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71,168,974
Christophe Bentz
Christophe Bentz (born 4 July 1987 in Rueil-Malmaison) is a French author, lecturer, commentator and politician affiliated to the National Rally. Since 2022 he has been a member of the National Assembly for Haute-Marne's 1st constituency.
[ "Politics" ]
2022-06-28T00:27:15Z
2022-06-28T00:47:04Z
71,744,878
Taleghani (surname)
Taleghani (Persian: طالقانی) is a surname which is mostly used in Iran. People with the surname included: Abdol Majid Taleqani (1737/8–1771/2), Persian calligrapher Azam Taleghani (1943–2019), Iranian politician and journalist Iraj Kalantari Taleghani, Iranian architect Khalil Taleghani (1912–1992), Iranian engineer and politician Mahmoud Taleghani (1911–1979), Iranian theologian Molla Naima Taleghani (died 1738), Iranian Shia philosopher and theologian Vahideh Taleghani (born c. 1953), Iranian politician
[ "Language" ]
2022-09-13T11:54:20Z
2022-09-13T11:54:31Z
10,600,144
Tepper Aviation
Tepper Aviation, Inc. was a privately held aviation company operating a fleet of Lockheed L-100 Hercules aircraft and was one of the largest civilian operators of L-100/L-382 aircraft. The airline may have suspended operations in 2006. On October 11, 2016, Tepper filed papers changing its name to Gulf Air Group, effective in 2017. In 2019, Gulf Air Group opened the Covington Maintenance Center at Southern Alabama Regional Airport in Andalusia, Alabama. Tepper was based at the Bob Sikes Airport in Crestview, Florida.
[ "Business", "Law" ]
2007-04-11T17:23:10Z
2007-04-11T17:33:08Z
63,065,454
Jonathan Faiman
Jonathan Faiman (born 1969) was one of the three founders of online grocery and technology business Ocado in 2000. He left the business in 2008, before the company floated on the London Stock Exchange. Faiman sold most of his shares in Ocado in 2010 at the time of its IPO for a reported value of £7 million. If owned in May 2020, the shares would have been worth over £500 million. More recently, in 2018, he founded Today Development Partners, also known as TDP and T0DAY (spelled with a zero), also an online grocery business that was established to rival his former business Ocado.
[ "Economy" ]
2020-02-09T17:17:22Z
2020-02-09T17:19:12Z
27,021,969
Arnhem leaf-nosed bat
The Arnhem leaf-nosed bat (Hipposideros inornatus) is a species of bat in the family Hipposideridae. It lives in the sandstone areas of Kakadu National Park (Northern Territory, Australia).
[ "Communication" ]
2010-04-19T20:15:12Z
2010-04-20T08:32:59Z
39,780,823
2XU
2XU Pty. Ltd. is an Australian/New Zealand multinational corporation engaged in the design, development and selling of sportswear, mostly compression garment for sports such as triathlon, cycling, running, open water swimming, and physical fitness. Founded in 2005 by Clyde Davenport, Jamie Hunt and Aidan Clarke, the company is headquartered in Melbourne, Victoria. 2XU stands for "Two Times You," which symbolises the multiplication of human performance. 2XU has been worn by world champion athletes including triathlete Emma Snowsill and currently holds official alliances with organisations including Rowing Australia, the Australian Paralympic Committee, United States Ski and Snowboard Association, and the Australian Institute of Sport.
[ "Concepts" ]
2013-06-26T06:13:09Z
2013-06-27T05:10:47Z
73,682,405
Kölner Domchor
The Kölner Domchor (Cologne Cathedral Choir) is the boys' choir at the Cologne Cathedral, officially founded in 1863. The choir rehearses three times per week. They perform regularly in services at the cathedral, and in concerts there and on international tours, including to Rome and the United States. The choir has been successful at choral competitions.
[ "Religion" ]
2023-04-30T07:29:20Z
2023-04-30T07:36:33Z
34,376,516
Educate Girls
Educate Girls is a non-profit organization in India, established in 2007, founded by Safeena Husain, that works towards girls' education in India's rural and educationally backward areas by mobilising communities. It currently operates in over 13,000 villages in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. By leveraging the Government's existing investment in schools and by engaging with a huge base of community volunteers, Educate Girls helps to identify, enrol and retain out-of-school girls and to improve foundational skills in literacy and numeracy for all children (both girls and boys). Since its inception in 2007, the organization has reached over 6.7 million total beneficiaries, and has helped mobilise communities to enrol close to 380,000 out-of-school girls in school.
[ "Health" ]
2012-01-14T12:06:47Z
2012-01-14T12:19:03Z
59,679,150
Danit Peleg
Danit Peleg (Hebrew: דנית פלג) is a fashion designer based in Tel Aviv, who created the first commercially available, 3D-printed clothing, and was recognized by Forbes as one of Europe's Top 50 Women in Tech.
[ "Concepts" ]
2019-01-15T20:20:41Z
2019-01-15T21:58:55Z
6,567,845
Stanley Peninsula
Stanley Peninsula (Chinese: 赤柱半島), formerly known as Tai Tam Peninsula (大潭半島), is a peninsula of southern Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong. Located between Tai Tam Bay and Stanley Bay, it joins north to Hong Kong Island at the town of Stanley and ends to the south at Wong Ma Kok.
[ "Geography" ]
2006-08-20T04:59:00Z
2006-08-20T05:01:09Z
33,903,247
Yu Keping
Yu Keping (Chinese: 俞可平) is the Director of the Center for Chinese Government Innovations at Peking University. He is a noted scholar having produced many noted books including the widely noted Democracy is a Good Thing. In addition to his academic work he has also acted as an advisor on political reforms to the Chinese government. Yu is also the New World Senior Fellow in the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation in the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2011-11-29T12:46:44Z
2011-11-29T14:32:42Z
1,147,402
Stratfor
Strategic Forecasting Inc., commonly known as Stratfor, is an American strategic intelligence publishing company founded in 1996. Stratfor's business model is to provide individual and enterprise subscriptions to Stratfor Worldview, its online publication, and to perform intelligence gathering for corporate clients. The focus of Stratfor's content is security issues and analyzing geopolitical risk.
[ "Information" ]
2004-11-09T02:52:56Z
2004-11-23T20:53:09Z
70,829,768
Hatice Akbaş
Hatice Akbaş (born 1 January 2002) is a Turkish Olympics silver medalist, world and European champion female boxer competing in the bantamweight (54 kg) division.
