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18,334,058 | Peeterman Artois | Peeterman Artois was a wheat-based 4% ABV global lager first brewed in Belgium. It is brewed by InBev. It was named after St. Peeter, the patron saint of Leuven in Belgium where the Artois brewery is based. It was launched alongside Beck's Vier as a mid-strength beer to capitalise on the trend towards weaker strength lagers, as opposed to Stella Artois at 5.2% and standard Beck's at 5%. In December 2008, InBev announced it would withdraw Peeterman Artois (and Eiken Artois) in favour of a 4% version of Stella Artois. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2008-07-07T21:34:20Z | 2008-07-07T21:37:03Z |
18,720 | Lodovico Ferrari | Lodovico de Ferrari (2 February 1522 – 5 October 1565) was an Italian mathematician best known today for solving the quartic equation. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2002-01-22T00:37:45Z | 2002-01-22T15:26:08Z |
1,120,926 | River city | River city is the generic name used to describe any city located on a river. River City may also refer to: | [
"Science"
] | 2004-10-31T17:43:24Z | 2004-11-09T21:01:03Z |
61,024,619 | Naparbier | Naparbier is a Spanish microbrewery located near Pamplona (Navarra). It was founded in 2009 in Navarra, Spain by Juan Rodríguez, Josu Tañine, Txerra Aiastui and José Javier Rodríguez. They knew each other from their previous job in their former company, but after a downsizing plan they lost their jobs. After that, and with the money they got from their unemployment insurance, they decided to found Naparbier as a brewing cooperative. In their beginnings, they were mentored by a German brewmaster called Alex Schmid, who introduced Juan to the homebrewing world and later helped them to set up their factory. | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2019-06-12T15:49:59Z | 2019-06-12T15:52:50Z |
32,058,225 | Lateef Adegbite | Lateef Adegbite (20 March 1933 – 28 September 2012) was a lawyer who became Attorney General of the Western Region of Nigeria, and who later became Secretary-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs. | [
"People"
] | 2011-06-12T12:32:30Z | 2011-06-12T12:39:21Z |
317,325 | Shen Buhai | Shen Buhai (Chinese: 申不害; c. 400 BC – c. 337 BC) was a Chinese essayist, philosopher, and politician. The Shiji records that he served as Chancellor of the Han state under Marquis Zhao of Han for fifteen years, from 351 BC or 354 to his supposed death in 337 BC. He died of natural causes while in office. A contemporary of syncretist Shi Jiao and "Legalist" Shang Yang, he was born in the State of Zheng, and was likely a minor official there. After Han conquered Zheng in 375 BC, he rose up in the ranks of the Han officialdom, dividing up its territories and successfully reforming it. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2003-09-13T06:24:00Z | 2003-10-20T22:00:59Z |
35,575,731 | Carver Theater (Washington, D.C.) | The Carver Theater is a former movie theater located in the Anacostia neighborhood of Washington, D.C. in the United States. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2012-04-21T20:53:29Z | 2012-04-21T20:53:45Z |
24,090,673 | Wordsmith (TV series) | Wordsmith is a thirty-part instructional television series about the English language. It is meant to help students expand their vocabulary through analyzing the parts of English words. It is meant for classroom use, either through direct broadcast or through videotapes recorded from the airings by teachers or other school district personnel. The host is Bob Kupa'a Smith. In 2020, archived episodes were posted for public viewing on Indiana University's Libraries Moving Image Archive. | [
"Education"
] | 2009-08-24T00:45:23Z | 2009-08-24T00:49:11Z |
37,641,049 | Chris Grigg | Christopher Montague Grigg (born 6 July 1959) is a British businessman. He was formerly the chief executive of The British Land Company plc, a British property development and investment company. | [
"Economy"
] | 2012-11-14T14:27:11Z | 2012-11-14T14:31:44Z |
56,846,772 | Le Chéile Schools Trust | The Le Chéile Schools Trust is a charitable trust which manages around 60 schools in Ireland on behalf of fifteen Roman Catholic religious congregations. | [
"Health"
] | 2018-03-15T14:18:06Z | 2018-03-15T14:25:58Z |
22,646,708 | St. Donatian's Cathedral | St. Donatian's Cathedral (Dutch: Sint-Donaaskathedraal) was a Roman Catholic cathedral in Bruges, Belgium. Located on the Burg, one of the main squares in the city, it was the largest church in Bruges. The cathedral was destroyed in 1799 in the wake of the dissolution of the Diocese of Bruges during the aftermath of the French Revolution. | [
"Religion"
] | 2009-05-01T23:02:42Z | 2009-05-02T21:52:12Z |
56,780,690 | Stephen D. Lebovitz | Stephen D. Lebovitz (born c. 1962) is an American businessman. He serves as the chief executive officer and president of CBL & Associates Properties. | [
"Economy"
] | 2018-03-08T02:16:42Z | 2018-03-08T02:24:10Z |
39,837,408 | Djoemala | Ismail Djoemala (also credited Rd Djoemala; Perfected Spelling: Ismail Jumala; 1915/18 – 10 June 1992) was an Indonesian actor active in the 1940s. He was often cast alongside Roekiah as her romantic interest. | [
"Concepts"
] | 2013-07-02T07:13:10Z | 2013-07-02T07:29:43Z |
65,532,633 | Grinzing Parish Church | The Grinzing Parish Church is the Roman Catholic parish church of Grinzing in the 19th district of Döbling, western Vienna, Austria. It is located at Himmelstraße 25 in the centre of Grinzing. It is consecrated to the Holy Cross and belongs to the city deanery 19 of the Vicariate Vienna City of the Archdiocese of Vienna. The building is listed as a cultural property. | [
"Religion"
] | 2020-10-08T20:34:30Z | 2020-10-08T20:54:40Z |
17,936,045 | Bob Dyer | Robert Neal Dyer OBE (22 May 1909 – 9 January 1984) was a Gold Logie-award-winning American-born vaudeville entertainer and singer, radio and television personality, and radio and television quiz show host who made his name in Australia. Dyer is best known for the long-running radio and then television quiz show, Pick a Box. At the height of his radio career, Dyer and his friend and rival, Jack Davey, were regarded as Australia's top quiz comperes. Bob and his wife, Dolly, were probably, after Sir Robert and Dame Pattie Menzies, the most recognised double act in Australia in the 1960s. Bob and Dolly's main interest besides performing was big-game fishing and, between them, they broke some 200 world and Australian fishing records. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2008-06-14T07:55:04Z | 2008-06-14T08:10:38Z |
