of Eden as the first man, expand and elaborate and draw inferences from what is presented in the text of the Bible itself. | [
"Universe"
] | 2007-05-23T15:26:54Z | 2007-05-23T15:29:26Z |
4,535,125 | Charles Lane (filmmaker) | Charles Lane (born December 26, 1953) is an American actor and filmmaker. While attending Purchase College as a film student, he made a short titled A Place in Time based on the famous Kitty Genovese incident. This short gained him a certain amount of attention, including a Student Academy Award win. Lane then directed and starred in the feature film True Identity, a vehicle for British comedian Lenny Henry funded by the Walt Disney Company. He wrote, directed and starred in 1989's Sidewalk Stories, a black-and-white feature about a homeless street artist who becomes the guardian of a small girl after her father is murdered. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2006-03-27T18:41:56Z | 2006-03-27T18:45:11Z |
30,768,682 | Kaytazzade Mehmet Nazım | Kaytazzade Mehmet Nazım (1857 – 1924) was one of the leading Turkish Cypriot poets of the nineteenth century. | [
"Language"
] | 2011-02-06T13:55:21Z | 2011-02-06T14:08:08Z |
4,729,773 | FrancoForum | The FrancoForum is a specialized language teaching facility owned and operated by the local government in Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, a French collectivity located off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada. Staffed by professional French instructors, the institute offers a variety of courses for both students and teachers wishing to improve their fluency. The FrancoForum is best known for hosting Le Programme Frecker, a 3-month French immersion program offered to students at Memorial University of Newfoundland. The program, which began in 1973, was originally housed in a small building at the centre of town. In 1992, an agreement was reached with the Conseil Général in Saint-Pierre to relocate the program to the newly built FrancoForum. | [
"Education"
] | 2006-04-13T05:56:12Z | 2006-04-13T06:04:06Z |
53,601,388 | Beer in North Korea | North Korea has at least ten major breweries and many microbreweries that supply a wide range of beer products. The top brand is the light lager Taedonggang by the state-owned Taedonggang Brewing Company. The country's problems with goods distribution and power output have forced North Korean brewers to innovate. To minimize distribution, many restaurants and hotels maintain their own microbreweries. Because unreliable power supply makes it difficult to refrigerate beer, North Koreans have developed their own steam beer, an originally American beer style brewed in higher than normal temperatures, that is widely available. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2017-03-26T13:21:55Z | 2017-03-26T13:22:18Z |
31,012,090 | Subject 13 (Fringe) | "Subject 13" is the 15th episode of the third season of the American science fiction drama television series Fringe, and the 58th episode overall. Inspired by fan reaction to the show's previous flashback episode, "Peter", "Subject 13" occurs 25 years before the show's current timeline, in 1986 six months after "Peter". The episode, with scenes set in both the prime and the parallel universe, explores Walter and Elizabeth Bishop's attempts to return Peter to the parallel universe using the Cortexiphan-induced abilities of young Olivia Dunham, while Walternate in the parallel universe struggles to deal with the kidnapping of his son. Showrunners Jeff Pinkner and J. H. Wyman, as well as consulting producer Akiva Goldsman wrote the episode, while producer Frederick E. O. Toye worked as the director. Guest actress Orla Brady returned to reprise the role of Elizabeth, while Chandler Canterbury, Karley Scott Collins, and Chris Bradford made their first guest appearances. | [
"Information"
] | 2011-02-26T06:17:27Z | 2011-02-26T06:20:02Z |
1,687,054 | Yitzhak Rabin assassination conspiracy theories | Conspiracy theories arose almost immediately following the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on November 4, 1995. The perpetrator, Jewish Israeli law student Yigal Amir, was apprehended within seconds by people in the crowd. Rabin later died on the operating table at Ichilov Hospital. Amir confessed to the assassination of Rabin. The assassination was reported as a clear-cut matter in Israeli media, and the Shamgar national inquiry commission and the court all drew the same conclusion that Amir was guilty of murder. | [
"Military"
] | 2005-04-03T12:56:17Z | 2005-04-03T12:56:54Z |
76,023,248 | Women's Legal Centre Trust v President (2022) | Women's Legal Centre Trust v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others is a 2022 decision of the Constitutional Court of South Africa concerning the legal status and regulation of Muslim marriages. The Constitutional Court declared that the Marriage Act, 1961 and Divorce Act, 1979 were unconstitutional insofar as they failed to recognise and regulate marriages solemnised in accordance with sharia and not registered as civil marriages. This failure was inconsistent with various constitutional rights in sections 9, 10, 28 and 34 of the Constitution of South Africa. The judgment was unanimous and was written by Acting Justice Pule Tlaletsi. The case originated in the Western Cape High Court, where it was decided by Judge Nolwazi Mabindla-Boqwana. | [
"Law"
] | 2024-02-07T13:14:12Z | 2024-02-07T13:14:31Z |
50,852,656 | Red Sparrow | Red Sparrow is a 2018 American spy thriller film directed by Francis Lawrence and written by Justin Haythe, based on the 2013 novel of the same name by Jason Matthews. The film stars Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton, Matthias Schoenaerts, Charlotte Rampling, Mary-Louise Parker, Jeremy Irons, and Ciarán Hinds. It tells the story of a former ballerina turned Russian intelligence officer, who is sent to make contact with a CIA officer in the hope of discovering the identity of a mole. Matthews, a former member of the CIA, advised the production on the depiction of spying. Based on historic Soviet sexpionage and contemporary Russian use of kompromat, filming took place in Hungary, Slovakia and Austria. | [
"Information",
"Law"
] | 2016-06-12T09:37:24Z | 2016-06-12T09:38:00Z |