[ "Sports" ]
2022-05-20T20:13:03Z
2022-05-20T20:22:55Z
30,257,927
Regal Cinema, Dublin
The Regal Cinema was a film theatre that operated for almost a quarter of a century in Dublin, Ireland, until its closure in 1962.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2010-12-31T14:30:09Z
2010-12-31T17:45:10Z
58,752,456
Yonghua Song
Song Yonghua FREng (Chinese: 宋永华; born 1964) is a Chinese electrical engineer. He has been rector of the University of Macau since January 2018, and previously served as Executive Vice President at Zhejiang University.
[ "Geography" ]
2018-10-14T17:25:31Z
2018-10-14T17:28:27Z
17,574,344
QUIET
QUIET was an astronomy experiment to study the polarization of the cosmic microwave background radiation. QUIET stands for Q/U Imaging ExperimenT. The Q/U in the name refers to the ability of the telescope to measure the Q and U Stokes parameters simultaneously. QUIET was located at an elevation of 5,080 metres (16,700 feet) at Llano de Chajnantor Observatory in the Chilean Andes. It began observing in late 2008 and finished observing in December 2010.
[ "Universe" ]
2008-05-23T09:08:33Z
2008-05-23T09:17:27Z
657,604
Annus mirabilis
Annus mirabilis (pl. anni mirabiles) is a Latin phrase that means "marvelous year", "wonderful year", or "miraculous year". This term has been used to refer to several years during which events of major importance are remembered, notably Isaac Newton's discoveries in 1666 and Albert Einstein's papers published in 1905.
[ "Universe" ]
2004-05-16T02:42:18Z
2004-05-16T07:58:13Z
58,346,765
Juhani Aataminpoika
Juhani Aataminpoika (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈjuhɑni ˈɑːtɑminˌpoi̯kɑ]; born 31 July 1826 in Vesivehmaa, Asikkala – September 1854 in Suomenlinna), alias Kerpeikkari (Finnish: [ˈkerpei̯kːɑri]), was a Finnish serial killer. He killed 12 people in southern Finland between October and November of 1849. He has been characterized as the first serial killer in Finland.
[ "Health" ]
2018-08-31T13:02:47Z
2018-08-31T13:12:46Z
30,827,814
Sass & Bide
Sass & Bide (stylised as sass & bide) is an Australian women's fashion label established in 1999. The label is known for being worn by actress Sarah Jessica Parker and, in more recent times, Madonna, Rihanna, Kate Moss, Beyoncé, Nicole Richie and Mila Kunis.
[ "Concepts" ]
2011-02-11T10:12:45Z
2011-02-11T12:15:05Z
70,910,610
Aysha Akhtar
Aysha Akhtar is an American neurologist, public health specialist and animal ethicist. Akhtar is co-founder, CEO, and President of the Center for Contemporary Sciences. She is a US veteran.
[ "Ethics" ]
2022-05-30T22:37:29Z
2022-05-30T22:38:10Z
34,758,254
Bak Jiwon (born 1737)
Bak Jiwon (Korean: 박지원; Hanja: 朴趾源; 1737–1805), styled Yeonam (Korean: 연암; Hanja: 燕巖, 'Rock of swallow'), was a philosopher and novelist in the late Joseon dynasty. He has been regarded as one of the greatest thinkers of the so-called "Practical Learning (silhak)" movement. Park Jiwon belonged to the "School of Profitable Usage and Benefiting the People" (Korean: 이용후생파; Hanja: 利用厚生派; RR: Iyong Husaeng-pa) to promote the industrialization of his country and the development of trade by positively introducing western technologies to Joseon Korea. Park Jiwon proposed that Joseon import advanced technologies from the Qing dynasty, and promote mercantilism. The scholars Bak Jega, Yu Deukgong and Yi Deokmu were influenced by Park Jiwon.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2012-02-16T09:29:22Z
2012-02-16T09:29:45Z
40,711,739
Diethart Breipohl
Diethart Breipohl (born 23 August 1939 at Königsberg, East Prussia) is a German banker.
[ "Economy" ]
2013-10-05T08:43:02Z
2014-01-15T17:09:55Z
72,865,643
2023 Neve Yaakov shooting
On 27 January 2023, a Palestinian gunman killed at least seven civilians in the Israeli settlement of Neve Yaakov, in East Jerusalem, the occupied West Bank. The suspect is also reported as having shot at worshippers exiting a synagogue, and, according to the police, was shot and killed after he opened fire on the attending officers. It was Israel's deadliest peacetime Palestinian attack since the Jerusalem yeshiva attack in 2008. Palestinian militant groups did not claim the suspect as a member, but called the attack a natural retaliation for the raid in Jenin the day prior that killed 10 Palestinians, while the Palestinian Authority blamed the Israeli government for "dangerous escalation". Many nations and international organizations issued statements condemning the attack while others called for restraint.
[ "Military" ]
2023-01-27T19:42:01Z
2023-01-27T19:45:39Z
5,130,512
Amyntas of Galatia
Amyntas (Ancient Greek: Ἀμύντας), Tetrarch of the Trocmi was a King of Galatia and of several adjacent countries between 36 and 25 BC, mentioned by Strabo as contemporary with himself. He was the son of Brogitarus, king of Galatia, and Adobogiona, daughter of king Deiotarus Philoromaeus. Amyntas seems to have first possessed Lycaonia, where he maintained more than 300 flocks. To this he added the territory of Derbe by the murder of its prince, Antipater of Derbe, the friend of Cicero, and Isaura and Cappadocia by Roman favour. Originally he had been the king of Cappadocia Deiotarus secretary (γραμματεύς), and was made by Amyntas commander in chief (στρατηγός) of the Galatian auxiliaries sent to help Brutus and Cassius against the Triumvires, but deserted to Mark Anthony just before the battle of Philippi in 42 BC.
[ "History" ]
2006-05-13T17:03:45Z
2006-05-13T17:11:59Z
46,728,017
Mahboob Chowk Clock Tower
Mahboob Chowk Clock Tower is a five-storied architectural clock tower which was built in 1892 by Asman Jah, Prime Minister of Hyderabad. Named after the 6th Nizam of Hyderabad - (Mir Mahboob Ali Khan), the Mahboob Chowk area is considered to be an important part architectural heritage of Hyderabad. The clock tower is erected in the midst of the small garden; it has four large clocks on its sides which enable the time to be seen from any direction. The clock tower is designed in the Turkish style. The tower is located west of the Charminar, not far from Laad Bazaar.
[ "Time" ]
2015-05-17T08:42:58Z
2015-05-17T08:44:11Z
56,745,307
Siege of Smolensk (1613–1617)
The siege of Smolensk (1613–1617) is an episode of the Polish–Muscovite War (1605–1618).