3,640,173 | Johann Baptist Cysat | Johann Baptist Cysat (Latinized as Cysatus; in French, Jean-Baptiste Cysat) (c. 1587 – March 17, 1657) was a Swiss Jesuit mathematician and astronomer, after whom the lunar crater Cysatus is named. He was born in Lucerne, as the eighth of 14 children, to cartographer, historian and folklorist Renward Cysat (1545–1614). In 1604, Cysat joined the Jesuits and became a theology student in March 1611 in Ingolstadt. There he met Christoph Scheiner, whom he assisted in the latter’s observation of sunspots, whose discovery would later become a matter of dispute between Galileo and Scheiner. In 1618, Cysat was named professor of mathematics at the University of Ingolstadt, succeeding Scheiner in this position, thereby allowing him to concern himself further with astronomical problems. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2006-01-06T20:58:45Z | 2006-01-06T21:00:49Z |
20,240,385 | Feedback loop (email) | A feedback loop (FBL), sometimes called a complaint feedback loop, is an inter-organizational form of feedback by which a mailbox provider (MP) forwards the complaints originating from their users to the sender's organizations. MPs can receive users' complaints by placing report spam buttons on their webmail pages, or in their email client, or via help desks. The message sender's organization, often an email service provider, has to come to an agreement with each MP from which they want to collect users' complaints. Feedback loops are one of the ways for reporting spam. Whether and how to provide an FBL is a choice of the MP. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2008-11-16T18:25:35Z | 2008-11-17T19:12:50Z |
70,187,784 | Karma News | The Karma News is an Indian digital news platform based in Kerala. It was founded by Vince Mathew in 2014. Apart from Kerala, it also has bureaus in the states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. It operates under the aegis of The Karma Media Private Limited, an Indian company registered under the Companies Act 2013. | [
"Internet"
] | 2022-02-28T07:35:30Z | 2022-02-28T07:37:16Z |
64,371,042 | Firing Point | Firing Point (stylized as Tom Clancy Firing Point, Tom Clancy: Firing Point, or Tom Clancy's Firing Point in the United Kingdom) is a techno-thriller novel, written by Mike Maden and released on June 9, 2020. It is his fourth and final book in the Jack Ryan Jr. series, which is part of the overall Tom Clancy universe. In the novel, Ryan investigates an old friend's death while vacationing in Barcelona, Spain. It debuted at number three on the New York Times bestseller list. | [
"Information",
"Law"
] | 2020-06-24T21:45:02Z | 2020-06-24T21:55:11Z |
36,047,835 | Orthology (language) | Orthology is the study of linguistic norms. The word comes from Greek ortho- ("correct") and -logy ("science of"). This science is a place where psychology, philosophy, linguistics and other fields of learning come together. The most noted use of orthology is for the selection of words for the language of Basic English by the Orthological Institute. The book The Meaning of Meaning, by C.K. | [
"Language"
] | 2012-06-05T15:28:14Z | 2012-06-05T15:40:04Z |
3,782,376 | Sophie Falkiner | Sophie Falkiner (born 20 March 1973, in Melbourne) is an Australian television presenter. Sophie has previously presented an entertainment news series Confidential on Fox8. She was also a presenter on The Great Outdoors and letter-turner on Wheel of Fortune with Rob Elliott and Steve Oemcke. Falkiner's big break on Wheel of Fortune came after completing a Bachelor of Media Studies (majoring in journalism) at Macquarie University. In addition to hosting Sydney Weekender and Luxury Escapes, she also hosted Crown Australian Celebrity Poker Challenge. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2006-01-20T09:33:24Z | 2006-01-20T09:48:41Z |
68,882,274 | Marius Arion Nilsen | Marius Arion Nilsen (born 14 August 1984) is a Norwegian politician for the Progress Party. He has been a member of the Storting since 2021. | [
"Politics"
] | 2021-10-04T00:27:50Z | 2021-10-07T01:14:02Z |
33,625,651 | List of city nicknames in New Hampshire | This partial list of city nicknames in New Hampshire compiles the aliases, sobriquets and slogans that cities and towns in New Hampshire are known by (or have been known by historically), officially and unofficially, to municipal governments, local people, outsiders or their tourism boards or chambers of commerce. City nicknames can help in establishing a civic identity, helping outsiders recognize a community or attracting people to a community because of its nickname; promote civic pride; and build community unity. Nicknames and slogans that successfully create a new community "ideology or myth" are also believed to have economic value. Their economic value is difficult to measure, but there are anecdotal reports of cities that have achieved substantial economic benefits by "branding" themselves by adopting new slogans. Some unofficial nicknames are positive, while others are derisive. | [
"Science"
] | 2011-11-03T14:17:11Z | 2011-11-03T14:19:33Z |
68,420,423 | Mihakayama Kofun | The Mihakayama Kofun (御墓山古墳) is a Kofun period burial mound located between the Sanagu neighborhood of Iga, Mie in the Kansai region of Japan. The tumulus was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1921, with the area under protection expanded in 1970. With a total length of 188 meters, it is the largest kofun in Mie Prefecture. It is also known as the "Ohakayama Kofun", after an alternative pronunciation of the kanji in its name. | [
"Time"
] | 2021-08-07T05:55:08Z | 2023-10-23T23:00:25Z |
31,120,133 | OPENCities | OPENCities is a project initiated by British Council Spain, to help cities to become more open and competitive. OPENCities demonstrates how international populations contribute to cities long term economic success and advocates for openness as a way forward for cities willing to play an international role. It has developed a tool to benchmark and analyse openness (the OPENCities Monitor). Overall, the project's goal is to highlight the importance of openness for cities' international success and competitiveness. | [
"Education"
] | 2011-03-08T09:06:39Z | 2011-03-08T09:25:01Z |