62,790,625 | Pokémon the Movie: Secrets of the Jungle | Pokémon the Movie: Secrets of the Jungle is a 2020 Japanese anime film based on Satoshi Tajiri's Pokémon media franchise and produced by OLM. It is the twenty-third film in the Pokémon the Movie Series and the third and final film in the Alternate Timeline series, covering Generation VIII. The film returns to the series’ traditional 2D art style rather than using the CGI animation used in Mewtwo Strikes Back: Evolution. It features the new Generation VIII Mythical Pokémon Zarude and a shiny Celebi. In Japan, the film was released on December 25, 2020, by Toho. | [
"Internet"
] | 2020-01-10T00:05:33Z | 2020-01-10T00:06:59Z |
23,486,472 | Gary Dorrien | Gary John Dorrien (born 1952) is an American social ethicist and theologian. He is the Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics at Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York and Professor of Religion at Columbia University, both in New York City, and the author of 25 books on ethics, social theory, philosophy, theology, politics, and intellectual history. Prior to joining the faculty at Union and Columbia in 2005, Dorrien taught at Kalamazoo College in Michigan, where he served as Parfet Distinguished Professor and as Dean of Stetson Chapel. An Episcopal priest, he has taught as the Paul E. Raither Distinguished Scholar at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, the Horace De Y. Lentz Visiting Professor at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the Lowell Visiting Professor at Boston University School of Theology. Dorrien is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America's Religion and Socialism Commission. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2009-07-04T07:18:44Z | 2009-07-04T07:32:01Z |
867,270 | Hamburg cell | The Hamburg cell (German: Hamburger Zelle) was, according to U.S. and German intelligence agencies, a group of radical Islamists based in Hamburg, Germany, that included students from different Arab countries who eventually came to be key operatives in the September 11 attacks. Important members included Mohamed Atta, who led the four hijacking teams in 2001 and piloted American Airlines Flight 11; Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who conspired with the other three members but was unable to enter the United States; Marwan al-Shehhi, who piloted United Airlines Flight 175; and Ziad Jarrah, who piloted United Airlines Flight 93 and failed to hit a target in Washington, D.C. (claimed by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to have been the Capitol). Other members included Said Bahaji, Zakariya Essabar, Mounir el-Motassadeq, and Abdelghani Mzoudi. | [
"Military"
] | 2004-07-30T13:47:06Z | 2004-07-30T14:07:14Z |
71,211,211 | Burnap v. United States | Burnap v. United States, 252 U.S. 512 (1920), was a decision of the United States Supreme Court concerning the Appointments Clause. | [
"Law"
] | 2022-07-02T20:36:00Z | 2022-07-05T03:17:44Z |
12,189,078 | Lesser sheath-tailed bat | The lesser sheath-tailed bat (Emballonura monticola) is a species of sac-winged bat in the family Emballonuridae. It is found in the Malay Peninsula (including Myanmar and Thailand), Borneo, and many other parts of the Indonesian Archipelago including Sulawesi, Java, and Sumatra. == References == | [
"Communication"
] | 2007-07-10T18:08:40Z | 2007-07-19T14:21:08Z |
45,474,599 | Omafume Onoge | Omafume Friday Onoge (21 October 1938 – 12 July 2009) was a Nigerian professor of sociology and social anthropology as well as an activist. | [
"People"
] | 2015-02-22T20:09:17Z | 2015-02-22T22:51:47Z |
70,031,689 | Class of '09 | Class of '09 is an American drama thriller television miniseries created by Tom Rob Smith. The show premiered on FX on Hulu on May 10, 2023. | [
"Information"
] | 2022-02-09T23:32:50Z | 2022-02-28T18:58:47Z |
841,332 | Georges Roesch | Roesch, Georges Henry, born Geneva 15 April 1891: died 7 November 1969, automotive engineer, was the Swiss-born son of a German-born blacksmith turned Geneva garage operator and his French-born wife. He came to England in 1914 from Delaunay-Belleville, where he trained under Barbaroux, to work for Daimler. With little English and a German surname and accent the subsequent outbreak of the First World War meant twelve months under a cloud of suspicion until the authorities gave him the benefit of the doubt. In 1916, aged 25, he was hired by the London firm of Clément-Talbot as Chief Engineer. He developed a 1750 cc touring car for production after the end of hostilities. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2004-07-18T23:29:42Z | 2004-07-18T23:30:42Z |
4,370,004 | Lepton epoch | In cosmological models of the Big Bang, the lepton epoch was the period in the evolution of the early universe in which the leptons dominated the mass of the Universe. It started roughly 1 second after the Big Bang, after the majority of hadrons and anti-hadrons annihilated each other at the end of the hadron epoch. During the lepton epoch, the temperature of the Universe was still high enough to create neutrino and electron-positron pairs. Approximately 10 seconds after the Big Bang, the temperature of the universe had fallen to the point where electron-positron pairs were gradually annihilated. A small residue of electrons needed to charge-neutralize the Universe remained along with free streaming neutrinos: an important aspect of this epoch is the neutrino decoupling. | [
"Universe"
] | 2006-03-12T20:11:43Z | 2006-03-14T14:45:50Z |
478,439 | Tone name | In tonal languages, tone names are the names given to the tones these languages use. In contemporary standard Chinese (Mandarin), the tones are numbered from 1 to 4. They are descended from but not identical to the historical four tones of Middle Chinese, namely level (Chinese: 平; pinyin: píng), rising (Chinese: 上; pinyin: shǎng), departing (Chinese: 去; pinyin: qù), and entering (Chinese: 入; pinyin: rù), each split into yin (Chinese: 陰; pinyin: yīn) and yang (Chinese: 陽; pinyin: yáng) registers, and the categories of high and low syllables. Standard Vietnamese has six tones, known as ngang, sắc, huyền, hỏi, ngã, and nặng tones. Thai has five phonemic tones: mid, low, falling, high and rising, sometimes referred to in older reference works as rectus, gravis, circumflexus, altus and demissus, respectively. | [
"Science"
] | 2004-02-20T17:55:10Z | 2004-02-23T21:44:53Z |