[ "Military" ]
2018-03-04T08:58:57Z
2018-03-04T09:50:41Z
28,098,921
Frères Morvan
The Frères Morvan (Breton language : "Ar Vreudeur Morvan" ), François (1923–2012), Henri (born 1931) and Yvon (1934–2022), are three brothers native of the village of Botcol, in the municipality of Saint-Nicodème (Côtes-d'Armor) and who founded a group of traditional singers in 1958, with the arrival of the first sound system.
[ "History" ]
2010-07-20T21:18:27Z
2010-07-20T21:21:14Z
76,687,608
Roald Dahl's Marvellous Children's Charity
Roald Dahl's Marvellous Children's Charity is a charitable organization based in the United Kingdom. The charity was founded in 1991 as the Roald Dahl Foundation by Felicity Dahl, in memory of her husband, children's author Roald Dahl. The charity provides specialist support for seriously ill children across the UK by sponsoring 'Roald Dahl Nurse Specialists' roles who work within within NHS Trusts to provide practical and emotional support to children with complex, often life-long, medical conditions. The charity also provides support services for the families of children with complex medical needs, and financial grants.
[ "Health" ]
2024-04-20T16:07:25Z
2024-04-20T16:22:10Z
73,540,050
Goodbye Julia
Goodbye Julia (Arabic: وداعاً جوليا, romanized: Wadāʻan Jūlyā) is a 2023 Sudanese drama film directed by Mohamed Kordofani. It is Kordofani's first feature film and the first movie from Sudan ever to be presented in the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival. Goodbye Julia was selected by the Sudanese National Committee operating in exile to compete for the Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards, but was later not included in the shortlist.
[ "Nature" ]
2023-04-13T19:30:47Z
2023-04-13T19:36:18Z
50,628,899
Vice-Chancellor of Lagos State University
The Vice Chancellor of Lagos State University is the executive head of the university. Upon the VC's appointment by the Governor of Lagos State, the VC has the overall responsibility for the policy and administration of the university. The Governor of Lagos state appointed Professor Ibiyemi Olatunji-Bello as the 9th substantive Vice Chancellor of Lagos State University on 16 September 2021.
[ "People" ]
2016-05-24T17:20:00Z
2016-05-24T17:58:09Z
194,276
Thomas Müntzer
Thomas Müntzer (c. 1489 – 27 May 1525) was a German preacher and theologian of the early Reformation whose opposition to both Martin Luther and the Catholic Church led to his open defiance of late-feudal authority in central Germany. Müntzer was foremost amongst those reformers who took issue with Luther's compromises with feudal authority. He was a leader of the German peasant and plebeian uprising of 1525 commonly known as the German Peasants' War. In 1514, Müntzer became a priest in Braunschweig, where he began to question the teachings and practices of the Catholic Church. He then became a follower and acquaintance of Martin Luther, who recommended him for a post in Zwickau.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2003-03-10T02:27:41Z
2003-03-10T02:33:13Z
52,318,808
Bank of New York Hoard
The Bank of New York Hoard is the name given to identify a treasure trove of several thousand Fugio Cents that were discovered at the Bank of New York. Sometime in 1788, a keg of Fugio cents was acquired by the bank and stored in the basement. The coins were forgotten until they were rediscovered in 1856, this time at the bank's current location. At that time the coins were placed in cotton bags and put away until a final rediscovery of the coins was made in 1926. The coins were then given out as souvenirs and keepsakes to clients until 1948 when the American Numismatic Society examined the remaining 1,641 coins.
[ "Economy" ]
2016-11-19T01:05:32Z
2016-11-19T01:21:49Z
30,782,487
Kamiyonanayo
In Japanese mythology, the Kamiyo-nanayo (神世七代, lit. "Seven Generations of the Age of the Gods") are the seven generations of kami that emerged after the formation of heaven and earth. According to the Kojiki, these deities appeared after the Kotoamatsukami, which appeared at the time of the creation of the universe. The first two generations were hitorigami while the five that followed came into being as male-female pairs of kami: male deities and sisters that were at the same time married couples. In total the Kamiyonanayo consist of 12 deities in this chronicle.
[ "Universe" ]
2011-02-07T18:14:16Z
2011-02-08T14:52:31Z
12,200,050
Allied Breweries
Allied Breweries was the result of a 1961 merger between Ind Coope (of Burton), Ansells (of Birmingham), and Tetley Walker (of Leeds). In 1978, Allied Breweries merged with the food and catering group J. Lyons and Co to form Allied Lyons. The breweries business merged with Carlsberg in 1992 and became Carlsberg-Tetley, which is now part of Carlsberg Group, with Carlsberg-Tetley now known as Carlsberg UK.
[ "Food_and_drink" ]
2007-07-11T06:58:58Z
2008-08-16T07:01:42Z
1,223,037
Pan Asia Technical Automotive Center
The Pan Asia Technical Automotive Center (or PATAC) is a joint venture between General Motors and SAIC Motor. It is a design and engineering center in Pudong, Shanghai, China, and is involved in engineering for Shanghai GM products, but also functions as one out of six technical development and design centers worldwide of General Motors.
[ "Business" ]
2004-11-29T17:56:02Z
2004-11-30T14:52:53Z
19,165,043
Ali Hajipour
Ali Hajipour (Persian: علی حاجی‌پور) is an Iranian taekwondo athlete who won the silver medal for Iran at the Asian Games 1986.
[ "Sports" ]
2008-09-03T22:56:39Z
2008-09-03T23:28:40Z
3,745,331
Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth
Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth is a 1992 American supernatural horror film and the third installment in the Hellraiser film series. It was directed by Anthony Hickox and stars Terry Farrell, Paula Marshall, Kevin Bernhardt, and Doug Bradley. Ashley Laurence, who starred in the previous two films, reprises her role as Kirsty Cotton in a cameo appearance. Following the events of Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988), in which the demon Pinhead (Bradley) is imprisoned in a statue, he resurrects himself by absorbing the life force of unlucky humans. After converting several power-hungry youths (Marshall and Bernhardt) into new Cenobites, Pinhead goes on a rampage, opposed by a reporter (Farrell) and the spiritual manifestation of his good half (also Bradley).