15,944,934 | Bataclan (theatre) | The Bataclan (French pronunciation: [bataklɑ̃]) is a theatre located at 50 Boulevard Voltaire in the 11th arrondissement of Paris, France. Designed in 1864 by the architect Charles Duval, its name refers to Ba-ta-clan, an operetta by Jacques Offenbach. Since the early 1970s, it has been a venue for rock music. On 13 November 2015, 90 people were killed in a coordinated terrorist attack in the theatre. | [
"Military"
] | 2008-02-25T11:34:03Z | 2008-02-25T11:35:42Z |
10,109,569 | Biatec | Biatec was the name of a person, presumably a king, who appeared on the Celtic coins minted by the Boii in Bratislava (the capital of Slovakia) in the 1st century BC. The word Biatec (or Biatex) is also used as the name of those coins. In the literature, they are also sometimes referred to as "hexadrachms of the Bratislava type". Biatecs, in fact hexadrachms and tetradrachms made of high quality silver and gold, bear inscriptions in capital Latin letters. Among 14 different inscriptions (for example NONNOS, DEVIL, BUSU, BUSSUMARUS, TITTO), BIATEC appears most frequently. | [
"History"
] | 2007-03-17T19:39:33Z | 2007-03-17T19:44:23Z |
26,866,441 | Abraham Schalit | Abraham Haim Schalit (Hebrew: אברהם שליט) (1898 – 21 August 1979) was an Israeli historian and a scholar of the Second Temple period. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2010-04-07T17:51:59Z | 2010-06-01T01:34:05Z |
2,325,750 | Dieter Zetsche | Dieter Zetsche (German pronunciation: [ˌdiːtɐ ˈtsɛtʃə]; born 5 May 1953) is a German engineer and business executive. He serves as the chairman of TUI AG. Zetsche was the chairman of the board of management at Daimler AG and the head of Mercedes-Benz until 22 May 2019, a position he held since 2006. Additionally, he had been a member of Daimler's board since 1998. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2005-07-28T09:13:25Z | 2005-07-28T09:14:01Z |
39,447,618 | Cyril Abiteboul | Cyril François Roger Abiteboul (born 14 October 1977) is a French motor racing engineer and manager. He has served as the team principal of Hyundai Motorsport since 2023. From 2013 to 2014 he was the team principal of Caterham Formula One team, and was the managing director of the Renault F1 Team from 2014 to 2020. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2013-05-21T16:44:28Z | 2013-05-21T16:45:42Z |
57,181,170 | The Succubus (sculpture) | The Succubus is a bronze sculpture with a green and dark brown patina. It was originally conceived in 1889 by the French artist Auguste Rodin as part of a set of works showing sirens and Nereids. It later formed part of his state-commissioned monument to Victor Hugo. It is now in the Museo Soumaya in Mexico City. | [
"Universe"
] | 2018-04-20T14:50:17Z | 2018-04-20T14:51:21Z |
1,040,953 | Recuperator | A recuperator is a special purpose counter-flow energy recovery heat exchanger positioned within the supply and exhaust air streams of an air handling system, or in the exhaust gases of an industrial process, in order to recover the waste heat. Generally, they are used to extract heat from the exhaust and use it to preheat air entering the combustion system. In this way they use waste energy to heat the air, offsetting some of the fuel, and thereby improve the energy efficiency of the system as a whole. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2004-10-05T04:10:49Z | 2004-12-11T15:15:37Z |
14,962,444 | List of airport museums in the United States | This is a list of airport museums in the United States. These are museums that are located inside an airport terminal building, NOT those that are located simply at an airport. | [
"Lists"
] | 2007-12-31T01:37:10Z | 2007-12-31T01:38:02Z |
32,804,040 | Agency Seal Medal | The Agency Seal Medal (formerly Medallion) is awarded by the Central Intelligence Agency to non-Agency personnel, including U.S. Government employees and private citizens, who have made significant contributions to the Agency's intelligence efforts. | [
"Law"
] | 2011-08-19T23:57:23Z | 2011-08-20T03:56:43Z |
1,436,754 | Earth-Two | Earth-Two (also Earth 2) is a setting for stories (a "fictional universe") appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. First appearing in The Flash #123 (1961), Earth-Two was created to explain differences between the original Golden Age and then-current Silver Age versions of characters such as the Flash, and how the current (Earth-One) versions could appear in stories alongside earlier versions of the same character concepts. Earth-Two includes DC Golden Age heroes, including the Justice Society of America, whose careers began at the dawn of World War II, concurrently with their first appearances in comics. Earth-Two, along with the four other surviving Earths (Earth-One, Earth-Four, Earth-S, and Earth-X) of the DC Multiverse, were merged into one in the 1985 miniseries Crisis on Infinite Earths. | [
"Nature"
] | 2005-01-27T07:19:42Z | 2005-09-05T22:57:01Z |
14,315,013 | Saint Wenceslas Cathedral | Saint Wenceslas Cathedral (Czech: Katedrála svatého Václava) is a gothic cathedral at Wenceslas Square in Olomouc, in the Czech Republic, founded in 1107. The square was named after Saint Wenceslaus I, Duke of Bohemia on the thousandth anniversary of his death in 935. The cathedral is also named after him. The cathedral is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Olomouc. | [
"Religion"
] | 2007-11-19T13:01:37Z | 2007-11-19T13:05:55Z |
30,214,385 | Moshe Zilberg | Moshe Zilberg (Hebrew: משה זילברג) (1900–1975) was a leading Israeli jurist. | [
"Society",
"Culture"
] | 2010-12-27T23:55:55Z | 2010-12-27T23:56:08Z |
5,651,922 | Amator | Amator (in French) Amadour or Amatre was bishop of Auxerre from 388 until his death on 1 May 418 and venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church. Amator's feast day is celebrated on 1 May. | [
"History"
] | 2006-06-21T13:34:55Z | 2006-06-21T13:41:15Z |
56,944,766 | The Foreign Legion | The Foreign Legion is a 1928 American silent adventure film directed by Edward Sloman and starring Norman Kerry, Lewis Stone, and Mary Nolan. The film is based on the 1913 novel The Red Mirage by I.A.R. Wylie. It was one of several Foreign Legion-themed films produced in the wake of the successful 1926 film Beau Geste. The production cost around $250,000, but was the subject of diplomatic protests from French authorities due to its depiction of brutality. | [