23,969,022 | Shadow of Egypt | Shadow of Egypt is a 1924 British silent adventure film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Carlyle Blackwell, Alma Taylor and Milton Rosmer. A European adventurer tries to steal from an ancient Egyptian tomb, only to become afflicted by a mysterious curse. The film was shot on location around Cairo in Egypt. The Shadow of Egypt is based on Norma Lorimer's 1923 novel of the same name. | [
"Nature"
] | 2009-08-13T14:27:08Z | 2009-08-13T15:33:58Z |
47,202,170 | David Burton (director) | David Burton (1877–1963) was a Russian-born American film director of the 1930s. He had previously worked as a theater director. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2015-07-10T09:19:34Z | 2015-07-10T09:20:47Z |
39,184,207 | Parviz Hadi | Parviz Hadi Basmenj (Persian: پرویز هادی باسمنج; born 16 November 1987 in Basmenj, East Azerbaijan, Iran), is an Iranian wrestler. He became Pahlevan of Iran in the 2014/2015 competition. | [
"Sports"
] | 2013-04-22T08:37:07Z | 2013-04-22T17:42:40Z |
70,110,837 | Joseph Mayor Asher | Joseph Mayor Asher (September 23, 1872 – November 9, 1909) was a Jewish English-American rabbi and professor. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2022-02-19T05:03:47Z | 2022-02-19T05:06:44Z |
18,320,163 | Shao Xianghua | Shao Xianghua, (simplified Chinese: 邵象华; traditional Chinese: 邵象華; pinyin: Shào Xiànghuá; February 22, 1913 – March 21, 2012) was a Chinese materials engineer and metallurgist. He was considered as a pioneer of modern Chinese metallurgical engineering. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2008-07-06T22:42:08Z | 2008-07-06T22:42:33Z |
566,713 | The Living Daylights | The Living Daylights is a 1987 spy film, the fifteenth entry in the James Bond series produced by Eon Productions, and the first of two to star Timothy Dalton as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. Directed by John Glen, the film's title is taken from Ian Fleming's short story "The Living Daylights", the plot of which also forms the basis of the first act of the film. It was the last film to use the title of an Ian Fleming story until the 2006 instalment Casino Royale. It is also the first film to have Caroline Bliss as Miss Moneypenny, replacing Lois Maxwell. The film was produced by Albert R. Broccoli, his stepson Michael G. Wilson, and co-produced by his daughter, Barbara Broccoli. | [
"Nature"
] | 2004-03-31T14:18:51Z | 2004-04-01T05:38:27Z |
72,711,303 | Siege of Caffa | The Siege of Caffa was a 14th-century military encounter when Jani Beg of the Golden Horde sieged the city of Caffa, (today Feodosia) between two periods in the 1340s. The city of Caffa, a Genoese colony, was a vital trading hub located in Crimea. The city was then part of Gazaria, a group of seven ports located in Crimea and belonging to the maritime empire of the Republic of Genoa. The event is historically significant primarily because it is believed to be one of the earliest instances of biological warfare. The siege of Caffa was characterized by intense military tactics from both sides. | [
"Military"
] | 2023-01-10T05:08:41Z | 2023-01-10T05:15:37Z |
55,734,440 | DC Solar | DC Solar Solutions Inc., trading as DC Solar, was a Benicia, California solar power supplier company whose owners lived lavishly on ill-gotten gains in Martinez. The company was shut down by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 2018 after it turned out to be a billion-dollar Ponzi scheme. | [
"Energy"
] | 2017-11-07T09:27:41Z | 2017-11-07T09:29:39Z |
52,221 | Corporate welfare | Corporate welfare refers to government financial assistance, subsidies, tax breaks, or other favorable policies provided to private businesses or specific industries, ostensibly to promote economic growth, job creation, or other public benefits. This support can take various forms, including tax credits, tax deductions, tax exemptions, government contracts, preferential regulatory treatment, debt write-offs, public-private partnerships, bailout programs, discount schemes, deferrals, low-interest loans or loan guarantees, direct subsidies or public grants. The definition of corporate welfare is sometimes restricted to direct government subsidies of major corporations, excluding tax loopholes and all manner of regulatory and trade decisions. | [
"Politics"
] | 2002-05-16T21:14:26Z | 2002-05-16T21:15:02Z |
53,735,406 | Chen Dexing Ancestral Hall | The Chen Dexing Ancestral Hall (traditional Chinese: 陳德星堂; simplified Chinese: 陈德星堂; pinyin: Chén Déxīng Táng) is an ancestral shrine in Datong District, Taipei, Taiwan. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2017-04-10T03:13:59Z | 2017-04-10T03:23:36Z |
64,382,297 | Santa Maria Ship & Museum | The Santa Maria Ship & Museum was a museum ship in downtown Columbus, Ohio. The craft was a full-size replica of the Santa María, one of three ships Christopher Columbus used in 1492 during his first voyage to the Americas. The ship was displayed in Columbus from 1991 to 2014, when it had to be relocated due to the Scioto Mile project reshaping the riverbanks. The Santa Maria has sat on a city-owned lot since its relocation. | [
"Entities"
] | 2020-06-26T01:21:05Z | 2020-06-26T01:22:13Z |
10,680,720 | The Australia Hotel | The Australia Hotel was a hotel on Castlereagh Street, Sydney in New South Wales, Australia. From its opening in 1891 until its closure on 30 June 1971 and subsequent demolition, the hotel was considered "the best-known hotel in Australia", "the premier hotel in Sydney" and described itself as "The Hotel of the Commonwealth". The hotel was situated in one of Sydney's important thoroughfares in the Sydney central business district. | [
"Entities"
] | 2007-04-15T14:25:10Z | 2007-04-15T14:25:51Z |
1,089,432 | Baron de Hirsch Cemetery, Halifax | The Baron de Hirsch Cemetery, also known as the Beth Israel Synagogue Cemetery, is a Jewish cemetery located on west side of Windsor Street at the intersection of Connaught Avenue beside Fairview Cemetery in the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. It has been the burial ground of the congregation of the Beth Israel Synagogue of Halifax since 1893. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2004-10-21T15:41:39Z | 2004-10-21T15:42:58Z |
38,960,180 | Munich American High School | Munich American High School (MAHS) was a Department of Defense Dependents Schools (DoDDS) system school located in Munich, Germany, on Cincinnatistrasse. MAHS was open from 1946 to 1992. | [