[ "Internet" ]
2006-01-17T01:19:42Z
2006-01-17T01:57:11Z
6,373,809
Trinity College Chapel, Kandy
The Trinity College Chapel ("Holy Trinity Church") in Kandy, Sri Lanka is one of the more distinctive church buildings in Sri Lanka. It is situated below the Principal's bungalow at Trinity College, Kandy. The chapel is one of the first and finest examples of the application of indigenous architecture in the design of an Anglican church in the country. The building is modelled on traditional Buddhist architecture, reminiscent of those found in Polonnaruwa, an ancient capital of Sri Lanka, in that it is an open building with a lofty hipped roof supported by numerous carved stone pillars.
[ "Religion" ]
2006-08-06T15:55:52Z
2006-08-06T16:02:12Z
20,410,870
Eth-
In chemical nomenclature, the IUPAC nomenclature of organic chemistry is a method of naming organic chemical compounds as recommended by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). It is published in the Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (informally called the Blue Book). Ideally, every possible organic compound should have a name from which an unambiguous structural formula can be created. There is also an IUPAC nomenclature of inorganic chemistry. To avoid long and tedious names in normal communication, the official IUPAC naming recommendations are not always followed in practice, except when it is necessary to give an unambiguous and absolute definition to a compound.
[ "Science" ]
2008-11-26T15:09:39Z
2008-11-26T15:10:50Z
300,208
Namco
Namco Limited was a Japanese multinational video game and entertainment company founded in 1955 which operated video arcades and amusement parks globally, produced video games, films, toys, and arcade cabinets. They were one of the most influential figures in the worldwide coin-op and arcade game industry; Namco produced several multi-million-selling game franchises, such as Pac-Man, Galaxian, Tekken, Tales, Ridge Racer, and Ace Combat. In 2006, Namco merged with Bandai to form what is now named Bandai Namco Holdings; the standalone Namco brand continues to be used for video arcade and other entertainment products by the group's Bandai Namco Amusements division. The Namco name comes from Nakamura Manufacturing Company, derived from its founder Masaya Nakamura. In the 1960s, it manufactured electro-mechanical arcade games such as the 1965 hit Periscope.
[ "Technology" ]
2003-08-19T23:45:01Z
2003-08-20T02:14:40Z
35,144,306
Manchester Network Access Point
Manchester Network Access Point was a Manchester-based internet exchange point (IXP). The access point provides an exchange point for internet service providers and businesses in northern England and the Midlands and was the first Internet Exchange point in the UK outside London. MaNAP was a membership-owned organisation, established in 1997 to enable internet companies in the North and Midlands to interconnect without the massive cost of running circuits to London and back.
[ "Internet" ]
2012-03-20T01:50:38Z
2012-03-20T01:51:03Z
57,906,196
July 2018 Mogadishu bombings
The July 2018 Mogadishu bombings took place on July 7, 2018 when fighters of the Somali group Al-Shabaab attacked the compound of Somalia's interior and security ministries in the center of Mogadishu. At least 20 people were killed and two dozen others wounded and all three gunmen were killed by the security forces.
[ "Military" ]
2018-07-15T08:18:57Z
2018-07-15T08:20:03Z
32,967,110
Corpse Party
Corpse Party (Japanese: コープスパーティー, Hepburn: Kōpusu Pātī) is a survival horror adventure and dōjin soft video game series originally created by Makoto Kedōin and developed by Team GrisGris. The first game in the series was developed using the RPG Maker software version RPG Tsukūru Dante 98 and released on April 22, 1996 for the PC-9801. It was followed by three remakes: Corpse Party: NewChapter, which was released incomplete for mobile phones from October 3, 2006 to December 26, 2007, Corpse Party: Blood Covered, which was released for Microsoft Windows from March 8, 2008 to July 28, 2011, and Corpse Party: Blood Covered ...Repeated Fear, which was released for the PlayStation Portable on August 12, 2010, and iOS on February 9, 2012. The game was released in North America and Europe by Xseed Games and Marvelous Europe under the title Corpse Party. Xseed Games planned to release a localized version Corpse Party Blood Covered for PC in North America in 2015, but the title was delayed until 2016.
[ "Technology" ]
2011-09-03T13:37:18Z
2011-09-03T13:49:18Z
39,241,190
Arzu Ceylan
Behice Arzu Ceylan is a female, Turkish, former European champion Taekwondo practitioner.
[ "Sports" ]
2013-04-28T11:11:03Z
2013-05-05T11:10:34Z
43,135,807
Tom Davenport (filmmaker)
Tom Davenport (born June 13, 1939) is an independent filmmaker and film distributor who has worked for decades documenting American life and exploring folklore. Currently based in Delaplane, Virginia, he is the founder and project director for Folkstreams, a website that houses independent documentary films about American folk roots and cultures. In the winter 2016, Davenport released his follow-up film to his profile of a North Carolina family, A Singing Stream (1986) which he made in partnership with the Landis family who were featured in that film. In 2018, he released a documentary on a 1932 lynching near his home in Fauquier County in Virginia. He continues to oversee the Folkstreams website, as well as help with the management of his family farm in northern Virginia at Hollin Farms.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2014-06-24T19:26:54Z
2014-06-24T19:29:09Z
52,839,940
Tess (2016 film)
Tess is a South African Afrikaans-language drama based on the novel Whiplash by Tracey Farren. The film, like the novel, is set in the Capetonian seaside suburb of Muizenberg. It was directed by Meg Rickards and starred, among others, Christia Visser, Nse Ikpe-Etim, Brendon Daniels, Dann-Jacques Mouton, Quanita Adams and Lee anne Van Rooi. The screenplay was also written by Tracey Farren. It was shot by Dutch director of photography Bert Haitsma and edited by Linda Man.
[ "Nature" ]
2017-01-11T19:39:16Z
2017-01-12T05:50:05Z
73,404,763
Olivia Hamilton (actress)
Olivia Hamilton (born June 3, 1987) is an American actress and producer. She is best known for her roles in the films La La Land (2016), First Man (2018), and Babylon (2022), which were all directed by her husband Damien Chazelle. In 2013, she founded the PLAY initiative, an organization dedicated to encouraging and injecting more fun and playfulness into people's lives while reconnecting them with their inner child. According to the foundation's website, PLAY is a two hour guided experience. Hamilton is also president of the Women's Foundation of California Board of Directors.
[ "Economy" ]
2023-03-28T20:18:08Z
2023-03-28T20:46:52Z
28,487,814
Browar Łomża
The Browar Łomża (Polish pronunciation: [ˈwɔmʐa]) is Poland's fourth largest brewery. Browar Łomża Sp. z o.o. launched the plant in 1968. In 2007, it was purchased by Royal Unibrew.