"Nature"
] | 2018-03-26T07:18:18Z | 2018-03-26T07:20:13Z |
24,959,347 | The Cambridge School, Doha, Qatar | The Cambridge School (Arabic: مدرسة كامبردج الدوحة) (also known as TCS) is a private international school that is located in Doha, Qatar, the school provides an education based on the National Curriculum for England to students from Kindergarten to Year 13. The school prepares students for the IGCSE, AS and A Level, following the Cambridge International Examinations Board. The school has grown from just under 300 students seven years ago to almost over 1,500 students with over 60 different nationalities. Some of the teachers are from the United Kingdom, although most of them are from South Africa and India. The school is founded by Mohammed Taleb Mohammed Al Khouri and managed by the Taleb Group. | [
"Education"
] | 2009-11-04T12:54:27Z | 2009-11-07T17:40:30Z |
31,192,206 | Nicolas-François Canard | Nicolas-François Canard (French: [kanaʁ]; c. 1750 – 1833) was a French mathematician, philosopher and economist. He was one of the pioneers of applying mathematics to economic problems, foreshadowing the works of Antoine Augustin Cournot, William Stanley Jevons, and others. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2011-03-15T18:14:03Z | 2011-03-15T18:15:14Z |
14,657,813 | Steve Dunleavy | Stephen Francis Patrick Aloysius Dunleavy (21 January 1938 – 24 June 2019) was an Australian journalist based in the United States, best known as a reporter, columnist and editor for the New York Post from 1977 to 1986 and again from 1995 until his retirement in 2008. He was a lead reporter on the US tabloid television program A Current Affair in the 1980s and 1990s. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2007-12-11T12:26:47Z | 2007-12-11T14:39:48Z |
33,630,403 | Chen Jin (computer scientist) | Chen Jin (Chinese: 陈进; pinyin: Chén Jìn; born in 1968) is a Chinese computer scientist. Chen was born in Putian, Fujian, in 1968, along with a twin brother. He earned a bachelor's degree from Tongji University in Shanghai and in 1991, moved to the United States to study computer engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. In 1998, he earned a Ph.D. there while working at Motorola's Austin research center. Chen moved back to China in 2000 and worked at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. | [
"Education"
] | 2011-11-03T23:06:05Z | 2011-11-03T23:06:31Z |
28,662,765 | Iain Benson | Iain Tyrrell Benson (born 1955) is a legal philosopher and practising legal consultant. The main focus of his work in relation to law and society has been to examine some of the various meanings that underlie terms of common but confused usage. His work towards an understanding of secular and secularism has been cited by the Supreme Court of Canada and the Constitutional Court of South Africa. He has also given critical study to the terms pluralism, faith, believer, unbeliever, liberalism and accommodation and examined the implications for various legal and non-legal usages. Benson was a member of the draft committee for the South African Charter of Religious Rights and Freedoms, a document which sets out core aspects of citizenship and the rights and freedoms of religion and conscience in a constitutional democracy. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2010-09-01T15:34:01Z | 2010-09-01T16:11:04Z |
58,004,863 | National Time Service Center | The National Time Service Center (NTSC; Chinese: 国家授时中心) has the task of generating, maintaining and broadcasting standard time in China. It is located in Xi'an, Shaanxi, China. Its predecessor was the Shaanxi Astronomy Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which was established in 1966. In March 2001, the Observatory was renamed to National Time Service Center of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. NTSC includes short-wave (BPM) and long-wave (BPL) standard time and frequency radio stations. | [
"Knowledge",
"Time"
] | 2018-07-27T00:28:23Z | 2018-07-27T01:55:19Z |
34,745,240 | Missing (Adam-12) | Adam-12 (also known as The New Adam-12) is an American police procedural crime drama television series produced by Arthur L. Annecharico, Burton Armus, and John Whitman under The Arthur Company and Universal Television. It is a syndicated revival of the 1968–1975 series of the same name created by Robert A. Cinader and Jack Webb (both credited posthumously as series creators) and features the same premise with different characters and an updated setting, following Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers Matt Doyle and Gus Grant as they patrol Los Angeles in their police cruiser, assigned the call sign "1-Adam-12". The New Adam-12 stars Ethan Wayne and Peter Parros, and co-stars Miguel Fernandes, Alma Martinez, Linden Ashby, and Harri James, among others. The series ran over two seasons of 26 episodes each, and aired consecutively for 52 straight weeks, with the entire series airing over one full calendar year from September 24, 1990 to September 16, 1991. The New Adam-12 aired alongside The New Dragnet, another remake of a 1960s Jack Webb series by The Arthur Company that was implied to be set in the same fictional universe. | [
"Government"
] | 2012-02-15T05:59:20Z | 2013-04-02T03:40:35Z |
2,358,733 | City of Lakes | City of Lakes is a nickname for several places. It may refer to: | [
"Science"
] | 2005-08-02T02:23:36Z | 2006-05-01T21:37:18Z |
12,536,973 | Big bonneted bat | The big bonneted bat, or Dabbene's mastiff bat (Eumops dabbenei) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae, native to South America. It is named for a former conservator at the Buenos Aires National Museum. | [
"Communication"
] | 2007-07-30T22:53:25Z | 2008-03-08T01:53:25Z |
865,560 | Pac-Land | Pac-Land is a 1984 side-scrolling arcade platform game developed and released by Namco. It was distributed in North America by Bally Midway, and in Europe by Atari Games. Controlling Pac-Man, the player must make it to the end of each stage to return a lost fairy back to its home in Fairyland. Pac-Man will need to avoid obstacles, such as falling logs and water-spewing fire hydrants, alongside his enemies, the Ghost Gang. Eating large flashing Power Pellets will cause the ghosts to turn blue, allowing Pac-Man to eat them for points. | [
"Technology"
] | 2004-07-29T15:58:16Z | 2004-08-05T06:49:12Z |