"Education"
] | 2013-03-30T01:55:57Z | 2013-03-30T02:03:08Z |
7,746,391 | Denialism | In the psychology of human behavior, denialism is a person's choice to deny reality as a way to avoid believing in a psychologically uncomfortable truth. Denialism is an essentially irrational action that withholds the validation of a historical experience or event when a person refuses to accept an empirically verifiable reality. In the sciences, denialism is the rejection of basic facts and concepts that are undisputed, well-supported parts of the scientific consensus on a subject, in favor of ideas that are radical, controversial, or fabricated. The terms Holocaust denial and AIDS denialism describe the denial of the facts and the reality of the subject matters, and the term climate change denial describes denial of the scientific consensus that the climate change of planet Earth is a real and occurring event primarily caused in geologically recent times by human activity. The forms of denialism present the common feature of the person rejecting overwhelming evidence and trying to generate political controversy in attempts to deny the existence of consensus. | [
"Politics"
] | 2006-11-02T21:00:25Z | 2006-11-02T21:03:52Z |
16,003 | Joseph Weizenbaum | Joseph Weizenbaum (8 January 1923 – 5 March 2008) was a German American computer scientist and a professor at MIT. The Weizenbaum Award and the Weizenbaum Institute are named after him. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2001-10-29T14:24:41Z | 2001-10-29T16:17:56Z |
8,658,642 | Shōkyō | Shōkyō (正慶, also pronounced "Shōkei") was a brief initial Japanese era of the Northern Court during the Kamakura period, after Gentoku and before Kenmu, lasting from April 1332 to April 1333. The reigning Emperors were Emperor Go-Daigo in the south and Emperor Kōgon in the north. | [
"Time"
] | 2006-12-29T15:11:22Z | 2006-12-29T15:13:53Z |
3,998,184 | Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute | Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute (BMCRI), (Beṅgaḷūru Vaidyakīya Mahāvidyālaya mattu Sanśōdhanā Sansthé) formerly Bangalore Medical College (BMC), is a medical college in Bengaluru, India run by the Government of Karnataka. It is on K.R. Road, near City Market. It is one of ten government medical colleges in Karnataka. BMCRI is an autonomous institution under the Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences, Bengaluru. | [
"Knowledge"
] | 2006-02-08T03:19:46Z | 2006-02-08T03:21:13Z |
41,908,899 | Attacks on U.S. consulate in Karachi | The Consulate General of the United States in Karachi is located in the Sindh province in Pakistan and represents the interests of the United States government in Karachi, Pakistan, and nearby surrounding areas. It is the United States' largest Consulate General, and is larger, in terms of both personnel and facilities, than many U.S. Embassies. Technically a part of Mission Pakistan, and reporting through the Embassy of the United States in Islamabad. | [
"Military"
] | 2014-02-11T10:30:07Z | 2014-02-11T11:25:59Z |
35,581,542 | Battle of Déols | The Battle of Déols was a battle c. 469 when Euric king of the Visigoths thwarted an attack by an alliance of Bretons or Britons of the Romano-British Riothamus and the Gauls. == References == | [
"History"
] | 2012-04-22T10:01:14Z | 2012-04-22T12:23:01Z |
1,029,189 | Thick description | In the social sciences and related fields, a thick description is a description of human social action that describes not just physical behaviors, but their context as interpreted by the actors as well, so that it can be better understood by an outsider. A thick description typically adds a record of subjective explanations and meanings provided by the people engaged in the behaviors, making the collected data of greater value for studies by other social scientists. The term was first introduced by 20th-century philosopher Gilbert Ryle. However, the predominant sense in which it is used today was developed by anthropologist Clifford Geertz in his book The Interpretation of Cultures (1973) to characterise his own method of doing ethnography. Since then, the term and the methodology it represents has gained widespread currency, not only in the social sciences but also, for example, in the type of literary criticism known as New Historicism. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2004-09-30T10:13:01Z | 2004-09-30T10:14:19Z |
17,595,940 | Boston Transit Commission Building | The Boston Transit Commission Building is an historic office building at 15 Beacon Street in Boston, Massachusetts. It served as the headquarters of the Boston Transit Commission, the nation's first public transportation agency, which was responsible for the initial creation of Boston's subway system, now operated by the commission's successor, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). | [
"Government"
] | 2008-05-24T19:25:22Z | 2008-05-24T19:25:49Z |
66,176,083 | Peter Malloy | Adam-12 is an American police procedural crime drama television series created by Robert A. Cinader and Jack Webb and produced by Mark VII Limited and Universal Television. The series follows Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers Pete Malloy and Jim Reed as they patrol Los Angeles in their police cruiser, assigned the call sign "1-Adam-12". Adam-12 stars Martin Milner and Kent McCord, with several recurring co-stars, the most frequent being William Boyett and Gary Crosby. The series ran over seven seasons from September 21, 1968, until May 20, 1975. Like Webb's other series, Dragnet and Emergency!, Adam-12 was produced in cooperation with the actual department it was based on, in this case, the LAPD. | [
"Government"
] | 2020-12-22T19:47:55Z | 2023-10-26T16:51:33Z |
12,266,930 | St Mary Magdalen Old Fish Street | St. Mary Magdalen Old Fish Street was a church in Castle Baynard ward of the City of London, England, located on the corner of Old Fish Street and Old Change, on land now covered by post-War development. Recorded since the 12th century, the church was destroyed in the Great Fire of London of 1666, then rebuilt by the office of Sir Christopher Wren. The rebuilt church suffered damage to its roof from a fire in an adjacent warehouse in 1886. It was not repaired and was finally demolished in 1893. | [
"Entities"
] | 2007-07-15T20:58:03Z | 2007-07-17T10:01:53Z |