[ "Food_and_drink" ]
2010-08-23T02:12:52Z
2010-08-23T02:17:55Z
1,112,502
Hristo Botev
Hristo Botev (Bulgarian: Христо Ботев, pronounced [ˈxristo ˈbɔtɛf]), born Hristo Botyov Petkov (Христо Ботьов Петков; 6 January 1848 [O.S. 25 December 1847] – 1 June [O.S. 20 May] 1876), was a Bulgarian revolutionary and poet. Botev is considered by Bulgarians to be a symbolic historical figure and national hero. His poetry is a prime example of the literature of the Bulgarian National Revival, though he is considered to be ahead of his contemporaries in his political, philosophical, and aesthetic views.
[ "Language" ]
2004-10-28T20:41:39Z
2004-11-11T21:55:07Z
49,276,598
Jodie Speers
Jodie Speers (born 22 October 1982) is an Australian journalist, news and television presenter. Speers previously presented Seven Early News.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2016-01-31T09:29:31Z
2016-01-31T09:30:26Z
33,648,311
Edward Ford (physician)
Colonel Sir Edward Ford, (15 April 1902 – 27 August 1986) was an Australian soldier, academic and physician. He played an important role in the anti-malaria campaign in the South West Pacific Area during the Second World War, and in preventative medicine in Australia after the war, but is best known for his Bibliography of Australian Medicine. After the war, Ford wrote a thesis on malaria control in the South West Pacific, for which he was awarded his Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree by the University of Melbourne in 1946. He became Director of the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at the University of Sydney in 1946, and Professor of Preventive Medicine in 1947, concurrently holding these two positions until his 1968 retirement.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2011-11-05T19:58:20Z
2011-11-05T20:11:09Z
18,319,078
Exuperius of Bayeux
Saint Exuperius of Bayeux (Exupère), also known as Spirius (Spire, Soupir, Soupierre), is venerated as the first bishop of Bayeux. The date of his episcopate is given as 390 to 405, but local legends made him an immediate disciple of St. Clement, who lived during the 1st century, and that St. Regnobertus was Exuperius' disciple. This legend was found in breviaries of the 15th century. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, “the Bollandists and M. Jules Lair found little ground for this legend; it was only towards the middle of the fourth century that St. Exuperius founded the See of Bayeux; after him the priest St. Reverendus worked to spread Christianity in these parts.” As Henry Wace writes, “this is only an instance of the tendency of the Gallic churches to claim an apostolic or subapostolic origin.”.
[ "History" ]
2008-07-06T21:57:19Z
2008-07-06T22:08:51Z
7,293,555
Cynthia Tse Kimberlin
Cynthia Tse Kimberlin (born Cynthia Mei-Ling Tse in Ganado, Arizona, United States; Chinese name: 謝美玲; pinyin: Xiè Měilíng; Cantonese: Tse6 Mei5ling4) is an American ethnomusicologist. She is the executive director and publisher of the Music Research Institute and MRI Press, based in Point Richmond, California. Her primary area of expertise is the music of Africa, in particular Ethiopia and Eritrea.
[ "People" ]
2006-10-05T00:09:17Z
2006-10-05T00:10:01Z
35,872,981
Horses of God
Horses of God (French: Les chevaux de Dieu, Arabic: يا خيل الله, translit. Ya khayl Allah) is 2012 Moroccan drama film about the 2003 Casablanca bombings. It was directed by Nabil Ayouch, and based on the novel The Stars of Sidi Moumen by Moroccan writer Mahi Binebine. The film won several awards, and was Morocco's submission for the 85th Academy Awards (held in February 2013).
[ "Nature" ]
2012-05-19T17:34:38Z
2012-05-27T09:07:57Z
9,971,445
Republika (Indonesian newspaper)
Republika was an Indonesian national daily newspaper. The newspaper was known, and described itself, as a publication for the Muslim community. The paper ceased publication in December 2022 and transitioned to online.
[ "Internet" ]
2007-03-10T09:38:00Z
2007-03-10T09:41:56Z
4,684,094
Wang Rong (Jin dynasty)
Wang Rong (234 – 11 July 305), courtesy name Junchong (濬冲), nickname A Rong (阿戎) was a Chinese military general, poet, and politician of the Western Jin dynasty. He was also one of the Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2006-04-09T12:37:57Z
2006-04-09T12:38:31Z
3,131,023
Ernie Dingo
Ernest Ashley Dingo AM (born 31 July 1956) is an Indigenous Australian actor, television presenter and comedian, originating from the Yamatji people of the Murchison region of Western Australia. He is a designated Australian National Living Treasure.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2004-10-31T11:03:10Z
2004-10-31T11:14:13Z
8,214,496
Bruce Paige
Bruce Paige (born 10 November 1948) is a former newsreader in Brisbane, Australia. He previously presented Nine Gold Coast News alongside Eva Milic. He previously co-presented Nine News Queensland alongside Melissa Downes, having paired with Jillian Whiting and Heather Foord in the past.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2006-12-01T08:02:02Z
2006-12-01T08:31:26Z
1,676,483
Intentia
Intentia was a software company founded in 1984 that provided applications such as customer relationship management, supply chain management and asset management. Intentia was a public company traded on the Stockholm Stock Exchange (XSSE) under the symbol INT B. In April 2006, Lawson Software and Intentia merged to form the new LAWSON.
[ "Technology" ]
2005-04-01T00:07:36Z
2005-04-01T00:08:28Z
46,185,013
Demand controlled ventilation
Demand controlled ventilation (DCV) is a feedback control method to maintain indoor air quality that automatically adjusts the ventilation rate provided to a space in response to changes in conditions such as occupant number or indoor pollutant concentration. The most common indoor pollutants monitored in DCV systems are carbon dioxide and humidity. This control strategy is mainly intended to reduce the energy used by heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems compared to those of buildings that use open-loop controls with constant ventilation rates.
[ "Engineering" ]
2008-01-22T03:23:20Z
2012-10-16T13:45:14Z
113,167
Israel Shahak
Israel Shahak (Hebrew: ישראל שחק; born Israel Himmelstaub, 28 April 1933 – 2 July 2001) was an Israeli professor of organic chemistry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, a Holocaust survivor, an intellectual of liberal political bent, and a civil-rights advocate and activist on behalf of both Jews and Gentiles (non-Jews). For twenty years, he headed the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights (1970–90) and was a public critic of the policies of the governments of Israel. As a public intellectual, Shahak's works about Judaism proved controversial, especially the book Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years (1994).