56,438,423 | Faqiri | Faqiri (Persian: فقیری; adjective form of Fakir or Faqir (Arabic: فقیر), a Sufi Muslim ascetic) is a Dari surname. Faghiri is the romanization of its Persian equivalent. Notable people with the surname include:
Mohammad Nasim Faqiri (born 1958), Afghan politician and diplomat
Mohammad Nazar Faqiri (born 1955), Afghan politician
== References == | [
"Language"
] | 2018-01-29T09:55:32Z | 2018-01-29T09:58:34Z |
66,327,151 | Tai Tei Tong | Tai Tei Tong (Chinese: 大地塘) is a village of Mui Wo, on Lantau Island, Hong Kong. | [
"Geography"
] | 2021-01-08T22:25:44Z | 2021-02-12T03:27:22Z |
3,430,202 | Georgi Sava Rakovski | Georgi Stoykov Rakovski (Bulgarian: Георги Стойков Раковски) (1821 – 9 October 1867), known also Georgi Sava Rakovski (Георги Сава Раковски), born Sabi Stoykov Popovich (Съби Стойков Попович), was a 19th-century Bulgarian revolutionary, freemason, writer and an important figure of the Bulgarian National Revival and resistance against Ottoman rule. | [
"Language"
] | 2005-12-15T16:58:32Z | 2005-12-15T17:08:16Z |
6,841,277 | Anya Phillips | Anya Phillips (February 1955 – June 19, 1981) was a Taiwanese fashion designer and the co-founder of the New York nightclub the Mudd Club. Phillips influenced the fashion, sound, and look of the New York-based no wave scene of the late 1970s. She was also the manager and girlfriend of musician James Chance (aka James White). | [
"Concepts"
] | 2006-09-04T17:20:22Z | 2006-09-04T17:51:03Z |
304,604 | Mechatronics | Mechatronics engineering, also called mechatronics, is an interdisciplinary branch of engineering that focuses on the integration of mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, electronic engineering and software engineering, and also includes a combination of robotics, computer science, telecommunications, systems, control, automation and product engineering. As technology advances over time, various subfields of engineering have succeeded in both adapting and multiplying. The intention of mechatronics is to produce a design solution that unifies each of these various subfields. Originally, the field of mechatronics was intended to be nothing more than a combination of mechanics, electrical and electronics, hence the name being a portmanteau of the words "mechanics" and "electronics"; however, as the complexity of technical systems continued to evolve, the definition had been broadened to include more technical areas. The word mechatronics originated in Japanese-English and was created by Tetsuro Mori, an engineer of Yaskawa Electric Corporation. | [
"Engineering"
] | 2003-07-13T09:18:41Z | 2003-08-10T05:07:41Z |
48,614,035 | Kornhill (constituency) | Kornhill (Chinese: 康怡) is one of the 35 constituencies in the Eastern District. The constituency returns one district councillor to the Eastern District Council, with an election every four years. The seat is currently held by Bonnie Leung Wing-man of the Civic Party. Kornhill constituency is loosely based on Kornhill in Quarry Bay with estimated population of 14,528. | [
"Geography"
] | 2015-11-21T14:11:00Z | 2015-11-27T00:45:43Z |
61,626,460 | Fukushima 50 (film) | Fukushima 50 is a 2020 Japanese disaster drama film directed by Setsurō Wakamatsu and written by Yōichi Maekawa. Starring Koichi Sato and Ken Watanabe, it is about the titular group of employees tasked with handling the meltdown of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. The film is based on the book by Ryusho Kadota, titled On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, and it is one of the first Japanese films to depict the disaster. | [
"Energy"
] | 2019-08-28T15:05:42Z | 2019-08-28T15:10:43Z |
18,677,028 | Thomas Huffman | Thomas N. Huffman (17 July 1944 – 30 March 2022) was Professor Emeritus of archaeology in association with the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. He specialised in pre-colonial farming societies in southern Africa. Huffman is most well known for his identification of the Central Cattle Pattern at Mapungubwe, a pre-colonial state in southern Africa. This, in turn he argued as the main influence in the formation of the Zimbabwe Pattern at Great Zimbabwe. Arguably his seminal contribution to the field was A Handbook to the Iron Age: The Archaeology of Pre-Colonial Farming Societies in Southern Africa (2007), which has contributed to the understanding of ceramic style analysis and culture history focusing on these groups. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2008-08-01T12:56:22Z | 2008-08-31T05:07:12Z |
52,253,371 | Joseph Bérubé | Joseph Edward Bérubé was the longest serving Ombudsman of the province of New Brunswick, Canada, occupying the office from 1976 to 1993. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2016-11-12T00:18:06Z | 2016-11-12T00:20:07Z |
36,117,179 | Hayri Sezgin | Hayri Sezgin (19 January 1961 – 5 May 2013) was a Turkish wrestler who competed in the 1984 Summer Olympics and in the 1988 Summer Olympics. | [
"Sports"
] | 2012-06-12T14:56:03Z | 2012-06-27T19:03:09Z |
1,008,953 | Benjamin F. Tracy | Benjamin Franklin Tracy (April 26, 1830 – August 6, 1915) was a United States political figure who served as Secretary of the Navy from 1889 through 1893, during the administration of U.S. President Benjamin Harrison. | [
"Economy"
] | 2004-09-22T20:09:56Z | 2004-09-23T02:23:37Z |
7,407,967 | Richard Stubbs | Richard Stubbs (born 4 November 1957) is an Australian radio and television presenter, writer and comedian. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2006-10-12T11:44:53Z | 2006-12-17T14:59:35Z |
60,654,072 | Metin Topaktaş | Metin Topaktaş (born 15 July 1967) is a Turkish wrestler. He competed in the men's freestyle 52 kg at the 1996 Summer Olympics. | [
"Sports"
] | 2019-05-03T18:58:33Z | 2020-05-22T06:10:09Z |
31,553,430 | James F. Keenan | James F. Keenan is a moral theologian, bioethicist, writer, and the Canisius Professor of theology at Boston College. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2011-04-21T02:12:41Z | 2011-04-28T14:14:49Z |
55,473,692 | Kjell-Børge Freiberg | Kjell-Børge Freiberg (born 27 April 1971) is a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party, formerly for the Progress Party who served as Minister of Petroleum and Energy from 2018 to 2019. He was also an MP for Nordland from 2017 to 2021. He currently serves as mayor of Hadsel Municipality since 2023, having done so previously from 2007 to 2015. | [
"Politics"
] | 2017-10-07T18:33:58Z | 2017-10-07T18:36:59Z |