36,854,153 | Aeroflot Flight 1491 | Aeroflot Flight 1491 was a scheduled domestic passenger flight from Moscow-Vnukovo Airport to Kharkiv Airport in the USSR that crashed on 18 May 1972 while descending to land in Kharkiv, killing all 122 passengers and crew aboard the Antonov An-10. | [
"Business"
] | 2012-08-28T19:14:16Z | 2012-08-28T19:29:01Z |
11,122,307 | Ehud Netzer | Ehud Netzer (Hebrew: אהוד נצר 13 May 1934 – 28 October 2010) was an Israeli architect, archaeologist and educator, known for his extensive excavations at Herodium, where in 2007 he found the tomb of Herod the Great; and the discovery of a structure defined by Netzer as a synagogue, which if true would be the oldest one ever found (the "Wadi Qelt Synagogue"). Netzer served as a professor at the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He was a world-renowned expert on Herodian architecture. Netzer worked at Masada with Yigael Yadin, and later completed the official excavation report for the site. He later led teams of archaeologists like Rachel Chachy, who did important fieldwork at the Herodian palace at Jericho. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2007-05-08T17:54:05Z | 2007-05-08T18:13:16Z |
57,425,223 | Michael Comay | Michael Saul Comay (October 17, 1908 – November 6, 1987) was an Israeli diplomat. He was the Israeli Ambassador to Canada from 1953 to 1957, Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations from 1960 to 1967, and was Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 1970 to 1973. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2018-05-15T17:22:15Z | 2018-05-29T19:52:08Z |
62,041,311 | List of Sohu original programming | Sohu is a Chinese streaming website. Sohu started its own programs in 2011. Its first show was a short form comedy called Qian Duoduo Gets Married, which led to huge success and to the production of several other successful short form comedy shows, including Diors Man and Wonder Lady. | [
"Internet"
] | 2019-10-12T12:47:48Z | 2019-10-12T12:50:02Z |
28,360,572 | Gennady Mikhasevich | Gennady Modestovich Mikhasevich (Belarusian: Генадзь Мадэставіч Міхасевіч; 7 April 1947 – 25 September 1987) was a prolific Soviet serial killer. He murdered
at least 36 women during the period from 1971 to 1985 in Vitebsk, Polotsk and the rural areas in the nearby regions of the Byelorussian SSR. | [
"Human_behavior"
] | 2010-08-14T11:15:23Z | 2010-08-14T11:19:38Z |
67,903,354 | Ta Pang Po | Ta Pang Po (Chinese: 打棚埔) is a village located on the Tsing Chau Tsai Peninsula of Lantau Island, in the Tsuen Wan District of Hong Kong. | [
"Geography"
] | 2021-06-09T13:28:20Z | 2022-07-02T16:55:40Z |
604,168 | Franz Aepinus | Franz Ulrich Theodor Aepinus (13 December 1724 – 10 August 1802) was a German mathematician, scientist, and natural philosopher residing in the Russian Empire. Aepinus is best known for his researches, theoretical and experimental, in electricity and magnetism. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2004-04-18T15:29:39Z | 2004-05-01T16:17:01Z |
32,113,522 | John Kempe (MP) | John Kempe (c. 1610 – 5 October 1652) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 to 1652. He supported the Parliamentarian cause in the English Civil War. Kempe was the son of Thomas Kempe of Beaulieu, and his wife Mary Oglander, daughter of Sir William Oglander. His father died in 1622, leaving him the family estate, and his mother remarried Bromfield. He was admitted at Gray's Inn on 2 May 1631. | [
"Government"
] | 2011-06-17T09:59:22Z | 2011-06-17T10:04:44Z |
72,846,034 | List of Scottish statutory instruments, 2020 | This is a complete list of Scottish statutory instruments in 2020. | [
"Law"
] | 2023-01-25T14:33:59Z | 2023-01-25T16:51:48Z |
53,450,836 | Be aware and share | Be aware and share is a Swiss relief organization founded in 2015 in the context of the European migrant crisis, and a documentary film released in 2016. | [
"Health"
] | 2017-03-11T11:53:06Z | 2017-04-12T02:20:26Z |
55,566,198 | Ibrahim Al-Omar | Ibrahim Al-Omar (ca. 1978 – July 11, 2016), was a Syrian journalist and camera operator for Al Jazeera in Idlib, Syria, who was killed during the Syrian Civil War. | [
"Internet"
] | 2017-10-18T16:19:03Z | 2017-10-18T16:21:37Z |
37,293,693 | Jan Lucanus | Jan Lucanus is an American comic book writer, filmmaker, martial artist, musical artist, and entrepreneur. He is the founder and CEO of the transmedia company Creative Impulse Entertainment, Inc., co-creator/co-writer of the mixed martial arts comic books series JFH: Justice For Hire, is a filmmaker, an international martial arts champion in both the full contact sport of sanshou and the sport of tai chi pushing hands, and is a rapper/singer/songwriter. Lucanus also consults on business, production, and creative strategies for companies and individuals across comics, film, television, music, and games. He is a graduate of the New York University Maurice Kanbar Institute for Film & Television, Tisch School of the Arts, holding a degree in Film Production. As a transmedia artist, Lucanus has been called a "martial arts comic book prodigy" and an "entertainment renaissance man" for his work combining comic books, film, animation, and music, most notably for the JFH: Justice For Hire entertainment property. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2012-10-11T15:28:25Z | 2012-10-11T15:31:32Z |
276,463 | Ehrgeiz | Ehrgeiz (エアガイツ, Eagaitsu, German: [ˈeːɐ̯ɡaɪ̯ts] "Ambition"), fully titled Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring, is a 3D fighting game developed by DreamFactory and published by Namco in 1998 for arcades. The PlayStation port was published by Square the same year. The game includes characters from Final Fantasy VII: Cloud Strife, Tifa Lockhart – which are playable in both versions; Sephiroth, Yuffie Kisaragi, Vincent Valentine, and Zack Fair – which were added to the PlayStation's roster exclusively. | [
"Technology"
] | 2003-07-24T16:37:37Z | 2003-07-24T16:41:57Z |
70,744,934 | Sarah Abo | Sarah Abo (born 13 November 1985 or 1986) is an Australian television presenter, journalist and reporter. She currently co-hosts breakfast program Today alongside Karl Stefanovic. She is also a reporter on 60 Minutes. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2022-05-10T07:13:40Z | 2022-05-10T07:15:03Z |