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2002-10-19T06:25:29Z
2002-10-19T06:27:43Z
50,501,468
Steven Mnuchin
Steven Terner Mnuchin ( mə-NOO-shin; born December 21, 1962) is an American investment banker and film producer who served as the 77th United States secretary of the treasury as part of the Cabinet of Donald Trump from 2017 to 2021. Serving for nearly a full presidential term, Mnuchin was one of the few high-profile members of Trump's cabinet whom the president did not dismiss. Mnuchin was born in New York City. Upon graduating from Yale University in 1985, Mnuchin joined the investment bank Goldman Sachs where his father, Robert Mnuchin, was a general partner. Mnuchin worked at Goldman Sachs for 17 years, eventually becoming its chief information officer.
[ "Economy" ]
2016-05-10T15:18:45Z
2016-05-11T01:18:05Z
24,327,608
Jalalzai
Jalalzai is a Pashtun Afghan tribe settled in Afghanistan and khyber pakhtunkhwa, Pashtunistan. It is a sub-division of the bahlulzai sub-tribe of Mahsud.
[ "Language" ]
2009-09-13T09:32:11Z
2009-09-13T09:35:38Z
50,322,566
Karthi Gnanasegaram
Karthi Gnanasegaram is a British television and radio presenter working for the BBC, Amazon Prime Video, Classic FM, the Royal Opera House and Premier League Productions. Since 2011 she has been a regular presenter on the BBC for sports programmes and on BBC One's BBC News at Ten, BBC Breakfast, BBC Radio 5 Live, The Chris Evans Breakfast Show and Today. Since 2017 she has been a presenter for Classic FM. She is also a presenter for Amazon Prime Video's tennis and football coverage and Premier League Productions.
[ "Internet" ]
2016-04-25T20:04:24Z
2016-04-25T20:05:21Z
4,345,275
Eve
Eve is a figure in the Book of Genesis in the Hebrew Bible. According to the origin story of the Abrahamic religions, she was the first woman. Eve is known also as Adam's wife. According to the second chapter of Genesis, Eve was created by God (Yahweh) by taking her from the rib of Adam, to be Adam's companion. Adam is charged with guarding and keeping the garden before her creation; she is not present when God commands Adam not to eat the forbidden fruit – although it is clear that she was aware of the command.
[ "Universe" ]
2005-07-13T02:25:02Z
2005-07-13T02:26:22Z
71,927,198
Shakarimi
Shakarimi (Persian: شاکرمی) is a Persian language surname. Notable people with the surname include: Jahanshir Shakarami, Iranian entomologist Masoud Shakarami (1986), Iranian actor Nika Shakarami (2005–2022), Iranian teenage protester who participated in Iran's 2022 nationwide protests
[ "Language" ]
2022-10-05T15:46:35Z
2022-10-17T21:35:44Z
784,830
Chiller
A chiller is a machine that removes heat from a liquid coolant via a vapor-compression, adsorption refrigeration, or absorption refrigeration cycles. This liquid can then be circulated through a heat exchanger to cool equipment, or another process stream (such as air or process water). As a necessary by-product, refrigeration creates waste heat that must be exhausted to ambience, or for greater efficiency, recovered for heating purposes. Vapor compression chillers may use any of a number of different types of compressors. Most common today are the hermetic scroll, semi-hermetic screw, or centrifugal compressors.
[ "Engineering" ]
2004-07-05T21:21:28Z
2004-07-12T21:52:47Z
77,299,827
Tripura Electricity Regulatory Commission
Tripura Electricity Regulatory Commission (TERC) is a governing body to control certain regulatory and safety functions related to the power sector in the Tripura. It was incorporated under the Electricity Regulatory Commission Act, 1998.
[ "Energy" ]
2024-07-06T18:50:54Z
2024-07-06T18:52:27Z
2,400,606
Minibar
A minibar is a small refrigerator, typically an absorption refrigerator, in a hotel room or cruise ship stateroom. The hotel staff fill it with drinks and snacks for the guest to purchase during their stay. It is stocked with a precise inventory of goods, with a price list. The guest is charged for goods consumed when checking out of the hotel. Some newer minibars use infrared or other automated methods of recording purchases.
[ "Engineering" ]
2005-08-07T18:48:40Z
2005-09-24T15:17:17Z
49,064,258
Robert Kudicke
Heinrich Robert Hellmuth Kudicke (born 12 December 1876 in Preußisch Eylau, Province of Prussia, died 8 May 1961) was a German physician, epidemiologist and one of the leading experts on tropical diseases in his lifetime. He worked in German East Africa and China for several years. A long-time collaborator of Nobel laureate Robert Koch, he is especially known for his work with African trypanosomiasis or sleeping sickness in the early 20th century. As director of the State Institute of Hygiene in German occupied Warsaw in 1941, he tested a new Typhus vaccine on Jewish residents of the Warsaw ghetto, with ensuing adverse effects and deaths. During the early Cold War era, he worked in several developing countries in connection with medical development aid programmes.
[ "Education" ]
2016-01-11T04:20:56Z
2016-01-11T04:21:17Z
32,253,721
Mohamed Morsi
Mohamed Mohamed Morsi Eissa al-Ayyat (; Arabic: محمد محمد مرسي عيسى العياط IPA: [mæˈħæmmæd ˈmoɾsi ˈʕiːsæ (ʔe)l.ʕɑjˈjɑːtˤ]; 8 August 1951 – 17 June 2019) was an Egyptian politician, engineer, and professor who was the fifth president of Egypt, from 2012 to 2013, when General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi removed him from office in a coup d'état after protests in June. An Islamist affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood organization, Morsi led the Freedom and Justice Party from 2011 to 2012. Morsi was born in El Adwah, Sharqia Governorate, before studying metallurgical engineering at Cairo University and then materials science at the University of Southern California. He became an associate professor at California State University, Northridge, from 1982 to 1985 before returning to Egypt to teach at Zagazig University. Associating with the Muslim Brotherhood, which was then barred from office under President Hosni Mubarak, Morsi stood as an independent candidate for the 2000 parliamentary election.
[ "People" ]
2011-06-29T18:55:20Z
2011-06-29T21:18:22Z
8,312,288
Wanstead House
Wanstead House was a mansion built to replace the earlier Wanstead Hall. It was commissioned in 1715, completed in 1722 and demolished in 1825. Its gardens now form the municipal Wanstead Park in the London Borough of Redbridge.
[ "Entities" ]
2006-12-07T10:06:45Z
2007-04-03T15:27:20Z
19,594,957
Atlantic National Bank (New York City)
Atlantic National Bank was a bank located at 17 Nassau Street in lower Manhattan in New York. It was organized in 1853 as a state institution. It became a national bank after legislation authorizing such institutions was voted on by the United States Congress. It was selected by the Erie Canal Board as a depository of its canal tolls in March 1856. The bank became insolvent in April 1873.