1,763,402 | The Adventure Company | The Adventure Company was a Canadian video game developer and a former publishing division of DreamCatcher Interactive. It was sold to THQ Nordic GmbH in 2011 following DreamCatcher's parent (JoWooD Entertainment) assets being sold after entering administration. | [
"Technology"
] | 2005-04-19T12:04:43Z | 2005-04-21T02:31:30Z |
15,251,809 | Mark Readings | Mark Readings is an Australian sports journalist and commentator. He is formerly a reporter for Seven News and Nine News and also commentates Australian rules football matches on 6PR. Readings began his career at radio station 6PM in 1988 before joining the Nine Network as a sports reporter, he also commentated on sporting events including domestic cricket, AFL Football and Olympic Games for Nine. From 2010 to 2013, Readings the main weeknight sports presenter replacing Michael Thomson who replace Readings following his departure. In 2014, Readings joined the Seven Network as host of ‘The Footy Fix’ program and in 2015, the main commentator of its WAFL coverage and filled in occasionally as an AFL commentator during Seven's coverage. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2008-01-16T11:29:39Z | 2008-01-16T11:30:45Z |
18,554,658 | Hesperoptenus | Hesperoptenus is a genus of bats within the Vespertilionidae or vesper bat family. The species within this genus are:
Blanford's bat (Hesperoptenus blanfordi)
False serotine bat (Hesperoptenus doriae)
Gaskell's false serotine (Hesperoptenus gaskelli)
Tickell's bat (Hesperoptenus tickelli)
Large false serotine (Hesperoptenus tomesi)
== References == | [
"Communication"
] | 2008-07-23T15:25:42Z | 2008-07-24T03:05:05Z |
38,630,209 | Shaul Ladany | Shaul Paul Ladany (Hebrew: שאול לדני; born April 2, 1936) is an Israeli Holocaust survivor, racewalker and two-time Olympian. He holds the world record in the 50-mile walk (7:23:50), and the Israeli national record in the 50-kilometer walk (4:17:07). He is a former world champion in the 100-kilometer walk. Ladany survived the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1944, when he was eight years old. In 1972, he survived the Munich Massacre. | [
"People"
] | 2013-02-24T22:16:41Z | 2013-02-24T22:25:45Z |
12,746,710 | Shishido Domain | Hitachi-Shishido Domain (常陸宍戸藩, Hitachi-Shishido-han) was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, located in Hitachi Province (modern-day Ibaraki Prefecture), Japan. It was centered on Shishido Jin'ya in what is now part of the city of Kasama, Ibaraki. It was ruled for much of its history by a junior branch of the Mito Tokugawa clan. | [
"Time"
] | 2007-08-13T05:02:09Z | 2007-08-13T05:02:48Z |
38,959,130 | Brian Dobson (archaeologist) | Brian Dobson (13 September 1931 – 19 July 2012) was an English archaeologist, teacher and scholar. His specialisms were Hadrian's Wall and the Roman Army. He studied under Eric Birley and is a member of the so-called 'Durham School' of archaeology. He was a Reader Emeritus of Durham University. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2013-03-29T22:45:03Z | 2013-03-29T22:47:33Z |
38,794,503 | Peter Megaw | Arthur Hubert Stanley "Peter" Megaw, (20 July 1910 – 28 June 2006) was an architectural historian and archaeologist. He specialised in Byzantine churches. He served as Director of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus, between 1935 and 1960 and as Director of the British School at Athens from 1962 to 1968. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2013-03-12T18:18:25Z | 2013-03-12T18:18:35Z |
8,565,423 | No-teleportation theorem | In quantum information theory, the no-teleportation theorem states that an arbitrary quantum state cannot be converted into a sequence of classical bits (or even an infinite number of such bits); nor can such bits be used to reconstruct the original state, thus "teleporting" it by merely moving classical bits around. Put another way, it states that the unit of quantum information, the qubit, cannot be exactly, precisely converted into classical information bits. This should not be confused with quantum teleportation, which does allow a quantum state to be destroyed in one location, and an exact replica to be created at a different location. In crude terms, the no-teleportation theorem stems from the Heisenberg uncertainty principle and the EPR paradox: although a qubit
|
ψ
⟩
{\displaystyle |\psi \rangle }
can be imagined to be a specific direction on the Bloch sphere, that direction cannot be measured precisely, for the general case
|
ψ
⟩
{\displaystyle |\psi \rangle }
; if it could, the results of that measurement would be describable with words, i.e. classical information. | [
"Science"
] | 2006-12-22T18:08:04Z | 2006-12-22T20:19:02Z |
15,845,762 | St. George's Basilica, Prague | St. George's Basilica (Czech: Bazilika sv. Jiří) is the oldest surviving church building within Prague Castle, Prague, Czech Republic. The basilica was founded by Vratislaus I of Bohemia in 920. It is dedicated to Saint George. Primarily Romanesque in style, it is part of the collection of buildings that comprise the castle, the political capital of the nation, and the spiritual center of the Czech state. | [
"Religion"
] | 2008-02-19T18:13:17Z | 2008-02-19T18:14:25Z |
74,769,311 | Niger de Pulis | Societal attitudes towards same-sex relationships have varied over time and place, from expecting all males to engage in same-sex relationships, to casual integration, through acceptance, to seeing the practice as a minor sin, repressing it through law enforcement and judicial mechanisms, and to proscribing it under penalty of death. The following individuals received the death penalty for it. | [
"Human_behavior"
] | 2023-09-07T16:14:23Z | 2023-09-07T16:14:40Z |
22,043,970 | George Hedges | George Reynolds Hedges (February 26, 1952 – March 10, 2009) was a lawyer with a list of celebrity clients including Mel Gibson and David Lynch who gained attention in the field of archaeology for what at the time was thought to be the discovery of the ancient city of Ubar. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2009-03-19T02:10:16Z | 2009-03-19T03:26:21Z |