5,700,750 | Carolinas Medical Center | Carolinas Medical Center, formally known as Atrium Health Carolinas Medical Center, is an 874-bed non-profit, tertiary, research and academic medical center located in Charlotte, North Carolina, servicing the southern North Carolina, northern South Carolina, and the Metrolina region. Carolinas Medical Center is one of the region's only academic university-level teaching centers. The hospital is the flagship hospital of Atrium Health. Carolinas Medical Center is affiliated with the Wake Forest School of Medicine. Carolinas Medical Center is also an ACS designated level I trauma center and has a heliport to handle medevac patients. | [
"Life"
] | 2006-06-25T05:24:24Z | 2006-06-25T05:30:51Z |
74,357,981 | Philomena Nyarko | Philomena Efua Nyarko is a Ghanaian statistician and academic, and the former Government Statistician for Ghana, chief executive of the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS). | [
"People"
] | 2023-07-15T12:27:26Z | 2023-07-15T14:53:19Z |
40,928,904 | List of prehistoric scheduled monuments in Gwynedd (former Caernarfonshire) | Gwynedd is a large rural county in North Wales. It includes the high mountains of Snowdonia National Park and the mixed farmland and hills of the Llŷn peninsula, which between them make up the historic county of Caernarfonshire. The southern part of Gwynedd is the softer coastal and upland landscapes of the historic county of Merionethshire. Gwynedd, the second-largest county in Wales, has a total of 497 scheduled monuments. That is too many to have on a single list article, so for convenience the list is divided into three. | [
"Lists"
] | 2013-10-30T01:45:05Z | 2013-10-30T01:50:50Z |
15,926,892 | Media (communication) | In communication, media (sing. medium) are the outlets or tools used to store and deliver semantic information or contained subject matter, described as content. The term generally refers to components of the mass media communications industry, such as print media (publishing), news media, photography, cinema, broadcasting (radio and television), digital media, and advertising. Each of these different channels requires a specific, thus media-adequate approach, to a successful transmission of content. The development of early writing and paper enabling longer-distance communication systems such as mail, including in the Persian Empire (Chapar Khaneh and Angarium) and Roman Empire, can be interpreted as early forms of media. | [
"Communication"
] | 2008-02-24T10:14:59Z | 2008-02-24T10:27:55Z |
13,151,942 | Scott McGregor (actor) | Scott McGregor (born April 1981) is an Australian model, television presenter and actor. McGregor worked as a model on the game show Temptation. He has also appeared in television commercials and print advertisements. From 2008, McGregor hosted the motoring show Blood, Sweat and Gears. As an actor, he has appeared in Underbelly, Winners & Losers and Offspring. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2007-02-23T10:04:16Z | 2007-02-23T10:05:58Z |
57,904,490 | List of bridges in Portland, Maine | This is a list of bridges in Portland, Maine. Casco Bay Bridge (Completed in 1997 to replace the Million Dollar Bridge over the Fore River. It connects Portland and South Portland.) Martin's Point Bridge (Original bridge was completed in 1828. New bridge opened in June 2014.) | [
"Lists"
] | 2018-07-15T00:49:32Z | 2018-07-15T00:50:08Z |
51,174,003 | John Tracy (aerospace executive) | John J. Tracy (born September 29, 1954, in Los Angeles, California) is the retired chief technology officer (CTO) of The Boeing Company, the world's largest aerospace company. At Boeing, he held the dual roles of CTO and Senior Vice President of Engineering, Operations & Technology from June 2006 to mid 2016. During his tenure as CTO, Tracy led Boeing's engineering team, which created noteworthy aerospace products including the 787 Dreamliner commercial airplane, the first jetliner to feature a composite fuselage; the 747-8 Intercontinental airplane, an updated version of Boeing's largest commercial airplane; the X-37, an experimental 30-foot unmanned space plane that's the first reusable spacecraft since the Space Shuttle; and Phantom Eye, a long-endurance, hydrogen-powered, 150-foot-long unmanned demonstrator aircraft. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2016-07-27T01:36:05Z | 2016-07-27T01:39:01Z |
21,735,938 | Kenan Institute for Ethics | The Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University is an interdisciplinary "think and do" tank committed to understanding and addressing real-world ethical challenges facing individuals, organizations and societies worldwide. The Institute promotes ethical reflection and engagement through its research, education and practice in five core areas: Human Rights, Global Migration, Rethinking Regulation, Moral Attitudes and Decision-Making, and Religions and Public Life. A small sampling of current projects includes an intensive semester-long undergraduate program on forced migration, a new laboratory on moral decision-making, a practitioner-in-residence program, a partnership with a U.N. working group on business and human rights, and a new initiative exploring how faith, citizenship, and the law intersect with processes of globalization. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2009-02-27T19:45:37Z | 2009-08-05T22:49:49Z |
15,398,616 | Sigrid Fry-Revere | Sigrid Fry-Revere is an American medical ethicist and lawyer who has worked on many issues in patient care ethics, but most recently has been working on the rights of living organ donors. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2008-01-24T16:44:55Z | 2008-01-28T22:18:46Z |
3,225,144 | Battle of Callann | The Battle of Callann was fought in August 1261 between the Hiberno-Normans, under John FitzGerald, and three Gaelic clans: MacCarthy, who held the Kingdom of Desmond, under Fínghin Mac Carthaigh, King of Desmond, ancestor of the MacCarthy Reagh dynasty. It took place in the townland of Callann or Collon near modern-day Kilgarvan, County Kerry. MacCarthaigh was victorious. | [
"History"
] | 2005-11-23T13:53:39Z | 2006-02-18T02:59:39Z |
3,951,586 | List of statutory instruments of the United Kingdom, 1994 | This is a complete list of all 1,851 statutory instruments published in the United Kingdom in the year 1994. | [
"Law"
] | 2006-02-04T01:43:02Z | 2006-02-04T16:56:46Z |