[ "Economy" ]
2008-10-03T19:26:25Z
2008-10-03T19:26:49Z
3,294,297
Forster Fitzgerald Arbuthnot
Forster Fitzgerald Arbuthnot (21 May 1833 – 25 May 1901) was a notable British Orientalist and translator.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2005-12-01T19:39:41Z
2005-12-01T19:40:43Z
36,158,275
Sir John Austen, 2nd Baronet
Sir John Austen, 2nd Baronet (c. 1640 – 1699) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1667 and 1699. Austen was the son of Sir Robert Austen, 1st Baronet of Hall Place, Bexley and his wife Anne Muns, daughter of Thomas Muns, of Otteridge in Bersted, Kent, and of London. He was admitted to Gray's Inn on 23 Oct. 1657. He succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father on 30 October 1666. He had acquired the estate of Stagenhoe, Hertfordshire though his marriage as well as inheriting Hall Place, Bexley.
[ "Government" ]
2012-06-16T12:14:56Z
2012-06-18T18:53:38Z
60,734,655
Chōnen
Fujiwara no Chōnen (25 February 938 – 25 April 1016) was a Japanese Buddhist monk and traveller.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2019-05-11T14:59:35Z
2019-05-11T15:02:26Z
73,185,287
Yoel Moshe Salomon
Yoel Moshe Salomon (or Joel Moses Salomon; Hebrew: יואל משה סלומון; 8 March 1838 – 22 October 1912) was a meshulach (Jewish diaspora emissary), entrepreneur and farmer in Ottoman Palestine. He was one of the co-founders of HaLevanon, the first Hebrew language newspaper printed in Palestine. He co-founded numerous Jewish settlements there, including Nahalat Shiv'a, Petah Tikva and Yehud.
[ "Language" ]
2023-03-02T11:26:46Z
2023-03-02T11:33:57Z
44,527,476
Charles W. Wason
Charles W. Wason (1854–1918) was an engineer, Orientalist, philanthropist and bibliophile. Wason was born on April 20, 1854, in Cleveland. His father was a banker. After schooling at the Guildford Academy, he studied for a degree in mechanical engineering at Cornell University from 1872 to 1876, returning to Cleveland after his graduation to take a job with the East Cleveland Railway Company. He rose through the ranks to eventually become president of the Cleveland, Painesville & Eastern Railway Company, as well as running other utility companies.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2014-11-27T13:57:37Z
2014-11-27T14:00:50Z
18,958,074
Closure (business)
Business closure is the term used to refer to when a business ceases operations. While the term is often associated with the failure of a commercial enterprise, businesses may also close because the owners have sold it at a higher value than what they invested in it. Entrepreneurs may close a business for personal reasons, such as retirement or moving into full-time employment themselves.
[ "Business" ]
2008-08-21T03:06:38Z
2008-08-21T03:09:43Z
5,181,440
Operation 40
Operation 40 was the code name for a Central Intelligence Agency-sponsored counterintelligence group composed of Cuban exiles. The group was formed to seize control of the Cuban government after the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Operation 40 continued to operate unofficially until disbanded in 1970 due to allegations that an aircraft that was carrying cocaine and heroin in support of the group crashed in California. It was approved by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in March 1960, after the January 1959 Cuban Revolution, and was presided over by Vice President Richard Nixon.
[ "Law" ]
2006-05-17T17:11:20Z
2006-05-17T17:12:34Z
28,916,183
The Scarlet Spear
The Scarlet Spear is a 1954 British drama film directed by George P. Breakston and starring John Bentley and Martha Hyer. The cast consisted mostly of Kenyan actors. The plot concerns a British District Officer who tries to prevent a ritual killing.
[ "Nature" ]
2010-09-22T15:28:25Z
2010-09-22T15:28:42Z
4,595,718
The Company (Littell novel)
The Company: A Novel of the CIA is an American novel written by Robert Littell and published by The Overlook Press in 2002. The plot interweaves the professional lives of both historical and fictional characters in the field of international espionage between June 1950 and August 1995. The book was a New York Times bestseller and received wide critical acclaim. It is the basis of a 2007 miniseries starring Michael Keaton, Chris O'Donnell, and Alfred Molina.
[ "Information", "Law" ]
2006-04-01T22:50:22Z
2006-04-18T17:20:32Z
12,451
Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point
A Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP), sometimes referred to as a golden spike, is an internationally agreed upon reference point on a stratigraphic section which defines the lower boundary of a stage on the geologic time scale. The effort to define GSSPs is conducted by the International Commission on Stratigraphy, a part of the International Union of Geological Sciences. Most, but not all, GSSPs are based on paleontological changes. Hence GSSPs are usually described in terms of transitions between different faunal stages, though far more faunal stages have been described than GSSPs. The GSSP definition effort commenced in 1977.
[ "Nature" ]
2001-08-16T21:29:06Z
2002-02-25T15:43:11Z
66,242,754
Plaza Hotel (Columbus, Ohio)
The Plaza Hotel was a building in the King-Lincoln Bronzeville neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. It was built c. 1895 and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. The building was built in a commercial Italianate style, with a brick exterior and three stories. The building was seven bays wide and eleven deep. The hotel faced Long St., with a distinctive facade including carved stone lintels on its upper-floor windows and a decorative metal cornice with a central gable.
[ "Entities" ]
2020-12-30T21:07:13Z
2020-12-30T21:07:58Z
5,888,466
Path 66
California Oregon Intertie (COI), identified as Path 66 by Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC), is a corridor of three roughly parallel 500 kV alternating current power lines connecting the electric grids of Oregon and California. Their combined power transmission capacity is 4800 MW. Two of the power lines run from Malin Substation (42°0′20.7″N 121°18′59.7″W) southeast of Klamath Falls, Oregon to Round Mountain Substation northeast of Redding, California. One of them is owned by Western Area Power Administration, with the other owned by Pacific Gas and Electric and PacifiCorp jointly. These lines are a part of Pacific AC Intertie and were completed in the 1960s.
[ "Energy" ]
2006-07-09T02:48:57Z
2006-07-09T02:49:45Z
52,409,858
Michael Hodgins (Bones)
This is a list of fictional characters in the American television series Bones. The article deals with the series' main, recurring, and minor characters. The series' main characters consists of the fictional Jeffersonian Institute's forensic anthropology department staff members Dr. Temperance Brennan, Dr. Camille Saroyan, Angela Montenegro, Dr. Jack Hodgins, and interns Zack Addy, Clark Edison, Wendall Bray, Arastoo Vaziri, Daisy Wick, and Vincent Nigel-Murray; FBI agents Seeley Booth, Dr. Lance Sweets, and James Aubrey; and Justice Department prosecutor Caroline Julian.