9,761,976 | Entekhab | Entekhab (Persian: انتخاب, lit. 'Choice') was a Persian-language newspaper published in Tehran, Iran between 1991 and 2004. Nevertheless, its news website is active under the name of "Entekhab" (Entekhab.ir) and has turned into one of the most highly visited news websites in Iran, close to reformists. The Iranian Supreme National Security Council and Minister of Islamic Culture and Guidance took down Entekhab with in from July–October 2023 for a post that was video calling out Iranians foreign deals with Chinese and Russians a failed result , the video was called Auction of Iranian brand/why is Iranian foreign policy so weak?, the government refused to unconfiscate the website weeks after a judge order. | [
"Internet"
] | 2007-02-28T00:29:21Z | 2007-04-17T05:51:30Z |
65,044,701 | Sack of Aleppo (962) | The sack of Aleppo in December 962 was carried out by the Byzantine Empire under Nikephoros Phokas. Aleppo was the capital of the Hamdanid emir Sayf al-Dawla, the Byzantines' chief antagonist at the time. | [
"Military"
] | 2020-08-22T16:23:40Z | 2020-08-22T16:23:49Z |
36,668,122 | Tamar Halpern | Tamar Halpern is a writer and director living in Los Angeles. She holds an M.F.A. degree from the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts. | [
"Entertainment"
] | 2012-08-08T19:56:32Z | 2012-08-08T19:58:45Z |
11,177,342 | Zaza Enden | Zaza Enden (born Zaza Eladze on 28 May 1976 in Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union (present Georgia) is a professional wrestler and a Turkish professional basketball player of Georgian descent. He is 2.06 m tall and weighs 116 kg. His well-known nickname is "Tatu". Zaza Enden plays at the power forward position. He came to Turkey in 1992, firstly to Trabzon, afterwards he had his Turkish citizenship. | [
"Sports"
] | 2007-05-11T20:27:14Z | 2007-05-11T20:28:35Z |
28,094,836 | Disappearance of Morgan Nick | Morgan Chauntel Nick (September 12, 1988 – disappeared June 9, 1995) is an American girl who was abducted at a Little League Baseball game. Her mother is known for creating the Morgan Nick Foundation, which helps people find their missing children. | [
"Health"
] | 2010-07-20T13:19:10Z | 2010-07-20T13:25:40Z |
63,550,648 | Winifred Hoernlé | Agnes Winifred Hoernlé née Tucker (6 December 1885–17 March 1960) was a South African anthropologist, widely recognized as the "mother of social anthropology in South Africa". Beyond her scientific work, she is remembered for her social activism and staunch disapproval of Apartheid based on white supremacy. Born in 1885 in the Cape Colony, as an infant she moved with her family to Johannesburg, where she completed her secondary education. After earning an undergraduate degree in 1906 from South African College, she studied abroad at Newnham College, Cambridge, Leipzig University, the University of Bonn, and the Sorbonne. Returning to South Africa in 1912, she undertook anthropological research among the Khoekhoe people, until she married in 1914. | [
"Humanities"
] | 2020-04-03T01:08:39Z | 2020-04-06T14:03:12Z |
47,237,501 | Emmanuel Ndubisi Maduagwu | Emmanuel Ndubisi Maduagwu (born 1947) was promoted to the rank of Professor in the department of biochemistry by the University of Ibadan in 1989 and he served the University in that capacity until December 2013. He was Professor of Biochemistry on contract at Covenant University. He is a Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science and was elected into the Academy's Fellowship at its Annual General Meeting held in January 2015. Professor is a Consultant in the area of food safety and food toxicology. Professor Maduagwu is currently Professor and Head of Department of Biochemistry at Chrisland University in Abeokuta, Nigeria. | [
"People"
] | 2015-07-14T15:50:56Z | 2015-09-04T08:51:56Z |
7,414,016 | Richard Brandt | Richard Booker Brandt (17 October 1910 – 10 September 1997) was an American philosopher working in the utilitarian tradition in moral philosophy. | [
"Ethics"
] | 2006-10-12T20:10:51Z | 2006-10-12T20:11:15Z |
60,791,764 | Patricia Campbell | Patricia F. Campbell is an American mathematician and mathematics educator. She is a professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning, Policy and Leadership at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her work has concerned the improvement of mathematics education in minority and lower-income secondary schools, and the effectiveness of mathematics coaching in mathematics education. Campbell is a graduate of the College of St. Francis. After earning a master's degree in mathematics at Michigan State University, she completed a Ph.D. in mathematics education at the Florida State University. | [
"Mathematics"
] | 2019-05-17T19:05:27Z | 2019-05-18T22:55:25Z |
52,636,270 | Assassination of Andrei Karlov | Andrei Karlov, the Russian Ambassador to Turkey, was assassinated by Mevlüt Mert Altıntaş, an off-duty Turkish police officer, at an art exhibition in Ankara, Turkey on the evening of 19 December 2016. The assassination took place after several days of protests in Turkey over Russian involvement in the Syrian Civil War and the battle over Aleppo. | [
"Military"
] | 2016-12-19T16:38:54Z | 2016-12-19T16:39:41Z |
1,184,176 | Australian League of Rights | The Australian League of Rights is a far-right and antisemitic political organisation in Australia. It was founded in Adelaide, South Australia, by Eric Butler in 1946, and organised nationally in 1960. It inspired groups like the Canadian League of Rights (1968), the New Zealand League of Rights (1970) and the British League of Rights (1971), with principles based on the economic theory of Social Credit expounded by C. H. Douglas. The League describes itself as upholding the virtues of freedom, with stated values of "loyalty to God, Queen and Country". In 1972, Butler created an umbrella group, the Crown Commonwealth League of Rights, to represent these four groups, and which also served as a chapter of the World League for Freedom and Democracy. | [
"Politics"
] | 2004-11-18T18:11:20Z | 2004-12-01T00:03:04Z |
40,710,039 | Olufemi Majekodunmi | Olufemi Adetokunbo Majekodunmi (born 1 May 1940) is a British-Nigerian architect. | [
"People"
] | 2013-10-05T01:41:03Z | 2013-10-05T01:44:38Z |
11,895,609 | Cosmic Anisotropy Polarization Mapper | CAPMAP is an experiment at Princeton University to measure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background. | [
"Universe"
] | 2007-06-22T09:16:01Z | 2008-10-05T23:11:49Z |