2,038,684 | Humanists International | Humanists International (known as the International Humanist and Ethical Union, or IHEU, from 1952–2019) is an international non-governmental organisation championing secularism and human rights, motivated by secular humanist values. Founded in Amsterdam in 1952, it is an umbrella organisation made up of more than 160 secular humanist, atheist, rationalist, agnostic, skeptic, freethought and Ethical Culture organisations from over 80 countries. Humanists International campaigns globally on human rights issues, with a specific emphasis on defending freedom of thought and expression and the rights of the non-religious, who are often a vulnerable minority in many parts of the world. The organisation is based in London but maintains a presence at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, the United Nations General Assembly in New York, and the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, among other international institutions. Its advocacy work focuses on shaping debates on issues associated with humanism, the rights of the non-religious, and promoting humanist attitudes to social issues. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2005-06-13T19:22:25Z | 2005-06-13T19:23:07Z |
740,558 | List of airports in Thailand | This is a list of airports in Thailand. There are 39 commercial service airports in Thailand, 10 of which are international airports. The Department of Airports (DOA) managed 29 airports, while 7 airports are managed by Airports of Thailand (AOT), 3 airports are managed by Bangkok Airways (BA), and 1 airport is managed by the Royal Thai Navy (RTNV). The six major international airports managed by AOT are the main gateways to Thailand for international travelers, while smaller commercial airports may be operated by the DOA or individual airlines. Thailand also has military and private airports that serve various purposes, such as supporting military operations, private aircraft operations, and general aviation. | [
"Lists"
] | 2004-06-21T09:23:59Z | 2004-06-21T09:35:07Z |
19,405,035 | Abu Salabikh | The archaeological site of Abu Salabikh (Tell Abū Ṣalābīkh), around 20 km (12 mi) northwest of the site of ancient Nippur and about 150 kilometers southeast of the modern city of Baghdad in Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate, Iraq marks the site of a small Sumerian city that existed from the Neolithic through the late 3rd millennium, with cultural connections to the cities of Kish, Mari and Ebla. Its ancient name is unknown though Eresh and Kesh have been suggested as well as Gišgi. Kesh was suggested by Thorkild Jacobsen before excavations began. The Euphrates was the city's highway and lifeline; when it shifted its old bed (which was identified to the west of the Main Mound by coring techniques), in the late third millennium BC, the city dwindled away. Only eroded traces remain on the site's surface of habitation after the Early Dynastic Period. | [
"Language"
] | 2008-09-21T00:38:31Z | 2008-09-21T00:38:57Z |
9,637,342 | Blowing Up Russia | Blowing Up Russia: Terror from Within (Russian: ФСБ взрывает Россию, romanized: FSB vzryvayet Rossiyu, lit. 'FSB blows Russia up') is a book written by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky. The authors describe the Russian apartment bombings as a false flag operation that was guided by the Russian Federal Security Service to justify the Second Chechen War and bring Vladimir Putin to power. The story was initially printed by Yuri Shchekochikhin in a special issue of Novaya Gazeta in August 2001 and published as a book in 2002. In Russia, the book was prohibited because it divulged state secrets, and it was included in the Federal List of Extremist Materials. | [
"Information",
"Military"
] | 2007-02-21T23:25:17Z | 2007-02-21T23:31:55Z |
36,072,782 | International Distillers & Vintners | International Distillers & Vintners was a brewing and wine and spirits distribution company, formed from the 1962 merger of W&A Gilbey and Justerini and Brooks. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2012-06-07T18:26:06Z | 2012-06-07T18:29:16Z |
49,617,576 | Henri de Villars (died 1693) | for Henri de Villars, Archbishop of Lyon, see Henri de Villars (died 1354)
Henri de Villars (c. 1621–27 December 1693) was a French prelate, latterly Archbishop of Vienne from 1662 to his death. | [
"History"
] | 2016-03-02T05:01:29Z | 2016-03-02T05:03:04Z |
61,626,452 | Kazuko Shibuya | Kazuko Shibuya (Japanese: 渋谷 員子, Hepburn: Shibuya Kazuko, born September 4, 1965) is a Japanese video game artist. She is best known for her work with Square (now Square Enix), in particular with the Final Fantasy series. | [
"Technology"
] | 2019-08-28T15:04:03Z | 2019-08-28T15:06:02Z |
52,263,636 | Bắc Ninh Temple of Literature | Văn Miếu Bắc Ninh (Bắc Ninh Temple of Literature) is a Confucian temple located in Bắc Ninh Province, Vietnam. Bắc Ninh Temple of Literature is famous for its large –scale with 677 graduateships of the pre-court competition- examination, occupied one third in the whole country. The Temple of Literature was worthy demonstrations of the age-old Kinh Bac civilization. It symbolizes the intellectual curiosity of the inhabitants of Bắc Ninh province which happens to be the province with the largest number of doctors appointed under the Vietnamese feudal system. Bắc Ninh, alone, accounted for one third of all national appointments. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2016-11-13T05:31:41Z | 2016-11-13T08:17:35Z |
63,934,667 | May 2020 Afghanistan attacks | In May 2020, a series of insurgent attacks took place in Afghanistan, starting when the Taliban killed 20 Afghan soldiers and wounded 29 others in Zari, Balkh and Grishk, Helmand on 1 and 3 May, respectively. On 12 May, a hospital's maternity ward in Kabul and a funeral in Kuz Kunar (Khewa), Nangarhar were attacked, resulting in the deaths of 56 people and injuries of 148 others, including newborn babies, mothers, nurses, and mourners. ISIL–KP claimed responsibility for the funeral bombing, but no insurgent group claimed responsibility for the hospital shooting. The Afghan government blamed the Taliban as the main perpetrators behind the 12 May attacks, and immediately ordered the military to resume its offensives against the Taliban and other insurgent groups. The Taliban, however, denied involvement. | [
"Military"
] | 2020-05-12T13:43:44Z | 2020-05-12T13:46:50Z |