[ "Information" ]
2016-11-28T14:40:57Z
2016-11-28T14:41:31Z
30,797,007
Marek Reichman
Marek Paul Reichman (born 1966) is a British industrial designer. He serves as Chief Creative Officer and studio head at Aston Martin.
[ "Engineering" ]
2011-02-08T20:53:09Z
2011-02-08T21:41:30Z
46,760,847
François Brigneau
François Brigneau (French pronunciation: [fʁɑ̃swa bʁiɲo]; 30 April 1919 – 9 April 2012) was a French far-right journalist and author who was a leading figure in Ordre Nouveau, the National Front and the Party of New Forces.
[ "Politics" ]
2015-05-21T01:07:37Z
2015-05-21T01:09:15Z
174,363
Public trust
The concept of public trust relates back to the origins of democratic government and its seminal idea that within the public lies the true power and future of a society; therefore, whatever trust citizens place in its officials must be respected. One of the reasons that bribery is regarded as a notorious evil is that it contributes to a culture of political corruption in which public trust is eroded. Other issues related to political corruption or betrayal of public trust are lobbying, special interest groups and the public cartel.
[ "Government" ]
2003-01-25T19:24:21Z
2003-09-28T15:44:10Z
32,424,165
Bangalore Fashion Week
Bangalore Fashion Week (BFW) is a bi-annual fashion event held in Bangalore, India. Established in 2009, The name Bangalore Fashion Week follows the international practice of christening the fashion week event after the name of the city in which it is being held. The participation to Bangalore Fashion Week is ‘by invitation only’ and each participating designer has to undergo a stringent jury which selects the designer on the basis of the ingenuity of his design. Bangalore fashion week is one of the biggest fashion events in India the event is managed by Dream Merchants
[ "Concepts" ]
2011-07-15T17:50:52Z
2011-07-15T17:56:30Z
15,219,857
English Electric Leo Marconi
The LEO (Lyons Electronic Office) was a series of early computer systems created by J. Lyons and Co. The first in the series, the LEO I, was the first computer used for commercial business applications. The prototype LEO I was modelled closely on the Cambridge EDSAC. Its construction was overseen by Oliver Standingford, Raymond Thompson and David Caminer of J. Lyons and Co. LEO I ran its first business application in 1951. In 1954 Lyons formed LEO Computers Ltd to market LEO I and its successors LEO II and LEO III to other companies.
[ "Technology" ]
2008-01-14T21:57:26Z
2009-07-16T21:18:57Z
46,304,423
Fred Schmertz
Fred Schmertz (November 10, 1888 – March 25, 1976) was a founder member of the Millrose Athletic Association in 1908 and the Millrose Games in 1914. For the latter, he was meet director between 1934 and 1974. Schmertz acted as assistant meet director for the Millrose Games from 1915 before acting as director. He was succeeded in the role of director by his son, Howard Schmertz. The Millrose Games has become one of the world's foremost international indoor track and field meets.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2015-04-03T10:33:22Z
2015-04-05T18:44:42Z
2,833,522
DHL International Aviation ME
DHL International Aviation ME, legally incorporated as DHL Aviation EEMEA B.S.C. (C) and sometimes branded as SNAS/DHL) is a cargo airline based in Bahrain. It employs 265 workers to dispatch, fly and maintain a fleet of Boeing 767 freighters operating under a Bahraini AOC. DHL International is the central platform for DHL Air Network Operations in the Middle East. It is wholly owned by Deutsche Post and operates the group's DHL-branded parcel and express services in the Middle East and North Africa as part of DHL Aviation.
[ "Business" ]
2005-10-04T18:55:27Z
2005-11-03T03:11:04Z
20,651,652
Bashford Manor Stable
Bashford Manor Stable was an American Thoroughbred racing and breeding operation in Louisville, Kentucky owned by George James Long. In 1874 James Bennett Wilder built a home on farm acreage he called Bashford Manor. In 1887 George Long purchased Bashford Manor and developed it into a leading Thoroughbred horse farm which bred three Kentucky Derby winners. To stock his new breeding operation. George Long acquired horses from the Erdenheim Stud of Norman W. Kittson.
[ "Entities" ]
2008-12-11T23:42:36Z
2008-12-12T00:03:04Z
3,770,573
CNN-News18
CNN News18 (also known as Cable News Network News18 and originally CNN IBN) is an Indian English-language news television channel founded by Raghav Bahl based in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is currently co-owned by Network18 Group and Warner Bros. Discovery. CNN provides international coverage for the channel, while Indian Broadcasting Network concentrates on Indian and local reports. In May 2014, Reliance Industries announced it would be taking over Network18 Group.
[ "Internet" ]
2006-01-19T07:28:05Z
2006-02-06T04:47:27Z
2,775,413
Tutankhamun and the Daughter of Ra
Tutankhamun and the Daughter of Ra is a novel written by Moyra Caldecott in 1989. It was first published in 1990 as Daughter of Ra in paperback by Arrow Books Limited (ISBN 0-09-959870-1).
[ "Nature" ]
2005-09-27T12:36:36Z
2005-09-27T12:41:42Z
44,023,968
Antony Edwards-Stuart
Sir Antony James Cobham Edwards-Stuart (born 2 November 1946) is a retired judge of the High Court of England and Wales.
[ "Government" ]
2014-10-04T18:31:57Z
2016-01-04T17:47:21Z
56,738,504
Wuling Rongguang
The Wuling Rongguang is a five-door, five- to eight-seater microvan produced by SAIC-GM-Wuling.
[ "Business" ]
2018-03-03T14:12:07Z
2018-03-03T18:37:05Z
60,040,792
Binyamin Amirà
Binyamin A. Amirà (Hebrew: בנימין אמירה; 3 June 1896 – 20 January 1968) was an Israeli mathematician.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2019-02-22T00:24:27Z
2019-02-22T00:28:20Z
77,626,659
Emmanuel Fouquart
Emmanuel Fouquart (born July 30, 1966, in Maubeuge) is a French politician of the National Rally who has represented Bouches-du-Rhône's 13th constituency in the French National Assembly since 2024.
[ "Politics" ]
2024-08-15T00:30:04Z
2024-08-15T01:20:38Z