1,223,460 | Movsar Barayev | Movsar Buharovich Barayev (Suleimanov) (Russian: Мовсар Бухарович Бараев; 26 October 1979 – 26 October 2002), earlier known as Suleimanov, was a Chechen Islamist militia leader during the Second Chechen War, who led the seizure of a Moscow theater that led to the deaths of over 170 people by Russian special forces. | [
"Military"
] | 2004-11-29T20:42:34Z | 2004-11-30T01:28:15Z |
50,792,448 | Debbie Spillane | Deborah Elizabeth Spillane (born 25 December 1955) is an Australian sports journalist and commentator. | [
"Mass_media"
] | 2016-06-13T00:36:30Z | 2016-06-13T00:44:59Z |
23,709,820 | Confucius (1940 film) | Confucius (Chinese: 孔夫子; pinyin: Kǒng Fūzǐ) is a 1940 Chinese film directed by Fei Mu. Produced during World War II, the film was released twice in the 1940s before being thought lost. In 2001, the film was rediscovered when an anonymous donor sent a damaged copy of the print to the Hong Kong Film Archive (HKFA). The HKFA then spent seven years restoring the print, which was finally screened to modern audiences at the 33rd Hong Kong International Film Festival in April 2009. The film depicts Confucius's later life, as he traveled across a China divided by war and strife in an ultimately futile effort to teach various warlords and kings his particular philosophy. | [
"Philosophy"
] | 2009-07-23T02:17:35Z | 2009-07-23T02:18:02Z |
51,771,668 | UpFront | UpFront is a current affairs discussion, debate and analysis programme on Al Jazeera English. The show premiered on 4 September 2015 shortly after Al Jazeera moved into their new Washington D.C. hub. The show has a politics focus although other subjects are broached such as religion, economics, development and government activities. The show is weekly and premieres new episodes on Fridays. The programme is centred around current affairs with each episode dedicated to one or two topics. | [
"Internet"
] | 2016-09-27T18:05:40Z | 2016-09-27T18:15:07Z |
11,197,170 | St Olave's Church, Silver Street | St Olave's Church, Silver Street was a church on the south side of Silver Street, off Wood Street in the Aldersgate ward of the City of London. It was dedicated to St Olaf, a Norwegian Christian ally of the English king Ethelred II. The church was destroyed by the Great Fire of London in 1666 and not rebuilt. | [
"Entities"
] | 2007-05-13T00:38:27Z | 2007-05-13T00:43:05Z |
20,971,654 | Boulder Beer Company | The Boulder Beer Company was Colorado's first microbrew and the forty-third licensed brewery in the United States. It was founded on September 25, 1979 by David Hummer, Alvin Nelson, and Randolf Ware. Ware and Hummer were physics professors at the University of Colorado Boulder and home brewers. When the laws surrounding home brewing were relaxed, the brewery originally started on a farm in a "goatshack." | [
"Food_and_drink"
] | 2009-01-06T04:10:07Z | 2009-01-06T04:10:39Z |
55,303,144 | Malay Bhowmick | Malay Bhowmick is a Bangladeshi playwright, actor, director, and educationist. Bhowmick has a broad role to play in the movement of pedestrians, especially in the open play movement in the northern region of Bangladesh. Although professor of the Management Studies Department of Rajshahi University, he is better known as a playwright. Bhowmick has also served as chairperson of the Department of Theater and Music at Rajshahi. He is the recipient of Bangla Academy Literary Award (2017) and Shilpakala Padak (2020). | [
"Education"
] | 2017-09-21T10:42:31Z | 2017-09-21T10:44:19Z |
7,235,869 | Peter Decker | Peter Decker is a fictional character in a series of mystery novels by Faye Kellerman. A lieutenant in the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), Decker is assisted in solving crimes by his Orthodox Jewish wife Rina Lazarus. When he meets Rina, a young widow, during an investigation at a yeshiva in The Ritual Bath, he is compelled to explore the religion for himself, and eventually became a religiously observant Orthodox Jew. Decker, though raised Baptist by his adoptive parents in Florida, discovers as an adult that his birth parents were Jewish, which makes him Jewish under traditional Jewish law, as well. All the books in the series are rooted in, or at least include, Jewish themes. | [
"Government"
] | 2006-10-01T07:41:14Z | 2006-10-01T07:41:28Z |
33,326,978 | Babilonie | The Babilonie is a hillfort of the La Tène culture at a height of 255.6 metres above sea level on the northern edge of a rounded hill in the Wiehen Hills above the Lübbecke village of Obermehnen in the district of Minden-Lübbecke in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The name is derived from the Germanic baben in the lon i.e. "up in the woods". The wedge-shaped, double-rampart system, which descends from south to north with the slope, was investigated archaeologically in the first half of the last century, especially by Friedrich Langewiesche, who assessed it as a refuge castle. Ceramic and even metalwork finds indicate that it belongs to the La Tène culture in the pre-Roman Iron Age, e vorrömische Eisenzeit, therefore probably part of an extensive trading network. | [
"History"
] | 2011-10-06T19:57:35Z | 2011-12-21T05:24:44Z |
1,991,105 | List of authors of names published under the ICZN | This is a list of notable zoologists who have published names of new taxa under the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. | [
"Nature"
] | 2005-06-04T21:32:07Z | 2005-06-04T21:33:52Z |
25,854,460 | Red (2010 film) | Red is a 2010 American action comedy film loosely inspired by the DC Comics limited series of the same name. Produced by Di Bonaventura Pictures and distributed by Summit Entertainment, it is the first film in the Red series. Directed by Robert Schwentke and written by Jon Hoeber and Erich Hoeber, it stars Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman, John Malkovich, Helen Mirren, Karl Urban, and Mary-Louise Parker, alongside Rebecca Pidgeon, Brian Cox, Richard Dreyfuss, Julian McMahon, Ernest Borgnine, and James Remar. Red follows Frank Moses (Willis), a former black-ops agent who reunites with his old team to capture an assassin who has vowed to kill him. The film was released on October 15, 2010. | [
"Information",
"Law"
] | 2010-01-18T20:37:25Z | 2010-01-18T20:40:48Z |
48,977,909 | Little Satan | "Little Satan" (Persian: شیطان کوچک, Shaytân-e Kuchak; Arabic: الشيطان الأصغر; Hebrew: השטן הקטן) is an anti-Zionist derogatory epithet used especially by Iranian leaders for Israel. | [
"Language"
] | 2016-01-02T08:18:23Z | 2016-01-02T08:23:24Z |
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