54,421,841 | Pietro Paolo Caravaggio | Pietro Paolo Caravaggio (1617 – 30 October 1688) or Petro Paulo Caravagio was an Italian mathematician. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2017-06-29T15:27:43Z | 2017-06-29T19:04:53Z |
36,641,305 | Lafayette Avenue station (BMT Fulton Street Line) | Lafayette Avenue was a station on the demolished BMT Fulton Street Line. The Fulton Street Elevated was built by the Kings County Elevated Railway Company and this station started service on April 24, 1888. The station had 2 tracks and 1 island platform. It was served by trains of the BMT Fulton Street Line, and until 1920, trains of the BMT Brighton Line. The station was located east of the BMT Fifth Avenue Line, but had no connection to that elevated line. | [
"Entities"
] | 2012-08-05T18:40:29Z | 2013-04-26T11:14:46Z |
2,376,791 | Rajawadi Hospital | The Rajawadi Hospital (opened on 2 October 1958) is a municipal hospital located in the Rajawadi area of Ghatkopar, Mumbai, India. The hospital's official name is Seth V.C.Gandhi & M.A Vora Municipal General Hospital. | [
"Life"
] | 2005-08-04T11:47:42Z | 2005-08-04T11:51:47Z |
1,467,265 | Meanings of minor-planet names: 10001–11000 | As minor planet discoveries are confirmed, they are given a permanent number by the IAU's Minor Planet Center (MPC), and the discoverers can then submit names for them, following the IAU's naming conventions. The list below concerns those minor planets in the specified number-range that have received names, and explains the meanings of those names. Official naming citations of newly named small Solar System bodies are approved and published in a bulletin by IAU's Working Group for Small Bodies Nomenclature (WGSBN). Before May 2021, citations were published in MPC's Minor Planet Circulars for many decades. Recent citations can also be found on the JPL Small-Body Database (SBDB). | [
"Science"
] | 2005-02-04T22:55:12Z | 2005-02-05T15:46:07Z |
50,939,915 | Solar heat collector and radiator for building roof | A solar heat collector and radiator is a heat collecting and heat radiating roof structure, designed for building roofs specifically. It was built to be used in conjunction with solar energy and uses a system of air circulation for increased efficiency. A solar heat collector, or solar thermal collector, is used today to capture solar radiation through electromagnetic radiation with the use of solar hot water panels, solar parabolic troughs, or solar towers. Today many people create their own DIY solar heat collectors, but the inventor William Goettl was the first to design and patent this technology. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2016-06-27T23:41:01Z | 2016-06-27T23:41:21Z |
488,623 | Dr. Phibes Rises Again | Dr. Phibes Rises Again is a 1972 British comedy horror film, produced by Louis M. Heyward, directed by Robert Fuest, and starring Vincent Price and Robert Quarry. The film is a sequel to The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971). After seeking vengeance on the doctors whom he blamed for his wife's death in the first film, Phibes returns to seek eternal life in Egypt, while he pursues a centuries-old man who holds the ancient secrets that Phibes needs. | [
"Nature"
] | 2004-02-25T18:51:39Z | 2004-02-25T18:54:08Z |
66,091,454 | Kankara kidnapping | In the evening of 11 December 2020, over 300 pupils were kidnapped from a boys' secondary boarding school on the outskirts of Kankara, Katsina State, northern Nigeria. A gang of gunmen on motorcycles attacked the Government Science Secondary School, where more than 800 pupils reside. On 12 December, the armed forces said they found the gang's hideout in a forest and exchanged gunfire with them. On 13 December, an unidentified Beechcraft Super King Air 350i ISR aircraft was seen patrolling the eastern Kano region in search of the missing pupils. The Super King Air 350i ISR aircraft took off from Niamey and patrolled the Kano airspace for over 10 hours. | [
"Health"
] | 2020-12-13T07:20:39Z | 2020-12-13T07:22:26Z |
570,661 | Universal health care | Universal health care (also called universal health coverage, universal coverage, or universal care) is a health care system in which all residents of a particular country or region are assured access to health care. It is generally organized around providing either all residents or only those who cannot afford on their own, with either health services or the means to acquire them, with the end goal of improving health outcomes. Universal healthcare does not imply coverage for all cases and for all people – only that all people have access to healthcare when and where needed without financial hardship. Some universal healthcare systems are government-funded, while others are based on a requirement that all citizens purchase private health insurance. Universal healthcare can be determined by three critical dimensions: who is covered, what services are covered, and how much of the cost is covered. | [
"Health"
] | 2004-04-02T02:03:09Z | 2005-12-26T23:36:30Z |
31,841,063 | Zeki Demir | Zeki Demir (born June 6, 1982 in Istanbul, Turkey) is a European champion Turkish karateka competing in the kumite -80 kg division. He is a member of the İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi S.K. His younger brother İdris Demir is also a national karateka competing in the kumite -65 kg weight class. | [
"Sports"
] | 2011-05-21T08:58:40Z | 2012-11-27T18:50:21Z |
52,800,826 | Berry Cemetery | Berry Cemetery, also known as Holy Resurrection Cemetery, is a historic cemetery located near Ash Grove, Greene County, Missouri. It was established about 1875, and is a small, rural African-American cemetery. It contains 48 marked graves dating from 1875 to 1948. It may also contain Native American burials in three burial mounds. : 5
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2017-01-07T16:41:43Z | 2017-01-07T16:41:55Z |
40,480 | Benetton Group | Benetton Group S.r.l. (Italian pronunciation: [benetˈton]) is a global fashion brand based in Ponzano Veneto, Italy, founded in 1965. Benetton Group has a network of about 5,000 stores worldwide. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Benetton family's holding company Edizione. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2002-02-25T15:43:11Z | 2002-03-11T07:59:57Z |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.